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We will pay the following prices for Selectee No. 1
Poultry, Dressed Poultry to be bleat in mouth and
dry picked—all feathers off—and starved properly,
Dressed
Spring (lhkik File ooer(111. ,27
Si to 0 1h. .25
" 5 in 5h lb. ,1:4
44 to 5 Ib, .22
4 t 45 1h, ,21
tinder 11b. .20
old Hens over 5 111 ,22
4}to:i Ib..,. 20
liressecl
Did -dens 4 to 4 Ib 17
to 4 111 .11
3to13511, .11
" under alb .08
Young Ducks 5 Ib, and over .22
Young Duel: o tinder 5 ib, .211
Roosters 5 Ib. and over., .15
Roost under 51b .13
Live Poultry taken at Market value according
to duality.
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P1-iONis 66
O.at �Y rrL 1uc
BRUSSELS
.,.,o...,,,m.,,,�
News of Local Interest
Going South.
At 5.30 a.m. Saturday morning •r
flock of Wild Geese hovered over
Brussels for 10 or 15 minutes and
then continued southwatrcl. They -
made themselves heard with their
honk -honk,
Assisted At Jubilee Services.
The Seaforth Expositor last week
in their wrfceup of the Jubilee Ser-
vices of the North Street United
church says ;—Mrs. A. W. Barker,
of Brussels, sang very effectively in
the evening, "Consider and Hear
Me."
Circulars a Waste.
Much of the flood of circulars
'chat cones to citizens here through
the mails never reaches any further
than the waste paper basket in the
vestibule of the Post Office. It's
food for thought, Mr. Advertiser,
that you don't find any copies of
The Post along with them.
New Companies.
New companies to the number of
139 with an authorized capital of
$38,281,024 were reported to the
Monetary Timet• during the week -end
Oct. 22, 1927, as compared with 85,
with $332,6.12,790 of capital, in the
preceding week, and with 77, with a
total capitalization of 521,859;710,
the corresponding week of las& year.
Roses Bloom in October.
Palmerston Spectator: — S. H.
Cunningham has rose: which were
picked in his garden this week and
they are very fine specimens of gar-
den rases. Roses are also in bloom
on the bushes at the Club House.
Mr, Cunningham had raspberries out
of his garden last week. These were
picked from eve)' bearing buohes.
Masterly Comedy Relief in New
Vidor Production.
King Vi for, the recognized mas-
ter of comedy relief, as witness
"The Bii, r Parade," has a worked out
the same treatment for "liardclys
the Magnificent," his Metro -Gold-
wyn -Mayer ,
yn.Ma ny•er 7rocluction starring
tarring
Joan Gilbert, that comes to the
Grand Theatre on Thanksgiving Day
and die, following two days. It is
cleverly and smoothly interlaced
with laughs throughout, with such
delineators of comedy as Kari
Dane, "Slim" of "The 131g Parade,
George K. Arthur, John T. hurray
and Lionel Delmore. Eleanor Board-
man i, I('lulitig woman.
Hunting Licenses.
The license fee for non-residents
to hunt and shoot game birds and
rabbits in Ontario is 3.20 plus a (1011111'
for issuing enc The ret to hunt
and :shoo. larger game, to non-resi-
dents i $ 10 in auldition to a dollar
Tor issuing. Ontario residents may
hunt deer for the Zee of $3.50, its
ed.lition to :fifty cents for issuing
though far'me'rs actually living upon
and tilling their own land its Hall-
hurton, Muskoka, Parry Sound, Nip-
issing and Manitoulin, and in chat.
part of the province north and west
thereof, may kill one door each for,
their own use during theopen sea-
son, for a fee of eighty cents, plus
twenty cents for issuing. An On
111'10 resident may ,luta 0)00se a11t1
caribou for a fee of 55.50, in ad-
dition to fifty cents for issuing. Resi-
'dlI'Is of Ontario may hunt and trap
fur -bearing animals for a fee of
114,50, plus fifty cents for issuing.
Brother Married.
