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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 15 Apr 1915, p. 7

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m O $1 1 es P i gs El il I Some of the prettiest new dress garnitures are so simple that any girl who can use a needle can make them and save money. As a ■ beginner beginner .one might try her hand at the ndjtel harness < of black velvet ribbon r As experience is . gained, ihemaay go on to something more elaborate in these ddinty accessories. accessories. • For harness suspenders, two strips of velvet ribbon three inches wide, and long enough to go from the waist line back to the same point front, are required, measuring measuring it on the wearer. The ends are caught down to a sash of the velvet of the same width as the ^suspenders, ^suspenders, loops and ends falling in the back. This is the foundation for a trellis work of narrower velvet set in the front from bust to belt, and, as its success depends upon the accuracy accuracy of arranging this network, the better plan is to put the skeleton skeleton on a bust form and then very carefully pin in the strips interlacing interlacing very evenly the entire length. Plenty of pins should be used, and firm stitches must be substituted for them upon their removal. This kind of bodice is most effective worn over a white or a colored frock in a dainty shade. It is especially practical for a matinee, freshening tfp. a passée waist wonderfully. Black velvet is usually chosen because because it can be worn over a blouse of any tone, but there is the suggestion suggestion of matching the velvet to the skirt worn, setting the - garniture garniture over a white waist. This addition addition would be a great improvement to the toilette. A second dress decoration is very pretty, for a summer day or an evening evening frock. In fact, the latter, if showing signs of shabbiness, will be quite restored by trimming as follows : . Cut soft silk'or satin on the bias about two arid a half inches wide and make into milliner's folds. When finished they will measure about an inch in width. To trim, put the waist on the form and ar range the folds around the decollet- age if"an evening frock and suggesting suggesting an outline to a yoke. If a day dress, in three rows about an inch apart.' One fold will probably drop over the sleeve top. Bring these folds to the bust and then interlace them, tucking the ends into a crushed crushed girdle or sash of the material sed for /the folds. Should the skirt need freshening, the folds Sly.Id be ; interlaced to form diamonds which could be ap- -glifed as found practical. The end or each fold could be gathered and held down to the skirt with a mock jewel, as, say a pearl bead, or they could be just caught neatly down, as preferred.--Helen Home, in Star Weekly. SPRING REMINDERS OF RHEUMATISM Raw, Damp Weather Starts the Pain, But the Trouble I Lies in the Blood Spring weather is bad "or rheumatic rheumatic > suffe re r s, The changes from mild to cold,, the raw, damp winds start the aches and twinges, or in the more extreme cases, the tortures tortures of the trouble going. But it must be borne in mind that it is not the weather that causes rheumatism. rheumatism. The trouble is rooted in SOUP AND SOLDIERS. Military Experts Think Top Much Is a Mistake. The Frenchman'® fondness for soup is proverbial. It is strongly in evidence among the soldiers now at the front, who subsist largely on soup or on stews, which amount to practically the same thing. English military experts are inclined inclined to think that this is a serious serious mistake. They believe that such sameness of diet leads to. staleness staleness among even the healthiest of and that the French would fight better if they ate more substantial substantial food, such as the roast beef and mutton . chops of which the the blood--the changeable weather Engligh are ^ fond . merely starts the pains. Trie only But though the English.believe way to reach the trouble and Jo g^iers are better fed than cure it is through the blood. Trie the French, they have to admit poisonous rheumatic acids must be that th owe the present excel- driven out. Liniments and rubbing lence of their military cuisine to a may give temporary relief, but can- Fre nchman. While England was not possibly cure the trouble, lrie g^hting in Crimea sixty years ago sufferer is only wasting time and Alexis Soyer, the celebrated chef, money with this kind of. tr satment, I ent there and , with nothing but and all the time the trouble is be- the regular rations to work upon, coming more deeply rooted--harder j Rfion revo ] u tionized the army's He found the camp cooks at Doinè Wonders For Rheumatism WHAT PETER F. PATTERSON SAYS OF DODD'S KIDNEY KIDNEY PILLS. Gaspe County Man Gives Advice to All Who Want to he Cured of Kidney Troubles. Haldimand, Gaspe Co., Quebec, April 12 (Special).