HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-12-27, Page 4the irt1<sst hl Vast
"111t71SL)AY, 1)1$CI.MBi.R 27 1917
ONE PERSON OUT OF
EVERY TEN IN CANADA
BOUGHT WAR BONDS.
The latest returns in the Victory
Loan campaign show a total of
782,714 subscribers, or one subscriber
for every ten people in Canada. This
establishes a new record with respect I
to the proportion of the population c.f
a country subscribing to its war
luaus. The previous record was held
in Great Britain, where one person out
of every twenty-three subscribers to
the last War Loan. in the Liberty
loan campaign in United States.
bonds were sold to one person out of
even: twenty-seven of the population.
In many cities, 1 Yens and districts
in Canada, the proportion of the peps•
lafion buying Victory Bonds was even
higher than one in ten. In a number
of cases it was as high as one in four.
The achievement in connection with
Canada's Victory Loan, while primar-
ily due to the splendid spirit of patri-
otism that pervades the country, is
another evidence of what may be ac-
complished through press advertising
backed by an adequate selling organi-
zation.
Prior to the Victory Loan campaign
there were compartively few bond
buyers in Canada, The third Cana-
dian War Loan of last spring, which
was the most widely distributed bond
issue in Canada up to that time, had
only 41,000 subscribers. The Finance
Minister deemed it essential that
many tines that number should sub-
scribe to the Victory Loan. He as-
signed to the press the task of edu-
cating with respect to the Loan the
great masses of the people who were
not bond buyers and in most cases
had only a very vague idea of the
meaning of the term "bond" as ap-
plied to securties.
For several weeks before the sale
of Victory Bonds commenced Canada's
need for money to carry on the war
and to maintain her agricultural and
industrial prosperity was presented
to the people of Canada in display
advertisements in the press. Empha-
sis was placed in those advertisements
on the privilege and duty of every
Canadian to assist in the war financ-
ing of his or her country, and upon
the fact that if Canada's financial
needs were to be met the great masses
of the people would have to buy Vic-
tory Bonds. The meaning of a "bond"
and the security behind Canada's
Victory Bonds were explained in
simple, every -day language. Similar
educational work was done voluntarily
by almost all newspapers and other
publications through their news and
editorial columns,
By November 120, when the sale
of Victory Bonds commenced, the
people had been educated very largely
to the need for the money, the secur-
ity behind the Loan and the reasons
why every person who could possibly
do so should buy one or more Bonds.
The preparatory educational work in
the press was followed up by personal
solicitation by a most efficient Domin-
ion -wide organization of personal
workers. Concurrently with that per-
sonal sol+cj,tation there appeared in
the press a series of "selling" adver-
tisemente and duty «f every Canadian
to buy Victory Bonds, and many edi-
torials and news articles along the
same line were published in every
newspaper.
The press publicity created an at-
mosphere and a knowledge of the
situation that in addition to securing
large numbers of subscribers without
personal solicitation made it possible
for the personal workers to do their
work quickly and effectively and with
infinitely greater results than could
have been obtained without the ed0-
cetional, inspirational and selling ad-
vertisements in the press.
At the conclusion of the campaign
Sir Thomas White, in a telegram to
J. 1.1. Woods, President of Canadian
Press Association, 'Inc., expressed his
sincere thanks for the fine spirit and
splendid energy shown by the press
and his opinion that the press had
every reason to congratulate itself
upon the character and effectiveness
of the advertising propaganda,'
NEW BRITlctf CREDIT MOVED.
Loudon, Dec. 12,—Chancellor of
the Exchequer Bonar Law moved a
credit of £5'50,000,000 Is the house of
commons this afternoon. (£550,000,-
000 is approximately 82451,000,000.)
The chancellor said he estimated
that the present vote would carry the
expenditure to the end of Match, 1918.
He declared that the average daily ex-
penditure in the last sixty-three days
was .£6,744,000, and for the period
since the end of the last financial year
d6,686,060.
1/ ted ':a,v'r$.4 F]. w,•._tix�TLW'IM'N;'A'` nlK,1'ki.
611AL.R,Cd'AX VRADIALD
CANADIAN HISTORY
ManyFathers of Confederation Came
From There
The stricken city, of Itlifax, Is the
historic town eel Canada. National de-
velupment began there, and there re-
sponsible government w;ts attdueed
anti ivauguarated in Nova Scotia. Can-
adian history awes much to her citi-
zens, many of the Fathers Li Cunfeder-
atlun came teem the city, and Halifax
1114 B$'it 40111 ci{ giltil ;111' t}t 11i0
fax. Such then as Judge Archibald,
the Right Rev. Bishop inglist, first
American Anglican bishop; the Hon,
Richard John Uniacke, Rev, William
Black, founder of Methodism in Noxa
Scotia; Rev, Thomas MaeCulloch, a
noted figure in Canadian Presbyterian-
ism; Judge llahburlon, author 91
"Sate Slick," and for years a promi-
nent judge; the Hon, Joseph Howe,
the patriot, imperialist, statesman
Nueva Scotia's leader in obtaining re-
spwisible government; the lion, J,
THE DRY-DOCK AT HALIFAX
played a very large part In Confedera-
tion.
industrial progress aruund the Great
Lakes is such different to the progress
that has characterized the growth of
Halifax and the Maritime Provinces. In
the latter con' eemities, and more par-
ticul art• in the, stricken City of Hali-
fax, progress has manifested itself in
legislative enactments and leadership
and in political progress.
A NAVAL BASE.
Halifax was discovered by the early
French adventurers, Its wooden huts
and cantonments erected to protect its
inhabitants from the raids of Indian
tribes were the headquarters of the
adventurous pioneers who launched out
into the great beyond and discovered
Montreal, and then on to Chicago and
St. Louis. Halifax was a base for
the assault in which it was hoped to
retake Louisburg by the New England
forces in 1745. It was Halifax that the
British selected in 1749, and again in
1776 and 1783, as a naval base, from
which she conducted her operations
that would have led to the final esab-
lishment of a British colony covering
the whole of the North American con-
tinent had not the War of Indepen-
dence ted to the victory by George
Washington. But this loss ;vas a lesson
proudly learned by Britain, and Hali-
fax became the cradle of a new farm
of colonial government that has solidi-
fied the empire and enabled it to stand
the test of August 4, 1914.
FOUNDED IN 1749,
In the War of 1812 the privateers of
lialifax played a part, and it later
became the favorite base of operations
for the Confederate blockade-runners
during the Civil War.
Halifax, as it is known to -day, was
really founded in 1749 by the Hon. Ed-
ward Cornwallis, as a rival to the
French Town of Louisbultg in Cape
Breton, It was named der the second
Earl of Halifax. in the opinion of
some historians, It made great sacri-
fices tar the cause of Confederation, by
the consummation of Confederation nad
purposes, a garrison city of Great Bri-
tain, in 1905 the British North Amer -
can squadron of the Atlantic fleet made
its last call. But the associations
brought about by this intimacy with
Great Britain are lasting; it is typically
English. Halifax is to the British what
Quebec is to the French, its quaint
aid houses, with esimney pots, sooted
Government and other official build-
ings, associate, the city with days of
citadel clock and other landmarks, its
styles of architecture, give it true
semblance of the early Georgian city,
Yet n
the mode' National Memorial
Tower, standing on the hill overlook-
ing the wide expanse of the Bedford
Basin, tells the visitor and the new-
comer that while the city takes one
back to the days of the Family Conn -
pact, Halifax was the nest of political
progress and representative govern-
ment.
FAMOUS MEN SOJOURNED THERE
Halifax is connected with more
maritime events than perhaps is any
other city :on the continent. Such
men as Cook, Rodney, Nelson, Marr-
yat,ins harbor
a '
all knewwell, and
each had at times either paid a for-
mal call or sought refuge in its wat-
ers from the Alaetic storms.
Many famous men have also so-
journed there. The Duke of Kent,
father of Queen Victoria, twice took
up residence in the city. While sail-
ing the North Alantic, Lord Nelson
called at the station In pay his re-
spects to the governor, William IV
had sailed these waters; John Inglis
and Sir Frederick Williams, of Kent,
also lived there. Sir Samuel Cunard,
the founder of the big Cunard line of
Steamships, succumbed to the lure of
W. Johnston, Sir Charles Tupper and
Sir John Thompson, Canadian pre-
miers;; Sir William Dawson, education-
ist and Principal of McGill University,
Monreal ail these have lived and mov-
ed In this historic city. Such con-
temporaries as Hun. W. S. Fielding and
Sir Robert Borden, and many other
leaders in Canadian Public life, in-
cluding Sir Robert Falconer, hailed
from Halifax or the lee::' r OYdr
whish Halifax exerts its influence.
LAST PORT FOR SOLDIERS
For the thousands of Canadian boys
who left fur the front via this eastern
port. It was their stepping -off point,
It presented to them the last glimpse
of the homeland many of tihem ever
saw. Troopships, escorted by giant
battle -ships, have passed out into the
silence of the night with their burdens
of warriors who are going to help Can-
ada "carry on" in France and gland-
ers. Whole fleets of British gult-
boats have crept into the sheltered
waters of the harbor on mysterious
tnissions, and crept out again, each
doing its part in helping Canada to
play the game. If the censor per-
mitted it, some wonderful war stories
could be told. Halifax has played a
bigger part in this world tragedy than
the average citizen of the Dominion
imagines. It is the direct link with
Britain. Ships that ply the Atlantic
under war conditions shelter them-
selves in Halifax until escorts can
assist them. Gold and men and pro-
visions have passed through the city
as never before, Personalities rang-
ing from Balfour to Bernstorff have
visited it and added importance to its
part in the war work on their voy-
ages to and from America. In short,
Halifax earned a war -time reputation
and impressed its importance upon the
rest of the Dominion that bas meant
and will mean, such for its prosper-
ity when it rises from the desolator
now !breed upon it by an unseen
hand,.
POPULATION OF 65,000 i 444
Halifax to -day is one of Canada's
busist cities. With it history of over
'160 years, its progress has been some-
what slow. But to -day a population
of some 65,000 people reside there,
and its citizens hold a large propor-
tion of the Canadian bank stock; in
fact, it is a bankng city of consider-
able note. The railways and the Gov-
ernment have been seized of its im-
portance as a summer port, and re-
cognized its position by spending
millions of dollars on great dock fac-
ilities, The railway yards and new
•♦♦•♦♦♦s•♦♦♦4000e390440e9ae
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Successor to
M. Yolleck
Is prepared to pay the
highest price for
Scrap Iron,
Rags,
Rubbers,
&c.
Will also buy Hi:leg,
Furs and Poultry
Write or Phone 62x
SAM WEiNSTEIN
111 ILL STREET
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WOMEN workers have been . so
successful in the factories InGroat Britain that they are
being tried lu the great workshops of
Canada Everywhere they are prov-
ing themselves to be keen rivals to
men, and it is now evident that the
home Is not the only place where a
woman may excel in work calculated
to advance. the welfare of mankind.
The Canadian PaelBc Railway Co. has
sent thousands of its male employees
for service in Europe, and as a con-
sequence male workers have become
scarce in various departments of in-
dustry. In 1916 women workers were
introduced Into the Canadian Pacific
Angus Shops at Montreal, At present
there are two hundred of them en-
gaged In the shops. '
These women workers have been
organized and work under the super-
vision of Mrs. J. W. Bell, wife of Mr.
Bell, superintendent of the Montreal
Windsor Street Station building, Mrs,
Bell is enthusiastic over the success
of the efforts of those entrusted to
Iter charge, and considers that the
field of manual labor requiring skill
and application is one in which wo-
men will yet exercise a wide infiu-
ence.
A. visit to the women workers in
the Angus Shops is inspiring. The
women punctually begin their labors
n finish 4.45
at '7.15 a.m., and sh fi at pen,
Allowing for the lunch hoar, between
12 and 1 o'clock, they work eight and
a half hours a day. Watching the
women trip along cheerfully to the
scene of their exertion one might
feel that he is observing the world
march away from the old era of pre-
judice and convention and entering
a period of freedom and common.
sense. The spheres of the activity
of the Angus Shops women workers
are made cheerful and comfortable
as it is possible to make them. Dacia
woman has a locker in which she
places her belongings before donning
her overalls and cap. At the outset
of the experiment it was difficult to
induce some of the women to take
kindly to the garments which tree
dition had marked out as male pre-
serves, but after a little while every
woman found these working dresses
were more convenient than skirts.
The overalls have three distinct re-
commendations: they are tidy, they
are sanitary, and they are safe, al-
lowing their wearers to move
among •t the machines without dan-
ger of being drawn into machinery
clutches. 6'
The women work on the piece sys-
tem, and they are paid at the same
rate as their brothers. They work
amongst the men with the harmony
that prevails in offices where there
are female and male clerks. In the
Angus Shops the women are to be
found sweeping, coach washing..
coach painting, working on drills, at
lathes, at various hinds of machin-
ery, filing and drilling in the brass
shops, brass polishing, operating nut -
tapping machines, cleaning dynamos
in the electrical department, assist-
ing in the eteamfitting centre, and
making mattresses and pillows, Ng,
woman is asked to do heavy work.
The women bring the material for
their lunch with ethem, and this they
may prepare in the lunch room which
accommodates two hundred. Soup
end bread are provided by the Com-
pany at cost :price: - Attached to the
lunch room is a rest room, and near
the rest room is a first aid room,
where any accidents that may occur
are treated. No less than seventeen
of the women workers bold certifi-
cates of proficiency in first aid work.
Should -any accidents occur the ser-
vices of these trained women are very
valuable.
There hoe been no scarcity of appli7.
cations for work at the Angus Shops.
Hearing of the liberal treatment
which they receive women have been
anxious to secure work there. Bvt
only those who are specially in need
of employment are taken on. Many
of the workers are widows, soldier's
wives, and women who are the sole
means of the support of dependants.
These plucky and industrious women
lessen to a considerable extent the
strain on the Patriotic, Red Cross,
and other charitable funds.
Mrs. Bell makes a thorough 'ores•
tigation of the cireum,stancee of each
woman. before she is given employ
menet, and a close watch is kept on
each worker for the first few days
after her appearance in the work.
shops. This is done so.asto guard
against the danger of alien enemies,
for many nationalities are represent•
ed among the female employees of
the Angus Shops. Mrs. Bell says that
every effort is made to have each wee
man placed at the task that is most
congenial to her tastes and ability.
Those who show exceptional talent
and skill are promoted. There have
been instances where girls entered as
coach washers and in a short time
found themselves installed as office
assistants. Many of the women,"
says Mrs. Bell, "are one hundred
per cent efficient, and this efiirlence
is 1n no small way due to the snit,
able conditions under which the wo
men perform their tasks. The wo
men are reliable and melds ofn uno
tuality, and only in rases weere thert
is illness of the worker or some mein
ber of her family do workers abecnl
themselves from duty. Women are t
decided success in the Angus Shops.'
docks now cover over 200 acres.
Its natural harbor, over six miles long,
attracts the world's shipping, and the
big ocean grayhounds stake sailings
from the pert to all parts of the
world.
But just when Halifax is rendering
its greatest service, death and destruc-
tion visit it Its quaint market
square, where the colored market
gardeners .' .old assemble around the
post ntiice to sell their garden truck,
the other centres that added a piquant
touch to the life of the city that was
perculiarly Victorian 111 its general
aspects, have been destroyed or part-
ly so. Halifax to -day is a city of the
dead. War in Europe has indirectly
brought about its desolation, The
Halifax Canadians have known for the
past 50 or 75 years is now no more.
A new city will rise out of the ashes
and rapidly assume its rightful place
in moulding the destinies of the
Dominion,
RICE FROM SEED
1,000 YEARS OLD
Will he Served to Emperor of Japan
At Manoeuvres
Tokio, Nov, 3o, Rice grown el-
rectly from seed grains cue thous-
and years old will be served the 1.n1-
peror of Japan when he attends the
autumn inanoeuvres of the Japanese
army fn Shiga prefecture this fill. The
ancient rice grains were found inside
a wooden rotate of Vaisravana in a
little Buddhist temple in the village of
Iwalne.
Vaisravana is the god of wealth,
and his . image had become so old
as to need repairing. in the course
of doing this there was found in
side the image a flaxen hag contain.
ing the seed and a paper with the
fallowing instructios in ancient
Chinese characters.
"This image has been carved for
the peace of the world. If any one
of a later generation open it, he
should put in new seed." From the
artistic style of the carving and the
le 'ma
traditions relating to tile image it
was estimated that the seeds were
1,000 years old, 'rhey were planted
and yielded a good crop,
LENGTH OF ANIMALS' LIVES
Whales seem, on the whole, to be
particularly gifted with longevity;
those which supply us with whale-
bone are supposed to live for several
centuries. Elephants rank fairly
high; in India they often attain the
age of one. hundred years. A large
class, including horses, dogs, lions,
tigers, cattle, and swine, have an age
limit somewhere between twenty and
thirty years. 13elow that we have
domestic sheep, and lower still the
Iter an
sma als Such as rats and
nice. Fish often attain a great age.
For instance, salmon, a hundred
years; eels, between sixty and a hun-
dred; while pike have even been by them,
And fu, t11Ur faire 00hf.•e (hxt later 4,1)4,4
known to reach two hundred. ' Cro- moiNm,rrl ,late the a.id Ids,entnr wb, pre.
codiles and tortoises live even longer, coed to dirtribnrth r rl d t
nwm,g thx nn, rot
the nb., hn vmg , Birds are not to be outdone. An old gxrdonlytnlbednin,e of tvbtnhhe,hnu ate, I
'i''1 died 1 t Ulna h"ve noldna, anti the *odd ligrnutnr will not
when it is allowed to enjoy its full
span of years without being sacri-
fice!' for the table; it will often pass
forty years of peaceful country life.
Notice to Creditors
Io the !natter of the estate of William
Reid, tale of the Tuwn'.h'p .1
Grey. in the County of Halon, 1 -
mer, deceased.
Noticoin hereby given pursuant to "The
!sed St4,tnten of Ontario;' tire e.l1 edit
and others having einin,s nom red the Ohl to
the mold Wlhlnm livid, who diem en or about
the a'went•v-fi16h dor of A ngr,:r, .1 0., 10
Br+•r, gavel , or 1,rt ,••r the Nin f n.l, lnv
deliver to (an reou 11. Parke., the • 1 ntar of
last Will and Teotnnn.,t of ',t5 1 :wed,nt
Bluer/110 P n, th,dr rhrl+tferyn nod 'oon:Ins
adrL•e.+,e• ,utd de�nrl pi low0 the roll ;'arta,,,tlBra
of their .'Inane thestatrment of 1h.nr nee/more
and thn anturu of the soon=.1.1::.+ lir airy) held
n'
Ra
ms
of
1'r,
danlnu•y, > 1), 1017,to :.on,i LYt ti, ,x11 or
,: nun: r n u• rren•,er
grey parrot, w is t t e a s for ba 1;.01 Pur thlirl t x3,1,1, m• rent port tl ar0•
ago, lived for ninety' years. •Cocky-' rPto :on:: personornorsnxaPwbonntlntlaeall notheveh1,,n, rrntlivrdby htool frequently live tobe120years tba tir nurh di.triL,,ifen.old, acidravensoverthecentury. The A""(#rny'11 lura, dap n. Drae,nhoc',
domestic goose is a long-lived bird e]InxoN n. PA13Xii4,,
20.0 Dluevdx, Ont. lixr.rutor,
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Graceilin A a
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A choice stock is fill lines, ,together with
finest quality of New Confectionery,
Fruits, Shelled Nuts, Fancy Biscuits, &c.
Neilson1's I-Iigh class Chocolates in Fancy
Boxes, No fitter goods to be had and
we guarantee them to please you.
Ice Cream, Oysters, Oxo and other Sea-
sonable Untie ]cies.
I�11ont q,1e. rn• ('5111 at store,
I'R()MP"1'
I7 ELI V E It Y.
Mc
ay
GI1lccr and
Confectioner
giook 'Pot, S tiff
Pi, , eeoteh shoe l itoen.Pull. Also 2 bulls
11,10:.'.m ruck vtun d x1.1"11, (3aine torr] a1ni•
• v•.1ti,t dr, oudn 1 nil '1 co andn
r u ub••r 0114,0 l„ rbt, ,' , I No 1(1 01t +f him ei
✓ cite s• I, 14, I''4' ad :un, rl,nn fee 20, rent.
II al • •••., . 59 ml 0; Nnlhut PI/11,0.1.00 trnvrl
luno! t.HOt4 Platt, Is
I hone 7810 n •.I. P O.
Hog for Service
211 uncirt.tgm_11 ,, lit
ll, .1•itf lo, n vlsI..nJo I,
y•.,; $ .0 54 IY•y3,11 wait.
n•
1,nid a. I.mr of Orn vire (holt
justness, of r, In bin:•,', 14e04,1'
.4 4 Phnu.- 514) 0E0101010r,
Farm fo r Sale
Finn 15'1 ,, , ,• P•" -,u iii. sane,, 1014;19 4 5, 1
lineal `I:t LM. 1'. 12'.i, a. !tlorrlr owush'p 0,c
the Curr, n+ hr 111„ l,rli'lc Ilnu•e. 1,.,,,, 1,•In
e1%7::: d Ing 1,• . o• ehn..) windo"U, &e,
1'•.-'.» ,' .,,, ".-nit pn.,bi,rn• ft 10,, I., 1111 •
.rhs nr
141,11) 1n0re" Fnll wlumIII , la ler, es
''11.h RUM til lnne.nd 1 n inleplpne• 75'•r
-trier NIP lees In' Appry un the to cult o err It
15'1,1'1,, P. 14 No ,t i41,111.
_7•tf AL131S1"1' i1Ow !ee i', Pro.- I tor.
.".OA1FOltlIA Pl,D 1101' . .', NI, r -r 1'•,1:
� 5.a ,,,a. -(•lout! wen nut ,4. t, PO.
fir. Alio 5 sora'. u, eta 50t .r.,„ ,. , ho -Re
1 Ole end di Iih-d WW1. ern- fn, tee: peei,•u.
r no to prim, term., C0 , apply to': t,', Y, rni.
uarnls.
Farms for Sale
Lot 21, Oon. d, 0, ay, 100 Hares, 01,0 01 the bold
pAatn r5 farm'. 1n 01.0y. 41st, wr hum nt 11110
d,ndj.Ldag the Prange ..•41 Slat -ton 175 n' res,
50.114 '8180f hate 23arn' 4, on S. and N pt
Ln, 41, t'.,,, a 0 sy. Mx ., dent building• nod
nn 3 1 -torte and groin t11,',,,, - wi•l he, 4r1:d to.
g..tho,• or a"nnrately on -.0y ter l50 Aunty to
;se vsrc 51I541,11.1 Wind, Ont - l7•55
Farm for Sale
In order to wind oil She a ant• of the Into
.l lines "h., s the -plead)] 140 nor.. l':' ndjnfn•
ing the VIllnee or 13,1144014 1s ff Po -nip.
