The Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-11-15, Page 4/vim MAN is putting up t!elephone poles.
Early in the morning he is out making a •
way for the wire that is to come. At ,night
' when the gang gets back to camp he is tired.
Buthe likes it. There is ze.st in, the work he ,
, is doing, for he is in new country. There have
never been telephones here before. .
He is -blazing the trial; After him will come
families and bonus and stores and factories to°.
make another city. Over the wires on the poles
'he 'plants 'there will be voices and laughter,
business will hum, all the • world will draw °
Tagser-... - •
He 'wprks • with rnagic. The wire transforms
time.and 'distance. .TOday 3rcot can lift the
telepone at yoprelbOW and within seven min-
utes hear the. voice of your friend in -England
'say: "Are you there?"
•T
. .1 • -
THIS MAGIC'in the .telephone has not
come in a day. • It has: come .with year
after year of experiment and,: improvement..
• The 'telephone of today is ncimore 'like the,.
.*0;40filehine; gun: isAiike a
• And the telePlione of4oinorrow, *ill surpass
teltivhnite"oplodip.: Tomorrow perhaps,.
„this :telephone at yont'aboVi will bring you the -
fatedr
Magic we ziifiw4o not itreant'of. '
„"irix7' : :"T• 4 ;
HIS IS -die urge to improve—to seek and
to find something: always better—which
has been the definite policy of the telephone
business since the first/ crude instrument re-
produced the voice of its inventor fifty -odd
• Years ago- . *
By no other policy could the telephone have
kept pace with country or contributed to
its progress as it has done in reducing Canada's
wide distances and differences of geography.
And by no other policy can the telephone now
meet the responsibility of serving Canada's
future.
C ANADA'S FUTURE is at
, least twenty
years of unprecedented growth and pros-
perity. All the signs and barometers of busi-
ness point to it. All the shrewdest prophets of
business predict it.
The signs and the prophets are so Mire, and
the future is so unmistakable that within the
•„next five years more money will be needed for
extension of the telephone system in Ontario
and Quebec than was spent by the business in
all its first forty years.
THE MAN pushing, pales and Wire into
new country and the foresight which now
is planning over one hundred nfillion dollars of
new plant to meet the needs of the next five
• years Come from the same '
policy and the same purpose --
to give Canadians facilities of '
communication worthy of their
country and its future.
Palialk4 as.,aa Cdruoi.s. of Cosielic to tail WOO
oMg alma 'Ow talsellows brirplases 4WD Ik.pooled is ;
.l...11•11111111.111_11.11111111,1,
• 'Awl ?mat
•krr,
• '
tHt .1.1.1CISi4OV/ SPNTINPL THURSD4Y,NOVEMBER 15th, 19:8
• GODERICH.
During the past' week six steamers
with apProkimately one 'million bush,
els .of gran.' for 'the Ideal elevators
. •
, and one Coal boat arrived at this port.
; There is still a shortage of 'railway
ears and the 'export shiptnent of
grain from the „ Gotieriali elevator
coritinue at an averageef about fifty;
• carloads per. day Over• both railways,
'•
Th, tug Sandford elee.eal. for Sara
a hie ehortlY after 2 oIo k teat Thera -
clay afternoon with the dredge which
was used •brathe' .Cedwiar: .Deedging
:Company here last suriiiiima When
bout forty miles from porttrouble
aae,s eneountered. on account of , the
eat % ea and -the thdg en down
The erew' f three Mee uereapayed
and the Sandford eeturned, to "this.
ert,
Dredging Operation's theoutey
losin- of the harbor have xeased:for,
thIs year and the Kilmer gt 'Barbet
dredge hat tied up in the barber; The
contract, hatnotbeen gonirleted and
• operations will ` be' reStmed neit
e.
THE
•1470kNOW SENTiNEL
Published, every ThufsdaY mnkning
at 'mallow, Ontario.,
A. D. MacKenzie, Proprietor
• 'and Edttor.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER' 15th, 1928
FORESTRy ASSOCIATION
About seven seven milliop .teees 'sew be
used in North America. this 'Christmas
as, Christmas trees; and the other
question at once arises -Are we de,
vesting' our forests by .brightening
up' the homes, and making millions
of yonagsters happy at Christmas
•• • „
,prominent authorities such as Di.
C. D. Howe, Dean, Faculty of For-
estry, University ota,to, Oan-
ade • and, Wm: G. He Superin-
tendent of State Forests, New York
State, in United States say 'No'.
