Monkton Times, 18 Jun 1914, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Pat Gail is Often Really St. ward, has been punished in school for not keeping still or for dropping | - things, when the trouble was, really St. Vitus Dance, This disease may appear ab any age, but is most com- mon between the ages of six and urteen years. It is caused by thin blood which fails to carry suffi- cient nourishment to the nerves, and the child becomes restless and twitching of the muscles and jerk- ing of the limbs and body follow. In severe cases the child is unable to hold anything or feed itself. St. >. vee Vitus Dance is cured by building up blood. The most successful treatment is to remove the child from all mental excitement, stop 'elarations, and aflirms 'school work and give Dr, Williams' - Pink Pills. hese Pills renew the blood supply, strengthen --_ the nerves, and restore the child to perfect health. Here is proof of their power to cure. Mrs. Geo. A. MacDonald, Harrington, N.8., says: "My son was attacked by St. Vitus dance; at the outset his sbep was weak and jerky. We called in a doctor who treated him, but notwithstanding he continued 'to * grow worse and at last grew so bad that he could not hold a cup in his hand, while his head constantly twitched, and his speech became rather indistinct. At this juncture T saw in a paper the cure of a boy from similar trouble through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. We at once sent for a supply, and in a few weeks after he began their use there was considerable improve- ment, and it was not long after this before he was completely cured, and has never had a symptom of the trouble since. I am convinced that there is no medicine like Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the cure of St. Vitus Dance. If your dealer does not keep Dr. Williams' Pink Pills you can get 'them by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont, oh - -MAN-EATING SHARK NO MYTH Wundreds of Human Beings Killed By Him Annually. A great many persons are of the belief that sharks, no matter what their size or species may be, do not kill or even attack human beings; some authorities declare the man- eater will only attack the human form when it is motionless; others that it will not touch a human in the nude, only those that are dress- ed, writes Charles Bradford, in Outdoor Life. A friend of mine residing at Pen- osacola, Fla., resents all. these de- that 'the shark of twelve feet or more will at- tack man or woman under all con- ditions--the body being still or in motion, nude or fully dressed. He writes me: "Hundreds of human beings are killed and eaten annual- ly by sharks. I personally witness- ed the killing of one man by a shark, and aided in killing the shark. The body of the man--that of Thomas-Ashe, pilot of the schoon- oer Wallace A. McDonald, sailing in Florida waters--was cut completely in two and sank in fifty feet of wa- ter: ees 'After biting its victim the shark was about to devour the parts of 'the body when a well-directed har- - poon ended its career, The shark may not molest human beings swim- 'ming in shallow water or attack surf bathers, but it is certain that the species will attack man in deep water," : 7 EYE STRAIN, Relieved by Quitting Tea and Coffee Many cases of defective vision are caused by the habitual use of tea or he : voffee, 5 ' It is said that in Arabia where coffee is used in large quantities, many lose their eyesight at about oe ee Mee Tea contains the same drug, caffeine, as coffee. An Eastern woman writes to the point concerning eye trouble and © coffee. She says: My son was for years troubled with his eyes. He tried several _ kinds of glasses without relief. The optician said there was a defect in his eyes which was hard to reach. "He used to drink coffee, as we} all did, and finally a it and be- gan to use Postum. That was three years ago and he has not had to ' r glasses and has had no trou- ith his eyes since. EA ae was always fond of tea and e and finally became so. ner- I could hardly sit still long gh to eat a meal. My heart in such a condition I thought t die at any time. : edicine did not give me relief almost desperate. It was ime we decided to quit use Postum, and have since. I am in perfect uble now with my t better in' my ~ JOue noes FoR SHACKLETON ANTARCTIC EXPLORER -- IN- TENDS TO USE THEM. -- Kxperimental 'Trip 'in' Norway to 'Test -Rations and Trans- portation. Sir Ernest Shackleton is about to make a preliminary trial expedition under Arctic conditions in the gla- ciers of Norway. This will be for rations for his trip across the Ant- arctic continent, which he hopes to make in four and a half months' time. 