Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), November 18, 1926, p. 3

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gin jvrtott jte jfrgflfl thursday november 18 1926 sunfly day8 come again dont lot trouble spoil your face whats tho une my dearie this old worlds a happy place though hoimo days are dreary first tho showery then tho flowero thats the way my dcarlo pleasure always roll own pain sunny days will como again dont you worry dont you fret whats tho use my dearie happy days are coming yet though today youre weary somo days sad and some days glad thats the way my dearie never mind tho falling- rain sunny days will come again treat all your troubles while thoy last lllto they weio bubblea floating past storm clouds may gather in your sky theyre sure to gather if you cry tears are all in vain in tho falling rain sunny days will surely comoagaln games in their seasons y la it true or merely a fancy that tho absorbing interest of our genera tion in the great games football baseball tennis lahelplng tho decad ence of somo of the lesser pastimes onftb popular forty years ago there wcro no school athletics in tho mod ern sense of the term but everyschool yard at recess time was tho scene of a dozen different games one of them which seems to have disappear ed completely was a glorified gamo of ileapfrog called headandlboter one after another the players fco at everincreasing distances over the back of a crouching boy who remain ed down until some unfortunate spurred him and had to taljs his place it was particularly a frosty weather game uko peelers and thieves french blocktag shinny and football one erood thing about all those pastimes was that a player need not be especially brawny or nimble to engage in them as for seasonal ports no bird was truer to its tlmo of migration than was tho schoolboy with hla marbles and tops and kites marbles and tops and kites are with us still but they seem to have fallen from their hlg estate are there boys today wo pride themselves in their marbles treasuring- like gold the smoky moss agates the china alleys with the en- circling lines of blue and red and green do they make long quest for a boxwood lop of just the desired beauty of grain and the perfect mod eling that makes for miraculous spin ning a can they buy in all canada a whip top such as used to hum by dozens up and down the streets of ontario towns who is there among our boys that aspires to jnako and fly the biggest kite in the neighborhood one that when aloft pulls like the horses of jehu does anyone nowa days ever see a boy on stilts and how about the girls the girls 01- tho present age though scarcely out of grammar school seems to have at their tongues end all the tactics and strategy of baseball and foot ball have the bean bag and jack- stones and returnboll once beloved of her mother and perhaps her grand mother no more a place jner young life is she no longer impelled by some strange instinct in the warm days of may- to keep a pip wheel shop taxing the resources of mrs murphys little corner store for papers in silver and gold and rainbow hues perhaps pin wheels have gone the way of mrs murphys famous taffy which a few minutes after it was bought became inextricably blent with tho safron- hued butchers paper in which it was wrapped if the games of rolypoly cat mumble the peg pom-pom-peel- awayanp stump master are still played in bur school yards and tho streets the signs thereof are neither visible nor audible however those who have left youth far behind must not speak with a voice of too assured dejeotloik sometimes on turning into a quiet suburbans tree t the wayfarer like a startled crusoe perceives tho tracing of a hopscotch plan upon tho walk or if it bo a gonial afternoon in may perhaps catches a glimpse in the distance under the sunny green of now foliage of tho shining braids of a girls hair rising- and falling as she goes through all those intricate cteps with a skip rope beloved of little girlhood for unremombered ages ifthoso sports persist it may be that the pastimes of the golden age ore not extinct but only unobserved by the dimming eyes of an older genera tion r f i fl m hlsbpv liinsssssssl ss3355isiflkskjis sl the old fashioned parlor si the old-faun- dont you remcmbei loned parlor with flowery gilt pajer adorning the wall with green brussels carpet where bloomed the pink roses and how in the corner tho what- not loomed lull oh dont you remember tho sheila that stood on it with tho small lacquer box that camo straight from japan the spray of white coral the bit of green agate the carved paper knife and tho ebony fan oh dont you remember the oldhalr cloth sofa pfoin which you slid off but soon mounted with glee fj until gentle reproof made you cling to tho corners while staring roundeyed all tho wonders to see ireha oh did you not love tho long starchy lace curtains that hung from tho windows and draped on the floor your favorite ambush the kittens temptation when you slid through the crack of the old parlor door oh dont you remember tho a moll of the roso leaves that grandmother put in the blue ginger jar the hair wreath the wax flowers the bouquet of grassqe that stood on the mantel no near yet so far but oh the sad day when the parlor was opened and all tho good neighbors came in dressed in black but oh the glad christmas tho hap py thanksgiving the frolic when martha was mar ried to