Dean Howe says "an ..area of thirty
square miles is set aside and man-
aged for Christmas tree Production,
wield supply the Present demand for
each year for, all tilne.".
The average size of the Christmas
tree marketed in the 'States isarx ft.
A spruce .tree of this size can ,be
geownin the nursery inside of ten,
;years and in the fewest in fifteen.
Howard: says7--"Trees. are for
• use,, and there is no other use. to
which they could be -put that Would.
contribute so .miich Joy to mankind
as their use by children On this great
'holiday.", He further: says, our
• state; a large proportioe , Christ-
mas es are cut from pasture lands,
whetethey are a nuisance, or from
other lands which the owner desires
to clear for farm purposes, so that
the trees Wouldbe cut in any eyent
•
and the marketing of then' for.Chriet.
Christ-
mas gives the owne,r „'some. .return
for hi a labor.":
'In kn'rojie:, WhereaaPorestry p
ra-
tice has. :reaced .its7higheat
Chaistmas treea, ara.,
which . are culled - out of the -forst,
'practice 'whieh:.actually. improYes..the
fOrete' Hence 'there AA: seereely , hut
dweller Who has not his , Christrima
tree: •
. The Jacksort Construetion Com.
,
PeaY,',who were receraly awarded the
, .
contract for the .eatension Of the
mooring wharf, cominencei Work the
past, Week. It is enderstood that a elip
Will beleft between the:new cribwork
and the emelt pier „for the elielter of
email erafts. „
s
•TIIEIR FUN
Nineteen
young hien entrboye were
• .
•
ibefore Magistrate. Reid at Brussels
on Thursday of 'teat week to, riliseret
to eharges atiaing out of Halloween
pranks. • . , •
gang
louse; tearing 'a 400e of its hinges
to get in. besidethey opened, water
taps anirdiiaed the Plae.e.
The younger 'element' \vete Iota off
-tmaerispeetied -sentepie whiI the ten
older members of the ,gahg were or.
tiered to pay, for the damages tiohe
and the cost- of •the court, amounting
in al1 to $57.00. As a 'nights: enter.
tainment, it comes high.
In Canada, the Canadian Forestry
Ferettry
Association. Would adaocate" that it
ecienectien with, forest plantations
there should be planted -some spruce
and • balsam for Christmas trees.
When these reach the praper size the
owner can cut them Out and Market.
them and still :leave the 'timber trec
o mature for a timber crop., This
;ource of supply would probably be
...efficient to supply the herne demand
For export trade, plantations of
spruce and balsam should prove P
profitable business .: Two thousand
Christmas trees can be gresen on one
acre. Thus, on A ten years rotation
/am .sqare miles *mild' euptdy 1=4
trees for all time, at a planting
:•est of less than one cleat per tree
Here is an opPortunity_for entereris-
.7ng connnunityatoWnships or iedivid-
uals to utilize some abandoned farm
to good purpose. This year in New
73ronswick alone there is a demand
for three nullion Christ:mai . frees.
For the present, however, certain
rules of conduct .should .be citieerved
To cut the tea of :a perfectly good
timber tree; and leave the body to rot
in the hash is a criminal weete an
uoworny. of 'a self reapeeting.cititen
'To take, a Christmas tree from priv.
ate property. is plain' theft and aa
question of public Morals that ehould
not, be,. tolerated by any cemmunity.
Why' not rather select • your tree
,teom estare land; of if .selecting in
the hrsh cheese cedar or balsam
whieh are prolific repreducersa the,
utilization cf Which' Wou/d do little
harm. '
„
.
END OF THE CURRIE LIBEL CASE
' (Toronto Saturday Niait ,
It is to be hoped that the unani-
teoue deeision of four enimerit'jndges
of the Supreme' Corirt of Ontario ills -
missing' the appeal of tbe dbfendants
in the libel action of Generel Sir Ar-
thur Currie,ii the last chapter in that
celebrated ease. Against the advise
of • several, lawirers Messrs. F. W.
'Wilson of the Port Hope . "Guide"
and W. T. R. Preptonauther of the
' libellous editeriel, "Mens," insisted
en appealing a verdict reached by the
trail jury at Coboarga . last May.
.which Must in view of all the circum-
stances be regarded as' exiremely
arereifid. /he coarse taken' -64Ythe
justices of the Divisional Court in
disraissing the applleatiee Without
hearsafremaeetinsel for
%riuCjjis the .1fittitita
answer to etubborn ettepant to keep
the case elive,,in whieh the laWyers.
