The Brussels Post, 1927-8-17, Page 6'WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 37th, 1937
THE BRUSSELS POST
IP
Real duality
208
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43204.11.11
Fathers ol Confederation
j
o
Samuel Leonard Tilley,. u, of 1,1
outstanding advocates of Conf dere- I
tion who claimed Nev frunswi k as
his home, was a druggi:;t by 1 cfcs-
Pion. At the time o !Ili,:1l 0th in 1
Gagetown in May of 1818 his family y
were well settled and looked back 1
with pride to the fact that the;• had
left the revolutionists to the eolith i
in order that they might live under i
the Union Jack. i
It is perhaps to his first employer
that we must look for the commence-
ment of the public career that was to
enroll his name amongst the fathers
of Confecizration. After taking an,
academic course in the dispensing off
drugs in the city of St. John, he ent-
ered oni: of the leading e-„talil:h-.1
ments of the city under the mat a;ge- } --
anent of W. 0. Smith, This gentle- Sir Samuel L. Tilley.
man had then made a name for hint
I.
self as 0 public man and there can bei ung that the larger ono in Quebec
no doubt that the first sparks of polo • 'grew. All the delegates were sworn
ical ambition were fostered by. the to secrecy until the matter could be
ideals and policies that were thus laid ;n a
proper way
before e the erre
set before the youthful clerk, (boos colonial assemblies. The secret
The employer, seeing that the could not hold and a Prince Edward
young man gave evidence of orator- !eland n wspaper secured notes of
ical gifts, induced him to join a de• the me ire proceedings. 'When they
bating society. From there 11e ea- I were , .''dished they had a tendenly
tended his platform by addressing to ce e, • a feeling o falarm, so much
meetings }'n the interests of temp so that Mr. Tilley was defeated at
erance. It was style and eloquenuen
the election o
n h 1
ed in
1865
In less
ce that induced
his friends to seek than a year the antagonism tied c-
his entrance into politics and in the way and for perhaps the first and
year 1849 he ran and was elected to only time in the political history of
a seat in the New Brunswick House ('••.nada a defeated premier was
of Assembly. The following year he cheered into a continuation of the
won numerous admirers by reason offce which he did not seek. How -
of his bold stand for railway d:cvcl- ever a Fenian invasion was threaten-
opment in New Brunswick and found ed from the south and under the
himself at the head of affairs. It was shadow of invasion he again took of -
as holder of such an office that he at- fice. It was his strong defense mea -
tended the Quebec Conference in sures that caused the Fenians to
1864. He had also attended the con- change their mind. The Confedera-
ference in Charlottetown a few tion hill was carried in the Rouse
months earlier. It was Mr. Tilley and Mr. Tilley went to London with
who learned that some members of other delegates. He was knighted in
the Upper Provinces were touring in 1867.
the Maritimes at the time ani ar- In the new Federal House he was
ranged for invitations to be cent to the first Minister of Customs and
then, to attend at Prince Edward Is- I later became Lieutenant Governor
lane}. It was from the smaller meet- of New Brunswick.
FRENCH CANADIAN HORSES special bulletin on the French Can -
AT ST. JOACHIM adian Horse, or communicate /with
the S.ttrerintendent, Dominion Ex-
perimental Station, Cap Rouge, Que.
The French Canadian horses at the
St. Joachim Station hat--• ' »» 368
prizes at the 'Quebec, Sherbrooke and
Three Rivers exhibition, since 1922,
including twice as many cups, dip-
lomas, and first prizes as all the other
studs combined. At the head of the
St. Joachim Stud is Albert de Cap
Rouge=14889=, admitted by every-
body to be the best stallian of the
breed in existence today. The num-
ber of brood mares runs from 25 to
35, and of total horses kept from 65
to sometimes over 100.
The main object is to conrblct ex-
perimental breeding work, but there
are also quite a number of projects
related to feeding, housing and man
agement. As regards the French
Canadian, the point is to breed a race
of horses weighing around 1201)
pounds in ordinary condition, sound,
hardy, full of energy but docile, fast
walkers, good lookers, and at home
as well on the plough as on the
surry. This kind o fanimal will al-
ways be profitable on the largo num-
ber of small farms of eastern Can-
ada, and a pair of them would be
useful, even on the largo farms, for
many kinds of work—on the culti-
vator, for instance—where the pull -
Ng power o ftwo clraugerters Is not
required.