jack and oh the dear folks that made liv ing so pleasant and oh tho swift years that have swept then away how sweet is the fragrance from memorys roso jar as we take off times cover and breatho it today gene h osorno wiseacres and pes8imi8ts there is really no difference between wiseacres and pessimists cortainlyno oneever encountered a wlbeacre who was an optimist on one over heard a wiseacre say with hearty satisfaction i told you so after things had turnd out well when there had been perhaps an equal chance of their turn ing out badly it seems nevertheless somewhat curious that persons who wish to appear wise should always take a discouraging rather than an encouraging attitude towards life should be given to warnings and fore boding rather than to stimulating and strengthening counsel of expecting them v to show themselves equal to emergencies the really wine persons are not the wiseacres theyare not pessimists wisdom is much more often a guiding and directing force than an obstruc tive one it does not manifest itself principally in finding flaws in other persons plans and purposes and pre dicting the failures that do indeed fre quently come to pass it proves itself by the way it shapes the persons own life- and controls his ajms- and efforts pessimism is never a part of it for what wisdom does for those who possess it la to direct them to what is really good in life and to tho meas ures by which they may attain it wisdom always encourages tho hope of attainment the utterances of the wiseacres aro a paralysing influence the man who is timorous faint hearted -doubting- disbelieving may win a reputation for prudence cau tion conservatism but he never at tains wisdom v 4 your own town and you your town boosts you why not do as well by the town as it does by you no cimien is so powerful and none so humble but that tho town is an aid to him in some way or other the food that he eats tho clothes he wears the recreation and amuse ment that he enjoys all originate in the town because th money with which they are procured- is made there when a follow boosts his own town he does not stop there hel i m perform inff ntt not that y improves ms own condition for every good word and every bod deed has its elevating in fluence a few people are always home town booster they accomplish much in tho way of community betterment and this- improves the condition of not only themselves but also of those who do no boosting at all r tt every cltiien would constitute himself a home town booster the re- suit collectively woqld be many times as great y and opportunities for self improvement would be more numer ous think it- over in your odd moments then tt got nto the boost wagon nnd hit the pace old timers along the new highway i quit work last week at the home of my boyhoods friend majcolm ken nedy tho stone mason tho next wee house is a cottage with a history it was built by john holt when ho erected tho woollen mills on the lot where mr j h relds flno brick resi dence now stands after mr holt save tip the mills he removed from acton and mr and mrs sidney smith sr resided there this was their home during the erection of their palatial residence known as falrvlew place tho past fifty or sixty yoars and whore mrs c s smith livedfor moat of her married life and whero she passed away last spring after sidney smith moved to his new home the late hon david hen derson and family had this as a resi dence they came here from milton in the spring of 1873 when lessra christie and henderson purchased the mercantile business of messrs c and j symon slncd the days of tho re moval of mr and mrs henderson to bower avenue there have been many tenants in this house the present occupant is thelaquacious john nlcol tho monument man and erstwhile member of acton council arid chair man of fairvjcjw cemetery committee the fine home of mr james h reldl at the corner of main and river sts was erected by tho late richard ham ilton carpenter and contractor for himself and his wife and rmlss ella their daughter it was a perfect- piece of construction and when built was regarded as one of the best houses in this county mr and mrs hamilton resided thero until richard gave up his contracting work and moved to erin whero ho went into tho grocery business mr robert royco purchased the property when mr and mrs hamilton and daughter removed from acton ho had retired from farming up in erfn or ernmosa and sottled here when mr royces daughter mrs orr was left alone through tho removal of her children to make their way in life in other parts she wpnt to live with her father thore in the courso of time the royco fam ily passed vand mr james h rcld who had also retired from farming in erin township purchased the prop erty and for the last twelve or fifteen years has made this the home of him self and his family and mr rcld has kept the place as neat as a new pin all the time river street was at one time the site of the mill race and flumo from the dam to the woollen mills when the acton plow companys works were established over where the hy dro power station and the mastm knitting works are now the course of the stream yvlx diverted and the old mill race was discarded and river street opened the holt woollen mill was a hive of industry for a number of years when it fell into disuse it was used as a planing mill for a time then again it was vacant for 6vernl years prior to 1875 it