•e • eajdzismeleae.
•As ' was 'stated in • these delurons
last enring a ,greet mane Cehadians
who. were „in a good position to know
the,, facts' os Mr, Preston. were welt
aware that there had %beeri tie mere.:
fire of lite' in the blocs:nets tapture.
of Mons eliirly en the morning of At,
snistice .patyl 191g.,, 4 Iv's obvious, co
• C•
hem the swift interchanges between
the bench and ceunsel for the defend”
ants that some of the justices them,
selves were aware of the truth and
naturally Indignant it Ilia further
effort to rams a elender agaipst Gen-
eral Carrie and his kaff down the
throate of the public. Chief Justice
Latchford's obiter dicta with tegerd
to. the. Rose'ilfle,g4vg a' new color to
ithe proceedings, and was naturally have any time mi their hands o
evoked by the cheunnstance that the which to be homesick; It Will not h
original author -of the Slander reViv- the fault of those who have arrange
ed in Presteies editorial Wee, the late the programme fintheir visit, Star
Sir Sem Hughes, vibe was . a thick-- in 'off With a builg-op dinner at Ha
and -thin chemPien of the Ross rine Rouse, the fanunis sec;a1 centre °
before the Tit', and refused to recede the University of Toeoato, on th
feme that -position even when it cot night of their errivel, the boys vi
in lives and morale was demonstrated have three days crowded with inter
The failure of the Appeal is the most e1, entertainment : and instrnetio
satisfactory since it furnishes a coma Hon.' James S. Martin,:, Minister 0
plete .vindication tif the fairness, ,of Agriculture, Will be. the chairman o
.the, trail judge, ,Mrai Justice Rose,, the Banged, 'end the boys ,will Ikea
whose 'patience' and leniericy in hie addresses by Premier Hciward Verg
endeavor s to bring out the whole eson and Dr. la ,J., Cody, the Chair
.Must be 'regarded is e public. :service man of the Board of Governors of th
of historical importerigea Univeisity, p •
• On Wieclnesdei, Novernaser the 21113,
PEW, UNITED" STATES CARS the. boys Will be taken for a tom< o
• IN CROSSING ACCIDENTS the Union Steck yards aril the Pack
ing plants where they will pee th
whole process of Marketing livestoc
and the ultimate manufacturing o
the animals into meat product.. I
the afternoon of the seare. day ;the
will be taken through - the huge Man
ufactuting plant of the Massey Her
tis Company Limited -end aill see the
different factory processes in the pre
:duction rof - farni--imaleinentsa --The
will, he guestiof the Coastal Of Can-
adien Meat Packers at luncheon and
Massey Harris' Company at shaper. In
the .evening they will attend the -Roy -
el. Winter Fair Horse Show as guests
0!
the
Faii
On Thursday... they.. will 'visit large
Toronto stores, but the greater part
of the day will be'spent in inspection
of exhibits' and studying the judging
of:livestock at the Royal rWintelareir.
In the evening' they will be guests of
-o7iaa'„e:air,Nr,l.Peeli;g"" The; T".;. Eaton 'Co af a ' hari-,
(Piet; 1
. .
On Fiday the last ',day, the. 'bey;
will be taken • through Ontario
Parliament Buildings .Aria will be giy-
en-a, motor drive_ariond,.the, Capital
City as guests of the City of Toronto
More time will be spent in inspecting
exhibits at the Fair; and in the even-
ing -those: boys that have survived
three days' of high lieiegcL
,aanate_not
overcome by the pangs cf indigest-
ion, will she, treated to .another ban-
quet by the Robert. SimPaon Com-
adny Limited.. , •
They. will leave .foi.lierre the fol-
lowing iporning.
FARM BOY TOHAVE GREAT
TIME AT TORONTO
, -
Fiveallundred Boys will Rave No iclk
a•
Moments During Royal Fair 'I'irip
If 'atm of ,the five hundred Ontaric
farm Fs Who are' to visit the Royal
WinterFair et. Toronto this month
. . The : Board of Railway Commiesi;
'oilers of Canada issued, not 1,On0 ago,
bulletin diteeting attention to dan-
gerous precticV of which certain
drieers eta vehicles and pedestrians
,had been . guilty , at level..erossings of
highways over lines of ilte..Canadian
Pacific, Canadian- Nation d and Tor -
enter Harailten-and-Buffaltellailways.,
The bulletin dealt', with facts , disclos-
ed in reports of cases. of teckleseness
observed ' by railway employersain
period eonapyising pertians of • the
vears 1927 'and 1928; In a "number of.
the eases reported, drivtrs passed
Over the crossings in safety. Many of
these ciriVers, no doubt gongratulated'
theinseAes on the, .smartness and slice
seas of their effortstosreeke progress
with. their journey, but ate de,
eltired in the, reports 'to the slteilwey
Conumssisni t
Like someOf . the aileiVers "tikes
, • -. . • .