0». the• Po/P0"12 1•, a good tab, , r n•u Orut.
mans h,,n,e. Fares ) dr ' :. 1,b the
1•(0x041011 "520 air,' I i.� •,r •tee.
or mtltivntlan Pas„s .,.) W•8•,,, 1:...,; Si.“ eh.
0'..r further pet•Henle
4' 4. 811,11', i:ra..rls
- Farm for Saks
Po/Ifni/this 200 nae., viz , 5-M Lot 80, Ce, 0,
01orr,n lawnohq.. told Lot I, Cor.. 1 G, ey town•
-hip Well watered, eonifo,tabh' house, bank
b,rn end tnnnnrl• eked. driving house, wind
ndll, nreherd, an 2,14 miler North -of Hrunnele
on grovel rood. Ruin) moil and lib -el 'phone,
ti mile to sei10o1, \'111 .en either or built
Llan If trot odd In fore Ort,,hw- let will be.
1•'or Ire 51,31' •0 WAY to
Al ISS F01) -Y I'll,Prop, toter, Rrwerts, or
T•. '4. 001'1', Bt 04451+. 9.4
For Sale
Bern; o' farmland. L, (1,» 1'o+vn.hi0
of 'hires, "dj.,l,dug 1110 Viiiel .• of l,ruo.e'nin
eon a,•111. 7 herr is 0 good grovel i•ir, i5 nnen•
0,1 05, from 2 to 8 Boren. It has nein t,sted
lend enough of grovel there to nae;., I:he town
And v'rtnity for the near tuna) -r ,d' n eontnry :
0
building iota on 1'clruhe ry -5. • e' ; 1 1.4 rn
0rergo street. Baur th. todirer .t;:,bm 2 e;nn
1ny private ,•a4ldenee rtl 1 h„ r, v.• '-snip, r:,,•rrr
of 51)111,, t nnrl Albert •.),o.'. e • In ,Ic•'r
pnrticulnrc apply to th.
read erre. Bigg
arueeels, 1511,s0lcroh, 1117.
For 1918
5,
Following are the Clubbing Rate»THE
Pose is )ualtieg i'ot• next year to
Canadian Pott tltl'es:-
Tins Poser nntl Daily Glnhe.........$ 5 00
:llrcil-!unpile..... .... 5 00
Toronto Worltl..,, 5 00
Toronto Star 25
'1',,,outo News,,,. 4 25
"London Advertiser 4 25
London Woe PI ess 4 25
Family Herald... 2 75
Weekly Witness. 2 80
Par.' A rl v ovate8 110
Nur. ll eesenger.,2 00
World Wide... . 3 20
Presbyleriao 2 75
Farm nod Unit y2 80
•
P1u ntrr s Snit 2 ZU
11' liapel's ,10 to be seat to the Unit-
ed tilttteo additional postage !e nocet'1-
sltry.
• Oaeh nmoLaccompany all orders as
the city papers givt• oo 55edit.
semi money by Express Order, Poet -
rd Na Le or Registered T,ellor. Hank
C:heettes must have commission added.
Ad.lres8
W. 11. K1f.RR,
7`1l l: PCH'' Brosiel., 0,11.
MONTHLY
HORSE FAIRS
eilag
BRUSSELS
Regular Monthly Horse Fairs will be
•
• held this 111:nsou as follows :
O
4
4
9
9
9
♦
0
•
steady Work and Good Wages
• Womea
pt's• �� 6 d�
•
•
•
0
Apply r:
(0,' Excelsior Knitting
Mills - k russets
'I'I3URtI)AY, L11d0, 4th
JAN. 5th
IAN. Stat
P161) 285)1
API).. 4111
Leading local nod outside Buyers Present
`By order t.f-Ocuncll.
Ii. 1. 50031', Clerk,
• 0088♦♦9♦♦♦♦♦♦♦0•♦•♦••4•60♦ 519♦♦41.9♦4,44♦044)440...♦449.4, Call l'honl'e 20x or 86.