The Huron Expositor, 1917-03-16, Page 7eit_e_tee
$e tka
eethat
ijidyla 'forgot ^ chi* y tion is,
itart
hiyn
ough hoot alfatsheastheesi eat- They tidbit tatil they left the ing letter was recently reemved by
lag a ahanahdowa I- /deader furrow horses and entered the house. When Mrs,. Toms from her son, Maleolm,who
ehthen with- the 001 melting from they Oat down, Weide mit her hands withlis brother Wilfrid, enlisted with
the root Ale plant had toppled a the t� her face. "0161 wish you had the 161st Huron Batalion, and these
* head, the rivulet has grown a dream, said nothing about it! How can't go eictrants will be read with interest
night falls, arid hid the moraine where to him and ank for help now—after gy their Bayfield friends: Witley
yesterday ;mailing miles -of green fields Cousin Lance luta gone into court Carron Jaaruary 4th, 1917 Dear Moth
looked up to the sun rolls a mad flood about the line andeverything?' And
of waters; is the Crawling Stone. of course my name, is in it all."
"Dicksie, don't raise spectres that
."4"111441°1111._ MOMS,
TVEV
ble zmv
eir moi e dem
age and chronic
e helping thousands
hee power—oherreornie
habil
ee from drugs.
144'
„,-.*.-1.geffemmiepskgmagemmeNshan
MELD 16 CROW
RISH CONSTIPATIED
u.
f tempi IS coat
wets with "Cali-
yrup 0 Flea."
an rest easy Meet giving
Syrup of rive?' because IA_
all the cogged -up wase.
id fermenting food gentre
f the bowel's, and you haye
fas. child again.,
iren iien't be coaxed toe
['armless laxative -h.
mothers keep It ItaTItty be -
know Its action on gut
rer and buwels Is prompt
druggist for a 50 -cent boh-
emia Syrup °trio,- which
ections for babies, children
and for shown -ups.
ns*.**•***.,*.fl*.*.*4.
TROUBLED
nt HER LIV
t Flits YEARS*
e booths Isecome constipat4
It gets out 4 -ord.u., the Ewes
a properly, sleet then foams
sitk litstdaches. the sotto:is
oda belching of mimi, htetzt-
:' brash, hilionsness, etc.
ur bowels regular by
Lemselkeer Pills. They
all the effete matter which
the system and thus die away
lipation and all its allied
111 Pitzgeratd, Brittarda Bay,
"I have been 4cgub1ed
°math and liver for the put
and have had constipatiesi
adache, backache and dizzy
sometimes I -would ahnost fafl
tried all kinds of reinedits
tai-ing o.ny relief.
need using" Itfilbunt's
and they have cured me.
ommended them to many 4
,and they are all very much
the results el:ey it r oh -
their
$ Laxa-Liver Pis, 25c vial,
MOO, at all deaters, or i�ed
receipt of orice by et: 'I'.
• IJNir111} inorovitei Ont.
HE FARM
TS
RE NEEDEll
OR EXPORT
EAT,
OATS,
BEEF,
00N,
:HEESE1
EGGS,
rTER,
'OULTRY,
or4s & PEAS,
WOOL,
X AHD
LAX FIBRE,
DRIED
METABLES
djfflculties may
r duty of eveT
se every thought
the direction of
still more,"
nista- of Agriculture-.
s evexy one desiris'
relative to FeLlis
TUE
•?Me, brittle, ocherlime. and eteraggy
hair la mute evidence of la neglected
tealn,j of dandruff—that awful wort
There Is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair
of its lustre, its strength and Its vete
;fife; eventually producing a feverie- ,
nem and itching of the scalp; net
If not remedied causes the hair reee
to shrink, icemen and die—then
hair falls out fest. &little Dander;
honight—now--any -vein ewe_
grave your hair.
Get a 25 cent bottle of idnowitmes
Danderine from any drug store. You
surely can have beautiful hair and lots
of it if you will Just try a little Dan-
derine. Save your hair! 'Try It!
