6/+ 0â€"<zes 0 <a>â€" Anything in Cement. _ Esâ€" timates prompty given. Prices right. Never before in the world‘s history have there been so many cases of nervous collapse, with "jumpy" nerves, accompanied by fits of depression, as since the Great War. â€" ‘This condiâ€" tion applies not only to men and women but to children. ‘These runâ€" down conditions affect every part of the human system, bringing indigesâ€" tion, headaches, weakness, insomnia, aneimia and finally, if not checked, that most insidious and dreaded disâ€" ease, consumption. , ‘To protect the system, there is only one thing to do, toee and build up the body with Carâ€" noi. Carnol helped Mrs. Beaulieu She says : "I don‘t know how to express my gratitude to you for all that Carnol h_a@e for me. I was tersibly deâ€" pressed. L had no. appetite. The least exertion tired me. I couldn‘t sleep. The slightest noise or exciteâ€" ment made me tremble. My nerves were "jumpy". _ _I was losing weight. Finally I consulted my doctor and he told me that I was completely run down and I needed a tonic. "The best tonic for your case, said he, ‘is Carâ€" nol"" I took Carnol for a month and 1 feel so well today that it is hard to realize that six weeks ago I was in such poor health."â€"Mrs. Frs. Beauâ€" Heu, Riviére du Loup. . 3â€"9 «o TWO Robinson Street South, Grimsby =â€"â€" ‘Phone 20 "The Least Noise or Excitement Made Me Tremble," says Mrs. Beaulieu _â€"_Carnol is sold by all good druggists evervwhere. Andrew Cloughley CELLAR AND BARN ~FLOORS,. CISTERNS, FOUNDATIONS, CURBS, SIDEWALKS, SEPTIC TANKS Chips‘;ff the Old 7B_|_ock Cement Work TINSMITHING BILIOUSNESSâ€"SICK HEADACHE, call for an RR Tablct, (a vegetable eperient) to tone and strengthen the organs of digestion and elimiâ€" nation. Improveg Appetite, Relieves Constipation. Estimates Promptly Given and Prices Right C. H. McNinch M JUNIORS â€"â€" Little Ns Oneâ€"third the regular dose. Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults. Phone 402. Res. Phone 286w THE 5/,â€"DEBENTURESâ€" 514 and SAVINGS DEPOSITS Carrying 3%%4 per cent. on DAILY BALANCE in TROUGHING Cor. King and Hughson Sts. Hamilton Providen HOT AIR FURNACES Are legal investments for Loan Corporation Sold in Grimsby by LESLIE J. FARRELL GENERAL REPAIRS TRUST FUNDS D. M. CAMERON, General Manager Hamilton AND The Sa cBe oZe oBe cGerSarBe se ofe oBe cSe ce Ee aBe aBe aBe aBe aSe eE eSe aBe a%e cBe ofe se Te aTe ae she ole sleate cfe Te afoate aZeots Working For United Statesâ€" . During the war Mackenzie King was working in the United States for $10,000 per year. \Since the war he has been living in Canada, but he is still working for the United States. + kM a His latest piece of work is the lowering of the tarif on agricultural implements in order to increase the sale of implements made in the United States to Canadian farmers. Mackenzie King is obessed with the fool notion that by lowering the tariff on agricultural implements five per cent. he is going to make the farmers rich. It is not low priced implements that the farmer needs, but a high price for farm products and Mackenzie King‘s action in lowering the tariff will tend to lower the price of farm products, because it will throw Canadian mechanics out of work and thus injure the farmers‘ best market. What the Canadian farmer, the Canadian stock breeder the Canadian dairyman and the Canadian fruit grower are suffering from today is the low price of all kinds of produce grown on the farmâ€"and Mackenzie King has not done a single thing to help raise the price of any one of those products. Had Mackenzie King put a good stiff tariff on every article grown by the farmer or fruit grower he would have made all the farmers and fruit growers prosperous in a few yvears. But he has not done a single thing in thtis directionâ€"the "free trade bug" has stopped that. What benefit is it to a farmer to save one dollar on a plow that he buys every seven years, Of twentyâ€" five dollars on a binder that he buys every ten years and lose