Conformation, size or weight, and
energy or "pep” are the qualifications
asked for. All horses, so remain in
the stud, must have these three re-
quirements in a high degree, or be
culled out. Some had won chant-
pionships at exhibitions but gave
progeny which were too small; ethers
possessed size and conformation, but
did not have the "pep" necessary to 1
act as reserve power in a tight pinch;
others again had weight and energy, '
but not the conformation of the
breed. A11 these were sold as work
animals, so that most of these re-
nnaining are of high quality.
For further information, write to
the Publications :Branch, Depart -
Ment of Agriculture, Otte -Wee for• the
IDENTIFICATION COMPLETE
A Westerner, growing tired of sub-
stitutes, took a trip to Chicago to
obtain some good old stuff. The
i price was considerably more than
he expected, he wao•otl
draw on his hence account for
s carfafcre toto
return home,
The Chicago banker wired the
. home bank in Montana: "Mr, J, E,
Smith here. Drunk. Wishes to case
, check."
1 To whish 11e received a c}nick re -
1 Ply:
j "Identification eompllette, Honor
ithe check."
HIS HAPPIEST DAY.
A man met a friend who was about
to be married. "Let me congratulate
you, old man," he said. "Permit me
to say that I feel sure you will al-
ways look back on this day as the
happiest in your life."
"Thank you, old chap," said his
friend "But it's tomorrow that I'm
to be married,"
"Yes," answered the other. "I
know that."
(EARS AGO people aged to
make they.eelves heard by
shoetrng from the houne tope.
If rem hied that to -day you
would probably have to appear
before d eommlar1an la I03111,0tt7.
NOW-A-DAYS/the' ba.xnear
man Idea air Wt et,Aee.
DISCOVERY OF CANAD
RUINS OF NOit`711-Sll'I`'LLlell I1
1'Ol' S 1) IX LABRADOR
Eskimo e'rtulitions is That "igler
\V0itt Built by Sten \i'ho !'ante
Front the Bea. lu lioaais--P11•lev(>At
Landed In the Year 1000.
T'be ,•x i:=t. •!ten' of ate-leillmills
eleulp n IeLuul20 miler, all' No
Labrador, is el n t, '.In 111,
is nu 01 hci In,I 1 uv Cona 11 or i
ocieire nue °I z;0;, le`'leeiral 1•, 11011
of F,11,1r,an urban out, d:c, •.'u; the
livai el' the ler,'m' i, cite:; Arthur
W lolf:mett in t1' Men seal I'1Le1
iieralti and We. dee Star.
Atunald D. le,•tiidee, the els
t'xee O'er. atl,1 ill me,. rites or t
te'i, I,i .ilii: um on u.ne. party, are
17 1)102 0, 7f' 1 -.1•,. i .+n,t
tt',.1,, 111; ill' 11 10 te,iil,..iti, )1
What 111 12 t. 1 ,. r
1 t ht i
house a
ore 113 maim.
of is Nor
settlenl n r
t :It I t 1. a ht , e ten
t u rni
.t
dd The srli'n7 t are In 1111 deo
regarding the I pr':e of i0, rue
slrl,rture, While there are no i
scriptions to prove enitebl.dvely th
they had been built by the \'iktn:0
nevertheless they bear a :.talking r
semblaneee to those explored recent
by the same party in (lreenlan
There is every similarity, and onl
the inscriptions wanting to give pro
positive.
The Eskimo traditions, h00d1
down from father to son throng
many generations, is that the Ston
"igloos" !yore built by men who ram
from the se boats. sea Ic•it
They call th
lace '
ru nitvi
P lt, !titch in the lshinn
tongue i nifles the place of to
\orsenlen, ' The b nliste are suds
fled that the reins have' hen tier
perhaps a than=and yrare.
To the avers eluIt it Brune
with something of a :Meek when 1,
finds it necessary to scrap certaix
long -cherish d tags of lnowledce
That ono date, for instance, that ha
long been regarded as the epiten
of all North American history, cry
tallied quite respectably in th
phrase, "Columbus discovered Amer
lea in 1492,'• is so feud} imbedded
in his storehouse of facts, that be
hesitates to dislodge it. That it oc
curs In print In all school histnrtes
seems a sufficient justiileatlon for its
unquestioned acceptance.
