HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-8-2, Page 4srusstio 1300i
TWURSDAY, AUOU51' a. rev/�
Peorh 11 who desire novelly even in
war are most anxious for the I€alsere
fleet t0 001ne out of 00111 storage lit the
Keele canal eo tbnt there may be n
"brush .• il, ole Bli!i.11 ••a ,?,,,A,
Ile
1/0 Iter 1 ellSoh wc, e (01111'1 !tying
we woted judge an els0-taut Is id hand
by the way the "0 c1 Dlau'n hese," other.;
wise known as the Senate, Is being filed
up. I! la a dandy harbor for woe n out
politicians
Give the so -caned "Chain fetter" a
place under the tea kettle and save
othe,,Ore annoyance you have frit on
the i,'• ,p +,f theve anonrmouu epi.. las,
The 7 :e !am:, p+nrn'3ed '1 t 0u de/A
carry out the Lake po,ereei .t ,1 :ot
touch you and you will help kilt off a
freak crusade that has had too Ioug a life-
time already.
Wee experts believe that Russia will
once more come to herself and will yat
assert herself in the world's war. A
great deal of good time, money and men
are being sacrificed over her intoxica•
tion over her new found freedom.
Liberty is one of the supreme gifts if
people know how to use it but 0 is a
most dangerous weapon when its value
is unknown and unappreciated. In the
role Russia lies played a great wrung
has been done her allies and it will be o0
matter of surprise 0 the iron hand has to
be d splayed to fs'ablish the rights of the
Nation and the bounds of what is des-
ignated as Liberty,
ANcerHER instance to hand of a child
dying from poison administered instead
of medicine and a case of a 2 year old
kiddie, who got hold of some pills and
ate them resulting in death. If some of
these folk were halted charged with
murder they might be brought to see
the culpable negligence of such actions,
Surely the warnings have been many to
obviate such occurrences et we deubt
v v
not but 111 dozens of homes not the
slightest regard is paid to separating
poisons from other Mottles or putting
out of harm's way things that bring
many a tear and heartache when too
late. How is it in 0011r house
Tna number of candidates passing an
exam. is not Ole only test of the work
done by a teacher as a great deal de-
pends no the ability of the pupil to
"stand fire" In an examination resting
A continuation of successes is geueraliy
assu urea as heaves good measuring rod
as to the kind of weak done. Here's a
wonderful exanti a cif thic point. 113
Port Hope in 1; veers ere candidates
wrote at the 311330ance exam. out of
whom only s failtcl. Principal7„Gillies
in this instance might stand a little
decorating with such a record. Bros
sell school, while perhaps not holding
as large a percentage has done a famous
work and the young people of this coo
munity have been the gainers. A good
Continua/Mu school saves many a dollar
of expense to parents who otherwise
would have sent their sons and daugh-
ters longer distances and at increased
expense to the nearest High School or
Collegiate. Our school has a deservedly
worthy name and the sustaining of it
depends on the people of this communi-
ty who can show their appreciation by
the support they accord.
So called Personal Liberty leas not
nearly as broad a horizon as folk often
think, For instance a man in London
gut into trouble the other day because
be spanked a neighbor's son, Perhaps
the very thing the lad needed but the
Court assessed a
the spanker anger ee5 for the
act. Theen
off der said he was just
"tuning u1" this bundle ofconcentrated
mischief b experience
ut nodout t 1 his
will show him that his privileges are
fewer then he imagined, A man knock-
ed over anindustrious rooster that was
busy iu his newly planted garden and
the owner, although he had the cock•a-
doole-doo for pot pie. said saucy things
to the owner of the vegetables and they
quit fraternizing Or a gang of young
smarties descend upon an orchsrtl or
raid Upon a plot of small fruits and tht
aggrieved party appears to have very
little redress unless by a circuitous route
in the Courts in which, probably tht
hostility of the neighborhood is stirred
over "the tremendous fuss made ovei
a few apples or a "feed" of berries, &e
Personal Liberty may not permit a land-
owner
and-
o � r to tickle the legs of the raiders
w e klg a s
with a charge of salt but the probabilities
are a little of that method of treatment
would prove more efficacious than a
warning by the j, P. or a 31 0o fine.
