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Oshawa Daily Times, 16 Nov 1929, p. 4

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PAGE FOUR a; THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1929 he Oshawa Bally Times Buseoading THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Botablished 1071) An independent newspaper published every afternoon oneept Bundays and loyal holidays, af Oshows Canada, by Mundy Prigting Company, Limited) 'Chas, M, Mundy, Presidents A R, ily Bee: etary, The Oskaws Dally Times i6 & member of the Cane disn Press, the Canadian Dally Newspapers As aopistion, The Ontario Provincial Dallies and the Audit Bureau of Clrenlations, SUBSCPIPTION RATES Delivered by Sarin ibe» ash ty a b Cansde outeld olivery $4.00 yt United Abd 1 » your, ' J TORONTO OFFICE 401 Bond Building, 68 Temperance Street, Telephone Adelaide 0107. MH, D Tresldder, representative REPRESENIATIVES IN VU. 8, Povars and Stone, Ine, New York and Chicago, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1929 A A DISARMAMENT CONTRAST Aub Interesting contrast Is to be Totmd In the ul titude of Creat Britain and that of France with re spect to dlghrmidment In a naval and military seme, In the Mouse of Lords the other day, the Brith government was strongly eritieleed for what has been uw practical measure of disarmunient, the drastic res duction of the personnel of the Brith Arry, Tt was stated In the course of the delmte that there ure now 273,000 fess men In the British Army than there were In August, 1914, und at that thne It wes of such small proportions, In comparison with the European wrmles that it seornfully referred to us "The Contemptible Little Army! In sphta of the experi Lenco of 1914, however, Britain has gone ahead with reductions In her army, until It ly now down to what might be ealled the danger punt, In naval construction, Beitain has left her original schedules of two or three years ago entirely out of the reckoning, and had'caneglled the building of sey eral erulsers and other war vessels, simply af a token of good falth Iw the matter af naval disarmament, And with the fivespower conference only two months wway, Dritlsh policy in delng so ix likely to be vin dlented, But France, on the othauhand, is not so sure that the conference Is going 'to be effective I"rance has announced her bullding program for her navy for next year, and It calls for 48,000 tons of new ships to be laid down In 1930, In spite of the Inclusion of the abolition of submarlies on the agenda for the January conference, Franco Is planning to build six new submarines, one submarine minelayer and one submarine net-layer an pant of that program There Is Nitle algn of a real desire for disarmas went in the French program, It may be, of course, that Britain has more faith In human nature, and in the steps whieh have bean taken to ensure permas nent world peace, than France has, And it may be, 100, that Drltaln, because of her of pres eminence In world affairs, Is more anxious to give leadership to the rest of the world In the reduction of both naval and military armaments wun position ER -- , wr-- ANOTHER DEFEAT FOR THE COM. MUNISTS Toronto in not the only place fn Canada where the Communists are being treated with scant courtesy, Police officials are not the only people who are des termined to oust the Reds from places where they oan do any harm by their talk of revalution and se. dition, The Alberta section of the Canaan Labor Party, at its convention held recently In Edmonton, Alta, showed Itself Just an strongly opposed to Commun lant as the Toronto Police Commission and Chief Draper have been, There had been, up to that time, some organisations in Alberta with Communistic ten dencies within the Canadian Labor party, « But the convention, recognising the menace of these organ jaations, voted them right out of the party, It went even further, It decided to bar from Its meetings nny known Community wha might try to attend as a delegate from any aMlated organisation, This 1s a hard blew to the Communists, who have been trying to worm thele way into the Canadian Labor Parte, amd 10 use WAL party as a means fo Communistio activities, But Canadian Labor is too 'pound at heart to tolerate the type of propaganda being spread by the Communists, and this indication of Labor's atthtude means that Communism Ix fueling a hopeless task fn trying to make any headway in Canada, . -------------------- EMPLOYMENT FOR VETERANS With employment conditions in Canada not very healthy 'at, tha present time, thero dv ane type oi oltleen who in deserving of special consideration, In the "veeomt Arniistiee Day cevemonics, grout Sires: was laid by speakers on the necessity for seme thing being