--"I 'have 'just opened the third box of Dodd s Kidney Pills, and find they are doing me wonders of good for the. Kidneys and Rheumatism, so says Mr. Peter F. Patterson, a well- known resident of this place . "My troubles came through a cold and strain," Mr. Patterson continues, "and I suffered for many years. I had headache, backache backache and rheumatism. My sleep was broken and un refreshing. I had a bitter taste in my mouth in the morning and I perspired freely with the slightest exertion. I was often dizzy ; I was troubled with heart flutterings; I was nervous A LIGHTNING CHANGE. to cure. There is just one speedy | methods of CO oking. cure for rheumatism--: Dr. VYii- Hams' Pint Pills. IS? Wd&lS&d .ndWied at night. "Aftér using Dodd s Kidney Pills I recommend them to everyone everyone who wants to be cured." Everyone of Mr. Patterson s ailments was a symptom of Kidney disease. That's why he found such prompt relief in Dodd s Kfdney Pills. They "only cure Kidney disease. disease. ly on/ . the impure, blood. They purify and strengthen strengthen it and thus root out the cause of the rheumatism. Here is strong proof of the above statements. Mr. J. Routley, Sydney, Man., says: "I was so badly cr^vpled with rheumatism in my hips and lmees that I could hardly go abriut. I began began the use of Dr. Willtlms' Pmk Pills, which I took steadily, for a couple of months, by which time all traces of • the trouble had disappeared. disappeared. I can most strongly recommend recommend the Pills to all rheumatic sut- fcrBrs.** Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Williams' Medicine Co.', Brockville, Ont. the joints intended for boiling so tightly that the exterior was cooked while the inside remained raw. He found cooking going on in huge copper copper caldrons so dark that it was not possible to see whether the tinning was intact--whether the water was not contaminated by verdigris. He found them marking their rations, rations, "lest they should be confounded confounded in the kettle," by attaching attaching to them- pieces of red cloth, a string of buttons, knives, forks, scissors, pairs of snuffers. He Nurse Crops. . ^ Observing farmers have seen that found them throwing away the fat| either clover or alfalfa do consid THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY. Censure is the tax a man .pays to the public for being eminent-.-- Swift. In- "this world it is not what we take up, but what we give up, that makes us rich.-- H. W. Beecher Don't flatter yourselves that friendship authorizes you to say from the coppers, three thick, for they did not know that they were thus destroying "a little of excellent soup. He found them sometime® cooking with smoke, dust and steam intermixed instead of fire, and yet consumed f a fabulous quantity of unnecessary unnecessary fuel." When a Woman Suffers With Chronic There la Trouble Ahead. . ... Constantly on their feet, attending disagreeable things to your intim- the wants of a large and exacting ates. O. W. Holmes. family, women often break down with The normal school turns out pro- nervous exhaustion. . of philosophy, only the In the stores, factories, and on ot pmios P y., «y , I farm are weak, ailipg women, dragged W £ essors ^ . school of lifeproduces philosophers. --Gustave Vapereau. It many times falls out that we seem ourselves much deceived because because we first deceived ourselves --Sir Philip Sidney. True courage i is not incompatible incompatible with nervousness, and heroism does not mean the absence of fear, but -, the conquest of it.--H. Van Dyke. . . If you have built castles in the air your work need not be lost; that is where thev should be built ; now-put foundations under them-- Thore au. - : _ I do not call the sod under my feet my country, but language, religion, religion, laws, government, blood. -- identity in these makes men of one Why Women Change Their Styles. Some one has said that the only reason women have for changing styles so often is that they may at-1 CO untry.--Coleridge, tract attention to themselves. Men p 0 r those who do not take to do- go on wearing the -same style of hat, } n g good as a .profession there is a the same cut of clothes* season af- great deal of social good.to be done ter season, year after year. There are some minor changes, but nothing nothing so radical, as a rule, .as to make last season's derby or last winter's overcoat grotesque. Many middle-aged or elderly men, _ who are conservative in their ideas . about dress, have $ their clothes made on absolutely the same lines year after year. How different is it with woman, says our critic. One year her skirts are so tight she can hardly walk in in putting down gossip, in prevent misunderstandings, and m keeping friends with everybody-- Jewett. the way out Success Change of Food Brought and Happiness. An ambitious but delicate girl, after failing to ,go through school on account of nervousness and hys- down with torturing bearing down pains. Such suffering isn't natural, but it's dangerous, because due to diseased kidneys. The dizziness, insomnia, deranged menses and. other symptoms of kidney complaint can't cure themselves, they require the assistance of Dr. Hamilton's Hamilton's Pills which go direct to the seat of the trouble. To give vitality and power to the kidneys, to lend aid to the bladder and liver, to free the blood of poisons, probably, there is no remedy so successful successful as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For inches | erably better when sewn with bar ley as a nurse crop than with oats. King says, in his book on soils, "that oats exhaust the soil- moisture moisture a great deal faster .and more than barley. Probably this is the reason why, especially in rather dry seasons, the new seeding does better better with the harley." But a great many farmers greatly injure the growth of their young clover, as well as alfalfa, by seeding too much grain as a nurse crop. It is a species species of greediness that, as Shakespeare Shakespeare says, "o'er leaps itself. It should require but a moment s thought -to see that the 1 coming clover clover or alfalfa is worth double in value what the grain crop is. Why, then, should the farmer endanger his hay crop next year? We have seen hundreds of young clover and alfalfa crops practically spoiled in this way. It takes 500 pounds of water to mature one pound of the grain of oats. Reckon it up and see what that means to the young clover clover or alfalfa in a crop, say, of 50 bushels of oats to -the acre. An Incident in the Life of the Late Lord Salisbury. The late Lord Salisbury, says Count Paul Va.ssili in.. his book, "Behind the Veil at the Russian Court," shared with the rest of his family the defect of being rather careless in his dress and general appearance. Lord Odo 1 Russell, who long represented England at Berlin, told Count Vassili this amusing little anecdote in illustration illustration of that -characteristic. "One evening," says the "count, "Lord-Odo and Ï were chatting about Lord Salisbury's attitude toward toward his personal appearance,--not ill-naturedly, for it is doubtful which of us had the greater admiration admiration for the remarkable statesman in question,--and Lord Odo laughingly laughingly mentioned to me his surprise when one day, after the dinner bell of the embassy had been rung, he found Lord Salisbury, who was living living there, still busy at work" in his study. " 'He rushed out, 5 said the ambassador, ambassador, 'and before I had-time to put aside the papers on the table, literally in three minutes, was back again ready for. dinner. Now in that time he could- not even have washed his hands, yet there he was in evening clothes ! I could not help asking him how he managed to dress so- quickly. "Oh, my dear Russell," he said, "anyone can change his coat atf" once, and 1^ had black trousers on already." 5 " Absolutely Painless No cutting, no plasters plasters or pads to press the sore s p ot. Putnam's Extractor makes the corn go without pain. Takes out the sting over-night. Never fails --leaves no scar. Get a 25c. bottle of Putnam's Corn Extractor to-day. - * Manures. Nitrates and ammonia - salts do not give their best results when in contact /With fermentable organic matter.. The possibility of loss' is greatly diminished by using well- rotted manure, and may be still farther prevented by applying the nitrate as a top dressing on the growing crop at the time the crop needs it. Salts of potassium and sodium, superphosphate and sulphate sulphate of ammonium, should not be sprinkled on the manure in the fur* row, but either mixed with the soil before the manure is applied, or sown broadcast' after the manure is plowed in and before harrowing. If top dressings of -soluble manures are used on open -soils they should De applied! late. Corns Go! a backache arid A Wireless News-Letter. For many months in the year the four or five thousand inhabitants of the isolated Magdalen Islands receive receive no mail or newspapers, for as the islands lie in the widest part of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, about C6SSIU1 SB JL/I. JLlcAiJU.il LULL O A- mo* VA e _ , . JJ • Tri 1 all womanly irregularities