West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 18 Mar 1909, p. 3

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rely a C let generally finds it eas: mddl« his own eance afts nired the canse and pad in Their Places. Insurance Man. UT MATCHES. One Finds Maiches Only C s a political club; the d I‘m for Smith. on‘t worey. I‘m out. You stand irg in he went and # the door burst op« 1e eteps "tl:&(o.d spectator, ag n * ‘erted the presprai ount yet. This is on‘ «ctlon a man wallng was startied to #¢ _ peged and a man 4}} sidewalk. Picking P- «d what was the my. in there," sAid am rt sta=t‘cs cf the ind be relation of '.on?“ gould â€" be e alintion 0P the 1 impasible to 4e anle 4.ap great m aniety" | of a makteh anyâ€" 1 Europe he must place. Matches are 1 Workd. Centuries ind oelmn-{euh wious of the fact mev. â€" Where does in Raiser i long in America use he $00,000,000 in This is a startâ€" he American naâ€" contention that ful and extrava« 0 OX Cl NHLOUR por 1500,000 a vear be imnited exâ€" mich it is sold. iateb, which the â€" choking I used extenâ€" ch where hanâ€" larger headed ul children were hrough h.‘i* ma tohes, Of is in this, its were children loit qureleasiy x were women lothing nc ©, for which e is paid in ect the comâ€" and the life tht fully exâ€" their â€" mabeh untriee, _ The ty lossa by five Sonther» Enâ€" United Rtates ‘eason for this C seraliniged . n a contimual extinguished aste â€" haskets, rugs of «lubs, @, thrown by eputed to be nown ho t their h«:‘_b yeneral direcâ€" ut : to reture / They ape 1M almost every te. The Amerâ€" as if be canâ€" : day or nigist hind a meteb. s or mings od oat; they are burcau drewâ€" ery accummilaâ€" _ it may be; md reeklsssly ml mices have ird article for The ament i matter of sentiment ex he following: operty loss arlor mateh ch can be a0c, as diaâ€" tv" â€" mateh King maâ€" ur to seven iy. 1t rests themsealves, .__ careless upon . bed eella P es tion Associa 1 of this exâ€" » the cost of his little arâ€" Hile perhaps enip civilignâ€" beat . ever y the workd The assietâ€" ment of d>â€" ire not inâ€" re . theanâ€" trying to ning chitdâ€" y permit matehes /n r cbildren ; dults, and urned _ to ch year by \ resowinas n seeondâ€" it wl ie.* nain says s, 25 fiom ly expended n its fire + atiek i4 live eoal 10re were )0 1% eX« ird weye point of + ignited nts are at quanâ€" vhe aÂ¥re loss Of to the c of the needicas re« that States. t their ies ingâ€" a only, hbound, hrough safety leadty parlor flying the and 3 1 HUMAN _ VOICE _ SUPPLANTING TME TELEGRAPH KEY. Thousands of Miles of Railroads Now Operated by Telephoneâ€"It Has Succeeded Where Other Systems Mave Failedâ€"Precautions Against It is as easy to run trains phone as t> call up a friend a him to dinser. The men who ’h.oubcdl-p.lrindndhviu him to dinser. The men who run the great railroads of the country are findâ€" ing this out, with the result that many thousands of miles of railroad are now m‘-‘d almost exclusively by . Not lon;: ago the superintenâ€" dent of ph of a great western rwilroad i why the Morse in strument is giving way to the human voice : "The use of the telephone is so ufid in every way and so much fore flexible thar the uL'uph that by it the desâ€" patcher is enabled to get far more deâ€" tailed information about exactly what cach train is doing. Even when occasâ€" ion requires he can talk directly with the conductor or engineer. He is thus brought so much nearer the actual deâ€" tails of train movement on the line. "It is far more easy to train telephone operators than to secure telegraphers. ‘There is hardly a town anywhere on the line where there are not young felâ€" lows who are more or less familiar with railroad work, who with . very little training wold be perfectly competent to do the work of telephone operators. ‘There is much to be geined by making use of men in their own home towns. Our telegraph service was at its best when this condition existed to some ¢xâ€" tent, and