-fa thence," ,"cat ,betweenaetaea
:et:attunes; and ."get a Away:with it.,
thes4'; drivers ati. crossings
evied their. escape :from' accident
:to. the '.eXertions or the .farbearanee
of .others. •
•
Froin exiininatien of statistics of
Iccidents and "near accidents. it
level crossings another': interesting
• fact, is. learned. That is that the num-
ber of motor vehicles from the ,United
States involved in accidents at rail-
way ceoisingt in Canada in 1927 was.
Very Small. In that year, 3,153a80a
automobiles came to Canada from the
Veited 'States to make Mere, or lesi.
:,),:ctended tours in, this. country: The
number of accidents to meter vehicles
it railweiacressinge in the Dominion'
was 263 In only '15 of these accidents
Were automobiles bearing United 'Sts
'tee Remise concerned. In ,isther words
only .5.7...Per •cent a of the aninbet of
notbmebileas theta, figured in level
"tossing accidents last year belonged
.•
I-6 visitors from the 'United States
All .the rest hehniged to. Canadians.
It, is :possible that the aest
;ty of. the 'meter VehicleS'.frore the
United States were driven on main
'nigliwaye, where grade crossing dee-
gere are fewer thao 'en .other reeds
in the country.. Still, it. is. Worth: not-
ing that though:, the .driecri of the
machines from the...United States, in
:most. instances.. lacked Ideal kilow,
ledge of the toads only fifteen . of
them came to grief at tailWey cros-
sings. It rrea be ,that these tourists,
travelling in e'. strange '‘eountry and
lacking precise knowledge as well, of
its traffic ,reeirlation,s ' and •,custema
a's .of its roads ,• emuloyed More than
,ordinary caution: in their .driving
Possibly from necessitya or habit.
they were. careful , to. take note of the
directing and aeareing SgnS by stile
roedsides. Perhaps. again: by driving
.at home on country roads, and city
streets where the velerne of traffic
14 usually 'great vehicles move, at a
brisk pride, they bad leerned. for their
Own 'protection to he vigilant, to ee-
eraise. self-restraint and to weigh tha
risks of eceident. Whatever be the
reason for, the • coniparath-e immunity
'of United States automobiles ' frbm
accidents at level crossings in this
country, thet. immunity is an.example
for Canedian driVers and maY arouse
a hope that, increasing Meteor traffic
will teach drivers, caution' and, thus,
eliminate some spresent Causes of ae-
cideets. a -Ex.
•—e-oeo-•
THE 1111 PORT ANCE '• OF PRINTERS
,Matlioet. printers,the teachersaof
the ages would have taught in 'Vain;
the 4rEtt/14. of hIlosophers v_v_oul4
„have, ,,,fieiehed With the -.tapers '...theta
burned • for their nieditationeaaPrint-
ing is the science of all sciences; She
art o f all arts, for it has asp; ened the
'lead of fair opportunity to the unteld„
Milliens, Since its discoVery and tip-
uliesition, -mankind has eiperienced
Itore pleasure,. greater "erlizlitnient
larger happiness, teuer libertythan
had come to it with „the blind grop..
insand voiceless aspira,lons ot the
tintless 'centuries preceeding.,
FARMER PAYS $900 BECAUSE .
OF ACCIDENT 'IN HI BARN
A law suit of unusual interest was
before the assize • Court'. recently held
at Walkerton. We take the following
account of the.case from the. Walk-
erton, Heald -Times:
In e snit broght by Frank ,Sutter,
of Brant in the Fall Assizes here
last week to recover ' $10,000 from
'his neighbor,' George Knoll, for in-
juries to his back Sustained on 'Sept.
.17th,` 1927.• by. a ladder that had been
placed against a seaffeld at a thresh-
ing on Knoll's' farm failing on Setter
as he was stooaieg oven to pick hp -a
,box; resulted in the PreSidine Jadge,
Mr. Justice 'Kelly :of Teaonto, after
listening to e-eidence for a day and a
ifelf„ persuading the warring parties
on Friday night to get together and
settle the' case, His •Lorlship ,intim-
ating that unless 'they did so, some-
body might be financially , ruined sin
the affair. •
As a coireqrrence a settlement was
affected whereby Knoll pays. Sutter
$900 damages: for his kale:lei, tegeth-
er. 'with Costs of .another couple of
hundred incurred in the action. The
ease is interesting in that it shows
the liability of a farmee for apeid-
•entS that May occur at hie threshing.
, It Would seem that ,knoll's son
Albert; eget' 22, had gene tip ,the lad-
der With a pitchfork in his hand, and
when about left, up. , the „ladder slip-
ped and he fell with the fork. 'His
father, Mr. Geo, Knoll. askedhis son
if he were hurt and reeekling an an-
swer in the negative, Sutter who
claimed the ladder had hit him on the
• backs.' exclaimed, -"I guessI got the
worst , of it," This was Olortly efter
dinner, Saturday, 'and'. Knoll deltas
Sutter ,kept on working and that he
tits; eame hark ere! ererkeci Mondey.
A few days ',later Setter complained
that. he was unable to .work,`! -and
Kriell, who: neielibor, did .his
chores for him for a week or ten daYs
At the time, of enteritte- suit for
410 000 edatnages ,,i,-.avae -thought that
„Sutterat-spine had been injured but
from the evidence, of the. doctor at
the trail it was ithareet• that only the
nerves of. the hackhad ben affeped.
• For the plaintiff. .Fearik Sutter
testified on hi own behalf* while his
father, Mr„ Tony Suttar, rehited o
conversation ,he had with deft after
the aceident in which Kneli admitted
that the ladder was notneessary in
the position 'it was In and • that he
i
,„aameeeee., „.CHATHam
( pir
,
McCormick -Deering •Clialliani Wagons
STAND rtILE. STRAIN OF
IIALS .pN FARM,
• OR GRAVEL HAULS AND EVERY, WHERE TEAT CAPACITY
.
LOADS TEST THE FIBRE OF CON STRUp,TION OP WAGON,
. GEARS. WE WILL BE PLEASED TO EXPLAIN THE SUP- .
ERIORITY OF THE .PATEN.TED CHATHAM DUMPli;R SKE-
IN, THE DUST -PROOF SKEIN BOX, THE 'EXTRA . STRONG'
IRON 'REINFORCEMENT OF THE GEAR.: HULIS OF SELF.CT-
ED LERCH, RIMS OF WHITE OAK, AND' SP..NCES OF BEST
GRADE HICKORY. 'SPECIAL CARE IS clVKIS` To EVERY'
PIECE OF MATERIAL;
•'ANDREW
aGEN'a' . L.UCKNOW •
'7
tsheorucl, have mewed away
,..frOm
h
.*Dr.,f'11. IL Sinclair, Who..attended
Sutter/gem evidence as to his injure
jos and snowed that the nerves,,of.the
spine ,had been affected.;
For the the defence P, F. McCue
testified that Suttee had been suffer-
ing fromi,injuries to his ba.cli before
the 'accident. "
Geo. .Knoll .the defendant...as:tilted-
;ahat it. was a enereaaceidtaate and not,
'd!.1:9;jo aty carIesesi... „oh his ?.• pert.
and : that hia 'sena sAlhei:t ,who fe'I
isith the ladder,' had teld lain that:
the ladder dielijettike Sutter at all
der the • slih
the Abet;iriapr;estsiet4
ent1ehashie'l't'ashe'vlaun
;r:
did not hit Sutter,. While. his brother:
WM. Alien, Deputy Reeve , of ip'apt
gave • evidence showing that it was
amposelele for -the.ladder to hit Sut7
ter in , the position he • was at the
'time. a
George Waechter, another WitnesS-
for the .defence, tried to show that the
ladder wasn't there :et ail, but had
been in another Part of the been,
Judge Kelly ,on adjourning Friday
' night, insisted on the parties getting
together and settling, •which they
did; Campbell Grant " acting ' for the
Plaintiff, and Lawyer Klein for the
defendant in the action.•
: The outcome Of the affair sllows'
the responsibility that is throvvn on
e fernier; as ,regards the safety and
gate of his help at threahings. •
▪ Eyery issue of the FarailY Herald
and Weekly Star of Monter:41 is worth
the year's subscription' price': to the.
fernier's of Canada and farmers' fain-
silie rejoice ih getting the addition of
a erb, magazine: •
Another (..---41-enre fo.tdiscontent isto
. . .
