Grimsby Independent, 5 Mar 1924, p. 2

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All Goods Being Sold| At Less Than.Whole-'i sale Prices f BANKRUPT SALE Main St., â€" Grimsby JAMES ST. â€" MARKET SQ. Robt. Duncan & Co. Chips‘o'ff the Ofilfidr_B_l_ock White Store EILIOUSNESSâ€"SICK HEADACHE, call for an NR Tablet, (a vegetable eperient) to tone and strengthen the organs of digestion and elimiâ€" pnation. Improves Appetite, Relieves Constipation. Among the many delightful new novels areâ€" â€" "*Theâ€"Alaskan‘".... .... ... :%2.00 "*Theâ€"Alaskan‘"‘.... .... . .. .92.00 (By J 0. Curwood) "Emily of the New Moon", $2.00 (By L. M. Montgomery) "The White Flag..........$2.00 (By Gene Stratton Porter "AZime With the Iron Door", $2.00 NOW GOING ON IMPORTANT NEW NOVELS (By Wm. J. Locke) "Bond Triumphant".... ... (By G. H. Grahame) "Tetherstones".... .... .. (By E. M. Dell) M JUNIORS â€"â€" Little Ms Oneâ€"third the regular dose. Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. â€" For children and adults. "Midwinter".... .... .... (By John Buchanan) "Doctor Nye"....:..... \.. (By Joseph Lincoln) ""v _uITHius TINSMITHING Estimates Promptly Given and Prices Right Phone 402.. Res. Phone 286w TROUGHING HOT AIR _ FURNACES GENERAL REPAIRS "Booksellers" . McNinch s CC 2rol AND 3> lpem uty 0 Locke) ".$2.00 $2.00 $2.00 $1.75 $2.00 «Lo oTe cGe oBe obe eb ofe afe afe cf : obe oo the ohe afe afe abe afe nlo aBe ce she aBe sTe ie ofe oBe ahe obo cle abe ahe afe ate a8 : che ofe ofe oGa oZe oZe aBo cEe eB ofe ofe afe aBe cBe afe eBe aBe aBe ofe oBe oBe eGa ofe afe aBe ofe ofe ofe ofe cle ofe afe afe efe ofe efe afe ofe ofe sfeofe The recent agitation against our Canadian banking system and demand for Government inspection as a sort of cureâ€"all, does not appear to rest upon a sound foundation. This agitation appears to have originated in the west, where the farmers have been up against it of late owing to various causes arising out of conditions creâ€" ated by the great war. Complaints have also been made against the recâ€" ent mergers effected by our banks, as tending toward monopoly, and as making it more difficult for the farmâ€" ers and small business firms to get credit; and the remâ€" edy proposed has been smaller banks and more of them. However, both Government inspection and numâ€" bers of small banks existed in the four chief agricultural states of the American west and what has been the result? Over five hundred banks have failed with deposit liabilities of many millions! I would also like to pofnt out that the . Home Bank, the failure of which has created so much unâ€" rest and dissatisfaction in Ontario, was originally a Loan Company, which obtained its banking charter with considerable difficulty and in a somewhat irregular maniner. te neve staff Even in the west itself, the conviction that the fiâ€" nancing of the farmers by the banks and loan comâ€" panies has stood the test of agricultural depression and deflation, better than the financing by the unit baakâ€" even with government assistanceâ€"in the western states, is clear by the following extract from the Sasâ€" katoon Star: "Here is where the superiority of the Canadian bankâ€" ing system over the American system becomes eviâ€" dent. _ The banks in these four states, being local conâ€" cerns, naturally were completely tied up with these farm loans. They hadâ€" not deflated their credit promptly enough; and partly as a result of this the farmâ€" ers had not reduced the operations promptly enough". "The two things went together, being based on loâ€" cal optimismâ€"upon faith in the "essential stability and prosperity of our district". The result was that the banks carried the loansâ€"they could do nothing elseâ€" until they ate into the banks‘ assets and caused failure after failure." _ _On the other hand, our own banks and loan comâ€" panies handled the situation with both judgment and consideration, and by their wide and extensive connecâ€" tions, were able to place resources at the service of the west, which never could have been made available by purely local institutions. The following letter won ane of the chief prizes in Colfier‘s: "What You Think of Prohibition" contest, and is especially interesting as undoubtedly representâ€" ingâ€"as it claimsâ€"the views of many average American citizens: "I am an average citizen. Frequently I« telephone to a boao‘tlegg.er and he (_1-e1ivers me a quartfbf‘ moonâ€" @idh@raiqr which Iopay him $4.00,__ In pzme@iing aus BEsEAC C deq ons o o n cladiiidireer s nfi 92. ® â€" ol t in consumIing i "The underâ€"cover drinking of today does not lead generally to the excesses of preâ€"prohibition times. And â€"most important to meâ€"the dry laws have not yet seriously iinterfered with my own drinking. "If given an opportunity I would vote for continâ€" uance of the prohibition laws. I know the 18th Amendâ€" ment and the Volistead Act have accomplished much good.:.