HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-10-27, Page 2G. 17. Mc:TAGGAR
M. D. A•I cTA G G A, IR'I'
McTaggart Bros
A GENERAL BANKING BUST
NESS TRANSACTED, NOTES
DISCOUNTED DRAFTS ISSUED,
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE.
POSITS. BALE, NOT29 rUI0*
CHASED,
Ef. T. RANCE
NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY-
ANCER, FINANCIAL REAL
ESTATE AND „FIRE ONSUR•.
*NCB I GEN'r. ItEP1'!:ESENT.
ING I3 Ii'I12E INSURANQ12
COMPANIES.
$IVISION COURT OFFICiA
CLINTON.
W. IIRYDONE,
BA.RRIZ'TER, SOLICITOR.
NOTARY PUBLIC, ETO.
Office-- Sloan Block —CLINTON
DR. J. C. GANI'11E11
OOke Hours: -1.30 to 8,30 p.m,, 7.30
to U,00 pen, Sundays 12,30 to late
PM,
Other beers by appointment oral.
O18ee and Residence --=Victoria 6fR
E DR, G. SCULLARD
Office hi Dr. Smith's old stand,
Main Street, Bayfield,
Office Hours: 1 to 5 and7 to 9 p.m.
Phone No. 21 on .624.
G. S. ATKINSON, D.D.S., L.D.S.
(Graduate Royal College of Dental
Surgeons and Toronto University,)
Dental Surgeon
Has office hours .at Bayfield in old
Post. Office Building, Monday, Wed-
nesday, Friday and Saturday from 1
to 5.30 p.m.
CHARLES li. HALE,
Conveyancer, Notary Public.
Cotnminsioner, Etc.
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
Issuer of Marriage Licenses
14URON s'TREET, — CLINTON.
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Lieu:scd Auctioneer for the County
of Huron.
Correspondence promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be
mado for Sales Date. at The
News -Record, Clinton, or by
calling Pbone 203.
Charges moderate and satisfaction
guaranteed,
TIME 'i'AULE—.
Trains will arrive at and depart
from Clinton Station as follows:
1.131F'yAL0 AND GO1DEEICl3 DIV.
Going east, depart . 6.28 a.m.
2.62 p.m.
Going West ar. 11.10, dp. 11.16 am.
" ar: 6.05, dp. 6.47 pee,
„ „ ar. 10.03
p.m,
LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV.
Going South, ar, s.23, ds, ti.23 am.
u 4.15 p,ni,
Going North depart 6,40 piny
" , 11.11 a,m,
The MoKillop Mutual
Fire Insurance Company
Bead cce, Seaforth, Ont.
DIf EUfUltY
President, Janos Connolly, Gotdorich;
Vice., James Evans, Beechwood;'
Sec:Treasurer, 'Thos, B. trays, Sea.
earth.
Directors: George McCartney, 96.11.
forth; D. F. kleGregt.r, Seaforth; 1,
G. Grieve, Walton; Wm. lttn ,. Sea -
krill; Ii1• 3icEwen, Clinton; Hobert
Ferries, H.arieek; Johre ilentreweir,
Grod]tugen; Jas. Connolly, Coderica.
Agents: Alex Leitch, Clinton; J. W.
Teo, Goderieh; Bd. llinch:cy, Seaforth;
W, Chesney, Egmon7vlLlu; k. U, Jar-
auth, Brod/angst:.
Any money - be paid :a may he
raid to 6loorish Cloth:: G Co.. Clinton,
er at Cutt's Grocery, Godaritii,
Parties desire ,g to etlect insurance
rr
transact ether business wet, be
promptly attended to on application to
aeY of the noose uffleers adctresseu to
their, respective post Wks, Leases
inapteted by the dtreetor whu will
...caress, the scene.
C piton
News ®Record.
CLINTON, ONTARIO.
Terms of subscription—$2.00 per year,
in advance to Canadian addresses;
$2,50 to the 0.8. or tther foeelgn
countries. No paper discontinued
tntil all arrears are paid unless at
the option of the publisher. The
date to which every eubscriptioa li
paid is denoted on the label.
Advertising rates—Ttensient silver.
tiaements, 10 cents per nonpareil
line for first insertion and 6 crate
per line for each subsequent iuser-
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guent insertion 16 cents,
Communications intended for publics-
titin must, as a guarantee of good
faith, be accompanied by the name or
She writer,
G. E. BALL,
Proprietor,
M. R. CLARK.
Editor.
Nearlyeveryono has
ripl,ing, tonringlleadncbes
nt bmenr Disordered steun-
neh--alagg,ah liver dean it.
Moor tip f hero's the roil
relief•"Ohanlborinin's
They Aecabeeun
Pet the stomach nd Yl1 001.
Ali druggists, 2(o., or fly mail from 0
Chambarlaln Medicine Co„ 'Toronto
•....•.... . i. .. n,.-•.�^--n-rno-n. -moi.. R
AUTO BANDITS CA WWII $14,600
FROM BANK OF TORONTO, ,WYOMING
POlice Think Robbers Are Same Band That Entered Bank
of HamilttaI in Toronto and Stole a Neti McLaughlin
• Car in Thorndale the Same Night,
A despatch from London, Ofit,
says;—Walking into the Beek .of
Toronto at Wyoming, a villougo
45 miles west of London, on
the G. T. R,, .en' Thursday after-
noon, four auto bandits held up
Manager H, B. Lambert and his staff'
and made their escape with $14,000 in
cash in a high-powered car, the motor
of which a fifth thug had kept run-
ning while the robbery was milting
place, The hold-up occurred at 2,50.
Ronald Brown, one of the clerics,
slipped out the back dlaor and gave
the al'ar'm, firing five ehots at the rob-
bers as they, jumped onto their Car
and dohive away. The bandits, who
were all aimed., fired at o'relrybody
they saw, compelling many people
who sought to give chase to seek
cover behind telephone poles or in
clearways.
W, Garlick, a traveller for, the In-
gersoll Packing Company, was passe
Mg the bank at the time, and two of
the staff, E, S. Taylor, teller, and
Thos. Scharf, hastily procuring re-
volvers from a hardweee store, jump-
ed into the traveller's ear and started
in pursuit. The bandits, however, had
a new McLaughlin, and, though hamp-
pered by greasy roads, managed to
distance their pursuers, until finally,
at Fernhill, north of Parldull, Taylor
and Scharf were compelled to give up
the chase.
It is thought that the robbers were
the same men who robbed the Bank
of Hamilton in Toronto on Tuesday
last, and also that they are the thieves
who stole a new McLaughlin car frein
Wr]ghtls garage in Thorildale, 10
miles from London, on the same night.
VY'hen the London polite received
word of the holo -up Chief Bierell at
once despatched a powerful ear loaded
With detectives and po+lice to join in
.the hunt far. the 'erdminels. As the
bandits had headed toward London
when they ]eft Wyoming, the Ioeal
officers went out the Sarnia gravel
road in the hope of meeting them.
They eay that at one time they must
have been within a couple of miles of
their quarry, but the latter were on
a road paralleling the Sarnia gravel
road and easily avoided their put
slums,
St. Mary's, Stratford and Guelph
police were at once warned to be on
the lookout for the gunmen,; as it
was thought they were heading flack
toward Toronto,
Resent ,bank hold-ups in Ontario
were;
Bslnk of Hamilton branch ect Loelce
and Herkimer streets, Hamilton, in
June; robber got $4 500,
Bank of Hamilton branch at •San-
ford avenue -find I{ing streets, Ham-
ilton, Oct. 13; robber got nothing.
Union Bank of Canada, Locke and
Main streets, Hamilton, Ott, 14; rob -
bet' got $2,000.
• Bank of Haniiton branch at College
street and Ossington avenue, Toronto,
Tuesday, Oct. 18; robbers got 32,990.
Bank of Toronto branch at Wyom-
ing, Ont., Oct. 20; robbers got 314,000,
CAPTAIN OF GERMAN
RAIDER IN MOVIES
To Play Role of Pirate in a
Hamburg Film.
A despatch from Berlin says:—
Captain Count Felix von Luckner, who
commanded the German sea raider,
the Seemlier, is about to appear in the
movies. He will play the role of a
pirate in a film called "Mabel and
Suitor," produced by the Vera Film
Company of Hamburg.
Certainly, Count von Luckner is
well fitted to the role. For seven
months the Seeadler roamed the At-
lantic and Pacific oceans and sank
no less than 25 Entente vessels, ac-
cording to Von Luckner's claim, Fin-
ally, the Seead+let• was wrecked in the
South Pacific. Von Luckner was cap-
tured, interned in • New Zealand,
escaped, was recaptured and at last
exchanged. '
University Class for Industrial
Workers.
Last week the Workers' Education-
al Association of Toronto commenced
its classes for the season in one of
the • buildings of the University of
Toronto. -Pate ,subjects. to be to 7.tnht
are economies, international f nar.ee,
trade union law, political philosophy,
British history, English literature and
composition, psychology, and logic,
public speaking. The Workers' Educa-
tional Association of Hamilton has
three vigorous classes in economics,
psychology and logic, and English
literature and composition, In Ottawa
the W.E,A, has also three classes,
one each in economies, history, Eng-
lish Iiterature and composition.
In all three cities this instruction
is provided for working men and wo-
men by the provincial university—
another instance of the widespread ac-
tivity of the University of Toronto in
giving education to all people in the
province who wish to take advantage
of it, A prominent publicist. said the
other day, "The University of To-
ronto is leading the way in linking
higher education to the world of af-
fair's,"
Austin Chamberlain
to be Deputy Frernier
A despatch from London says:L-It
is stated that if Lloyd George goes to
Washington Austen Chamberlain oil]
act as Deputy Prime Minister and
preside over the Irish Conference. Sir
Philip Sassoon, M.P., and Colonel
Grant Morden, M.P., will be with the
party sailing on the Aquitania.
Cambridge Refuses
Membership to Women
A despatch from Landon says:
— Cambridge University has
again voted against granting
women membership in the Uni-
versity by a majority of 214. On
December 8th last the Uni-
versity refused women member. -
ship by a vote of 908 to 1,712.
It was voted, however, to give
women titular degrees by cliplo-
maS. This recommendation n'aS
adopted 1;y a majority of (i41
Sir Maurice Hankey
Secretary of the British Cabinet, who
will act as Secretary of the Uritish
delegation to the Washington Dis-
armament Conference.
meslia, et Regina.
LINKS IN CHAIN
OF EMPIRE'S CABLES
Canada; Africa, India and
Australia.Joined by Wire-
less.
A despatch from London says:—F.
J. Brown, Chairman of the Postoffice,
Telephone and Telegraph Society of
London, speaking before that body,
discussed Great Britain's increased
communications with the Dominions.
He said that the Imperial cable was
a romance of the war. IIe said that,
despite the submarine perils, the
former Gorman cable from Emden to
New York, via the Azores, was di-
verted to Penzaeco and thence to
Halifax, and that it is now working
from Landoll to Halifax, carrying an
average weekly load of 230,000 words.
Mr. Brown said the Postoffic_ wire-
less station at Leafield, near Oxford,
had just been completed, and a cor-
responding station near Cairo would
be finished at the end of the year,
thus forming a link in the chain to
Last and South Africa. Two more
stations arc to be erected in England
and Egypt, forming the first link in
a 0hain to India, Singapore, Hong
Kong end. Australia.
1921 Apple Crop.
British Columbia—Total crop 100
per cent. in excess of last year, or
approximately 1005,000 barrels (3,-
027,000 boxes).
Ontario—Total crop CO per cent, of
last year, or approximately 060,000
barrels. Eastern Ontario, 45 per cent.
of lest year's crop. Spys heavy. Wes-
tern Ontario, 45 per cent. of last
year's crop. Pre:Micelle,. all sold. Con-
siderable stab and high percentage
lower grade?.
Quebec—Tot'1 crop is from 85 •to
40 per cent. of last year, or approxi-
mate'.;' 85,200 burets. Color and size
fair, henna;: ] rend prices good.
Nc'r ere et'vlcl:—Total ti mate
about 110 pee cent. of last year, or
`13,000 barrels,
-Nova S.ctia--'.ental mem will he 110
to 11.6 per cow, of lust year, er. 1,-
300o0t1 h. .,s.
•
•e ,1-, , , ". .i IN HONOR OF 7i a. BRAVE, ....'
A'fr. Walter 9, Aliward's design for tt memorial on 11111 62, overlooking the Ypres Salient, This memorial
was aeeepted by the. Canadien,Battlellelds Memorial Commission•, It is approximately 225 feet long and between
125 and 140 emit high at its highest point,
The Leading Markets.
Toronto.
Manitoba wheat-', No. 1 Northern,
$1.16%, nominal; No. 2 Northern,
$1.14, nominal; No, 3, 31.10, nominal.
Manitoba rate ---No, 2 CW, 4631o;
No. 3 CW, 43%c; extra No. 2, feed,
483'1; No. 3 feed, 3901e.
Manitoba barley—No. 3 CW, 68c.
All the scbove, track, Bay ports.
American corn—No, 2 yellow, 56c,
nominal, Bay ports.
Ontario eat—No. 2 Winter, 40 to
42e.
Ontario wheat—No. 2 Winter, per
car lot, 31.05 to $1.10; No. 3 Winter,
$1.02 to 31.07; No, 1 commercial, 95
to $1; No. 2 Spring, Ole to 31.03; No,
3 Spring, nominal.
Barley—No. 3, extra, 67 to 60c, ac-
cording to freights ou'tsid'e.
Buckwheat—No, 2, 70 to 75e.
Rye—No. 2, 95e,
Manitoba flour—First pats,, 37.60;
second pests., $7.10, Toronto.
Ontario flour—$5.50, bulk, seaboard.
Millfeed—Dei„ Montreal, freight,
bags included: Bran, per ton, 321 to
323;•shorts, pee ton, 323 to 325; good
feed flour, 31.70 to 31.80.
Baled hay—Trask, Toronto, per ton,
No. 1, $23; No, 2, $21; mixed, $18.
Straw --Car lots, 311, track, To-
ronto.
Cheese—New, large, 20 to 21e;
twins, 2015 to 21%c; triplets, 22% to
28e. 01d, large, 25 to 26e; twins,
261 to 26%e; triplets,'26 to 27e; Stil-
tons, new, 23 to 24c.
Butter—Fresh dairy, choice, 33 to
85e; creamery, prints, fresh, No, 1,
42 to 43c;. No. 2, 80 to 40c; cooking,
22 to 24e.
Dressed poultry—Spring chickens,
30e; roosters, 20e; fowl, 28c; duck-
lings, 30 to 35c; turkeys, 60 to 60c.
Live poultry—Spring chickens, 20
to 25c; roosters, 16e; fowl, 16 to 24c;
ducklings, 25c; turkeys, 50c.
Margarine -22 tq 24c.
Eggs—No, 1 storage, 46 to 46e;
select, storage, 60 to 61e; new laid,
straight, 67 to 68c; new laid, in car-
tons, GOc.
Beans—Can, hand-picked, bushel,
34 to $4.25; primes, $3.50 to $3,75.
Maple products—Syrup, per imp.
gar., $2.50; per 5 imp.gals., $2,35.
Maple sugar, lb., 19 to 22e.
Haney -6030-1b. tins, 14% to 15e
per ib.; 5 -245 -lb. tins, 16 to 17e per
Ontario Bomb honey, per doz.,
38.75 to $4,60.
Smoked meats—Hants, med., 31 to
82e; heavy, 24 to 26e; cooked, 48 to
52c; rolls, 27 to 28e; cottage rolls, 80
to 31c; breakfast bacon, 33 to 37e;
special brand breakfast bacon, 42 to
450; backs,. boneless, 42 to 47c,
Cured meats—Long, clear bacon, 18
to 21c; clear bellies, 1815% to 201/2e.
Lard --Pure, tierces, 17% to 18o:
tubs, 18 to 18%e; pails, 1.8% to 190;
0
prints, 201% to 21y/ae. Shortenic
tierces, 13 to 131se; tube, 13%i to 14e;
pails; 14 to 14%e; pellets, 16 to 1634e.
Choice heavy steers, 36 to 37; but-
cher steers, choice, 35.75 to 36,60; do,
good, $5 to ,$5.75; do, meal„ 34 to $5;
do, coin, 33.50 to 34; butcher heifers;
choice, $5.50 to 36; butches' cows,
choice, $4,50 to 35,50; de, med., $3 to
34; canners and cutters, $1 to $2;
butcher bulbs, good, 33.50 to $4; do,
ram., $2 to $2.75; feeders, good, 000
lbs., 35 to 35.75; do, fair, 32.50 to
33.50; ranker's, $60 to 380; .springers,
370 to 390; calves, choice, 312 to 13;
do, bed, 310 to 311; do, ram„ 33 to
$7; lambs, good, $8,25 to 38.35; do,
cam,, 35 to'$5,60; sheep; choice; 34 to
34.50; do, good, 33.50 to 34; do, Heavy
and bucks, $2 to $3; hogs, fed and,
watered, 39; do, ':off cars, 39.25; do,
f.o.b., 38.25; do, country points, $8.
Montreal.
Oats—Cam west, No. 2, 52 to 52%e;
do, No. 3, 61 to 611/ee. Flour, Man.
Spring veheat• pats., firsts, 37.60.
Ro'lle'd oats, bag 90 lbs., 32.90 to 33.
Bran, 32L26.• Sheets, 323,25. Hay,
No. 2, per ton, car late, $27 to 328.
Cheese, finest easterns, 15% to
161/X. Butter, choicest creamery, 40
to 41c. Eggs, selected, 47c. Potatoes,
per bag, car lots 31.40 to 31,45.
Canners, $1.25 up; bologna bulls,
32,50 to $3; ' very light yearlings,
32,25; calves, 38 to 311; med. quality
milk -fed calves, 39 to 39.50; lambs,
goody 38 to 38.25; hogs, 39,50,
Method Discovered to
Isolate Pox Germs
A despatch from Santiago, Chill,
says:—Dr. Arturo Atria, chief bacter-
iologist of the Cbilian Institute of
Hygiene, announces that he has suc-
ceeded in discovering a method of
isolating the bacteria of smallpox.
Dr. Atria claims his 'discovery will
permit the combating of smallpox by
direct injection instead of through
preventive vaccination.
Victorian Order Nurses
Offers 31 Scholarships
A despatch from Ottawa says:—
Announcement is made at the Exe-
cutive Council of the Victorian Order
of Nurses of Canada of the award of
31 scholarships, each amounting to
3400 to nurses in the form of post-
graduete public health courses in live
Canadian universities,
ti
Ludwig III•, former King of Bav-
aria, dies in Hungarian exile.
Some 8,000 spectators watched the
international plowing match at Wood-
stock, Ont.
,w..._ WHO WON THE WAR?
The tnan who The roan who The man who
thinks be did. guesses he (11;1. knows he olid.
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SF ti 1 (4(•'''I /
It's a Great Life if You. Don't
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Weaken -
MAY DEFER TARIFF
REVISION IN U.S.
Leaders in Harding Govern-
ment Strive to Postpone Ac-
tion Till Nov., 1922,
A. despatch from Washington
says:—Some of the strongest leaders
of the Harding administration are
working quietly but persistently and
effectively, it is stated; to prevent re-
vision of the tariff for another fifteen
months. It is their plan to throw
tariff revision over until the congres-
sional elections of November, 1922,
have been decided,
The impression is steadily growing
in Washington that the prospects for
passing a tariff bill this winter are
becoming remote. The resolution to
extend the emergency rates on agri-
eulturai products will pass.
Walter S. Allward
The Toronto sculptor whose design
for a battlefield memorial was accept-
ed by the government along with the
one submitted by P. Chapman 010 -
The Glow of the Forward
Track.
The bade track is the lo•nesomost
road any man ever travelled. 17e who
takes it leaves behind him all he
ever has done of good; he turns his
back on the .possibilities of the fpture
and says to hard luck, "You beat me
once, maybe you can ,lo it again. I'ni
going hack to see." So he invites the
defeat he deserves.
But the forward tra. k—how it does
shine with Hope and pr..,,iiso and in-
spiration! It is not so easy a road
to travel as is the back track. Most
of the thorns have been beaten down
that way. The hummocks have bean
smoothed, , The forwsvd track hairs
seine hard work ahead. Put forward
work never has any dread for the
man with fire in his heart.
The forward track leads somewhere.
It may be we can not sec the end of
the road just yet. That snakes it all
the more attractive. Wheel we know
all the eteps cf the way v • are taking,
life becomes one ]rug ' deed level,
There are no s•u;iri:e'. \i -e plod
along lazily and win n lazy Irons
rewards.
Mighty fine is the ceo w cf the Air-
wave] track! Are rot: walking ane
working in its shine?
