HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-11-22, Page 4Aritssti# Valk
T11U, St ,r+Y, N'OVEMISISP a2. 1927
CAMPAIGN BROUGHT FORTH:
LARGE ACREAGES
IN FARM CROPS
HON.TKOS, SPROULE, FORMER
SPEAKER AND HEAD OF L,O,L.
DEAD.
For Many Years a Parliamentarian and
Senator, end Second, Oldest
Commoner,
Markdale, Ont, Nov, t0,—`Phis town
lost one of her most prominent citizens
in April the Organization' of Re- this morning in the death of Hon. T.S.
sources Conlanitte issued the Crisis. Sproule,
speM. aker otf he tlle radia hof Gone-
Asa phamphlet it was distributed widely
throughout the Province to Patriotic the Loyal Orange Lodge of astermous, and formerly grand master of of
Associations and municipal authorities, Dr, Sproule returned to his home
o ministers, and public-spirited Citi- town from Ottawa when Parliament
tens in general. As an advertisment, prorogued a few weeks ago, and up to
it appeared in every newspaper pub- yesterday enjoyed fairly good health.
Naiad in Ontario, Within a week the
extreme seriousness of the food situa-
tion confronting the world was impres-
ed on everyone. People who up to
this time had only vaguely understood
the necessity for increased food pro-
duction,
ro-
duct ,m, now realized as the headline
site! Famine told World Hunger are
on our Threshold. Action result im-
mediately. Though the season was ad-
vanced, farmers increased their acre-
ages of spring -sown crops. Towns-
people added vacant lot undertakings to
their usual gardening operations.
. Grorps of men co-operated in plant-
ing fields of rntatoes, beans, corn and
bucleeheat. Rotary Clubs, Boy Scouts,
'Girl Guides, Women's institutes, Bible
Classes, Churches. Sunday Schools,
Patriotic Food Committees, Horticul-
ture' Societies Agricultural Societies,
Town Cnpncil . Boer -is of Trade, Bowl-
ing. reel, elannfa'•terers, Bank Office
stn :tad cost every sort of organ-
ize, e
rgan-
tz it i,•.we were stirred to help in-
cr.— .cold's food supplies,
Th elte have been inspiringly
itioneeeit.. Favored by a splendid
sels,n reitario taken at large, has
pt ee"s v never had a better harvest.
Certain!, never have Ontario gardens
yielded as they have this year.
R-+3'rIe,1,:e Increase in Acreage.
Tl es in acreage, consider-
lne '.in in man -power on the
farm: from recruiting and industrial
exl ansi,\n In time towns, is remark-
abl.'. The returns made to the De-
partment of Agriculture show the fol-
lowing increases in 1917 over 1916:—
Acres.
Spring wheat 38,654
Barley 23,412
Oats 73,593
mAlixed grains 29,607
Rye 15,161
Peas 5,220
Beans 60,786
Ilav and clover 64,160
Alfalfa 11,544
Buckwheat 75,743
1Iuskine corn S ,603
Slave corn 71,918
Potatoes 6,958
Mangles 6,355
Se r 1 -Vets ,357
C i is ,529
Tut•, ips 1,364
These increases more than offset
the decreases in fall wheat. The re-
turns for this crop show 118,921
acre less in 1917 than in 1916. The
increase in spring wheat alone makes
up for ane -third of this serious shrink-
age. 005 of the most remarkable in-
cre.ses is that of beans -60,786 acres
This ti''p was grown this year in
scores of new places in the Province.
The campaign carried on by the Or
genization of Resources Committee
explains these gratifying results only
in part. Undontbledly the newspaper
publicity given to the Empire's needs
throefehout the winter had roused
our Meal citizens. The Ontario De-
partment of Agriculture, too, had
used its splendid organization to
good effect.
The Needs of 1918,
After a period of stress, there is
always a tendency to relax effort. The
people of Oaario in country and town
ail a rep onded nobly to the call for
increases food production this year•
Teel; if its have been fruitful of
good resuits. But there is no war-
rant tor "standing easy," yet more
headway has to be made. Nineteen
hundred mei eighteen has to be faced.
The enemies has been engaged but not
defected. Famine still lurks about
B , in. her allies, and our own boys
1n ;-ran -e. famine can not only
we .n Lllt can destroy our striking
force Oatario cannot in face of her
obi permit any relaxation.
