HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-10-14, Page 5RUSINES$ CARDS,
NO
J .SU
SUTHERLAND ERLAND
&SONS
LIMITED
OV 1x19' awarefo
WM. SPENCE
CONVEYANCER AND ISSUER
of MARRIAGE LIOENSEi3
Rice to the Post Office, Ethel. • 80.4
IEOAL AND CONVEYANCING.
M. SINCLAIR--
• Barrister, 8ofloitor, Conyeyaneer,
Notary Public; &e. Office --Stewart's Blook.
1 door North of Central Hotel.
Rolleltnr for the Metropoiitnn Bank,
AUCTIONEERS,
L'S. SCOTT AS AN AUCTION•
• can, will sell for better prices, to
better nieu, in less time eon 1000 chargee
than any ether Auctioneer in East Huron or
he won't *barge anythAtg. Dates and orders
sap .1 wave ue arranged at this nue e er by
pe..e 'out application.
LIME
LIVERPOOL -GLASGOW
LONDON-HAVRE -
Fine, modern steam-
ers - equipped with
every comfort Red
luxury. For infor-
mation apply agents,
Or
" 95Ki : StWToronto
W. H. KERR.
Agent Allan Line, Brneeele.
CENTRAL
STRATFORD• ONT,
Ontario's
BestB
Business Col
. i
Pups
Our ie tr
a uotldu are experienced.
at gearet placed t attention on and gradu-
ates rece vin placed in ns woo n t are
Streudents
applications any Mine.
meet,
tsroar may alue anytime, Send
for our free catalogue and see it it 1n -
r' terestR you. ®/
`Q _ D. A. MCLACHLAN,. Principal.
rdr raSY r.,,y rBY ra1Y tom'
b, '� far vit7
k.,..,.........................„..„.....,.
No School ever had truer friends
arhon its graduates than
n
B
ELLIOTT
•
Fat TORONTO, ONT.
This ie n School of Results -Splendid
results. M
d< riwork top our
the
-
students and for th
8 IrnPt1110 u,•
has been active famous
s 10 the We ti
�
building of our famous school. We
assist worthy atedenia to get employ-
ment. Oommenact a 'course now.
Oatalogne free.
6y+ Yo1nYon&Ohtarloaste, 1W. PriEnLLipOaTl.T., ,cy
r2
'iG av4e'4ga.rAa\r6A7a+tYRSI'9%'%a'
IBYI."u711427.1`GrvAYID'n4.1So7AVAVArl481'AGSY.7411:71.
j ENROL NOW
-I at the
LISTOWEL BUSINESS COLLEGE
1 Thotnugh Courses taught by
- Competent Teacheta.
�.. Nor particulars address-
EDWIN 0. MATTHEW8, ,
Llatowol, Ont.
,
WIXereeieeeerselearialmeezerrrterive re,
THE
Best Brains
in Canada have participated In the pre-
parationof our epleudid Houle Study
Conrees in Banking, Eoenotnies, Higher
Aooauntiagg, Commercial .Art, Show
Card Writing, Photography Journal-
ism, Short Story Writing, ?shorthand
and Booldceeping. Solent the work
which most interests yon and Write ue
for particulars,Add MORA
TOE- 5IIAW CORNESPONOENCE SCHOOL
801-7 Yongo 84•, Toronto
SIMIliMIWIngsnakslimammiestssumma
COLLEGE'
AT: HOME
Thoueanda of &inihitlous young pito,
pie are fast preparing In their own
hones to (monpy lucrative positions as
. etunographers, bookkeepers, telogra-
phots, otvil servants in feet every
sphere of ROtivities, You may finish at
college if � yon so wieh. Poeltione guar•
ant
sed, Enter college any day, Inds•
virtuThirty
Instruction, ex , Expert towhees.est
Thirty yams' ode. eSev, Largest
Speaktraine'
In eo ()anode. Seven colleges.
Spoalnl oopree for Nowhere,
toric
Affiliated
tLon 0f do nada toSutrlm e
r
Scheel 0l et ronwua Stiotton Business CoA
Inge, London,
Wingham Business College
HRS. 5004808, W. T. Mogan,
President. Prirtofpel,
t_tin
Saltines* Gard%
*twin Cilli, Norene Gibson, Burton
MacDonald, Caul Lamont:. Annie
�, Woods, Ralph 141uDvnttld, Earl Bowes,
Alice Davidson B Printer,-iiatiley
Ijelirnier, A ].'moor,-el,yal Linileay,
Marjory T'honcpsoil, Jimmie Woods, I
Marry Krauter, Bobby Gilchrist,
Lizzie Woods, Meddle Mtutruy, liar -
old
T. T. M'RAE old Vpdden, Ian Mcl)ouald, Those
marked • have missed one 0;• More
tests. 17, MOLELLAND, Petit,
B. MAONAUGHTON, Asst.
Tiirtdsay, Edith Dane, Jennie McKee,
AS. ANDERSON..
N RSON.
VETERINARY 5VROEON,1
S o or
u Vose to of ' e Moore, Office Ander,. I40gs, Llvury arable, Brussel,,, Toleplioµo
No. 2p,
M 13, M. G P. A Sr O.
M 0, H Village of Btueoeln,
Pit/Arian, Surgeon Aoounoheur
Office ovor Standard Sank
OR, a T. BRYANS
Baohelor of Medicine, University of Toronto ;
bleentinto of College of Phyofoians and Sur.
Keens, Ontario ; ex -Senior Renee Surgeon of
Western Hospital, Toronto, OfEoee of lute Dr.
A.lhfolfeye Smith Bleak, Bruesele.
Rural phone 49,
. ALEX. D. M'KELVEY
M•B., M.C•P.@S. O.
198 Rigor street East, Toronto
Diseases Ear, Noeo and Throat
Clinical Resistant in Ear, Nose and Throat de-
partment New Qmrarel $oapitel, Toronto ;.
Poet Graduate Harvard Medical Sobool, Bos.
tent ; late Senior Reeidont Surgeon Wee, E e
&Ear Inarmnry ; lata Clinical assistant in
Nose and Throat department Masa. Gen. Hos-
pital; Tate Hooke Surgeon Toronto General
Hospital, 4a•In Bruosele by appointment,
DR. M. FERGUSON
ETHEL. ONT.
Physician and Surgeon; Post Graduate comma
London (Eng,), New York and Chicago Hos.
-
pitals, Special attention to dioeaoe of eye, ear,
nose and throat. Eyes tested for glasses.
G. H. ROSS, D.D.S., L.D.S.
Graduate of Royal College of Dental Sur-
geone of Ontario and Graduate University of.
Toronto Faculty of Dentistry.
Office In ,card Block, Wingham
Phone 240. Post Office box 278
Painless Extraction, Plato work and
Bridge Work a Specialty
MAUDE O. BRYANS
OPHTHALMOLOGIST
Personal graduate Department of Ophthal.
urology, MoCormlok Medloal Oollege, Chicago,
I11., th prepared to toot eyes and 81 glasses at
her office ovor Miss Inman's millinery store,
Office days -Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
and Saturday of every week. Office hours -10
to 12 a. 01. ; 1 to 8 p. m. Evenings by appoint-
ment. Phone -1219. -
DR. WAROLAW
Honor graduate of the Ontario Veterinary
College. Dayand night calla. Office opposite
Flour Mill, Ehel.
PROUOFOOT, KILLORAN & PR000FOOT
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public,
&c.
Office on the Square 2nd door from Hamilton
Square,
GODERIOH. ONT. -
Private funds to loan at lowest rates.
W. Pnot nwooT, K. C. '.1.-L, KuLLORAN
WH. PROuDFOOT JR.
GBaND FS owe !aQs513ar
BRUSSELS
GOING 80uTH GOING NORTH
Express 7:18 a no I Mail 11:22 a m'
Express 8:45 p m Express 8:62 p m
CaIN010I41JM rat emir '
WALTON
To Torouto To Goderioh
Express 7:38 a on I Express 12:26 pm
Express 12:63 p m Express 9:00 p m
WROXETER
Goin East - 7:06 a. m. and 9.58 . m
Going P
Goin West - 12:19 and B' . m.
Going69 p
All trains going East connect with O. P. R. at.
Orangeville for Owen Sound, Elora and T
G. B. stations,
GEO. ALLAN, Local. Agent.
Misfxzt# 1,eivs
• Fordwich
Misses Mary Cattanach and Tillie
Siefert were visiting in Hanover,
Wm. Brown, sr., 9th Con., is the
latest purchaser of an auto in this
'neighborhood.
At Clifford Fall Fair this year, in
strong competition R. J. Sanderson
won 7 Brat, , pt izes and a second prize
on five head of Shorthorns,
A concert under 111e auspices of the
1•ordwieh \has.lnic Lodge and in aid
,if the Pets•intic Fund is to be given in
the near future,
Morris
SCHOOL REPORT -U. S. S. No. 3,
Bast'kVawauosh & Nn. 3 Morris. Re-
port of pupils standing in order of
merit, for the mouth of Septetitbee,
St 1V. -'Bary Patter, Anna Queen
Jr. IV, -Ida Stalker, lia.yy .Kid ly.
May Healy. Sr, III. -Seek; teal Mee ,
Bernard Craig, Metzgie Crnnye,
Btrdetta Noble, Roy Nobl'. Jr, 111
-Annie 11,tllithnn, Annie -kern v, Leu
(lronyn. Sr. 1 1. -Mary 111111e, Viele
Renee, nlary Phelan, 2!a,geerite
Phelan, Beetle Craig, dint SI,dker,
H
john allahan. Jr, IL -Niko Beaty,
Inc Kelly, Joe Phelan. Sr, Pelmet.-
17ruest Corning,, Ernest Rouse. Jr.
Printer 13- Fergus Kelly, llnnina
Cron _yn,'teloreuce Rouse, Nora Healy,
Dan Rallahan, Vincent Reny. Jr.
Primer- A - Jne Hallahan, Lillian
Burke, Lloyd Burke, -Celia,' Phelan.
Number no roll, 85, Average attend-
ance, 27. Present every day, Susie
Lattituer, Bernard Craig, Bertie
Craig, Ernest Coming, Viola Rouse,
Maty Ellis.
111. GILBERTSON, Te.toher,
Ethel
SCHOOL REPoitT.- Following is
the Repent of Ethel Behind for Sep-
tember. Pass 69, llomors'75. Forut
V Jr.-M.yetio Lamont 08, Archie Mc.
Donald 66, Cecil Bateman 65, *Dave
M.clfee 60. Jr. IV. -Russel Kral ter
83. Bernice Cole 83, Mae Vedder) 82,
(Afford Ferguson 7.1, Alice. Eclentier
73, Verna McCall 72 *George McKee
71, Nati Love 69, ',Quest. Dobson 59,.
13erthn Cole 51, laciorge Pollard 38,
Sr. ill.—Margaret McDonald 88,
Blake Howled' 72, Merl McLelland 71,
Willie Dane 64, 1sloe Mitohell 52,
*Leslie Pollard, .7•r. III.- Ella
MitchellnBare 8o John r 1 au7 , Edwin'
Krauterm
70, Lloyd D.b'tr62, Lily
Sander's 55, Sr. II. -Myrtle McKee
Ruby Cleaver, Willie Mitcheil, Mer-
vyn Daimler, Susie Rowland, Willie
Woods, Ralph Rowland. Sr. L-
Elinor Engler, Audrey Bremner,
%Valkr Mitabell, Junior h --•-Glenn
Qorrie
Roland Nash has gone to Toronto to
attend Faculty.
M;'e, MoICaig, Watford, is visiting
her niece, Mrs, A, 1W, Hamilton,pd. Mitohell received a telegram
from Trinailad, Ool., stating that his
brother bad been shot.
The resilience of Les. Williams,
poultry dealer, was totally destroyed
by fire about 3 o'clock Monday mom,
ing of last week and prartioally all the
contents were oleo deettoyed. - Lose is
partially covered by insurance. Mr.-
VVillianle will rebuild immediately.
Cause of fire ie unknown,
(3oderich
At a meeting of the flnttnoe commit-
tee of the Council it wee unanlmoualy
derided to recommend a grant of $5,-
000 to the patriotic fund,
Miss Laura Farrow has returned
from a three months' trip in • the
West. She went as far as Seattle
and the Canadian Coast cities and
had a most enjoyable holiday.
Quite a number of oases were on the
docket for the sittings of the County
Court last week. Aftet the formal
opening- on Tuesday, however, the
Conrt Was adjourned to the 1311h inst.
An unfortunate accident happened
to Geo. Feagan, son of John Feagau,
of Colborne - township. The young
man was operating a concutter when
hie left hand was caught in the
knives, which took off almost the
whole of the hand.
Orville White, Whitevale, Ont., is
the new teacher at the Collegiate
Institute. He is e. recent graduate of
the. Faculty of Education, He will
teach junior science, geography,
RIithmetic, physical- exercise and
cadet drill, being a specialist in the
two latter subjects. There are now 8
teachers on the Collegiate etaif.
Blyth
W. J. Mains left for Belleville where
he will attend College.
Roy Denholm went to Ohicago
where he will attend Dental College.
It was with general regret that otir,
citizens learned Friday 1st inst., of the
death of Hazel Luxton, daughter of
our esteemed citizens, ex -Reeve Lux-
ton and Mrs. Hill, after an illness of
typhoid fever extending over some
weeks. For some days its was known
that with her, life's tenure was short,
but even then her death caused sad-
11e8s throughout the town. She Was
in the 14th year of her age, was a
bright child, of a loving disposition,
beloved at horse, and esteemedby her
playmates. The funeral took place
from the family residence, Dineley
street, the school children marching
in a body. Interment took piece in
the Union cemetery.
EYYMENEAi .1 A very pretty wed-
ding was
at the home of
Councillor and Mrs. James M. Outt,
on Thursday, September 30tH, at high
noon, when their ybungest daughter,
Mies Gladys Irene, became the wife
of Thos. H. Taylor. 800 of B. H. and
Mrs. Taylor, of East Watvaioeh.
The ceremony was performed on the
beautiful lawn, underneath an arch
of evergreens and white asl ere by Rev.
W. L. Taylor, of Rietz, cousin of the
groon. in the presence of over 60
guests, from 6oderieh, Brussels,
Lucknow and other points, Bride
who was given away by her father,
wore white silk veiled with lace
trimmed with pearls and a bridal veil
crowned with orange bloseen,s and
carried a briquet of white roses. Mrs.
A. Walsh, sister of the irroom, played
the wedding nutrch and B. A, Itic-
Donaid,•Stratfnt•d, cousin of the bride,
sang "Perfrot Day." After the cete-
mnity, dinner was served in the dining
room, 52111011 Was bean tifnlly decorat-
ed with wliite'attd pink flnwet•e and
later Mr. and Mre, Taylor left for
Toronto, Stratford and other points
au(l.on (,heir return will take np their
reeidenee nn the gu`est's faun in East
Wawannsh. THE Pose, with numer-
ous friends of 11r. dent Mrs. Taylor.
j $111 in tvisling them a happy and
lit" Herons wedded 11Pn.
'101 S'+�n••l, fl•anhalin Reader Rn(1
1 1 n •0 he Town 1dnll on Mon
r8 0lie 25 it lost it`te'$ fine and
rtes muter• the Red Cross. Circle
41•tsicnl progren% will also be rendered.
ee cent ticket for the 'hest seat in the
Hall. Don't fail to buy a ticket.
' Turnberry Council
Minutes of Council meetingheld in
Bluevaloon Natality, Sept. 7th. All
members present•.
Minutes of last regular sheeting
Wete'tad and adopted on motion of
Wheeler and Adair.
Moved by Rutherford -Adair, that
Reevetogetherwith Reeve of Onlrose,
TRY
Harry Laem's
FIRST-CLASS -
Hand
Laundry
Leckie Block, Brussels
Low PI'IIOS,
. Satisfaction Ouaraa#sed,
Family Washing done by
the dozen.
Goods Bailed for and delivered
if desired,
WOM pA u 'r� can Iva avoid the eonolneinn that a
F RED very large p5oportion of ape insane
have had their orf In 1uk
()eight i•i
d b
tllenatelvee or their ancestors. A
drunk men
temporality i n is em hran•ily iueano, sff.
ruucb so that he Often eainunite rrin r•
der. In view of those facts how Pottle
and childish the various 1•elnedles
that 8110 l rnpnsed,
R' r
TEN YEARS
From
e le Ills—Restored
I~ ma s Rest
oed
to Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
Belleville, N.S., Canada. -"I doctored
for ten years for female troubles and
did not get well. I read in the paper
about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and decided to try it. I write
now to tell you that I am cured. You
,an publish my letter as a testimonial-"
- Mrs. SuvRINE BAB/NE, Belleville,
Nova Scotia, Canada.
.Another Woman Recovers..
Auburn, N. Y. -"I suffered from -
nervousness for ten years, and had such
organic pains that sometimes I would lie
in bed four days at a time, could not eat
or sleep and did not want anyone to talk
to me or bother Ate at all. Sometimes
I would suffer for seven hours et a time.
Different doctors did the best they could
for me until four months ago I began
giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound a trial and now I am in good
health. "-Mrs. WILLIAM B. GILL, NO, 15
Pleasant Street, Auburn, New York,
The above are only two of the thou-
sands of grateful letters which are con-
stantly being received by the Pinkha.
Medicine Company of Lynn, Mass,
which show clearly what great things
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound does for those who suffer from
woman's ills.
If you want spe-
ciel advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkliam
Medicine Co. (cont)•
dential)Lynn,Mass.
Your letter will be
opened, read and
answered by a wo-
man, and held in
strict confidence.
be authorized to get legal advice re
sink . hole on Turnberry- Oulroso
boundary and act accordingly. Car-
ried. •
Award on the Hallie drain was laid
before the Council and filed.
Following accounts were passed and
cheques issued :- Coulter Bros.,
grading, $41 ; Mcis;innon Bros.,
gravelling, $86 22 ; George Walker,
inspecting, $4 50 ; S. Vanatone, grav-
el, $684'; Wm. Haugh, .drain and
tile, $6 ; Alex. Hill, iron for culvert,
$63.95 ; Ben. Ringlet., gravel, $4 ;
Miss Burgess, rent for Hall, $5 • P.
Powell, revising Voters' List, 553.13.
Next meeting of Council will be at.
Binevale, on Monday, Oct. 25th, at 2
p. m.
WHAT IS DEGENERACY
To the Editor of Trot Poem :
We have
shown that the City
Treasurer generally pays out five
times as much as be receives from the
liqunr traffic in caring for the pan-
pers, ,orphans and criminals which it
causes -and that in ,many other ways
which cannot be estimated the money
loss is very great.
But that is ottlythe money side of
this great question. We might put
Is with the loss of money. We might
struggle on under the heavy tax bur-
den but we will certainly go down as
a nation tf we continue poisoning one
young men, the future fathers of the
race.
Anew word of dreadful import has
come into our language. Degeneracy
is the word that signifies more than
any amount of money loses. Science
has thrown new light on this liquor
problem, It has shown us that alco-
holic liquors even in so called modera-
tion are amusing degeneracy of the
face..
What does degeneracy mean ? 11
means that the children of drinking
not to say drnken parents rarely equal
their parents in body or mind, It
MORTIS that we are breeding still more
idiots, insane, feeble-minded, crimin-
als, etc., to be Loused and fed. The
burden is honey enough now and the
cry every your is for mora room,
But 10 it it lie that lite children of
drinking p,118n10 degrnernl3' 111(1 (rive
a tmaleuey 10 become itioone ? 'There
is tint a doubt, i1.. G"ver'nluetrt re-
ports say sit, scientific Intel Nay so, end
asylum superintendents say so, The
only difference of opinion is as to the
number that an a caused by drink. It
is new an acknowledged fart that in-
sanity started by drinking parents
may spread to the third and fourth
generation. The following figures
show that insanity is almost in direct
proportion to the nppo'tunjties for
getting drink, Stetisticaus have
divided the United States into font.
groups showing the number of Mamie
m each group per hundred thousand
plantation.
Group No. 1 consists of 9 prohibition
states. These have an average or 118
insane to the 1h011155ed thnusend popu-
lation. •
Group No. 2 consists of 17 states
that are nearly prohibition. These
have 150 insane to the hundred thous-
and population.
Group No. 8 Onneiats of 18 'states in
which less than 50 % are under pro-
hibition.
Theta have an average of 242 to the
hundred thousand poln1latinu.
Group No, 4, consists of 10 states in
which less- than 25 % 'are tinder pro-
hibition, Theee have au average of
270 to the. liundeed thousand minute -
shows
Tlhs shotes tin
t t wet states have
more o e than double the insane that the
(try states have: Whet, -you consider
that-tnaby of the prohibition states
have been under prohibition in, only
at short time and further tlhat they are
snt'i onnded h9 wet sta'eee it makes the
showing still more noteworthy.
When we coneidoe that Kansas has
87 counties without any insane hoer
h0 r, AI, 13„ M. C, P, s,
An Appeal for Red Cross
The following telegram %vas received
by Reeve Leckie, of this town : -
'l'oronto, Oct, 5, 1915.
I beg to iufm'e you that Lord'
Lansdowne has sent me the following
cablegram; -"I' beg to inform you
that the British Red Cross Society
and the order of St. John, in view of
the great drrnands upon their. resourc
es,)nthinFrance.and the near East
have decided to make an appeal
throughout the 38,..pile by street co1-
leetore upon the 2lst day of October
next.
The stoney received for the appeal
will be donated entirely to relieving
the suffering of our wounded soldiers
and sailors from home and overseas,
at the various seats. Fromm all parts
of the lfingdom we have already re -
eel ved 'generous offerings in our work.
With the increase of British and over-
seas forces at the front there is a cor-
responding increese.in our expenses
and we shall betruly grateful to you
if you will help ue by organizing an
appeal and sending the proceeds to us
for the object which I have named.
I shall be greatly obliged if you will
kindly communicate the foregoing to
your government. Their Majesties
the King and Queen and her Majesty
Queen Alexandria are giving its their
gracious patronage and I trust that
you will also be able to see your way
to help us."
In view of the importance of the
first appeal that the Motherland has
made to us I confidently trust that
you will at once organize with a vie'v
to getting a won thy contribution from
the people of your municipality on
Oct. 21st. Join•? S. BENDRIE,
Lieut. Governor.
Since the receipt of the above other
more pressing communications have
come to hand urging that Brussels
give another "lift."
THE FAIR FAIR
•
Some things there are that stay a
while, then quickly pass away ; some
live a month, some just a week, and
riot a few a day. There's one, grand
institution that's camped with ns for
keeps ; it never gets ascared or blue.
or shivers with the creeps. We're
'lluding to the old Fall Fair, with its
punkins and its oats, its woolly sheep
and cabbage heads, its chickens and
its shoats. Whv John's folks drove
for 13 miles in their old demmycrat,
to show a sofa cuehioti and a fancy
spate room ` mat. They knew the
folks for miles around would also do
the same, and bring the yearlin' filly
'long with ribbons in its mane. It is
a glorious thing to shake a hundred
hands an hour, and discourse on the
price of oats, the price of wheat and
flour ; it's like a tonic in the Spring
to meet old friends mice nC more,and
hear of luck or failure with the ind-
er or the mower. It is, indeed, a
chesty day, enough to turn the head,
to see a first prize ticket perched
upon your loaf of bread -to have the
risen front all around gaze on that
wondrous thing, and swear, by gum,
that that was fit for any duke or
king. Small wonder, too, that shivers
creep like hunks of joy and pride,
when some dyspeptic with a grouch,
and weak and hollow eyed, should
say with longing in his voice and in
his spinal slat, "I wisht my wife
could snake a cake, by gum, that looks
like that." It is a great and glorious
thing, our blessed country Fair, where
folk can giggle for a day and shake
their gloom and care. Like mustard
plasters fora cold, or sage for stuni-
wick ache -the Fall Fairs greater'i
them all, and sweeter than a Christ-
mas cake. -Ark.
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•
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0
•
0
•
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•
•
•
•
Engagement Rings
0
It
0
e
52
Wedding Rings
Give
Her a
Diamond
o A nice assortment of line, white O
• Diamonds, mounted with Plati- a
e
tuun Tips, 14k Rings at very 0.
• close prices •
0 $12.00 $15.00 a
25.00 50.00 ..et
0aid upwards according to size of
•
• Diamond. •
Marriages Continue a Pace I
t„
• - Even in war times.
•
to
•
• We have a full stock of
• Seamless Wedding Rings e
• g g•
O •
• The beat Wedding Ring in the •
world. Let the show you, •
•
•
•
eW(NDT,
•
•
s
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•
m Jewellerand Engraver 0
s
0 Wroxeter Ontario 0
'• •
eckle®••••••do•wdd•••••®ae•I
5,000,coo
Increase in Ooe Mooth
To the Investing Public, t
in my previous advet tisement on "Cur Banks and
h 'Their Invest.
menta" I called your attention to the way our Bankswere increasing
thele Investments at the present time. I did this in order to show
you that our leading financial institutions regard the present WI a most
profitable time for making investments.
Since that ad was written the August statement of the
Banks to the Governnterit has been made public. It shows by far the
largest increase of any month yet. A computrieon ofrecent mouths
will prove interesting :-
Increase in May 51,851,357 Increase in July,..., ..,,..$3,610,800
Increase in June , 378,047 Increase iu August.:..... 5,498,784
The September statement 1145 not been published yet.
It was during the first part of August that I cornmeneed nay pees- •
tint bevies of advertisernerits with the advertisement "Investors 1 In-
crease your Interest 1" In these I offered to do business with you- by
mail. I did this because I realized what exceptional opportunities ex-
isted at the time for. malting safe and profitable investments for you.
You will pardon me if I draw your attention to the fact that what
I claimed then has been proved by the action of the Banka themselves,
Since that advertisement was written both the July and Auuse
Bank Statements have been made public. These together show an in-
crease in '•Investments in Stocks and Bonds" amounting to more than
$9,000,000.
Do net miss the opportunities that are still open as they are be-
coming fewer all the time.
Send me your name and address and I will tell you what I can do
for you.
R. C. Deadman
SCOTIA JCT., ONT.
JOYS OF THE EDITOR
Consider the editor. He tveareth
purple and fine linen. His abode is a-
mongst the mansions of the rich. His
wife bath her limousine and his first•
born sporteth a racing car that can hit
her UD fn 40 at.
Lo 1 All the people brealreth their
necks to hand him money A child is
born wets the wife of a merchant in the
bazaar. The physician gettetb to golden
plunks. Tne editor writeth a stick and
a half and telteth the multitude that the
child tippeth the beamat nine pounds.
Yea, he Beth even as a centurion. And
the proud father giveth him a creme. I
Behold the young one groweth up
and graduateth. And the editor nut-
teth into his paper a swell notice. Yea,
a peach of a notice. He telteth of the
wisdom of the young Womac, and of
her exceeding comeliness, Like unto
the rotas of Sharon is she and her gown
is play"d up to beattheband. And the
-
dressmaker getteth two score and four
iron men And the editorg etteth a note
of thanks from the S. G A.
The daughter goeth on a journey,
and the editor throweth himself on the
story of the farewell party. It runneth
a column, sold. And the fair one re-
membereth him from afar with 8 pic-
ture postal card that costeth six for a
jitoey.
Beholden'she returneth and the youth
of the city fall down on
t andworship. She
picketh one and lo she picketh emon.
But the editor calleth him one of our
most promising young men and getteth
away with it. And they send unto him
a bid to the wedding feast and behold
the bids are fashioned by Muntgum•.
notary Hawbuck, in a far City.
Flowery and long is the wedding no-
tice which the editor printeth. The
minister getteth 10 bones, The groom
standeth the editor off for a twelve-
month subscription.
All flesh is grass and in time the wife
is gathereth into the silo. The minister
getteth his bit. The editor printeth a
death notice, two columns of obituary
three lodge notices, acubit of poetry and
a card of thanks, And be forgetteth to
read proof on the head and the dashed
thing cometh out, "Gone to Her Last
Roasting Place,"
And all that are akin to the deceased
jumpeth on the editor with exceeding
great jumps
And theyputteth
out
their ads and eanceletb their subscrip-
tions and they swung the hammer unto
the third and fourth generations,
Canst thou bear it
` ` More Bread ;and. Better Bead:" vair.
"MADE IN CANADA"
Ford Touring Car
Price $ 530
Its performance is bigger than its price.
What any other motor car will do, the
Ford will do—and more. Yet it is the
lowest -priced real motor car on the
market, Because our output is set this
year at 40,000 cars, we are able to sell
the dependable Ford at so .low a price.
The Runnbout is now 5480; the Town Car
1
i80 ; f.
o. b, Ford,Ontario. All cars completely equipped, ncl diegelectricheadlights. omoot doeR not inotnduapeadontater. Get
,particlnrsfrn5
S. CARTER,
. Dealer - Brussels
'• T it I 1' \ i \' 1 :: 9\ 1. a 1 1e�-