The Norsemen of to -day, pnl•tien-
tarly those in Canada and the Unit-
ed States, while admitting the his-
torical signiflcanee of Columbus di-
rrc.
t attention to the et• -:
d 3.ratro con-
sequences u
I1P
.aces aha followed q t llmved e •., n
in 1 f.
to
averring with unshakeable nnviriton
that the 125,000,000 on this contin-
ent have more reason to be interested
in Leif Ericson and the settlement of
America by Nordic stock than in the
destructive forces set loos;' in the
New World by the Spanish buer'a-
neers.
The story of their emigration to
Greenland, and their discovery of the
mainland of North America, is of
special interest to Canadians, 011100
it was what is now Canada that they
first sate.
Bjarni 13erjulfson, it appears.
while beating northward towards the
Greenland settlements in the year
986, sighted the "western lands," and
spoke thereof to Leif, who bought
Bjarni's ship, and dr'sh-ed that his
own father, Eric the Red, should lead
an expedition of discovery wesiwerd,
but the old man put the honor upon
hie son, and sent him off with ills
blessing,
Helluland, (Nfid.) and Markland
(N,5.) were passed and a landing was
made in Vinland where Leif burled a
tool in the year 1000, near Naliant,
Cape Cod, and called the place Kiar-
01005s, (Keel Nose). Thorflnn Eiarl-
efni coming later found the burled
keel there in 1007. With flocks and
ler
ds and his•''P
411 Gudrid and 151
eople, including six other women,
e established a settienacat, where
ix hundred years later the Pilgrim
others landed.
The New England settlers had not
sen there long when they found
unia inscriptions on what is known
s the "Dighton Writing Rock" eo'-
°berating the story told In the Saga
f Thorflnn, Prof, Rafn gives the
oilowing translation: "Thorflnn with
51 seafaring men took possession of
his land."
The Kensington Rune Stone which
as found in Minnesota in 1898, a
w miles north of Kensington sta-
rlit on the Minneapolis, St. Paul &
cult Ste. Marie Railway, is another
stance of a Norse memorial In
mel'! a i
c with important historical a tin -
'cations. Shaped like a tombstone,
arty inches long, seventeen wide,
d seven thick, it was evidently in-
nded to be set up In the ground.
hree-fifths of the length of one face
covered with very neat runic char-
ters. Olaf Ohman, a farmer, found
o slab of graywacke on an island-
ke elevation surrounded by a marsh.
was lying face downwards, just
neath the surface closely embraced
the roots of a ten -inch poplar tree.
Prof. H. R. Roland, of Ephraim,
isconsin, offers the following trans -
lion: "Eight Goths and twenty-two
rsemen on an exploration journey
om Vinland through the western re-
ties. We had camp by two skerries
o day's journey from this stone,
e were out and fished one day.
ben we came home we found ten
a red with blood and dead. Ave
rte! Save us from `evil! We have
of our party by the sea to, look
our vessel, fourteen days journey
m this island. Year 1362."
Historical researches reveal tho
t that in 1155 Paul Knutson was
t out from Norway at the head of
expoditfoe to effect a union of lost
05)1085 who had migrated to un -
own parts of America from Green -
d and to bring 'them back to the
man Catholic faith from which, it
s rumored, they had strayed.
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A wrist watch serving as an alarm
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An exquisite gem of rare
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Diamond flings Wedding flings
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JEWELER
WROXETER
Here r
_eanclThere
The west will require 25,000 men
from Eastern Canada to assist in
gathering the grain crop this yeltr.
In all about 67,000 men will be re-
quired to complete the work. Ar-
rangements have been made by both
railroads to handle the harvesters.
T. 0. F. Heuer, manager of the
Canada Colonization Association,
states that this organization has
placed 400 010 Country families in
the Prairie Provinces this year and
that 800 other anilines will arrive
before the end of the year.
The fourth annual ride of the
Trail Riders of the Canadian Rock-
ies, an organization with a Mem-
bership including many prominent
artists, writers and society leaders
in all parts of Canada, U.S. and
Europe, left recently from Banff
over a new trail for Mount Assini-
boine.
A shipment of 1;100 horses pur-
chased in the Prairie Provinces for
the Russian Government moved to
Quebec over Canadian Pacific lines
recently, In addition to the 27 car-
loads already moved to the east a
special train of 17 cats passed
through this city en route to the
Atlantic coast. The ]gorses in the
latter shipment were all purchased
at Alberta points,
Members of the newly -appointed
Saint John Board of Harbor Com-
missioners visited in Montreal re-
cently to confer with officials of the
Canadian Pacific regarding needed
changes and improvements in the
harbor facilities of Saint John.