The Clinton News -Record last
week had the following matai'nlonial
note, the groom being' a brother of
Hen Whitmore, of the Post Staff: --
Tho marriage took place at 'the Ont-
ario street United church parsonage,
Clinton, on Thursday last of Ethel
Verna, daughter of Mr.. and Mrs.
Alex Elliott, and Raymond Whitmore
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Whitmore
all of •Goder'ich township. The cer-
emony was performed by 'he Rev.
A. 11. Doan and, the young couple
were unattended. The bride wore
her tl quelling costume, a frock of
sand crepe with bine hat and coat,
She latter trimmed vetch
grey fur.
•
After the ceremony the bridal party
drove to the home of rho bridges
parents, where the wedding feast
was spread. They left by train from
Scatfovth the same afternoon on a
trip to Toronto and Hamiliton, Mr,
thnrnd hr
residence
1nlFrederiick se aro t eek
Clinton,
Opened On Tuesday.
The deer season opened on Tues-
day of this week.
Always Welcome.
'Send us in your loyal news. The
Post is always glad to get the items
that make the home paper interesting
locally and to friends of Brussels at
a distance.
Two Minutes Silence.
In accordance with the arrange_
molts for the observance of Armis-
tice Day sanctioned by His Majesty
the King, the people of Canada are
invited to mark the occasion by a
two minutes' silence at 11 o'clock
a.m. on Friday, the 11th of Novem-
ber.
No Quail Shooting,
Quail are not legitinlats game in
Ontario this year. To give the birds
a chance to mmntiply there will be
no open season. Iron. Charles Mc-
Crae announced at the conclusion
of Cabinet council. Heretofore, a
three-day open season on the bird:
in the counties of Essex and Kent
was declared each year.
Indian Agriculturalist.
A report of .the department of. In-
dian affairs states that agricultural
condicions on the reserves in Ontario
have very much improved in the last
five or six years. There are 0 great
many more Indians farming at the
iatime
)resentthan there were as few
years ago. The number of stock on
some of the reserves has more than
doubled.
White Steers a Feature.
The Canadian Countryman had the
following to say about Archie Mc-
Donald's
c-
Don ld s shipment to the Fcedc,'
Show last month:—"One of the most
interesting ft tures at the Toronto
Feeder Show last week was, the car-
load of white Shorthorn steer's shown
by A. L. McDonald, Brun. els, Ont.
t f
This t the est 'ul c. oto straight
white steers eva.r seen on the Toronto
market, These white steers received
t
'che white ribbon, standing fourth
u
I
While it 011
' their class. �V required l t
ce
months for Mr. McDonald 1 ilcl tog this
load together, his efforts wet re-
warded, for it stimulated the intel.t:,t
of J. M. Boobcr, of i.anta ter, Penn-
sylvania, to such an extent that he
paid 50 per cwt, for them. The ) 2
steers averaged 1,017 sus. 'Trees are
apparently some good white Short-
horn bulls around Brussels.
Sells Their Creamery.
The Clinton News -Record refers
to a sale in that town by two :fanner
Brussels boyo:—Tho Gunn Langlois
Co, has bought out the Clinton
Creamery, which has been carried on
by the Itozell Bros., for some year,,
and takes possession about the mid-
dle of Novemlbe, Elton Rozell will
cnn'1inu0 as buttermatker but both
brothers are interested in farming,
Ernest Mozell having moved out to
the farm in Stanley township recen-
tly purchased by them from James
Jackson. The Gunn Langlois people
intend buying all :the cream 'they
can •get and will no noubt make a
succuss of their new enterprise, as
they usually do of anything they un-
dertake. They will have a complete
line now, butter, eggs and Dout:1.y.
No town in Huron County offers so
complete a market for the products
of the farm as Clinton does, and no
other tower in the county pays out 00
much ]honey during he year to the
farmers.
WE FOUND THIS remedy, Mrs.
Sybillia Spalme, Tonsilitis nearly 99
percent su100514 treating Sore Throats
Head Colds, Bronchial Asthma,
Cough, Bronc'hi'tis, Catarrh, and
Tonsil Diseases. Results good, or
money back. For Sale at H. 13, Al-
len's Drug Store, Brussels.
