Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 22 Apr 1915, p. 7

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â- f» ') *â-  i : ^ PERFECTION ^u applies to our Poultry Fencing Just right It keeps your chickens ot homeâ€" nnrt their enemies out. Each intersection securely lockedâ€" the kiud that stays "put. Peerless Poultry Fence imJs of tli« boat Cipma Hesrth itMl fears wlra â€" tooi ^<EafelB^i:9«.'>ISMl^-:i ^•iT.i-^r i&fi ^IBejIPW.i -1 t »ad 1 U uimIs of tli« boat Cipma Hesrth itMl fears wlra â€" toofh. clMtl 1 sad spriofrâ€" ftod will not mftp <t brruk ander auddvu ahocki orq \ fttmoaphsrlc ch&ngiia. Our moth*d <it galvanizJD; provtaU rust i n"t flftlo. poul or chip otf The JoinU kro securely bold with th^ "I'eerlusi Lock," wlili-li will wttbstaud kH suddaii rhocks i ^ atnilrt*, yot Peorlesa Pnultry Feoce can b« crortad on tlia uioit I: L and uiioTi^n (round wlttkout backliog, snnppltif or kiriklni. Thahsftvy^ â- 9IIM pr«r«nt Hcslni: uii r*<]uira oalf ftt~>ut btlf u) 111U17 p^)i *â-  cUm*^ o«l*a build ParukniOniuDtntU Fu>cla< wi4|gMM. ^'rllafur »t^0C. AGESTTS ' NE.KULT KVBnrWHKRlL UVt AGENTa WANTKI) IX UNAH81GS£D TERIIITORT. ' THE BAaffELIr-a OllB WIHK VEM'K TO.. Ltd., lTUBlpe». Uâ€"^ H^mUton, 1 THE FATE^F AZUMA; Or, The South African Millionaire. CH.iPTEB YI. And it was wonderful how her nesY rola became her. â- It really seeme to be bringinB me luck," cshe told herself, forgetting that -when a woman h«« reached the point •when lihe begins to eee luck coming from an abnormal mood, and a terrible reeig- nation of all ambition, she has reached one of the most dangeroufi crose-roade of liife. She had made a ret«>!Te, and the rcsoWe had brought a look of calm con- tent to her fea.lure«, which hadn't been there of late. "Judith Boach is looking quite beauti- ful this year " said the women who were not jealous of Iwr. And Judith Eoach herself was aware that she had never been so beautiful. Her one fear hitherto, had been of a sort of epanoui»jement." which would mike her look like a married wo- man,â€" giv.> her ;i ivay. Now. lately, some- thing which she nad paid no heed to, had made her thinn^-r and more ethereal-look- ing, and her uovemants grew more •wil- lowy, in keeping' with It. Her resolve was never to do anything noble again. If a man proposed, and she always had t'wo or three offers every reason, or could have if she would, she would accept the meet eligiibl-?. and say nothing. After all, why should the Moman be to much better than the man? Almost any woman was good enough for the men one met. Only one had seemed to her too good for such a fate, and he had passed out of her life, slammed the door on her in Piccadilly, and, it seemed to her, ffone down some distant corridor and slammed another. Be had written her a very nice letter, Celling her that he was very sorry for her, that it was bard enough for her without his telling her what a blow it was for him, that he could never ceaee to love her, and that he hoped she would grow happier as time went on, that he thought it very plucky and brave of her to tell him. But ther« was no mention of rewarding her for her vaJor. He had lov- ed her eho was sure of that, but not enough. Would anyone ever love her enough, she wondered, while she forgot to cultivate the qualities of the heart which alono could have made her needful atbove all others to some man. The end of the letter made her give a little wicked laugh. "You won't mind my saying as we have been stu-h friends, that I can't help think- ing that you would be far happier abroad or living quietly in the country. You are «o ibeautiful that pertuipti you are laying up for youreeU a needlel^s repetition of the pain you suffered yesterday. Men are sure to *all in love with you. and 't isn't quite fair, don't you think? I know you will take this as I mean it, from a heartfelt desire that you should not suf- CORRDGATED IRON Salvanizwly Rust Proof Mad* from very finest sheetsy absolutely free from defects. Eaoh shaat Is pressed, not rolled, oorrugatlons thersfor* fH aooupatoly without wasta. Any dosirsd slz« or gauga, •tralght or ourvod. LOW PRICESâ€" PROMPT SHIPMENT Metallic Roofing Co., LIMITir Manufacturers TORONTO & WINNIPEG 47) PRESIDENT SUSPENDER NONESO-EASY MftDF IN tV\N/\DA Choose which Grain you like best for your white Sugar and buy St. Lawrence Pure Cane Granulated white, ia originat ba<«â€" Fin* train, medium or coarte. Eaoh the choicest sugar. i4jik your Crocar. ' 8T. LAWRENCE SUGAt REnNERIES, LIMiTED MONTKEAL. :i6-io.ij fer more than is necessary." He s'gned himself "Yours sincerely." Yes, he was sincere. She laughed, then suddenly she grew grave. "He is a dear boy, 'but he i« a fool." -he had murmured at Aral, then: "What on earth does he take m© for, why doesn't he suggest some iniititution •where they wear apronu and do needlework, like those one iiends kitchenmaids to? Poor dear boy, how young he is. " Then an awful thought came over her. In his simple way he had exipreseed the thought of every man. It wasn't playing fair. It was not possible that eho should ever marry, ever, and she belonged to a tet in which it was the primary condition that one should marry as soon as possibleâ€" as well as pos**iblc. and Judith had been out over four years. Her mother would 1».b forgive her not marrying than ahe would the other epi- sode. She had forgiven the other condi- tionally on its not being found out, but for nothing on earth would her mother stand her being an old maid, and with her looks, with her moneyâ€"which while It was not much, was enoughâ€" with her position, why. of course, she must marry. Yet the thought pierced, wa«i it possible that the purity of a dairymaid was a more valuable possession than wealth and beauty and good breeding? It seemed so. And as she lore up Uuberl Oretshams let- ter uhe regained her cynical mood. Y'es. apparently in order to marry that won- derful creatureâ€" man. especially the Lon- don young man. who comes straight per- haps from the arms of his mistress, or, more likely still, from the armu of some other man's wife, it seemed necessary to be extraordinary virtuoas, not to have had a malheur, as Louise would have called it. How funny, how hugely funny men's ideas were. Sometimes Lady Judith wondered if Loui-se knew. She scmctimt's thought she did. because she was I'reiich. One always has an idea that French women have a sort of second sight on the subject of morality, and like everyone else Lady Ju- dith had the fancy that, because a town is far away, everyone in it meets and knows tUe other. But ;udith Boach had no intention of guin»; to live in the country, or of "Coiffer Sainte Catherine." On the contrary, she intended to make a very good marr-age, and to keep silent in the future, and if it came outâ€"why, no man on earth would publish abroad that his wife had been a malheur." that he had been taken in. That was -/hat she ought to have done with Sir Hubert. How stupidly dense she had been. She did not even remember that she had felt it would be quite im- possible to marry him without telling him. because she had loved him. She didn't lovo him any more, he was too con- vent ior.al, too puritanic, she didn't believe they would ever have got on well together even if he had forgiven. Forgivenâ€" now and then when she thought of all she had aulTered. still liufTered sometimes, she asked herself how any man would dare use tho word for- The scenes which occurred periodically with her mother, once a fortnight, some- times more frequently, were in themselves, it seemed to her ati expiation, and she was quite aware that, for the next few days, she would be exposed to those, fcnd she made up her mind to them, just as a periioii who goes out to sea w prepared for rough weather. They had been too busy, these two women, with their occupation of pleasure, which has bwome a sort of in- dustry in London, in which there is more sweating than in a factory, more strenu- ous hours, and, if better food, very inade- quate sanitation, to find time to reproach or to pai-ry questions. They were like two adversaries, who know that they must tight a duel, but who have proclaimed a tacit truce till they shall have liberty to fight at peace. Already her mother was preparing her arguments, the while Lady Judith was laying up a store of retorts with which to meet them. She had a few which she always kept in store for the hour of crisis, the final, the most telling of them all, though perhaps tho most cruel was when she said at times: "It is all very well to blame me, hut yon shouldn't have allowed me to go and stay at the Lorraines alone, you knew what they were. I didn't. " It would not have convinced Judith if, she had been told that her mother bad 1 been glad to get rid of her anywhere, that because their dispositions were so un- congenial she had jumped at tho idea of Judith going awivy without her for a few days, under the chaperonoge of Lady Bill Fenwick, which, as someone said, was like tying one's daughter to a bal- loon. Even nQW, n^twithitanding all that had happened. Lady Olaucourt remem- bered, with a sigh of satiwtaction, what a very pleasant week she had had while Judith wa« away. She never allowed her memory to dwell on how the girl looked and behaved when she came back. She had sent her to Paris, eoi-dis.int to study art, with quite the right per<ion, a Muda-me Dufour, who had once been a sort of companion governess of Judith's, :iad who. strange to stay, adored her; a, really nice -woman, called old. probably, out of sympathy for her clothes, but who had a distinct personality, which belongs to tho women who will never be old, if they have also never 1-een quite young. Ma- dame Dufoui- re illy came of quite good parentage, and was highly recommended by a marquise of the Olaucourt'ii ac- quaintance. In the days when Judith -w.is quite a. child, she had been supposed not to speak Knglish, now she alwa.vs torgot to speak French, and made English ^em as if she were still doing so. Tho only mistake Madame Dufour made was that she enjoyed the whole mystery of it all so much, that she forgot to be shocked enough. Alter a long exi>ericiKe of thi> haute noblcfse on 'both sides of tho chan- nel, she had como to look upon these things ae part of the tax grandeur pays to passion, and she had carried out the onl.v half-suggeetcd schemes of Lady Glaii- court with an astuteness which had made the trip to Paris seem aliuovit a ple«>Burc trip. "Cette pauvrc enfant" had stifferod a great deal lees mental agony bccau«e of Madame Dufour, and had never complete- ly realised the enormity ot it all, until she had fallen in love with Huihort (rrcs- ham. Now it Boemed, even to hersc-H, iii- oouceivaiblo how she had been able to en- joy his courtfhij), how it wn« she had not iforeaeen the end, or at least, taken precjiutione tor the future. Instead she had floated on the t.ido with a renewed girlishuess which "vvas sincere, notwith- Btflnding that, strictly speaking, her girl- hood waa over; and now when two years had gone by, she grew gradually to think of that girl, of the whole event ot tho trip to Paris, ol nil that went before, and all that went afterivnrdB, and of that mo ment of tcrriiblo clutching at her heart, ae if it had haDpened to suuieono elflc. It had been chai«cteri»l ic of her whe.i erhe returned, that she had eaid to her mother: "If you ever reproach mo with it, I shall leave the hon-jc." It had been her way at chtvking once for ;Uw;iy;4 the reproa<-hes. the recrimina- tions, which t-he knew would make l.fc n- tolerable. She h:id confided Imr dri'Jd of this to Madame Dulour. who could well believe that Lady OLaiicouit who was "une femme de glace, " snggcjied th;it .Tudith shnuld aflk her very nicelyâ€" "tre« gentiUment"â€" never to mention the »\>Ai- ject. And Judith'ii interpretation *»f "tres gentillement 'â€" had been to threaten her mother. Perhaps, after all, it had been the best wtiy. Nevertheless, occasion- ally, her mother forgot her vow, made at the moment of the threats, and brought ti<p the subject; and always there was a scene in which Judith threatened to make a clean breast of it to her father and to dii^itppear. It was fear of her husband knowing, which always made Lady Glaucourt the first to make it up, to entreat her not to go away, promising always not to refer to the subject ag:iin. .