hundreds of dollars on the price of his proâ€" ducts every year? : What benefit is it to dollars a year on his im of dollars a year on the 5 Mackenzie King is a "nut".on fighting the Canaâ€" dian manufacturers, but he is working like a trojan to help the farmers and fruit growers of <the United States. § There are millions of dollars‘ worth of agricultural products come into Canada every year and Mackenzie King ‘has never raised his little finger to stop them and that in the face of the fact that the United States has raised the duty on our goods mountains highâ€"it is no wonder that Mackenzie King is dubbed the memâ€" ber from New York instead of the member from North YÂ¥ ofk. â€" ‘The state of the fruit growing industry\ of the Maritiime Provinces, British Columbia and Ontario toâ€" day is enough to stamp Mackenzie King and his finance minister as a pair of consumate asses, absolutely withâ€" out commonest kind of Business acumen, and ruled entirely ‘by a "fool fad" injected into their brains by the poisonous bite of "the free trade bug". Imagine the "fool" actions of a pair of finenciers clapping themselves on the back for knocking off a fool sales tax that they themselves put on a few months ago. The very fact that they knocked it off proves that they were fools when they put it "Oon. Imagine a pair of blundering "asses‘" putting a sale tax of six per cent. on agricultural implements and then turning round and blaming the manufacturing for the high price of implements,â€"and clapping themselves on the back when they knocked the tax off. Monkeys always imitate their mastersâ€"The Toronto Globe. â€" Praised the government when it put the six per cent. sale tax onâ€"and howled with delight when the government knocked it offâ€"mighty economic brain. Take a walk along any of the business streets of Toronto, Montreal, Hamilton, St. Catharines or Grimsâ€" by and see the tons and tons and hundreds of tons of foreign fruits that are displayed in the shop windows and forced on the people by every known trick of merâ€" chandising and think .of the thousands of barrels of Canadian apples that are lying in the cold storage plants of Grimsby, Hamilton, Toronto and Montreal that cannot be sold for a dollar a barrel; in fact, canâ€" not be sold at allâ€"and for this condition Mackenzie Kingâ€"and he only is to blameâ€"he could by one stroke of his pen, stop our Canadian markets from being used as a diumping ground for the surplus fruits of all other fruit growing nations, while our own Canadian fruits rot in the cellars or store houses. Mackenzie King lets the Dominion Canners bring thousands of bushels of United States pears into Canâ€" ada free of duty (by rebating them 99 per cent. when they export the canned pears) and Canadian pears rotâ€" ting in the orchards within a mile of the canning facâ€" toriesâ€"no wonder they call him the member for New Y ork. No wonder Fielding left the cabinet on the exâ€" cuse of illâ€"healthâ€"Ill tell "you why he left the cabinetâ€" he couldn‘t stand Mackenzie King‘s breath. It is the same breath that drifted from the nostrils of the Editor of The Globe in 1911 and poisoned Fielding and Sir Wilfrid so that Sir Wilfrid went to an untimely' grave, and is now sending Fielding into early retirement. The breath of a man insane from the ravages of the "free trade bug" in his brain. / 3 And why did Sir Lormier Guoin leave the cabinet on the excuse of illâ€"health? The smell of the breath Sir Lormier knew the taint of the "free trade bug" and got away as quickly as possible. What empty pated dupes the progressiveness of the West must be to imagine that the reduction of $1.00 on a plow or $5.00 on a wagon or $15.00 on a binder spread over eight or ten years is going to make a farmâ€" Facts and Fancies is it to a fruit grower to. save ten his implements and lose thousands on the price of his fruit? f er rich when his wheat is se and his steers selling at $15, his dairy stock selling at $20 not selling at all. The Senate at Washington is