The :meds of 1917 persists for 1918
Ne.ailer are they limited to food pro-
duct:on. The saving of substitution
of s od and the saving of money must
be recognized as insistent needs also.
Conserve Food—Produce Food—
Save Money.
The t 1rg;dtizatiun of Resources Com-
mittee, in view of these needs has is-
sued as its Circular No. 6 "The C.P.S.
Call" for ristribution throughout the
Province. lu it an appeal is made for
a continuance and en increase of the
1917 activities. People are urged to
organize and co-operate so that maxi-
mum results may be secured. Sug-
gestions are made for community
undertakings in such matters as edu-
cating public opinion, storing garden
Produce, canning surplus crops, ar-
ranging farin help schemes, purchas-
ieg tractor plows, purchasing seed
and increasing the wheat acreage, An
appeal is made also for the support of
organized schemes to encourage sys-
tematic saving and the purchase of
Dominion War Loans and War Cer-
tiliicates.
To further these aims the Organiza-
tion of Resources Committee Would
like to get intotouch with organize-
tions in ° everytownship, village, town
and city in Ontario. The secretaries
of Patriotic Food Production Commit-
tees that are not yet joined up as
branches of the Organization of Re-
sources Committee are asked to in-
form the committee of their where-
abouts and activities,
Sono Municipal Enterprises in Food
Production, 1917
The reports on town and city gard-
ening from all parts of the province
show that the most gratifyleg results
have ben attained for the season of
1917, Not only . have individuals
nla'de the greatest possible use 05
their back yards and nearby vacant
land but Municipal Councils, Boards
He was seized with intestinal trouble
last night, However, and passed away
early today, Mrs. Sproule was with
hint when he died. One daughter, Mrs.
Turner, of Salt Lake City, survives.
The late senator was born October
25th, 1843, of Irish parents in the
township of King, North York, and pra-
ctised In one or two places in Ontario
before settling in Markdale.
Dr. Sproule represented his con-
stituency in the House of Comons for
many years before being made speaker,
and later translated to the Senate. He
was generally recognized as leader of
the Orange forces in Parliament.
A TORY STALWART
Ottawa, Nov. l0.—News of the death
at Markdale of tion. T. S. Sproule,
former speaker of the House of Com-
mons, has been received at the capital
with many expressions of regret. The
flag on the Parliament Buildings was
placed at half mast as soon as word of
the event was received. At the time of
his appointment to the Senate in 1915,
Dr. Sproule had, with the single ex-
ception of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the dis-
tinction of being the oldest parliamen-
t i in ' th C 1{ h d
at• an a ommons. e a repre-
sented North Grey continously since
the general election of 1879. Dr.1
Sproule was one of the stalwarts of the
Conservative Opposition in the fifteen
years Sir Wilfrid Laurier was in power, I
and there were few debates in which
he did not participate.
The late Dr. Sproule succeeded Non.
N. C. Wallace as grand master of the '
Loyal Orange Association, a post which
he held for a number of years. Recent-
ly he has been in failing health, but he
occasionally participated in the Senate 1
debates.
The Government will be represented
at the funeral.
of Trade, and Patriotic Associations,
e+•• ....♦.t♦♦A.A ♦� •
ttN.eWOt♦♦.♦t♦t t ♦ ♦ t tR • .
The PatriotioYoung Woman a
make possible sarri(i,io to to (. 1 a 1
. 'u> even ticonsiderable
f tn•d,t is willing, av t 0
o,
Y
kr
•i
(t
weat(
If t
' I'.•lt fila 11'0111.
L' man fol 5(! I V (. t
'i + (t' tOh A t2.n
i t/lt deem t 4a r
1 10 Ea
. it: "1: 1)411' of thewet', the \vhf el "f comulerre Must be kept move e
• Lig, tad the best mei Otte tt young tveluau man render the country at 0
II
Ill t
is hio 19 50 fit freewill' to take the place of a 1 - !lied (ace elan,,
a Besides, its good insurance. 0.
•'
You can get this tfit!uiug7n about Gmon llT, at. thy a
a 'S 0
Oentral Business College
4
a
e
Z
4♦
t
3 Affiliated with the Cenla'ai Busineas Oollege, Hu
tttaurr, and the Elliot e
• Business OOege,iItia
s D. A. McLAOHLvAN, Pres. A. HAVILAND, Principal.. Q
i.♦.....t►..••••••.tt♦.04•e+ •....eoae.aa•♦•ifa.♦♦••♦t•
WINGHAM8 QNT,
Brussels School Board
Regular meeting ttf Brussels School
Board was held Friday evenlug
the Board room in the Public Library.
Members present, D. 0, Rnss, J. Fox,
It. LeaLherdnle, P. Stewa"t, and M.
Blank, Minutes were read and ad-
opted.
0a notion of Jas. Fox, sernu(ted by
P. Stewaet, Rev, W. E. Stafford was
appointed a member of Lite Public
I ibrney Hoard to complete Rev. Mr.
\Veto's term, the later having 19,111W/ -
ed.
Ohnirnnn Ross and blesses. Crnr-
nilighnna anti Leathetdttle 'vele depu-
tized to procure wood for the school
building.
Ltspector•s' reports were read, dis-
cussed and recommendations l'efeeeed
bn Propet'ty Contrnittee, Inspecttu'
Milts says :—"Attendance is good,
classes are making very satisfactory
progress and the parents are getting
good returns for Lhe money expended.
Under present conditions itis not de-
sirable to snake expenditures that, can
fairly be avoided but good blackboards
are a necessity and should be provided
at once. As Legislative grant on
equipment is 8 per cent of the value
and the County gives double this
amount it would be in the interest of
this school financially to provide the
equipment that would be of real ser-
vice iu carrying on the school work.
Closet accommodation is farm front
satisfactory. Primitive in construc-
tion and location necessitates great
diecnrnfnrt and even daueer to health
of small nr delicate children during
inrlennent weather. A new system
should be provided as soon as pos-
sible." From IuapeCLor Field's report
the following is Laken :—School is in
al lsaet as gond onnditian as at any
i eevious visit ; general tote is excel-
lent and when such is the case it is
narta!n that the school is its a pro--
pernnn condition. !Nachos art' ea-
pable, all are good workers ; discipline
satisfactory and has improved.
In many places have organized under-,
takings that resulted in the cultivate ;
ion of large acreages.
Rev. Nr. Gilroy not a Candidate
The Hamilton Daily Times speaks of ,
a brother of F. H. Gilroy, Manager 0!'
the Bank of Nova Scolia, Brussels, as
fellows ;—
The Rev. W. E. Gilroy in another
p111, or this paper states at length his
reason or reasons for not accepting
the nomination of the Independent
Labor Party in East Hamilton and his
statement is a reasonable as well as a
patriotic one. Mr. Gilroy secs in
Gen. Newburn, our Minister n1 4filitia
the roan upon whom devolves the
principal task of winning the wee so
foe as Canada's efforts are ceneerned.
He is led to believe that the General
is eminently codified Lo discharge the
duties of his office and therefore he
cannot take the responsibility of op-
posing frim at the polls, eveu if he
?toes not consider Ilius a suitable can-
didate for such a constituency, But
he is willing to accept him in this
emergency, when everything must
give way to the supreme issue.
Mr. Gilroy imagines that something
else should come out of this grim
struggle than a mere tnilitat y victory,
and he is afraid that the people are in
danger of being duped and defrauded.
If the conaeription of man power is
necessary, so also he thinks, is the
conscription of wealth and reern rcee,
Tie further declares that the wealth is
being conscripted by profiteers, anti
that there )a soil -talent wealth to the
country to pay all nen' wot' expenses
without the neceaaity of raising
tummy by means of Victory war bonds
which have to be paid back with in-
terest,
We ale not prepared to argue that
question, We kitow that Beit, Mr,
Carvell the other fright in Hamilton
announced that the rich man would
have to pay much more than lie is
now PM' 'TAX , How touch we do not
know. We have Pal idea that the
Government sl,nuid by taxation take
all the extra profits accruing from the
war, and that it should take under its
control all the warlike industties and
public utilities, so that the Slate could
get the full " benefit, financially 01
otherwise ?torn their use, 000119011 -
high or conscription of wealth may
go farther than that. We don't.
ts0W,
Under ordinaey circnmstttnces We
believe that 117r, Gilt oy would be well
qualified to represent a eonstieuency
like East Hamilton, but We give him
credit for good judgment and patriotic
motivedeoltrrittg to uppese the
Minister ofiu. Militia,
S
TUBERCULOSIS
SUNDAY
SU
Last year, as in years past, nearly
every Clergyman and School Teacher
in Ontario helped to spread the Gospel
of Good Health on Tuberculosis Sun-
day and Tuberculosis Day in the
Sohools.
