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Ontario Reformer, 19 Sep 1922, p. 7

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mm re -- ts = 142 see -- his od a Dental DR. T. C. CLEMENCBE, DENTIST, Office over Andison's Tailor Shop, 19 King St. West. Phone 231. . 8. TUCKER--DENTIST, OF- i Tn Hogg and Lytle's stora, Phone 948. 1-yr. DR. 8. J. PHILLIPS -- DENTIST: Office over Kyle's Grocery Store. Phone 959. 4-1yr. DR. JAMES, DENTIST -- OFFICE over Jury and Lovell's Drug Store. Phone No. 97, DR, TREWIN,' DENTIST -- EN- trance to office one door oast of Detenbeck's Store, DR. W. J. LANGMAID, DENTIST, Office over Engel's Store, 16 Simcoe St. N. Phone 1243. Medical DR. C. E. WILSON, PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Union Bank Building, Simcoe St, North, Phone 57, 119-1yr DR. McKAY -- PHYSICIAN, SUR- geon, Accoucher. Office and resi- dence, King St. East, corner Victoria St., Oshawa. Phone 94. DR. L. J. SEBERT, 78 BLOOR ST. East, Toronto, will be at Jury & Lovell"s Drug Store each Saturday from 11 am. to 4 p.m, for consulta- tion in disease of the oye, 12-1yr DR. D. B. NEELY, EAR, NOSE AND Throat. Diseases of children. Office over Dominjon Bank, Telephone 1155. Hours 11--1; 5--6; 5-9; Satur- days 2--35; 7--9; or by appointment, 45-6mos DR. A. A. HALLIDAY, 143 COL- lege Street, Toronto, will ha at Jury & Lovell's Drug Store first and third Friday each month from 2.30 to 4 for consultation in diseases of the nose, throat and ear. 134-0 DR. F. T. BRYANS, OF 160 BLOOR Street West, Toronto, will be at his office over Miller's Arcade each Sat- urday, from 1 till 4 p.m. for consul- talion and treatment of diseases of ear, nose and throat only. Legal JOSEPH P. MANGAN, B.A.--BAR- rister, Solicitor, Notary Public, Con- veyancer. Money to loan. Office 143% King St. East, Oshawa. Phone 445. D. A. J, SWANSON--BARRISTER, Solictor, Notary Public, Conveyan- cer, ete, All branches of Civil and Criminal Law. Loans arranged. Of- fice, King St. Chambers (Formerly Oshawa House) King St. West, Osh- awa. Phones, Office 940; Residence 619). GRIERSON & CREIGHTON----BAR- risters, Conveyancers, Notaries Pub- lie, ete. Office over Standard Bank, entrance Simcoe St.; Phone 13. J. F. Grierson, B.A., T. K. Creighton, B. A. G. D. CONANT, B.A.,, L.L.B.--BAR- rister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc. Office (entrance) 7% Simooe St. South, Oshawa. Loans arranged on mortgages, conveyancing and gen- eral practice. Phone 63 H. E. MORPHY, Solicitor, Notary Public, ete. Office 11% Simcoe St. South, Phones---Office 210, Res. 160. IF YOU ARE SICK, TAKE CHIRO- practic Spinal Adjustments and get well. Examination§ free at office. Dr. 8. M, Jones, 86 Simcoe St. North. Surveyors M. M. GIBSON--ONTARIO AND DO- | minion Land Surveyors and Civic En-| gineers, Whitby. Phone 231. Suec- cessor to late W. E. Yarnold, of Port | Perry. 73-1 Undertakers & Embalmers LUKE BURIAL CO. -- FUNERAL directors, embalmers, private am- bulance; morgue and chapel in con- nection; picture framing; 11 Simcoe St. South. Phone 210. Residence 19 Division St. 26-1yr Tire Repairing ALL KINDS OF TIRE REPAIRS AT Ideal Tire Repair Shop, over Oshawa Sales & Service, 99 Simcoe St. South. Tires for sale. Jamieson Bros., Pro- prietors. Phone 1162. FURNITURE STORED -- IN CLEAN dry building. Also storage for cars. Day phome 552j, might 552w. Rit- son Road North. 9-ar | B.A BARRISTER, | Oshawa. | 11-41 | = ---------- TE ial Try -- Articles For Sale FOR SALE--USED CANADA PIANO, oak case, good condition, a bargain at $250, Stalter's Music Store, 23 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa. 45-t1. FOR SALE -- McCLARY'S ELEC- tric range for sale. Nearly new. Ap- ply 215 Athol Street. pad (70.8) SWEET CIDER MADE FROM good sound apples. Any quantity. Phone 908 r 24... (60-11) FOR SALE--BED, DRESSER AND stand, also heater. Apply Box "W" Reformer, (70-¢) | fOR SALE -- D, MOORE'S HOME | im Treasure coal and wood range with hot water front. Apply 39 Greta St., phone 253-W., 71-a COUNTER FOR SALE. PRACTI- cally new, Will sell cheap,. Apply 84 Alice St. 71-¢ FOR SALE--MAJESTIC ELECTRIC heater, only used twice. Cheap. Ap- ply 42 Westmoreland Ave, 71-a FOR SALE--A BERLIN ORGAN, 6 octaves, 13 stops; in first class con- dition, Will sell cheap. Apply at 75 Bond St. E, 71-a FOR SALE--GIRL'S HEAVY BUR- gundy coat, good as new; reason for selling, is too small for owner. Size 1+ to 16 years. Apply to Box 75, Oshawa, Ont, Tl-c Real Estate For Sale LOTS ON PARK ROAD NORTH, just north school, 132 x 150 ft. Name and pick your own frontage, $25 down, balance terms to suit purchas- ers, See sign. For further particu- lars write or phone owner, G, Hurd, 381 Montrose Ave., phone Kenwood 2461-J, Toronto. 