The Brussels Post, 1927-6-29, Page 7*ow
um.n..............-,...
"-------:—_---. —..--.-z-----.1"--, —r ------.-"="----,-..,-2-r--
,,
)
THE BRUSSELS POST wEoNEsDAY, JtNItl J,D27,
earn
actlk„
eans ETTER C. R EA M
13 UT TE
inar
tj Er ER PRIC ES
oro 12, dp.11..21 to (yu
1 r/221,2 or
oathor it t11 e••• ir 22•• (11.11‘',1 :it VW CI., Ili, y 41044 day
o II. 11.0 tVitil covered truck twep sup oil' it.
incy it P1,114111111 (.1. 1 rf`111 11. 1/l111”14,lt fr,1. Spee.
ItIrovei hot df N... I grade, nod 3 ;snits por lti. no 2.1 -fat I'm.
N.., 1 wade (2vt 1 (hal if No. 2 gi 10211.
pvinei pie or the improvonima in Ow quality
tintario bin lei in the cdoe.1.12i um of 82cood ..1T grade
eioain. This limy b.. 9.N...11.pH-died by T....yin.; ?lie Ili...duvet.
godil el l'1,111 h1.114 1 111 poi 111,1111d Of ter.f..1 Ilan i.
Paid to 1 lie odueot• of p....1 ci Nun. \Vt. Vi 111 pad
age and c.d.( mom ion t11111ket,
it.9.\11.. will you m
u (u,
Stit! ,ur Agiint, C. McCA
or Pllorie. 2310, Brussel:1,
The Seaforth Creamery
ru-rra-rus= uno, .vrronarmouenitenmer..nimmaucsovarmr*,p
Jain
...1.,revaran.,AvuoviiMnova,Menramilmartmatasauknoannekvikeammemoory..-.::r.nosrmromi...,
The Adventures
Coward
copyright
NNW SIIMAT, STOILY.
(1')
Delurey, I want my great..
Wet, to come and have tea with sno,"
aid Mrs. Peniston over the nodding
plume of Pen's hat. "Penelope Herr-
ingiuun is a great niece, as I suppose
you know?"
"I did not know," said Arthur,
"Bumph! She must come to tee
with mo this afternoon."
"1 :on wee my cousin," 2721iti Pon.
She had talom a great disliko to ails.
Peni,t cm -a -more on account or her
monnor to Arthur than her brusque
tone to herself.
"You w1.11 come with mo," said Mrs.
Peniston. "I wish to talk to you."
Pen would have refused point-
blank, hut Arthur gave her a warning.
look, and the curtain went up at that
momont. Pon could not now telat the
intorest she hall done in the fortunes
of the heroine; she wee thinking of
her own misfortunos. W ni she to
lose the tea with Arthur after hav-
ing had her lunch Fp0ilt?
Arthur \'as also thinking. Mrs. •
Poniston was a well-known character..
She wont out much, in with of her
age, and was accounted a woman of
vast wealth, though she spent little.
Ho knew that she had few relatives.;
or had quarrelled with them all. A
.succession of downtrodden compan-
ions followed one another in the ser-
vice of Mrs. Poniston. The last was
•sitting meekly on the other stile of
•
the- old lady. If Pen wo....2 her gr.
12101' 11111 ho vi -h1 t‘i 1101',
it would be too good a Chum. 10 he
lost
Mrs. Peniston did no; liko him --
he know that In some wai h., had
happened to annoy her, and Mrs.
Peniston never f orgavo a fancied
But her dislike would not
cri2Ltio. 141 1,01, Ito -w14 22'01 sar.. if
Pon's affection for him to be afraid
that she could work upon the girl to
mako her give him up. The old WO-
W= was over eighty; he had heard a
disouesion about her ago only a few
days before, and the lowest guess
Placed her age at eighty. If Pen
were left a tidy sum 'Jet way would
he smoothed for thole =Mile', and
she was so young that to wait a ycbl
or two would not harm either of
them. They would moot 111 society
Mrs. Peniston would not La able to
prevent that. She would grow fond
of Pon. Ivory one muat be fond of
Pen.