their merit fifty miles northeast of France no- ward Island, it is difficult, if not impossible, to run boats to them is well known. Because of their mild, soothing, and healing effect, Dr. Hamilton's Pills are safe, and are recommended for girls and women of all ages. 25 cents per box at all dealers. Refuse any substitute substitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake Mandrake and Butternut. BABY'S OWN TABLETS (JteuSED ELEVEN YEARS Mrs. McEachern, Glencoe,' Ont., writes : "I have used Baby's Own Tablets for the past eleven years for my children and have every reason reason to praise them as they always do good." Once a mother uses the Tablets for her little ones she will use no other medicine. They are absolutely safe, pleasant to take and never fail to regulate the bowels bowels and stomach. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. SEED POTATOES. E arly irtsh specially eelected. COBBLER POTATOES, and Government inspected for eeed. Only limited quantity. Price, One Dollar per Ibushel f.oJb. Brampton. Brampton. Also Connoisseur's Pride and New Snow, two excellent new -potatoes. Price, Two Dollars per ibuahel. Special pr.'cee for large quantity. Cash, must accompany accompany all orders. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. Brampton. . FOR SALE. Knew the Signs. "l ean read my wife like a book. "That so?" "Yes. Whenever she's, cold to me I know she's going to make hot for me." T HREE farms. IMPROVED HALF SECTION John Scott, Whitewood, Seek. NURSERY STOCK. 9) it S TRAWBERRIES, RASPBERRIES. POTATOES. POTATOES. Catalogue free. McConnell & Bon. Port Burwell. Ont. . mSCEM.AJrEO'gS. C ancer, tumors, lumps, etc.. internal and external, cured without without nain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. Limited, Collingwood. Ont. , Mlnard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. A Close Shot. It was during a golf game m Scotland. The first player who drove off was very bow-legged. The second player, unmindful that his opponent was directly in front him, struck the ball and it whizzed between his opponent's legs. "Hoot, mon," said the bow-legged bow-legged one in anger, "that's nae golf!" . ■ "A weel," said his opponent complacently, "ef 'tis nae golf tis gude croquet." A Bit of an Epicure. Lady of the House--You can earn your dinner if you'll chop that pile of firewood. Tramp--I'd like to know de menu first, lady. Sore ATENTS OF INVENTIONS PIGEON, PIGEON A DAVIS •la St. James St., - Montreal Write 1er Iniermatldn J^ErmatJî _L M ari n e E naines LACK OF MONEY END WAR. them, the next they have gone to teria, found in Grape-Nuts the only ti.Mxt.eme of fullness In. l tlnng ££ :£«£* her -P gear there is a -veritable not oi change. Broad hats and narrow hats, high hats and low hats, hats with foliage or plumes, and hats without either, follow in quick sue cession. Men say the only purpose of all. this change is to attract their attention. I question whether our -critic, or any other man is able to draw the fine line that separates the ornamental ornamental from the -purely useful, either in woman's dress or in their own. May there not be some of the pea-fowl in us all? Bub if a woman is thinking only of attracting at and furnish health. . -- ■ - "From infancy," -she says, I have not been- strong. . Being ambitious ambitious to learn at any cost I finally finally got to the High School but / soon had to abandon my studies on account account of nervous prostration and hysteria. - . , "My food 1 did not agree with me, and I grew thin arid despondent. I could not enjoy the simplest social social affair for I suffered constantly from nervousness in spite of all sorts of medicine®. ... "This wretched condition continued continued until I became interested in the Expenditure Up to That Time Will | day. he $16,990,000,000. Edgar Cr am mo nd, a prominent financial writer of London, read a paper before bhe Royal Statistical Society recently dealing with the cost of the war. In his opinion the war must end in July through , the exhaustion of some of the belligerents. belligerents. . . Mr. Crammond estimates the total cost of the war to the end of ' July as $16,990,000,000, and the total economic loss, - through damage to property and other direct and indirect indirect losses at $45,740,000,000. He estimates that Great Britain alone and during the winter. The Canadian Government has consequently arranged arranged to send weekly to the clergymen of the islands a wireless despatch of eight hundred words that gives the latest news of the war and other events. These despatches despatches the ministers read aloud to the islanders at church every Sun- INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis, the patent solicitors of 71a St. James St., Montreal, report that for the week ending March 9th, 1915, 138 Canadian patents were issued, 101 of which were ^granted to Americans,, 23 to Canadians and 14 to residents of foreign coun- tries. Of the Canadians who received patents, 11 were residents of Ontario, Ontario, 3 of Alberta, _ 2 of Quebec, 2 of British Columbia, 2 of Manitoba, Manitoba, 1 of Saskatchewan, 1 of New Brunswick and 1 of Nova Scotia. In the United States for the same week, 954 patents were issued, _ 15 of which were granted to Canadian inventors. tention jfcp herself, the demure little otters of those who had cases like Quakeress has the best of us all, in-I m i ne and who were, being helped this riot of change and of- color, j by eating Grape-Nuts. Why not place some of the folaqie for the -fast and furious changes in woman's styles upon the manufacturers manufacturers of feminine garments, who find it exceedingly " profitable to turn out new styles with every change of season ?--Frances Frear in Leslie's. Much More Important, iinderstand you are . the .press rent for the college girls' play ?" ^j^Yes, I'm getting out some -of the ■ 'What you working on--the cast of characters ?" "Casteel characters ? No, no. Nobody cares/for that. This is the list of patronesses. To freshen a room.--Burn a piece ol orange porting* on » hot stove, and a very pleasant odor will be imparted to the whole room. Cure Children's Colds By External Treatment Mothers Will Find Nothing so Speedily Speedily and Reliable as Old- Time "Neryiline." It's really a shame to upset a young child's stomach by internal dosing, when external treatment will so promptly break up a cold. ■ j when your boy comes in after play with his feet soaking wet, his throat hoarse and sore; his little chest tight apply Nerviline. estimates that vrr«»u *>«««« °Tnîv I give him IT vigorous rubbing over his will, spend up to the end of July | fîrnat. and nut lots of Nerviline on £708, (Î00, 000. The London Times, commenting on Mr. Crammond's figures j thinks hé takes • a somewhat exaggerated An old bachelor is a man whom no widow has made a strenuous effort effort to marry. Mlnard's Liniment. Cures Burns, Etc. Wrong Tip. Woman--Does this parrot swear ? Dealer--Very prettily, mum, for so young a bird. Granulated Eyelids, Eyes inflamed by exposure exposure to Sun, Dust and Wind quickly relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye SalveinTubes 2 5 c. For Beok oi the Eye Freeask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Ce., Chicege A Two-Ounce Egg. Pullets of any breed should lay a 2 oz: egg at one year old. .With very few exceptions all n-on-sitters lay white-shelled eggs, and all sitters sitters dark ones. The coloring of wild birds' eggs is to some extent protective. Therefore, one would think that domestication should tend to ridding the shells of color. But we do not find- it ; &o-, as the Asiatic heavy breeds which lay the darkest eggs have been under domestication domestication in China for some thousands of years. Therefore, we can no more account for a Leghorn laying a white egg and- a Brahma a brown one than we can for the wood pigeon laying a white egg and a magpie, also a tree builder, laying laying a spotted one. When a boy, the same love of live things dominated dominated me that has done ever since, and I had a collection, self gathered, gathered, of nearly every wild bird in file Midlands. ; My pets also included included hawks, doves, larks, green- inches and many more. _ No doubt it was this early familiarity with bird life that led me to take poul try seriously Home. America # Standard <4 Cycle Marine Motor 4 Cycle. 4 Cylinder. 12 to 20 H.P. Highest quit- , Ity. Silent operation. No vibration. Controls I like the finest Motor Car engine. Extremely ■ economical on fuel. Used as standard equip. I ment by over 10 per cent, of the world's I leading boat builders. Catalog on «quest. | USÂlQiMO depending on equipment. - KEJtMATN MFfi. CO. Dipt. Detroit, Mick. Others Turned Him Down. the only v'oman -She--Am I ever loved ? He--Well, yes YOU -successfully The conversation of most people is .so unimportant that when they stop talking you wake up. later on.--F.- and Strict, All Right. "I understand the Blanks strict vegetarians." "Strict! I should say they Why, they won't even let children eat animal crackers. are are. their I consider MINARD'S LINIMENT the BEST Liniment.in »fie. T throat, and put his chest and rub It right In. To make Nerviline penetrate more quickly cover his chest and throat with a hot flannel j- bandage. This treatment viewT although he is in possession of I WON'T fail. Your boy will be feeling facts which entitle hi® opinion to better th half an hour, and you will rtroeet The Times points out that have the satisfaction oj knowing you respecu. _n_ -e I have warded off perhaps a cold, or grippe, or illness that might have laid Premier Asquith's estimate of Great Britain'-s expenditure^ during the same period was only £500,000,- 000, but adds: "This certainly now appears too low, even if Mr. Cram- mond's estimate is too high, 9) I had little faith, but procurée a pkg. and after the first dish T experienced a peculiar satisfied feeling that XV had never gainie< from any ordinary food. I • slept and rested better that night and in a few days began to grow stronger "I had a new feeling of peace and restfulnese. -In a few weeks to my great joy, the headaches and nervousness left me and life became became bright and hopeful. I resumed resumed my studies and later taught ten months with ease -- using grape-Nuts every, day. I am now the mistress of a happy home; and the old weakness has never returned." returned." , Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read, "The Road to We 11 ville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason/* VfievwJ'iietia mtètt Ahww one appears from time to time. They minslM, true, and fuU ef Unman interest, ; And yo-u may do a man a favor by not giving him advice. OBill had a bill-board; Bill also had a .board-hill. The board bill bored Bill so he told the bill-board to pay the board-bill. - After Bill sold the bill-board, the board-bill no longer bored Bill. The corporal was much better at his drill than at grammar, says The Manchester Guardian, but the defeat defeat did not worry him in the slightest. slightest. He had just sharply ordered his men to "mind them spaces now/;' when the smiling lieutenant observed : "Why 'them spaces,-, corporal ?" ■ 'Well, sir, if I said 'distances' about 'ari of . 'em wouldn't understand me," he explained explained simply. ' him up. , „ Nerviline is mighty good for preventing preventing • colds and for breaking up a had one, too. For general family use it cures all sorts of external aches and pains--you simply can't beat it. Try it for earache, toothache, neuralgia, neuralgia, sciatica, lame back, rheumatism, or lumbago. Wherever there is congestion. congestion. inflammation or pain in the joints or muscles, Nerviline will cure mighty quick. The large 60c. family size bottle is so economical, so useful, useful, it should be in every home. There is also a small 26c. size. Dealers anywhere anywhere sell Nerviline. , ■ -The successful man roots while hi® unsuccessful brother stands round and squeals. ■hnfhed it "well with MINARD MENT, and it wae ae well ee ever da7 ' Yours very truly, T, G. MoMULLEN. next LOW FARES TO THE CALIFORNIA EX- PO.IT.OH, . «ORTH Pour splendid daily trains from the Passenger Terminal, Chicago _to g.Q Francisco, LoS 'Angles and Ban Diero. Choice of Scenic and. direct routes through the best otf t^e West^ Something ♦n Me aU the way. ^Double track. Automatic Automatic electric safety eignaJs all the way. olan your trip and furnish folders Kd Ml 7£rtieul«« B E Benoett, G.A., vttVYoele flt., Toronto; Ontario. The -lady of t'he house was explaining explaining things to the new maid. "An' what's this, missus ? asked the girl, indicating a metal bottle. "That is a bottle which will keep things either hot or cold, whichever you desire," replied the mistress. "Well foh the land sake, ejaculated ejaculated the girl. "How is.it gwine to know whether you want things hot or cold ?" Mlnard's t-lnlment Relieves Neuralgia. , Aunt Liza's former mistress was talking to her one morning, when suddenly she discovered a little pickaninny- standing shyly behind his mother's skirts. Is -this your little boy, Aunt 'Liza? she asked. ' 'Yes, miss, dat's Prescription. "Goodness, what a funny ^ame, auntie, for a child ! How in the world did you happen to call him that?" "Ah simply calls him dat becuz Ah ha's sech hahd wuk get- tin' him filled," MlnariPs Liniment for sale everywhere. Canoes, Skiffs, Motor Boats THE PETERBOROUGH LINE. '"PETERBOROUGH." strength and fin it any canoe can give you satisfaction, u Always «invèt tbe «5^ «« ^te%rcato!ogue. The latest canoe sizes, wni ABk . for lllus trated folder. Skiffs ish. Over fifty styles and sizes. ^r^ptp^oVto^^pteV-Launches, aU staes ana era. Get, folders telling all about these. THE PETERBOROUGH ÇfrHOE CO/RPÎlHy, LIMITEP, PETERBOROUGH, ONT. ■t^5 ' k., v Overmtern g attorn 0D Railway Station ini Beam 3 Ft, 9 'In., MOTOR FITS- 7 jlTtiig «gin» piteM tm 0»« <mr quotation» Bov, beets end Cnnow., ; L ! THE GIDLBY BOAT (XX, LD0TBD, PBNETANG. CAN. | ED. 5e ISSUE 16--'15. Ssf: S

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