70-d LOTS FOR SALE -- GREAT BIG, deep lots on the Oshawa Boulevard. Cheap, with reasonable restrictions, Water, sewer and sidewalk. Apply Russell Perkins, Regent Building, 50 King St. East, Office phone 1232. Residence, 403. 46-1 --= | Sept. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER. 19, Houses! For Sale FOR SALE--EIGHT ROOM HOUSE, 231 King St. East, hot water heat- ing, everything in first class condi- tion, Apply owner, Geo. T. Everitt, 43 Inglewood Drive, Toronto, 68-f HOUSE FOR SALE -- NINE ROOM brick, nice location, central, built re- cently, hot water heating, all mod- ern conveniences, and splendid condi- tion, Applp H. C. Bradley, phone 420, 70-¢ HOUSE FOR SALE. CENTRAL, Apply 110 Church St, 71-¢ Help jp Wanted--Male MAKE MONEY AT HOMB -- $15 TO $60 paid weekly for your spare time writing showcards for us, No can. vassing,, We instruct and supply you with work, Service, 23 Colborne Bldg. Toronto, 83.5, JSMAN WANTED. APPLY BOX Reformer, 71-c "Sale By Auction SAL "RY, West-Angus Showcard 1922 on Questions and Answers Conducted by the Canadian Forestry Association Forestry. Machines Help the Rangers Q. What mechanical equipment is used nowadays by fire rangers in de- tecting and suppressing forest con- flagrations? : A, Lookout towers for detection with hero and there tho services of seaplanes for the same purpose. Fire finding machines. ary used in 4he towers for fixing the location of the blaze. Motor specders and veloel- pedes are widely employed for pa- trolling railway lines, Gasoline pumps are higluy effective or fight- ing incipient fires, Small motor cars and trucks are us2d where roads per- mit, All thes: and other devices are Lelping to check forest fires, What a Planted Foresc Can Dn Q. How large an area would he re- AUCTION SALE ed instructions from Lloyd to sell by Public Auction, at Lot 16, Con, 3--East Whitby, 20th, at 1 p.m. Stock and Implements, For List .| and terms see Sale Bills, Jas. Bishop, 69-c Auctioneer, 'Hardwood For Sale THE UNDERSIGNED HAS RECEIV- Gifford | Wednosday His Farm quired to he planted with timber trees in order (o give enough timber to support a small pulp mill A. The chief forester of the Laur: entide Company estimates that 250 souare miles will yield 100.990 cords of n.pwood in perre:u ty, Tt we nld take just ten times that area, of course, to keep one of our hig news- print paper plants going, Please bear in mind that this refers to a planted forest which should yield 75 HARDWOOD, CUTqy $15 PER CORD; softwood, cut, $13 per cord. Frank Plaza, 361 Ritson Road. 70-Imo Rooms Wanted WANTED-BY OCT, 18T, ROOMS suitable for light housekeeping. Con- venient to General Motors, Reformer, Help Wanted--Female LOTS ON HILCREST A? $59 RUS- sell Perkins, Regent Building, King] East. Phones 1232 « or 403, 59- -tf | $4,700 will buy a lovely 6 room brick | with all conveniences and hard-| wood floors downstairs. Terms | reasonable. | $500 down will buy a 7 room brick | with all modern conveniences, cen- | trally located. $4,200 will buy a 6 room brick with | all conveniences, in North, on easy | terms. We have many more houses at vary- ink prices and in different parts of the town. We write all kinds of insurance, life, fire, accident, sickness, plate | glass, burglary and automobile, { OSHAWA REAL ESTATE SALES | - COMPANY | 61 King St. E., Phone 793. A. C. Lycett, J. C. Young, | Phone 625 Phone 909-J | 71-¢ {$240 WILL BUY LOTS ON JARVIS { St., 40 x 110, sewer and water. | $600 will buy a lot on Athol Street, 40 x 96. ,500 will buy a 7 room brick house on Athol Street, hot water heating. $35,000 will buy 7 room house on Div- | ision Street. Private money to loan from $300 | to $2 500, | | Apply H. SALTER, 2i Hoyal Street. Phone 185. $5 i 71-b To Rent {FOR RENT--FURNISHED OFFICE {in Bradley Building, or will sell fur- {niture and on monthly payments to, {party taking office. Suite 4, Bradley | Bldg. 4, tf HALL TO RENT - ---- HARDWOOD! floor--heat light. Size 27x73. Al- terations to suit tenant. Apply to |H. Engel. 