HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-6-1, Page 7THE BRUSSELS POST
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Copyright 1 01 3,
--Py- MARY ROBERTS PINEHART 1
Ile came right over and put his
arm,: :wound toe.
"Who arc, you, anyhow be said.
:'You who turn to the world the fro-
zen 111:0;k of a 1'lu•11n ;IAA 1•t bi a lists;
Mere. landledy, who art' a p,•ntb.'-
ww11:ul 1,y ,.1 1; in: tiuet tan ! training
end e ;'ill at heart Who are you?"
"I'll t,•11 you what I tun,,' I said.
"I'm a romantic old fool, aunt you'd
Matey let ni do tide quickly before
i teat' my mind."
lie fret 11 n :it that, but he fol-
lowed to the telephone and etaatl by
while. 1 gut Lida. 1I was in n per -
feet freihy of anal ty, turning red
n111 white by turn, and in the nlhl•
-
d!e of the einiversee ion inking the
receiver bodily from in and holding
it 1" his own ear,
Shr. ,id ;111 1hoter-rht .she could'rr•t
away; ;he spoke guardedly as it Al-
ma were near, but I gathered (het
-h,• would come as soon as she c add
full, front the way her voise broke,
I knew she wee a, excited ns 1, n•
he.!tl„ ane.
She re heavily coated and v•il•
-
x1, at a qu. i,•r after 10 that night,
and 1 took her back to the alining
room, whet•,• he was waiting. IIc• dirt
not make a mor0 toward h: r. And
at first she (111 not melte a stove eith-
er, hut need told gazed at him, thin
and white, a wreck of himself. Then:
"Ell!" ,he ,erica, and ran 11010(1
the table to him as he held out his
Sums.
The schoolteacher was owe I
went into the parlor bedroom and
eat in the cozy corner in the dark. I
had done a wrong thing, and I was
glad of it. And, sitting there in the
darkness, T went over my lite rain.
After all, it had been my own life;
I had lived it; 110 one else had shap-
ed it for no,. And if it was cheer-
less and c'nlorless now, it had had its
big moments. Life is measnred by
big moments.
If I let the children in the dining
room have fifteen nig moments in-
stead of five who can 'Monte m0?
The next day was the sensational
one of the trial. We went through '
every phase of conviction: ,Jennie
Brice was living. Jennie Price was
dead. The body found at Sewickley
could not be Jennie Brice's. The
body found at Sewi'kley was Jennie .
Brlce's, And so it went on.
The defense did an unexpected
thing in putting Mr. Ladley on the
stand. That day, for the first time, 1
he showed the wear and toar of the
bi'deai. He had no flower in his but-
tonhole, and the rhns of his eyes
were red. But he was quite cool, ;
His stage training had taught hien'
not only to endure the eyes of the ,
crowd, but to :find in ite gaze a sort
of stimulant. He macre a good wit-
Jtess I must adroit.
Ho replied to the usual questions
easily. After five minutes or so MIs'.
Llewellyn got down to work.
CHAPTER XII.
"Mr. Ladley, you have said that
your wife was ill the night of March
s1'?"
Etym.))
"What was the nature of her ill-
ness?"
"She had a functional heart trou-
ble, not serious.''
"Will you tell us fully the events
Letterheads
Envelopes
Billheads
And all kinde of Business
Stationery printed at The
Post Publishing House.
We will do a job that will
do creditto your business.
Look over your stock Of
Office Stationery and if it
requires replenishing call
us by telephone' 31.
The Post Publishing Mouse
of that night?"
"I had been asleep when my wife
wakened ow. She asked for a medi-
cine Au, ih,ed in thr -„ attneka I get
up end found the bottle, but it was
empty. air she was nervous and
frightened. T acreed to try to ret
,ante at a drugs tore, I Went 0000-
tnIrd, teak, .lir:,. Pitman'e boat mei
went to soveral .,tore.; before T could
awoken a pharmaci.it."
'Volt cut the Loot hove?"
'Ye,. it was tied in '1 Wonlau'
knot of series of knots. I r"114 11•1t
untie it and 1 W110 In a hurry.'
"Bow did you cut it?"
"R'ith uiy micictknife.'
"Yon did nut u:e Mrs. lithium's
Freud knife?"
"i slid not,"
"Anal in cutting it cut your yvrid,
did yen?"
"Ye.. The knife slapped. I have
the sea0 :till"
"Whet did you do then?"
"1 v, nt 1.•1e)' to the room end
stanched the blood with a towel."