discussing a bill to stop Canadians going into the United Statesâ€"while the parliament at Ottawa are passing a bill to send Canaâ€" dians to the United States. dians to the United States to build agricultural impleâ€" ments for Canadian farmers and fruit growersâ€"that‘s political economy of th¢e first water. oJa oBe oBe oBe oBn oBe ofe oBe ofe obe ofe oBe oBe aBe ofe ob ohe oBe oBe ofe oBe oBe aBe aha afe ofe afe ofe ofe ofe ofe ofe ofe afe afe ofe ofe ofe It is a matter of astonishment to me where certain prohibition orators and letter writers obtain their statisâ€" tics. Indeed, it is but too apparent that & number of them are in precisely the same class as that former member of the British House of Commons, of: whom it was said that he "trusted to his imagination for his facts and to his memory for his eloquence." For example, a clerical prohibitionist in a recent letter to the press, made particular reference to the astonishing success of prohibition in the United States. It is quite evident: that this clerie‘s idea of "success", is to say the least, "peculiar". In other and more comâ€" mon words, "How does he get that way?" Letter writers generally, and clerical writers in par ticular, should either state the facts or leave the subjec severely alone. The Department of Justice, at Wash ington, has had a large number of statisticians gather ing information on this very subject for a considerable period, and has come to the fo""mwing interesting conâ€" conclusions: The next group consists of seven statesâ€"Washingâ€" ton, Oregon, Kentucky, Montana, North Dakota, Minâ€" fesota and Michiganâ€"â€"which are put down as 50 per cent. "dry", and next in line comes 18 states that vary in "dryness" from 5 to 40 perecent., according to the figures of the Department of Justice. The first is that no state is really "dry", the nearâ€" est approach to this being Kansas, Idaho and Utah, with For instance, in 1923, there were more arrests for violations of the Volstead Act than in 1922, and more in 1922 than in 1921. â€" There were in 1922 a total of 64,000 arrests for violations of the act, but in 1923 the total was 100,000. } a total population of 12,000,000, but this does not mean much, because these states were mostly "dry" through local option before the Volstead Act came in force. The last group of states in which the law is largeâ€" Iy held in‘ contempt, contain, however, upwards of 50 million people, or more than‘ half of the entire populaâ€" tion. . Moreover these statistics do not bear out the favorite argument of prohibitionists that the law has not had time to reach its most effective stage. but the contrary seems to be the case. j The value of property seized 9y prohibition agents in the United States in 1922 was 5,800,000, but in 1923 in was $11,478,000â€"more than d« ble and one is temptâ€" ed to ask if this "astonishing s tess" goes on at the same rate for the next 10 years (where the American people will find themselves? _\ Take the city of Washingtom~‘sst year‘s total arâ€" rests forâ€"violationâ€"of the_"*ary "tay, s â€"«mounted to 13,040, an increase of 231 per cent., as compared with the prevâ€" ious year, and a comparison of arrests on all charges from 1910 to 1923 shows that, although Washington‘s population has increased only 32.17 per cent. since 1910, arrests in 1923 for serious crimes showed an inâ€" crease of 107.47â€"per cent. over those in 1910. . Crimes against morality increased, as did murder, manslaughter and theft. For a number of years both on the public platâ€" form and in print the writer has contended that the surpluses claimed for the London and Port Stanley Railway were purely imaginary under any ordinary recognized method of bookkeeping, and now comes along very strong evidence from @n authentic source to support that contention. A recent despatch from London says, "At the risk of being called ‘an enemy of Hydro and public ownerâ€" ship,‘ the city auditor, Mr. Ashplant, in his annual reâ€" port on the above railway, takes