The teaching and practice of the Golden
Rule would help the avoidance of many
a snarl and "cut out" much that is un-
fair and difficult to bear. Parents have
a work to do along the line of showing
}tow easy 11 is to trespass on the rights
of others and the wrong that may be
done by forgetting that Personal Liber-
ty ends where the rights of others are
interfered with or lost sight of. Some
people have cinch t0 learn about "Learn-
ing to mind their own business" instead
of being so ready to dabble with that 01
everybody else,
By the slowpoke methods adopt,. d 00
fair linettin men to the firing line the
g g
,present army stands a good chance of
bolos svip d out before reinforcements
cin get 10 'heir le 1,,
wItaN Conset p ion to ts to work there
will be the danger of favoritrism being
shown unless the authorities Weer a
d IYereut course to the way ofilees and
honors were handed out ranee the war
commenced.
Rti5Ns100 is fu the limelight with a
loon's job to bandit. in Russia tie le
said to have been wounded In the arm
when he rushed iu between a defaulting
Ininulty detachment who was going to
be taught a lesson by a loyal artillery
brigade.
e� Wante
-ON -
Munition Work
A number of good relia-
ble men can secure steady
eniploynlent on Munition
work. Apply to
The debt. Bell Engine & Thresher Co., Ltd.
3.3 Seaforth, Ont.
ANOTHER PILOT
Dr, Theobald Frederic Alfred von
Bethnhann-Hollweg, until his selection
EARL GREY, former Governor-General
of Canada, is seriously ill. He re-
cently underwent an operation,
m
*
*
n
SIDELIGHTS ON
THE SESSION
Written Specially for the
Ottawa Journal by the
Corridor Patrol.
The battle which took place in the
House over the power taken by the
Government to suppress newspapers
which violate the law -which -is -to -he, is
a reminder that there is a fair sprink-
ling of newspapermen in the House, al-
though the number is not so great as it
was in several other Parliaments to the
loss tie doubt, of the present Parlia-
ment.
—0—
r the of the newspaper members is
W. F. MacLean, tthe independent -Con-
servative member for South York, the
proprietor of the Toronto World,
Pr,,t•ably no man in the House has been
such a warm advocate of public owner-
ship as he has been, and he has lived
to see many of his ideas carried into
effect.
—O—
Another is lien, Frank Oliver, owner
of the Edmonton Bulletin. He is the
keenest critic in the Opposition, and
the grandest tighter of them all.
—0—
W. A. Buchanan is owner of the
Lethbridge Herald. He may be sum-
med up in the words of Charles A.
Magrath when discussing before the
last general election his chances a-
gainst Mr. Buchanan, who had come out
in opposition to him; "The trouble is
ha's a very decent fellow."
.--0—
Co1. Hugh Clark, parliamentary sec-
retery for External Affairs, is the owner
"f the Kincardine Review, a very bright
Western Ontario newspaper.
O -
Hon, George P, Graham, is, or was,
the ra tr.r''tor of the Brockville cLville Re-
corde, Land editor of the Montreal
Herald -Telegraph.
-0—
J. H, Burnham, although a lawyer,
was several yearseditor edit r of the Peter-
borough
eter-
0
b sou h Review,
tv,
—D—
ot
Col. J. D Taylor is proprietor of the
New Westnninister Coiuntlrian, He is
one of the very best speechmakers in
the House, For years he was a number
of the Press Gallery.
-----C_
General Sir Stun Hughes at one time
owned the Watchman -Warder, of Lind-
say, and when he sold it, realized what
was considered a vast sutra in these
days.
One of the best newspapermen in
the House is E. J. Robidoux, of Kent,
N.B., who received an excellent training
under his father, a distinguished Acad-
ian editor.
—0—
C, A. Gauvreau owns a newspaper in
Temiscouata and writes the editorials
which are much quoted.
---o --
Another Acadian editor who bears a
high reputation is 0. Turgeon, of
Gloucester.