\a a matter of fact Lady Glaucourt didn't believe that Judith would tell her father. They were both aware that while they belonged to him. and he providetl them with money and every luxury, and even slept under the same roof, that they did not lead the same life at all. He was a quiet man, much given to iiport and politics, and supremely unconscious that they were in any way different to what he w;inted them to be. He had known when he married her tJiat his future wife was rather cold, and had taken her cold- ness for reserve aud good form. Now that he was sure that it was coldne;-s, he sui)- posed that her daughter took after her. Hi^ wife's worldliness he attributed to â- M the natura.l consequence of thei^position and the reason that his daughtfr hadn't yet married, he put down to the fact that lihe was se extremely good-looking, that she considered thai there w;is plenty of time, and that she could pick and chooee. He perfe<tly agreed with her. He had one son in the array, who was very like himself, and who st.iyed away from homo as -much as possible. He was much more intelligent than his father, and had early found out that his mother, though devot- ed to him when he waa at home, w;is not fast, but very worldly; he had also found out. he hardly knew how. that Judith waa not worldly, but very fastâ€" i-onstitu- tionally faijt. She was so very beautiful that, in a so- ciety which is always seeking something, without quite l^owing what, but certain that it hasn't got it, it was perhaps only to be expected thai if she had not been fast, she would at least have been fond of flirtation. She had discovered at an early age that she was quite one of the most beautiful women in London, and of one uf those particular types which at tract men. She was most exquisitely formed. Lady Glaucourt came of a family of which all the membera were good-looking. There are familieia like that in England, of which the very name evokes grace, and of which the distant relatives, even, seem to share the family di-tinction of good looks: in which a plain daughter or an ordinary-looking son is a phenomenon which is talked about. And she looked good, as nearly all beauties do, with something of the ex- pression of a Madonna, a Madonna with "espiegleric." like those painted by the modern great painters, something like all ot them; a little the look of Bodcnhau- sen's Madonna, while her hair grew low in a natural wave like Sichels, and the expression of the eyes reminded one of Defregger's. And later, without its being perceptible, except to those who knew her well, it had intensified, bringing a look of pain which, as the years went by. made her look more like the Uadonuu of Pari- siaui. Y^es. at moments when she remembered, that was her expression. Her coloring was exquisite, and her height, a little above the medium •vas nit enough to prevent the exquisite graco of her move- ments. .\n ideal woman outwardly, and the delight of dre.ssmakere. photograph- ers, artists, with just enough conscioiw- nese of it to make her appear to be be- stowing a sight of herself upon the public, and not enough to make one think her conceited. Great beauties are rarely con- ceited. In the evening a little crowd would assemble at the door to see her go out to parties and balls, and it had never been known that tho was without a part- ner at a dance. All she required, someone had said. In order to become a professional beauty, was to marry. Y'es. ».uch beauty as hers nei'de<l an impresario. But hitherto she had not quite hit it off with an.yoiie ex- cept Sir Hubert Grcwham. although she had had offers which had not been to her taste. S<Mne men, who admired her New P'.-ld Husbi»ndr,y Building Ontario AoBicvtTDaAi. Colukx. (ivEirii. ^Thesc Buildings) are Painted with iMABTIIfSENOURl PAINT fet* I'i ?.-,fi' bTTs Barns at the Ontamo AoricvltukalCoueoc^ QvELftt. FARMERS Consider Purity in Paint in Preference to Price. You wouldn't pay die regular price for Sugar that snalyzed 10% of sand. You wouldn't pay "all wool" pri-;c;, for cotton-and-wool clothing Why should you P113 ^ our good money for impure Paint, when- you can get MARTIN -SENOUR "100% PURE" PAINT We guarantee Martin-Senour "100% Pure" Paint (except a few dark shades that cannot be prepared from pure Lead and Zinc alone) to be 100',o pure White Lead, pure Oxide of Zinc, pure Linseed Oil, pure Colors and Turpentine Dryer ; and to be entirely free from adulteration or substitution ; and sold subject to chemical analysis. Every experienced Painter knows that the above formula (s right. It is the standard of the paint world. You get absolute puritv â€" extreme fineness â€" uniform qualityâ€" when you insist on 100% Pure" Paint. SENOUR'S FLOOR PAINT The old reliablL*. RED SCHOOL HOUSE PAINT l\)r the bcrn uid siieds MARTIN-SENOUR WAGON and IMPLEMENT PAINT for wmgons. tools, elc. We'll lend you. free. "Farmcr't Color Set** aod our fine book, *"rown and Couairy Homeit", ii you write for the name of our acaresc deaicr-a^eat* ADDRESS ALL ENQUIRIES TO * ^Ae MARTIN-SENOUR Go. LIMITED. 