done te rellve the plight of the dig: abled veteran who is not in reveipt of a pemion, or whose pension Is not sufficient (0 maintain his family In even the barest comfort These men, thousands of them, are new face face with a seridus problem, They went overseas in defesiee of Canad, amd gave the best they had, Qn thelr return, many of them, anvipus: to get bath wo thelr howes amd elvilian Bley 100k thelr discharge without having any examination made tor war abilities, Now, years after the war, disabilities ave waking themselves felt, and they are unable to com pete in the labor market with mei in full possession of their physlgn! strengths Buty beeawse thelr mills tary history shows no indication of disability curred on service, they are debarred f¥omh the benes to Jin is fits of the Pensions Act These men are surely ol sideration from the employers of Tabor in this couns Worthy sy pa thetig CON try, They are casuslties of war Just us much us those men whe lost a limb, but this is not apparent, sive in the inability te curry on In regular employ- ment, In these days of Intense business and Indus trial competition, employers wre looking for efialency above all elves, and these men are left by the wayside, vietms of thelr sellesncrificing service of patriotism, Buch conditions do exist In thousands of cases, and the only eure for them Is In a recognition by employ - ern of labor of pny kind thit these men ure desery Ing of special gonslderation, and that, wherever It Js ut all possible, they should be given the epportunily of filling sueh positions as will fit thelr purtieulas conditions, After all, the only thing that these men unk for for themselves and thele fumbles ia that the promises made to them before they went aversens to fight be fulfilled In at leust some small measure, Burely that Is not tog mueh to mk of u grateful Cunndian people, ---------- HITTING THE DAIRY INDUSTRY The Unlted States senate apparently belleves that the daley Industry of that country Is In danger of being seriously Injured by competition from Canada, There can be no other Interpretation placed upon the scale of tarlffs against dalry products which has heen udopted by that body, AN wlong the line, these tus riffs have been Increased, In some causes being more than doubled, There ean only Le one reason for these Increases, The senators, urged on by thelr rural constituents, hive viewed the exports of dalry products from Cane ada to the United States with alarm, and have de- termined to shut out the products of the dalry farms of Cannda from the markets of the United States, Thin means that the dairy industry of Canada, and partieularly of old Ontarlo, will be dealt nu severe blow, It will be virtually shut out of the Unlted States market, a market which In recent years has absorbed millions of dollars of Canadian dalry pros duets at wu profitable price, With the door shut to that market, the problem of disposing of the sur plus production Canada's farms will be come nu serlous one, and will make It necessary that more attention than ever be glven to the finding of new markets to replace those In the Une ited States of dairy elsewhere THE ROYAL WINTER FAIR Next week, the world's greatest agricultural ex position, the Royal Winter Fale, will throw Its doors to the Now this great national and International event has grown to lye Institution, and sroug Indientions the progress shown year to your again demonstrated In this year's exhibition, The Winter Falr of 1928 liad no less 17,000 entries, and the attendance was twenty-five per cont greater than In the previous year, Under an aggress sive board of directors, the plans for 1929 have been seh that It will be & great sdepeise If the show this ppen publi¢ in {ts seventh year, tremendous there ure that once i" from will be than year does not far surpass any past records, Ihe Royal Winter Falr Is more than & mers local Foronto distriet, It has grown to be of agricultural Indus» try of the whole Dominion, with the various provins olal governments playing a large part In making It truly national in jts scope, Every branch of agricul ture finds a place there, and whether one be Inter ested In lve stock, or In the products of the fleld and the orchard, there ls.a fascination about the Fuly that cannot be denied While the Canadian National Exhibition has won the reputation of being the world's greatest Industrial exposition, the Royal Winter Fair, by specialialng on Canada's primary industries, carned Its place us the greatest agricultural expos tion held anywhere in the world as an annual show, I'hat for the agricultural industry this country, and shows the that is taking in great material activities that underlie the prosperity of the