'He has, with the aid of the Royal Army Medical Oorps, evolved the "perfect ration." It will average only, 35 ounces daily, as compared with the three pounds or more con- sumed by the average man, but it is believed it represents the highest nutritive value for polar travel. Sir Ernest will be accompanied by five members of his staff when he goes to Norway to conduct experi- ments with these rations and also test his tents and motor sledges. The party will don polar kit and Travel Among the Glaciers. While the cold will not be as in- tense as in the polar regions, the country will furnish the same sort of sudden blizzards as are experi- enced in the Antarctic. Shackleton's new. ship, the En- durance, has been almost com- pletely fitted in Norway, and will arrive at the London docks this month, She is 18 feet longer than his last ship, Nimrod. She is a beautiful specimen of wooden ship building, and probably the last of her class that will be constructed. Her whole keel is made of solid oak 5% feet thick, and her sides are two feet thick. She belongs to the barkentine class, has the latest triple expansion engines and will steam ten knots an hour. She is fitted to consume both oil and coal. When in the ice oil will be substi- tuted for coal, which will mean economy if she is delayed in the pack, as the boilers can be kept warm and full heat generated quickly. When the oil has been used the tanks will be filled with water ballast. The Endurance will take on 100 tons of coal briquettes at the South Shetland Islands, so she will enter the Weddell Sea with full bunkers. Dogs From Canada. The second ship, Aurora, intend- ed for the Ross Sea side of the ex- pedition has been purchased, and will be delivered at Hobart, Tas- mania, at the end of August. The Endurance, which is to oper- ate on the opposite of the Antarc- tic, will leave England early in Au- gust for Buenos Aires, whence she will finally start for the Antarctic base in October. Most of the mem- bers of the expedition will leave England in the Endurance, but Sir Ernest Shackleton will travel later by mail steamer and join his ship at Buenos Aires. The dogs, which constitute an im- portant factor in the expedition, are a cross between a wolf and a Scotch stag hound, and have been bred in Northern Canada.' The lightest of them will turn the scales at 80 pounds, whereas the heaviest dog with the last Shackleton expe- dition weighed 45 pounds. They have been selected by the experts of the Hudson's Bay Company, and will be under the charge of one of the most experienced drivers from Canada, who was chosen by the commissioners of the Northwest Mounted Police. The latest appointments to the expeditionary staff are Sir Philip Lee Brocklehurst, who was. with Shackleton in 1907 and 1909 and who made the first ascent of Mount Erebus, and his brother, Lieuten- ant Courtney Brocklehurst, of the llth Hussars, hundreds of applica- tions for positions with the expe- dition have heen received. HOT AND COLD. Advantages of Cape Horn Route Over Panama Canal. The new route from New Zealand 'to Liverpool via the Panama Canal is about 900 miles shorter than the old route round Cape Horn. None the less, shipowners engaged in the frozen-meat trade declare that they will make no change. At present ships traverse a long stretch of cold water from New Zealand to the Horn; they still pass through cold water while coming up the Patagonian coast, and strike almost vertically across the equa- 'tor. Thus they are in hot water for only a few days. But ships pro- ceeding from New Zealand to Pa- nama would cross the equator slant- wise, and so would be in hot water for a very much longer period. Now, frozen: meat. leaves the works in New Zealand as hard as stone. It softens slightly .during the process of handling at the wharves, and for two days, per- haps, after the ships are laden the refrigerating machines are kept at work driving out the warmth. But onee this is done, all the machines have to do is to prevent warmth leaking in; and, naturally, the _|warmer the water through which the ship is passing, the longer the machines have to work, -- | In fact, so great would be OSS tra cost of keeping the refrigerators '| going that owners say that it, toge- {ther with the canal dues, would |more than counteract the saving in to engage in a announced. -- Davie 'Word comes from. England "that the special purpose of testing the (less than the English mile). T | Arabs call 2,143 yards a mile, while the Turks are satisfied with 1,826} NOTES OF INTEREST FROM HEB BANKS AND BRAES. ¥ f ee What ts Gotng on in the Highlands and Lowlands of Auld Scotia. 