Walkerton Hospital is having an
X-ray machine installed,
78 were eoan101ttetl to Bruce Co,
c
jail for currant year, compared with
47 for previous 12 months, Meals
cost 1.61/2 cents per day.
Sheep stealing has been going on
in Bruce Peninsula and James Clem-
ents, a farmer 02 Eldcrslie, Inas plea-
ded guilty and will come up for son-
. thrice,
en-.thrice.
V 111.1o1„nm,:..
THE BRUSS-ELS POST
WEDNESDAY, NOV, 2,1(1, 1927.
Huron Cattle Hard to Beat
51,1 .'.r. :(it loot .,f white st'er:- ever =„•n 011 h '1'oruotn u'I: \ r.l:. 1'h••w.. nt i d in the
1cc.at ')'ionto 1",,.�1(v' Show le, A. 1,. Mellenald, Bee...4., chit. 'I'u. v .i,, oral run.:i•l-,:.hi. iir..e: a, in.lud-
ing th.:c of J. al. liouh[•r, 1.aneasii.t'. Ponn:ylvani,, who paid :.:1 ver v:ct. tor thew, (Court. ,•y of eamt,iiau
t'oullti•yuuul, t
Mentomble EvelW in. +'tl. T
hisdoll`t of tI e Empire.
ehar1es C'oZ
BIRTH OF KING WILLIAM 111.
Two hundred and seventy-seven
years ago, on the 4th Nov sad, r,
1650, Prince William IIh of Crams-,
afternvards King Wiliam III, of thus.
land, was born at The Hague in Hol-
land.
His great-grandfather was the fam-
ous Prince William the Silent, who
had rescued the Netherlands from the
tyrannical power of Spain and was
the real founder of the independence
and the greatness o1' tfic Dutch is ••
puplic., while his father was
Prince William TI., who, as Staot.
holder, of chief magistrate, hs i
raised the Republic to the highest
point of its commercial Prosperity.
and his mother was the eldest daugh-
ter of King Charles I. of England.
When Prince William II. died the
office of stacltholdor was abolished,
and 'c:he soveriegn power, which had
so beneficially exercised by the
Princes of Orange, passed into 21.1
hands of John D. Witt, who was ap-
pointed the guardian of Prince Wil-
liam III. De Witt retained his sup-
remacy for twenty-two years, and
as the tart of which e was 'ate
party h ch h t
head was lio:tile to the House of Or-
ange the young prince grew up sur-
rounded by enemies, a fact which
was responsible for his cultivating -
the cold and reserved manner which
made hien so unpopular with his Eng-
lish subjects in later years.
In 11172 Holland was invaded by
a formidable French artily, and the
Dutch people rose in revol. againa
their government, De Witt was
murdered by a mob at The Hearne.
and Prince William, who was veiled
save t, cyte[
upon to ,av his country, was elected
StartnofCaptain-General ler,
t
nd
Admiral for life. 11e stopped 21 .'
further advance of he • enemy 0+1
land by opening the sluice gates and
flooding the country, while on th.'
sea, the Dutch fleet, under the com-
mand of Admiral de Ruyter, de-
feated the allied fleets of England
and Frame, but -h.' struggle was
continued for many years with very-
ing fortune.
William's Marriage in 1577 was a
diplomatic^ triumph. It deprived the
French monarch of his Englirlt ally,
for William's wife, Mary, who was
the eldest daughter of James, Duke
of York, and niece of King Charles
iI, stood second in the line of suc-
cession to che English throne. Charles
II. was succeeded dy James II. in
1685, and the new sovereign at once
crnnmen[:ad his ill-advised and ill-
fated efforts to re-establish the Rom-
an Catholic church in England. 1-Iis
short reign was marked by numerous
acts of tyranny and oppression,
which finally resulted in William be-
ing invited by 'che English people
"to bring over an army and secure
their infringed liberties."
William landed at Brixham Har-
bour on the 5th. November 1688,
and his Dutch army met with no op-
position during its march to London.
