HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-11-9, Page 2WEDNESDAY, NOV, 0th, 1127.
THE BRUSSELS POST
nted
rffi.i
We pay Highest Cash Price for
Cream. 1 cent per lb. Butter Fat
extra paid for all Cream delivered
at our Creamery.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Brussels Creamery c
Phone 22
>iJ
Limited
CHARGED WITH LIFTING EIGHT
HEAD OF CATTLE
Accused Admits Taking Six Head,
Offering to Pay for Them
Alfred Paul, of St. Mary's, 'a':')
contacts a butcher business s: in that
town and at Kirkton, was brought
before Magistrate Reid an Monday
and charged with theft of eight head
of cattle, the property of Fred Ellor-
ing'ton•, of Exeter; on or about the
27th of July last. Paul elected sum-
maryis
but. .
trail by the magistrate,
he was not represented by counsel
'ne reserved his plea, on the advice of
Crown Attorney Holmes. He w:ts
admitted to bail of 910,000 to ap-
pear before the magistrate on Nov-
ember 1st.
The accused, admitted that he had
taken six head of cattle and stated
that he was ready to pay for them.
Ile said he used the cattle in his
business.
The arrest was the result of a good
piece of work by Provincial Officer
A. Whiteside. When the loss of the
cattle was reported 'there was no
clue from which to trace them, until
it was learned that a man accompan-
ied by two girls had been seen driv-
ing a bunch of Battle along the road
at night about that time. A des-
cription of this man was obtained
and further investigation revealed
the fact that Paul and two young
daughters, and an their being inter-
viewed they admitted having been
ques-
tion,
tripin < .
their father on the with t1
thathe
tion, believin:;, no doubt,
had bought the cattle in the ordinary
course of business. The arrest fol-
lowed,
The cattle were on pasture
lana
belonging to Ellerington in the town-
ship of 'Lisburne. A peculiar feature
of the case is that Paul and Ellering-
ton have been on very friendly re-
lations. (Gode•rieh Sinal.)
FEEDING COWS FOR WINTER
MILK PRODUCTION
The aim in feeding for winter milk
production is to produce the greate-t
amount of milk and butter at the
least possible expense.. In order to
do this roe must imitate. as closely as
possible, condition: during the e,ariy
summer when there is abundant,:, of
palatable, succulent teed,
The ration Hurst he well balanced.
That is, there must he sufficient pro-
tein to balance the carbohydrate,.
Legume hay is usually the , heaipe: t
source of protein. Th t fere, the
dry tom h fete should containa-large
a percentage of either elover or alf-
alfa hay as possible,
Succulent tells keep the cows in
gooth health and are vory nrdatn ti
therefore, either roots in
should he feel to enable the cows to
make the best use of the other feed;
-in the ration.
For maximum milk production the
ration should contain a liberal al-
lowance of concentrates. Conccrt-
trates are usually the expensive part
of the ration. Therefore, in feeding
concentrates, each cow should be fed
individually. The amount it will pay
to feed will depend partly an the
price of concentrates as compared
with roughage and, partly on the a-
mount and quality of milk -tacit cow
is producing.
At the Fredericton Expet'lmental
Station the cows are fed all the mix-
ed clover and timothy hay 'they will
eat with from 25-40 pounds of corn
silage or up to 50 pounds of roots.
Heavy producers are fed 1 pound of
grain for each 314 pounds of mill(.
Medium producers are fed 1 pound
of grain for each 4 pounds of milk
that they produce. The grain ration
fed is composed for the most part of
1 part bran, 1 part crushed oats, 1
part linseed meal and 2 parts brewers
grain, and. 1 percent of salt i$ added
at mixing. -
A LIR OF Si;1 F■SACItiFIGE
R'llfrid 'P. (Irerntelf heir Spezia Nearly
!rorty Year,' Among Deep
h icei , +'1 1 et. ., i lice tc.
The .revs, rhos lila Ma1,';ty Icing
1 t'z'•,. ih•• t• cult ..
istr, lt';I1'ri+1
T.
.i•. ••d s; i,;n hit,•ce, •
'It tl'x t,.1 bt tut,
u .. ,,,•Cat u; ;.