'The death is announced of Mr. Andrew McGill, Barsalloch, Pen- /ninghorne, a noted breeder of Gal- loway catitle. Lieutenant-General Sir Spencer Ewart, K.C.B., has been appointed General Officer Commanding-in- Chief, the Scottish command. The financial statement submitted at the annual meeting of the Scot- tish Football Association showed a profit of $19,320 onthe year's work- ing. A railway porter named John Burks, of Rolland Street, Glasgow, was killed at Queen Street, station by being caught between the buf- ers, ay Dundee Parish Council have re- solved to present an address to the King and Queen on the occasion of their forthcoming visit to Dundee. As a result of a kick from a horse in the yards at: Sankind Road, Dum- barton, a carter named Trotter has died in the Western Infirmary, Glasgow. The death has occurred of Mr. Munro Wilson, a retired grocer of Hawick, aged ninety-two. He was a pioneer of the temperance cause in Scotland. x A disastrous fire broke out on the farm of South Longmuir, Langside, tenanted by Mr. Marr, and the whole stock of cattle numbering thirty-nine, perished. The annual pilgrimage to the Wishing Well at Culloden, near the yerness, on the first Sunday in May was observed with all the time-hon- ored ceremony: One miner was killed and another seriously injured in a bad fall in the main coal seam in Messrs. Ro- bert Addie and Son's Viewpark Colliery, Uddington. A public playground and gymnas- ium provided by the corporation of Paisley for the benefit of children residents has been formally opened by Provost Robertson. There has just died at Eaglesham, at the age of 82, Corporal Robert Grace, another of the diminishing list of Crimean veterans. He was attached to the Scots Guards. New premises are to be built on the High Street of Hawick, for the Hawick National Security Savings Bank, and the plans have already been passed by the Town Council. The Watching Committee of Glas- gow Corporation is understood* to be in fayor of granting the city po- lice a weekly day of rest, but at de- sires to 'wait for Parliamentary sanction. At a meeting of the Peeblesshire County Council the county clerk was authorized to borrow for the erection of a new bridge at Crown- head, the estimated cost of which is $18,250. For the 307th year in succession the bounds of Berwick Corporation estate were ridden recently. The mayor, Councillor T. Wilson and the sheriff, Mr. E. W. Stiles, head- ed the procession. The Aberdeen ship painters have come out on strike as the result of the employers refusing an increase of 2 cents per hour, making the hourly wage 14 cents. Some 70 men are affected. Mr. Robert Milligan, teacher, Kirkgunzeon, has intimated his re- signation as headmaster of the pub- lic school after forty-seven years' service, and in all fifty-one years as a head teacher. The Corporation of Glasgow have by a majority, acreed to the recom- mendation of the Tramway Com- mittee, that the Tramway Depart- ment should carry their own insur- ance against third party risks. eran eo SAVE THE CHILDREN Mothers who keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in the house may feel that the lives of their little ones are reasonably safe during the hot wea- ther. Stomach troubles, cholera in- fantum and diarrhoea carry off thousands of little ones every sum- mer, in most cases beeause the mo- ther does not have a safe medicine at hand to give promptly. Baby's Own Tablets cure these troubles, or if given occasionally to the well child will prevent their coming on. The Tablets are guaranteed by a government analyst to be absolute- ly. harmless even to the new-born babe. They are especially good in the summer becattse they regulate the bowels and keep the stomach sweet and pure. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ; Pa A Mile in Various Lands. In England a mile means 1,760 yards, but in Ireland it means 2,240 yards, and in the Highlands it may mean the old Scotch mile of 1,976 yards. In Switzerland the mountaineers think 9,153. the pro- per thing, even when, as it general- ly is, it is very much uphill. The Swiss is the longest mile of all, be- ing followed by the Vienna post mile of 8,296 yards. The Flemish mile ig 6,869 yards, the old Prus- sian 8,237 yards, the Russian mark they walk 8,244 yards and call it a stroll of a mile. The Germans have modernized their former dif- ferent miles into the kilometers The yards, and the Italian shortens the distance of a mile to 1,766. | Beep Minard's Liniment in the house, FROM --GOANE -- SCOTLAND (worst) 4,100 yards, and in Den-} | Even a gold handled umbrella has | 1 ghe | its ups and WOW ee BEE-STINGS FOR DRUNKARDS Discovery "Made by- ecident in a London Hospital, Acco rding to the recent testimony of various English doctors and their |cures of rheumatism amd sciatica have been effected by the sting of the bee. In one case a person crip- pled by rheumatism for fifteen years was completely cured after he be- gan to keep bees and was contin- ually stung by them; while in an- other case a lady..who had been erippled for four years by an at- tack of rheumatic fever had bee- stings: applied to the various affect- ed parts, and within a fortnight the kles, elbows, and finger-joints. - The explanation' lies in the fact that the bee, when it stings, injects a large quantity of formic acid into the body. This acid, as has been shown by experience with hundreds of cases, is the best' antidote for the poisons in the system which stiffen the muscles and joints with rheu- matism. It