Janles fled to France, and on the
13th February, 1689 William and
_Mary were formally proclaimed joint
sovereigns of Great Britain, but it
was distinctly understood that the
administration of the realm should
be the function of the king alone.
During his reign of fourteen years•
William proved himself to be a great
statesman and diplomatist, and he
worked indefatigably for the wel-
fare new subjects,but 'he
nt of his n v
failed to secure their affection, prin-
cipally because he made no attempt
to cultivate their good -will or to
make his beneficial projects accept-
able 'co then), and it was not until af-
ter his death, which took place on
the Gt.h, )larch, 170..9
, that the British
nation
realized ] true worth. Pos-
tt i.y has ,justly tanked him among
the ablest and the wisest of British
monarchs but his military skill and -
his v'ic'tories on the battlefield have
been magnified out of all proportion
to tiler real significance and impor-
tance.
egimental Piping Awards Announced
1 Inter-Iteghnentai Trophy preaentgd by 11. N. neatly, president of the Canadian
Padac. 2 Lt. Charles Dunbar, winner of the trophy. 3 Piper' Nell Sutherland.
winner of second trophy.
5,a question of military status was ruling Pipe -Major McPherson, of the
Toronto Scottish Regiment, ranks for
second prize of 550.00 and Pipe -
Sergeant Hugh McBe , of the
Calgary Highlanders, for third prize
of 525.00. Piper Neil Sutherland, of
the Twelfth Signal Battalion, Cana-
dian Corps of Signallers, Regina, is
awarded the first place m the com-
petition for a trophy of equivalent
value as Champion Pipe Player,
Canadian Militia, the trophy to be
hold by the contestant who wins it in
two successive competitions and the
trophy remaining the property of the
unit to which the winner belongs.
Neil Sutherland receives $100.00 cash
as winner, Second in this competition.
is Pipe -Major Janles Hamilton, of
the Canadian Fusiliers, London
Ontario, who receives a substantial
cash prize.
involved in the regimental bag-
pipe competition held at the Banff
Highland Gathering in September,
the final decision as to the holders of
the trophies was referred by mutual
consent to the Minister of National
Defence, under whose authority the
competition was held. The decision
has just been given by Major-
General Thacker, Chief of General
Staff, to the effeet that the trophy
given by Mr. E. W. Beatty, chairman
and president of the Canadian Pacific
Railway, as originally offered to
pipers from Highland Regiments, be
awarded to Lieutenant Charles Dun-
bar, IJ.0,1V1. -•Argyle and Sutherland
Highlanders of Canada, Hamilton,
Ontario-- this being accompanied by
a cash prize of $100,00. Under this
HURON COUNTY
(:oderieh i, r, - ,i g:,nizing the bate- 1,
ball tern, fin u„xl '.1,
R'm. IVal".'11, of (',Motu, lea, in -I
stalled the helve liutdirg systeu, in'
his hnuet' and lean
The po' i''" tl in change the date nY
theplunieipnl elertim,c in (iodetichl
vyn,c, 11,4 paled by the 1l1ity[n'1 vol 0,
Dr. (1. \V. Knapp, "f Ilensitll, has I
c"innouncing
the opening of our new
PRODUCE PANT
at
S 1 R.C"t� .1 .! ' GR Dy ONTARIO
ARI'O
Tuesday, November 8th, 1927.
On and after that date, we will be in
the market for your
CREAM POULTRY EGGS
We pay cash daily and return contain-
ers daily.
Cream prices good until November 12.
Special
No.1 -
No. 2 -
- 42c
-, - 41c
- 33c
f.o.b. your station. We pay express charges.
Make your next shipment to
SWIFT CANADIAN CON Limited
STRATFORD - ONTARIO
sold his dental practice to Dr, MCTag-
gait, of'Ioronto, hot a former IItu'nn-
1te.
Henry &rrker, shipper at the O. N.
R,., Gnderich, had several bones 111 his
foot broken when some iron bars fell
m1 it.
Mrs. Murray and Mins Steele were
presented with life membership cert1-
ficates by the W. M. S. of Seaforth
Piesbyterlan Church,
Lawrence Smiley, Dungannon, has
disposed of his hardware and tinware
stock to R. A. McKenzie, who has
combined it with his store,
Steve Murray. of McKillop Town-
ship, was badly bruised and had a rib
broken, when a truck collided with
his wagon on the highway.
Fred Elliott, of Clinton, has signed
up with the pronto Ravines, Ontar-
in professional hockey team. Fred
played with Owen Sound champions
and also in Milwaukee.
While adjusting a belt on a thresh-
ing outfit, Alvin Moir, of the Thames
Road, was painfully injured. In some
way, his hand became entangled and
twirled with the belt with such force
as to dislocate his shoulder joint,
Arthur Kestle, of Stephen Town-
ship, met with a serious accident,
while assisting at a threshing. His
body was crushed between the tractor
and tank to such an extent that he
was Burt internally, He was rushed
20 Exeter hospital, where he is being
rated for. Hopes aye entertained for
his recovery,
PERTH COUNTY
A Mitchell man was fined $100 and
costs for having liquor in a hotel
room and not being registered.
Roy, the 3 -year-old son of Wm. and
Mrs. Bennewies, of Brndhagen, was
badly injured when he fell out of hie
father's car, as the latter was backing
it nut of the garage, and the wheels
passed over his body. He was rushed
to the Seaforth hospital.
BRUCE COUNTY
Kincardine population is 2127, six-
ty-two less than in 1026.
Alph Dientert, who has been car-
rying on a tailor business at Mildmay
for nearly three years, has taken a
position in Toronto.
Neighoring ministers were also
present and a male quartette of
Lueknow assisted with the song ser -
rice.
Jack Cain, of London, and 0
grandson of T. F. Cain, owner of
the Cain House, Lu,•know, has re..n-
• ted the hotel for a term of years.
Besides receiving 0 prize for her
essay on "Canada" :hiss Justine O'-
Malley, daughter of J. and Mrs. O'-
Malley of Teeswater, received a
beatiful bronze medal from 'lie
Department of Education.
Kincardine needs new houses and
citizens are asking the town council
to submit a by-law making a se's as-
sessment on new houses for a term
of years.
Herman Stewart a well-known far-
mer of Kincardine township, was kil-
led when he fell from a load of
wood on a wagon at his farm sit-
uated on the Greenock -Kincardine
boundary.
The corner stone of the new Bible
School of Knox church, Ripley, was
laid by Rev. J. A. McGillivray, D.D.,
of Guelph, ex -Moderator of the Gen-
eral Assembly, in the presence of a
number of interested spectators.
B, tier theManwith
m
Eye to tize/Sky
theltvlapwit
tothe f i,
HisEar
,1c^
LL through its long, successful history,
General
Motors of Canada has had its eye to the horizon
listening not for what followed, but looking
always toward the thing ahead.
And General Motors has seen many of its visions
realized. . . .
It has seen a great industry grow up in Canada to
supply the Canadian family with a means of trans-
portation to meet its needs and resources, to answer
the desire for style, dependability, luxury,
It has seen, in the Canadian Fisher Body plants, the
perpetuation of Canadian ideals of craftsmanship.
It has seen, in the General Motors Research labor-
atories, the development of countless advances and
refinements on which much of modern motoring com-
fort depends.
It has seen, on the General Motors Proving Grounds,
the proof of principles which are ,now accepted
factors in automobile design and construction.
It has seen the triumph of co-operative purchasing
and manufacturing methods with their resultant
economies to be shared with the buyers of General
Motors .cars.
And the eyes of General Motors are still to the
horizon . , . still seeking new ways to improve
General Motors cars and to place the cars within:
reach of ever -widening circles of Canadian buyers:
4a•42a9
CHEVROLET PONTIAC OLDSMOBILE OAKLAND M0LAUC)NLIN-QUICK
LASALLE• OADILLAC GENERAL MOTORS TRUCK
ENERAL MOTORS
or CANADA limited
Home Office and Factories - Oshawa, O.-.tario