= The open saloon, â€"with its evils is gone. "I would vote for modification of the Volstead Act. to permit the sale of wine and beer, merely because I then could obtain intoxicating beverages more palatable than the raw whiskey I now drink. However, I am not interested enough lin this proposal to work for such legislation. "And until there is awakened in me a greater sense of civic and national responsibility, until there is enâ€" gendered in me a greater respect for those laws which affect my personal liberty, I will continue to break the laws of my state and country as regards priohibition, and will continue to ‘be unconcened with such violaâ€" tions by othersâ€"simply because I am an average Ameriâ€" can citizen." The following is taken from the Passaic News, New Jersey: "A successful business man, now acting as a city manager, was asked the other day, "What the chances are of getting dollar for dollar in public serâ€" vice as compared with private service?" His answer is worth thinking about: "Up to date" he said, "the plain truth is that the public does not get as much for its money in public as in private business. That is true; not merely of; this country. In Ontario they ‘have Sir Adam Beck, amn able business man and notable public figure, who is devoted to the development of the great Hydroâ€"Elecâ€" tric project. A straight life is admired by all, even by those who make no pretence of living such a life themselves. But unfortunztely many people place far too little imporâ€" tance on a straight body. If you doubt that stateâ€" ment, just watch the people you meet. â€" It is true and also very regrettable that some have to work so hard that they unconsciously grow stoopâ€"shouldered. They did not realize it, and no kind friend gave them a word of warning. Sometimes school children form the habit from careless positions while sittinos at their desks. And every parent should feel deeply grateful to the teacher or trustee who provides adjustable seats and desks for their pupils, for if a child uses a desk either too low or too high, it prevents the proper deâ€" velopment of the body. And with the world moving as it does today, good health is of prime importance. And good health is not a thing that we can buy up "When he built the Chippawa canal he ‘had the best experts to be obtained, but somehow, the uniit cost was greater than in private business. It is nearly alâ€" ways that way." "Why : "When men work for the government, they know it, and somehow they will not tolerate pushing or crowding. "There seems to be a creeping paralysis which overtakes men in public employment. _ There is an idea that government money belongs to whomsoever can get it, an idea that city government particularly is a sort of private venture on the part of officeâ€"holders. Wifeâ€""I hope my costume is the nicest at the ball. All women are rivals, you know when it comes to clothes." He is straight, you can trust him." _ Who would not like such a recommendation? And what a comfort it brings to the employed looking for help! i *This goes from the top all the way down the line Men come to think they have the right to their jobs and can do as they please and that is hard to change‘". NOTES ANOD COMMENTS ON CURRENT EVENTS Husbandâ€""Yes, one certainly tries toâ€"outstrip the ther" . PEOPLE WHO ARE STRAIGHT BY PETER â€" PETEREKIN 11 buas l _ hn sn _ Sprert C[ia ie _ _ C /d frave no qual.ms of conscience. ce when our finances take a turn for the better; we must grow up into it if we are to have it. 3 It is said to see people bowed through hard work, but what shall we say of those who are bowed through carelessness? What is to become of the boys and girls on our ~‘strecets, in their [ teens? Oh, the ‘nitv._ of 4t‘ Whatever®~‘mav be â€"said and girls on our _â€" â€"StFCECtS, 111 thneir LECILS I 11, the ‘pityâ€"of ‘it! Whatever may be â€"said . and thought of the soâ€"called "frills" in our school course of study, there can be no doubt â€"of the importance of physical training in some. form ofr other. Nor does thisâ€" require an elaborate systenm of rules and exerâ€" cises. Five minutes at brisk exercises in the midâ€" dle of the session, with windows open, will work wonâ€" ders for both body and brain, especially if the pupils sit properiy afterwards. â€" Teachers know that few puâ€" pils will sit properly unless they are taught. Most of them, and many grown people too, sit so that the