is affirmed, too, by physicians that inebriety as well as rheuma- tism may be cured by bee-sting. The discovery: was made quite by accident in a London hospital. Five men were being treated for chronic rheumatism. Four of them had been hard drinkers for years, and one was a confirmed drunkard. Bee-stings were applied to them, and the rheumatic condition promptly subsided. When they were finally discharged they found that the treatment had done more than cure rheumatism--it had des- troyed their taste for alcohol. Even the sight of drink nauseated them, and since leaving the hospital sev- eral months ago not one of them has touched liquor. An intoxicated person is quickly sobered by a bee-sting, and drink- ing-men who take up work among bees, where they are frequently stung, soon lose their old craving for alcohol. How a Sick Woman Can Regain Health READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY. "For years I was thin and delicate. I lost color and-was easily tired; a yellow pallor, pimples and blotches on my face were not only mortifying to my feelings, but because I thought my skin would never look nice again I grew despondent. Then my appetite failed. I grew very weak. Various remedies, pills, tonics and tablets I tried without: permanent benefit. <A visit to my sister put into my hands a box of Dr. Hamilton's Pills. She placed reliance upon them and now that they have made me a well woman I would not be without them whatever they might cost. I found Dr. Hamil- ton's Pills by their mild yet searching action very suitable to the delicate character of a woman's nature. They never once griped me, yet they estab- lished regularity. My appetite grew keen--my blood red and pure--heavy rings under my eyes disappeared and to-day my skin is as clear and un- wrinkled as when I was a girl. Dr. Hamilton's Pills did it all. The above straightforward letter |from Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife of a well- known miller in Rogersville, is proof sufficient that Dr. Hamilton's Pills are a wonderful woman's medicine. Use no other pill but Dr. Hamilton's, 25c. per box. All dealers or the Catarrh- ozone Co., Kingston, Ontario. a Wreng Diagnosis. A man called upon a physician for advice. The physician diagnos- ed the case as one of nerves and prescribed accordingly. The fee was five dollars and the prescription two dollars. The man had only five dollars. He said to the physician : "Doc, five dollars is all I have. Lend me two dollars and I'll have the prescription filled." The physician gazed at the man for a moment, then said: "I have made a mistake in my diagnosis. Your nerve is all right. You are affected with an enlarged gall. There is no remedy for that." MINARD'S LINIMENT is the only Liniment asked for at my store and the only one we keep for sale. All the people use it. HARLIN FULTON. Pleasant Bay, C.B. Spoiled the Job. Howell--When you want a thing done right, do it yourself. Powell--I guess that's good ad- vice; I never got a fellow to he for me when he didn't make a mess of it. Minard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend Certainly. "Why do you say a thing is as dead as a door nail?' asked the old foggy. "Why is a door nail any deader than a door?' "Because it has been hit on the head,' replied the grouch. mG FE | IN SCALY SPOTS patients, some really wonderful stiffness and pain left her feet, an- | ' ; Around Mouth and Chin: Spread All Over Face in Big Disfiguring Blotches. Burning and Itchy. Used Cuticura Soap and Oint- iments, Ringworm Disappeared, _ Burnt Church; N, B.--* For about four years I was troubled with ringworm on my face. It first made its appearance in little scaly spots around my mouth 4, and chin which would last for 4 about a week, then would disappear and in two or three weeks' time would appear again. As tho little scales or scabs came off it would get like a cracked sore which was always incgcasing in size and eating into the flesh. It was always getting worse until It had spread all over my face in big disfiguring blotches which did not disappear at all. They would have a burning itchy soreness. The ring- worm disfigured my face very much for the time being and was always very Irritating. "T tried all the known household remedies I could think of besides some recommended ones without any effect. A friend told me of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I ob- tained a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment, The first application afforded relief, I washed with the Cuticura Soap and warm water as directed, then ap- plied the Cuticura Ointment. In a week's time the ringworm had entirely disap- peared." (Signed) Miss Marjorie E. Mor- rison, May 26, 1913. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. ¥or a liberal freo sample of each, with 32-p. book, send post-card to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. D, Boston, U.S. A. ODDS AND ENDS. Singapore now has a population of 303,222. British South Africa has miles of railway in operation. Canada exported 20,941,000 lbs. of cheese during October. The Chinese divide the day into 12 parts, each two hours long. A well-constructed brick house will outlast one built of granite. Vaccination is an essential- quali- fication for marriage in Norway and Sweden. The ants of South America have been known to construct: a three- mile tunnel. The German village of Remborn has a linden tree which is said to be more than 1,200 years old. Shanghai recently saw the open- ing of the first street car system financed, constructed and operated solely by Chinese. In one of the Spanish cities a co- operative society has been formed which is to have a central market, where all sorts of foodstuffs and fuels may be procured. Geologists have estimated that the great German deposits of pot- ash salts, practically the only im- portant one in the world, will last at the present rate of exploitation 600,000 years. French Guinea is regarded as one of the richest of the French West African colonies. Konakry, the capital, is the port through which almost the whole of the export and import trade passes, and improve- ments are being made to facilitate the constantly increasing trade. Native children in the Alaska, schools under the United States Bureau of Education become so en- thusiastic over the personal hygiene campaign that they frequently bring their fathers and brothers to school to have them put through the clipping and cleaning process at the hands of the teacher. 8,501 "*« UNFIT 10 LIVE--MUST DIE The verdict rendered a thousand times when corns get sore, Do them to death by Putnam's Corn Extractor; it cures painlessly in twenty-four hours. Use "Putnam's," the only vegetable re- medy known, price 25c. at all dealers. ok "Tt geems strange that he could plunder a great corporation like that for years without being found out.' 'Well, you see, the corpor- ation was pretty busy itself." YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids; No Siffarting-- just Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the Eye by mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. If a young man has the audacity to propose to a girl, she should have the impudence to accept him. Minard's Liniment used by Physicians. earache EATING A FAMOUS ROOF. Ravages of Beetles on the Roof of Westminster Hall. More than five hundred years ago a foreman carpenter designed the hammer beam roof in Westminster Hall, and finished the job in 1397, charging six shillings a day for his genius. It was cheap enough, and his work might have lasted an- other five hundred years but for the Westminster beetle. The West- minster beetle has eaten imto the wall beams until one can scoop out the rotten wood by handfuls, and the whole arched edifice is sinking hy inches. aioe Needless to say, the beetle is eat- ing into other parts of the oak be- sides the beams we have mentioned. Neither purlin, nor the longitudi- nal struts which form the | side arches, nor the fine gothic tracery and carving are sacred to this in- famous parasite; but the wall posts and hammer beams and posts are principally mentioned because on them lies the work of supporting the hammer beam roof; and also because some of these great timbers have suffered most from the in- roads of the larva of the beetle. It is almost possible to stand inside some of the cavities. The arched | ster Hall on either side. hammer beam roof is like an in-| it, helping to: support the big A at the apex. Imagine a line drawn reaching to the walls of Westmin- The small- er A might rest on this cross-bar and support the big arch. As a matter of structure the two halves of this imaginary cross-bar do not join in the middle. They the bowed legs of the smaller A to rest. on their ends. These two pro- jections are called the beams, They end in carved angles and support and are braced to the jlarge A by upright pois. We hope this description is mcderately clear, and will, at any rate, serve to show the ingenuity with which the four- teenth century English carpenter devised his balancing system of stresses and thrusts. What is happening now is that the weakening of the hammer posts | and beams, as well as of the arches which spring from them, is actually pulling the wall posts and plates clear away from the walls, It will be necessary and sufficient to brace the whole structure together with a light and imperceptible steel frame- work, Little can be done to repair the ravages of the beetle, though steps are being taken to fill up its cavities and by means of various preparations of sulphur to discour- age any further activity on its part. The Westminster beetle is a grey- ish animal, not unlike a skate- shaped wood louse. It is the larva which does the damage, and this warrior has an enormous appetite quickly eat its way through the and very powerful pincer-like jaws, Confined in a corked bottle