—0 ---
Hon, Charles Marcil was an im-
mense favorite amongst the fraternity
when he was a Montreal reporter, He
was for many years on the staffs of the
Star and the Gazette.
Sir Wilfred Laurier, Sir Thomas
White, llon, Rodolphe Lemieux, and
Col. John A. Currie are old newspaper-
men, who drifted into other walks of
life, and possibly are sometimes sorry
for It. J. M,
DR. VON BETHMANN HOLWEG
German Imperial Chancellor
was Minister of the Interior, the fourth
since Bismarck. 1•]e has been account-
able, under the constitution, only to
the Emperor, having been a fellow -stu-
dent of the Kaiser at Bonn. His spec-
tacular entry into the tear was in the
use of the words "Scrap of parer" in
his final interview with the British
Ambassador. He was born November
29, 1856.
NO ELECTION TILL OCT?
A. H. Birmingham m gham Says Would
Take that Long to Administer
New Franchise Act.
A. H, Birningham, official organizer
of the Conservative party in Ontario,
does not believe that an election can be
held before the middle or end of Oct-
ober. "What Franchise Act are we to
use in Ontario?" he asks. To adminis-
ter the new Ontario Franchise Act
would take at least two and one -]calf
months or three, and unless some net
and wonderful machinery for taking the
vote in Ontario is discovered an election
could not be held any sooner.
"At the time of the last Federal
election," says Mr. Birmingham, the
Franchise Acts in use in each Pro-
vince with exception of some small can-
stituences in the West, were used,
Since then a new Act has been pas-
sed in Ontario. Under it the munici-
pal voters' list is not used in cities,
and a board of registrars has to be
appointed to snake up the lists" There
is a possibility, though, that legal in-
terpertation of statutes may, in some
way, alter the procedure of taking the
vote in Ontario, with the view of saving
time.
BRITISH CENSORS TIP OFF
PRUSSIAN PLOTS IN AMERICA
English Intelligence Department From
Beginning Has Become Most Im-
portant Information Auxiliary to the
Allied Army and Navy.
Th British censorship was very
humbly born in the first days of Sept-
ember,1 14 in the basement the
9 of
generl posttofllce in King Edward's
building, wr' esErtofisherWood
in
the Saturday
Evening Post, its origin-
al staff consisted Of adozen volunteers
s
and' s sole purpose was to openen
lett-
ers sent by regular mail from England
to Germany and submit them to a
cursory examination, with the idea Of
suppressing any that openly and frank-
ly carried information of military value
to the enemy,
tie
Y•
Leiters to Holland, Denmark,
Bel-
gium
gium and other countries along the
German frontiers were though to he
innocent and were allowed to pass with
out examination.
To -day the British censorship exer-
cises systematic control over all conn-
hnunciations that cross the seas. Each
month it minutely examines 15,000,000
messagesl No secret means of coin-
munication is too cleverly conceived
to evade watchfulness.
It supplies the armies and fleets of
the allies with the news of the enemy's *
military and naval plans—which far •
exceeds in quantity and quality any t
thing that could be furnished by the o
most perfect secret service, .
t.
The censorship sends the fleet ad-
vance information of the ultimate des,.
tili5tlon of every important cargo
crossing the seas. The total value
of cargoes ,theady condemned in prize
courts allhhi,111118 to ninny hundreds of
millions of dollars.
Stops Price Manipulation.
It also detects Illegal transaction by
British sybjects. By withholding their
mail 11 has, to a large extent, put a
slop to the activities of certain Ger-
mall agents who, In all parts of the
world, are engaged in raising the cost
of foods,
The censorship each week Intercepts
and destroys tons of enemy propagan-
da sent out from Germany to neutral
and allied countries; it forewarns the
local governments of Ireland and India
of seditious encouraged by Germany;
it sealed the fate of Roger Casemate;
before that unsuspecting individual
had left Berlin
It could convict hundreds of Ger-
man-Amerciaut citizens of treason
against tate United States; and has, in
fact, frequently furnished the Ameri-
can government with information re-
garding German plotters and disloyal
German -Americans. It gave the tip
that led to tate conviction of Fay, the
German dynamiter, and to the expul-
sion of Boy -Ed, Von Papen and
llumba.