"1'i nt whom did you gee the
1)1•(11(}111""
"From .11exendel''s pharmacy."
"At what time?"
"I am not certain. About 3 o'-
clock, probehly."
"You went directly back home?"
Mr. Ladley hesitated. "No," he
swirl finally. "My wife had had these
attacks, but they were not serious. I
w'a, (81'1(11114 to .see how the, river
front looked and rowed out too far.
I was caught in the current and
nearly carried away."
"You came hone. after that?"
"Yes, at once.. Mrs. Ladles, was
better and had dropped asleep. She
wakened as I crone in. She wee dis-
agreeable about the length of time
I had been away and would not let
ole explain. We quarreled, and silo
said she was going to leave me. I
said that Its she had threatened this
before and had never clone it I would
:see that she really started. At day-
light T rowed her to Federal street."
"What had she with her?"
"A small brown valise."
"llow was she dressed?"
"In a blanc and white Ares, and
hat, with a long, black coat."
"What was the last you saw of
her?"
"She was going across the Sixth
street bridge,"
"Alone?"
"No. She went with a young man
we know.
There was a stir in the courtroom
at this,
"Who was the young man?"
"A Mr, Howell, a reporter on a
newspaper here:"
"Have you seen Mir. Howell since
your arrest?"
"No, sir. IIe has been out of the
city."
I was 140 excited by this time that
I could hardly hear. I mi,s:ad some
of the cross examination, Tie dis-
trict attorney pulled Mr. Led!ey's
testimony to pieces.
"You cut the boat's painter with
your pocketknife?"
"I slid."
"Then how do you account for
Mrs. Pitman's broken knife, with the'
blade 121 your room?"
I "I have no theory noout it. She
may have broken it herself. She had
used it the day before to stet tacks
1 out of a carpet,"
That was true; I had.
"That early Monday anorning was
cold, was it not?"
"Yes; very."
"Why did your wife leave without
her fur coat?"
"I did not know she had until we
had Left alto house, Then I did not
ask her. She would not speak to
me,"
1 "I see. But is it not tiuo that,
upon a wet fur coat being shown
you as your wife's, you said it could
not be hers, as 'she had taken lteg's
with her?"
!'I do not recall such a statement,"
"You recall a coat being shown
you?"
"Yes, Mm Pitman brought a
coat to my door, but I was working
on El play I am writing, rind I do not
remember what I said, The coat
was ruined. I did not want it, , I
probably ..ai,i the lirat th'a 1
111011-10 nl' to )••e,. rid oI' 111,1 „,..411.„
got t u, at t tilt 1 t •b
t.. I l l l ! nt t
I
in :rC• ab,lnt t1)•• hr il'll:nil,•, I'.r 'h.
n a ; leo tttla'h, IIowevor, 01, i tt) -
n' 1 11101! III .peak me, ,.t • Jill . h.
11 ,n,. 1, ,, 1: i.,',/ lm: eJ;:s'0 ;, t 1 1:,1,1
„'•, 1,4 it elel,tt..
"',ow, yntt .:,1,• ton t`: 1•; ,'1 il.' II :,
.:1:'t• to t[ri 14,I, ..,1';'t, i.rr rile
'hot von 1,11 t11,• rope, thus cat
-
1' Your 1Y1•iet
1 h "r• :tar .:,111•„
"'soon could not wait to lie."e the
food, ;and y,t you. w•,•ut aleee tee
sit r flood io see hew ]t.•'1 the wee
"11, 0 alarm Bart excite!! 111•, 1sot
v;he•lt I ttot out and renuenth'rn,l that
1,, demor! of had told 119 r1i • wool!'
n r,•,• die in tai :ttt:t lt, I i,rew• tact
, ur1•m tl."
"Volt u east the nledihine thief.. you
"Ml Alexander has to t fieri that
eels test the methane at ;t. It had
IP en ,.hots11 that you 1,4% t1)" h 711.
:t 2 and got back :bout 1. Dors oat
I}r: show that, with all your •l;.11•111,
y'1:.it nt to the river 1. ant 1)1?"
"I win, gone from 2 to 4," h,' re
nlieri calmly, "lir. Alexandre 11117x1;
b,• Weil ; 1,1,nat :he than I w^,il;eir'l
11hn, 1 got the nt elicit In ti.
".Aura your Weil', h•it yn11 at the
,fid ;11,• ser' 0)1,1. :1) was
eoinr1" '
"'Coe 018111 tlr,tt this Wont:ut at
1TOrntt was your wise"
"I think at
"S,,t• there an onyx clock in the
:.i nt,d .tory ronin when yo1 moved
into it:"'
"I do not recall the cluck."
„Your wife did 11ot tale, an onyx
clock away with her?"
Mr. Indica. ,nulled. "No."
The defense called Mr. Howell
west. He looked rested and the hap-
e'er- for havires seen Lida, but h •
t;,,.; efill pale end showed the strain
of some hidden anxi.ty. What that
amt, ty wee the next two days were
to tell us all.
"Mr. Howell," Mr. Llewellyn ask-
ed, "you know the prisoner?"
"Slightly,"
"State when you met haat."
On Sunday morning, Muds •1. I
trent to sec him,"
"Will you tell us the nature of
islet visit?"
"My paper had heard he, was writ-
ing a play fur Meisel!, I was to get
an interview, with photographs, if
possible."
"You saw his wife at that tinct:?"
eyes."
"When did you see her again?"
"'Moe following morning at 11 o'-
clock or a little later. I walked
across the Sixth street bridge with
her and put her on a train for Hor-
ner, Pa."
"You are positive it was 10111118
Brice?"
"Yes. I watched her gat out of
the boat while her husband stedied
]t."
"If you knew this, tvhy did you
not conte forward sooner?"
"I have been out of the city"
"But you knew the prisoner had
been, arrested and that this testimony
o1' yours would be invaluable • to
him."
"Yes. But I thought It necee ary
to produce Jennie Brice herself, sly
unsupported word--"
"You have been searching for
Jennie Brice?"
"Yee. Since March 8."
"How was she dressed when you
saw her last?"
"She wore a reel and black hat
and a black coat. She carried a small
brown valise."
"Thank you."
The dross examination did not
shake his testimony. But it brought
out some curious things, Mir. How-
ell refused to say how he happened
to be at the enol of the Sixth street
bridge at 111111 hour or why ha had
thought it necessary of meeting a
woman he claimed to have known
only twenty :four hours to go with
her to the railway station and put
her on a train.
The jury was visibly impressed
and much shaken, for M. Howell
carried conviction in .every word he
said. He looked the district atter•
nor in the eye, and once when our
glances crossed ho oven smiled at me
faintly. But I saw why he harl.tried
to find Jennie Brice and had dreaded
testifying. Not a woman in that.
courtroom and hardly a man but be-
lieved when he left the stand that he
was or had been Jennie Erica's lover
and as such was assisting her to
leave her husband.
'Then you believe," the district
attorney st11(1 at the end -"you be --
flew, Mr, Howell, that Jennie Brice
is living'?"
"Jennie Brice was living on Mon-
day- morning, March 5," ho said
firmly,
"Miss Shaeffer has testified that on
Wednesday this Warr ll who you
clitite was Jennie Brice sent 11 letter
to yell fro: Horner. Is that the
ease?"
eg•at 4. 644+0 4.114Sr 4 444•I.4✓•44,404
115
rS
+14
5
4
+?
mertet for
7 best_.
"111-
4
I; 7,7 7, i1 n(re ry-
fi J
"The lett.0' was }l:'neel 'Jennie
I,t.1,.,
11 wit.t sighed J. Ti'."
vv,u y„d .Lott file court that 1 •.
ter:
"1 destroyed it."
"It was a p •1 •"nal letter?"
"it merely add ehe had 1)1elvoQ
Safclt and not to let anyone knew
where 110 t:t1."
"And yet you destroyed it?"
1 po>tcupt said to do ,o."
"Why,'
"I do not luio'v. Alt extra pre-
r:,ution probably,"
"You were under the impression
that she wee going to stay theret"'
"Shr, waa to !tate remained for a
week."
'And you have been searching for
thi.; woman for two months?'
I1
quailed but his voice was,
eel "Yes," he admitted.
11' was telling the truth, cyan if
it v:as not all the truth. 1 believe
}awl it gone to the jury them iht'. Lad•
ley s ouid have been acquitted. But
lute that afternoon things took e new
turn. Counsel for the pro -,.cation
stated to the court that he had e new
111 important witness and sest pet -
811 4lon to introduce this, further
Littlefield and proved to be my one
night tenant of elf. second :tory
front. 13oleonth.?; (4018)ner of the.
night before tools the stand, The
doctor wear 1t: irmire,sive in fall
daylight -he tee a trifle shiny, a bit
bulbous as to nose and indifferent as
to finger 111110 But his testimony
was given with due professional
'Weight.