discipline lessened in proporâ€" tion as we have had to import telegraph talent." great railroads of ing this out, with en a !ol:lio.o. Not lon, dent of telegraph ruilroad explained strument is giving voice : While railroading by telephone seems like an innovation, it was really put into serious use thirteen years ago. It was then adopted by the Terminal Asâ€" sociation at St. Louis, whic hin 1895 erected a sew Union _ station _ with | twentyâ€"odd tracks running north and' south, all of which had to be available for trains running east and west. To complicate matters all trains had to back in, nakin‘ it necessary to focus all the tracks in the station at _ one point, from which a number of tracks eurved east and west to meet the main ‘ lines. | The man who directs the trains is stationed in an interlocking switch towâ€" @r just beyond the crossover. From his d.i he can see all the tracks entering the station, and also all the East and West main lines. He is connected with *elephone lines extending along _ the main lines for several miles in either «lirection and receives over these wires reports of the movement of trains . as they enter or leave the yards. These reports are made by switchinen stationed at various points who control the switches on the main line tracks. :? giving them instructions the train «director can shift the outgoing or inâ€" coming trains at will before they have reached or after they havo left the terâ€" The train director is able to Cl@&Y | recejved the ‘the station tracks for incoming trains | other‘s repe in sufficient time to permit them to enâ€" l while the m ter without delay. He is connected with | yyderline ea the station master‘s office, so that the | this way gis utation master can be notified of the arâ€" | insuring &A < wival of treins when they are still some ; The New dlistance avmy and shift the station | in operation #orce to take care of them. | a distmace c The station master can stop the moveâ€" | 1907, and it rival of treins when they are still some | _ The New York Central has had a line distance av®my and shift the | station | in operation between Albany and Fonda, #orce to take care of them. | a distnace of forty miles, since October, The station master can stop the moveâ€" | 1907, and it has never been necessary to ment of a train even after it has startâ€" | resort to the telepraph service in this ed, as the train director can set the | time. even with the telephone cireuit in necessary stop signals before the train | trouble. Special signalling devices are has left his control. _ By having the | used on this line which permit the desâ€" movement of all trains and switches in | patcher at Albany to call one station this terminal under the control of the | without calling the other, or while talkâ€" train director over 700 trains a day are | ing to one he may call another withont handled. interrupting the conversation. When the system of deup.tching\ In case of accident or unusual delay trains by telegraph goes out there will | the system cnables the superintendent be an end to an institution that was | of the division to talk with the man on â€"started in 1850. The use of the taleâ€" | the ground and issume immediate orders. phone for the purpose has been Ob | The tetephone circuit is also found to ‘jected to on the ground that it is not ' work well under weather . conditions «s accurate as the telegraph owing to the | which interfere with the operation of the â€"eimilarity of sounds of different words, | telegraph circuit. When the system of despatching trains by telegraph goes out there will tbe an end to an institution that was â€"started in 1850. The use of the taleâ€" phone for the purpose has been obâ€" jected to on the ground that it is not ms accurate as the telegraph owing to the â€"«eilmilarity of sounds of different words, Aletters and figures The adoption of ‘the telephone at this time is indication that this trouble has been overcome. thundred miles of single track -B'J'{SJIER_&Mn using the teleâ€" phone for years is the Lake Erie, Alliâ€" ance & Wheeling, which has nearly a Mins Heron is BY TELEPHONE. (New York Sun.) easy to run trains by tcleâ€" a Pittsburg girl MISS MARGARET HERON ie k The 1 who made her debut this season gisls in Pittaoburg. line handles much coal traffie and its schedule covers thirty trains each way a day. There are twentyâ€"four telephone stations along the line at the various stations where the agents or train crews receive their orders. x ho On the division of the Pennsylyania lines between Columbia, Pa., and Parâ€" kersburg, Pa., a distance of thirtyâ€"eight miles, the trains have been operated by telephone, supplemented by block sigâ€" nals since 1906. ‘This division handles ninetyâ€"five trains of 4,800 cars daily, but the arrangement differs from that on the Lake EKrie, Alliance & Wheeling. with the telep wires in eith« in direct comn In receiving Quite Exceptional. An elderly gentleman dropped dead in a New York street car after rising to give a lady his seat. There is m:n%ur of a fatal epidemic from this camse.â€"â€" New York World. ACC!DBNTS will Happen in the q best regulated hom@n; . and having a box of Zamâ€"Buk handy is a precaution that has saved thousands of families much worry and expense. ‘There is never any knowing what a small injury T W ies may lead up to if neglected. ‘The stoppage * Pn \ of the bleeding, or the pain from a cut, * \ burn, or scald, luils many people into a false sense of security. Dust getting into a wound may set up festering, inflammation, and bloodâ€"poisoning. In a similar way, a tiny cut may . be the starting point of itching and frritating eczema; and the spot your child scratches on his head, the unsuspected beginning of ringworm or some other hairâ€"destroying scalp disease. UNWERTE: Zamâ€"Buk, while such a perfect healer, is also the inveterate enem: of akinâ€"discase. Abum.-cud.cut.orbmiuwommlyln‘n.lluhdrfldvdtt‘hrmu‘thl baim cannot * turn the wrong way "; and uhudcmolnn skin to become itchy, inflamed, or *‘ mattery," is mu:‘ng checked, is is because Zamâ€"Buk not only grows new, heaithy skin, but, being so ned, is absorbed by the pores, and its healing essences make perfectly healthy all the underlying tissues. Aiways keep a box of Zamâ€"Buk handy, for daily mishaps make Zamâ€"Buk a daily need. PS MAE AMIMATEE T MAE U cce Mrs. W. Corkey, 15, Rischmond Square, Montreal, says > My little grandson was sevarely scaided on his right log from the knes to the aukle. ‘This injury was vvoy seriqus, and demanded great attention. a used nothing but Zamâ€"Buk, and it was wonderful how cooling and soothing it proved. It was some woeks before the leg was finally healed, but there was not a scar left to show where he had been scalded. As the home ‘firstaid,‘ 1 think Zemâ€"Buk is without equal Zamâ€"Buk is a positive and certain cure for cuts, burns, bruises, sprains, piles, festering sores, ulcers, scaids, bsood‘solsonml. ec W bands, coldâ€"cracks, chilblains, ringworm, scalp sores, be .lu,‘sllmm 1 o(.!‘a- ski:‘ discases :Tld injuries. Om t pa ue L Chalzzabiam a anlatiea m poi BAD SCALD OURED. Mrs. H. Girdlestone, of 106, Rawdon Street, Brantford, Ont., says:â€""1 find Zamâ€"Buk a splendid healer of children‘s injuries. My itle bo“bmod his foot badly on the redâ€"bot lid of the stove. ihon.kum :-pltly bucned off, and he « shocking oot, the wound turning to a rumning sore, Zamâ€"Buk, and it discharging and fe discharging and festering, drew out the l-lqm-‘:::n. and m the wound I remember being once in an outâ€"0fâ€" theâ€"way hamlet in Baniffshire, to and from which the train service was of the most primitive character. . The distance from the nearest mainâ€"line town was only some twelve or fifteen miles, but "the local express‘‘ took the better part of two hours to cover it, stopping leisurely at some halfâ€"dozen stations en route, and even then makâ€" ing a prolonged stay when the driver or fireman got ‘"on the chaff" with the stationmaster or other official. On the occasion of my visit to â€"â€"â€" I was rather anxious when the time came to leave to catch the Southâ€"going train at the junction, and as we crawled along 1 began to be very dubious about doing so. At last I asked a fellowâ€"traveller if the train in which we were seated was booked to catch the eonnection I wanted. _ _ 3 "Oh eye," he Ylied. in the broad Northern poric, solemnly removing his clay pipe before speaking, "‘she‘s booked richt eneugh, but she verra seldom does‘t." 3 9 f CHILD BURNED BY STOVE LiP. This was encouraging! We seemed to go slower and slower from thi: point onmwards ,and by and by the train stopped, with a sort of sleeny jerk, less than a mile from the juncâ€" tion. After squirming in my seas for about ten minutes J got up and ovenâ€" ed the window. The signals wero down, and there was no sign of any block ahead. Then I opened the carâ€" riage door, jammed on to the line, and walked forward to the engine. The driver and fireman were seated on the footâ€"board, the one enjoying a smoke and the other a chew. They expressâ€" ed no surprise at my appearance; inâ€" deed, the engineâ€"driver was â€" polite enough to remark to me that it was "a braw mornin‘.‘ ""Yes," reglied I, "the morning‘s all very fine; but what about this ball ?ld train? _ What has she stoppeg or?" "Oh, aye," he plied, in the broad sponded the driver. "The fact is," he added seriously, "the engine‘s gane aff the bile!" Just then 1 heard the whistle of the express as she left the junction for Aberdeen! ie Repeat it: â€""Shiloh‘s Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." A herd of 500,000 caribou is beyond Sixty Mile River, and the vast band is travelling toward the Tanana River. The news was brought to Dawson by Chris. Williams, who says that last year and during the summer the herd trampled down forests and went to the White iRiver wlopes: > =7 C _:« 3 Later it turned back and passed mcross upper Sixty Mile and then seemed to turn westward toward the head of the Tanana slopes. They are travelling in a proceesion twenty miles wide. All that are left in the vicinit yof Dawson are some straggling bands. _ Indians have followed the mand are bringing some of the meat to Dawson, but on the whole the herd is getting too far away to get carcasses back to Dawson with any profit.â€"â€"Dawson correspondence Nome News. T geuss Repeat it:â€"*" Shiloh‘s Cure will alâ€" ways cure my eo!gh: and colds." It came to pass In front of a looking glass. His collar button fell. He hunted it long and well. ‘‘Right here it dr::red." I‘e said and flop liown on the floor To explore. Ho searched for it everywhere; It wasn‘t there. (Nu. you‘re not a good gussser It didn‘t roll under the dress« reghn He shook the rugs, and then Explored the floor again. With language strong He crawled along, An‘l searched, aund searched, and searched, Ani searched, and searched, and searched, But couldn‘t find the beastly thing. That collar button bad taken wing! & + \ & % But late that night, Upon disrobing quite, He found itâ€"prepare for a shook!â€" ‘The collar button was in his nc"k! ae kWnt N ETEA s vesarn (Explanatory note.â€"â€" This ACUURHI EAMNLL ed." said the unfortunate person who sends in the foregoing; ‘"you can use it?" We can â€"but don‘t let it bazpen azain.) "You never went to jail for the cause." "Did you ever hit a constable with fiour umbreliat" was the heated rejoinâ€" er. "Well, I chained myself to a chair I hadufl'httooeenpyinaptherln‘ where I was an impudent interloper." "Pah!" hfuunl h'-ren unde:sbooch‘:ll Mh that the suffr of Eng! were mâ€"mm Ledger. Even the fellow who loves to be at the top of the heap dgnn't prefer an up: per berth in a sleeping car. Jotcad i ler®‘ Why the Train Stopped Big Caribou Herd QLD, OLD STORY note.â€""This actually bhappenâ€" Debate. Some General~ Suggestions Practical Broth Recipes. The more highly civilized we . beâ€" come the more we eat. The more we have to eat the more errors we make in our diet. We may be pourly nourished even though we eat a great deal, eithâ€" er because it is not the right kind or it is improperly cooked. It is said that twoâ€"thirds of the sickâ€" ness is caused by improper diet, and doctors agree that the feeding of the sick is of as much importance as the medicine. o apea When the patient is sick in bed only a little nourishment is needed, which is usually given in the form of liquids. The most vourishing liquid is milk. Some people do not like milk and canâ€" not digest it. One must use infinite resource when sick people do not like things. You can make the milk into junket. The rennet supplies the di‘:s- tive fluid, and flavoring the milk makes it more agreeable and digestible. Here is a recipe for one person : Oneâ€"half cup of milk, oneâ€"half teasâ€" .poonful liquid renmet, one teaspoonful (level) o sugar, three drops of vanilla. Heat the milk until lukewarm, add the sugar and stir until it is dissotved ; add ' Ls. 2 mm Snd C n o ces ul b diPres vadl dn Wes s ts the vanilla and rennet and pour in the dish you are going to serve it in. Leave it in a warm place till it is firm, aud then set it in a cool place. Always use it the day it is made. It can be served with cinnamon and nutmeg and cream. If the patient needs laxatives, do not give spices, as they act in the opposite way. If the stomach is delicate do not give cream, as it will be hard to diâ€" E*‘ Oune of the grievances of an invalid is the montomous diet, which is not at all necessary. ‘There are several kinds of broth, and they do zot all taste alike, Variety car be made by the seasoning, but there is not enough nourishment in them to sustain life for a long period ; but they are stimulating and very valâ€" uable in the diet. _ All broths should have this point in commonâ€"â€"they should be something more than mere water. ‘They should not be greasy, because freuy broth does not agree with a deâ€" icate stomach. They should be served hot, but the dish that it is put in should be hot, and a hot cover on the dish, and then all haste to get it to the patient. gest Chicken broth usually has the preâ€" ference. An old fowl contains _ more juice than a young one. One mediumâ€" sized hen should make a quart of good broth. Singe and wash the fowl. I know nice, intelligent people who will put thec hicken in a pan of water, soak out all the juice that will come out, then throw it away. The juice is what you want in the broth. Cut the fowl in rather small pieces; chop the bowes, as they contain gelatin. Scard the feet and legs and remove the skin and put them in. ‘There is gelatin in them also. Cover with cold water and let soak one hour. Then boil slowâ€" ly a halfâ€"day. The chicken should _ be cooked till it falls from _ the bones. Strain through a fine strainer or a coarse cheeseâ€"cloth. Press the chicken down till you are sure you have all the juice. If you have more than a quart, boil it down. Put it in a cool place. The fat will rise to the top, and the broth will beâ€" come thick like jelly. The fat can casâ€" ily be skimmed off. n is evirg n Now this broth can be kept several days, and each time it is served season it differently. For plain broth put salt in, but no pepper. Sick people should not have pepper. _ o A teaspoon of rice boiled till it is very soft, may be added. If the patient likes onion flavor, use a very little onion juice, which may be obtained by pressâ€" ing the onion on a grater with a roâ€" tary motion. _ Always taste it first to see if it is all right. o on ul ks Cl â€"This broth may be alternated _ with beef broth mutton broth or veal broth. Beef broth lhas more taste and the patâ€" ient gets tired of it more quickly. BEEF BROTH. One pound of lean beef makes 1 pint of broth. Have it chopped very fine, soak it 1 hour in 1 pint of cold water. This broth should never be boiled, as it coagulates the albumin, which will then be strained out, leaving the broth with no more nourishment than a cup of hot salted water. Put the pan of beef and water in anâ€" other pan of water over the fire. Stir constantly till the broth becomes dark red or chocolate color. Strain through a coarse strainer, pressing the beef down with a spoon to get all the juice out. When the broth is reheated, put it in a pan of water, being careful not to boil it. You can tell when it is cooked too much, as it becomes clear. Season it with salt. Mutton and veal broths are made the same as chicken. Remove the fat from the mutton, as it gives an unpleasant taste to the broth. They should boil slowly a long time, be strained, allowed . L o ale va a us w EP T mPTOT : off. troth, also rice. Rice is good with veal broth When these broths are var clam or oyster broth. I do no even an unreasonable patient for more. For clam or oyster broth take . 6 large clams or oysters in the shell, scrub them very clean. Put them in a saucepan with 1 cup of cold water, Let th:m boil till the shells open. Strain through a piece of muslin, season with salt, and if the patient is not very sick, a little butter. Be very careful about serving things to sick pecple. Do not ask them what they want to eat. If they have a strong desire for anything they will let you know. Serve a small quantity at a time. The sight of a quantity of food will ofâ€" ten turn the patient away from the idea -fiquey_ is nice to serve in _ mutton stand till cold, and the fat skimmed CLAM OR OYSTER BROTH CHICKEN BROTH are varied with I do not see how patient could ask of eating, where a little would tempt him Have everything spotless and dainty, do not forget anything. _ Be sure the knife and fork and spoon and sealt and everything needed are on the tray. thousands of rust holes.. Any patent paperâ€"andâ€"tar roof would be ragged pulp. Even a slate roof would be dangerously out of repairâ€" THE RIGHT KIND OF A ROOF ‘fi:;;_n'l‘l _the hot dishes covered so they will be hot when the patient is ready. o g Put a flower or even a green leaf on the trayâ€"anything that will _ divert him for the moment, for often his mind is sick and needs good cheer. Long, long before awa‘‘â€"shingled roof single thing done to _ The: t"l;:ag: that are left should be burned. Nothing that has been in . a sick room should be saved. _ . 40 4 0 4 464 606 ¢¢ #+40+044¢+¢4¢+4 2C C Ecr a Long, long before any ‘*Oshâ€" awa‘‘â€"shingled roof needed _ a single thing done to it. Recause, as you can easily see for yourself, there is simply uoâ€" thing TO wear out. about a shingle ofâ€" heavy _ (28â€"gauge) toughened steel, special galvanized to defy moisâ€" tureâ€"*Oshawa‘" Galvanâ€" r: 321â€"3 Craig St. W MONXTREAL We are safe enough in E guaranteeing these shinâ€" gles _ for _ twentyâ€"five years, as we do, in plain Engâ€", lish, with a quarterâ€"million dolâ€" lars back of the written guaranâ€" tee, which says: If any roof that‘s "Oshawa"‘â€" shingled in 1909 leaks at all by 1935, we will put on a new roof for nothing. T 4 e04e4044444444 40444444444 46 "Mistahâ€"Mistah Walkah, kin yo‘ tell â€"kin yo ‘tell me de diffâ€"de diff®wce ‘tween a cream pitchahâ€"‘tween a cream pitchah, you knowâ€"je‘ a cream pitchah, C ! P Om uind tC 8 F7 like that an‘ aâ€"wot Eo’ keep cream in, on d*° breakfus‘ tableâ€"an‘ aâ€"kin yo‘ tell me de diffunce, Mistah Walkah" _ Honestly, we believe an ‘*Oshâ€" awa‘‘â€"shingled roof will last a century, let alone twentyâ€"five years. â€" Why shouldn‘t it? w 2 : . 3 P t % ©C OO MBWOR EDCA No ienss "No, George, 1 can‘t tell you the Cifâ€" ference between a cream pitcher. \What is the difference, George, between . a cream pitcher?" * K "Whyâ€"whyâ€"de uddak‘s a prim sreaâ€" ture, Mistah Wa‘lkah, en‘ de udâ€"â€"* "Ladies‘ o‘ gentleme4, there boung no popular ballid or appropriate voral selec tion to go with that une, I will myself give you an imitation cf an interlocutor iring a dranken blackface comedian off the stage." ized Steel Shingles are n ind aae id t Aatid O B0 Th S These heavy steel galvanized shingles lock underneath on all four sides in such a way that the whole roof is practically one sheer sheet of steelâ€"without a crevice or a seam to catch moisâ€" ture or to let wet get through. Repeat it:â€"**Shiloh‘s Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." T he A representative in Congress, who is the father of several bright girls, tells a story whereof one daughter is the main ues‘ > s Sh o < h Eam s "For a long time," says the represenâ€" tative, "I had the bad habit of hanging about the lower floor when the girls had men callers. One evening I had settled in an easy chair in the reception room, just off the drawing room, when one of my girls, who was talking to a bright chap from our own state, called out: "‘What is it, daughter® "‘It‘s 9 o‘clock, dad, the hour whe Tom and I usually go into committee â€"Harper‘s Weekly. They met in a Fleet street chop house. "Halloa, Algy! Doing much poetry now ?" "Only enough to keep the wolf from the â€" door," _ answered the very minor ““amt Seott!" cried his friend, "the wolf car‘t read poetry, can he?"â€"Titâ€" DOES NOT NEED A DOCTOR. Mrs. F. Porier, Valleyfield, Que., says: "I always use Baby‘s Own Tablets for my little . one, and therefore _ never need a doctor, When my baby is feverish or restâ€" less J give her a Tablet and in a couple of hours she is all right. They have been of the greatest bencfit to her when tecthing, and are just the thing in all emergenâ€" cies." These Tablets promptly cure colic, indigestion, _ constipation, diarrhoea, destroy worms, break up colds and make teething easy. Good for children of all ages. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Witâ€" ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO lams‘ Medicine Company, Brock ville, Ont. Horrors of Minstrelsy. Repelling the Margauder. A Subtle Hint. w t W w t t o PEp wirlld Address our Nearest Warehouse: OTTAWA TORONTO LONDON CHATHAM WINNIPEG QUCEBEC S8T. JOHX, NB. HaALIFAX 42SussexSt. 11ColborneSt. 86 KingSt. 200 West KingSt. 76 LombardSt. 127 Rue duPontSq, 42â€"46PrinceWillisin®t 1§PFinceSt We want Agents in some sections. Write for details. Mention this paper. No. 123 MAUDE RHODES edlar People of Oshawa Long years before y ou cou?d find a rign of wearâ€" out about an **Oshawa > shingiedroof any w oo d. shingledroof would berotâ€" ted to ‘dust. Any ordinâ€" ary metalâ€" ehingle roof w ould be pitted ~with t Cl M "OSHAW A" A new roof for nothing If they leak by 1935 SHINGLES You need never put a brushfol of paint on an "Oshawa ‘‘â€"shingled â€" roof, the special galvanizing makes paint _ entirely needless, and it won‘t wear off nor flake nor peel. Yet that roof will be _ Rainâ€"proof, Snowâ€" proof, Windâ€"proof, Weaâ€" therâ€"TIGHT as long as the buidings stand, Fireâ€"proof, of course eould a seamles sheet steel catch fire?% That alone is worth the whole price of these Oshawa Galvanized Steel Shinâ€" gles. . GALVANIZED STEEL Count the saving in insurance rates (any company makes | a lower rate on buildings so shinâ€" gled). Count the freedom from anxiety, the safety of _ your houses and barns. (The Economic‘s Society.) A little more than a year ago we drew attention to this subject. _ The text was then drawn from the spoliaâ€" tion of those enterprising persons . in and out of Canada who, resting belief on public faith and legislative honesty, daringly invested many millions in the comparatively new project _ of hydroâ€" electric power development and transâ€" mission. That what we then said might be expected has really occurred and is now history. Capital has become chary of investments in Ontario. The murder of those who had invested had proved to be a very real form of provincial suiâ€" cide. So that toâ€"day a text may be taken from the Ottawa Citizen of the 5th inâ€" stantâ€"than which the Ontario Governâ€" ment has no stauncher supporter. It is as follows: And, a most important fact to you, an ‘*Oshawa‘‘â€"shingled roof is â€" LIGHTNXINGâ€"proof! _ Posâ€" itively proof against lightningâ€" insulated far better than if it bristled with lightning rods "There are several people in Canada who think it is not in the interest of this Dominion that _ our Government should get busy incorporating companâ€" ies for Brazil, Mexico and Timbuctoo in order to entice Canadian _ capital away from home. The mere existence of these companies with their large list of Canadian shareholders is a _ backâ€" handed advertisement for the opporâ€" tunities for the investment of foreign capital in Canada. The shrowd British investor, for instance, is not slow to remark that if Canada is such a giltâ€" edged ficld for British investment, it is a wonder that our home capitalists, who made their money out of Canada by the way, should find it necessary to go to Brazil or Timbuctoo to reinvest it."‘ It is hardly necessary to p!gailx an y BShe was married to Theodore Mitchell Hastings recenuy Mawr, Pa., in theâ€" Church, of the Redeemer. Miss Baily is O mflu young women in society. © She is a daughter of Mr L. Baily, of "Clovertou," A rdmore, Pa. SUICIDE BY LAW. Nesc MISS$ CAROLYN CORLIES BAILY of tough » Can‘t Catch Fire «â€" Makes Buildings Lightning " _ Proof ' ‘ Lasts a Century { Never Needs Painting 11 OW Half a million dollars doesn‘t cover the damage ilghtning did last year to Canadian farm build ings alone, and **Oshawa‘‘â€"shinâ€" }I ing would have saved all that loss. Yet, with all these things to show you that an **Oshawa"â€" shingled roof is the RIGHT roof for you, **Oshawa‘"‘ Galvanized Nteel Shingles cost no more than wood shingles to start with. Let me tell you just what it would cost to roof any building right. You nceedn‘t figure the labor for anybody who 1 can use a hammer can Right ?" think, to free, of « Podiar products include every kind of sheet motal building materialsâ€"too maby items to even mention here. You oan have a catalogueâ€"estimateâ€"priccsâ€"advice just for the asking. We‘d uhquh! w to interest you in our Art Stee! Cellâ€" ings and Side Wallsâ€"they are a revelation to many people. More than £,000 designs. May we send you & booklst and plctures sermon from this text, for it is text and sermon in ome. Capital maturally goes where it conâ€" ceives it can do best, and has sunely the right to do so. 1t would indeed be in koegha( for a legislature that has by its legislation destroyed confidence in a province, and consequently driven the people of that province to seek abroad such security of investments as they have been â€"deprived of at home to try to frame other legislation to oo-(n! them to invest in the midst of the inâ€" wecurity it has created. This would be comic opera staged on a tragic pleatâ€" form with a vengeance. **Chickens," proverbially, _ ‘"come home to roost," and when we murderâ€" ed tens of thousands of trusting inves tors we created this chicken suicide by law. It has now come home to roost. Gaunt it may be; raven in line and in mournfulness as that ghastly bird of Poe that cried ‘"‘Nevermore," but it is our chicken still bred by our own legâ€" islative experts and turned out of our legislative hbatchery. Mere it is now, perched above our chamber door, disâ€" turbing, uncomforting, _ making sad with its constant refrain. Let us hope, that by and by, perhaps after some exâ€" piatory suffering to punish us for proâ€" vincial legislative folly, our ears may be cheered and comforted by a final refrain, **Nevermore; Suicide by Law." ee, of course. Just address our nearest place «k for Roofing Right Booklet Baldwinâ€"The trouble is that so few of us have the real Thanksgiving spirit. Rambo (with some thickness of ut«er> ince}) â€"That‘sh not th‘ trouble with me, 11 put these shingles on eas ily and quickly. f send you a booklot and pictures of them * a ESTABLISHED 1861 fin.um recently at Bryn * Mis« Baily is oge of the Not Guilty these things to an **Oshawa"â€" the RIGHT roof

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