'r:. 1h.. t,,,t 1•.
`ltit•a;.• 11,18
fel. tvit .�
%ILLn *Olin w.
poop,o
,+t f f,
•.I n,n • ne• 11, ,ul,•I NA
81. ,1ulh-rn a-1 to -n •r,•,.,.,.=1
hl. -i.rta ei lee
d 1 .,,r i u. ; . .
t has 1.. •,cd tf ,
value en th.• wed. :net'nntpin•ie"i ,+y
t r Ifrr. tits et•Ii ,turd::: the f...a .111,t;
j eight ye.tr,+.
littf;•I!. ae„ +ft we vers
edecrtecl at l . r.! Sou at 1, t ,oi
, 0; , tl . im,
lieu. aurr .>n u•.. Si.' et•.ierfek
'1 t ,l ;tet:,tt
h has e -t., ,•,u.d a wide variety. of
d'cies_ unique career, t•'.'-
eu1 cAlae anE:aa
d pit tea.
B. ef it :',r ,i. ;al nii....i,ntary, lie is a
alas,- e rand to is a lu.allc?
„t .he Pc, in Newfoundland and
r e at, Dr. Grenfell
en, *•e•d th. ter„ of the Royal Na -
11,,, i Y ere.% to I) •ep Sas Fieher-
meu of Great Britain in 1829, He
I nu r
ill., first hospital ship for
the Lritt..h fishermen who piy their
trade in the North Sea. On that ship
'i,• cruised with the fishing fleet, it is
related, front the Bay of Biscay to
Poland. lie was also one of the
leaders of a movement that resulted
in the establishment of homes tor
fishermen on land and in the pro-
vision of mission ships to minister to
them at sea. In 1892 Dr. Grenfell
turned his attelltioll to the needs
the fishermen and settlers on the
coasts of Labrador and in the re-
moter parts of Newfoundland, and
began a work that has occupied him
until the present time. Be estab-
lished his headquarters and the head-
quarters of his missionary and medi-
cal activities at St. Anthony, Ntld.,
and has been responsible for the
rounding on the coasts of Newfound-
land and Labrador of four or eve hos-
pitals, an orphanage and a school.
1.1,• has taken a leading part in the
opening of a series of co-operative
stores to supply the wants of the fish-
erfoik and others, and has started a
number of small industrial schemes
for their benefit. 10 a hospital ship
he has cruised up and down the coast
of Labrador summer after simmer
ministering to the iuhabttauts of the
small scattered villages. At other
seasons be has been busy writing and
lecturing to raise funds with which
to carry on his work.
Dr, Grenfell has been honored by
a variety of .•rgaaizations for the
humanitarian labors he has carried
on. He has received honorary de-
grees from a number of universities,
among them the University of To-
ronto, which made hien one of its
Doctors of Medicine in 791
1'and
awards from a numberof learned
societies in Greet Britain sand in the
United States. .He was made Com-
panion of the Order of St. Michael
and 5t, George in 11106, and now has
been elevated tho raulr of a knight
of that order. Canadians, as a re-
sult of the action ut their Parliament,
are not now themselves recipients of
knightly Liths from the Soto e eign,
but manv of them will freet that a
knighthood conferred on ,.u:h a ratan
as Dr. tirentell is a fitting roe:ognition
01 meritorious services.
It =honhl altr.ly s ',e burro in mind.
that cows v,li not Irak., the air t
pros t tbi. use of feed vol -0110 i car
1e 1.,: y are fed and w•ttt l'r d i : •Q'
arty, given c•otttfortable quarters and
allowed to exercise each ,.lay.
- STORING EQUIPEMENT
Preparing the be.es for winter aid
puttin • then away in cellar or p:Pk--
her case is not the only work that
demanie the beekeeper's attention
in the fall, In addition to the -be:•t
there is a lot of valuable equipment
that requires careful storage during
:he winter if losses are to be avoided
The most valuable asset a beekeeper
can have, outside of his bees, is a
good supply of drawn combs but if
these are not carefully protected
when not in use on the hives they
may be totally destroyed by rodenvs
or wax moth larvae.
The best method of storing combs
is to place them in supers and then
stack the supers one above the ocher
in tiers with a queen excluder or
inverted hide cover beneath and an-
other rover on top of each pil:•, this
will save the combs front the ravages
of rats or mice. To prevent da-
mage from wax moth the supers of
combs should be stored in some un-
heated buil:ling for the winter Wax
moth will not develop in low temnrr-
atute and 21 degrees of frost will de -
'troy them without harming the
combs. Any unused foundation
beet wrapped in paper and stored in
tight fitting boxes. Foundation
t'tn-
•
should not he exposed to low-
iteratures as it .becomes very britele
when cold and is easily hrokem, Oth-
er equipment such as hive bo -lies,
supers, floor boards, cover- and 0:m-
pty frames should of course hr stor-
ed under never where it is eonve•n-
i3Ot to do any work that is necessary
io them during the winter. 'I'h.: ex-
ttucaat•, honey tanks. capping meiter
and Ganey pump should be thur--
'u:hly cleaned and kept in a dry
41tte•f, for winter to prevent ru,t;uv,,
t'.
Proper care aid rtoral.o
imnent when acct in u -o retards ,i,•-
-•rilitn.dou and reduces rout of pro-
duction.
SOME NEW VARIETIES OF
FRUITS
Th, Itici,len of Horticulture 0f
the Itominion Experimental Fan•nt,
ilranch ha, for many years h.•.•,t
c4rryimx on breeding work with d;r.
fe1'ent kinds of fruit and each s• :r
t't hili, . of spec-
ial pi puns - pt ,clued. ."+mon, th•t,
n.ew taf.letius of apples that hire
been bred dtu'ing• recent r,ers and
have been planted in enmmerclal nr•
chant; as soon as stork was av,tiluble
I•:ntft,,t. T'h • ,lbrlha i. an early sp-
ill,- of I>urh stet, and Mdutoah
d4Uality. Well O'olotn'ed and attractive,
Lobo i- fatly equal to McIntosh in
npi,eat's.r e, hitt is net of quite as
good quality. it is earlier than 1I -
ee 0'
Inst ,: raid I,t..minendr•d for
Eastern Ontario and Ql.t :air.
5 to al additional varieties of
hardy pear, fruited ill ihtiti, They
nt',- crosses s between I1Utelan pears
:end some of the Netter commercial
varieties grown in Canada and sane
of thein show great promise as hardy
pears of fairly good quality. They
are more' resistant to blight than
manly other varieties and may be
grown in colder districts. Five new
varieties of evencearing strawberries
are exceptionally promising and are
expected when thoroughly tested, to
prove superior to existing sorts.
A hem in Ulster lays two eggs at
a time, somc-'cimee three. The owner
explains this by saying that the hen,
a last year's pullet, had sunstroke
when a month old. Since it haat
grown) up the hen leas on four days a
week laid two eggs at ati,me and has
twic-e laid three.
To Develop Empire Settlement.
The British Empire League, ac-
cording to advice. from London, has
issued a brim Iture appealing to
mayors throughout Great Britain. to
to -operate with tine mayors of thole
nameealtes and other towns in the
Dnntinlnns in order to develop Em-
pu•„ s,9.Lh)ritent.
L. C, Amery, Secretary of
:Otic tor the Dominions, in a fore -
nerd, declares that the probie'm of
distrihntiug the populatlnu of the
British Isles in other parts of the
Empire is one of first importance.
"We Billet know and have sympathy
with the views and tispiratiots of the
Dominions and they with ours," he
says.
The "Brats i;ta,te."
The "tiros ;;tone which dates
from 1104, has b, en placed in tete
Town Ha11, Annan, S"+otland, The
stone belonged originally to the for-
tified houses of the• Bruce Lords at
Annan. The Bruer referred to in the
iusctiption is tither the 51.11 Robert
de l3rus, who +li,d in 1304, or his
son Robert, the illustrious King or
Scotland. The stone was discovered
recently in the possession of a woman
of North Devon, who gifted it to the
Town Council at Annan.