He glanced at Pen's profilo orator
her hat, and thought with pride that
no one could resist Pen. •e. num he
knew was looking at her now from
one of the boxes. Pen was certainly
a beauty. Before the curtain (1101)-
0 21 the second act Arthur nad
settled himself and Pen with Mrs.
Peniston's money, and was enteo•tnin.
big largely with an admired wilo and
a full purse.
Woodpeckers' C
nvention at Banff
-fikkokaveetta'k'eselfefge--;alictiare reaefeeesia.1,1.-o-
t',,"::•etgfiel:TrirsM,741.77 '"'
O''':eeert•A`ee' • eseeN
• , •
', „I •
2:2
Typical Woodpecker hole in a Fie tree. (lasen) Rare p1 otoaraph of the
Menisci Voodpeeker.
in one or his tortures delivered at the
Banff Springs Hotel, Dan Me -
Cowan, the well-known Canadian
naturalist, bus a wonderfully inter-
esting story concerning a wild bird
convention held in the Canadian
Pacific Rockies during the fall of 1926.
At that time the new Banff Springs
Hotel was under construction and
large numbers of structural steel
workers were engaged in uprearing
the fabric around which a dream
palace had been evolved. There was
the loud clanging of steel as the heavy
girders were lifted and guided into
place. Winches rattled and ongines
hissed incessantly. Above all other
sounds rose the staccato "rat -tat -
tat" of scoros of. riveting hammers.
Far up the Forty Mile Valley of the
Bow this sound was hornet it re-
echoed from cliff and crag on grey
Mount Rundle, it shattered the
silence in the deep groell woods that
• ()the tho valleys and the mountain
es.
(mahout this extensive forested
Ind Banff and Lake Louise,
peckers are to be found at
of Os yea?, io thesn
'esters came the 1300114
at woirls; it WAS inter-
s the noise of a host
hammering and
and timber of
Douglas Fir and Spruce. Instinctively
they hastened to the source of the
sound, confident that a keen -eyed and
enterprising members of the tribe had
discovered an army of tree -infesting
grubs and that there would be a feast
for all who cared to answer the sum-
mone broadcasted so clearly.
The. Dileated Woodpecker, a large
black plumaged bird with crest of
scarlet, vivid as huntsnutn's coat,
flew through the woods like. a fiery
torch and caused the dim aisles to
echo with his loud and raucous cry,
Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers,
lessor birds 111 the ancient order of
foresters, clung to the gnarled hark
of trees and with heads aslant,
hearkened querulously to this strange
drumming of hammers on steel.
Such an asserthl age of Woodpeclzors
hail never before been seen in the
valley of the Bow. The woods seemed
alive. with birds of this brood. 'Unlike
most conventions held tit Banff, this
ono could hardly be tanned a success.
No doubt tho birds W0T0
and deeply disappointed that the
promised fast did not materialieo,
Nevertheless there must have been
oomponsation in the nurnbor of
family re -unions inado possible by the
eall of the hanirnere that; fashionod
the framework of it groat male in the
seenie heart of tho Bookies,
"1 think e.1 nieilii tic '0 u.'hic h. I.," 8.1.4 l'icleieli+.44.1.+4.04,440-1•4444ell.eili ;t lil., ly 'lint 1 , I "'CAI ': A '2 ., '.'. I ,,.i',t 0 N., 11111. 1/1111 r,, • 1, ,,, 11,, ..To-gx: Industrial teforegoigo and
+
:-.1i.1 Arthur in Is ; ; ,.e, -0',..;• i ; ; 1 i' ? 'hi' ' i " 1 i 1 iiit. I i, ' i.".; , 1 ' , .i.:;iii Tie iiiii, ',.' , I., , 1 i 0' 1
,!,I' R. Sr-4V11111.;iat coompramy, of Sarnia
T;
i.",it nun% ',inn knew." : IiI
(1.‘ . r`kl fl, '4 ,,,,,.,,,;: :„ 4 i ,,, ,, , , , , , • : 1.,, 1,, i„,, ; 2„ , , ,,1,1 ., , ; •.„ ., , : , .
