Dryden Observer, 23 Oct 1925, p. 2

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Fe hig he EE i. designed Ford iouring Model -er-- Longer-- Broader. These he three main improvements in ih: iord Motor Company of Canada's vo louring Car." i lar Ford Model i adh It hoe an accentuated stream loo _ :Afeet, due in part to the fact that has heen" on the cowl giving a ve YY continugus ig is all-steel, finished in . bked enamel, An improved one- top, following the lines of the adds much to the car's appear- md the curtains are on uprights, ing forward with the doors, which are wider than before. The whole car is built lower but the same road cicarance has been retained. The scats are much wider, broader and more comic able and convenient, The gas tank is under the cowl, and the coil box on the left side of the motor, both valuable improvements. A wind- w shield wiper is provided on the plate ventilating windshields. © ch interest is; glass, double: An alternation fo that of the widening bétween the rear of the front seat and the edge of the: vear seat, which will not only bring: move comfort to those occupying the, rear seats, but also accommodate two' bushel baskets--a distince advantage, for farmers, who find the Touring Car. indispensable around the farm and for trips to town. Ford Motor oC. of Canada, Ltd., Ford City, Ontario. ANDERSON & HARRIS FUNERAL DIREGTORS (1 DAY OR NIGHT CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO PHBUONE-- Bay, 62 R 2; prs Night, 62 R 4 nas AGENTS FOR-- Massey- Harris Implements Carbon Removed trom Cylinders ; by Acetviene Burning SoD. O'NEILL Barrister, Solicitor, Etec. CARMICHAFRI, BLOCK KEMNORA ONTARIO W. A. WEARE General Merchant MINNITAKI, ONTARIO Agent For-- JOHN DEERE PLOW CO. There is John Deere-Eguipment for Every Farm Use. Get QUALITY and SERVICE TIME PAYMENTS Arranged to Suit Purchasers. lachiz & Popham Barristers, Solicitors, ete. H. A. C. MACHIN EARLE C. POPHANM Also Member Manitoba Bar. IMPERIAL BANK BUILDING KEENORA --:-- ONT < 7 OEE M. J. CROSIEE General Merchant, OXDRIFT, ONTARIO Dry Gouds Groceries Boots and Shoes Hardwars and Farm Produce Frost & Wond and Cockshalt Implements T.GARDINER General Merchant, : EAGLE RIVER.§ : Agent for Frost & Woed IMPLEMENTS. COCKSHUTT PLOW COY. ® ok RK a Sharple's Cream Separators, b RAW FURS BOUGHT & SOLD. REE, In appsarance the is immensely Ws Tet Them Kid You" JH Meighen says the first into power, is to replace the to wd means Farm Implements wil think they o duty reduced still more. thing vhere it was when Mr King came into office. ea says the Dryden Observer he will do when he gets duty on Farm Implements, This I advance in price again, We are high enough right now and could stand the 1elp this along by sending a upporter of Premier King to Ottawa, or in other words . vote for PETER HEENAN on October 29th. a He HZ 1. S. CORNER, Uxdrift, Ont. for: RNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY of Canada, Ltd Peter Heenan's - Record mn Public Lite Publishedby ~the Liberal - Labour Organization, Kenora, Ontario. iia To Business Men Peter Heenan has made his home | town cf Kenora one of the busiest and most prosperous towns in .Canada. To The Farmer Hvery person who visits Kenora District is impressed with the great amount of Roads and Highways con- structed since his first election in 1919. The Rural Credits or Long Term Loan Act was also enacted and Peter Heenan was one of the committee that reported to the House on this measure. rpg To The Labour Men Every one who knows Peter Heen- an's record admits he has been a real friend to the men and women who toil. During his term of office much Legislation on their behalf has been placed upon the Statute books of On- tario, such as the amendments to the Workmen's Compensation Act, enacted during the session 1920. Under this Act injured workmen and their dependents are being paid approximately six mil- tion dollars annually. Mr Heenan has also been active in promoting a living wage for women and girls as evidenced in the Minimum Wage Act. He has been a fearless champion of the Lailway man's conditions of em- ployment demanding a full measure of justice for the men engaged in this hazardous occupation. During the last session of the Ontario Legislature he led the debate on the unemployment situation and furnished considerable valuable information on the unemploy- ment guestion. To The Women During Peter Heenan's term of office the Mothers' Allowance Act was placed on the Statutes of Ontario being enact- ed at session of 1920. This Act is now caring for nearly 5,000 mothers and over 12,000 children in Ontario. Peter Heenan will still be the friend of the men and womep who toil. Let us unite to place him in the House of Comunons where he can use his ex- perience to secure the enactment of an "Old Age Pension Scheme." There has been a demand for Peter Heenan to turn his experience and energy to the wider field in Dominion affairs and the Electors of Kenora and Rainy Rver constituency can rest as- sured that if