"You are a doctor of medicine, Dr,
Littlefield?" asked the district attor-
ney.
„ SGsn
"In active practice?"
"I have a clue for inebriates in
Des Moines, Ia. I was formerly in
general practice in New' York city,"
"You knew Jennie Ladley?"
"I had seen her at different theat-
res, and she consulted me profession-
ally at one time in New York,"
"You operated on her, I believe?"
"Ye,. She came to me to have a
name removed. It had been tattooed
over her heart."
"You removed 1t?"
"Not at once. I tried fading the
marks with goat's mills, but she was
impatient. On the third visit to my
office she demanded that the mune be
cut olit."
"You did it?"
"Yes. She refused a general an-
esthetic and I used cocaine. Thu
name was John -I believe a forager
husband, She intended to marry
agora,"
A titter ran over the courtroom,
People strained to the utmost are al-
ways glad of an excuse to smile, The
laughter of a wrought up crowd al-
ways seems to me half hysterical.
"Have you seen photograph.; of
the scar on the body found at Sew-
ickley? Or the body itself?"
"No; I have not"
"Will you describe the operation?"
"I made a transverse incision for
the body of the name and two verti-
cal ones -one longer for the SP, the
other shorter for the stem of the 'h.'
There was a dot after the name, I
macre a half inch incision for it."
"Will yoti sketch the cicatrix as
you recall it?"
The doctor made a careful draw-
ing on a pati that was passed to him.
Lille for Mlle, dot for dot, 1t Was
the scar of the body found at Sew-
ickley.
"You aro sure the woman was
Jennie Brice?"
"She sent the tickets for the thea-
tre shortly after, and I had an an-
nouncement of her marriage to tho
prisoner some weeks later',"
"Were there any witnesses to the
operation?"
"My assistant. I can produce Ilius
at any time"
That was 1101 all of the trial, but
it was the decisive moment. Shortly
after tho jury withdrew, and for
twenty-four hours not a word was
heard from them.
CHAPTER XIII.
After twenty-four norm' delibera-
tion the jury brought in a verdict of
not guilty. Tt was a tirst degree ver-
dict, Mr. Howell's unsupported word
had lost out against a seal',
Contrary to my expectation, Mir.
I•leleoinbo was not jubilant over; the
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1tt :".
It
1•111,1e i•1 a t1) , n„ e, i
1 that 111 ,011" 1111 ! ::ino 1 11y 11e obi 111111t", ref, 11 li
t,uu;v, it t1) n 1101 101, "n yard, t 1 1, fl int,+. : !tab! .t,
!1 i;lt't lent, t1,' 11,• .t-!, "in I "1,' lie ler y t:"
: w „f Ilut•:• i1': t siloony, 11• r;dl• rn 11.....",101.!,\• •
.:{1••a 1. 11,•e.0• 11 Ir 11, 14: 441111..: tl',i:c', "1 56,1 1101. !a
,1; 1.• ,.. ;,ln,,:'. Lo.,h a• rh.� :'I. , 1..
114,1)tin; 1,101'1,!:::' n', i,1 Ii•
! 1' f 1,1,.' 1.'811% 1) • jl I.t ;,l!-i-
,Itrt�• ,in a• 1•,1 1 1 I.
1 -in ten , ti 1 u - I, ' 1 tfld-
es. t1 '.; 1,tt'. 111' ,''ll 11x;5
11; 1ft I,! 1.
fre,:11 111111r "!:1"/r.rli', 11,11 from:
thou Coro, w11.11 iii- r, .rte 1 "t, the
1111, nr iia, 1111, 1 1,-,1 Fun itt,l,.r
11;):,:01:4111.1(1 :�- rn .tl, l,f. 11
the jell uta lour:,I Id and on
, ,1,t ,lav 11o,h,d1' ilr 1 1 io
1r dor L: 1 u11.
i;
hare !re +t 11' t
n 1,r1.1:5 t : :11 0'„1S *{.• i,,: 14 i1
p >2.' 11 ,l e,
u "
"There', only v..ny ,se thet
1 ., ' be tad n,i;dl). -Tee, tt uta•e
h,et 0 ;well ,1 fool enotnl11 to h.: :t
n lone taut •d ut, 1 I.11,..1,'
Vnllt:if ••4, 1' tII"II It cut., 11,',1:t of 1ci,J
lel have Ray mime put lit lues','
Ihop,-tot"I.retorted. 31•'.11•.