was tho rendezvous for the bnnd of calithuonplans under general sklddlomadlnkbnrudlcburm- jum on the twentyfourth of may finally it was torn down and tho timbers used in construction of the plow factory theso flno old clear pino timbers went up in smoke when the factory was destroyed by ore thirty years ago acton creek which crossed main street nearby was always a stream admired for its purity ia pebbly bot tom and- in the early days for the abundance of snccklod trout which abounded there they say that suck ers and bass are riulto abundant there in these modern spring days my old eyes are not sharp to verify this fifty years ago however i saw many a shoal of speckled beauties in the creek and under the old log bridge there arid i caught my fair share of them therenndunder the grnssy banks further down the stream on the northslrto of the stream was boforo he and his famll wenl to california in 1872 or 73 between tho slto of this old mill and tho stone houso there was at onetime a carriage shop whero tom eastern did quite a trade for a time mr easton married emily webber the millers daughter tho old stone house which now be longs to thurtoll brown wiioro mrs oliver cook lives has quite a history i think it was built by sandy grant for years known as squire grant be cause he was a justice of the poac mr grant was a shoemaker and hud a little shop in the southwest corner of the lot across from tho old cali fornia hotol through some business deal mr grant idst this house and removed from it to another house he owned farther down tho street besldt- mldgleys store after squire grant and mr mc gregor i think archie mcnabb ot eramosa purchased the property and moved there he lived thero for a good many years la tor mr and mrs james anderson from down the mountain below syeysldo lived in this house mr anderson passed away ut rlpo age but aunt janet hih wife survived him for many years she was a kindhearted citizen but a woman of very docldea opinions she iwas a generous giver to missions and had a great admiration for rev dr robertson superintendent of missions in the northwest i think she claim ed him jfcs her nephew auiif- janet had no use for innoyntlons in tho method of conducting service li tho presbyterian church she had ij use for tho organ- she bad been accus tomed to sitting when the palma arid hymns were being sung and standing during prayer when this order was reversed she adhered to her old custom and naturally she became rather noted for her perversity we didnt like this in the old kirk but put up with it for the sake of the genuine goodness of the dear old soul who was pure gold r- the yfool lane or educational lane tt is now called was not there in ioiose early days or for a good many years afterwards it originated as a private entrance into the smith property but eventually became a public avenue lined with the fine old maples which now give grace to it tho brick cottage where charlie holmes and his family reside was i think the first brick house built in acton it was built by james clark who was ah expert brick layer- but gave up his trade to become pro- proprietor of the royal exchange hotel which stood where the bank of nova scotia and pattersons meat market now stand there was for years a blacksmith shop beside the house built by wil liam overton but afterwards run for years by anthony stephenson across the little creek was the old school lane r ran through smiths shingle factory yard and then turned into the school grounds just below where the old pump stood the two houses where sandy mclsaac and ix a henderson now live were erected by james brown and horace hall- when they conducted the shingle mill behind mr and mrs john stephenson lived in the brown house for many years arid mr stephenson died there asa hall one of the earliest settlers in acton lived in horaces house with mr and mrs james brown after he lofc his farm where mr nnd mrs hugh mc- cutcheon ore now the lane beside this house led to the storey clove leather tannery whloh ceased operations eight or ten years ago jr coxe bought the property and utilized the lumber when he built his fine commodious ford garage and this is the history of the prop erties lining be new main street pavement from the early days t hope my readers have enjoyed my story i am glad to bo nble to preserve this bit of history in tho columns of the town paper for the information and edification of the present generation and the generations yet to come mary is calling me to dinner 1 must go i observe however that contractor king has the fine new pavement about completed i hope 1 shall soon have the opportunity of en- joying a drive over the new roadway in one of the fine motor cars i see running about town these days my what would those early residents say if thoy could see the new pavement and the automobiles but perhaps they do after all weekly fashion hint roofing fjioorina storm windows propkrtt ownbaib uouflkhotjkbfl 1wd buicdkiui snoum wnitk hm oua ritkb catalogue hauitdat company- utd po box gt9s hamilton ont clearing auction sale farm live stock and 1mple- j wents the smock is popular in business offices as well as the art studios smart women arc wearing smocks here is ajnew version of the rery popular garment which may be developed in cotton rep cretonne sat een or gingham the model pictured has a vshaped neck finished with a turndown cottar there is shirring on cither