weight of the body comes on the end of the backbone instead of on the cushion of flesh that nature has proâ€" vided. + But however careful the teachers are about these matters, little can be accomplished without the earnâ€" est coâ€"operation of two other parties, the pupils and the parents. Do the parents not realize that a curved back affects the appearance and also the health of their children. And speaking of curved backs, it is the wrongly curved backs of many chairs that we must blame for a considerable share of the curved backs of people. Many "easy" chairs are auite hard to sit in properly, in fact, it is quite impossible unless the big hollow is filled in with cushions or something of the sort. A straightâ€"backed chair may sound very unâ€" inviting, but if one sits properly it is really more comâ€" fortable than if of the wrong shape. The position of the chest is also of great importance. Instead of trying to throw back your shoulders it is better to devote your attention to the chest. Aim to throw your chest as far forward and upward as possible, and the shoulders will naturally fall into a proper position, and the desired result will be more easily attained. A little determination in this lireâ€"when first sitting down will soon form a correct habit of sitting. When walkâ€" ing try to "hit the sky" with your chest, and see how springy your step wiil become. If parents and puâ€" pils will second the teacher‘s efforts in this line we may hope to have aacommunity of people who are straight in body and on the road to improved health. â€"Exchange. (Voronto Star) No man can have edited a newspaper, especially in one of the smaller communities where it is posâ€" sible for a man to know his neighbors intimately, withâ€" out having at least one occasion to regret that it is not possible when a man dies to write an obituary of himâ€" which would do justice to his life. An editor must, once or twice in his career, wish that he ‘could sit, down and write the honest truth about a departed citizen who all his days was a neighborhood nuisance and a domestic afflictionâ€"a man who all his days was mean in all his ways. * Tempted as an editor some#mes is, he does not yield. Nearly always there is some devoted woman whose hearts would be wrung, a mother, wife or daughâ€" ter. â€"So the editor prints pleasing platitudes about the departed citizen. And nobody=â€"blames him for doing so. It seems generally agreed that the obituary column of a newspaper and the chiseled face of a tombstone are places where it is not well to tell the truth. There the who‘e duty. is to be kind. ‘ Somebody, however, has actually done what so many have been tempted to do, Anâ€" English paper reproduces fronp the Bethnal Green News an obituary notice which appeared with name and address as folâ€" lows : This is frank enough to suit anybody, and it is, perâ€" haps, as truthful as the average obituary notice which makes it seem that the departed was one of the saints of this world, which nobody had previously suspected. Yet the closing reference to the way in which this man had disposed of his fortune in his will leads one to susâ€" pect that he might have had an eulogistic an obituary as anybody if he had but been penitent at the last and left his estate to his family. Money spent at home circulates in the home .own. This is well known, but few people have any idea of how many hands a bill passes through in the course of an ordinary business day. _ With the object of tracing the adventures of currency, the Mayor of Calgary recently tried out an interesting experiment., He pasted a five dollar bill on a large sheet of cardboard, which had a notice on it asking each person accepting the bill to endorse on the card his particular business. That bill passed through sixtyâ€"one different hands in ten days, finally being returned to the mayor. In starting on its journey he handed over the bill to a Calgary haberdasher in part payment of a new hat. The second endorsement showed that it had been paid to another store, and on the same day it was enâ€" dorsed by a firm of florists who paid it to an automoâ€" bile company, and so it went on from one businesss house to another until, as stated, at the end of ten days the identical bill with its accompanying card, was received in change by the mayor, who had started it out ten days earlier, PAYS TO KEEP MONEY AT HOME The following summary gives the different hands the bill passed through and shows that practically every class of business benefits by money paid out during the course of ordinary transactions: The adventures of this bill should be a potent arâ€" gument to put before mail order shoppers in proving to them that by spending money at home there is an exâ€" cellent chance of the cash coming back to the original spender. Against this the money sent perhaps hunâ€" dreds of miles away is a total loss so far as other local business men deriving any benefit from it. A party of tourists were looking at Vesuvius in full eruption. "Ain‘t this just like Pq_des?" exclaimed an American. "Ah! these Ame t" said a Frenchâ€" man standing by. "Where ey not been?" THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO "The deceased, indeed, was‘a most strange man. Although bringing the childre;h intg the world, he had z& strong antipathy to the n his house, while the‘= mother natural) * thieir reâ€" i i * . hesy. f maining, which caused unhdappings§, In his busiâ€" ness life he was an arrogant, autocratic and quarrelâ€" some man, and a dictator of the worst order. He at any time of his life had but a few friends, and those he soon lost. His mannerisms were disâ€" tasteful to the last degree, and his expressions on the sanctity of marriage will: be treated with ridicule, for it is known for some years past he showed his affection to many. He was, in plain words, a hyprocrite. "It is a recognized sayving, ‘Speak not ill of the dead‘; but what can be said of a man who died and leaves his fortune to others, and to a loving and faithful wife not a penny to provide for a large family?" Dry goods and clothing Hardware.. ..}... ysd Florists... .. /o. . . .aM Insurance...;. .... 110 Cigar Stores,.... ..mv i. Tronworks...; .. .. aaas Cafte:.:m"/.~. sy . y Druggists....‘.."y 2eâ€". Frinters. ... _s. _9 Shoe Stofres.. ..; Buther.;!.‘ /.. 3. Grocers.y..: ... EFlectrical.. .. ... Autos and garages Banks!:.. ....... Telegraphs..:.: :. : Cartage company .. Unclassified.... .. WHEN A MEAN MAN DIES Great Travellers 16 5L x 38. cxmph hb (1§5A B t _ | [ 9 > c o NP Sn S C _ Friendsâ€"Some people are so dumb that they think Jonah was th e first one to sing "Sittin‘ on the Inside, Lookin‘ at the Outside." Her father leaned from his windowâ€" sill, Whilst daughter eloped with sweet !lBill’l ; THE MAX . WHO ... HANGED HIMSELF DIED OF HIs OW N EREE WILL_ AND A CORD: A pocket dictionary is one that omits the words one might wish to inâ€" vestigate. If you think you‘re â€" a than vour neighbor, don Show him. Friendâ€"*"Cong I hear you have Monkeyâ€"gland can‘t get the lit down off the ch But her daddy laughed and chuckled in glee. As ‘he thought: "No. wedding bells for me!" * not can It is said that courtship carries more passengers than all other ships. A Beamsville man wears such a red necktic that a physician was called today because it was thought his throat had been cut The â€"following â€" advertisement seen recently in a magazine: Baily, Banks,.â€"and . Biddle Cof Watches for Women of Superior Design > and s Perfection of Movement BLTP Sheâ€""Just think, we‘ve been marâ€" ried five years now, and you‘ve k‘ssed me every morning before breakfast, ‘nd everything." * Heâ€"â€""Yes, I‘ve followed the docâ€" tor‘s instructions snd cut down exâ€" penses, too." Sheâ€""‘What instructions?"" â€" Heâ€"‘"He told me that every mornâ€" ing before breakfast I should suck a ‘emon." THE WOMANX Is SELDOM THE SILELEENT PARTNER, According to an authority on beauâ€" ty, "the ears should not be placed higher than the eyebrows nor _ lower than the tips of the nose." Ladies, when making themselves up should bear this in mind. Everybody should strive to make 1924 a real high mark year in every respect, except the German mark. A book of verses underneath . the bough. : A jug of wine, a loaf of breadâ€"and thou Beg‘de me ne‘ghing in the wilderâ€" nessâ€" Oh, Sparky, do not leave your Barney now. A French physician says bathing is not indulged in by most people as a health measure, it‘s mainly an aid to social standing. "I guess we‘ll make port," said the sailor as he threw in another handful of raisins. Mexicans have to read the pape! daily to see who is President. The man who takes an umbrella to church, and leaves it out in the vestiâ€" bule, has true Christian faith. Most of the classical dances remind us of trying to get into a union suit in an upper berth. A consistent vegetarian is one who won‘t risk eating chestnuts in the dark People and automobiles that knoc} need attention. Some folks seem to think, that _‘ they pay up by the time Germany does it will be all right. ? wWHAT CONGRESS NEEDS IS FOURâ€"WHEEL BRAKES. Kss ng a S!: tle of olivesâ€"if come easy. wONDER JUST HOW _ MANY . OF USs ARE DOING OUR DARNDEST. AK. ADVERTISEMENT â€" IN OoUR COLUMNS WILL BRING YOU BOEH TOGETHER 11 ally ;Mac says:. A‘nuâ€" glad " I‘m a window paneâ€"cause everybody see right through ‘em!" C€OsSTSâ€" MORE THAN DOUâ€" TO LIVE *A â€" BDBOUBLEâ€"LIFE: Chief Causes of Swearing: 1. Collar Buttons. 