655 Drolet Stri-et, Montreau inenwlv would yet have been afraid to ask her to marry them. One amusing old man hud said: "Upon my word, she's too pretty for a wife. .She ought to be placed in a shrine 90 that everybody could come and see her." -Vnd till the "malheur" she had led a iia^py life, because of the constant ad- ulation which was offered her every morn- ing anew, like dow. Kvon the maid de- lighted in running tho ribbons in her un- derlinen. Till the malheur. she had been happ.v. even if her happincHt wa-i not based on those toundatiofis which seem to hold n them «ome of the allributes of immortal- ity. To be young, to be beautiful, to be well-off, and abor* nH, '<> be well-dressed, to ii;ive a couple of horses lo bunt with, and enough intelligence to enjoy the mod- ern twaddle which is written, whiU more conUl any girl desire? But of late, without being aware of it. she was profoundly unhappy, with an un- ha,ppiness which she felt instinctively would always be hers, even if it turned from poignancy and diecontent to an ac- quiescent, stultified deepair. She was much sadder now than she had ever been, even at the time of the â- mal- heur," sadder, not only Ris-uuse she had been oa near loving as she probably ever could be, when she had captivated Hir Hubert liretiham, but 'because she had realized that he h.id voiced mas<ulino opinion everywhere, and that hencefor- ward either she would have to forego mar- riage altogether, a prospect which did not for a moment find, any response on her part, or live a life of de<'eit. The latter did not dismay her. It was what all men did, and it didn t seem to affect their happineee at all. After all her pnist wa.s he£ own. and this strange code of men, that women were to be everything they were not incensed her. By what right did they enforce it» Argu- ing with, herself in a way which, if it only im- I gave partial and temporary 3atiefa<nion yet be<-au«e it had the counterfeit of sanity brought a little comfort, she told herself that surely it was far better for such H thing to happen before her mar- riage, and to be faithful afterwards. When she thought of the young married women she knew, and whose swiety she instinctively frequentiKl more than that of girl-s, it seemed to her that there could be no possible doubt of that. It would be like a sort of feminine sowing of oats, and, like a. frivolous man, :<lie would be all tho more likely to settle down into domotiticity. But there were other moments, those realistic, terrible moments, when she awoke in the night, or was ill. when she saw things as they were, and had \j<y <'Oii- \ fe«s to herself that it would be very dif- : flcult for her to find a hunband if any- j thing ever leaked out. .\nd who could tell that it wouldn't. Dear old Madame Dufour. she was safe enough, and the man himself, she did not think he had ever spoken, and yet. in these days, how men do t.alk of their uuccesses. boast of tliem. and often invent them. Shu had never, either, felt quite sure, in bewilderment, that she had not heard a door open fur- ther down. When she thought o( this something scemt-d to creep from her very ti>et to the root^ of her hair, -.omi'thing that was more than shame of the fact, the shame of whether anyone, anyonn knew the Htory. which wan much worse than the shame of it. If it leaked out. what would her chances be? One of a very few. and thtjse fe-w not pleasing, to marry some old man fur his UKiney and iwsition, who wa* luken with her beauty enough to take pity on her. or who didn't believe what he had heard, wliom she could fawinato and magnetixe into acquiescence, or uome man of infer- ior position, who wanted to gel on in s<)- cietv, and whom she would despise, while ho despismi her. Or. worst of uU the carrying out of her mother'-* suggestion, that she should marry the man, the cause of all the trouble, the man she hat^'d and loathed, and who had neither wealth nor leaked out any particular position, except that of squire of dames and buffoon to society. The idea she had fostered now for so many months, precluded the hope that some man would fall so desperately n love witli her that he would not care. She had hojied that Sir Hubert (]r»iham would Ik- that map. Now she had grown ("on- ^iderably less confident of her power. -Vnd as these thoughts revolved again and again, like a squirrel in its cage, .