s5 ,1, 1t. * ,5 * st * * 0 *
* LOOK OUT FOR FAKERS *
8 To the General Public: *
* , .You are hereby warned to *
take no notice of any man *
*'' selling goods, either wear- *
* ing the uniform or in- civil- *
Ian clothing or professing *
to be a member of the *
Great War Veterans' As- *
sociottion of Canada, un- *
less he can produce a let- *
ter signed by the Secretary *
of theGreat War Veterans' *
Association .of Canada. 'S
*
+k * * * * • * * * ,5
Auction Sale
--OP—
Valuable Electric Light Machinery
AND PLANT
Under and by virtue of a power of sale con-
tainedin a e•rtain Mortgage which will be
produced at the time of sada, there will be of-
fered for stile by public Auction by F, S Scott
Auctioneer, at the American Hotel, in the
Vfltsse of Brussels, In the County of Buren,
0t 2.80 o'cite; in the aftes'noonon Tuesday,
the 14th day of August, 1917, tate follow-
ing vatualde property, namely: -
All those certain parcels or 505,20 of land
and premises silents, lying mrd being In the
Village of Brussels, in the County of Herm!,
esti Province of on mein, and being composed
of that part of Village Lot number Rare on
Turnberrystreet in the said Village of Bru&
eels, described am follow% ;-Commencing on
the Esatern b'turldary of osld Lot ata distance
1 two feet and three imbue from the South•
west corner thereof, then:, Westerly at right
nog,* to the said Eastern boundary to the le tie
m the rear of the said lands, thence Northerly
parallel to the said Eastern boundary of said
lot to the Northern boundary thereof, thence
Hester], along said Northern boundary to the
Northeast angle or the ssid lot, thence South-
erly along the Eastern boundary of said lot to
the ploee of be -sinning ;
Alen that part of said 158 number six of
Turnbe•ry street aforeadd described Re rol-
lowa:-Commencing ata point from the South•
east angle on Ta'nberry street, twenty-four
feet more or less to n point st the outer wall of
the lands at present owned byone John 0.
Brinkley, thence in n Westerldirection at
right an glee with Tar mhe•ry street a distnnou
d one hkindred and thirta",ight feet more or
lees to the nbaitined river, thence aloes the
Dbdtlaut ,1 ver told parallel with the Southern
boundary of said lot a diste ee of one hundred
feet to Tmroberry street, thence along Turn -
Le• ry t t re, 1 1,111, pinee of beginning.
Up m this Droperiy le ettuate Ole following,
,.uruilgst °Oise, buildings, machinery and
plant ; -
A brie', dy,.au,oltoase, with dwelling above,
A 2 -story cement
40 ft et tent (Mopping building, 20 foot by
90
40 fastfeet; b
A 051. 005 050)18 boiler inose, 10feet by 40
fact
A o»a-story frame goal shed, 20 et by 80feet,
In the above meitioned build nes and per-
taining to the premises ere situate a 75 -horse•
power holler ; a 100-horae•pewer aolnpouta
engine t one gene, n'nr ; o,10 exoittn• (0lternat•
Ing earrentl, with all nere+na'y s110851ng, belt-
ing, elect, to lines tied a large supply of 250 volt
meters. The plant hes for years post .upp11rr1
all the eleetrle lighting rr gnb•ed in the said
•xt Col or n 5 Private ur-
Vitra for both ntfo and P Iv
F1 P
P
ones.
r='e t e. he mu,
ohm.Tnao, ne SAP, .. 1 n e nut of t
p P
Ohm rd,•o ole din biline
w1010 money oath lay Ps nn the
within offered
days ui. lot to It Pee The sp proprice.
Fur-
ther
r r-
th he aced . u set e n n on np fie. 11
will ole
1 P
t7 r + 1, •s may b¢ had ilf¢ation to
sir strip, t w on n.
u y pl
the and ensign, 0.
Datid 26th. July A. P. 1917.
F. S. score, It. VA NSTONE, Winghan,
Auctioneer, Vendor'n Solicitor,
ac
��r,MrNYx',N,f�.+idilh�MW4�4�MeA*2�.N�hY:f�k�VMA±nY.�M�1�i4
'M�rF+�-u+?n.+KR4.Gtr'nr+».+u+-vzk�iav+t,n+u•�A.:r'M'Yn'=G'AN
Wet Sulrtl+ter 1{ecalled,
An old resident inforlils the 'i'ele-
scope that it Is nearly 50 years since
there has been such a wet summer,
Ile recalls that fu the year 1869 II
rallied all season and only lel up for
two weeks in September, With the
coming of the equinoxial storms the
rain turned to snow. The farmers did
sot have a chanee that year to har-
vest their crops, which were almost
a total loss.—Wnikertoll Telescope,
in the County of Perth the harvest
was late, and it is a fMet that there
were some gelds of oats which were
never got into the barn, The snow
came to stay on October 18. Most of
the potatoes and a large share of the
turnips were not dug, while the ap-
ples were not gathered. As the ground
was not frozen the potatoes in many
cases were dug in the spring and
came out all rightIi
Blyth ,,,, ,...Oct. 2 and 8
FALL FAIR DATES
13russels ............... Oct, 4 and 5
Drayton Oct, 2 and 8
Durham .,..Sept. 20 and 21
Galt ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, Out. 4 and 5
Goderich Sept. 213, 27, 28
llattover Sept, 20 anti 21
Kincardine Sept. 20 and 21
Klrkton ................ ... .... Oct, 4 and 5
London (Western) ..... Sept. 7-15
Listowel„ .. Sept, 20 and 21
Milveeton ........... . .....Sept 27 and 28
New Hamburg ...,Sept. 13 and 14
Ottawa (Central) ,...,........e Sept. 8-17
Palmerston.-- ..... Sept. 18turd 10
Parkhill.- ................ Sept, 24 and 25
Setlfeeth...... ............. Sept. 20 and 21
Stratford Sr tt. 17, 18, 19
Tavistock ........... Oct 2
Toronto (National).,,. Aug. 25 -Sept. 10
'iVslleeley. ..............._... Sept. 11 and 12
\Vinghant pot,, 0 at.d 10
Woodstock..... ...... .... Sept. 10-21
Ailsa Oraig . ••.•• -••• 0.1 5
Atwood-- .......... Sept. 18 e i ,1 19
(xorrie , Oet.9
Ripley Sept, 25 and 26
Teeswater ....Oct. 2 and 3
Luckuow ....................Sept. 27 and 28
Mildmay Sept. 17 and 18
Arthur ........•.... Oct. 0 and 10
Dungannon Out. 4 and 5
Notice to Creditors
In the matter of the estate of Mary Hol-
ler, late of the Township of Grey, in
the County of Huron, widow, de-
ceased.
Notice JR hereby given pursuant to "The Be•
1eed Statutes of Ontario," that all oredltors
and others hiving claims against tate estate of
the said Mary Holler, who died on or about
the Fifteenth day of June, A.D„ 1917, are re-
quired on or before the 48h day of Au0000,
A D., 1917 to send by post prepaid ar deliver
to A. Reymann. one of the Executors of the
Inst Will and Testament of said deceased, at
:drat brook Post (Mae, Ontario, their Christian
and Sarntnnes addresses and desariptlonn, the
full partionlars of their claims, the statement
0 their accounts and the nature of the Recur -
hies Of any) held by them,
Arid further take notice that of ter such hint
mentioned dote the said Exeoutoro will pro
-
used to distribute the assets of the deceased
among the parties entitled thereto, having re.
gird only to the ctaiata of which they shah three
have notice, and the wild Executors will not
be liable for the said asset'. or any part there-
if
here•rf to any person or l or8ora of whose claim
notice shall not have been received by them at
the tante of such distribution.
Doted at Uranbrook this 5(1, day of July,
A, D. 1017.
A RAYM ANN LtExecutors.
WILSON EVANS, S
Two Nigh -class Stallions
Two of the highest aloes, most beautiful,
royally bred ltoree!f ever offered for the conaid-
oration bf breeders in this community. A,
the stud sermon 1017:
Inspected and Enrolled
This Grand Circuit Champion
ELMER DICKSON
010.60, A. T R., 2.UIIg,, 1010 race record, one of
oho moat beautiful and hottest horses over seen
on the Grand Uiroult Elsner Dlokaon went
the third elle at Columbus, Olds, in 2.00, witlt
the last half in one minute in 5510 Be is bred
in the purple with show horse finish. Will
stand this season at his own stable at 'Myth, ex.
°opting on Thursday afternoon he will go to
Swortlee Hotel, Winghan, for night ; Friday,
to Hall's Hotel, Blaevale, far noon, and Central
Hotel, Brussels for night ' SRturdoy hone to
his own stable for noon where he will remain
until the following '1'1,nredey x fte•aoon.
Inspected and Enrolled
IKE MEDIUM
51,525, A T. R , the unbeaten show ]orae. Lit•
tle need be sold or Iko Medium as everyone has
P0071 or heu•d of him. Be is a ohomp on bred
horse and a champion show horse, with Rho,,
quality, speed and breeding, and furtheris
st0mpitlg bio colts with his own remarkable
oho rapt mist ice He will leave his own barn0t
Blyth Mondry morning and prosoed to 0etter'a
Hate'
Auburn,
o,
for
noon,
tLo to Sa
d
th'„
Hill ll
for night • Tuesday to Colborne Hotel. Oode•
rich,where be remaintool rdnemdx0in, W°doomcRy to Del. Oardiner's, Bob
eav1for noon, then to arnliam,R Hotel,
11 tome0rn1 1,t • Thursday home tohis awn
stablt Blythwliere i-
will remain untilth
e
following ony morning.Write for bill
and further in fornintion
hone
2.
0511. 001 11T
TBODIAB 3. COULTER,
II11h out.
9 ,
••••,•••••••••••••10000040 0.00.0.0••0.0•••••0•••••••
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Know Market Conditions
The members of the censorship trade •
department have so steadfastly studied,I 40
1n the aggregagte, all German and Brit- 0
isit trade correspondence that to -day •
they know more about tate market con- 4
d111o11s of the world than ever mortal •
men have known before, it is well •
known that the Allies do nearly all their t
buying of war material through cant- 4
311011 60111 Y015510115, 1 •
This is called "unit buying” and is
largely carried on in accordance with b
the information that Inas been collect-
ed, tabulated and supplied by the cen-
sorship, •
This prevents uttscrupious army coin- e
tractors from fattening on exaggerated •
profits at the expense of the war- •
stricken allies, This single result of 4
the censorship has saved hundreds of
millions of dollars for the allied trea- •
curies, 1 e
EAS. Plum
General Blacksmiths
and Horseshoers
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Oarringe fainting and Woodwork Repairing given prompt
and care) 11 attention ata moderate price.
The only local agents of the original Fleury, Wilkinson, Frost
& Wnrnl, (all parte of plows), Oliver, (lockshutt, Nip, Afaple
Leaf, if]d and Kangaroo, P00011 and Judy Plow Repairs. Come
Mete etrerk of nH lines carried, Compare Lire gentlilto with the
enhalieule told 113111 no other,
implement Repairs
Look your machines over etu•ly nota renew all broken parts,
Over 10.000 e.xrunt duplicates of the original pieces of Ft &
Wood, Deming and AIoOot'tnicic Lnpletnents carried in eLock,
Nein work second to none. See our stock when needing n Wagon or Buggy.
Lawn Mowers Sharpened and put in good shape,
Phone Noe.
