Daily British Whig (1850), 7 May 1926, p. 9

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Cook in a cool 6 ~ a Canadian Beauty Rangette is used. Just as the Electric light routed the coal oil lamp, the Canadian Beauty Rangettes make the old fash- ioned stoves a memory, so far as summer cooking is concerned. With the Canadian Beauty Rangette, elec- trically generated heat is placed where you want it and nowhere else. "The quantity of heat used can be regulated as well. You turn a switch; + that's &ll--no fumes, no flames, no smoke, no ashes, no fuel to prepare or carry, no dangers. Cooking labors do not trespass on summer's leisure. You do not work over meals at blast furnace temperatures. Canadian Beauty Rangettes have knocked the bottom out of Electric cooking costs. The expenditure for the largest Rangette is. about half that for the ordinary Electric range, includ- ing installatign. Prices for the other gettes and hot plates pictured here are in proportion. Besides solving the entire summer cooking problem, the Canadian Beauty Rangettes are making friends with apartment and small home dwellers for year round cooking. i built, and all Re J Ea ry, and ull pare than the large cabinet ranges, have cooking elements of same style and capacity. Each element is ai with the latest improved reciprocat --- The top. or cooking surface is Of ios line. ? ; good-bye to the hot, stuffy kitchen when ; Ped vitreous porgelain. Let the dealer ¢ you the ave you seen the new Majestic colored Porro J & The Renfrew Electric Products, Limited Renfrew - . Ontario Branch Office: 29 Richmond Street West, Toronto i Kitchen #sSummer rrr rrr rym ISTE 1 GR Tr Poh edd dl Nii | wu | ete 77) 3 4 rs N Halliday Electric Co. Carry choice range of Canadian Beauty Electrical Appliances 345 KING STREET. er. ------ FIVE DIE IN ROOK SLIDE be the taliest b loose and et ailds shown carrying out one of | 'PHONE 94. Pn Sale of a Farm. Salmon Point, May, 1.--~The farm owned by the late George Tuttle, Salmon Point, has been sold to Harry Cowles, New Brunswick. Harry Rus- sell has leased his farm to Manley Petersos, who has already taken possession. » Mrs. Angus MacDonell, Pembroke, died on Saturday, aged fifty-seven yeirs. The end came with shocking suddenness, Though ill for nearly six years, her condition became seri- ous on Wednesddy evening when she suffered a paralytic stroke follow. ing which she never regained con- sciousness. Logansport, Ind., will spént $2 000 on new roads. en 1d,- Lady May Cambridge, daughter of | Princess Alice and Lord Athlone, High Commissioner to South Africa, is to wed Prince Olaf, heir to the throne of Norway, London hears. Prince Olaf is twenty-two, and Lady May ts twenty. -------------- EVOLUTION OF THE SEWING MACHINE, Who made the first chine? Kent, in his "Seven Wonders of the Modern World," says that a Lon- don mechanic of sewing ma- || on June 24th, 1750, for an embrold- ering machine. ner. first iavention of a mechanism take the place of thé hand asd | needle or at least is the first record- | In 1790, Thomas Saint, of Bng- on leather, but it embodied many of | machine. This invention was, how- tions. were granted to John Duncan on May 30th, 1804, for a much less com- prehensive machine, and later to James Winter for ilaprovements on sewing Machinery. { In 1830, a Frenchman named Thimmonier invented a chain stitch machine; ten years after he had eighty machines making uniforms for soldiers, but angry journeymen tatlors destroyed the machines and models, and Thimmonier barely es- ||| caped with his life. He made a second attempt, and was again suc- cessful in assembling a working model, but this was destroyed by an || other mob, and- ha dled a few years later, heartbroken, and penniless. To Thimmonier belongs the distinction' of baving produced the first ma- ¢hine whose sole purpose was that of sewing garments, and for the in- troduction of the use of the presser foot. : INDIA'S BEAUTY --" Her Highness the Rani of Mandi, who is a picturesque figure at the court of St. James this season, is calléd one of the most beautiful mem- bers of royaity in India. SPRING You talk of autumn fires, but have you smélled : The smoke that rises from a ragged lawn In early epring? And seen it float upon A mist of new-born buds? Or, trembling, held Among the greening twigs, swiftly spelled d To drift about our houses' Whis- pering dawn Is the best hour to see the magic. It is gone / By glaring noon. and all the mys- tery quelled. que But when the sun first comes, - or wd you are Jost. No use of any | This machine used | [fi needles pointed at each end with an | i eye in the middle, and a thread car- | [fi rier employed in a very clever maa- | i This appears t0 have bees the | J to | Hil land, invented a machine to stitch | [ii thé features of the modern sewing i ever, lost for more than two genera- | il German origin, | Jil named Weisenthal, took out a patent | {ii | | i ed attempt. | i Hi | We next mind that letters patent | Jill | | | To be able to sell thousands of dollars' worth of Ladies' Ready- to-Wear in our Water and Smoke Sale of our stock which was re- cently damaged in the Harrison Building Fire, in such a short time, is quite a task, but it is done with your help and we thank you. It's to be expected that after such a huge sale we would have lots of Odds and Ends, and the balance of the goods that must be sold, to be able to re-decorate our store and again open up with a new and complete "stock of Ladies' Ready-to-Wear. We'll Sell Them at Prices So Low that there should be nothing short of a scramble, when we open the doors Saturday morning, 9 a.m. Do you remember the story about the early Bird ? . Well, that policy will apply here Saturday morning at 9 a.m. All our Odds and Ends and the balance of our stock of lines will go on. sale. If you knew the surprise we have for you, you'd stand in line all night until the doors open. ODDS AND ENDS of COATS, SUITS, DRESSES, UNDERWEAR, HOSE, COR- SETS, BLOUSES, etc., that must be sold right away. - . . Silk Hose, 15¢pr | Underwear, 15¢ One more lot of Ladies' Silk Hose will be | The first and last call of our Odds and Ends of Ladies' Knitted Vests and sold Saturday morning, the last day of ou sale, 9 a.m. sharp. Assorted shades, Bloomers--White and Pink---All sizes all sizes--Reg. $1.00. ~=Reg. to 780, OUT THEY GO AT 15c. Pair | OUT THEY GO AT 15c. Each SILK COATS | Corsets | Blouses $14.95 Oc | 98¢ Ladies' Black Corded Silk Coats, the last number in style, Odds and Ends in Ladies' Cob- English Broadcloth, Striped and Fur Trimmed Collars. All sets -- White and Pik -- all plain pattern Blouses. All new Slightly @ 3 by styles and sizes. Reg, $8.00. sizes. Regular $30.00. Out They Go At Water. - Regular (0.88.00, '. Out They Go at : Out They Go at : 98c¢c. SPRINGCOATS| Dresses Jlouse resses $9.95 $9.95 9c Be one of the first to get one 25 only, Odds and Ends Ladies' . Silk Dresses -- beautiful pat- This is indeed extraordinary -- terns--all new styles--regular Ladies' House Dresses, -- all sizes--regular $2.50. to $30.00. * Out They Go at * Out They Go at $9.95 79¢. Each DRESSES Children's Sweaters ~- Jha balance in Odag nd Ende of our rel orl butte td

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