B. Et lireti
Ilahrister, Solicitor, Conveyencer and
filiarr Petite. Solicitor for the Dom.
JOSSink. Office la rear ot the Dom -
Nish 'Beak, Seelowth. Umber to loan.
•di IA BIM
Naddater, Onsiveyancei end
?Wk. °MOB upotaire over
firgante store, Meta *Meet,
r. BOLNESSTRD.
ilbrrider,lt�, Conveysccee and
Wary likdieitor forithe 0abhie
Mau Bank 0 Colimeree. Mosey to loan.
POW for sale. Mho la heart block,
Mit oteeet, *fa/oral
eoh
TROUDFOOT. Me..ORAN AND
COOKE
Ilarristers, Solicitors.. Notaries Public.
gbe Wee to lead In Seafortb on lean -
Olt tech week. Otfleo in Kidd block
We Treadloot, 1. L. Killoren, EL
.1111 Paokei
TETESINABT,
F. WA.BBURIL v. S.
• Sour grittuete of Ontarky Yetneln•
II'0011eies and honorary member et
Oh Medical AMMelation of the Maack
Velottaary 0,11ege.- Treats diseases of
all Domestic Allmale by the Roost Nad-
ir" priacipiet 'Dentistry and iiiik FOY-
* specialty. Office opposite Dial
.11keel, Male streetitSeatorth. All he
Seeelsit at the hotetwill receive, prompt
Night cello received at the
am%
acani azrovir, T. S.
low graduate a Ontario Valeria-
sal College. Ail diseases- of- Domestic
Kilasale treated. Calls promptly attend-
ee to and charges moderate. Veterinary
Dtedlitry a specialty. Office and reel -
AWN GoderictLatreet, one door east
-et Dr, &Au% office, Sea -forth,
MEDICAL •
PR.W L GLANFIELD,
Fhysiclun, Eto, Honor Graduate
101 IGuthersity ofidThronto, eit years'
ezpirience.•Brucefteld, -Ontario.
..........,.......
,
SMIT
.._,ii
0404.110/411lorkbogio.
by
Frank IL Simarman-
Affilmsfroeffmalassiiiiiagowilo.
(Continued from last week.)
ontavl the aboutbort Menlwedn.
yoU who et beh of year aged lived near
cafl e ones- Bayllewho new resides in the
,tdi hake the ef- wei
st, s friends here.,
e Letter P70111 England.—The follow-
have nothing to do with the ease. If ,
we go to him and ask bin' for help
CHAPTER XIX• he will give it to us if he car; if he
can't, what harra is done? He has
The Crawling,Stone Rise.
been up and dovrti the river fon three
So sudden was the onset of the riv- weeks, and he has Ian army of men
er that the trained riders of the big camped over by the bridge. I know
ranch were taken completely aback,
.Thla was, the peril that Glover and
and hundreds of e head of Dunning's
McCloud essayed when- they ran the
three-tenthseaiode and...laid an eighty eattle were swept awaybefore they
could be removed to points of safe -
pound rail up two hundred and fifty Fresh alarms carne with every
miles of the valley. It WAS in local tY*
and exclusive territory a rich prize hour of the day and night, and the
telephonee up and down the valley
and they brought to their undertakind
no(, perhaps, greater abilities than rang ineesantlywith appeals from
neighbor to neighbor. Lance ' Dun
other men, but incomparably greater
material resource than earlier Anieri- 1011g, calling out the reserves of his
vocabulary swore tremenduously mid
can engineers had poseessed,
Success Such as theirs is ,cumulative:
when the work is done one man stande
for it, but it repreentstthe work of a
&engager men in every walk of Ameri-
can industey. Where the credit must
lie with the enghieer who achieves is
m the application of those enormotie
reserhes Of industrial triumphs to the
Particular conditions he faces in the
inoblern before him.'in the application
lies the genius called success which is
always new. Moreover, men like
Grover and McCloud were fitted for a
fight with a mountain river, because
-
trained in the Western school, where
poverty or resources had sharpened
their wits. The building of the Crawl-.