47-1. {WANTED TO RENT---SEVEN OR] |eight roomed house, with conveni- | ences, for end of September. Apply {at once to William Morrison, 167 | Pearl St. 70-¢ {TO LET -- 1 DOUBLE FURNISH- (ed room, suitable for 2 young men. {Phone 957]. N= Board and Rooms BED-SITTING ROOM WANTED by young lady. Box "V." Reformer, (66- f) ROOM "AND BOARD FOR THREE, all conveniences and warm. Ten minutes' walk from Four Cormers. convenient to all factories. Reason- able board. Phone 1205W. 70-b TO LET -- TWO UNFURNISHED rooms. Apply 369 Centre St. la ROOM AND BOARD FOR THREE, all conveniences amd warm. Tea minutes' walk from Four Cormers. Convenient to all factories. Reason- able board. Box "J", Reformer. 7l-a Werk Wanted MAX DESIRES SINGLE ROOM -- Patents RIDOUT AND MAYRBREE, KENT Bldg., Yonge Street, Toronto, Regis- tered Patent Attorneys. Send for free _booklet. 20-21 SHARP & HORNER, 73 King St. West Toronto, Schools, Churches, Public, Buildings, etc. Economy in design, efficiency in administration. 71ar HERBERT C. TRENEER, ATCM., organist and choir master of King St. Methodist Church, is prepared to of accounts ts pre- income tax reports prepared, ENDERED AND OOL- books stat i to Four Corners. Reason Cun rate. Apply Box "M." rg EH LATHING AND SHINGLING. WORK done by job or piece. Estimates given. Apply 13% King St. W. 53-2mo WHAT ABOUT THAT LEAKY Roof, we do all kinds of roof work. ' Slate, Tile, felt and gravel or shing- les. 8 J. Gascoigne, Box 343, Whitby, Ont. Phone 243. 55-4 £f. ) i "General Wants WANTED EARLY APPLES BY | the barrel or otherwise. Phone Rus- ® sel Perkins, 403. Residence 151 Park Ra: NX. _ Saar The inventor of the Ukelele, who | 'has just died at the age of T9, must | have heen successful in keeping his | identity concealed -- Indianapolis Star. | phone Co., Oshawa, {her own home. '5 ,000 FT. NEW INCH LUMBER, ' dressed lumber, lath, all kinds were | the |pfices or freight sheds. 'W. | C. 4 | you attend COOK, GENERAL EXPERIENC-| ed. Good references. Can he well recommended. Apply Box "Z" Re- former, (70-h) WANTED A STENOGRAPHER, Apply Commercial Dept, Bell Tele- 66-1. A CAPABLE WOMAN and a half each week. 5. J. Storie, £8 Drew . 6Ttr DO at former. 71-a | WANTED CAPABLE GIRL, FOR | general housework. Apply 59 Bond St. East. T1-t.1. = Automobiles For Sale | FOR SALE---~FORD TOURING CAR, 31 Bond Street East. Phone 1016-J 69-c WANTED for a day Apply Mrs. St. {WANTED small LAUNDRESS washings and iron Box "8" TO same, , Re Lumber 25 ! thousand, delivered. 4 c Cook, Alice St., E. (65-5) LUMBER --WE HAVE ROUGH AND shingles, sash, and interior trim. F. L. Bee- Whithy Lumber and Wood- Whitby. Ont. Apply doors croft, Yard, 69-tf HAY PRESS FOR SALE forse Power Press, made by national Harvester Company. Capac- ity--one ton per hour. Nearly new and in good order. Enquire of GRIERSON & CREIGHTON, Solicitors, Oshawa, Ont. 70-b C.P.R. Pays Respect To Late R. B. Angus As a mark of respect to the R. B. Angus, the great C. P. R. system was silent and still at 145 o'clock Standard, (Eastern Time) today for two minutes. Exactly at 1.45 o'clock all trains no matter where they were came to a standstill. Clerks and exe cutive heads alike dropped pen and pencil; conferences and activities of interrupted. Oshawa, same as every other city and town which boasted of an employe of the C. P. R, was affected. No work of any kind was done in the local The edict 0 this effegt was issued this morning by R. McInnes, vice-president of the PR Inter- late After a Palm Beach suit is cleaned a few times, the owner has no room . Flint to criticise short dresses. Journal. "EVERYGIRLY Theatregoers, take hoed? | sibility rests on your shoulders when the theatre - you who think you go merely to be eatertain- lod. Bat after listening to what Hudy