it will quickly eat its way through the cork. One specimen which was con- fined in a bottle with a 'tin-protect- ed cork retired from the contest with the tin and was in danger of starving. Its life was preserved and its appetite restored by a meal of the familiar Westminster I The larva always eats its way im along the grain of the wood, The light golden-brown color of much of the roof is due to a species of mil- dew or-rust. Best Liniment of All Destroys Every Pain But Never Burns "How thankful we are 'to get hold of such a wonderful household rem- edy as Nerviline," writes Mrs. E. P. Lamontagne from her home near We- taskiwin, Alberta. "In this far-away section, far away from a doctor or druggist, every family needs a good supply of liniment. Nerviline is the best of all. It destroys every pain, but never burns. We use Nerviline in a score of ways. If it's rheuma- tism, aching back, pain in the side. sciatica or stiff neck,--you can laugh at them if you have lots of Neryiline handy. For earache, toothache or cramps I don't think anything could act more quickly. For a general all- round pain remedy I can think of no- thing more yaluable and speédy to cure than Nerviline." The above letter is convincing--it tells how reliable and trusty this old- time remedy is. 'Nerviline for forty years has been a household word in Canada. Scarcely a home in Canada you can find without Nerviline. Every community has its living examples of the wonderful curative properties of Nerviline which will cure pains and aches anywhere in the joints or mus- cles. It's penetrating, soothing, warming and safe for young and old to use. Get the large 50c. family size bottle; it's the most economical. Small trial size 25c. at any dealer's anywhere. TSR piv eek ae Something should be done to dis- courage the belief that comfortable clothes are never stylish. -------- Ask for Minard's and take no other. Catehing Up. "Why do you insist upon having the biggest share of the pudding, Harry?' asked the mother of a small boy. "Isn't your older bro- ther entitled to it?' "No, he isn't," replied the little fellow. "He was eating pudding two years before I was born." The Nearer Hills. "And, my dear, what mountains in domestic life give you most trouble "' 'The kitchen range." like a cross-bar through the A and only project far enough to allow | hammer | picnicker's choice. Everybody's favorite. j Ls FARMS FOR SALE. -- oak. | H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Toronto. vf F YOU WANT TO BUY OR § Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy write H. W. Dawson, Brampton, Colborne St., Toronto, : ' H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., AGENTS WANTED i COR BIG MONBEBY-MA Our dollar book, "Destruction I press of Ireland." Best book publi ed; write at once for Free Outfit. Terms; freight paid; credit Nichols Limited, Publishers, Toron -- NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE. -- "MOOD WEEKLY IN LIVE TOW York County, Stationery and B Business in connection, Price only $4,000. Terms liberal. Wilson Sire 9 ing Company, 738 West Adelaide Stree Toronto, re MISCELLANEOUS. Bia tio TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC., / 'internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment, Wr: a 2 us before too late, Dr, Bellman Med Co,, Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Home Trade Dealer Has It SK your Home Trade Dealer for a copy of this catalogue. It lists thousands of articles at a great saving to you. It gives you the best and latest in every line and a high quality at surpris- ingly low prices, because the goods -- are shipped Direct From Factory to You and thus you save middleman's profits. Your Home Trade Dealer gives you PERSONAL SERVICE and absolutely guarantees every article, therefore a purchase through him means COMPLETE SATISFAC- TION or your money back without question. Give this catalogue a place in our home. Let the Home Trade oaks make good these claims. Remember every dollar, spent at home through this catalogue means economy, absclute satisfaction to you, and a decided benefit to your district. Thereis a Home Trade S235 Store Near You ba Miss Caustic -- Your tend Smythe, brags that he is a self-made man. You never hear a self-made woman boasting about it. ; Mr. Oritic--No, they like every Obvious, one to think it natural. ee with a room. cooks better. Toronto Quebec St. John A cool kitchen on ironing day is panei New Per The heat is all in the burner--none in Winnipeg ection the The New Perfection is cheaper than coal--and Broils, bakes, roasts, toasts. In 1, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes. 1914 model 4 burner, cabinet range with fireless _ cooking oven. At all hardware and general stores. -- Royalite Oil Gives Best Results THE IMPERIAL OIL CO., Limited Ask to see the Halifax Montreal Vancouver verted A with a smaller A inside

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy