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The Brussels Post, 1917-12-13, Page 4e itiritsseis 13 est r • 'gliUltSDA DE Bf r r x �>an4 x 1 , 3� 9 7 Must (rind Sorne Fool Substitute ----•- In 5 e mu lac t 3 Dr, Huron Co, Council The Oounty Council ;net Iaet week, the seesion smelling 011 Tuesday after- noon, All the meUbees in attend The tilling of the oflloe of County Y reaeurer, it de vacanth d 'l by -the cote , 1,ln f Dr. W. J, , Holmes, o res was one 1,F R the important mattefiA nn the order of businees and was dealt with on Wed- nesday afternoon. A motion was presented that the (aces of the ClerkandTreasurer be combined and that Wm, Lane County Clerk be appointed to the dual pnition, This was lost. It was then decided by unanimous vote that Mr. Lane be appointed to the office of Treasurer and two nomi- nations were made for the Clerkship, thus left vacant, Messrs. Beoek and McKinley moved the appointment of G. W. Iioltnan and Messrs. Nairn and McNabb nominated J. M. Goveniock Reeve of McKillop, The vote was 17 to 12 in favor of Mr. Holman, who ac- cordingly will take the position of County Clerk. Mas Holman is a well-known school teacher of the township of Tacker - smith. It is remarkable that 25 years ago when Mr. Lane was appointed to the clerkship, Mr. Holman contested. the appointment with him. G. M. Elliott, County Agent of the Children's Aid Society, waited nn the Council with reference to the pars. chase of a suitable bending for a shel- tee for neglected children, explaining the nerdthat exists for such an in- stittll inn, Me'et's Neill' and Beavers moved flint. t1111 Special Committee be ein- poweeetl til purchase the EElliott pi.„/„.1y fee title purpose, for $3,000. Tito nvI'inn ens lost. "•Ie heard from the R'1'V.' !rule„ whose direction the farm ,rneims lent by the Provincial Depart went '.f Agriculture were used in the County last Fall, The tt'actoi5 appear to have done good work cot- sidering the unfavorable weathet. They were used no farms where the Fall plowing was behind on account of lack of help and the average cost at plowing was about $1.35 per acre, The Council passed a vote of 8100 to be divided among the different Reeves who handled the traction plows and hereafter the farmers having work done by the plows are to meet the expense. At the closing session of the County Council Friday afternoon an address of a very complimentary nature was read by Reeve Lobb and Warden Milne, of Blyth, was presented with a gold -beaded cane by the members of the Council. In reply the Warden said that he had been in the Oounty for 80 year's and had been in Munici- pal office for 20 years. He paid a tribute to .the -County's Patriotic record. .At the afternoon session an address on !the Good Roads problems was given by Provincial Engineer Hubert, of Toronto. The County has adopted • the good roads system, The Council made the following grants to patriotic purposes :—Patri- otic fund, $8,000 per month ; British Red Cross, $55,000.00 ; assessable property, $5,000 for the Canadian Red Cross and $1,000 for the Navy League of Canada. On account of the floods during the Summer and the washont of many bridges and culverts which had to be replaced, the expenditures exceeded the estimates by a matter of perhaps a couple of thousand dollars. The Good Ronde Movement will now be pushed, Donald Patterson being elect- ed by the Council Good Roads Super- intendent, A further report of the proceedings will be given next week. English as She is Writ. Card in restaurant—Small steak, 20 cents. Extra small steak, 25 cents. Sign in bakery window—Home-made plze. Selected from country papers:— Mrs. Jones, of Sactus Creek let a can opener slip last week and cut herself in the pantry. A mischievous lad of Piketown threw a stone and struck Mr. Pike in the alley last Tuesday. John Doe climbed on the roof of his house last week looking for a leak and fell striking himself on the back porch. While Harold Green was escorting Miss Violet Wise from the church social last Saturday night a savage dog attacked them and bit Mr. Green several times on the public square. Isaiah Trimmer of Running Creek was playing with a cat Friday when it scratched him On the veranda. Mr. Fong while harnessing a Broncho last Saturday was kicked just south of his corn patch, An English report on education says --The female