exception to the finanâ€" cial methods of the management of the road, whereby he claims, deficits are changed to surpluses. "Item of expenditure," he says, "have been changed to capital account which properly belong to current expense, the result being to create paper surpluses which do not, in reality, exist‘. Mr. Ashplant finds a deficit for 1923 of $30,000, and also questions the surâ€" pluses shown in the Commission‘s statements since Dealing with this situation, the London Echo says, ‘"The question, of course, is one of bookkeeping. and also involved is the point whether there should be one system of accounting for the railway and a different one for all the other civic services. Mr. Ashplant is also auditor of the accounts of the city council, utilities, sthools and hospital, and naturally objects to any one of these services following an exclusive system of its own. 8 1919 "Possibly‘ if the council and school board were to adopt the railway‘s accounting .s‘*}“fstem they, too, would show goodâ€"sized surpluses this year and the work of lqwering the mill rate would be greatly simplified. If the railway financing system is allowed to go on inâ€" definitely, it may be found necessary when quoting civic figures, to place some distinguishing mark against those concerning the railway and another for those of all the other departments. ‘"No good can result from persistence in the railâ€" way Commission‘s system; sooner or later the fallacy of it must force itself upon the public just as it would if the council adopted the plan. There should be no camouflaging of accounts, particularly where the pubâ€" lic interests are concerned, even though it would be an acknowledgment that predictions made by advocates of electrification were false. _ The public is entitled to the truth, no matter ‘how plain and blunt it may be." All which is exactly what I have been trying to make clear to the public all along. Not only in the éaxse of the Port Stanley Railway, but of the whole radial scheme and much of the Chippawa scheme also. Camouflage is interwoven with therï¬-all_and the public has been, and is still being systematically deceived If they call a man that takes a drink a scoflaw, what would you call Secretary Fall? Let him think women silly if he will. . He isn‘t the kind they are trying to please, anyway. from a horse Wonder who will be the first one to interview King Tut on tax reduction? It‘s hard for an Englishmian to ‘break away from custom. â€" The Prince of Wales has resumed falling For a pedestrian to be drunk is a misdeameanor. He is not so much a menace as a nuisance, but for a driver of a powerful engine on the highway to be inâ€" toxicated is, or should be, a crime because of the peril to the public that is involved. NOTES AND COMMENTS ; ON CURRENT EVENTS $ BY PETER PETERIKIN 3 THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO is selling at 90 cents a bushel, $15, his horses selling at $10, ; $20, and much of his produce Joseph Foley is fixing up a tourist camp on the grounds at Beamsville, formerly used as port at the aviation camp. .:. K!-(J-(|-()-()-()-()~()-(l-()-()-l)-(0:0 #ode Je rfeofecfeofes$sefucfeal» No new roads will be constructed in Welland this year, but the. County Council will spend $160,000 on road maintenance. Beginning May i1st, Beamsville stores will close on Thursday afterâ€" noons during the summer. Doors close at 12 o‘clock noon. .:.l-l)-()-()-()-()“()-( )-()-IYQ()-()“(TQ:Q § News of the District Culled From Our Exchanges W**M%*-!g*%***mwmm'wï¬nb»xo»b«»!«!a Eggs dropped to 28 cents a dozeni D. Glover, of Beamsville, on St. Catharines market on Saturday.| paringrhis p'roperty at the w The Welland Canal will open for navigation at 7 o‘clock on the mornâ€" ing of Wednesday, April 16, ten days earlier than the opening last year. Several freighters are now waiting at Port Colborne to pass through the Canal with grain. For regulating the discharge of guns and other fireâ€"arms and the setting off of fire balls, squibs, crackers or fireworks in the Township of North Grimsby. The Municipal Council of the Corporaâ€" tion of the Township of North Grimsby enacts as follows:â€" â€" 0 _ _ 1. No person shall discharge any gun or other fireâ€"arm, or set off any fire ball, squib, cracker or fireworks on the public highway or in any park or other public place in the Townshi_p of North Grimsby. 2. No person shall, without the writâ€" ten consent of the owner or occupant thereof, discharge any gun or other fireâ€" arm, or set ‘off \ any fire ball, squib, cracker or fire works, or engage in huntâ€" ing on private property in said Township. (a) In a prosecution for a breach of this byâ€"law, the onus of proving that he has such consent shall be upon the perâ€" son charged. 3. Any person or persons guilty of any breach of amy of the provisions of this byâ€"law shall, on conviction before any justice having jurisdiction in that behalf, forfeit and pay a fine and penalty of not less than one dollar, exclusive of . costs, and not more than fifty dollars, exâ€" clusive of costs, such fine and costs to be collected by distress and sale of the goods and chattels of the offender, and in case of nonâ€"payment of such fine, and there being no distress found out of which such fine can be levied. then and in such case, it shall be lawful for the convicting justice to commit such ofâ€" fender to the common gaol of the County of Lincoln, with or without hard labor, for any period of time not exceeding twentyâ€"one days, unless such fine and costs (if any) including the costs of disâ€" tress and of the committal and conveyâ€" ance of the offender to the said gaol are sooner paid. 5 fayad . l 1924. THOMAS W. ALLAN, Clerk Under power contained in a mortgage which will be produced at the time of sale there will be offered for sale by Public Auction at the Cooper Hotel, Smithville, by James A. Livingston, Aucâ€" tioneer, on Friday the Twentyâ€"fifth day of April, 1924, at the hour of 2.30 o‘clock in the afternoon, that seventy acre parcel consisting of First, The Southâ€"east part of Lot Number Eighteen in the Ninth MORTGAGE SALE Concession of the Township of South Grimsby containing by admeasurement forty acres more or less. Second, being composed of a Southâ€"west part of Broken Front Lot Seventeen in the Ninth Conâ€" cession of said Township of South Grimsâ€" by containing by admeasurement ten acres of land more or less. Third, Being composed of a Northâ€"east part of Lot Number Eighteen in the Fighth Concession of said Township of South Grimsby containing by admeasureâ€" ment twenty acres of land more or less, which said parcels or tracts of land are the said Broken Front Lot Number Eighteen in the Ninth Concession lying North of the twenty mile creek also the Easterly centre part of said Lot Number EFighteen in the Eighth Concession and also ten acres out of the Southâ€"westerly corner of said Lot Number Seventeen Broken Front Ninth Concession devised by the late George Adams to the said Robert H. Adams by will registered in the Registry Office for the County of Lincoln under Number 12614. Dog Tax for the Town of Grimsâ€" by, is now due and must be paid before May ist. Male dogs, $2; female dogs, $5. Tags 25 cents each All owners who have not paid their Dog Tax and secured a Tag by May ist, will be dealt with acâ€" cording to law. j This is the property for some time owned an occupied by one Lawrason. _ TERMS OF SALE:â€"Ten per cent. down at the time of sale and the balance within twenty days thereafter at the office of the Mortgagee‘s solicitors. _ For further particulars apply to Aucâ€" tioneer or to the undersigned. _ _ a DATED at Brantford this 3rd day of NpPril 1924) ) â€" /o. 0 u600 0; $f0 {alg > [ This new Health Science has brought relief to thousands of sick people. Investigate and learn of its merit. Passed this 12th day of April, 1924 ViizAGE INN Tues., Thurs., Sat., 4 to 8 p.m. DOG T AXES BYâ€"LAW No. 319 SPINAL â€" ADJUSTMENTS HAMILTON OFFICE, Secord Building (Next to Royal Connaught) District Summary ROPRAG]T F. W. ANDREWS, Tax Collector. BREWSTER & HEYD, Xâ€"Ray aju ofe ols riuofeefuejes]= otc on at o shoale ofo uSnale ofe uin afo oze afy afo afe ol uafeate nl. uie efeaSaqte ofe ujoofe ale sfeeforfeafaatects r WM. MITCHELL, Reeve . SCHNICK Brantford, Ont.. Solicitors for Mortgagee D. Glover, of Beamsville, is preâ€" paring his property at the west end of the village for a tourist camp. Alâ€" ready some improvements have been effected there. Niagara Falls, Ont., April 13.â€"A new customs building is being erected on the lower steel arch bridge on the Canadian side to accommodate the increasing staff and to prepare for the summer congestion. The. building will be of handsome design in Spanish fashion and three stories high. The regular summer halfâ€"holiday system will commence in Smithville, on Thursday, May 1st, the business places closing at 12 noon on that day, remaining closed every Thursday durâ€" ing May, June, July, August and Sepâ€" tember, inclusive, till the following morning. All places of business will be open on Wednesday evenings for the benefit of the buying public. "It is the same thing as a father backing the note of his son," said Reeve Nelson of Thorold township in registering his approval of a resoluâ€" tion carried by Welland County Counâ€" cil whereby the county guarantees debentures for the amount of $140,000 to be issued by the village of Chipâ€" pawa in payment for water \works and sewers systems; the fo:mer costâ€" ing $77,000, with $63,000 to be expendâ€" ed upon the construction of sewers. Niagara Falls, April 11.â€"â€"The Niaâ€"| gara Wine Company has / called for| tenders on the construction of a secâ€"! ond storey, size 40x80 to the present| building in Stamford and a new buildâ€"| ing, size 50x100. Messrs. Kirkpatrick | and Cannon, Niagara Falls, N. Y., are| the architects and the proposed work| will cost about $25,000.. Tenders were | received by the architect and close toâ€"i day. ~ | St. Catharines, April 11.â€"A police court case will follow the shooting lagt nisght of x young man in ‘the C. N. R. yards by a railway detective. So far the police refuse to officially reveal the names of either the detecâ€" tive or the youth shot. The story is that a number of youths were playing "tramps‘" and took a". ride on a freight train. It is said the railway detective thinking they were stealing coal, fired three shots, and one took lodging in one youth‘s leg. He . is now in the hospital. St. Catharines, April 9.â€"L. J. Cunâ€" ningham, Manager of the local Govâ€" ernment Employment Bureau, this afâ€" ternoon reported a large. influx of Danes and Finns to the city.. He said there were a great many | Nova Scoâ€" tians here also looking for canal jobs. The contractors ave not yet ready for the men, owing to the recent incleâ€" ment weather, which has made condiâ€" tions in the canal zone very muddy. Within a week or so, however, if the weather clears, work on the new Welâ€" land Ship Canal should be in full swing, contractors say. Niagara Falls, Ont., April 10.â€"It is believed by veteran rivermen here that the wild swans have â€"changed their route, and are going over Kingsâ€" ville instead of over the Falls. It is believed that the wild swans sent to Jack Miner by Red Hill last year reâ€" mained there, and it is thought. they brought the others that way. In former years hundreds of swans were lost in the Niagara River, which was recognized as the worst death trap on the American continent. Only two wild swans have been seen so far this year going over the Falls, compared with many hundreds in former years. | SAVE MONEYâ€"READ THE ADVS. St. Catharines, April 10.