in Stone Line -came with the dawn of
a new day in American capital, when
figures that had slept in falries'drearna
woke into every -day use, and when
enlarged calculation among men con-
trolling hitherto lenlieerdof sums of
reoWr deraanded the beet3 andmoat
permanent methods Of construction to
insure enduring economies in operat-
ing. Thus the constructing of the
i
Crawling *tone Line opened n itself
new chapters in Rocky Mountain rail-
road -building, An equipment of ina-
chinery, much of which had never be-
fore been applied to such building,
had been assembled by the engineers.
Steam shovels had been sent in bat-
talions, grading machines; and dump -
wagons had gone forward in train?
loads • and an army of men were op-
erating in the valley. A huge .steel
bridge three thousand -feet long was
now being thrown across the river,
below the :Dunning eanch.'
The winter had been an unusual
one even inta land of winters. The
season's fall of snow had not been
that because Mr. Smith rode in from
there a few days ago.'
"What; Whispering Smith? If he
was there I would not go for worlds!"
"Pray, why not?"
"Why, he is an awful man!"
"That is absurb, Dicksie."
Dieksie looked grave. "Marion,. no
man in this part of the county has
a good word to say for Whispering
Smith "
g
directed tile operations aainst the (To be continued next wok.)
river. These seemed indeed, to consist!
mainly of hard riding and hard lan-
guage on the part of everybody. Mur-
ray Sinclair, althouhh he had sold his
ranch on the Crawling Stone 'and Was
concentrating Inc holdings on thh
Frenchman, was everywhere in evi-
dence. t He was the first at ,a point
danger and the last to ride away
from the slipping acres NI/here the -
muddy flood undercut; but no defiance
seemed to disturb the Crawling Stone,
which kept alarmingly at work
Above the alfalfa lands on the long
bench north of the house the river,
in changing its course may years ear-
lier, had left a depression known as
Mud Lake, It had become separated
from the Anain ehannel Of the Crawl-
ing Stone by a high, narrow barrier in
the form of a bench deposited by the
receding waters of some earlier flehd.
ond added te hy send -storms sweep-
ing among the Willowe that, over-
spread it. Without -an effective hea,d
or definite system owork the efforts
of the men at the Stone ranch were
of no more consequence than if they
tad spent their time in waving blank-
ets at the river. 'Twenty men riding
in together to tell Lance Dunning
that the river was washing out the
tree elaims above Mud Lake made no
perceptible difference in the event.
Dieksie, though an inexperienced girl,
saw with 'helpless clearness the 'futil-
ity of it all. The alarms and he
continual failures of the army of able-
bodied men directed ,by Sinclair and
her cousin wore on her spirit. The
rivee rose with, each succeeding daeh
becaine a. menace -to life'and property
of the ranch, and in the midst of it
.above the average, but it had fallen in tame the word that the river was
cuttmg into he willows and heading
the sprin.g and had been followed by
for Mud Lake. All knew what that
excessively low teMperatures through -
meant.. If -the Crawling Stone should
out,the mountains. June came again,
take its old channel, not alone were
but a strange June. The first rise of
the Crawling Stone had not moved the two square miles of alfalfa doom -
the whatefrost,and the stream lay
ed: would sweep awaly every vestige
r t
of the long stacks below the corals,
bound from bank to. bank, and for
hundreds of miles, under three teet take the barns 'and lap the slop& in
of ice. When June opened, backward ronof the. raneh-hotse itself.