Davis, who has one of the | principal paris in "Everygirl™ te say on the subject there will be imo excuse for you not "to be on the | job." "Do you know what has struck me most strongly since I have been on the stage " she asked, and when told that a mere interviewer never {mows anything, she smilingly re- plied: "The part the andience plays DODDS KIDNEY Box *U", | 70-¢ | - aroused Little! do vou know what a great respon- | has! | cords an acre, whereas the natural Driftwood on Our Northern Shores Q. I understand from explorers that enormous masses of logs are found at the mouth of the Mackon- zie River, Where does this material come from? A. The Geological Survey, Ottawa, reports that the "derelict' logs mass- ed dt times at the mouht of rivers flowing into the Arctic have heen car- ried all the way from Siberia, Nor- way and the St, Lawrence, Forest Fires and the Newspapers Q. As a newspaper editor, I have always maintained that the daily and weekly press are paying the bills for forest fires. 1 refer, of course, to the destruction of paper- making woods, spruce and balsam, A. Your statement is not exagger- ated, Spruce and balsam are the raw materials of newsprint paper. Dear wood automatically follows paper mills are finding today, When forest fires, as the United States Ontario loses 700,000 acres of tim- herlands by fire in a single season, and Quebec another 600,000 acres, it is not difficult to understand that the price of depletion must he paid by the ultimate consumer of wood | products, price of hewsprint paper and at the! forest in Kastern Canada now yields only from four to ten cords an acre. | | same time allow forest fires the right | of way. When the "sgmething which could {never happen," 'hecame a law by pop- {ular vote away back in 1916, and the flowing howl ceased to flow, the dead mourners slowly awoke to the faet that not only had their sole comfort {passed out, but that several of the |old customs and institutions had gone by the board as well, Many of these were marked as small losses, but one gorely missed is the dead- and-gone street corner quarette, Just how many hundreds of peo- ple stopped with an amused smile on their faces as they watched four bandsmen perform on their instru- ments at the Four Corners during' the Firemen's demonstration here, it would be impossible to estimate, hut { that the midnight concert provided by these musical visitors to Oshawa more than passing interest goes without saying when one con- siders happy reminscences of bhy- gone days that were brought forward that night in the minds of not a few Oshawa people, When *it" could be had for much less than ten dollars a quart, every | Saturday night saw groups of tipsy ¥ouths gather beneath the light of the corner and warble maudlin senti- ments far into the night, in' a voice known as the whisky tenor. Where Without the are those songsters now? spirit which once bound them with a common tie, they remain peacefully at home. listening in on the radio or indulg- ing in some like amusement Of course when the "singers pass- | ed their songs went with them Old favorites that looked as if they would live forever are now burie d in the dust of recollection. "My Adeline." 'once sung wherever men | gathered is heard no more. "Casey | Jones," a song that was in popular favor over a score of years,» has {dropped out. | gia" CORNER CHORISTERS AND FAMILIAR SONGS PASSED AWAY WHEN THE | FLOWING BOWL CEASED TO FLOW | joke, God also departed. "Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here!" is putting up a game scrap, but it cannot he kept alive on grape juice. It was a song of a stronger age than ours. "There's a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea," a fine old post prohibition ditty, has degenerated, and with modifications is used as a setting for a foothall vell by nearly every fresn water col- lege on the continent, It is only when the real old-timers get together that the almost-forgot- ten tunes are revived. Then the same spirit and pep that they had returns and the sweet strains of "Oh, Wher Oh, Where Is My Little Dog Gone," "For It's Always Fair Weather When Good Fellows Get Together," "If