The Brussels Post, 1928-11-28, Page 7Cr
l
radi 10.
Means
ETTE R CR14-A141
L'L Ii I;U'1'TI:R
I:"I"I'I:R PRICES
We tarn now prepared to Grade your Cream honesty,
gatle r it -twice 1 1 cAIt and deliver at our Creamery each uuy
we lift it. We gather with covered truck to ke.'p sun at it.
\VI' .pay a premium of 1 cent par ib, butter fat for
Speciale over that of No. 1 grade, and 3 cents per lb. but-
ter-fe* for No 1 grade over that of No, 2 grade,
The basic principle of the improvement in the quality
of Ontario butter is the elimination of second and off grado
cream, Title niay be accomplished by paying the producer
of good trim a better price per pound of butter -fat t.t'tn
is paid to the producers of poor ('!ream. We solicit your
patronage and ee-ope.rution for better market.
t`° 'Wo will loan you a can.'•
See our Agent, T, C. McCALL,
or Phone 2310, Brussels,
The Seaf rth Crea 'I eery
Ecarzsgoixnervo
alg sea
MIrl. i
914
..14.)
.
By
J. ALLEN DUNK
e
Illustrations by
Irwin Myers
C :pyr:ght C°ebs Merrill Co.
tracel stn' see olo,T as 11 0;? How In
Nimes are you emu' to write adven-
ture If you 1100 1 llv0 ll?
"Me, T'm gu'n' to git a ammener
built aceordin' le my own !dens. Have
a lather engine in it, mebbe, an' go
round the world. What's the use of
nein' on it an' not knovin' it by sight?
Books and pletures are all right in
their way, I reckon, but, while my
riggln' holds up, I'm for travel, Mebbe
I'll talte a group of islands down In
The South seas nfter a bit an' make
somethin` out of 'est. Not jest copra
an' pearl -shell, but cotton an' rubber."
"A king and his kingdom," suggest-
ed th1e girl.
"Aye, an' mebbe a queen to go with
It," replied Lund, his eyes wide open
in a look that made the girl flush and
T)
"'That's a Man's Life," Went on Lund.
Rainey feel the hidden issue that he
felt was bound to came, rising to the
surface,
"That's a aunt's life," went on Lund.
"Travel's ell right, but a man's got to
do somethin', buck somethin', stand
tterheads
elopes
ads
1 kinds of Business
ry printed at The
Wishing House.
do a job that will
to your business.
er your stock of
tationery and if it
replenishing coal
lephone 81.
Wishing House
Snue'rhitY, _An' a rrii ldu'•<b,' r.::•
❑'1ut0 the right `l::d a :e.
play male, Poli: -h .11' Itis rcet,,h
edges, meb11e. 1'11 re.ler 1n• a ran '
NISI 11V tint1 rnuid stood t11'11' rt hit,
than smooth an' pitted, ,1n', when 1
1111d the right wurllnll, 011i' 01 my own
breed, I'm guilt' to Ile to her 101' Ler
to ate,
"I'm golf to he rich, They've
(leanedalp the sands of Nome, blit
there's 01hers'll he found ylt bel een
Cape 110p1 11(1' 1'(13,4 Barry, Mean -
(1111e, We'1•4' got 11 Waiver or (1111' ❑1171,
\1'ilh plena' of gold they nin't touch
limit to what a 1111111 ('1m 111), I've
roughed It all try life, tin' I'm not
lookin' for 41!51'. It makes tt 011111 soft.
But—"
11e swept the figure t f'the girl in a
! eeee 111(11 wits eln'lnt'nt or Ills Ilue or
:h,ntttLt• the grew 1(11 >114y 111 11, lint
L,uud nntitatoed i1 until she raised
her eyes from her work and eh111-
Ionged his. 111dae'' sow her bt'ett01
heave, saw her straggle to hold the
Raza, turn led, then pale, He ''!ought
her oyes showed felt', anti then she
stiffened. Almost tmeonaoinitsly she
raised her hand to '';here Rainey was
sure she kept the little pistol, toile/m(1
something, as though to assure herself
of its presence, and went ut1 sewing.