-he aisked herself whether it would ever be po.sible to feel like a girl ugaip. to go ba<-k to where she had started from, and t<i so forget as to bewitch and enchant by inno.-eiu'e? Often and often she had wondered whe- ther it hud made any difference in her manner, her looks, even in the thing;- •he said? Sometimes she fancied so, but her mother caid not. If Judith begun thinking that, every- thing would come to an end. and every- thing, in this case, meant a brilliant marriage. As the season progressed, L.<idy Glau court grew feverishly anxious. Of course there were quantities of men hanging ahout .ludith. but no <-,nc better than Lady Glaucourt knew that that meant no- thing. Now and then she asked herself, .ludith did, whether anything had ever iTo be continued.) • It isn't the upper dog that howls for the peaxiemalcer. WORMS â- Wormy.' that's what s the matter of em. Stomaoh and inttsMnal worms. Nearly aa bad as distemper. Co«t you too much to feed em. Look bad- are bad. D<Mi't physic em to death. Spohn'S Cure will nwnove the worms, improve the appetite, and tone am U|i aJl round, and don't "phyaio. " .\ots on glandi and blood. Full direction* wiitih e.aoh boWJe. and sold by all druggiots. 8P0HN MEDICAL CO., Chemists. Coshap, Ind., U.S.A PAGE FENCES AND GATES WEAR BEST- -SOLQ DIRECT PAGE HEAVY FENCE No. of Stays- bare. Height, inches apart Spacing of horiiontaU Price $0.24 Angle Steal Poets, 7 ' Set Toole $8.00 25 I be. Staplee, 0.80 i. 7, 81/,, 9. 9 ^.. $0.24 5i/i8. 7, 7, yi^, 8 ^6 2, 6! 2. 73/2, 9. 10, 10 26; 6, «.li, 9, 6, «, 6 29 6, 6, 6, «, 8, e. d 31 4, 5, y/i. 7, S'i, i,9 ., 30 4, 8, 5! 2, 7, 8(2. 9, 9 SS, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 8 34 - 6, 6, 6, 6. 6, 6, 6, 6 3S 4, 4, 5, 51/2, 7, 81/2, 9, 9 34 I 4, 4, 6, 61, 2. 7. 81/2, 9, 9 36 1 3, 3, 3, 4, 5' 2, 7, 7, 71/2, 8 . . .38 3, 3, 3. 4, 51-2, 7, 7, 71-2. 8 . . .41 3, 3. 3, 4, 51 ,.7, 81 '2, 9, 9 . . .38 3,3,3,3,4,512.7,812,9,9. .41 SPECIAL POULTRY FEf^CE. Not painted. No. 9 top and bottom. Balance No. 13. Uprights 8 inches apart 20-Bar 60-inch 51c per rod 18-Bar 48-inch 46c per rod PAGE RAILROAD GATE 3 ft. ..$2.30 12 ft. . . 4.35 13 ft. .. 4,80 14 ft . . 4.85 ! 4 Ins. X 11/2 X li/j Ins. . . 0,81 Qoiled Wire (100 Ibe.) . 2.60 Brnce Wire (26 Ibe.) 75 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liliiillllllillttHI fiHiitiiiiiiiinui PAGE LAWN FENCE. Not Height Painted Painted 12 Inch 6 c. 18 " 30 " . , 36 " , 42 " , 48 " . PAGE POULTRY NETTING. 150 feet. 24 Inch ..$2.3^per roll 36 48 60 72 IVr/t* Tor trtio copy ofthm big eataloafd Hating ISO tlftt»i'»nt numbarm of Farm and Latun F»nc» antt Oatas, am we// am hun- di'mau of ummTut Farm and Homm art/ott* at wholmaale pr/oes. . . 3,00 " " . . 4.00 " " .. 4.26 " " . . 5,60 " " PAGE STANDARD GATE. HBIOiHT â- Width 36 Inch 43 Inch 48 luch 3 feet $1.90 $2,10 $2.30 r/i •' 2,10 2,3C 2.S8 4 " 2.56 2,80 3 " s 3.00 3,20 " .... 3.60 8 " 4.10 4.35 10 " 4.80 5,00 5.26 11 " 5.p6 12 " 8.55 5,70 13 " 5.05 14 " ., 6.18 These prices for Old Ontario only- Prices for New Ontario, Quebec, Mari- time and West on request. Here are the lowest prices on the best- wearing Fence and Gates. More PAGE Fence and Gates are sold than any other single brand. So our manufacturing coa^ must be low. PAGE Fence and Gates are sold DIRECT from factory to farm (freight paid.) So our selling cost must be low. PAGE Fence and Gates are made of the ver.v best materials â€" by the pioneer fence- makers â€" with 23 years' experience in building fine fence. Every part of every PAGE Fence and Gate is made full size. Even our Farm Fence locks are all No. 9 wire. So that PAGE Fence and Gates last a lifetime. For these reasons PAGE FBNCI!] and GATES are the BEST and THEAPEST to tigo. Mai! your order, with cash, deque, bank draft. Postal or express order, to die nearest PAGK BRANCH. Get immediate shipment front near- by stocksâ€" freight paid on SI') or over. Page Wire Fence CGinpaiiy Limited 1 I I DEPT. W. West 1137 Kir« «» TORONTO MS Notre Dame St. West ivtONTRKAL SI CIturoh Sti'Ml WALKeriVILLE 39 Oook Ji, ST. JOHN. »i.B,

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