I Die Don't Bury Me At All," and "The Bulldog," are brought back to be sung on these rare occasions. And what has happened to the in- struments that supplied the accom- paniments for the street corner chor- isters? The mouth organ, once heard in every corner of the city, sgems to have fallen into disuse. There are plenty of them on the market, but the sale has dropped off. The concertina and accordion, once 80 popular, are now threatened with extinction. Even the old fiddle that hung in every barber shop has The old tunes played by these instruments are still with us in syncopated form, but "Way Down in Dixie," "Turkey the Straw," "Marching Through Geor- and others composed in B.P. (before prohibition) were not made to be interpreted on the implements of jazz. No saxophone could give them with half the homely feeling imbued by the wheezy accordeon. Will the old songs ever be popu- lar again, and will the street corner quartette ever come back? As Poe's raven was wont to remark, when the occasion demanded, "Nevermore!™ in in a pe rformar ance how much the es audience a "show sends that - it is really ; amaz- success of a per- rests with them. If the is cold and sits back with me" air, it immediately atmosphere across the foot-lights, and before they know it, the performers have a feeling that no matter how hard they work, the ir | efforts will neither be appreciated | nor liked. Applause means more to | an actor than anyone realizes. | "Then evening audiences are very | {different from those at a matinee. | Women predominate at {and their sense of humor is eatirvely difierent from men's. Men subtler bits of comedy than women, {and are more liable to laugh audibly | - women seem to fear to do that. Then, too, men are easier to please {than wowen." THE UNLOYVED NT Vanity in a womam is interesting only when it is associated with in- telligemce, for mere beauty has some- thing in common with the shop win- dow. But vanity in a wife or hus- ! band is quite another matter. Flor- ence Edna May. the authoress of "The Unloved Wife," a new play | which comes to the New Martin Theatre, Friday Sept., 22 with ma- (timee for ladies, has written a daring | play. one which covers every phase lof married life. ! The difficulty of sécuring swit- able hushands or wives is in the mna- {ture of a lottery. Yet you should {know what is best,'and in "The Un- loved Wife" you will find an angle to life you little dreamed could exist. The production comes here with an admirable cast. The evening performances are for everybody over the age of sixteen. ORIGIN OF HAWANAX MUSIC it has been remarked among play- goers that "The Bind of Paradise™ has been responsible for the imtro- duction of Hawaiian music in the United States, and that the singing of "Aloha song was first in the {Tully play, but this is not correct. | The "Aloha Oe", the most popu- lar of Hawaiian numbers, was pub- | licly sung for the first time om the | stage back in October. 1906. when | Luders and Pixier produced "The | Grand Mogul" a musical comedy. | Lmders at first received credit for {the melody, but later admitted that {he adapted it from a Hawaiian song. The number was sung by a chorus | quartette, and failed to make an im- | pression. in 1919, Richard Walton yi % grasp | went to the Hawaiian Islands, where he wrote "The Bird of Paradise." To impart atmosphere to his effort Tully gave it a musical setting, in- terpolating the "Aloha" song and other native melodies, and also en- listing the services five ukelele players all with. good voices. These | features are &till prevalent in the iplay. The "Bird of Paradise" comes to the Martin Theatre next Monday of PAGE SEVEN Hold a Mission at (Continued from page 1) alike, It is the only spirit which makes for happiness here as well as hereafter." Education Value The knowledge of God was the most important part of all education, Any gystem of education which left it out was necessarily incomplete, Father MacMahon continued, One who knew God even. though he could not sign his name, knew more than a univer- sity professor who did not Know God, The love of God necessarily implies the love of his neighbors, his enemies and