Lund 'l ieklerl, hot shifted his eyes to
Rainey,
"110'hv don't you write up this
v'yage? \\'hen it's all over? '.!'lure's
adventure for you, an' we ain't hn'f
through with It. An',• romance, too,
mehhe. We nin't neveloped much of
a love -story as yht, but you never can
Ile laughed, and I'eggy Simms got
up quietly, folded her sewing, and
said "(food night" composedly befo'e
' elle went to her room.
"Hew about it, Rniney?" quizzed
1.und, "How about the love p'u't of
1? She's a beauty, an' she'll be an
heiress. Ain't you got enny led hlood
in yore veins? Don't you want her?
Yon won't find ninny to hold a candle
to her. Looks, built like n. ricin'
yacht, smooth an' speedy. Smart, an
Hell Into the bargain, Why don't you
make love to her?"
Rainey felt the burning blood
mounting to his face and brain.
"1 nal not in love with 'Miss Stumm,"
he said, "7f I was I should not try
to make lave to her under the circum-
stances. She's alone, and she's father-
less. I do not c'u'e to discuss leer:"
"She's a woman," 011111 Lnn11, "And
y'o're n (1—cl prig! You'd like to hast
me 1n the Jew, but you know I'ur
stronger, You've got some guts,
Rainey, but yore hidebound, You
ain't got hn'f the glt-up-an'-go to yr
that she has. She's n woods, I tell
you, en' she's to he wan. If you want
her, why don't you stand up an' try
to git her 'Mend of sitlin' annual like
a Melt rel whenever I happen to 0.01-
1lh'e her looks? •
"I've 0000 you, I nin't blind cony
Longer, you knot', She's it \vom1111 en'
I'ln a man. I thnnght you was one,
11(11 you nin't. Yore hive of tn5kin'
love is to Send the gal 1t hex of randy
nn' (walk bus:y-fonfed un' write poems
to her, Yon want to write life ns' T
W11111. 10 live It, So does a gal like
that, She's more my breed Hutt yorea.
If she hes got odd -feat -Ion, An' she's
flesh alit] blood. Saone 05 7 am. Yo're
half sawdust. Yore stuffed."
He went on deck laughing, leaving
Rainey raging hitt helpless. Lund tip -
peeved to thiok the sllnatinn obvious.
Two men, rind n ivolnnn who wllS nt-
tractive in nary ways. The only
wont's while 11104 were nhmnrd the
schooner, therefore the More to be de-
sired, achniretl by' men rut Off from
1110 rest of (Ile world,
tuna sooner or inter, mount to tti1e
her, willing or unwilling, lie hod
5nlr1 110, ((01(0 t00 covertly, the very
evening. And, if Rainey metol, to
stand between her anti Lund 11S 111 pro-
teelm', Lund would 0ec'eht him in Ihat
elm:mete' only ns the 14!(1'8 lover nut
Ills rival.
Icor the time heing, the safety of
the Earful( and the smceessful carry -
Ing out of the purpose of the trip tools
141 of Lund's attention end energy.
Twice lie had been thwarted by the
weather from gleaning his golden har-
vest, and it began to look as le the
third attempt might he no more for-
tunate,
"The IrarInk's stout," he salt once,
"hut she ain't built for the Arctic, if
we got nipped Nulty she'll go (Ike an
eggshell,"
"And then what?" llnlney asked,
T Ii
RUSSEC.S POST
-t at toe gots: Iton S wont we 7'r'*"t"►44'1'•'b,►1e44.40•(.i'i't'1'h4•4044'1'
,lame for. I1' ler 1 -eve to make sleets
.au 11u4 the 1111111, is for n d t coon.
Ile mega t! iudun11tn11Jr, "lir Il make
rn matt of yet ylt, alert, we
Nil back
Land wee marlin,,' 'leen In '4('('41,4,
seeking ;111+:14'14 40 fe,•l a Via); tea;art
the position of the bland throind: the
lee that continually Latiled prutr';'s.