Pur Farming Industry In 13.0,
British Columbia is rapidly organ-
izing a fur farming ttidustry of con-
siderable importance, and some am-
bitious schemes for the ranching of
muskrats are being put into effect.
The province had already an anneal
revenue of $3,000,000 from raw furs,
but with innumerable valleys suit-
able for fur -farming enterprises and
an Ideal climate, the possibilities are
bright.
Motion Picture Producing Industry.
The city of Victoria, B.C-, have
been authorized by a vote of 2,137 to
663, to guarantee bonds of a motion
picture producing industry there, to
the extent of $800,000 after $500,000
has been raised by British motion
picture distributors and exhlbtl rs.
Violent Headaches
UntilShe Found
(' Fruit-a,tives"
MRS. MICHAEL COULIS.
Once again a former sufferer, grateful for
relief given by "Fruit-a-tives", returns
heart -felt thanks: -
"I used to feel tired out and rundown,
and periodically had severe headaches,"
writes Mrs. Michael Coatis, Killaloe Sta-
tion, Ontario, "After using 'Fruit-a-tives'
the headaches and tired -out feeling soon
disappeared, and for two years now I
have been in the best of health."
For over 20 years "Fruit-a-tives" has been
a positive boon to thousands of Cana-
dians visited with headaches, listlessness,
rheumatism, constipation and kindred ills
due to failure of the kidneys, stomach,
bowels or liver to act properly.
"Fruit-a-tives" is so universally auccesa-
ful because it is a natural medicine-mdde
from the intensified juices
of fresh fruits
combined with tonics, Let it help you,
too. Buy a box, to -day, 21c and 50e,
everywhere.
MY LADY'S
COLUMN.
f+++++++++.4-4..
TAR REMOVER
Soak a tar stain with pure lard.
then remove with turpentine and
clear spot with gasoline. Never
use soap. It sets tar.
PREVENTS STICKING
Before turning out a cake you
can prevent its sticking by sprinkling
the board or pan with powdered
sugar.
GLASS PACKING
o
If . you must move after your Win-
ter's fruit is put up, keep the jars
from cracking by cutting old inner
tubes the right length to slip over
them.
t'
GUM SPOTS -
Scrape chewing• gutta off, first,
with a dull knife. Then place thin
blotters on either side of material
and press with hot iron. Remove
ring with cleanser,
• i•
NEWPURSE
Black velvet, 'with three half -code
widely spaced, fashions a new bag
with rounded corners and 0 gold met.
al frame.
o i
APPLE FILLER
If you use diced apples alone;
with celery when staking chicken
salad, you will discover they make
an admirable' filler and give tang,
ODD SALAD
Grapes, sliced fresh tomatoes and,
cottage cheese make tt delicions
salad, With Romaine. Make cheese
balls with nuts for variety.
., 4.
FUR DUET
A fur coati is smart but a coat of
two flu's is smatter. A stunning
model in seal uses beaver for huge
shawl collar and barrel cuffs nearly
to the shoulder.
•
"DIFFERENT"CAULIFLOWER
Serve cauliflower cooked whole
Hollandaise sauce to give your
family something "different."
LATEST FLARE
The latest flare comes in the legs
of a new maize crepe pajama suit.
Starting at the knee, side flares cid'
eular in cut, give graceful fullness.
TASSIIIL NECKLINE
;. c,.
A brocaded evening gown, with a
circular flared skirt, achieves dis-
tinction :from its skillfully painted
deeolletage of gold with a tassel
suspended from the centre.
HONEY TASTED
Melted honey, added to beverages
for swcetning, gives a 'smooth pleas-
ant taste, that improves the consist-
ency as well as the flavor,
*omen Voters Prefer Bachelors.
Women voters outnumber meta in
four oonttituencies in Britain, and in
two of these, Cheltenham and one
Glaegow division, the present 112.P.'n
are bachelots.I
''
Definition
Johnny, wl21t is steam?
Water thac's crazy with the heat.
AN IITSTORIC ITIN'(1.
Queen 1'llltstboth ('aye it to Her 1Ratw
prier+, the Fart of Essex,
According to 1,emtat d
eaft
tot!
from London, the famous ring pre-
sented to Go, Merl of Essex by Queen
Eliztabctit has been sold for 11546.
There is to tragic piece of history
:asseelated with the ting, 'i'he Iuarl
or I'lssex was the handsomest and
most favored eunrties at the court
of "flood Queen Iless," 'Though only
t1 youth of 22 whe,i he took his piaci,
nt. court, be was 140011 chief favorite
wit the Queen, despite the (11210 ri 1'
(heir ages. I4!iztth. th at that tanto
being almost 60 years of tele. The
favor of Kings ana i;t'.•eos Of ileum,
nays, however, was dangerous, and
proved so for less -x,
He Incurred the enmity of many
dlstingulahed turn atinnnad-
ing Sir 'Waiter Raleigh. whtl•' bis own
high spirit rnttde the strain of con-
stantly dancinc, aitent''nce 00 Eiltta-
heth partiewarly tt'ltrntne,
In the year r l60o '•ar',•:c was im-
prisoned for )(cline in ',•1rinus ways
in opposition to the ep(pleaude et tit,'
Queen, but through the intoreesanm
or Sir Pi.alleis 1101(11 ho ass 501,1
liberated, 111011 L prevented from re-
turning to emir!, in I1,ul ho at-
temptod In incite a r•v'tlniion on his
own behal', which Mot od ebnrt1ve,
and drew no grtlater follewrl0 Ilhan
some hate hundred peiple, After a
trial 111 was eond'nnne d In i nth.
From his prison c' ll P.,sox 'tent
the ring that had bean elven hint by
Elizabeth in the heyday of his favor
back to lis r•';al thmor. Had th•
ring reached the Queen then' is little
doubt that his life would have been
spared, in Culnlment of tho to,'nl
pledge, 13ut his en -tales antletl a'ed
some such sit •ntpt on lets parr to
reach the Queen's ear, and the bear-
er of the rime was intercepted and
the ring stolen. On Feb. 21, 1601,
Essex was hanged. The ting bears
the portrait of lb]izabeth, and in a
romantic, if tragic, link between the
present and the past.
The ring will be placed in a spe-
cial tomb in
c e
cial casket on the Queen's (asen
Westminster Abbey.
A STONE' 'I'F:MPLE
One of the Few Things Left by irt-
vaders of Sixteenth Century.
When the +Mohammedans invaded
the kingdom or Vijaayanagar in the
sixteenth century, they wrought tre-
mendous havoc on all the great
buildings of that great city, stays a
Writer in a Calcutta paper. To -day,
as one rambles over it, there is hard-
ly to be seen a structure that does
not show evidence of the iconoclastic
proclivities of the invaders.
It is interesting to note that one
of the unique structures among the
ruins, a temple car trade of stone,
has apparently been untouched. This
is the more striking as the:, temple,
in the courtyard of which the ear
stands, has been terribly treated,
some of the finest carving in the
whole city being broken and shatter-
ed out of all shape. This car is to
be found in the vicinity o2 the Vit-
thatlaswami Temple, not far from the
river.
At first appearance one is inclined
to think tho car itas been carved out
block o stow., but a closer
o a solid b ]c P
C
i othis i notso.
examination shows s
The joints between 2110 verities pests
are wonderfully well dont, and un-
less one loops at the structure care-
fully, it is not surprising the impres-
sion of solidity sh0ulu be stroll. The
Pilgrims who visit the place believe
that they obtain merit by turning
round the wheels which are elan
made of sten;', As a result of this
devotion, the axle has became very
much worn. Two elephants of stone
stand in front of the car,
Rarehot:ae,s in Luxury.
Asterus, a fantails French race-
horse,
aco-horse, is an inmate of a sttper-
luxurious racing stable belonging to
Mr, Robert Denman tit Maisons-
Lalitte, where the inmates are treat-
ed like spolld d children.
The stable has specially construct-
ed qutirtern fitted with the most mod-
ern er.ntrivanecs. Seven cows supply
the milk which in consumed as part
of their diet by 50 h•,ppy thorough-
breds. Powdered sueal of the high-
est grade is mixed with their oats
and corn. Quantities of cod liver oil
are provided for those names whose
constitution requires such treatment,
;:odium !sulphate ilejswits.
According to the Dominion De-
partment of dines eighty-three oc-
currence of sodium sulphate deposits
are to be funnel in Western Canada,
principally in Saskatchewan, and an
investigation of 27 of these show the
presence of over 116,000,000 tons of
hydrous salts, mainly sodium sul-
phate, This commodity is used in
Canada in the pulp and paper indus-
try and also in the glass, metallurgi-
cal, dye; textile and other industries.
Fishing Developed His Muscles.
Blank carne back from his fort-
night's holiday, brown and proud of
his bulging muscles.
"book at these arms," he said.
They were certainly in good cou-
ditfon. Elis listeners put it downs to
rowing, but Blank withered them
with scorn.
"Rowing be blowed," he snorted.
'I got them pulling in flab,"
Memorial to Wallace:
A memorial to Wallace, the great
patriot, and to Robert Bruce is to
be erected in Edinburgh in accord-
anee with a bequest. It has been
decided that the proposed memorial
shottid take the form of statues or
Wallace and Bruce, to be placed in
niches at the entrance of the ro'stle,
Calgary's Population.
A,ccotdtng to Henderson's (fly
Directory for 1927, the papulatian of
Calgary, Alberta, is 81,300, or an in-
crease of 3,900 over the year beteee.
Height of a Beaman Figure.
The height of a correctly-0top0r»
tinned human ftgttre is six data the
length of the right foot. ,
JUST BE GLAD. j THE POST OFFICE
Oh, heart of mine, we shouldn't
Worry so.
What t •e'miseel tt a rot , a nf to • lnt We
eottldn't Imre you know!
What 441'4,4, met of stormy pain,
.11.1' of sorrow': driving rain,
1f it blow,
lid huvo c're'ed in that dark hour
We have known;
When the tears fell with a shpw,v',
:111 :dote.
Were not shine and shower blo1hl
A$ the efrnc•inus master meant':
Let 11, l,•tiMor 'nu runlenl
1Vith hid: plan. -
For we 21111w not every morrow
Can be sail;
Su, forgetting all +ho dorrnw
Wo stave had,
l..ct us fold alvlty our 1 01'14
Attti eh•y our fols:.. baud,
Anti through all I11,• cunni1( year?
dust be �Ited.
--James W11110(.01111) 11licy,
PREMIER WILL PAY
WASHINGTON VISIT
Due in U. S. Capital Latter Part of
November-Willingdons Follow
December 6.
Hca 1'srclleney the Governor-Gen-
rlrll and Lally Willington will visit
1Wttshin it0(1 011 Doeornhof 0, 81111 not
Notentber (3, as previously reported.
Premier king will visit the Ameri-
can capital. on November 22, 29 and
24. Ott November 10 Premier Icing
Will attend n dinner in Quebec given
by the• Jeuncsic' ,Liberal Association
to Hon. Lucien Crouton, solicitor -
general. On Thursday, November
17, the Prime Minister will address
the Women's Canadian Club of Mon-
treal, and on Friday, 18th, he will
speak to the Men's Canadian Club.
Both speeches will he non-political
in charat't l', it is understood.
1927 Christmas Seals
The 1427
Christmas
Seals, in aid of
t h e Muskoka
and Toronto
Hospitals f o r
C onsetmptiver,
have just boon
issued. These
handsome
Seale, bearing
the dol.bie-
barred R a d
Cross, carry a.
message of
hope to those who are afflicted with
consumption. Every dollar received
through their sale is used for the
maintenance of patients.
The National Sanitarium Associa-
tion is in need of funds to carry on
the work of its hospitals at Muskoka
and at Weston. Why not buy these
Seals In lieu of others? Not only
will yo
f get good
value In r
otur
n but
your money will serve agmea greater end
Por it will
go to help someone 111
distress.
Look for the doable barred Red
Cross on every packet. None others
are genuine.
For sale by school children and
banks, or direct from the limas Seal
Department Stage Institute, Toron-
to 2, Ontario..
For the first time In '200 years,
pares of Wetntintter Abbey are be-
ing thoroughly cleaned,
Margot Asquith's latest book has
already netted her 950,000. This goes,
to show that tittle tattle about other
people is as popular in hook form as
in private conversation.
London's smallest shop, which
houses a .ue r r :,sl ul art furnishing
busincsa, is fifteen feet lung by 42
inches wide.
It has been estimated! that the
earth can maintain a population of
0,000,000,000, a total which will be
reached about 2100 at the present
rate of increase.
Sine() the return to two vent ger
penny postage, in July 1112d, 111,+
Ctinadian penplo have purchased a-
bout 911,000,000 More in post•tga
sttuupa than ill any previous car -
responding period. The result is that
in lite first five months of the pre-
sent Natal year the postal rev, nu
has made .t gain of ni ur1y 02,0011,0110
11411e the end 0f the fisted ,Cent• it
is said, in an Ottawa do::patch, .hof J+
"all losses due to the t'e•.:nmptiun of
penny pis+utsto trill be ut•ertakeu.'•
That i; (211(0 new,. It is :huhtiler,
and very striltilt , rel'leetitn upon
the pro: fierily of Ctutttda generally.
It is a fact that lower post8ee ntine-
ultes the pu:blie to write more bit-
ters, not only of a prirt,e nature, -
hut in the way of oomoai+;'u,, of Ia11
advertising and 0ducation:l uauro.
lly 11 reduction of prices en an ca-
nttal of Modet'n bliAlimiS the Past
Office l t, Iuern able to -1'1.021- a
much larger volume of correspon-
dence, to turn a Loss into as prospec-
tive gain, and to vision a profit hot-
ter than in the days when its price, i i.
wore higher. All business men know
something or this plan, or 1aRv of
economics. or whatever terns the ex-
jer1s give it for the moment.
I'te1
Canadian Post Office depart-
ment,
art-
ment, taken on the whole has been
very progressive. Especially in tho
last thirty years or so has its ad-
vancement been in keeping with that
of the country, When one thinks of
the scattered population and the vast
areas of the Dominion, the efficiency
of the department is the caut1 for
wonder, not that oecasion't11y
„''e to
makes mistakes. The latter, t as1. too
often the case in other walks of life,
,
is apt 'co be dwelt upon unduly when
the steady day by day excellencies of S'i
'the service, in fair weather and foul, I y'
are overlookeck In its present plans
for expansion of the service by the
use of the airplane, the Post Office
gives additional evidence that public
service is its first consideration.
May its business increase and its
revenues likewise.
• 1
•
ij
1
CREDITON GIRL BADLY
INJURED
Car in Collision Between Exeter and
Crediton
While driving from Crediton to
Exeter High School, a sedan owned
by W. F. Clark, and driven by his
daughter, Laura, accompanied by
three girl friends, all high school
students, collided with a car driven
by Peter Mclssaac of Dashwood, one
111tic wc,t
s !load on the
o f London
I concession leading to Crede t'tot. The
a:, turned over three times, and
Mtlsranc's car once, fru111 the fo1ce
of the impact. The girl.; were badly
shaken up -and the driver, Laura
Clark. suffered ,tenon: internal in-
juries. Dr. Graham was called to
the scene and had the injured rentov-
, cl to as nearby farm lnnlrs. 'i'h,r
wrecker from Exeter brought in `he•
disabled cars.
Sauna Article predict.= a subaancinl
export surplus for the year.
Use of American machinery leas
decreased since 1013 in Europe,
whereas Australasia is using twice
as much as before the war.
A hotel in Charlotte, N.C.,. hew
ordered 20 special beds (3 inches
longer than the average, in the
!lope that •2511 guests will stop
complaining about having to sleep
with their legs drawn up.
1
1
There are a great many ways to do a job of
printing ; but quality printing is only done one
way -THE BEST. We do printing of all kinds,
and no matter what your needs may be, from
name card to booklet, we do it the quality way.
P. S. -We also do it in a way to save you money.
The Post
Publishing
House