teachers were instructed in plain cooking; they had, in fact, to go through the process of cooking themselves. On a coupon—The holder of this coupon when properly punched is en- titled to one of our beautiful photo- graphs. From a prepared roofing ad. —'its bright red color Is permanent and will Tenths permanent, A report of a wedding—The cere- mony was performed by two Jewish rabbits. A Milwaukee paper informs us that "John Huckbody of Wausau lost thirty chickens by freezing to death. Advertisement In poultry journal-- Plymouth rock hens, ready to lay $3.25 tech. Graham 13e11 ins of the tele a ee o t 1 phone points tut some of the pro blems awaiting solution at the hands of scientific men and technical experts of the future It Is interesting and Instructive to look back over the various changes that have occurred and trace the evol- lo of the present from the past," ut n #3 pr t t p writes Dr. Bell. "Byprojectingthese lines of advance into the future you can forecast the future, to a certain extent, and recognize some of the fields of usefulness that are ,opening up for the young men of today, We have one line of advance from candles and oil lamps to gas, and from gas to electricity; and we can recog- nize many other threads of advance all converging upon electricity. We pro- duce heat and light by electricity. We transmit intelligence by the telegraph and telephone and we use electricity as a motive power. In fact we have fairly entered upon an electrical age so that it is obvious that the electrical engin- eer will be ouch in demand in the future. "On every hand we see the sub- stitution of machineey and artificial motive power for animal and man power. There will, therefore, be plenty of openings in the futuretfor young; bright 'mechanical engineers working in this direction. There is, however, one obstacle to further advance in the increasing price of the fuel necessary to work machinery. Coal and oil are going up and are strictly limited in quant- ity. We can take coal out of a ,nine, but we can never put it back. We' draw oil from subterranean reservoirs but we can never refill them again. We are spendthrifts in the matter of fuel and are using our capital for our run- ning expenses. "In relation to coal and oil, the world's annual consumption has be- come so enormous that we are now actually within measurable distance of the end of the supply. What shall we do when we have no more ensa! or oil? Apart from water power (which is strictly limited), and tidal and wave power (which we have not yet learned to utilize), and the employment of the sun's rays directly as a source of power, we have little left excepting wood, and It takes at least 25 years to grow a crop of trees. "There is, however, one other source of fuel supply which may per- haps solve this problem of the future. Alcohol makes a beautiful, clean and efficient fuel, and, where not intended for consumption by human beings, can be.manufactured very easily in an indi- gestible or even poisonous form. Wood alcohol, for example, can be employed as a fuel, and we can make alcohol from sawdust, a waste product of our mills. Alcohol can also be manufactured from cornstalks, and in fact from al- most any vegetable matter capable of fermentation. Our growing crops and even weeds can be used. The waste products of our farms are available for this purpose, and even the garbage from our cities. We need never fear the exhaustion of our present fuel sup- ply as we can produce an annual crop of alcohol to any extent desired. The World will probably depend u'poi alcohol more and more as time goes on, and a great field of usefulness is opening up for the engineer who will modify our machinery to enable al- cohol to be used, as the source of power." -Portland, Ore, Sunday Journal, Paris Had Bread Ration in 1870 It Is announced that a system. of bread •rationing will be adopted in France. This calls to mind the Seige of Paris, the last occasion on which bread rations were instituted in France, Although other foodstuffs were ra- tioned almost from the outset, it was not until halfway through the Beige that bread allowances were issued, Each citizen was allowed two-thirds of a pound a day, and when the white flour gave out a mixture of rice, oats and straw was used. Gltizens were given a card on which the owner's ;tame and address were