Dominion, event for the 4 complete show-window the the greatest of hus speaks well of interest stimulating these ------------ EDITORIAL NOTES So ---------------- 5 NAY Tinmie Walker was the popular choles in York, but in Ontarie Johnny carrlod the day, the successful one indieate that deer 1929 has been & very deer, Report hunting season of except for the ---------- The Poland who went insane brother left him a million dollars is not the first man to lose his head over a little man in when his mone) Nothing fHusteates better the vast expanse of Can ada than the diffeulty whieh Col, MeAlpine and | men are having In getting back to their homes It fs not likely that lquer vendors will be vel keen about distributing Hterature the effect of reducing their sales which might have Mexico is mobilising her army mn preparation for the general eleetfon next Sunday, They evident! take their polities seriously down there, he Prince of Wales fa a firm believer in advers tising Empire products, Bverything on the menu for the dinner to the V.C's was of Empire origin, Lhe Woodstock Yo M, GC A has collected $3,500 in a threo day campalgn for {ts annual maintenance funds, And, yet Woodstock has less than 11,000 population 10 compare with Oshawa's 26,000, EE ------ Ihe British Labor government has proposed an vight day holiday with pay for all workers, That, however, will not be of much assistance' to the un employed, PARE ---- It fs rumored thst the Rev, W. Gi Martin will Le the next speaker of the leghlature, * Fancy putting a minteter in a positien where his chances for dratory are nil, TET n Me press of Ontario' is backing up the Ontario government to Ughtén the Liquor Contre! Aet, But the thghtening might Just ax pasily have been done at the fast session of the legisature, he Toronto unlversity students are not far wrong when they suggest (hat Mayor MeBride's conden nation of them conutimies an excellent example of Taronto's intolerance, \ he Mail and Bpire of Toronto suggests provid ing each school in Canada with "All Quiet on the Western Front,' We wonder if the man who wrote that note has read the book yet, A COpyY ut Other Editor's Comments AMERICAN VAITH IN THE BRITINM (Irom, the Now York World) We trust the *fundamental soundness and liberalism of the British people, who put men lke Asquith, Baldwin and MacDonuld in office, and who In some ways wre bolder for pence and soelsl oguity than we; we trust a British Empire which gives autonomy the freest soups, We understand ana respect the culture of the British, und they understand and respect ours, In this understanding. snd Hiking the democratie young dams Infons ave Increasingly important, OTHER PROBIEMS (Ottawa Journal) And wo The Journul sincerely hopes that we have heard the last of this Hguor question In election oampalgny, The last, aut least, for some yeurs, Thig Provipee, after all, haw other problems to den) with, There ure problems of fins ince; problems of taxation; prob. lems of highway construction; of northern development; problems affecting the social, political sna economly well-belug of our people, Let ug try to take un fow years off from mere fighting over thig Hquor guestion, support the law and try fo makes It effective, and get down to vonslderation of other pressing things, ------ TOO MANY VIGUIKN (From the Peterborougy Mxam- | lner) If un election campaign could only be conducted without such a barrage of stutistios, ft 18 to be fms agined politien would enjoy a larger mensure of popularity, Bo many meetings are spolled os soon as the speaker renches for his dispateh ense and starts to drag out pages of figures, | will say In An orator on one wide "Do you know that back this or And next night a speaker the other eamp will say: "Home body or other didn't spend $177, NER In 1678, 16 wan BIKKT777, and IC wasn's In 1878; It was In 1047, And if he did what about no-and #07 1 have hora the offielnl figures and they show," ete, They hurl millions around, ke n hookey erowd tosses coppers out on m the ley between periods, und hy | the time the campaign is over the ! whole countryside Is saturated with statistios, After all the only figures that really count in an election are those the returning officers mark down when they've counted the ballots | Bits of Humor his | Bits of Verse | The | Give strength, xive thought, give [to the right If you do not talle until you have something to say, you will always have something to say when you talk he mir! says a well-known novel ist, thinks of nothing but e¢lothes One eannot say, however, that she entirely wrapped up In them Mother In-Law="Why, Marle, any woman would be satisfied with what Perey save he wives vou" Marle "So would 1" "Doan your husband any hard