â€"A special provision may be made in the case of Henry Beauregard, the seventeenâ€" yearâ€"old lad held in Lincoln County Jail for the Fall Assizes, charged with the attempted murder of Frank F. Philban, on December 17, The boy claims Philban led his mother astray. C. H. Claus, Manager of the Children‘s Aid Society here, has been requested by J. J. Kelso to ascertain if any philâ€" anthropic person can be found to give the lad employment at the jail, so that he can occupy his time and also earn some money. An uncle of Beauregard interviewed Mr. Kelso reâ€" garding making this unusual request for his nephew. It is possible the matter will be left in the hands of the Dominion Parole Officer. Hamilton, April 9.â€"Amounting to $124,975, road estimates for the year were passed by the County Council this afternoon, after much discussion as to how the money was to be found. Adoption of a 14â€"mill tax rate, it was pointed out, will not produce nearly enough revenue and take care of road estimates, and there was some talk of increasing the tax rate. It was agreed that the road work was too important to be neglected, but, with estimates alâ€" ready pared to the bone, Councillor Moss said, it was a question what Council should do. Road Superintenâ€" dent Lumsden said that the net reâ€" quirements for road maintenance this year would be well over $100,000. Council finally approved of road estiâ€" mates of $124,975, of which the county will have to pay approximately $75,â€" 000. The balanceâ€"will be borne by the Provincial Government. The quesâ€" tion of either increasing the tax rate or incurring an overdraft at the end of the year was Geferred until the next meeting. Aâ€"The Young Canadians‘ Forest League, with 140,000 boy . members, has been organized by the Canadian Forestry Association to help in preâ€" venting forest fires that are so costly. YOUNG CANADIANS‘ FOREST LEAGUE (Qâ€"What is the Young Canadian: Forest League? Ms 0:0(».'0..(:“4‘@(,@0&! .:0)-()-()-()-1)-()-(7-()-1)-()-()-{‘7-tb 0:0 Dentist Officeâ€"Corner Main and Mountain Streets. Office hoursâ€"9 to 12, 1.30 to 5.30 Phone 127. Grimsby, Ontario W.:)J. CARSON, L.D.S.. D.D.S. Dentist O{ficeâ€" Farrell Block, Main St {Jtfice hoursâ€"9 to 12; 1 . 3C or by appointment Phone 92. C Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public 45 Federal Life Building. Hamilton 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 MacKAY, MacKAY & PERRIE Hamilton Calder & Hazlewood MONEY TO LOAN REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE, Funeral Directors and Licensed Embalmers Motor Hearse. Office Phone 72. Night calls 333j Residence, 24 Ontario Street. GRIMSBY ONTARIO John Clarke, C. A., W. F. Houston, C;A., M. I. Long, C.A. 809 Bank of Hamilton Building, Hamilton Phone Regent 1549 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS CLARKE, HOUSTON & CO. BUSINESS DIREGTORY Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public V olland T ally Cards Wednesday, April 16, 1924 are arranged to be used either for Auction Bridge, Five Hunâ€" dred or Mah Jong. The instrucâ€" tions and scores for Bridge and Five Hundred are inside the tallies, and on the back of them is the table score suitable also for progressive Mah Jong. This new, scoring arrangement is a feature of the Volland tallies and adds greatly to the comfort and convenience of a hostess having a party at which all the guests do not play the same game. G. ARTHUR PAYNE & SON Money to loan at current rates Officesâ€"Grimsby and Beamsville Robt. Duncan & Co. STATIONERS James Street and Market Square Barrister, Solicitor, Notary,. etc. Office: Main Street, Grimsby. Phone 7 We shall be pleased to call at your home and give you an estiâ€" mate on repairing and upholsterâ€" ing your furniture. You will find our prices moderâ€" ate. â€" All work guaranteed. Furniture Dealers Phone 72. I. B:â€"ROUSE (Glohe Optical) Optician 52 KING ST. E.. HAMILTON Established, 1901 Office hoursâ€"8.30 to 6; 830 to 9 on Saturdays. 19 Issuer of Marriage Licenses G. ARTHUR PAYNE & SON HENRY CARPENTER MARRIAGE LICENSES FUNERAL DIRECTORS UPHOLSTERINC G. B. McCONACHIE COUNCIL CHAMBER, W. F. RANDALL ROY C. CALDER LAND SURVEYOR Aleurnanioren e c se ul oalice We 29 T?R. D. CLARK Phone 7, Grimsby "C+ OPTICIAN DENTAL LEGAL NEW 12;1:$90 to 5.30 > 0 u0. 0 â€"<oid 0â€"Gim (4)6 Grimsby Grimsby Ontario tf Ontario tf tf tf