Against 111 1100001111.00 hr''02.0,,1 1,1,1
0.04 111011, just rifle'' sm,>"1 ':r•• "1;:11,
ors the duck ramp( dr,:1n, 1 '•:Ira' n
sL0111 111101 pouted 10 n !UI'n! '4:11',• over
the part how, Rainey thought 1t the
aurora, Int Lund 111ll„11011 ut 111111.
ell's. the (niter t+ ' f the l.tnnd,'' hn
11(11. 'So1Llh' tint c'nel,, ltouIer
11 •tiler,'( e . New, hose” le, 0001 ' 1>,
hi: dee'p v.dre lit lu ` .:1111 a hitera-
thin, "there'" god w,1'.'111! Intetle
fora eluu,ge of tle,lihe•r, 0ve7'4 ue,th-
ai•':; s:,n of yowl,.
de+'k wits soon ernw40,1, On
the previous *rip Ito schnotna• had 11tl-
iironclle01 (110 (shout from al different
angle, 1(11t the men were swift. to
ac'knowJ"dge the glow of the volcano
as the expected landfall. Lund re-
110411led on deck, and it was late be-
fore any of the Brew turned! 111,
Rainey, during itis watch, saw the
mountain tire -pulse, glowing and wink-
ing like the eye of a Cyclops, 1t5
gleam reflected In the eyes of the
n'atchere who were about to Invade
the island nut rob It of its golden
sands.
T110 chnngr of weather came anent
three in the mnruing, though 1101 110
1.41110 Istel hoped, A sudden w11111 mu-
ferinlized f:'wn the north, stllTeuiug
the 1...0111',118 with its tee -laden breath,
glazing the schooner wherever mois-
ture dripped, bringing up an angry
stud of clouds that fought with the
100011. The sea appeared to have
thlcicened. The Narita: went sluggish-
ly, as if she wa8 selling la a sea of
treacle.
CHAPTER XI.
Smoke.
When Itnlney 001110 un deck the next
morning he found (11e schooner flout-
ing In a small Ingrate that !made the
1.e1t01' of a floe, The water in it was
"We'll Make a Man of You Nit, Rainey,
Afore We Git Back."
slush, half solid. blain and fore were
close furled, the headsails also, and
the Karhtic was nosing against the far
end of the rapidly diminishing basin.
The wind was still lively.
A deep hum of bursting surf under -
toned all other noises and, prisoned
as she was, the schooner and her floe
were sweeping slowly toward the land
In the grip of a current rather than
before the gusty wind.
Lund came up within the hour and
stood blinking at the brilliance.
Ile seemed well satisfied with the
prospect. "Ilarl breakfast?" he asked
Rainey, and then: "All right. We'll
git the men aft,"
13e bellowed an order, and soon
every one carne trooping, to gather
In two groups either side of the cabin
skylight, Their fort's were eager with
the proximity of the geld, yet half
sullen no they waited to hear what
Lund hn4 to soy. Since the attempt
against him Lim(' had sold nothing
1111,1111 their shares, They aeknovl-
edged him 110 tnnster, but they still re-
belled in spirit.
"There'a the lobo!," said Coma.
"We'll make It afore sundown, The
beach is !hero, waltin' for 014 to dig It
up. It'll be some job. I don't reckon
it's frozen hard, mn'y crusted, If It Is
Well boot the crust with dynamite,
But 10e got to hop to It. There'll be
another cold spell after this one peters
out an' the next is like to be twine -
hent, l want the gold washed out
afore then, an' us well down the
strait. It's pp to you to hump yore -
selves, an' 1'0 help the hutnpin',
"We'll cradle most of the stuff tint,
if they's time, well flume the silt tall-
tn'e for 1110 fine dust. Providln' we
can got a 1011 of water. There'll be
plenty for ail hands to do. An' the
shares go as first fixed. I ain't ex -
pectin' yon to do the riggln' an' not
git a pinch or two of the dust"
The men's faces lighted, and they
s1ufled about, looking at 006 another
with grins of relief.