,•1;u.o
el too0' ' issse'1'' • •• t . t; ,io,r,-,,..»e. ;• ,• e 11, :. , o.. / 1:a Ilt.V.I.la, s m..o,.n.a1 1 1 1 1 as i • 1 i ait 1 1111/It eny n,oe•
2,),Y1 ri .11,I, t. A 1 Pht.t• uppty l'221,11"." • ÷ , t4 ,11, . t 1.,111 'I. , ..4,1, 1/Fit. , It liu wIli
4
O 4.
"1 1 ettn1tot he 1, 115,1, .1 •te 1 w:11 h
l.,,i ;• 22241! 1,1114, 1. •.„,I IViortflown
eOne,101.11 t1hI;1,y ,,r':• WAf7LI71 ', c!' ,1 ....; 1, . 1 , ,,
coArin gn Gn.nopany
4-• 11
:111,1 11,34' all ;1/1,/111, 11. V.1,
4
we J, 1.7) C )W 0
1; :,r..i .in...'Ill'! 1l,..' 1// 1 ////, 1 0, ; 11 1w4,2
.ole11. 1.f 4.,,h,-...... rs1.,2,,• rkelit'',2 s•2 - ite. .to'••
,;.i.t 2,2 I P.1'l: Lr or1*1
ii•
•1, ,, ,/•1;,-, ... ,1,d /1 ,, ,-,i,, ,‘ i , , .: :i.. i.i ili . /if. / -wiw,.., ii _ i L,. hvii Li '2..2, 7..;,A,1,.1,.1P1.'.:,l,4 t•..i1tf1.i1' l!f I?l
'a;.:../ 11110
111111,1• tittr2 i2.21H2ol 2 . 1 ,1, ,1,
÷ 4
o•e•-••••,- :.• • ,oe
:11, P. hi 1,„, .1..claria 4 id .1 10•421 2 2 4 4 "-: T ,7". , EL, : oo,..144.
vo!.;•.• hitt tie• phly 452/.8 11.411,1 1 0111'.
21 2(1 2221 liecnre the
the flirt -
1;Y. and last' of al! los
Aothur.
"Von. 17111 -o • ti t tis
:-1 at ion?" ...aid Arthur, itandin4
eneritos door.
"S1e. is toy niotev," eahl aloe. P.
"I van quite w,Jt adet care
of her:"
j,,oloal at Arthur' handsome
roc, wet perrect clothos with dse
"I,.2.11ish popinjay!" 4110 muttered
tho earriaire 1(111 '1
P,11 W0111,1 hil,W! StOpp.1.1 and got
out, hut sho 41'114 opp1'o54e,1 aire.
Pooleotti'e overpowering' presence.
811. mado ito her mho] there and then
1112.1 not111.11g bor gr..at-tatot could say
412,1112.1 her long in the house.
CHAPTER 111.
tda 1, the small drawing.
room, Williams, at once! Mis.. John..
-ton, w.. shall not want y,m." Tho
companion crept away up the stairs.
"('1ie thi' 1122111, Pendlorn.; I wish
to look at you!"
Pon obediently stood by th... win-
dow While the hard glitteeing taete of
31 2'. Poniston took in evsoot- dotail of
tho raco and figur. n,11 fele
hot fionouth thoeo appeal:dog eyes,
hat W11 '(1 she tried to 11110V0 :11/1.1111 P.21-•
iston told her sharply to stand still.
"You aro 2mmething liko your
Mother, I''21'1 2', 12,1,
figure and her (..yos, only deeper 222.t. •
Rut I do not know that i distol-
vantago. You can pour out the teo.
No sugar for me! How do you move?
Not badly. With some teaching you
would do very well. Yes. I think ycu
would do. 'You do not look stupid
either. Penelope Herringliam, I am
zi rich woman."
"Yes?" said Pon, wondering what
was going to happen.
"Four years ago I want.al to adopt
you. Did your fathor over tell you 7"
"Yes, he did. I remomber hie
saying something about it,"
Pen remembered now he had said
that her great-aunt had wished to
adopt her and turn her int.) a hard
lordly woman; but he proforred that
his little Pen should be poor and
good and humble rather than what
her great-aunt would virake hee.
"Not that .all rich people are hard
and worldly, or all poor people. good,"
he had added hurriedly; "but am a-
fraid that poor Mrs. Penietton---"
Ho had said 110 more. Mrs. Herr-
ingham never i:poke evil of anl one.
Pen had almost forgotten; but now
undor her aunt's hard cold gaze she
romemborod, and mentalli ended the
4011 (1111' her father had left unsoid.
"He would not have it. But now 1 1
will make the same offee to you. You ;
will do (11' orodit, and I want 1111)11
one young about the houso. Did your
father lave you provided for?"
"No. Ho Wag .S'() good—he gave
everything---"
"1 thought as much. 1 suppoeo
thpro aro no entanglements with that
cousin or yours, that Arthur Do- t
lari-y?"
"What do you mean? Entangle,-
meats?"
"I Inean you do not imagine your-
in lm'' With 111111?"
"WP are engaged!" said Pon proud- s
ly,
"Not until ho gets somethirg toi h
do." . t
"Arthur Didaroy hat: about six or •
seven 111,1 El year. H111. COU111
111;11TY 011 that. Ife is too 3oltish, you g
moon, to lanolen himself with a wire.
What do you imend to do le ho will
not mari•y you?"
"I am going out to South America
as a companion,"
"Pooh!" said Mrs. Poniseona "Do
you know you aro an eatromoly bum -
ti rut girl? Arthur Delmont would
nover haw got erigagod to a moroly
pretty penniless lase. It would not
have 110011 carried aWay, as 110211 sure
that he was, when he got engaged to
you without a sou,"
Mrs. Peniston stopped and looked
at Pen again, mentally appealable;
here If :selfish Arthur Doloroy 112221
mado a fool of himself so far as to
become ongaged to Penelopo Herr-
inglimn it was certain tha tPen would
Ito able to marry whoin sho ploased.
A groat match by the 111010 would
perfect glory upon the 1111111.
"You will certainly not go to
South Amorica," Mrs, Peniston soid,
"I am your great-aunt and your neat-
eet Motion, or, at Ivey rate, the only o
ono who can do anything for you. 1
'You will como to live with me, Pono•
lope Fthrringliam."
Pon shivored. Even South Amn-
ion was more alluring than this big y
l'e? • •
,..,„
• , YOhck
stately woman, with th • ie
bearing awl cold glittorird
2datil adopt yON, 22n2 111
death—but T am not tin 11.1 wow:one.
slot addod haetily—oal .tholl you
comfortably nroeilled --1 -that if
you do nothina folish."
Pen wonibleal who', M1,2.
considered fooM1.
"To begin with, .41111 cin
11011sen.d, wIlatoVer with tint Aram,.
Dolarey."
Pon stiffened and .tier 11,1
to moot Mrs, Peniston's
1,,,;:1111t,:•;is..1.r. bur Delarey is a s .1t2.2
head-ovor-•.ars-dtz 41; 1 t
young 1112111. I shall allow 12,1 non.
son., whatever with hint!"
engived," said Pan 111111 t.
ly.
"Engaged! Poold Yon will 14.1 ito
to him and say I forbid ytoto ovor
opeaking to him avain."
Pen laughod: She, c•oill not hole
it. To think that a strowt. wooed!
whom she had met by chaned in a
theatre could order her to giv up
Arthur find expect to bo '(11':.-,' 2. It
W118 laughable!
Mrs. Peniston raised hoo hood at
the sound of that laugh. Sho was 14
bully by nature, and oposition mado
hor the more (totem 'tined to have hen
wa'3:You need not laugh!" oho said,
I intend to be obeyod."
TNli:itrby sts1.12121.1,1'1'2•1111.1 Peniston
sot her floe.
"Do you understand, you little fool,
that I in rich, and that I will tape
you to parties; and give you new
frocks and hat,s that I will marry you
well and leave you my monoy? Ar-
thur Delarey is a .selfish young man
about town, and would drop you like
a red-hot pin if he could make a rich
marriage."
"I will not have you saying such
things of Arthur!"
"You are lucky if you never hear
worse of him than that. Penelope
Herringham, offer to adopt you, to
take you as my own child, on the
understanding that you will drop
Arthur Dularey and give 1110 your
word of honour to have nothing more
to do with him."
"I refuse!"
"You had bettor think moment.
Your refusing to give up Arthur Do-
larey will not make him marry you.
You will go to South semerica, and
his letters will cease after a while,
and then you will hear that Ivo has
narriod some American heieesso who
ma boon taken in by his eow-co1curod
sair and white teeth. I believr.2 (hoe'
aro falee."
"They are not!" ilasinal not Pon;
and then she laug•hed again,
"False or not, he does not 11101111
o marry you. Give him up, and you
hall have everything a Rid desires—
lances, dresses, admirers — ovory-
hing."
"1 do not want them."
"You are infatuated !" said Mrs.
Poniston angrily. "But, after all,
mu are my niece. Supposing that
1211.1117 make the stipulation that You
hall have no communication with
•
To herself she said that she would
aloe that Arthur Delarey should un-
lorstand that if he married her niceo
not a penny of her money should the
MA have. If her judgment of the
nan was correct that would effectual- •
ly stop him. It was a caso of setting
a thi'I! to catch a thief, Mrs, Pen-
iston could form a pretty accurate
idea of what a selfish worldly 5o1'-
8011 150111d (10,
"T do not rar0 to be adapted," said
Pen slowly and clearly. She 51115
herself eating, driving, living sklo by
side with this hard cold woman, and
she ahuddored. Bettor a thousand
times to work for her own living than
become what her aunt would wish
her to bol
Mrs. , Poniston stared. She had
never imagined that a. girl in her
senses would doclino such an offor,
"You must be mad!" sho said at
length. "Do you understand that I
am offering you n hoinot?"
'You tell wie that Arthur Delmoty
is not, to 1100 1110, that am to have
nothing to do with tho man whom T
love, to whom 111111 engago(11 1 havo
nly heard your name mentioned
2100 in my life, I do not remember
to have ever soon you before. 1 moot
you by chance to -day, and you motto
111(7 1110 offor to come to live with
ou, giving up all that 1 core for, Is
22 a, • ,, • 1.1. //11/ 1- 11,- r/1 /1, ;,,,/ Calliltiti'S['Arsonist Life insurance Co.
1 1.1,11, • j: WV' 1, ,1 itp-t Assuance
1, H. tt it.'.07.11. 1'..n, "i,!, 11,40;i1 Lgile ,,fr
Ontduri
"1 11,t14, , 1.1•1.././ 220(4. 14211,1-.•`1.: Pia'
G. W. ABRAHAM
jmv,. I1t• v.215 ant1.11 lit-1.t!t•1 j •
.•it.•:t. for it win ine ice Mr.
.`c-thur O•?,..rey,"
I :tin nt ..,t:
Opt ;,f, 1 ,fi il;
:eiin M".-. 11-'11 1-tto
41.,vt: 11.• 1-.•1 . of to. hoot ,ttt, • f..ti-
1e.t. 11,11111!.t.r,.70 1tIt
'11.•
"tVi, .t. a little sight ,.11 • ;.
.121 r. "I 1..•11..v... I ani
21,11 Oka 101 the 1;
111,1•• • 211,11 11'11'111111/ :122..1 24,
2211 tt•.- of 1111,
.t_t•1r1 1,Itt1 r1e•111,•.1
511. 1 1,1 1,11,111•'
f;•111(.1. 10 11/ l', 1-.4111 11', ao 51,10.1f,
in +1,0
for mary 21
moron. Sip, wishial that tho ble112.,nt
eintileitron :t foot;:11111 ot-
ittahl to t -ti 11, :'t:11 2.it 111_2 iit:it1t0i.
Ai th0 i0i,10.1 it voo pros -ed
loom hop thind 1.21111 she duad co...., ref,
112. 12 her go,
Pon, :127 1' leaving (31,,howo, in-
(p.ired the way to tin. Welt, Pao
21,':,'withoirt misadventure.
t,1110 vitTritt 211;i'arl!pir:
r 11,1 home t11011
1; 2,1'hindoci to take; bat her
day hap hoen 5(011,!. :aid she had
eothne: ito do in Tenn:Iota
2oi.• ::.• to 7222) to aim:it Annoica;
oho hod rofusoll a fortuno. Tho first
was 422(122) troth Lai her! tete second
was 115-22 thought of '152' 11, Arthur
was 00111111g' t 011101TOW. 11111 t1)'3'
would 1:102211 together ovor hoe aunt's
proposition.
Miss Jones was 801021151101at her
early appearance. She had not 11x-
pected. her for another 1100r. To
Miss Zones Pen related '(1111:bad
happened. She looked grave 0\'01
l'on's 50121881 to be adopted, and camo
as near as she ever came io advanc-
ing an opinion of her own.
"Do you not think, illy dear, von
should have been in not quite such a
hurry? It would have ben a home."
"After the way she spoke of Ar-
thur—nevor!" cried Pen. --
"Perhaps not," sighed Miss J01107,
Pen looked around at Retstory
garden as she stood in the porch after
supper. Tito lilac seas smelling sweet
the laburnum was hanging in ooldon
bunches over tho gate, tho fruit bloat -
sons was dying and fading!, but it
; 11 .11, 1. .... .2 .•• 2 . .. 2. , 4.1..21,11,•,.... tr,.
L,Lit
1., have iis.1.•.2
12 11,-1' :t.1.1,..1
"1k. • 'LI- not dreadful our
-2;11'."' said 111 '4512117won-
2 tii•• 0111 lone12 1,.to.11111 11, 12,1,1
'22
n r:111 1/12 1:1- that a
'':3' 71,1? ••2,
i2221ri 'all it.
.e1 .01":" Arti1U1'. -Ai 11 I
2. 1.;i1;•lc
r -; an - notre
for i- oahl
Pon Fotitlee "1 rents,..ii
tireni2"
1'.•,1 1,to2oqi up. For first, tint -2
d
tho oul.t 4'1,5,b 14,0' min 1 113 10
NVII..1/11 r Ar111 lir Itrolth.I (114 11.2
!it
"1 1101.1e.1 her horrid. She 112211'ta1,o-t
to atlopi mo. and 1 1100.1111..1 th. and
(1't h. d
"Y('21121101ou('21121101,)r'5100,)2"
22111 quite w.intrri
1‘5, 1(4 proy111,.. 114Vii 111)21to 110 with you. Arthur. 8112 sold
horrid thing.: tebout y012. 1 (marl::
1144' ot her 11, 52111h
t.,11. 1 45115
A
to ,t, 211' • I fl lilIt 1
kVoUlt1 21,45')':peak 10 yell 11,1-1111. Of
5(4214'reftlmon"
(Continued Ni -et Wook.)
Gorrolas ledi•rlo. or Now Yore. the
first woman to swim ti, 100,1.11 Chan :
11,'l, 1111 entered the t•11710,095 Cana-
dian National Exhibitioo 21 .
marathon swini, Auguat elst.
Ovor 700,000 sehool. children of
Canada have 1.024,1e -est invitatiena to
attend tho Canadian National Flxhi-
bition as guests of the management
ois Young Canada's_Day.
Long before there was a :United
Canada the seed of tho Canadian
National Exhibi,tion sown.was Th,
neat Agricultural Fair in Upped
Canada was lield in 171H.
Over 2,400 cars from th • Unittal
States were counted on tho C211221;2211
National Exhibition Groando 11. one
day last year. W. U.5121rCkeilifi
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,
Many enquiries for infoematlon oa CONVEYANCER, NOTARY PUBLIC
tho Canadian National Exhibition ' eacKIE BLOCK_ - BRUSSELS
have been received from the leni•tod 015 tSbiRbL.qw
Statos this year than evor received F12,, or graduate 01 th'Ontario V t !nitric
any other two years combined. tsat' and 01411nslis. 0(1111010,18(11.Flour 11I111,.Sthel.
C. C. RAMAGE, u.u.S., L.D.S.
BRUSSELS, ONT.
Graduate Royal College of Dental
21.t122,2.,.a
.22L; nd Honor Graduate Uni-
.2•rsily of Toronto. Duntiary in all
i±s 421.tidp
Office Over Standard Bank,
Phone 200
WM. SPENCE
Eihel, Ont.
Conveyance, Commissioner and C. J.
Tor
The Imperial Life Assurance Co. of
Canada..
1taii
Ocean Accident Guarantee Corpora-
tion, Limited
Accident 1111111t:thee, A atom 212 ile In-
:urance, Plate Gia„e Insuranee, (ole.Phone 2225 Zthel, Ont.
AGENT FOR
Fire, Automobile and Wind los,
:COMPANIES
For Brussels and vicinity Phone 64
JAMES M' FADZEAN
Apt Buick Mutual fire Insurance Gamow
Also
Hartford Windstorm and Tornado Insurance
Phone 43 Pox 1 Ttxrnbcrry Street Bruen&
JNO. SilirNEM.5203 & SON
LIMITED
vrsozzl,„var
GOWEPAt &torsa.to
D. M. SCOTT
k,21V422,.Y311')J av,arrxame
PRICES MODERATE
Forlritlevr,,eixesimu-411t, any perago1nVel 1 0 1136111
T. T. M' RAE
M. 0, 11., Village of Brusselu,
Physician, Surgeon, Aueotteheur
°Mount residszkzill,go;ignelelville Church,
tiosseetzeres............._ astetremememmsemstazaiserasteomesseeisommeroterismemneaser
a 4 -
"'-mmoestesmaavostrasserazemssestestalewrrameentsaelemesazeastiesseeasmsseesiaeareams
----
12
Another Firm
Out of Business
Just one of the news items which aro appearing in paper.;
quite too often thoas days throughout the Teomiiiion. And
whot is the reatoon? Thon, is only 01111, and that is lack of
I1t7221ty to home institutidas and t171,lure of the flashing
publicity of tho 1,11 -go tate. oetabli:hinonts. alone, citieons,
511110 earning thole Wages and salaries in ono place, nevor-
tholoss send a large proportion of this 1110113' out of the
community for question:11,10 bargains, lime doprivitig such
community of that much nocossary working caplial.
Business Men
o the" Same
They have local arms who aro alilo and heady to supply
them with all their require -moms, yot far the most tri 01121
reason or excuen they will conatmt to extend this patronage
to outside firms, thus holping to build up dietant cake at
the capers, or their homto town, eoom 10 forgot that
this 111011427' so sent out might otherwisse havo boort largely
returned to thom by those with whom they should have loft
this btsiness. Thorcfore, when in nood of printed matter of
any kind, whether farmor, business num or professional man,
always extend first consideration to
The Post
Publishing House