exercise?' "Well, last week woven ulghts running over take he was oul -- | Angry Wife; "Will you tell me What that red hair means on your oURLT" cornered Husband "Trouble, my [of Aberdger 1879 | somebody ov other spent $177,84% [1h that?" | ' from | dear," Man is like a taeks=useful if he has un wood head and is pointed In the right direetion=but even though he with head lower than the body and asthe Is driven, he can only go as far head will let him "There Is a deal of truth In the old saying that one can Judge 4 man hy the company he keeps," saya Charles Petrie, But one Judge lim better by the company he pro notes NT gg | | GIVE 'God's love hath In us wealth wis | heuped by giving Ia body withers pent up by a welfah mly It reaped; In rind lends, give pelf, Give love, give tears and give thy nell give, he always giving, wives not. ia not living The more we give The more we live, Give, Whe THE DENTITUTE NY THR SKA Foar ovecps near me as you oroep up the sand; does ha Journey with hand fn hand? Coma no closer to shake me with your thunder; Queer you should brittle bones for plunder! Well, you will find them * some night when tide is high, stark, without breath, when And you pass hy Lying in death. beneath the pence: ful aky, Tell, You want these fear Jonnie LL, Neattie, A Double QuestionI1 ve have not been faithinl in the unrighteous mammon, wha will commit to your trust the ewe riches? And if ve have not been faithful fn that which Is another man's, who shall give you that which is your own l==Luke 10{ iL 1 Prayer "Fill every part of me with praise Let all my being speak OF Thee, and of Thy love, O Lord, SIE Bladder trouble | & per cent no good results were ob | tained, and the mind | in deciding what In the trouble, but | where there Is Just a Hitle soreness | doy { bladder ------------ EE -- SCOTS AND SCOTCH (Prom the Argonn ut, Ban Proneiseo) Aberdeen Is commonly supposed (o maintain wu slush fand out of which are defrayed the enpenses of the pub leity campuigns whereby the brugsl iy of the Aberdonian bs demonstrat ed by unecdotes prepared for the purpose und published 1m gyery news paper of the Loglishespenking world Ineulewlable dumage to this pro pigandi has been wrought by the re | cent revelation that Aberdeen is the only ety in Beotlund whieh could | persunded to extend the remotest pe cunliary support to the Beottish Na tonal Dictionary" which Is now bi ing edited by Williwm Grant, 'ut Ab erdecn, for the Seottish National Di tionary Association, Lid hig book Is un mplification of Dy John Jameson's "Dictionary of the seottish Lunguage" published u hue dred years ago, nd will contain thousands of words, revealed by Inter and more exhuustive research, that have never yet appeared In any dic LIONITEY I'he to extend tu ten volumes and will he publi hed ut iw subscription priec of £15, sterling, or uhout ¥75, The cost of producing th estimnted ut §75,000 hit yet been produced, beens (unite ubseriptions pouring in Ihe Tdrest Yigt of sub serihers reveals the of seven English boolgsellers, hut not a single cottish bookseller, One Burns Club (ut Hanhton, Out) has subscribed, beottish Boelety (in New I'he only other engourug it Is announced, Is the generosity with whieli private Aber donluns have subseribed to the Issue nothis respect it Is stated that, hud the rest of Scotland given propor tHonately, there would have been no ton about bringing out the ork unhappily ex work Is work 1s it has not the re have not been Hanes wd one Zewland), Ing feutwre, (ue ioguestion whieh now Int und frets to openhanded eltizens Attention muy he ealled to the fact ot thin fmperiled work Is called thie cottish" dietionary, not the neh Hon nor th cof CHORAYY mslderation for the ira ughiness of the Caledonian or this point, It Is customary editorial wliey of the Argor to favor the id jective Scots, except In relation to the wine of the country en in Auld Reekie, may reler red to as "Scotch conellintory reuson th er cust of Scotland not § whieh, « SRN marily refers to a native FA U'Seot" or a Scotsman, h ' | weotehman | I'he which the Argonaut seeks prejudice fo id touehin raw Is really quit Wi upon thi modern, and | Oy James W. Darton, M.D DRAINING THE GALL BLADDER One of the Httle mistakes often made Is the idea that If the gall binddey can drained, that Is washed out the use of epsom salts, that no matter what the ex isting trouble It will cured by this method, | Now this washing of the gall bladder will remove stones, alire cancer or nny severe condition of the ver and gall bladder It will, however, drain tho gall bladder and remove distressing Aymproms, As you know It conslsta in simp- | ly pouring a solution of epsom Anite down a fine tube which takes It past the stomach into the flest