side of the front and on the patch pockets frills are formed at the wrists by the shirring of the long raclan sleeves medium size requires 3m yards 36inch material routine and ruts many people lament to themselves if not to their friends and families the fact that they aro in a rut they feel that as the years go by they wear their ruts a little deeper and see less and less of what lies beyond its walls life seems to them to present a stead ily narrowing vista they contrast their condition unfavorably with that of the fortunately placed who have leisure and wealth who are not the slaves of roritirie who can follow caeh day whatever pursuit they wish and whose lives are enriched by variety ot experience but people should not confuse ruts with routine it js not in the least in evitable that one who must pursue a dally routine should eventually fall into a rut the people who most suc cessfully preserve and develop their individuality are generally those who are most conscientious in performlnff routine tasks the people who de teriorate are those usually who ne glect routine tasks or who do them poorly and carelessly with distaste or abhorrence routine tasks to be sure ore of all kinds but that is only another way of saying that they are suited to all temperaments there is routine that brings a person constantly into asso ciation with others and there is a routine that keeps him for the most part solitary whatever the routine may be it has its special facilities for developing and enriching the lives of those who faithfully pursue it the routine of the research worker is as different ns possible from that ojl the travelling salesman tharwtttchihe the undersigned hns received in structions from alck cripps to sell by public auction at his farm lot 1 concession 1 erin situated at crewsons corners on the provincial highway on o thursday november 25 commencing at one oclock sharp the following horses general purpose team 11 year3 old 1 spring colt from wallace horse a good one cows red heifer with calf at foot red holfer with calf at foot holsteln cow 4 years old with twin calves red cow g years old milking well bred in sept reg jersey cow 9 years old milking well due in march spotted cow milking well bred in sept jersey cow due tlmo of sale brlndle cow duo first weekpo cember jersey heifer bred in ifay young cattle 1 steer rising 2 years 2 heifers rising 2 years q spring and summer calves purebred shorthorn bull 16 months old sheep 6 oxford breeding poultry 20 rock hens implements mccormlck binder gft cut in good condition deerlng mower 6ft cut nearly new fleury grain crusher mccormlck manure spreader new 10ft deering hay rake 3horae international gas engine international spring tooth cultivator mh 10 spout seed drjll complete steel roller disc cultivator circular saw fleury singlefurrow ridlngplow new cockshutt 2furrow plow 2 turnip pulpers fleury walking plow 4 section harrow lumber wagon low wheel with box and spring seat farm wagon with box nearly new 1 set 3 bench sleighs good as new inter national 2horse power hay baler top buggy buggy pole chatham fanning mill peter hamilton cutting box hay rack harness 1 set team harness nearly new 1 set team harness 1 set chain plow harness 1 set of double driving harness collars brid les etc forks hoes etc etc the farm if not previously sold at the same time the farm consist ing of 122 acres more or less will be offered for sale subject to a reserve bid this farm which is well fenced and in a good state of cultivation would make an ideal dairy farm lots of good running water with plenty of shade 85 acres under cultivation there iip a good 8 roomed stone house with kitchen and woodshed a stone barn 60x54 with stabling un derneath the situation is ideal being on the toronto- sarn la highway bus lino at tho door 2 miles west of acton terms on farm terms oil farm may be- had from the proprietor or will bo made known on day of sale household furniture new melotte separator viking cream separator daisy churn no 3 heater stove parlor cook stove good cheer numerous other articles terms 110 and under cash over that amount 12 xnonth3 credit will be given on furnishing approved joint notes 6 off for cash fowl- anfi fnrnl cash three means of grace a negro preacher walked into the omco of a newspaper in rockymount north- carolina and said mlsto edto fhey is fortythree of my congregation which subscribe fo yo paper do that entitle me to have a church notice in yo sunday issue sit down and write said tho edi tor j i thank yo and ththls the no- yco the minister wrote mount memorial baptist church the rev john walker paston preaching morning nnd evening in the pro mulgation of the gros pel three book ii necessary the bible the hymn book and the pocket book come to morrow and bring all three ri is good tea tea llesxtumcvlytfk fimxc iade research worker finds reasonably con genial would be to the travelling sales man intolerable the converse is equally true so long as routine is reasonably congenial it should bo a blessing and not a curse if it is reasonably congenial and the young man should not jump to a hasty con clusion that it is not or he may find on being drafted inton routine of an other sort that he had been better off than he supposed t offers scope for enlargement of the mind and heart that la denied to those who are mor osely grubbing along making their ruts deeper and deeper for n most cases when routine becomes a rut it is because the victim perversely 4n- sfated on tranafqrfning it into one plant food in the soil tlm manysided lord shaftesbury the philanthrop ist used to repeat chuckling with amusement the speech of an old beg gar woman to whom he had refused alms asho walked away from the impontunato beggar she called after him you withered specimen of by gone philanthropy miss cobble in her life remarks that his lordships philanthropy unlike that of some of the other noted philanthropists was never scanyiy kind to those immed iately around him while very benevo lent to those afar off x he exhftnxed an enthusiasm for hu manity on the largest scale a score of great charitable undertakings rest ed on htm he did a vast amount of good by prompting legislation which protected women and children in fac tories and coalmines but he also re membered to perform all sorts of little kindness to individuals and never did ho omit tin act of courtesy not long before his death miss cob ble had on interview with him in his study the conversatldn had fallen on the woes and wrongs of the poor girls and poorer women of london which ho hod learned by personal in- vealgation among the slums- of the great city overcome by its emotions hesold when i feel age creeping on me nnd know i must soon die i hope it is not wrong to say lt but i cannot bear tojleave tho world with all the misery in it tho old philanthropist found much pleasure in doing good that even tho joys of heaven were less attractive to him than- the work of mitigating the sorrbwof earth it required no moral effort for htm to do good he did it not as a duty but because he loved it useful light stationed oft the island of islay on the west coast of scotland at the otter rock there is an interesting and novel tightship which in described in cassells magazine it is unnamed ret it can be re lied on to display the warning light to guide the mariner on this dangerous coast it is a very ingeniously con structed vessel and the only one- of ltsklnd in existence in its wo steel tanks sufficient gas can b stored to supply 4he vessel for several months experiments have shown that the light may be depended upon to burn there was a saw mill at ono time in what la now the smith prorperty i cannot remember when lumber was sawn there hut t do recnll qulto viv idly when peter mcgregor was in the moat business in acton and used this old mill as his slaughter house that can always be predetermined and there is no danger whatever of tho light being extinguished by wirid or spray- v- the light is vlalwe at a distance of eight to twelve miles the lightship fclso has a bell- which is made to ring automatically toy means of an ingen ious device which ntlllxes the gas as lt passes from tho tanks to the lantern to work the bell clapper the light i is not interfered with in the sltghtst degree by the device for striking the i bell j of the jnany elements composing the sofl three are absolutely essen tial to support plant life phorphorus nitrogen and potash- ah tbqee of these elements exist in the soil in two forms soluble and insoluble but it is only when they ore able td be dissolved that these elements become available for plant food the insoluble material s gradually reduced to a state of availability by natural chemical pro- cetses caused by wind atmospheric conditions and other agencies of na ture but so slowly are the changes ot this sort brought about that if the land is to be used constantly to sus tain plant life to a profitable degree artificial means must be resorted to in order to provide on adequate sup ply of plant food fjold tests taken of the eoll will indicate in what pro portion the necessary elements are present and commercial fertilizer is added to make up any deficiency a cheap fertiliser is not recommended in any ease as it is more than likely apt to contain elements especially ni trogen in an insoluble form which means just so much money thrown away in fact the farmer is better off who mixes his own fertilizer buying the necessary materials in bulk quan tities as he is then certain that the required percentage is added and that the ingredients used are of good qua- itjr nitrogen is the most expensive as well as the least plentiful of the ele ments required so thefurmer should ejrileavor to conserve the natural sup ply of this material as far as possible certain crops require less of this food than do some while stilt others have the property of returning nitrogen to the soil and alko rendering soluble tho otherwise unavailable supply among these are such products as cowpens sugarbeets clovers alfalfa and other leguminous crops which should be frequently used in crop ro tations to keep up the nitrogen sup ply the residue ot these crops when plowed under or used for pasturing stock will permit tho return to the soil through the medium of decay of a large percent of the plant food con tained in tho leaves and stalks sugar beets and alfalfa in themselves are ex cellent stock foods and are extensively raised for that purpose tho increase in acreage devoed to the growth of sugar beets shows that the modern farmer understands the value of this crop as a soil conditioner as well aa wonderful food for ms cattle no land can continue to produce first quality crops unless scientific iteans ox employed to keep up the supply of plant food in the soil and the cheap est and least