1101,1.1 t1 ,';t 1:111111 1: %d, neri t11.
Put, :1 Mr. Holcomb 1 111
Nit 1101 beeii prose!) w,.: .1 tt-
I:tier w,r demi, 1•rnhxt,. n'-
,1 TT,' could ut,,t 111041,.•1 ed 11•
(felt-:- let tile,: tlu' ret-,• '7 1
,iuly without, their ,11!:'n,. .ear,
seress 011 :air. llowell-,o .tor;:. (Mt
y: e were, to u u1c•r>tend that emee :111:
tee•.
many other IIs•. E{ ent
till 111•• that e•t •'hill r of 1 n
front John Bellow.. of the t,etootoi
.:::nut, 011 Jennie 1;Hee 8111 "f slot..
:ifter an almost endleee ;'ircb. 11
had found the oleo who had ells the
1111111,1 away.
Reynolds had gone to lode ,•, ii 1 -
ing an Elk and several othee thines
and 1118011 given to regalia in boxes
and having 11!•; picture in `I1, nc tv0-
papers in different outlandish cos-
tumes, 11)•. Pitman used to ;.1y that
man, being denied his natural love
for barparic adornment in hie every-
day clothing, took to the different
fraternities as an excuse for decking
himself out. But this has nothing to
do with the doorbell.
It was old Isaac, He had tt bas-
ket in his hand, and he strep • 1 into
the hall and placed it on the fluor.
"Evening, Miss Bess," he. ;aid.
"Can you see a bit of conl(any to-
night?"
"I can always see you," I repIh.d.
But he had not meant himself Ile
stepped to the door and, wetting it,
beckoned to someone across the
street. It 1.115 1,111:1.
She came in, her color tt h,ttlo
heightened, and old Isaac stood back,
beaming at us both. I believe it 100,4
t,,
It
I. 1 .
1 - i `e'er 1 2 11
1
111 1•,. 1 1.,:e1:
"'fir• b•, :• It ."i ..>.'1 1 -•n!',I
1 , ! • 1 :no. r.1:1, ti. .;,L it-
• da, 1,• 11,11 -- "
1 11 tt even obi 1 ;4.1' rhol:• 11-ettit.
ad 1 , Ito, ,i ,,1. ,1t•n t1„ it
"1lot•. ,I e' i . ` 1,:,111 : tx;d 1••1111" '
1`„ . "SO 1-.nr• 1:• �.,, „' nln'.11^
llrtr y0e11 Heed alt+ay- 1,. A;'.
Ir I'an•u,:
ILl-:t:, 1,,114 111 11x•.141 ',,"
1
• ,1. "I went ti;.for st bele
'.! r, bid 1 ;"1 1,1n'1i iii,•
nc1 :)1)11'1• iY tI.• nil }1vtP.,
V:11. 111,1 II.I :on o;a 1,"
1•.•r ti ,.t, l= ht.,,, :111 tie ameiss,
o:: T d 11..1•, S114,
,11: 41 xc:th I) p• ter. of
!{ 1• - ,
:hue:11,•? Ie,y f- 1', 11' •maul4„1; 1C'.
,' , ,e•nitt'• 1'11111. br ee'. '111
1+•:•1.11•• 41 w'anlu alta (411 , nun1
k to lee lite re or 'the nl,l ham,•
r1, and tvhn, nn- 1t.„1 1)21.1: 111`o 01
idy o1' the 11,,ori lt. ;.'i,.t, c•etih! only
:tach the ., tivitt mei 111 Int fr:,n1
hind , llwnn to Le'' n, •lid
11, r cols -ten her :.,. Nor .hultld
: I. • 1110.
llt. Ilutvc1) aunt: :coli aft i1•.
11,1% anal, teing hick to tiv,
her 41111 aly.He
t 1 !t11 1 i t', •: :'1. , :4 nt 1't ire
;he I .111 t n '. Leak b, 1111 worn be -
1'0; •. H,t,511o,1 to 11:11r 311. II 111'
tooth • brats; ill low o. and b• 1)<:Ici
a< .11, feta. of 11 , e111111)1 a otu'd the
1:11,1••--111. Holcombe with 1111, note -
re ,t k, 1 with Ivy mending and the
,y with one of 11,1 o s hands. t •ank-
ly under his on the rod tatdecloth.