Several suggestions advanced by
the railway company will be acted
upon before the winter traffic be-
gins, according to the Hon, W. E.
Faster, president of the Commis-
sion.
Interest taken by American Rail-
wayofficials als in the latest achieve-
ments in the way of Canadian loco-
motive construction is emphasized
by the fact that the Canadian Pa-
cific Railway Company has been
invited to send their latest and most
powerful passenger engine to be
placed on exhibit at the Centenary
Exhibition and Pageant being held
by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
at Baltimore, September 24 to Octo-
ber 8. The C,P.R, "2300" engine,
their latest and finest passenger
type, will be sent to Baltimore. •
The first ticket issued from the
new Union Station at Toronto over
Canadian Pacific lines was enclosed
in a special leather folder, upon
which appeared the name of His
Royal Highness, the Prince of
Wales, The three tickets following
were issued to T•hR,H, Prince
George, Premier Stanley Baldwin
and to Mrs, Baldwin. The new union
station was formally opened by the
Prince of Wales, the Royal train
being the first to steam into the
new depot.
A cable received at Ottawa by the
Department of Trade anci Commerce
from Harrison Watson, Trade Com-
missioner for Canada in London,
indicates that Great Britain will
offer an attractive market for the
Dominion's exportable surplus of
timothy and clover during the prose
eat year. The cable reads as fol-
lows: "English hay crop turning
out so badly that imported hay will
be required. Prospects are that
there will be a fair demand foe
Canadian timothy and clover
TT1[ 94IiI IICf 3-J, (it.
Nunwrous Huila i:otitbnt«, 1 117:ne(•ted
1\'ult ltd+ llystertvtte lead.
The Whiskey --jack enjoys 0, 11te un-
toriety' over the northern part or this
oredin'nt by his miler nam the
t <Inada Jay, The White, y-,7itek is a
my-,ataa•ious 1711,1 In maty re 111 ens, and
he has 1111111.q'n1(5 elrpe r:4, 21"tls sn31-
nerte(1 with ills I, !stele. th;t1 brhte
hh11 a distiurticul In ihr c ,out teeth, 1,
woods, particularly in th, P; r North,
Some yetis nen, cute 0 , with
sone, friends, s 4,9•,' ) 11' <I. at 0 131t11-
hct• (•gulp 1101111 ed Lek,. 2t,l'w•inr,
the camp 40(2: 11.1106 011, u07rnirter by
a Meer of noisy whie e 1110.,. 'rho,
camp 1001; and his eel:tnnil� wo.l•'•
busy i.1021buit bi••wtkfasi, and , vertu
large frying -pans on the huge stoves
were Piz%ling with it ,IS e111 moose
oleates. Time Ind time g gin eV!,
k,'i Juuks ilea• in taunu II the mien
dent Ind , irrled the elm •, and ,^1111
time they wore
"shooed" c d away bythe,
meet 1 waving.
an old marl u;tt\
parka
ka
:11 them,
•'i .
1 pall •
>, 080\\h[s7nt 1c
i k,
'iron bold and entetpricing thin the
uthc n,,, uiull0ed t0 win;; ((vera fry-
limg-an and make away with 0 hum"
slice of frying. moose heat. His booty
was so heavy that he made slow pro-
gress reaching the door and tale out-
er tar, but the cook let hint depart
without attempting to strike 1^11m.
Another thing that aroused cur-
iosity was that the cook, or any or
his mon, could have wielded a broom
and despatched several of the girds,
but he did 110 such thing, It turned
nut that this flock of Whiskey -jades
had made morning nuisances of
themselves
sin u
this manner for
alon
g
time,
The h root! was asked how it
was that they were not stint and an
end put to the raids. Ills reply- was:
„If the were to hill ono of those birds
there would be ,1 riot in ramp, and
the man ivho l=ilted the birds would
have to be let out before the lumber -
Jacks would be satisfied. No, there
is no one in tads camp would take
chances on killing a Whisk'! -jack.
And it seems to he a fact that old-
time lumbermen would no more
think of staying a Whiskey-jacltthan
•'7ey would of killing a human being.