Peter Heenan is elected he will secure the greatest possible benefits for this District. It is felt that the people of this con- stituency are sufficiently informed of the Tariff question to know that a higher protection means this country a dearer place to live in, and that there are other means by which prosperity can be attained without taxing the majority of the people for the benefit of a few. Sveaking of this particular district, it should be borne in mind that the Arthur Meighen Policy as expressed hy himself on the floor of the House 'ast session, was to prohibit the export- tion of Pulpwood from Settlers' lands. If this system was adopted it would 1ean that the Pulp and Paper manu- acturers of this Country would have 1» monopoly and would be able to make "heir own price when purchasing wood rom the Settlers. Peter Heenan's reply to the above as expressed on the floor of the Ont- ario House last session was, "that be- fore we stop the exportation of Pulp Wood from Settlers' Lands, the Gov- ernment should provide that the Cana- dan Industries would be forced to pur- chase the Settlers' wood and, if neces- 'sary, the Government ought fo insure to the settler a fair prices? £ So E52 TY be FE That a new market has been found tor Canadian lobsters, is shown by 2» report that twenty-six hundred casos of lobsters, valued at about $78,000, were shipped to Sweden from Halifax, N.S., during the first week in July. The gold mires of Northern On- ario are now realizing aggregate profits of a million dollars a month, according to estimates compiled at Timmins, Ont. There was a gross income of $2,650,000 during the raonth of June. Six hundred and twenty-four families from Great Britain and oth- er European countries settled in the West on 187,000 acres of land, sold in the fiscal year ending May 31st, according to the records of the Can- ada Colonization Association. Quebec is this year enjoying the greatest influx of tourists it has known for a considerable time. Hun- dreds of motorists, the majority from the States, are camped in and arernd the city, and the Chatea: reports capacity booking: During his tour of Weiss ada Field Marshal Earl I through the town on the 1 Pacific Railway which wea aamed for him several years ago, for the first time. The Field Mar: learning his connection with town, looked as pleased as though he had just won another famous victory. 3 ot Sa According to the report of the De- partment of Agriculture, livestock marketings in Canada during the past year were the best experienced. for many years. There were 975,- 020 cattle, 355,179 calves, 3,094,291 hogs and 425,606 sheep marketed in 1924, as compared with 882,921, 315,522, 2,362,402 and 512,390 re- spectively in the previous year. According to J. M. Gibbon, secre- tary of the Trail Riders of the Cana- dian Rockies, who recently left Mont- 'real for the West, the annual cross- couwntry ride and pow-wow under- taken by that organization, iz be- coming so popular that lovers of the outdoors from England and Aus- tralia are attending this year, in .ad- dition to the members from the TInited States and Canada. ny 1g "Beatty Boys," four British youngsters, brought out here by E. W. Beatty, K.C., President of the Canadian Pacific Railway, to study Canadian farm methods, arrived in Canada on the "Montealm" this month. They are expert farmers selected by the Minister of Agricul- ture from the members of the Young Farmers' Club of Great Britain and will remain in Canada for two months as the guests of Mr. Beatty. That elk, in the Panther River country, not far from Banff, are wpidly increasing in number and may possibly become a menace, is the opinion of Belmore Brown, an artist of New York who recently re- turned from a painting tour through the Rocky Mountains. Myr. Brown -egarded as an authority on wikfl ces that there will now, 10,600 elk 2 ta fa 1 anlinnis ang be, ten years from in the ct, unless steps are taken tod x their numbers. DEAD MAN'S HAND GRIPS HROTTLE OF WEST EXPRESS Syracuse, N.Y.--With a dead man's hand gripping the throttle of the West- ern Express, bound for Chicago, rushed i5 miles through the night before the fireman discovered Engineer W. C. Vanbergen's head had been crushed by a girder on a bridge. Protection and Prosperity. OTTAWA, Getober 15.---Mr.Meighen bi really believes that Le can double the wealth and population of the country by doubling the wnvesent tariff duties. & i is eampaign literature declares that n MaeDonald raised Canad: Canada under a law tariff between 1878 and 1878. They were even worse during that period under a high tariff in the United States. 1. ie In both coun- ries there was a revival of business towards the close of the 70's. he Tories say this was caused in Canada by an increase in the tariff, but they fail to account for the period of har times which came under that same high tariff between 1893 and 1896. People Leaving Canada. ; But was there after all such a reviv- al of business as the Tories claim under the National Policy? Our pop- ulation increased slowly, and thse volume of emigration to the United tates was enormous. The census of 1891 disclosed an increase of only 5,00- 000 in the population of the Dominion during the preceding ten years, al- though during that period 886,000 im- migrants had entered the Dominion. ° No Miracle in United States. Certainly the. tariff had nothing to do with the depression in the United States between 1873 and 1878, or with the great revival of business that pre- vailed from 1878 to 1890. The Mox- rill Tariff Act passed in 1861 was mn force all the time. It was in force twelve years before the panic of 1873 broke, and it was in force for twelve years after the panic ended. The Other Side. : In 1890 the United States raised its ariff by passing the McKinley Tariff waw and soon after it was visited by whe terrible panic of 18938. The Me- Kinley high tariff did not avert that panic. Neither did the National Policy prevent Canada from passing through a period of depression between 1893 ad 1896. Another Miracle? With the accession of the Liberal vty to power in 1896, tariff duties e lowered and ry enteren upon an era of record | king prosperity. The Tories say zing the tariff had nothing to do the fifteen years of good times | crevailed during the premiership | Wilfred Laurier. The Liberals ! with equal confidence that any | svival of business which followed the | accession of the McDonald Government to power in 1878 had nothing to do with the increase in duties. A Narrow View. To imagine that an act of parlia- ment can double the population and wealth of the country is childish. If prosperity followed an increase in| tarill duties in 1878, greater prosperi- | ty followed the reduction of these duties in 1897. The Tories, however, tell us that the United States has al- ways had a high protective tariff and therefore has always been prosperous. One Hundred Per Cent Wrong, 4 Both these statements are untrue. The United Staes has no always had | a high ariff and she has not always ! oh iar 4 Westinghouse Radioiroméy Musicons Headset, ete. Demonstrated in Your Home FREE! Arrange It Nowl _ y EAR this wonderful Super-Trirdym --one of the new DeForest & Crosley "R" series--in your own home A set with long range, beautiful tone, ines proved efficiency and unusual simplicity. "Tunes out" unwanted stations with ease, Fine two-tone mahogany cabinet--etched metal panel with raised indicating' marks that gleam like gold ---~all batteries and wires concealed. May we give you a concert tonight, FREE! At $135, this Model R-4 is a wonderful value--the only extras necessary are 3 Antenna Equipment and Batteries. Eesy payments if desired. Gr. Ripley's Easy Payments If Desired Through the new DeForest & Crosley Time Payment Plan we can arrange con- venient time pay- ments, enabling you to purchase cut of income instead of for cash, y immediately the ssewesecawmmnms BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS : STOCK OF LUMBER, SASH AND DOORS, SHINGLES, WOOD FIBRE BRICK, LIME AND CEMENT Estimates Freely Given TULL, FLEA TEES PRR ERT ERAT tv or + | 49 CASH GROCERY Better Goods, Better Prices, Better Quality, : AND _ Better Service Special :-- 4 Ib Tin Roval City Strawberry Jam = Ca UN been prosperous, That Country has | enjoyed spectacular waves of prosperi- | ty, and has suffered spectacular! periods of depression. Efforts to connect these periods of good and had fortune with the tariff have not al-} ways succeeded." We do know that | the United States had a very low | tariff between 1846 and 1861, and that | this particular period was undoubtedly one of abounding prosperity. { n UnwiilinAg Witness, Even the late Hon. James C. Blain, a Republican leader, and a high pro-; tectionist, had to admit this when he ceased to be a politican and become a historian. In his "Twenty Years of Congress," Mr Blain speaking of this low tariff period, says:-- E "The tariff of 1846 was yielding abundant revenue, and the business of the country was in a flourishing condition. Money became very | abundant after the year 1849; large enterprises were undertaken; specula tion was prevalent and for a con- siderable period the prosperity of the country was general and apparently : genuine . . . . The principles; involved in the tariff of 1864 seemed | for the time to he so entirely vin- dicated and approved that resistance | to it ceased, not only among the peo- 5 ple, but among the protective economists, and even among the manufacturers to a large extent... __° It was not surprising, therefore that in 1857 the duties were placed lower than they had heen sines 1812.7 National Liberal Committee. 115 Sparks St. Be EB A RR SS AS AOA So Oo. Proprieto: . TERE Wanted hauffeur! ~ Miss Canada: "Why did you choose the low road, when everybody else seems to prefer the high road ? The Chauffeur : "Why, Madam, you'd never be satisfied to savel the high road! It has too many toll-gates! This toad, you see, bas nope!" : = : + ae Rigo pa:

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