"No cheers?" asked Lund ironically,
"Wall I hardly expected Way, Ilene
son, you'll be one of the foremen, with
pay ecC 'din', Deming."
•
•
4
1-
+
4
' Ii lust marh(a
drliri fur \'e.>'r 1 r':,tiu:rs +
•
Md111 0 ,
f
WA1411 d ED
0:1111 1114. ", LI :1,.elti„r•'' er•p",.
!e':'Iv, •`:a•1Nn•r a^111 111..:1... 0'1:11 too
rtL.
:,4',-„ not it r" Bald
1.:urh "1 t'1 eh ynn'1' 1,,11, 1,e„e•.11
to tu' '>t ire of 4nrt. >.(0re<, ,' ti. „o..
pip• 11p, 1,,,,0411 for ; r,. 'I,.
'(igulo' in yore t'•1'i,,'1: f"t• 1::-,1.' it'.
ribs 'llrl he whole If pat 1.-.:11'1 el,' led
th0 l>.,( l rr9k rtnrt. Cat 1'1,1 111111
some11>11,g for 114.1; Or ran l4 do, Doll't
let I 140 worry you mea'.
"we've got nlo•evey uh'l:u"1 some-
whero," 1,0101 (.,v,1111,n•.1, to Ralooy,
11'(0411 the teen haul dispersed, far More
'hrerful 1Lan they had gathered.
"We'll 0:e that rot veneeniraiott in
the film riffles, Titasen'Il have ruek-
ers matte that'll emelt the big stuff.
If the x•m'st 1.0111es 10 111e worst, we'll
Mad up the old hooker with the pay
dirt nrl' wash It out on the (way home,
T'(1 strip that lime) down to bedrock
If T have to work the toes an' fingers
off 'em,”
By noon the schooner was glazed
in s5 firmly as n my model that 15
mounted in n glass 8010 The wind
blew Itself entirely out, but the cur-
rent bore them steadily on, to the
clamorous shore, where the swells
were creating promontories, bays,
ellfTs and chasms In the plied -up con-
fusion of the floes pounding on the
rocks, breaking alp or sliding atop one
another In noisy confusion.
The marble-whltrn,'ss of the Ire
easeees was (101 .1:' 10' 100 h((t's and
soft violets of their shndows, and by
pearly sheen wherever the planes
"10("4'•, 1110 It'rht nt a pr"rer - elur Por
1110 ploy of 1')'i4104. Ilea1)1411(1 as it
was, the sight ons ft.:trial to Rainey,
111 common w;1I11 the crew. Only Lund
01111e).r1 it mouch:Maly.
"11's bux(in' uh 11>14: " be said. ".til
ice nl'rd is it tittle !uek. 1f w'• '01'1
;;nt (Litt there's nu (1140 of worryln',
\\e can't (111141 o,lrselwe!s out (i this
without riskiu' the schooner. \1'e
might to he thankful we froze In gen-
tly, 'there ain't at 11181111 started, The
noe'II fend ns oil', 'Therm ain't enny
big chunks enny (('ay near ns aft. Luck
—to 0111110 n deems' ('anlin`—ie all (ve
need, ant' it's my hunch it's comm' our
way."
Ills "hunch" was correct, Though
fhe'y t114 not actually 11nke the little
hay on which the treasure bei:1L de-
bourhmd, they retched tip near It
agnlnst a broken hill of (4.e that had
lodged on the sharp slopes 111' a little
promontory, making the conn,c'Itoo
without further dmmnge'than s split-
ting of the forward end of their en-
ensieg Floe, with beefily n Jar to tate
finl'ltlk,
Lund sent mon ashore ave:' the lee,
ellmbing 1'.11 the promontory crags with
hawsers by which they tied up
schooner, floe nod n11, to the laud if
the broken hill suffered further eines-
trophy, which slid not deem likely, Its
fragments would fall upon the floe.
In rase of emergency Lund ordered
men tulll o(T day end night to :mold by
the hawsers, to cast lowes 01' cut, 115
the extremity needed,
It was (inlet before they were
snugged. The men volunteered,
through T-Tnnsen, to inllinenc'e clleeing
that night by the light of his; tires,
so crazy Were 1 110 at the nearness of
the gold, But Load forbade it.
"You'll work realer shifts Schen you
git .started," he said, "An' you won't
start till termorrer. We've got to
stand by the ship ternight until we
land nut by ntorn(n' how snug we're
goln' to be berthed."
All night long they hey In a I+nn-
denundmnl of noise, After a while
they w0(11(1 become used to It as do
the (wtn'kl'rs hi 11 stanlipu(ll, but that
night It 11e0r011 tlu'mu,kept them
awake and ntel•1, fearful, with the U'e-
su'ndr.us canuenteling, The bit of the
1.11>:t mode- the timbers of the Kl"hlk
creak nod its thrust ('0111inual(y
worked aunnte the sirumted masses
wit b gronOin» Ili:mdor: 10111 s1111i11
('1•;;' r .y (.14h' the $1s•f ewer loolued
nn 1h>' 1.0 ,01010 sfu'et? or 100,
Inuwu r'a'ce hero(('' (hes were (l1' -ane
or it, a st::i'1en rush ,1f light that dyed
the lee ho oyer} Into of red and nrmlge.
that- tipped the fr,oel> eons! with
trusts or ruby Ibt1n0 tient tiered like
be'uuons and glided the erns', of Ina
long swells, 4lnaing all their world with
n (wild, unnatural glory.
T,untl, striding the d"ek, his red
heard iced with his breath, suddenly
stopped and stared into the east,
There, in the very eye of the dawn,
wee a troll of 51710140, Bice n p011115
ngninsl the flaming, three-quarters ctn.
cle of the rising stun 1
Luhd's fare, on which the braises
were fast fading, Mbmlgecl purple.
Week with rage, lie whirled upon
Sandy, gaping near, and ordered him
to fetch his litimeutstrs. Through them
he stated long at the smoke. 't'hcn
be turned to the gill and Rainey,
"Come down inter the cnbin," he
Paid, "We'll need AB our wits. That's
a patrol boat, Japanese, for a million!
None other this far west An' it's
d -d funny It ghouhl come up right at
this tninnit. We've made the 'trip
en schedule cite, tt,R' item 407 11h0w,
net w4'14 101 111 - �' •'r o
(14411 10'!, i! 11 t 1 .
P ,I At.
f I�.hl °vr � 1
l e t 1 }Pit,
\11,.% 4WO 01.110. (011 Lan +.. .11'
c)sr r1110 ,• +,t ,:- n 11 t•r•.. ' le
rluf q, 10 lit(.11:1110 ,11 'r' 11 :01
n, Iru•1! Hwy f, -lie..,, h<. if 111,•r.• Iv
it 11140 rih"ari1 n,• 44 0.1,,, .u' 4 :1, ..t'
t1 111.11,1 -;mal 011 (be b. ,.0., ti.'.;'11 nail
us. '1'1(144 1(111} , 1,0 :14, lu:a a -.0,01'.
4.100.
"11', lth•1' 1 '1,• ,11.10 '1 .1.
(tp 111.0,! I -sr 1,. 11 1 1 '
e'„t41101.r 1 In ,
rn tt • t ,, 1'
(.1,11i,%. 11,111i (''''1', 1 ,
if , fur!,1 ' '1
pe y, --o (141>'). (1•4• i= 1 • .
1•,111 ,'al to tat e I1 s • e ,..
” J'in Sheet-, 1,01 1L" ,n,.
of '(•0!, At.'.n,
celeste,. N"tido, u,4•: .1 •.. .... _
about 011hy deulh."