2. Automobiles. 2 Women. is THEY MCGHT HAVE DONE IT FASHION HINT THE ELOPERS Omar Khayyam verses underneath the SO girl is like opening a botâ€" â€"if you get one, the rest ngratulations, old man. ve a new . baby hbeoy." ad Parentâ€"â€"‘"*Yes, but I little rascal to come chandelier." a better [Ter, > Inan tell him. ompan y wWAs One desirous Of influencing the popâ€" ular mind might paraphrase the old saying to the effect that he cared not who wrote the history of his country so long as he might invent the fables. Perhaps the most generally known inâ€" cident of American history, the inciâ€" dent that is learned earliest by the young American, is the thrilling story of George Washington and the cherry tree. Yet there is every reason to believe that it is a sheer invention. and it is not without some amusement one observes in â€" American newspaâ€" pers, as each anniversary of Washingâ€" ton‘s birth comes round, almost ~as much space given to arguments about the cherry tree as about the Fareâ€" well Address which is supposed to have established â€"the principles upon which the United States for all time to come will conduct its foreign afâ€" fairs. Outside of the peruna belt. and those districts in which the inhabi tants hold to the rugged be.iefs of William Jennings Bryan there is now general acceptance of the cherry tro story as a fable. â€" There is not. how: ever " an attendant suspicion faa: Washington was an inveterate ; Heis accepted as the most truthinl o‘ all Americans, a man who se a stan dard of veracity to which nonws o hi countrymen has since had the hard hood to aspire. = But there was a liar concerned with theâ€"cherry treeâ€"story," although. the author of it would no doubt resent tlc word. He admitted the invention but: when taken to :ask about it by Bishop Gadsden, he defended himseli by saying, "Why. isn‘t it a good thing for the boys? â€"It teaches a moral iesâ€" son better than any fable." Undoubtâ€" edly it does, but there does seem something inappropriate in a minister of the Gospel making up a yarn even for this good purpose, and the author, Mason Locke Weems, was a clergyâ€" man. He was 3: Viriginian, . born some thirty years later than Washingâ€" ton, and at one time was the rector of a church which Washingston atâ€" tended, so it is probable that they were acquainted. . The fact that the book in which the fable occurs was dedicated to Mrs. Washington by "your sincere but unknown friend" is evidence enough that he was not on terms of intimacy with the family, and in no position to hear anecdotes unâ€" known to others. A Successful Book Agent He was a successful book agent 2 ud his powers of persuasion are proved by his ability to se‘ll three thousand highâ€"pricedâ€"Bibleg in oneâ€"year..~He was also an author, his biography of Washington, which won him fame, beâ€" ing his second venture of ‘> kind, and being followed by lives of Franklin,. Penn: and Gen. Marion.. _ His lifeâ€"of Washington appeared shortly after the General‘s death. At first it was a mere pamphlet of 82 pages by no ing his secondâ€"ventfiir~o+ :s kind, and being followed by lives of Franklin,. Penn: and Gen. Marion.. _ His lifeâ€"of Washington appeared shortly after the General‘s death. At first it was a mere pamphlet of 82 pages by no means an authoritative work, and deâ€" signed to suit the tastes of persons who" desired that their historical reâ€" searches should amuse and edify them. The work ran through several ediâ€" tions. each one an improvement or an amplification on the other. It was in the fifth that cherry tree story first appeared. It was accompanied by other incidents of Washington‘s boyâ€" hood, most of them frankly "adaptâ€" ed" from the biography of a good litâ€" tle English boy published some years ecsrlier. _ It was not to antother auâ€" thor, however that Weems was inâ€" debted for the cherry tree story. He admitted that he invented it and took pride in the fact. . In the booKk itself he says he had the story from a ladyv who was a distant relative of the Washingtons, and as a girl spent much of her time with the family. The Story Here is the story as it appears in Weems‘ history: "One day, in the garden where he often amused himself hackling his mother‘s peaâ€"sticks, he unluckily tried the edge of his hatchet on the body of a beautiful young English cherry tree, which he barked so terâ€" fibly, that I:don‘t. believe: the_ tree ever got the better of it The next morning the old gentleman finding out." what‘ " had â€" befaller «his tree which by the by, was a great favorâ€" ite, came into the house. and with much warmth asked for the misâ€" chievous author, declaring at the same time, that he would not have taken five guineas for his tree. Nobody could tell him anything about it. Presently George and his hatchet made their appearance. ‘George,‘ said his father, ‘do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry tree yonder in the garden?" . This was a tough question; and George staggered under it for a moment; but quickly recovered himself, and looking at his father, with the sweet face of youth brightened with the inexpressible charm of allâ€" conquering truth, he . bravely cried out, ‘I can‘t tell a lie, Pa; you know I can‘t tell alis. _ I did it with my hatchet.‘ ‘Run to my arms, you dearâ€" est boy,‘ cried his father in transports, *un to my arms;â€"glad am 1I, ‘George, that you killed my tree; for you have paid me fortit a thousand fold. Such an act of heroism in my son is worth more than a thousand trees, though blossomed with silver, and their fruits of purest gold.‘ "‘It was in this way, by interesting GHFRRY TREEF STORY ""It was in this way,. by interesting at once both his heart and head,. that Mr Washington â€" conducted George with great ease and pleasure along the happxmgat‘hs of virtue‘." A Moral for Fathers But the preface to this incident robs it of all moral significance for boys, and makes it really a lesson to fathâ€" ers. _ Weems tells of an interview beâ€" tween George and his father in which the latter told his son that in no cirâ€" cumstances was he ever to lie to him. He was promised in advance immunity for any fault as long as he freely conâ€" fessed it. Indeed, as the story itself indicates, the infatuated father seemed WAG Admitted the Invention INVENTED BY A RROK AGENT great and f . cthi at th truthfulness is â€"concert vitiated by the fact tha: but recently presented 1\ and that the fallen tree been the victim of some the neighborhood wie! hatchet. in the . ~; George‘s confession wa tion not of a soldier hbu ‘"Mamma;," said little Elsiec. "I do wish I had some money to give you for Christmas dinners and poor chilâ€" dren." Her mother, wishing to teach her the lesson of selfâ€"sacrifice said: "Very well, dear; if you would like to go without sugar for a week I‘ll give you the money instead, and then you will have some." alimo BPe acs the joy sion. The little one considered solemnily for a moment and then said: "Must it be sugar, mamma"" 3 "Why, noâ€" darling, not necessarily What would you like to do without? "Soap, mama," wasâ€"Elsie‘s answen UEPHENE ENNN itA » PAAA NN NTiTHIttin DENTAL f Dentist Officeâ€"Corner Main and Mountain Streets. Officge_hours=â€"â€"9 to 12, 1.30 to 3.30 Phone 127. Grimsby, Ontario HENRY CARPENTER Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public 45 Federal Life Building. â€" Hamilton f tf Land Surveyors, Civil Engineers James J. MacKay, Ernest G. MacKay William W. Perric Phone Regent 4766. 72 James St. N. ..‘ ~ Home Bank Building Dominion Land Surveyors, Ontario Hamilton wW. ]. CARSON,â€" L.D:S., D.D.S. Dentist fice=â€" Farrellt Block, Main St. HRfice boursâ€"YI to 12; 1.30.â€"t0 5.30 or by appointment. MacKAY, MacKAY & PERRIE Calder & Hazlewood MONEY TO LOAN REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE, John Clarke, C. A., W. F. Houston, C.A., M. I. Long, C.A. 809 Bank of Hamilton Building, Hamilton Phone Regent 1549 * CLARKE, HOUSTON & CO. Funeral Directors and Licensed Embalmers Motor Hearse. Office Phone 72. Night calls 333j Residence, 24 Ontario Street.. IRIMSBY ONTARIO * a, aum Anammmamrmvermvimy YAAA aa BSG CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS ncne G. ARTHUR PAYNE & SON Pariister?, solicito Money to foan Officesâ€"Grimsby Wed We shall be pleased to call at your home and give you an estiâ€" mate on repa_iring and upholisterâ€" ing your furniture. You will find our prices moderâ€" ate. All work guaranteed. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary. etc Office: Main Street, Grimsby. Phone 7 Phone 72. Established, 1901 Office hoursâ€"8.30 to 6; 830 to 9 on Saturdays. j I. B. ROUSE (Globe Optical) Optician 52 KING ST. E., HAMILTON msby Issuer of Marriage Licenses MARRIAGE LICENSES FUNERAL DIRECTORS UPHOLSTERINC COUNCIL CHAMBER, to ARTHUR PAYNE & SON Furniture Dealers Ol Theâ€"mora a2 W. F. RANDALL ROY C. CALDER LAND SURVEYOR nesday, March 5, 1924 NFSS D Phone 7, Grimsby DXR. D: CLARK Solicitor, Notary Public r foan at current rates irimzyby and Beamsville OPTICIAN IcCONACHIE LEGAL RFCTORY ith a hace 1ad evide: small boj iing ~a, a rcumstan the insp a tactician Grimsby Grimsby Ontario tf Ontario tt HTkare V 111 tf

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