while it was permissible to wage a just war against one's enemy, it was net permitted to hate him, To gerve God meant to keep His law. The ten commandments were not impos- sible of observance, They bind all a- like, nations as well as individuals and neither could escape the penalty of violation, Nations were always pun- ished either here or hereafter, Monday evening Father MacMahon gpoke on "Sin" which he described as the one obstacle to man's salvation, All evil was merely an allegation of the absence of some good, The greater good of which we are deprived, the greater the evil. "Sin deprived us of God--tle All-Good--and the only Good, Therefore sin is not only the greatest possible evil but the only real We cannot hold down the | evil, Other things, the speaker declar- ed, such as poverty, disease, suffering [are not necessarily evils at all, They may be and often are very great bless. ings. Sin was never a blessing. There- (fore nothing could ever justify us, {hence the fallacy of the doctrine which !some have preached that "To catch unethical "persons, one may use un- ethical means and utterly unchristian- ize doctrine," he stated, | Dwelling on the distorted views of !sin, Father MacMahon stated that for some it was a trifle and for others a It was not, he declared, hecause hurled the angels from heaven EECHAM'S PILLS Sick Headaches Test Eyes IT IS DONE PROPERLY } JURY & LOVELL, Ltd. { Phone 28 Phone "WE ARE HERE TO SERVE 1101 § | TWO IN FAMILY ARE RESTORED BY TANLAC One of the outstanding features of Tanlac is that very often several mem- bers of the same family are restored to health by it. Thousands of such cases are on record and it is now the family medicine in countless homes throughout the U8, Canada, Mexico and Cuba, Mr, Emile Faucher, of 498 Plessis St, Montreal, P,Q, says: "As soon as my wife saw how Tan- lac was restoring my health she hegan taking it, too, and now both of us are feeling fine, Indigestion had such a tight hold on me I didn't expect to ever get rid of it, . "Now I am in the pink of condition and couldn't ask to feel better, "My wife had been suffering from stomach and liver trouble and consti- pation, 'and at times her hands would get numb and cold and swell up aw- fully. But now she is in as good health as she ever was." There is not a single portion of the body that is not benefitted by the help- ful action of Tanlac, By enabling the stomach and other vital organs to per- form their functions properly,. the whole system is nourished, purified and strengthened, Get a bottle today at any good druggist, to hell for a single sin, and the sin of our first parents was the remote but real cause of all the suffering, trouble and misery in the world to-day. Oth- ers regarded the drinking of a glass of beer as a deadly sin but they think nothing as such adominations as rac. fal suicide, abortion, ete, Father MacMahon will take for his subject this evening "Confession." ROMPTNESS is We that valuable to our patrons. want work done quickly a virtue, time When cleaning and effec- You will realize is you your. 'ary tively bring it to us. save time and money. Satis- faction is guaranteed. "A trial will convince you™ PARKER'S REPAIRERS Dyers 38 Simcoe St. N. Cleaners Phone 788 §2.600 buys a 6 room house new furnace, large lot 1st October, large lot to rent near four coruc lease Low rent. have hes Store We List the We have FOR SALE ni Cedar Dale Terms $700 down, $4.500 buys 7 room brick bungalow, Terms arranged. ATS. building lot your property with us, if your prieyq is right, houses of General Real Estate Phone 1207 or 651 all newly decorated, balance easy. nearly completed, ready by This is a splendid site. Can in Oshawa. Prices are right. we can sell it. all sizes. 113; Simcoe St. NN. Tla matinees, | | | 1 | | | | i all dainty things. for wasking delicate things aud giving them back the fresh beauty they had when new. Whe LIX walory are male ws wiry thinesby our exclusive phos cess--that they dissolve instantly and in hot water. This makes a wonderful, bubbly safe Puss ic i pe Buin LUX is sold only iu sealed packets--Dust-proof. II i

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