part of the small intestine After a short time the patient les down be hy not salty return oareying the bile with them Dre, G4, NM HOO onsen method results used gall cont Niles where reports ho has for all sorts of In 46 per the Improvement fa definite; in 20 results have heen falely #0 that the patients hack from time to time drainage 10 pey to report, and In in this por cent satinfactory have come tor additional cent have falled Now how do you know when you have mall bladder troubla? Where there Are severe attnoks of colle In the region of the pall adder there fs not mueh diffioulty HL Ban hlads think of the stomaoh, a tle nausen, and considerable distension, all slgna of gall disturbances, you wight In Just a Httle "indigestion Now don't sulfor with the above aymptons, heonuse early attention to this may enable your phyaloian to outline diet and hyglenle habits which will pravent the formation of gall stones, In a general way this means oxerolse or bending of the body, and aveldance of woh foods, The physiolan nowadays always has an Neray ploturve taken, and after using thin deainage method may fastruet you how to de this | yourself It in certainly more Inviting than the thought of an operation for drainage or removal of the gall I Rogistered tn Accordance with the Copyright Act - FIRE DESTROYS BARNS Petarhoro-Fire of unknown origin last night, totally destroyed two large barna together with the WORRON'E POP, ono eall, one hun: | dred hens and most of the imple ments on the farm of Ms, J, Lane onster, leonted (hree miles ons of | this ofty, on the "Meek Road" LB Qronn bes | WOYOLK NTOLEKN Rrookvide="Diek Remmeor, Ab Wall atreet; has veported to the polioe the lows of un "Perey Me Deide' Bleyele, which wan stolen autalde thé Publle Library on Tuesday evenly The missing wheel wa, Black in color and the front mudguard was misslog, works, us dud largely to the Inability of the Seot' to fully assimilate the niceties of the English language, Burns used the word "Scoteh" when he meant "Seoteh" und was writing In English I'he works of Bir Walter Beott, who wis ulso reputed to be a Beot, indi cite that the author used the ndjec tive "Seoteh" almost exclusively, It may he suggested that these most of us have read them, wre trunslations, This 1s not the cas Irrefutable evidence exists to demons strate that Sir Walter's works were wll written originally In the Southern tongue, The proper English word descriptive of the Inhabitants of Seots lund, und of things charnctoristically pertinent to Scotland, used to be and still Is "Seoteh," ex, "The Beoteh are & pay, the Irish, a dour race" "Can you play the Seoteh harp ?=No, hut 1 espeinlize In the Freneh bags pipes," "he Seoteh "Seots," and "Sets," The "Wruncals," Wreneh," Some English parists resent being told by forelgners how to speak or write the English Innguage A Nie tive of Scotland, however, has In an exceptional degree the gilt of being able to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds---to elaim Anglicism and Insist upon being Caledonian, to terrorize by Insult or scorn the pers son that ealls the Seoteh people may eall themselves do eall themselves French call themselves In English we call them i 3 by C.K TUCK, Opt.D C (Copyright 1948) OROKE EXYV One of the groeciest handicaps Lo grow up witly uncorrected Btrabis mus or Bquiht It is harder for uny person so handicapped to ob tain nu gituntion, harder to do husl ness and harder to mix in society, This condition usually com monees at the ange of two or three yours or ag soon ns the child learns & wlio "Seoteh" instead of "Seols" or "Scot tish," or that to a "Beotch" thistle Instead of nu "Seottish," or "Scots" thistle In fact, the only elr» cumstances In whieh the Caledonian will tolerate the English form of the word Is when the native or the allen ugpests un wee drapple "Seoteh," An eminent philologist, whe Is him elf u Scot, remind. us that centuries the sound that Is now shelike ch Seoteh it occurred sed syllables, became In the Northern dialects of Sei I'hus, In the old ballads, we read sal for shall and so forth Analogously the Southern "Scottish" and "Scoteh' hecame "Scotts" (a form now lote), and "Scottie," by contraction, hecame "Scot Therefore the ad jective "'} " meaning Scotely fl form helonging to northern Se while the coteh" of Burn Walter Scott was the mpecepted forn of the word In southern Seotlan| nearly two hundred years ago; the sake of and Inter | Courtesy the v customarily affected by the Argonaut in San Franelseo, refers Wo the 1) unstre in when tland, # oh Jeol land and Bir Just WA, lor peace "Scots" Is E. LANSING .,AY, PRES]. DENT AND PUBLISHER OF THE BT, LOUIS GLOBE-DEM. OCRAT, SAYS: "Did you ever stop to think that you ean jo to