SWF NECK, LUMBAGO'
Aohee . and Point: of Rheumatism
sometimes Almost Unbearable,
'Moro are weather conditions that
snake r'houmatism worse. They are
not the same in the eases of all per.
5913$,. .Solrfe victims of this disesse
stiffer more in clry warm weather
than in moist cold weather, but all
suffer more or less all the tiro,
'rho cause of rheumatism is an ea -
cess of uric.aeld'in the blood, afleat-
148' the muscles an$ joints. Vence
the blood must have attention for
permanent results in the treatment of
this disettee.
TTood's Sarsaparilla has given en-
tire satisfaction In thousands of
eases. Do not fail to give it a trial
If a laxative is needed, take 1100d's
Pills—they don't gripe. 't
FAIL TO AVERT
U.S RAILWAY STRIKE
Brotherhood Leaders Claim
Nothing Accomplished by
Conf.
A despatch fromerenceChicago
Efforts by the Railroad Labor Board
to avert -the' threatened railroad strike'
through conference with heads of the
five unions whioh have oedere•J a
walk -out, effective October 30, failed
when the meeting adjourned an
Thursday night with the announce -
remit, by the board, that "while the
discussions were beneficial, no definite
results were obtained."
"There has been a full nal frank
discussion of the situation," said a
statement given out by Ben W. Hoop-
er, Vice -Chairman of the-ooatd, "The•
Labor Beard and the Brotherhood
chiefs exchanged views in a perfectly
pleasant way. The inteovicw was
beneficial, but we cannot say that any
definite results were obtained," ',
"The adjournment is final," Chair-
man R. M. Barton of the Labor Board
announced. "We do not plan any
further conferences with the Labor
leaders, nor do we plan, at present, to
call in the railroad Presidents. I can-
not say what our next step might be."
Union leaders said the board had
not presented anything which they
looked on as in any way a tangible
proposition.
"It's somebody's neat move," read
the head of one of the larger of the
five organizations. "Whether it is curs,
the bo u's or the roads', I do net
know. I only know that the beard
broug'ht us here and talked four hours
without presenting anything which Wo
could even consider as a compromise.
The meeting was absolutely without
results. • '
"Wo are going hack to our head-
quarters. There is nothing sehe luted
immediately except to go right ahead
with the plans for a strike."
The Rich Northwest.
The reported discovery of an ex-
tensive deposit of iron of high quality
on the shores of Lake Athabasca, in
the sub -Arctic region of our great
Canadian Northwest, follows rather
closely upon the account of the oil
strike near 'Fort Norman, on the
Lower Mackeniie, west of Great Bear
Lake.
The first lore that attral:tted pion-
eers to the region was the beaver.
The prosperity of the 11udon Bay
Company •was founded en fur trade
with the Indians. The l;ticimo had a
little copper at the mouth of the f op-
permine River, and the Indians took
it from them in occasional raid, But
the mineral and nidal resource,1 of
Canada outside of the vaiey of the
Upper Yukon in the neighborhood of
Dawson until lately huve been com-
paratively neglected. The great work
of the Canadian Ministry of Mine,
and the reports of the Geological Sur.
vey of Canada of an exemplary thor-
oughness, are publishing to the traria
the assurance •of large returns for
sound investment and strenuous toil
in a land that Nature never meant
for the dilettante, which the home-
bilitig and comfort loving pnrtion of
mankind regards inked as the abom-
ination of desolation.
In Holland a municipal gas plant
is extracting' l luuiil;sting ga.; from a
neat and coaal mixture.
•,-
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Mir
ram.:rte, tvs
, ree9 'm ac-�rv�o9
Read These Amazing
Stories of Success
1v�n,a ,5:, +n T•. ccnl..
err
tom
to
y...
ni
What these men hero done, you can do l In your snore time
nl home you eat easily master the•secrets of selling that make
Star Salesmen. Whntevor your experience has been --whatever
won may be doing now—whether or not you think you emu Belt. -
put. answer this question: Are you ambitious to earn $10,000 e
year? -Then got in touch with ,no nt meal I will prove to you
without coat or obligation that you can easily become n Ater
Salesmen. 1 will show you how the Salesmanship Trebling and
Free hmploynient Service of the N. S. T. A. will help you to quick
success in Selling.
$10,000 A Year Selling Secrets
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National Salesmen's Training Association
Canadian Mar. Box 362 'Toronto, Ont.
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