Thi one -tine legend that still has
some hold on men of the 'ember
lamps is that "every Whiskey -Jack
cnntainc the soul of a dead lumber-
man." ;'e have nevem been able to
(11500ver the origin of this rup,rsti-
tion, bit certain it is that this bird,
which winters over in the 1'ar North
in the most severe weather, is not
only reverenced, but protected, not
only
by lumbermen, n but by trappers
nn
and r
ached -'
l c rs. The visitor isitn • wit-
tingly
\oho • t
ni
tingly or unwittingly despatches a
Whiskey -jock in certain parts of the
North, and is found out, might bet-
tor leave the country* as early as
possible.
The Whiskey -jack is neither hand-
some nor graceful, and he has no
song; but when a hunter Das shot
clown game he will appear on the
scene in large numbers, sereonlrg
out that dolorous o -y of his: "Meat -
moat -meat."
It was front the latter characteris-
tic that the. Canada Jay in some lo-
calities gained the num,. or the meat
Bird,
stranger ta
Can't Be Too Careful.
Walking into an hotsd bar recently,
a man picked up 0 piece of paper
from the floor and, after looking at
it in astonishment, asked, "Has any-
one lost a ,15 not? I've just pieltr d
ono up-"
The other guests looked up un-
believingly. "You needn't swank
here," said. one; 'other people besides
you can sport 25 notes."
Rather annoyed, the man said,
"Well, I've got one here," and, turn-
ing to the manager, tesk0d, "What
shall I do with it?" The manager
took his cue from the °there: "011,
put it in your 1100008," he said,
"Yes, you can keep it," said the
man who had accused the stranger of
swank,
So he had his drink and departed
25 richer!
Ten minutes later the incredulous
guest who had rebutted the man put
his hand in his pocket to pay up.
"Good Heavens!" he shouted, "I've
lost a 25 note."
The hero of this amusing incident
was Mr. James Rafferty, of Liverpool,
England, He returned to the hotel
later on, despite the rebuffs he had
received, and found the owner or the
note.
World-Wide'Wireless.
The new short-wave brat: -feasting
station at Eindhoven, Holland, is
making radio history. Its range is
world-wide, and it has been found
possible for stations as far away as
Sydney, in Australia, to re -broadcast
its programs more successfully than
America can be re -broadcast In
Britain,
Experts believe that the future of
wireless lies' with the short-wave and
high-power station, and the erection
or one in Britain would mean that
if a speech by the King, say, were
being broadcast, the whole Empire
could hear it,
Turning Camel Into 011?
A picture Of the Alberta coal Holds
being turned into oil and piped all
the way to Toronto and the east in
the next few years, was drawn by
Prof. J. C. McLennan at the luncheon
of the Canadian Manufacturers' As-
sociation, when he advocated an in-
tensive campaign of scientific re-
search,' lie said, "it is possible to
turn the whole coal fields of Alberta
into oil and pipe it down to Toronto.
The same thing,applies to Nova
Scotia."
Fish Witit Two Roads and Two Tails.
Two heads and two tails are pos-
sessed by one Bel) among the thou-
ends of young trout which the New
Cumnock, Ayrshire, Scotland Angling
Association are rearing in their
batcbery at Connel Bank,
Toronto stands high as a health.,'
city, having the lowest death rate of
all cities 011 the continent, having an
equal or even larger population.
24e 7.4einve,
Its superior strength makes Purity go farther than
ordinary flours. It is perfect for all your baking.— cakes, ries,
buns and bread -- so the one flour sack only is necessary,
Try Purity Flour to-day—it is certain to please you,
Send due i a stamps for ear 700 -recipe Parity Hoar Gook 13aak, 202
Wootern Canada Flow Mille Co, Limited, Uremia, Montreal, Ottawa, S.intJotn,
The Car Owner's Scrap-Book1
(P,y the Left laud Monkey Wrench/
CL
EAN G~
SET CASE
over
'frozen rusty roads, will often1n u
r light n
it into the n.,r
re• •�
i• Wear th,• rubber qtr the sde4•nll :uul
knocked n11' the genus, or other for -
ease to remove any chins of metal expose the fabric carcass,
sign substances such us grit or dirt, MAKES GOOD SUBSTITUTE
Open the drain plug at tate bottom of In the absence of rogular packing
the case to allow all the oil thus use.] • material, graphited asbestos .tring
to run out. can be used in repacking the pump
shaft. It is often used in regular re -
EFFICIENT BRAKES 118111' shops and with excellent ('211(8.
Jamming on the brakes may not be Ordinary soft wicking' eke may be
a good practice if resorted to the used in this work. It is o1 sale in
often. Making them "bite" now and balls at most hardware stoles, and
then, however, !roughens up the lin- all that is left for the motorist to
in
g and 1 • haltes them m mo• r
c, efficient. .It.
do is e
s e that .
It lde
w 11 greased. t a�e•I. In
Stepping on the brake pedal vigor- eitherg
ously may also show the m
brakes not material
case, plenty of the. packing
aterial should be used, but not so
to be as good as one might think, much that the nut cannot be scrow-
eci well on to the gland.
WIRE WHEELS
To keep !vire wheels 'rue, remove 1 _
the tiro and rim and ,pin th whir!}, I "AIR FOR LEAKY RADIATOR
holding a piece of chalk in such el Flax -ted meal is best to use a3 an
way that it will strike the part of the emergency repair for the leaky radi-
wheel that is out of line. idnving ator. The preparation is hnrmi•rss
determined this, loosen the spokes on and "1111 be boiler} nut of the radiator
the side that is pulled out of true if necessary without difficulty. Be-
am/ tighten those on the other sale. fore ''8 is placed in the cooling sys-
tem mix a handful of the meal with
enough wean water to make •t thin
paste, •Itun the engine fol' r. fow
minutes to give the paste an oppor-
tunity to find the leak, Dry meal
can be poured into the radiator, but
it will be harder to mix than if it is
made
into paste s firs.
1 t 1'11 remove
the mea], the engine should be run
until the water an the radiator gets
warm, or the radiator should De
drained and refilled with hot water.
Springs should be tested to see
that the toneion le correct after the
valves are ground.
WEARS ENGINE OUT.
improper use of carburetor choke
or dash control not only wastes fuel
and contaminates the engine oil, but
causes rapid wear of cylinder bores,
piston rings and bearings. Further-
more, the
engine ne oil diluted tad wit
h
gasoline makes
a poor compression
seal, thus causing leakage of the
compression past the rings into the
5rankcase.
TIRE INTELLIGENCE
Overloading — Avoid overloading
tires.
Inflation—Learn the correct air
pressure for tire, and cheek it with
a gauge every few days,
Repair Tire Wear — Anything
which causes a tire to drag with more
or less side motion instead of runn-
ing true will grind the rubber tread
away taster than is normal.
Rim Trouble—Take a careful look
to see that nuns may not be causing
the loss of some service from tires. HURON CO. SCHOOL FAIRS 1927
Chain Abrasions—See that skid -
An old broken spring leaf 14 one
of the most useful tools for removing
a tire from the rim.
To start en engine when the ig-
nition is ]ocke.i and the key is lost,
run a wire from the underground
side of the horn to the ignition coil,
chains are not so tight that they
gouge into the tread and fabric car-
cass of the tire, • Wroxeter . , ... , , . , .Sept, lb
Tube Care—The destruction of a Ethel Sept, 14
tube is often started when it is being Walton Sept. 15
pinched uncles the fire tool or under Belgrave Sept. 16
Varna Sept, 19
the bead of the tire,
Godorich T
Hensel]. Sept, 8
Zurich Sept. 9
Fordwich Soot. 12
Sept, 20
Tread Cuts — Sharp stones and Colborne Tp. .. Sept 21
pieces of glass, tin, or the sharp Ashfield Tp, . .... . Sept. 22
St, HelensSept. 23
Winchelsea ...... Sept. 26
Blyth Sept, 28
Crediton , . , Sept, 29
Grand Bend Sept. 30
Dashwood Oct. 3
Clinton Town ..... . , , Oct, 4
Clinton, rural ...... ..Oce. 5
11
edges of a switch point will cut into
the toughest kind of a tire tread.
Stone Bruises—Probably aro one
thing causes tires to be scrapped be-
fore they have given full service
more than a break or crack in the
fabric body of the tire, commonly
called a stone bruise. Radio Aids Fishermen
Sidewall Wear—Scraping a tiro Gulf coast fishermen find radio
against curbs when turning a corner broadcasts of weather conditions of
or when parking or careless driving great value.
IhI !hi liiitirxllllh
,, 111$111111
There are a great many ways to do a job of
printing ; but quality printing is only done one
way—THE BEST. We do printing of all kinds,
and no matter what your needs may be, from
name card to booklet, we do it the quality way.
P, S,—We also do it in a way to save you money,
The Post
Publishing House