written, and the number of t'atioes to width he was entitled, At- tached to this were several dated obit,. CAR OF S Napes flour AND FEED Will arrive in course of a few clays. Special price off car. Enquire nc 1 t t u'rm (-oh j W.G.AL WALTON pons, all of which were duly ratified by the stamp of the Maire, .As the customers entered the shop, tile baker would detach one of the coupons and issue the allowance of bread named thereon. In spite of the fact that the Parisians were on the verge of starvation, Bismarck threaten- ed to resign if the Government even accumulated food supplies to give the people _ immediate sustenance upor their surrender, declaring that such a course would encourage France to pro- long the contest to the last possible hour. THE SAD STORY OF THE STRUGGLE FOR LIF is frequently revealed in these war times even in this well-to-do Province. Hard enough to be poohstill worse to be sick and poor. The lot of the consumptive is a spe- cially trying one. Only recently a family was discovered living in two small rooms over a store. At one time they had occupied a comfortable home but the father took sick and had to give up work. With the savings all gone, they were forced to sell the fur- niture to buy food. When the man was found to be a consumptive, this was the op portunity of the Muskoka Free Hos itel to bringrelief so that not only would the stricken husband have a winning chance for life, but more desirable still, the wife and chil- dren should be removed fl'ont danger of contracting the disease. Under skil- ful guidance the home was cleaned up and the family temporarily provided for. Pt is now reported that the patient is doing well, with every chanee of recovery. This is the great work carried on by the Muskoka Free hospital which is now appealing for help. Contributions may be sent to W. J. Gage, Chairman, 84 Spadina Avenue, Toronto, or Geo. A. Reid, Secretary - Treasurer, 223 College St., Toronto. CLEVER AMATEURS PLAYING AT FRONT Give Amusing Performances in Schoolhouses and Barns.— General Delighted, Says Show Was a Real Tonic for Weary and Sick Men. Whether the Germans provide the- atres, concerts and other forms of Tight entertainment,. for the ,soldiers at the front—whether the German soldiers provide such things for :them- selves—we cannot say. Our own eherry fighting amen are well provided for in this respect, A chronicler in the Wind- sor Magazine states: "You will find amateur theatricals in every field of the war. A big centre like Salonika produced a regular Lon- don pantomine, which brought an au- dience of some five hundred men each night—not forgetting the Greeks. There were three huge tents, an orchestra of piano, piccolo and violin. The scenery was mainly army blankets, and the stage scarcely more ambitious than the "three planks" of great Du- mas' ordaining. The author, Frank Kenchingtan, was a private soldier, who Jotted down the dialog of his droll "Dick Whittington" on appropriate scraps of paper during wayside halts' on the march, Ingenious Stunts. "Here Dick has a military career, Fitzwarren is a government contract- or, and the villains of the piece bear the names of famous stew and jam - vendors, whom Tommy appreciates while he abuses them. The patomine is a drum -fire of army -jokes, witk interpolated songs and variety turns so ingeniously devised as not to ap- pear dragged in at all, but an 'ante Steady Work and Good Wages —.l+ Girls and V!onmn Apply at Excelsior Knitting Mills' Brussels Call, Phones 20x or 85, Brat part of the story. All Hie cos" tutees and properties are, locally Blade, even to the gorgeous gowns and wig Alice. e lighting tl a beauteous a Tll of 3 was done with three acetylene operat- ing rat- ing lamps, four headlights of ambu- 1 lances, and five -and -twenty big can-' dles stuck le 95 many tins. The per- formance made a lasting mark, even on military maps of the district, for these soon bore "Dick Whittington" names such as FIlzvtrr n' S Corner, , Alice Lane, and so on. It was a field ambulance which produced this piece, and the general was so delighted with it that he sent it round to all his divi- sional units as a real tonic for weary men. "To turn school house or barn intoa regimental theatre is Tommy's su- preme delight, ile abondons himself to the 'task with riotous exuberance. One ceases to be astonished at the