laborious method is that of returning as much as possible of what the crops themselves have con sumed of course all thnt the plant consumes cannot bo regained- but a great deal of expense in purchasing roy hindley auctioneer r r no 3 acton erin phone 6hl charles iarker clerk 202 is this type of tourist really an asset to ontario liquor advocates claim that ontario will get thousands more tourists if it goes wet on december 1 these are the facts the dominion government report for 1925 states ontario under prohibition had 1290000 motor tourists new brunswick under prohibition had 476555 motor tourists quebec under government sale had 111983 motor tourists government sale means increased liquor sold and consumed with increased dangers do you want our highways thronged with hilarious joyriders and campfollowers of the liquor traffic do you want to encourage and promote reckless driving upon the highways on the part of our wn citizens dpnt be fooled make your vote count against these dangers vote for your dry candidate ontario prohibition union x4 bloor street e toronto ftvil village of acton a bylaw to establish a public utilities commission for the village of acton contlnuounly for months at ft tlmo tho approximate duration of tho ught wmslarfortnimra c b0 saved in thlo wnv t t klott fho oiemlstry of plant life t evtes refreshes tired eyes a wllmmurtappctitoofabwcibcl i whereas by bylaw number 501 passed on the twentyninth day of november 1920 according to sub section x of soctlon 34 of the public utilities act rsjd 1914 chap 204 as enacted by 7 george v chap 47 sec 2 there was established in the municipality of tho village of acton the acton hydro electric commission for the jmrposo of controlling and managing- the hydro electric system within the said municipality and whereas said sec 34 pro vides that the control and manage ment of other publlo utilities within the municipality may with the as sent of the electors be delegated to a commission similar to that already established along with the control and management of the supply of hydra electric power and whereas it is deemed to be in the- beat interests of the munici pality that the control and manage ment of tho municipal waterworks system be delegated to a commission b it tharofofe onuctod by the municipal council of the village of acton as follows 1 com plot o control and manage ment of the municipal waterworks system of i tho village of acton shall be and is hereby t delegated to the acton hydro electric commission which shall hereafter be called and be known ns the acton public utilities commission the members of the said commission to be elected and to con tlnue in ofllce which thoy now hold in accordance with the provisions of by law 501 hereinbefore mentioned 2 all the provisions in said bylaw number 601 with regard to- officers keeping of minutes banking issuing of cheques and every other matter shall apply to the public utilities commission in the control and man agement of the hydro etectrlc system and waterworks system 3 the votes of tho electors of the saift vii logo of acton shall be taken on the above mentioned proposed by law on mondaythe sixth day of de cember 1926 at- the somo time in tho same places and in the- srme manner as the vote in the annual municipal elections v 1 on friday the third day of de cember 1926 the reeve will attend at the council chamber in the town hall in tho village of acton at 10 oclock in tho forenoon to appoint in writing signed by him two persons to attend at the final summing up or the votes and one person to attend at each votlns place on behalf of tho persons interested lh and desirous of passing the said blaw and also the same number of persons on behalf of tho persons desirous of opposing the sold bylaw fixjtio clerk of the municipal coun cil ait the village of acton shall at- teim at the town hall acton at 6s0 pm on the sixth day of december 1920 to sum up the member of votes given for and against tho said bylaw passed provisionally the twenty- eighth day of september 1926 a mason reeve h n farmer clerk v seal notice notice la hereby given that if the assent of the electors is obtained thereto the above bylaw will jc tok en into consideration by the munlcl- pal council of the village st acton after one month from the fourth day of november 1928 being ttie date of the qrst publication of this notice h n farmer clerk of tho village of acton dated at acton ont nov 4th 1926 198 youevev to think by edson jr watte shawnee oklahoma that the grocery advertisements carry a wealth of suggestions for the housewife 3b3at they should be read carefully suggestions for your table needs await you there that they are money savers they tell you what is on the market that the uptodate grocer is enter prising if it is on the market he keeps it in stock and quotes prices in his adver tisements that why worry abdut what to se lect for the next meal let the grocery ad vertisements help you they will make it easy for you that they always carry a wide selec tion of quotations on good things to eat that the grocer who advertises takes much pride in the quality of the ar ticles of food he buys and he is as careful in his buying as the most painstaking housewife the modern grocer knows that quality variety service and price is the paved road to success he travels that road copyright 1u26 i iff

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