(Continurrd Next Week)
COMFORTABLE COVERS
Cover.; for comfortables L1 delute-
poka-riots or flowered materials, can
be purchased reasonably and are in-
valuable in preserving the silk cov-
erings on your down puffs,
NOVEL DISHES
Spring ••s the season for adven-
ture. If you have gotten Into menu -
rut.., buy a new cook book aad try
out emu( new menus on your Tamil;.
LIBRARY CLOCKS
A handsome clock often rive= a
living quality to a library that adds
infinite charm to the room.
industrial ivlortgage and
Savingte, Ounepany, of Sarnia
;;;;,"I''','Aro109'1 111,,./11
yor
$e n.•', , 11 I J I' R 8i t 1. -:. 1.,. m5
••,11t 1 a,•, 1, tet+.: w lit
f,., :a uftr.- and ni h,•e pne f.;r„.,
-rho inruue.rreal r,Aart(t: tart
1010 Saviour, Company
W. J. D O WD
AUJQ r (OlilFf 11?
,,; k., . ,41 with 20x., -ewer.
".'141., to 41'
;;e, 1's t C: ut ;;1t Life Insurance Co.
�•-' �1 Assurance
411",,L1 .. Go. of °auad
G. W. ABRAHAM
[7i tri.'t I..1,re-e.11titt!ve
C. C. RAMAGE, D.D.S., L.D.S.
BRIJ :Li 31:LS, ONT.
C,ra it tt •. Royal Collet -tai of Dental
, slay, on.• 3711! Honor Graduate
_.r.:its of 'Toronto. ih:ntistry in all
O.hce Over Standard Bank,
Phone 200
WM. SPENCE
1:.'b• 1, Ont.
Conveyance, Commissioner and C. J.
Al ill. for
The Imperial Life Assurance Co. of
Canad4
and
Ocean Accident Guarantee Corpora-
tion, Limited
\
,:dent 1 t,:u 114 ., A0 9111111ile In-
eiranee, Plato Ght o Ju.uf.inee, etc.
Phone 2225 iitltel, Ont.
a. Lc/N .1',6
AGENT FOR
ire9 hell.,oniaitile sl��l hid ins,
,CtIMFANItS
For Brussels and vicinity Phone 64
I. ES' M' F. ADZE AN
Agent licnick Mutual Fire Insurance Company
Also
'a'tfal'u Tiiid1i:i, :i1:R la,oalia Insurance
Home 411 Pr..X. 1 Turut,erryyyStres
Street tirqOsyel
MD,}
SLIMITED
Ifirc, 7
xcE
OWTSILICI
D, M. SCOTT
PRICES MODERATE
For referonre ron.snit any peroon whoa° sal
I have officiated at. Phone 2828
E
T. T. M' RAE
M. E3., M. O. P.. 6 S, O.
M. O. H., Village 0r Bruseela.
Physician, Surgeon, Are ,awee•It
ole PP at re.OS£nee. epponite Alnlville Chnroh,
Wittier, .street.
rc t` bf.4'r'Mt:.%rti'r,'f,F0
BARRISTER, 'OLICITOR,
CONVEYANCER, NOTARY PUBLIC
L"OKIE 0LOCK - BRUSSELS
FT, WARULAW
nor r h rt,.:1 r,1'le ttrfarto V.tertna9T
1'•1Ileve tar and nIgh4 Cann. (,fume 01)7,01111t8
5(4','yf-ri, auha:.
"•w.t. a 1MMTI RSTI w >161.2.1,40n Ftary :. eu0:^ .117aWn ra:as-xca.,
0
Another{ fern
Id
ut f Business
.Just one of the news items which are appearing in papers
quite too often these day$ throughout the Deninima And
w•ilat is the reason? There is only one, and that is lack of
loyalty to home institutions and the lure of the flashing
puhlscity of the large city establishments, Many citizens,
while earning their wages and salaries in one place, never-
theless send a large proportion of this money out of the
community for questionable bargains, thus depriving such
community of that much necessary working capital,
Busi t. est ! ^ T n
the Same
They have, local firths who are able and ready to supply
them with all their 1'equirelnent$, yet for the most trivial
reason or exen5o they will consent to extend this patronage
to outside firms, thus helping to build up distant eitiee at
the expense of their home town. They seem to forget that
this money so sent out might otherwise have been largely
returned -to them by those with whom they should have left
this business. Therefore, when in need of printed matter of
any kind, whether farmer, business roan or professional man,
always extend first consideration to
The Post
Publishingouse