stores right in your home and by judicious selection, be assured of getting the same quality as that which a purchaser in New York or St Louls or Sun Franglsco Neis/ town "Modern methods of manufae: ture and distribution have given you this advantage, Your grand: parents bought their sod. erack: ors, their candy, thelr relsing In bulk, from a grocer who scoop: od the merchandise out of a bin, In those days the buyer sould only hope that he would get full measure == or perhaps extra mea: sure, He could enly hope that the goods he bought would be pure == as high in quality one week as the last, But until business genius found & way to package merchandise, and until business pride and business fore sight Inspired the marking of packs ages with dependabl brands, the consumer could never be sure of unis formity in the weight or the gual ity of the things he bought, "Today the manufacturer who places his trade mark on a pale of shoes, a bottled beverage, or a can of peas, proclaims with pride, "Chis 1s my pros duet) 1 shall keep It good! "THEN, IF HE 1S WISE, THIS MANUFACTURER WILL AD. VERTISE HI STADE MARK TO THE NATION, AND TELL YOU, IN YOUR HOME TOWN NEWSPAPER, WHERE YOU CAN SECURE HIS BRAND, AND THE PEOPLE IN THE NEW ENGLAND STATES CAN BUY WITH CONFID. ENCE, AND THE PEOPLE IN THE SOUTHERN STATES CAN BUY WITH CONFID. ENCE - SURE OF GETTING THE SAME VALUE AS THE PEOPLE IN PENNSYLVANIA, IN IDAHO, IN OREGON, OR « EVEN IN THE FAMOUS OTH STATE" While camping near Weymouth, Kngland, the Warwickshire Torels | tovials, a military organisation deaned the famous White Horse statue, representing King George 11 on Nis famous charger, which | Wan overgrown with weeds, A, ISS PT TC H lf]fP R visto, Thi various spd EO, the value of clear Ruse ure many und the result 1s the normal relation between nceommodntion snd con« vorgenes being disturbed snd the weuk fusion faculty cannot right the conditions and double vision GHHNeH, The eyes may turn up, out, or in, and comfortable vision is obh« tained ut the expense of the turns ing oye and the lage lo the devis pling eye In suppressed ov dis garded and may in time be entire ly Tost through non use, The col rection consisis In correcting any existing error, re-establishing fu lon and devéloping vision in the poor aye Upon the development of vision ond fusion the correction onutirely . depends, and tho earlier the treatment 1s commenced the better the prospects of success, can he corrected hut so many ves spond readily to treatment when taken in time that It Is a great mistake to neglect them Nol every cum In this manner i. [rE m------ rv---- wo" StoBiE-fORLONG 6 | STOCKS BONDS Office: Reford Bu WELLINGTON 8, F. EVERSON, Local Manager Private Wire System 17 KING STREET EAST, OSHAWA Phones 143 and 144 " GRAIN f | sn i I RL ES The wise man never waits till he is driven by neces« sity, secure your CONGER COAL now while best services are available, \ConGrr Lrmen CoaL Co. Lvrmen J. H. R. LUKE Phones 871 -- 931 -- 687.W Manager, I mm J I a A mp a DISTINCEILO Ee a i C]H]L- When you visit Toronto you can take pride in inviting your friends to meet you and dine with you at the new Royal York, Over thousand rooms from which to choose, each with bath at moder. aterates , , , spacious public rooms +++ five restaurants with meals to suit every purse , , , Rex Battle's dinner and Fred Culley's dance or+ chestras English Music Festival, November 13:18, , and the Royal Winter Fair, November 20-28, Excellent sample room accommodation E) ---------------------------------------------------------- BUBWAY CONNBROTION WITH UNION ITAYION T ROYAL YO T OR HE ' RK ONT ast Hotel in the British A Period of Readjustment chases are being made income, features, Montreal Wines Vanosuver Londen, Ont, The present period is one in whic emphasis is being placet! upon the advisability of purchasing high grade bonds and the senior securities of industrial corporations, ing maximum security, together with an assured We shall be pleased to submit a list of offerings of securities which combine these investment DoMINION SECURITIES ON LIMITED one d Office: TORONTO: 26 King St. B Hamilton A J REDDIN, Reproseniative, 23 Simcoe Street North, OSHAWA, Ont, Telephone: 2008 increasing such pure with the object of obtain. Now York Kitchener Ingeton Londwn, Bag. A STAN SN I i A a A BIREOT PRIVATE WiReS TO ALL PRINGIPAL MARKETER TNROUBNHOUY GANADA AND THR UNITHD STATES YORONTO * F.O'HEARN & Co. OFFICERS i SARNIA «+ OWEN SOUND OANAWA « [MONTREAL Genosha Hotel, Oshawa Telephone 8700 MEMRERS NEW YORK QUAD Bxonanar (ane're) STANDARD STOUR & MINING KXOHANGE GHITAGD BOARD OF TRADE WINNIPEG GRAIN EXEHANGR NEW YORK PRODUCE EXOHANGR Er et elle

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