Terror seized Dicksie. She tel.&
AO cold, there had been no spring.
phoned in . her distress to Marion,
Heavy" frosts lasting until the .middle
of the enontt gave .sudde e .way to i heggIng-11" te'.-"imatn.l) biaA've t'lleY
stunrner heat, and the Indians on. thes.
hould all be swetit away; and Marion
turning the glop over to Katie Dane
upper valley reservations began mov-
Of lie W. ICARN, Iiii.13.04si, ing back .into the hills. Then came Mg, got into the ranch -wagon that
Dicksie had sent and started for the
aRichmond street London, Ora. the rise. Creek after creek in the
six- C
faaviallat: Surgery Ind Genito-Urin• higher rnOuntains, ice -bound for ra*ling Stone. The confusion along
the river road as the wagon approach-
arz diseetees a men and *Omen. months, burst without warning into
ed the ranch showed Marion the ser -
the flood. Soft winds struck with
iousness of the situation. Settlers
the sun and stripped the momatain
DR. =anonaxt BEILEMANN, driven from their homes in the upper
walls of their snow. Rains set in on
valley formed almost .a procession of
Sateorathle Physician Of Cl°derich. the desert, and far in the high north -
misery -stricken people, making their.
Specialiet in women's and chlidren'ti west the Crawling Stone lifting its
diseases, The:mat-ism. acute, chronic four -foot cap of ice like a bed of feath- way on horseback, on foot, and in wag -
and nervous' disorders, eye, ear, nose era, began rolling it end over end down 0118, towards Medicine Bend. With
and throat. Consultation free. Office in the valley. In the Box, forey feet of them they were bringing with them
Cady Block, over W. G. Willis' Shoe water strilek the canyon wane and ice all they had saved from the flood—
Store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays floes, were hurled like torpedoes 9,-. thelittle bunch of cows, the wagon
I a.m. till 1 p.m. ' gainst the granite spurs, the Crawling lod of hogs, the household effects.
Stone was starting after its own.
theponies, as if war or -pestilence had
.,
DR, 'ALEXANDER MOM: When the 'river rose the earlier talk struck the valley.
of Durininh's men had been that the '
At noon. Marion arrifed. The ranch
Prideful & Surhbon Crawling Stone would put an end to the house was deserted and the merf were
all at the river. Puss stuck her head
L ice oh Rehtieheih maiii street. raildoad pretensions by washing the
Pboke 761t; Henna. two hundred and fifty miles of track out of the kitchen window, and Dick-
--baek to the Peace River, where it had Isle ran out and threw -herself into Mar -
.started. IThis Touch in the beginning ion's arms. Late news from the front
h
was easy to predict; but the railroad had been the worst; the cutting above
men had turned out in force to fight Mud Lake had weakened the last bar -
for their holdinghand while the flinch- rier that held off the river, and very
erd were laughing, " the river was available man was fighting the cur -
flowing over the bench lands in therentrenmtaaritonthabteaproditall
upper valley .-
all while eating a
At the Dunning Ranch the confidence luneheen. Dieksie, bese ; :with her
of the men in their own security wpm Inucietsr, could not stay in the house.
way to confusion as the river, sprea4t. The MSS that had driven Marion over,
ing behind the iee-janis inte lidliattOladdlchl horsin the afternoon, end
lakes and bursting in torents through the twds women rode up above Mud
its bariers, continued to rise. Traache Lake, now become through. rainfall
DR, Pi di BURROWS, , • • • and seepage from the river, a long
Office end residenee—Goderich etreet shallow lagoon. For an hour they
east ed the leethodist church. Seaforth. watched the shovelling and carrying
,
reone No. ti, Coroner for the County of aandbags, and rode toward the river
d Starok ,r i tO the very edge of the 'disappearing
willows, where the bank was melting
f ' t ma Bean k MCKAY,/ away before the undercut of the re-
sistless curent. They rode away with
re, Scott,' gradteete a Victoria, and a conunon feeling—a conviction that
Dollese et Ithseielans and Surgeons, the fight Novas a losing one, and that
Sas Arbor, sad nierober of the Ontario another clay would see the ruin corn-
% MacKay, Lootor graduate of Trinity plete.
• "Dieksies" exclaimed Marion—they
*how for the County of Rufron.