"1110 City?" u -1:00l ,},,. '
do no hnrc to !nn.,l,r r` "
hawrlil H Bebe'! (1,' r1,
1,11m1 harked at 11i•r'1
"I gave you 01'0•(1#L for :.b lrllrr ••;11 ;'
he fig 1/1. "W'e've grit to 141v'
111111g so so reg'ler they emit 4411(1 011 0,r.
false for haulm' 0s In an' o:,'ttlo' fire
to the schooner. They'd do it in a
Jiffy. 11'e got to show 'mu our clear-
ance pnper5, 011' we've gut to 1 1111 up
all down the Use, Rainey a'n't on tate
8111p'8 haokse-('nrlsel Is. Lund mi't't
but Simms is. I'tn Simms. An' you"
—he stopped to grin at het'—"you're
my dnughn'r, I'll dissolve the rela-
tionship after a while, I'll promise you
that, An' I'll drill the men. They
know what's ahead of 'est if the Saps
git suspicious.
"That ain't the worst of it! They
may know what we're after. If they
do, we're goners. Ever occur to you,
-Rainey, that Tamadn, who Is a deep
,one, may have tipped off the whole
thing to 1114 consul while the schooner
V100 at San T'ranclseo? He was along
the last trip. I•Ie'rl know the approxi-
mate position, light have got the
right Jiggers out o' the log, him
Mein' the run of the cabin. A cable
would rlo the rest. He'll git his
wheel: out of It, r.'h the order of the
(;olden Chrysanthemum or sone jig•
artg to hoot, an' git even with the
way he feels to'ard our mitflt fn''e' •
that ain't bin none ton ev- '
The suggestion held a foundation of
conviction for Rainey, Ile had thought
of the consul. He had alwaye sensed
depths la Tamada's reserve. It looked
plausible. Lund rose,
"I'll fir Tamada," he said. But the
girl stopped him.
"You don't know that's ,true. Ta -
made has been wonderful—to me.
What do you Intend to do with 11011?"
"I'll make up my mind between here
and the galley," said Lund grimly,
"This Is my third time of tackling this
island, an' no Jap is gain' to stand be-
tween me an' the gold, this trip. Why,
even if he ain't blown 'on us, he'll give
the whole thing away. If he didn't
want to they'd prate him come through
if they Laid their eyes on him. They've
got more tricks than a Chinese man-
darin to snake a num talc. Stands to
reason he'll tell 'em. If he can tan:
when they git here," he added om-
inously, standing half -way between
the table and the door of the corridor,
bis hand ouoning and closing su010es-
•
I
WEDNESDAY Nf;\'i':DII11;It 192
tive•ly. 1 1 L
1f I ,1.1•Ina Foe> .r t 1.
;,1
But Peggy S mus Was Between Him
and the Door.
That gunboat'l1 have it hunt ahlugshle
this floe Mettle of ninety nlimldts,"
But Peggy' Simms 1wl1S 1,0twee1 lilrn
and the dour.
"You shan't do It," the (411111, her
eyes hard us Flints, if Liners wore like
steel. "You don't know what he with
to me when -when dad was hurled.
Call him in mud let him talk for him-
self or --or I'll tell the Japanese myself
W11111 we 1100 ('01110 fur:"
1.110(1 '.1(1.1.1-11t11rg it: lion, h!, f:le„
hard, his lour( tltru.: t mut like a hush
with the ,lilt of his jaw, :#111 '-lie
raced him, resolute, haely tip 10 hb<
shoulder ,
slitn, defiant. tira>nally his
features r'r111k11 1 Into a grin.
(Continued Next Week)
W. D. S. JAMIESON,
MD; CM; LM•CC;
1?hysician and Surgeon
Office McKelvey Block, Brussels
Successor to Dr. White
Phone 45.
T, T. M' RAE
rd. B.. M. C. P.. a S. O-
M. O. H., village of Brussels.
Phyolclan, Surgeon, A000uoheur
Officest residence. oppoelte Melville Church
William street.
DR. WARO,LAW
Honor graduate of the Ontario veterinary
College. Dar and night calls. Office opposite
Pinar Mill, Ethel.
fr. X. tfiNal4:1011ff
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,
CONVEYANCER, NOTARY PUBLIC
LECKIE BLOCK - BRUSSELS
AUCTIONEERS
TFIOMAS BROWN'
Seafoeth, Ontario
1.in''n'.ed alta i iolne.er for counties
of Huron :111,1 Perth. Immediate are
rallg'et1L!11t:a 1'ol' ::tie dates eaten be
made by calling 'l'he rest, Itrussejs,
(1h1argee $ea ouahle, Satisfaction
Onarahteeti or no 011:1(11,'''• 16-9.
JAII/IFA TAYLOR
1 t '•t: t.d Au tl '1 for the county
of 11111.011 '1,011-1 041te1011el to in al'
pats of the c,x4nfy. S.ltiefaetiot,
tl('u'011teed, or no Payr. Orders left
at The Post promptly attended to'.
111igrave Post (Office.
P11ONES
Brussels, 15-13. North Huron, 15-628
KEMP BROS.
Auctioneers
Auction Sal of :111 kinds accepted
and conducted. Satisfaction Guar-
anteed and terms reasonable. Phone
Listowel art 121, 38 or 18 at our ex-
pense.
W. J. DOWD
Auctioneer
Orders left at this office or w1
Thos. Miller, Bruseehs, Phone 16-18
will ensure you best of services e
right prices.
Box 484 LISTOWEL Phone 246
D, M. SCOTT
Licensed Auctioneer
PRICES MODERATE
For reference consult any person
whose sale I have officiatel at.
61 'Craig Street, LONDON
C. C. RAMAGE, D.D.S., L.D.S.
BRUSSELS, ONT.
Graduate Royal College of Dental
Surgeons and Honor Graduate Hale
versity of Toronto. Dentistry in all
its branches.
Office Over Standard Bank,
Phones—Office 200, Residence 65-14i
Gofton House — Wroxeter
Every Thursday Afternoon
WM. SPENCE
Ethel, Ont.
Conveyance, Commissioner and C. A.
Agent for
The Imperial Life Assurance Co. of
Canada
and
Ocean Accident Guarantee Comoro.
tion, Limited
Accident Insurance, Automobile In-
surance, Plate Glass Insurance, et,
Phone 2225 Ethel, Oat,
JAMES M'FADZEAN
Agent Hawick Mutual fire Insurance Company
Also
Hartford Windstorm and Tornado Insurance
Money to Loan for
The Industrial Mortgage It Savings Campo;
on First-class Farm Mortgages
Phone 42 Box 1 Turuberry Street, Braseele.
JNO, SUTHERLAND & SON
j
LIMITED
I ;rsp1rNARa/M
•
hat Makes a Town ?
A h 1't:sperous rural population which demands a community
centre where may be established business, educational, rag -
10a5 a:(d entertainment facilities. Where these flourish and
are active it is safe to surmise that the people of that section
realize and appreciate the value to them of such a centre.
What 't,. aintains it ?
The towns are largely maintained by the surrounding districts,
But the organization, the direction, and to a great pleasure the
up -keep. of the institutions in such towns are in the hands
of the business interests, together with those directly and in-
directly connected therewith. Without the active business and
professional men to supervise and govern these public institu-
tion, and undertakings no town could thrive.
ho sikfi
eq
eoted
Every citizen either in or about a town Should be concerned
in seeing to it that they do their part in carrying on any good
cause which may be promoted, either by financial or active
support. Only in this way will any town prosper and develop
A, it shelld.
Publicity is Required
111 promotion work your local paper takes the leading part,
It is ever the champion of worthy causes and philanthropic
and patriotic undertakings. But to function properly, ;and
fully carry out its natural prerogatives, it must in turn have the
financial support of the community in serves. When needing
adver'tiaing or printed matter always first think of
The Post
Publishing House