This year, under the auspices of the
National Sanitarium Association, en-
dorsed by the leading Clergymen of
all Denominations and by the Depart-
ment of Education, Sunday, November
25th, and Monday, November 28th,
have been appointed for the annual
observance of these days.
At no time in the history of the
world has the necessity for physical
fitness been so great as it is to -day.
One has but to scan the reports of re-
jections for active service abroad to
note the many that are unfit. "You
have tuberculosis!" has been the pro-
nouncement to thousands of young
men in Canada and the United States
during the past few months,
A thorough physical examination. a
year ago might have exposed the
weakness and prevented the develop-
ment of this dread did -ease; and yet,
in spite of such a warning, thousands
of men and women Will continue to
disregard the danger until they too
have become victims of Consumption.
If you would avoid this disease,
watch your health, avoid needless wor-
ry and aver -work; see that your food
is nourishing and that it is served at
regular intervals. Above all—get out
to the sunshine every minute you can
spare; see that the windows in your
place of business and in your !tome are
open so that day and night you me-
in assured of 'a plentiful supply of
pure, fresh air.
SOB LETTERS FROM HOME
LE R P
(From l(noxville, 'Penn., Sentinel.)
Sobby letters from home cause more.
trouble with the soldier boys than
anything else, according to some of
the oilicers who have registered coin-
plaints against the Mothers and other
fonts writing in the lachrymose strain.
One officer in charge of a camp' Is
quoted by a correspondent as as yin g:
"Wiry will the mothers of hien
write them sob letters? It they amid
see the sights 1 see after their sons
get those letters—or their husbands or
brothers, for that matter—if they
could only realize how unpatriotic
those letters are, they might think
twice before they sent them. Theres
a boy we have trouble with every
time he gets a letter from home, His
mother writes about her loneliness
and her ever -flowing tears—she must
have to do her housework in a skiff—
and her sacrifices, and the empty
chair at the table, and dwells at
length th on the dewy -lonesome one e es
of
his pet dog, and tells Ilial they had
strawberry shortcake—the nice, Juicy
kind • you always loved, Willie—for
supper, and she couldn't eat any be-
cause he wasn't there, and they
scraped out his share because nobody
else` could bear to eat it. Can you
beat it for sheer cruelty? Boys are
teare
rocks towards tueer animals. heirsgnsiblwomankind, but
you just get 'em away from home and
then begin serving them with that
sort of diet several times a week and
you'll find how ready dependent they
are on their women and what a lot of
bolstering up they need. Instead of
writing 'I'm proud of you, Willie, and
1 often think how nobly you're serv-
ing the finest country and flag on
earth. 1 think you look so handsome
in your uniform, and I'm betting on,
you to put up the greatest little fight
in the world, for I know I can depend
on you to be fine and brave and clean
always and a credit to the mother
who loves you and is so proud of your
unselfish patriotism, and who thinks
you are so right to be there, She
writes a lot of sob stuff about the li-
lacs being in bloom where he used
to play, and how their smell nearly
chokes her with longing so that she
goes off and cries and cries, and "Oh,
Willie, v,hat if you never come home
again!" Things that wring his heart
and snake a weakling of him and a
coward and a baby.
"It's the biggest thing we have to
fight. Think of It! Letters from home
that ought to be our biggest help."
We cannot think that many moth-
ers write in the strain indicated to
their boys. it is too cruel and selfish.
As much as parents necessarily suffer
from the separation and their anxiety
the mother love is thoughtful and un-
selfish and THE MOTHER INSTINCT
WOULD SURELY TEACH THEM
, THAT SUCH ARE NOT THE KIND
IOF LETTERS THAT WILL HELP
THE BOYS TO P
LA
Y THE PART
T
OF MEN AND DO THEIR DUTY,
Cheerful, encouraging letters, telling
of the mother's „pride in her soidier
boy, andexhorting him to
acquit
t
himself with honor may be harder to
write but such will be better for the
boys.
CLINTON
lased be
Holloway a as neon the
Mr. A,J,Ioowyll p
!rouse and lot, owned by Ms mother,
and will continue to reside there,
On Monday shortly after one o'clock
a distressing accident took place near
the big mill, wllgn Mr. John Carriek's
horse ran away, and threw him out ,
breaking his leg Just above the boot,
top. The injured pian was taken
home and the three doctors were called
upon to dress the break. it was a very
bad break, the bone protruding through
the skin. Mr. Carrick will be laid up
for some tithe.