Slalversity, and 'gout medallist of Trio- were riding to the house as she spoke
WI Medical college; member of the Col- —"I'll tell you what we can do!" She
lage of Pheeicians eadluegeons, OntacIo. hesitated for a moment. "I will tell
you what we • can do! • Are you
i
plucky?"
Dieksie looked at Marion patheti-
cally. .
"If you are plucky enough to do it,
we can keep the river off yet. I have
an idea, . I will go but you must
come along"
- "Marion, what do you mean? Don't
you think I would go anywhere to save
the ranch? I should liketo know
where you dare to go in this. eoutnry
that I dare not"
"Then ride with me over to the rail-
road camp by the newbridge • We
will ask M. McCloud to bring some
of his men over. He can stop the
t river, he knows how."
THOMAS ROICI• Dicksie, caught her breath.
Marion! that would do no good even
if I could do it. Why, the railroad
has been all swept away hi the lower
valley."
"How do you know?"
"So everyone says!"
"Who is everyone?"
"Cousin Lance, Mr. Sinelatir—all
the men. 1 heard Abet a week ago."
"Dieksie, don't believe It. You don't
understand these railroad men. They
understand this kind of thing; cattle-
men you know, don't. if you will go
with me we can get help. I fool just
Die_ J. W, PIKE
Scaduate of ?acuity of Medicine, W-
SW University, Montreal; liernber of
Soilage of Phyalchuis .end flu.rgeone of
Mitario; Licentiate of -Medical Cotomil
d Maeda; Post -Graduate member of
Reddest Medical RAU of General Hos-
pital, Montreal, 1914-11; Office two
doer& alit of' Poet OM% Phone 511:
feessill Ontario,
CHILDHOOD AILMENTS
panscommes
The ills of childhood come swiftly
and too often before a doctor can be
called in of medicine obtained the
little one is beyond aid. The wise
mother will always safeguard her lit-
tle one by keeping Baby's Own Tab-
lets in the home. This medicine al-
ways does good—it ean rioter do
harm. Concerning them Mrs. Napoleon
Lambert, St. 'enlace, Que„ writes:— ;
"Bally's Own Tablets are an excellent,
medicine for childhood ailments and 1
I am Well pleasedwith their use."
The tablets are sold by medicine deal-
ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from
Brockville, Ontario.
ki.104-11.01mailigg/61411"11111""mulim.
BAYFIELD.
(Too Late iFor Last Week.)
Breezes .—Remember the Irish Soc-
ial in St. Andrew's church basement
on March 16th. A good time is ex-
pected.—R. Penliale left for the west
last week with a carload of horses.
—The Hard Time Social on Tuesday
evening was fairly well attended and
a pleasant time was spent. The cos-
tumes created much amusement. The
The gentleman's prize WAS awarded
to Mr. Magee, Lady's, Miss E. Stare
geon; boy's Norman Toms; girl's Jean
Woods. Games were played during
the fore part of the vening followed by
a programme of choruses, by a num-
ber of ladies, solos by Miss Ada Clark
and Mr. Macfarlane; instrumental by
Jean Woods and readings by Miss
Harries. The proceeds amounted to
° H. HUGH ROSS.
etreduete of Ilniveratty of Toronto
tractulty of Medicine, member of Col -
Wee of Phrsicirma and Surgeons of On-
tario.; NW graduate courses In Chicago
Meal School of Chicago; Royal Oph-
elialitio Hospital, London, England,
Uolverivity College Hoesital„ London,
Begland, Office—Bach of Dominion
Sank, Saeforth. Plmne No, -6. Night
ealla answered Insaa realdeneeorietoria
shresa,t, gienfortia
Attevoianata
;
Icing Sugar
For frosting cakes, snak-
ing bonbons and other
confections without kook,:
ing. Ask fq it by name
at your grocers.
1 -lb Cartons only
Liataled auctioneer for the couneiNg
MI Evros sad Birth. Corrospoadeace
senkSeatente for sale dates OSA be
Mole by cabs up 'boas 37, Seaforth,
ar The Sispotttar offtesc, Charges mood-
iest* "Ad rsafistastiou6 guaranteed.
LOXIIPae
Liceased eectionear for the Oem
kel Banal Sake attaaded Ss la
Setts of tiee eauely, lbws years" m
tredemeela damitoos mad Illaakstalawas
Ems* reaassatia Paseo Na. 101,. R
Ikeas Nabtor: Osatraga P, 0, ft. ft
Fos 41trdof1 tett at TM Sam Ita
gait*, terhirsishtly,
testovil te.tee
is packed at - the factory in
dust -tight cartons. Yours •
is the first hand to touch it,
2 and 5 -lb Cartons
10 and 20 -lb Bap
"TheAll-PurposeSugar"
Scud to a redball izrobr.
FREE owe.
A thentie Sugar Reeneressilill.
Power max. seseeseee
-----
Children Cry
FOR rumors
cAST_ORIA
_
amommassommomemoromonwl
tee
awillitaanap*
er and Fother:—sReccilved your long
looked for letter today- told was eev.
t,ainly glad to hear from you. I am
in the best of health and so- is Wil-
frid and the rest of the Bay -field boya.
We were moved into this camp last
Wednesday and is surely fine here—
the best we have been in yet.- We
have been moved four times since we
landed in England. I guess they want
us to see the country before we go to
France. The weather is fine here,
th ground frozen a little, ne SneW euid•
sun shining ever w day. Fe weather
for chilling. Our battalion is re -or-
ganized and we are going to France
togehter--guess there is some class
to us. Ford Xing and Billie Brandon
are in this camp. I see them every
night. Both are looking fine. 1 was
promoted to /duce Corporal today and
start a courise to -morrow. i tarn
think of any more news this time.
Your loving son Malcolm
.*PRIfliff031**
ORDERS MAY SE SENT US
EY TELEGRAPH OR TALEPHONS
tar h
VINEIRMR5FilieelliEEMMEWZIONSWAI
A. E. AMES & 00.
Invesinsent Banker4-. ,Establi.shed r889.
AT OUR EXPENSE
FOR THE NEW
WAR LOAN
10 MON OF CAN
MONTREAL
-SD
Union Bank Building-, 53 King
TORONTO
NEW YORK
„
WAINOMORRINMIEMIREMEMOZEIRARDORNMONORARIRAINWOE 0
Ei ,
r0 WA. R LOAN
M
Ni,......,_
DOMINION OF - CANA.DA-
is)
si
ig Issue of $150,000,,000 5% Bonds Maturing ist March,
51
El
El Payable atipar at Ottawa, Halifax, St John, Charlottetown, Montreal, Tpronto,
Winnipeg, Regin.a, Calgary, Victoria, and at the Agency of
ig the Bank of Montreal, New York City.
El INTEREST PAYABLE HALF -YEARLY, ist MARCH, lsi SEPTEMBER.
El ,
El
El -
PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PAYABLE IN tjOLD._
ISSUE ?RICE 96,
A FULL HALF -YEAR'S INTEREST WILL BE PAID ON lst SEPTEMBER, 1917.
THE PROCEEDS OF THE LOAN WILL BE usED FOR WAR PURPOSES ONLY.
TEM MINISTER OF FINANCE offers herewith, on behalf
of the Government, the above-named Bonds for Subscrip-
tion at 96, payable as follows: -
10 per cent on application;
80 16th April, 1917;
30 " 15th May, 14)17;
26 " 15th June, 1017.
The total allotment of bonds of this issue will be limited
to one hundred and fifty million dollars, exclusive of
the amount (if any) paid for by the surrender of . bonds
as the equivalent of cash under the terms of the War
Loan prospectias of 22nd November, 1915.
The instalments may be paid in full on the 16th day of
Nti April, 1917, or on any instalment due date thereafter, under
a discount at the rate of four per cent per 9.11I111111. All
1 payments are to be made to a chartered bank for the
credit of the Minister of Finance. Failure to par any
SI instalment when due will render previous payments liable
NI to forfeiture and the allotment to cancellation.
Ejr - Subscriptions, accompanied by a deposit of ten per
ft/ cent of the amount subscribed, must be forwarded through
sithe medium of a chartered bank. Any branch in Canada
zgi of any chartered bank will receive subscriptions and issue
rgi provisional receipts.
This loan is authorized under Act- of the Parliament
1 of Canada, and both principal and interest -will be a
charge upon the Consolidated Revenue Fund. a
1 Forms of application may be obtained from any branch
in Canada of any chartered bank and at the office of any
50 Assistant Receiver General in Canada.
vti Subscriptions must be for even hundreds of dollars.
wit In. CitEle of partial allotments the surplus deposit will be
IM
epplied towarcts payment of the amount due on the
SI April instalment.
El Scrip certificates, non-negotiable or payable to bearer
Ei in. accordance with the choice of the applicant for
6/ registered or bearer bonds, will be issued, after allotment,
Si in exchange for the provisional receipts.
St When the scrip certificates have been paid in full and
Mpayment endorsed thereon by the bank receiving the
ead money, they may be exchanged for bonds, when prepared,
' with coupons attached, payable to bearer or registered
as to principal, or for fully registered I bonds when prepared, without coupons, in accordance with the
ig application.
•
SUBSCRIPTION LISTS WILL CLOSE ON
DEVARTAIENT OF FINANCE, O'FrAWA, rdarCh rah, loll.
enanggagaggiggic-gEggirstMe AggagagignEkagaggngia
Delivery of scrip certificates and of bonds wifl be made
through the chartered banks.
The issue will be exempt from t..ee—including ay
income tax—imposed in pursuance of leOslation ecacted
by the Parliament of Canada.
The bonds with coupons will be jostledin denominations
of $100, $500, $1,000. Fully registered _bonds without ,
coupons will be issued in denominations of $1,000, $5,000
or any authorized multiple of $5,000.
The bonds will be paid at maturity at par at the office a
of the Minister of Finance and Receiver General at
Ottawa, or at the office of the Assistant Receiver General
et Halifax St. John, Charlottetown,,. Montreal, Toronto,
Winnipeg,'Regina, Calgary or Victoria, or at the Agency
of the Bank of Montreal; New York City.
The interest on the fully registered bonds will be paid ,
by cheque, which will be remitted by post, Interest Pee
on bonds with coupons will be paid on surrender of coupons.
Both cheques and coupons, at the option of the holder, M
will be payable free of exchange at any branch in Canada
of any chartered bank, or at the Agency of the Bank
of Montreal, New York City.
Subject to the payment of twenty-five cents for each NEI
new bond issued, holders of fully registered bonds without Ta
coupons will have the right to convert into bonds of the IR,
denomination of $1,000 with coupons,and holders of bonde 041
with coupons will have the right to convert into fully
registered bonds of authorized denominations without M
coupons at any time on application to the Minister of a
Finance.
The books of the loan will be kept at the Department a
of Finance, Ottawa.
Application will be made in due course for the listing
of the issue on the Montreal and Toronto Stock Exchanges.
Recognized bond and stock brokers having offices and M
carrying on business in Canada will be allowed a eOninliS-
sion of three-eighths of one per cent on allotments made
in respect of applications bearing their stamp, provided,
however, that no commission will be allowed in .respect'
of the amount of any allotment paid for by the surrender
of bonds issued under the War Loan prospectus of 22nd Rig
November, 1915, or in respect of the amount of any
allotment paid for by surrender of five per cent debenture
stock maturing ist October, 1919. No c,onernissiofl will
be allowed in respect of applications on forms which
have not been printed by the King's Printer.
OR BEFORE THE 23rd OF MARCH 19
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