Visit the old herne town end seewhat
yeers have 'der* to the •girt 'yea al-
most martie.d..
• •
•
•A UTO:1101111Li,a ,AC'CIDFIN
SET'l LED 0:>$ l'EltC12:11NIAGg
..•
"13,Asks'. •
• The only .eaSe to be 'argued:before
• I.,
Jury.at the Assizesraceraly held a't .
.iil i ton,Wai40 ection .brotight, by
Donald W.' Beare of Wiarton and his 7..
iic Isabefla, against - an Albeinai•le
fat,eer,. Wee. .J.. McGarvey, aged .64,
--;4oherikt:11;eliTtiltt:loovh.o"niZOI'pli.'7,1d;31011.1Vt,
. Struck- and , kirk:faked: dawa 'Mtss• Baine
as she iras. attemetinga•th -,crogi the
steeet.",The• victim- had both' :bones -
broken 'bet •`..,.eeen • the elbowand"
six ribs fraetured;
hurt, besides hiany .severe braises on .
'the .face, head and hody. She. was in:
the Owen Sound, Hospital, for a time
with. her injuries. The evidence went
to 'slioav ;that the areitian after get, •
'eing ..past the .car;' had beconie exeit6.4
and, jarnpedback right .'iri'fiont. of ,.
the auto; niaking it impossible for the
driverto prevent, the ,e,rash.' it was •
held on the ot:her hand that the driv-
two tols away, 'end as she Was gon-
p,
er had s.e en the weniee when aheat.
fused he should have ,stooped instead
of merely sle'a lag deem: The Jury
found that the inetorist was 25 per
cent a riegligent and the Woman 75
"e ent The2.- • fixed damage's at ,$2a0
:foi the injugds „lady. and St'50'. for ,the
hnhand, .who fr.-ul been • put tos.several
hundred dollar's' exnerree inanedical •
treetnient, " etc. 'The Judgeal-whoSee
charge to the Jury- Was somewhat: -
favor,qhle to.'t1u. detend-int- has . re-' •
.served hie di -ion on the matter.
faor Nem; (hveri Sound, for the
.doehifienndtittfln;.t.0..E. /.Kle_iniValki
•
0oorton for
• There's- one ,Arond thing. 'Seine ek-
nerbriPnter in dev(lOpine; home-made
hooteh rnav yet'. diSeover a perfect
1:•arnish.. remover. ' •
•
1 •
Phone NO. 10 isdt Your Service
We: Sell for Cash -We Sell Cheaper Than The Credit Store '
:'
GOOD CHEER STOVES.
The GOOD CHEER Oven' Heater is in a
Class by Itself
UTILITY' COMES FIRST IN ANY HOUSEHOLD- EQUIPMENT, .
THEN RELI413ILI1YaLONG .SERVIL'E *AN:p LEAUTY. '
ALL THESE QUALITIES ARE SU, alMED tn, tHE "GOOD
CHEER," '
THE. FIREBOX 18 ROOMY AND BUILT R:CIIIT. TN` THREE
MINUTES, YOU CAN RAISE THE COAL GRATES TO :MAKE
THE FIREPOT SHALLOWER FOR B.CRNINCe • COKE Ott AL-.
ilERTA COAL. ' • a • • •
THE OVEN IS .20 IN, AND WILL GIVE ROOM Ppit,EIOITT PIE
PLATES--,FOLTR ON .THE BOTTOM "VaD POL:li ON 1 HE RACK
ABOVE
IF rYOU 'WISH TO SEE THE ,BES.I", AT A REASONABLE
PRICE, WE INVITE YOU TO CALL,
DON'T FAIL TO SEE THE "GOOD CHEER OIRCULATOR" A
WONDERFUL, STOVE FOR 09.00.
WE HAVE A GOOD RANGE OF. HEATERSaaCOA L, OR woon.
ouw.OWN.NrAR.P, OF STOVE. PI 084.-3,• MA D taro \r ELISII
pt.:A..Tr.„----ALANiAYS ON HAND,
COLEMAN LAMPS -COLEMAN I EltN,S -a DRIVING'''LAN
OI
1:7sER,
EN:T'*EFfzIT:st!scrH,E.12 ALt.,,,OpRItErcLcEDCT;LICscy*sC
AsIrLIGI'vri kT ti.723:
"
Lime Plaster Cement •
• Sash -Primed and .Glazed
Wm. Murdie Son
Heating, Plumbing and Electric Wiring
41
•