88 and 41x
E. & 8. PLUM
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The New Series
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The only Car in Canada selling at less than
$7oo.00 equipped with Electric Starting and
Lighting System. More Wonderful than ever,
8*
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Standard Equipment o
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Valve in head Motor
Electric Lighting — Starting
System
Selective sliding gear
Trausmission, 3 speeds
Forward and Reverse
New front and rear Spring
Brackets
Staunch 1"rainn
New front spring Suspensions
New accelerator foot rest
Ample road clearance
Cantilever springs
Improved Upholstery
Mohair Top
Non-skid Tires on rear wheels
Garage at D. Ewan's Carriage Works
Ament
AGENTS, BRUSSELS
Court of Revision
A flon•t of Revleton will he held by the Cot -
ell of the Ville go of Brassele In the Council
Chamber, Bru+sole, lliunday, August 0th, 1.017,
nt tltx hour of 8 o'oloek p m., on the Special
Assessment Rolls for the Tarnbenq Street
North and Turnberry Street South pavements
whinh have been eenetrooted. Snit sproial
ARs30anent Rolla are now epee fur exmmina-
lion inthe Clerk's ,ittue nod of which nntico
has been maned to tech of the totepayers
whose lands were specially assessed
F. S. SCOTT, Clerk.
Executor's Sale
For the parent° of winding up the e,tate of
the late John Hnlau,tynu the [ands and prvnf-.
hint., situate in the Vithfge of Comb. noir, eon -
Mining same 10 acres or lend end cpm, which
there is erected a comfortable frame Mune
mol rramm lin Ill, are offered for side, I+'nll
pertinalors and terns of sale will hr made
known upon uppnrntion to the Executor, An.
litany ltnysnaan,, Craibroulr. or t1,,, under-
! signed. W. 111. ts117O0A111,
4041 Solicitor for the Exeoator.
Pasture Farm to Rent I For Sale
The undersigned otfere for rental the 100
sere farm, Lot 0. lion 0, Grey, 'known as the
Gxrules farm. Ample water supply, Ttaned-
latepossossion, Apply to
J. D. WARWICK, V. S. }j Exeoutoro,
or S, J. SE00ERS, j
Brnsels,
Farms for Sale
The undersigned offnre for sale his tine 180
acre form being Ant 12, and part of Lot 18,
Oon. 0, and 80 acres on L417, Con. 4, Township
of Grey, Huron County. On the former is n
good brick house, mitre good Karn, 80 x r(0 feet
all cemented and water Metalled, nitre in m-
allard, &a 00 cares is chiefly bneh. Also 100 18078 (1111501 Entolment No. 1807
aures, being hut 12 Con. 0, in sante towmsihip. Inspected and Approved.
12Pall wheat and over 40
norms plowed: Both forma in goad condition,
acmes of extra good JOHN J. M06101111, Prop,
For further partioo1er, as to prices, terms and
eonditians, apply on the urnmloea or write This well bred horse will Omni. for P1311100
trio the rases Pensee a 1 r
JOHN JACKSON, I daring
] t t h e own enlblea,
Telephonel4010, Ethel P. O. y, Lot 22, Cod. 15, bleRillo
28;5 acres of farm lands 1n the Township
of D germ, adjoining lite Mitten of ttruosels, in
one Held. 'tern leagood gravel pit, If open-
ed up, from 2 to 3 acres. It hna been tested
nod enough of gravel there toaupply the town
and vicinity for the next quarter ofn can tu'y;
0 building iota ou 9'ttrttbea•y stunt ; 1 lot we
t3eorge nit set. „car the railivey etotion ; also
myn'ivate resi,ience on the river bank, Corner
of Winton, and Albert streets. For farther
fiarticulnre apply to the uddersinr,ned at, his
resifte,;re. .1. LECKIE.
Brussels, 151h March, 1917.
CUMBERLAND GEM
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"MzlDirr71'N O"ADA"
:e'
The 1917 Ford Touring Car
$495.00
•(, o 11. Forst, Out.
You pay less for this car but it. gives
you more enjoyment, more mileage and
service than those which cost rrlt)re.
The Touring Car gives the utmost in
automobile value, pride of ownership and
economy.
Buy a Ford tali, year anti • salve money
r
.—when saving IS a national duty,
8. CARTER, Dealer
BU- Jt SsErLS
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