talent shown, for the army is now the - nation, as our statesmen remind us. So that the soldiers' theatre lacks no element of reality. Music there must be, of course. The mouth -organ has string, and essay masterpieces upon it lost its pride df place at the more am- bitious performances, bat our men French, for the pont will make a passable violin out of a tit can and with hair-raising improvisation of his own." the battlefields of northern Prance some months after battle should, as one writer suggests, be made the subject of botanical research, for the phenomenon 1 recalls the h ur,ltive prediction of the 6 ilebrew prophet. to the effect that the earth would "disclose her blood" wbeit called up to "cover her slain," Spent Fortune on Old Stamps The death was recently reported of the owner of the world's greatest stamp collection, Philippe la Renotiere Fer- rary. He was the son of the late Duchess de Galliera, from whom he in- herited vast wealth and an enthusiasm for collecting. From his boyhood, in the 'sixties, Ferrary, encouraged by his mother, col- lected stamps, and expended large sums on his collection. Some years ago it WAS computed that he had spent more than £250,000 on it, and his annual expendi- ture with one London firm of stamp dealers is said to have averaged £4,000 a year. Ferrary amalgamated 'several impor- tant collections with his own. So far back as 1382 he bought for the then record price of £3,000 the general col- lection formed by the late Judge Phil - brick, a collection which to -day would be worth as much as £50,000. He was a great asset to"the stamp trade and as he was always a ready buyer at a high price for any rare or exceptional item he had the pick of the market. The great collection, which until the war was housed in the Austrian. Embassy in the Rue de Varenne, a mansion be- queathed to the Austrian Emperor by the Duchess de Galliera, contains pra- ctically all the great rarities among stamps. Blood -Red Poppies Grow Thick in No -Man's Land. Myriads of blood -red poppies that have turned some sections of the battlefields of northern France In- to fields of scarlet, as if the color of the blooms themselves came from the blood of fallen heroes, anew calls attention to the strange re- lation that seems to exist between certain flowers and fields of saguin- ary conflicts, a number of remarkable instances of which can be pointed out in history, if you ever visit the great Eng- lish racing centre of Newmarket you will hear the story of "Bloody Flower of Newmarket," which is said to bloom nowhere else than in the old moat, which is now filled up. Ac- cording to tradition, a very large num- ber of human bodies are burled in this spot, These flawers bloom in June and July, and the dark, bloodlike hue of their blossoms is said to have suggest- ed the name that had been given to them. A similar instance is pointed out as having happened during the Wars of the roses, when the monks of a certain monastery in Wiltshire burled after a battle a large number of Lancastrian and York dead in a huge, common grave. The following year, according to the traditional story, the rose bush- es planted 011 the grave bore red and white roses, flowers that were a blend of Lancaster and York, Macauley tells in a passage of striking eloquence how, after the bat- tle of Landen in the Netherlands, in 4693, between the French army under the Marechal .de Luxemburg and the English under King William iii., where more than 20,000 .men were left un- buried on the field, the soil broke forth the following year into millions upon millions of scarlet poppies, covering the entire battlefield, as if with a vast sheet of rich red, One hundred. and twenty years, later the salve kind of an Occurrence was reported to have taken 'pace in the same region, when in the 'guln- mer of the year following 'the victory of Waterloo the entire battlefield was ablaze with scarlet poples. In the present war this same bloom- ing of scarlet poppies everywhere on I PRICELESS POTASH Plants cannott live withoutpotash,- that ilis erasable product which we once so largely imported from Ger- many, and which our chemists have CIvbbj Tates For 1918 LFollowitlg are the Clubbing Rates THE POs']' is tricking for next year to Osuodiau Post"f33ees :— TsEPosTaud Daily Globes. .... 85 00 flail-Linpite..... 5 00 Totonto 1•Vorld.,5 00 Toronto Star 4 25 'fat onto News 4 25 London Advertiser 4 25 London Free Pi ess 4 25 Funtily Herald2 75 Weekly Witness 2 80 Far. Advocate 3 00 No'. Messenger2 00 World Wide... 3 20 Presbyterian , 2 75 Farm mud Daily,,, 2 30 Farther's Son ..., . 2 20 IF papers nue to be sent to the Unit- ed States additional postage is neces- sary. Cash must accompany all otders as i tete city papers give no credit. Fend motley by Bxpeess Order, Post- al Note "r, Registered Letter, Hank Cheques must have comcuissinn added. Address W. H. KIIRR, Tans POST Brussels, Ont. MONTHLY HORSE FAIRS BRUSSELS Regular Monthly Horse Fairs will be held this season as follows i BOW learned to make fair themselves. The potash In the -soil comes from the granite rocks beneath it, for air and 'grain act upon* the felspar and t potash frau mica of granite and take them, which dissolves In water ilnd enters the soil aa food for plants. But the fa'rulel' rarely bus suffi- cient p051511 in the soil of his land, lutcl before the war our farmers ob- tained large quantities front Stassfurt in Germany. 'There was once a great inland sea or lake in this region,on which contained the potash compounds in solution, and when the water dried up the potash was left behiltd, Potash Is one of our essential min- eral foods, too, and is contained in fresh meat and vegetables, the lack of which predisposes towards the dis- ease of scurvy. In olden times, when these foods were rarely obtainable on long voyages, the sailors suffered a great -deal from this disease. - Auction Sales AUCTION SALE Or FARM STOCK. IM. Imuttew,e, $o Jas. Tey la, Auctioneer, lune boon instructed h the undersigned to sell 1,y Pualia A,Lntlon at 1•155. I,ut 0 Don. a, Morl'is, 011 Whiny, Dee 14th et 1 unlock, the following valuable property, viz : -1 Gold ii It more ris- ing5 yenre old, 1 l�ruulbm In mare rising 5 yrs. old supposed In root. Goldnnit, 1 Dru,nherlo mare rising'4 yonre old, 1 Goldliplt gelding rite ing 8 yeses, 1 gelding riving 4 years, I ally ris. big 8yenro, 1 told link filly °nit, 1 standard bred driving mitre rising 7 roam, 1 ,rote due to calve In February, 0 cow. nue to calve in Item., 2eovodue toealveinApril. irowdonnoeleve May 1st 1 2 -year-old le 13 r sae to calve in Morph, 0 stars Heim; 2 yen -,. 0 voices, l thorn bred Durham bull 14 months old 17 -ft Deer- ing binder nearly new, 1 Deering mower 31.19. cut, 1 McCormick hay rake, I International hay loader. 1 Gµltivotor. 1 Mammy -Harris it hoe seed drill, 1 agdisc, 1 Prost Sc Wood gang bplow, 1 won and box, 1 open buggy, 1 top uggy, 1 oil tter. 1 set double harness, 1 set sin- gee harness, 500 bushels oats, a quantity of hay add other articles too 111111101.0114 to MOO 1011. Salo unreserved as farm lots been sold, Terme —$500and ui der cash ; over tent amount 10 months credit given on famishing apprhved joint notes, 4 per sant• off fqr cash on credit eniounta, tiny' and oats each GEO. K WARWICK, Proprietor. miry. For We by Tendert 50 aero feral MIA of N3 el Lot 15, Don, H ,1 ' I I ilr 5 11 b i u I1, 1,1,31 Ii a IN town •1 11 1 t �fP r nl�n tender. 'tender, : I 1 In 65 I)„i' 1GIli Fnme „I1lle 1."`1.1'11,/11W 7nli Iw or I lIP a Hull ,+,n 1.16/.1111111t11/16 h /1 34 n w1, tem 11 colt tion,, rgeed eater. 0, lei well lune, d, ,Mur 01,0110 r not tenll,i a nook I's '1111110, PiElil O, Pi,rn,, 5810 HI•u,sel• P.3), Farm for Sae ra ISA t I sale, 1,04 Lot '„ ( nn , 1,l 4 oleo ) o Fp,. 1 G R I, ort JIhet l Con s 1 u.hl Oe 4 1,0,;1], 1 1 11 11110 laic!, ll butt am 11x7/. 1 ,f 11. .h 01 rim - w111.1111111. 1'ic. 1?,., -1,114111 ,flu 01,1 r. Ou,lrxul,tt'• eels of 1,b W knees': )Call wheal-. In la a'+rre. knell hire] 1111+11 end 10101 telephone hyo farther por"r'elarx anvil. 00 the promit 50 oris. by letter to R. If Na 3 Myth 17'tf A0BER1' 11)001.10117, Proprietor. O✓11511OR1A li 1:E StourSE AND LOT POR 4 +.A I r (40,1 well and chloro, Yrult trees, See. A leo 5 nores 1n tic, poratien with Ia1:ge. stelde I I 11rd1.(110 e'1. For 30.111er p0riieu- lare est , 11, ice,. Lerma, ,Oe , apply 10')'11 a Pees, Brussels, Farms for Sale I ot.22, Con, 5, Grey, 100 nares, ono of the best paste re rarmo In Grey. Also my farm 1,t 101a1 - el, udjolnine- ti,e Village mid_ Station, 115 zeros, being oerts ofLots20 and 24 on 8. and Npt hot 24, Con 11, Grey. Excellent build Ingo 1,11d 1111 15.1 ,.took and grain rm'm. Will be sold to. grtllnr 01. ooparatoly on posy ;conk. Appy to DAVID MILNIC. Ethel, Ont. 15-0f' Farm for Sale In order to wind ip the estate of the late ,Ituu,'a-Rha v the s)londlrl 140 acre fern, adjoin- ing the Villoeo of B011e9ele is offered for sale. On 1310 property 11, 0 (mod bank horn and &M - allies house, Farm 111111 seeded down with the „snnptlaii of 20 acres and iv 0, excellent et11te of cultivation Possession given eat of March, For furthe'perliunlnrs npplx 910 If. S. SCOTT, Brussels. Farm for. Sale Containing 100 acres, viz , 3434 Lot 80, Oon 8, Morrie tow nehi11 and Let 1, Cm,, 5, Grey tcwn- "hip.. Well watered, oov,f,,rO,O,le house, hank born andmanure stied, ;Towing house, wind mill, oredlm'd, tire 2114 mile+ North of Brussels 011 gravel road. Rural Mail and rural 'phone, 1-: mile f school Will sell either or hotb rnntrd lone fu thee pnrticelnrs npi131 to Al EX FOn ' '• Pre riator, Brussels: or Notice to Creditors Iu the matter of the estate or Charles H. Rdight, late of the 1'nwn'.hip of Grey, ,a the County of Huron, for-: I neer, deceased. Notice is hereby given pursuant to "'1'ha Ilse Ned Statutes of Ontario," that all rr0ditura and others having claims aeninst the estate of the said Chas 13 Knight, who died on or about the Seventeenth day of 3epten.For, A D., 1017, aro required on ore fore the Thirby+arst day of tDore,,,l 0r, A.D. 1017 to send by post pr"puid or deliver to Ir. H Soon one of the Eoe,'ntol f !stet Will and Testament. of maid:deernsrd at ousel:; P D„ tbelr Cln'ietian cud Su, unu.ns { odttrere+and , thestatem, 13,o toll heir ioulare of their claims, theotaleu,enl or 13,,,,^ ncoonnts and the nature of the securities t lr any) held i by them, And further take notice tient atter such last I mentioned date the said'Ezretltors will pro-' coed t0 distribute the 051090 0f the deceased among the parties entitled thereto, hnvin m re- gard only to the olsitio of which they shall then have notice, and the said Ex, 0,100re will not be liable for the said assets or tiny part therm rf to nay person or persons' of whose elai,n notice shall. not have been received by then, et the time of 00011 distrihntion, Dated at Brussels this 20th day of November, A. D. 1017 F. A. 5OOTT Ex, enters. NELSON A14KIN, THURSDAY, DEO. 8t1s JAN. 5th 1' JAN. 81st 61 Fi'.13. 28th APIS. 4th Leading Local and Outside Buyers Present 13y order of Council. F. S. SOOTT, Clerk. I 1')) S, 8(207'0', Brussels, Executor's Sale For the purpose of winding up 'the .estate of the hate John Ballantyne the In nd0 mid prem Wet, situate In the Piling.. of Cronin Oslo, eon - fettling some 10 awes of lain] . and upon w9d,h there IN reef -1i n oamrortnblo frappe h. use and 11 111,,0 barn, are offered for stile. Fall purlienine- rind terms of sale w'id lie made 111100)0 np011 nerlicetion • n the Exe,.otor, An. thony 12eymann, Crenhro c or the 3n Mr - sign ed w lei. 0IN3 LA110, 40.11 Solicitor for the Execntor, For Sale 0814 acres of farmlands in the Town -hip of ilorrio, adjoining the Village of Brussel,. ,n one fle10. There is n good gravel pit, if mien - ed ftp, from 2 to 0 tierce It 1108 115011 noted. 0114 .1100 gh 1,f. grovel shore to+apply ihr town and vlrinity for the next quarter of a centrry; 11 building lots on 7'urnlwrry street ; 1 int no George street, near the I nilwny station ; also 111 private residence nn the riverbank, 50119'r of William nod Alpert streets. For fn. *her particulars apply to the undersigned at his rest,'"pees, J. LE'7K.IE Brussels, 15th 5Inrel), 1517. Sr, e `'d�R tp�' �{Py(3,'/J+r� � �� {(yL��1I� ssi��eFFordL Ve C�,4/ k, a4. w hersEverywhere C OURTEOUS attention to your needs wherever you may travel is something you appreciate, and being a Ford "among " r•' owneryou canget it. You are always an1011 free ds n � There are more than 700 Ford Dealer Service Stations through- out Canada. These are always within easy reach of Ford owners —for gasoline, oil, tires, repairs, accessories, expert advice or motor adjustments. The cost of Ford Service is as remarkably low as the: cost of the car itself. Nineteen of the most called for parts cost only $5.40. Just compare. this with the cost of spare parts for other cars and you will realize the advantage of owning a Ford, ".rt„,,r(p.:"—'""''tzzzn,aaso'1. THE UNIVERSAL CAR r, 0, 1?. 'FORD ONT. funaboui. • - $475 Tourin - - $495 S. CARTER, Dealer Brussels 4' es 4