BIY th
Farmers are busy drawing tutu town
then' tuwt!pa and polatooe which-- are
being shipped to the Anlet ieem side.
They eve receiving good priers.
Luxton Hill hits charge of the die•
pnsal of the Victory Loan Honda in
this section and is making a thorough
canvass of the Lotvit trod M1191011 Illing
country and is meeting with splendid
success.
The W au'to's Ohrielian Temperanee
Union t:ondtteted a very successful
silver-nswlal contest in Lhe Methodist
chinch,Thutsday evening, Nov. 1st,
at•whielr there was a Burge attend-
ance. The peoreeds anrrnuhted to $25
There were 13 con tesLauts The
judges had a hard time .milting the
selections of those to receive the silver
medal, but, eventually they decided
that Mies Lillian Jackson shnuiil re-
ceive the award for singing anti Miss
Melba McElroy for elocution.
MONTHLY
HORSE FAIRS
i
BRUSSELS
Regular Monthly florae Fairs will he
held this season RH fniloat :
THURSDAY,
DEO. 0111
SAN. 15111
J AN. 81st
28th
A Psi,. 4; h
leading local and Outside Buyers Present
13y order of Councii.
F. S. SCOTT, Clerk,
The Moos -Inn 01 FwNAnco 'offers for -Public Subscription
Canada's Victory Loan
I ssue of
• $150,000,000 5i% Gold Bonds
Bearing Interest from December let, 1917, and offered in three maturities, .the choice of which is optional with the aubsaiber, as tollowsi
5 year Bonds due December 1st, 1022
10 year Bonds r' +cember 1st, 1927
20 year Bonds c....::.:ttmber 1st, 1037
Thin Loan le authorized under Act of the Parliament of Canada, and both principal and interest arc a charge upon the Consolidated Revenue Fund.
The amount of this issue is 8150,000,000, exclusive of the amount (If any) paid by the surrender of bonds of previous Issues. The Minister of Finance
however, reserves the right to allot the whole or any part of ttte amount subscribed is excess of 5150,000,000.
The Proceeds of this Loan will be used for War purposes only, and will be spent wholly In Canada.
Principal and Interest payable in Gold
Denominations: 550, 5100, 5600 and $1,000
Subscriptions must be In gums of 550 or multiples thereof.
Principal payable without charge at the Office of the Minister of Flinnce and Receiver General at Ottawa, or at the Office of the Assistant Receiver
General at Halifax, St. John, Charlottetown, Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary and Victoria.
Interest payable, without charge, half -yearly, June 1st and December 1st, at any branch in Canada of any Chartered Bank.
Bearer or Registered Bonds
Bonds may be registered as to principal or as to principal and interest.
Scrip certificates, non-negotiable, or payable to bearer, is accofdance. with the choice of the applicant for registered or bearer bonds, will be issued after
allotment In exchange for provisional receipts. When these scrip certificates have been paid in full, and payment endorsed thereon by the -bank recelviag the moneY
they may be exchanged for bonds, when prepared, with coupons attached, payable to bearer, or registered as to principal, or for fully regletered bonds when
Prepared, without coupons, in accordance with the application.
Delivery of interim certificates and of definitive bonds will be made through the Chartered Banks.
Bearer bonds with coupons w114- be issued in denomination of 850„ 8100., 8500., and 81,000. and may be registered as to principal. only. Fu1IY res
tared bds, the interost on hch Is paid direct to the -owner by Government cheque, will be issued to denominations of 51,000., 85,000. or any authorised
multpie oof 85,000. w
Subject to the i a,meot of 28 cents for each new bond Issued, holders of fully have
bonds without coupons, will have the right to convert into bonds
of the denomination of 81,1)00 with coupon,, and holders of bonds with coupons will have the right toconvert11110 fully registered bunds of authorized denom>r
(nations without coupons, at nay time, on application to the Minister of Finance.
Surrender of Bonds
have the
HoldersofDominionof
their Canada
in part payment for October 1st,
to bondsoof this issue, he three preceding
conditib Canada War Loan Iituee.
Debenture Stock, due October let, 1010, at Par and Accrued Interest.
War Loan Bonds, due December 1st 1925, at 07I4 and Merited Interest.
(The above will be accepted in part payment for {loner. of any of the three maturities of this Issue)
War Loan Bonds, due October 1st, 1031, at 9715: and Accrued Interest.
War Loan Bonds, due March let, 1097, at 06 and Accrued Interest.
(Theo will be accepted in part payment for bonds of the 1037 maturity ONLY of this Issue)
Bonds of the various maturities of this issue will, in the event of future lanes of like maturity, or longer, made by the Government, other than issues
made abroad, be aooepted et par and accrued interest, as the equivalent of cash for the purpose of subscriptlou to such lemma
Issue Price Par -
Free from tures—lnoludina any Income tax --Imposed in pursuance of legislation enacted by the Parliament of Canada.
Payment to be made as follows,
10 on December let, 1017 205' on March 1st, 1018
10onJanuary 2nd, 1918 211 on April 1st, 1018
20 Jo on February 1st, 1018 20 0 on May lat. 1018
A full half year's interest will be paid on let June, 1018.
The pods therefore give a net interest yield to the investor of stout:
5.61% on the 20 year Bonds,
5.68% on the 10 year Honda
5.S1% on the 5 year Bonds
]Ipayments are to he made to a Chartered Bank for the credit of the Minister of Fluauee.-. Failure to pay an Instalment when due will render previous
pa- menu !!•alo. forfeiture, and. the nilotment to cancellation. Subecriptlons accompanied by a. deposit of 10% of the amount subscribed, must be forwarded
through the medium of b Chartered Bank. Any branch in Canada of any Chartered Bank will. forward, subscriptions and lssee provislonai- receipt..
s
In case of paellal allotments the surplus deposit will be applied toward payment of the amount dao on the Jammer instalment,
Subscriptions may be paid in full on January 2nd, 1518, or on any. Instalment due data t10Mafter under discount at tits rate of 534% per 1111111/M. Under
this provision payments of the balance of subscriptions may be made as follows: {
1f paid on l,ebrnn v2lsst, 1015, at the
rate
of 70 46959 per 01 W.
If paid on March let, 1859, at i .o rate of 50.72274 per 0100.
If paid on April 1st, 1918, at the rate of 80.00969. per 51m,
any .branch In Canada of any Chartered Bank or from any Victory Loan Committee, or member thereof,
Forms of cif
Loa will
be okot,t at
from
The books of the Loan to i bd due
58 fo Department of Finance, Ottawa.
AppliralNOnn will be made in duo course for the llating of this Issue on the Montreal and Toronto Stack Exchanges,
Subscription Lists will prose on or. before December lsi, 1911.
DupAarMtltT 0P F.rsAesrn,
OTTAWA, November 1211,, 1017.
MOTh[R GAVE
mIS D[VCAT
CW VNOL
;And He Got Well and Strong.
That's True
Monaca, Pa, -"My little boy, who
is the youngest of three, was weak,
nervous and tired all the time, so he
was most unfit at school, and noth-
ing seemed to help him. I learned
of Vinol and gave it to him. It has
restored his health and strength and
we i t ".--Mrs.
he has gained in gh
Monaca,Pa,
Frederick
Fee k
Vinol is a constitutionalcodliver
and iron remedy for delicate, weak,
ailing children. Formula on every
bottle, so you know what you are giv-
ing them. Children love it,
F. R. SMITH, 171•tlt:gi'I, 13i itssels,
Also at the hest Utuggiets iu all On-
tario towns.
Clubbing Rates
For1918
Fallowing are the Clubbing ELM etiTHE
Pos'r 19 ulahiog for 11,x1. gent• Lo
Can:Mimi Posts Iii. 'es :—
Tan POST curd Daily Globe.... .....$ G 00
Hail -AMA, e . .... 5 00
Tolnnto World—. 5 00
T,.routo. Star 4 95
'Poi nnto Ne we,4 25
London Advertiser 4 25
Lindon Free Press 4 25
Family l-leraltl 2 75
\Neck!, \V!Lao :lee" 2 80
Atiyou13011
Nor, neleseenger.., 2 00
wood ld Wide.., . 11 91)
Presbyterian ...,.., 2 70
Farm mid pnfty2 Rtl
Pd tiler's film 2 2t1
11
If papers !lee 80 he spilt 1" I he Unit-
ed Stales additional post age 10 1100031 -
Ratty.
()ash most at'4arpally tti1 of tiers an
the city paper„ nu el edit.
Send momey.by Express Order, Pool,
al Note or ; Reggistered Letter. Bank
Cheques mutt have columissinn added.
Address
W. H. KERR,
Tsnc Pon Beussels, Ont.
Old FalseTeeth
Bought in any condition
,SL.00 pr'1' Set O1' .7 cents
per tooth. Cash by re-
turn mail.
R. A. Copeman
2570.t E9planei a ave., Montreal, P. 01.
10.15
Teacher Wanted
•
Quonilot t,acher tProto9tont4 wanted for 15.
5, No 10. plea Township, Buren County.
Duthie to rolunienso Tun 3rd, 1918. Personal
tgtthrntinn I ,eforred Anoly, stating miry
ardesi), ,'1..11p h, ISAAC LAKE, 1,0,
0. reso , 1t. 1( N „. U Brussels. 17.11
Farm for Sale
rine 100 Warn 6.t m ion sale, 1 'leg 14 15 34 405
11 and Nit Lot 15. thin 8, Norris , uwnailtp. On
the poen:see le a line brick huteie, bank barn
02572, 2 thriving shorts, nrchetd, windmill Se.
Po9suasfc1 to snit purchaser. 0 miles to windmill,
eats nr Birth 0 nsres 15811 Winn t. in. 18 8050,
bush Butyl m:dt and earn! telephone. 11'0,
further parch:uhtrs apttty 0u the premises et• if
W le' tor to B. It No Blyth.' 17.15 ALBERT ROW.ETT, Proprietor.
G0a1lORTABI:E,t10U8E AND 1,011 15OR
sa t,s.—t0o0d wetland cistern, fruit trees,
Se. Also 5. scree in corporation with largo
etable and.d tilled well, Nor further particu-
lars as to prlcu, terms, ¢e., apply to 1568 s Pose,
Brussels.
Farms for Sale
Lot 02, (Ion. 0, Gray, 100 nares, one of the hest
pasta re Parma In Grey. Also my farm et Eth-
olollntnhng tit e'VIllcgoearl :Matfolt,175wee,
1)amg pinto of Lots 28 and 24, +,0 8 and N pt
Lot 2I, Una 9, Grey, Excellent balltllogs s and
nn A 1 etuntc and rnbn tam t g to•u
), Wlbosoldto-
gether or x 5on forms. Applyto
UAVID 81154
51, Ethel, Set, . 1•tf
Farm for Sale
Ooutnining 200 acres, vin., 514 Lot 80, Oct. 9,
Morrie township, end Lot I, Owl, 5, Grey town.
ship. Well wntored, comfortable House, bu,,ht
barn and 111, 0010 shed, driving house, ikon
mill, orchard, stn. 234 tulles Nurtb or Brussels.
on gravel 101111,. town1 thin! mud rural 'phone,
mile to school. Will Roll either or both
farms. If not soil before October lot will he
rented, For further particulars apply to
ALEX, 1/'ORSY7'13, Proprietor, Brussels, or
' u.8, ewer, Brussels, .: 9.9
Executor's Sale
For the on eposc of winding u1, the estate of
tit elate Joh a Dallas Lytle Ole lamas and pyrite
ides, mita, to in the Vflingn of.. (Y•hnbrootr, one
ttdufng6 vamp 10 sures or hand Anel upon which
there to tweeted a comfortable frame 0 hm108
rind Fre me barn, nee 0n'eved, for sale, !lull
t5,rttt'Inr» and 1010, of onto will he Houle
known upon appnoatlou to the Extentor, An-
thony Bnymonn, Cronbroolr, or the under -
1 W. N. iNOLAIR,
•IOhf Solicitor for the Exeonter,
For Sale
'1815 noon or fora, lands 10 the Township
of morels, ndjoinlug the Vil Inge 05 Brueeels, 11
one field. There Ix it goodgra vel pit, 1f open.
ad np, frottn 2 to 11 nerex. 1.E has bean tested
nee enough 05 gravel there to stlppiy the town
and vlohllt for the next qusrter of a celttory ;
' 0 building Iota on Tnritborry street ; 1 lot. on
Georgee1rart,nenr thereilwny etntlee ; eine
my ,Aid
vila re.enno on rho river batik, worn or
05 William and Albert strops. Far further
partlettma's apply to the tttidoreS wsd at Itis
reB00eule,15tlihint'oh,11t15. .5, 1tC5I10.