HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1910-07-28, Page 6The Climes New ora
July ISth u910
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TORONTO. 135
KING GEORGE'S REIGN.
!oyer Daoud Says It Will Be
Short and Stormy.
!!i short and stormy reign for George
. is predicted by S. Daoud, the.Wacth-
on astrologer. Two years ago. it
said, Daoud foretold the death of
g Edward and described the eir-
tances accurately. Among the
gs which be foresees in the new
s horoscope is that his reign will
but six and a half years.
"the first tire years," Daoud says.
•s!will be among the stormiest in 5 ng-
Iand's history. The last eighteen
1noiths, however. will be comparative -
fortunate. The coming reign will
terminated by the king's death.
Which will be a natural one. Ele will
4ltnore than once be the object of at -
!tempted assassination, but woulde be
murderers will be powerless to harm
i11im.
rn "There will be trouble in all the Brit-
lsb possessions during the second year.
$especially in India.
"In the third year of his reign there
1Ri11 be a conflict between Engjand
and another European power ruled by
kinsman of King George. which will
1:1precipitate a great war. England will
'on her own part wage war With this
'European country. The war will be
;short and decisive and will result in
.;England's being obliged to make.con-
Heessions which will deprive her of
!much of her power.
"Egypt will give King George de-
s .tided trouble, but will not be able to
sIfree herself from English rule during
reign."—New York World.
A New Rifle Muffler.
The stir created by Maxim's :murder
ous rifle =silencer. whieb is really a
muffler, not a silencer. bas brought
other inventors into the field. A Moore
,!silencer is chronicled that is said to
have many advantages over that of
Maxim, not the least of which is its
relative cheapness. The ordnance de-
partment of the army is now giving It
YAWNING.
its Effect Upon the Respiratory Organs
and. Upon the Hurt,
Dr. Emil Bunzl of Vienna, Austria,
to speaking of diseases of the throat
and remedies. said that yawning had
Its great vaine. Yawning bas recently
been recommended independently as
a valuable exerdse for the respira-
tory organs.
"According to Dr: Naegli of the Uni-
versity of `Luettich;" said Pr. Bunzt,
'yawning brings all the respiratory'
muscles of the chest and throat into
action and is, therefore, the• best and
most natural means of strengthening
them. He advises everybody to yawn
as deeply as possible. with arms out-
stretched, in order to change complete-
ly the air In the lungs and stimulate
respiration. In many cases he bas
round the practice to relieve the diffi-
culty in swallowing and disturbauce
of the sense of bearing that accompa-
ny catarrh of the throat. The patient
Ls induced to yawn through suggestion.
Imitation of a preliminary exercise in
deep breathing.
"Each treatment consists of from 'six
to eight yawns, each followed by the
operation of swallowing. It should be
added. however, that it is quite possi-
ble for deep breathing to be overdone,
particularly by persons with weak
hearts, and it is at least open to ques-
tion whether the obstacles to free 'res-
piration which the yawning cure is
alleged to remove are not useful in
preventing the entrance of germs and
other foreign bodies." — Washington
Herald.
Advertise in The New Era
There is more Catarrh in this sec-
tion of the country than all othei
diseases put together, and until the
last few years was supposed to be in-
curable. F ,r a great many years
doctors pr +pounced it a local disease
and prescr bed local remedies, and by
constantly failing to cure with local
treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Woman'sWorld
Little Princess Mary
Her Father', Chum.
PAINOItsB MARL
England will now have three queens,
the queen dowager, the new queen and
Princess Mary. The latter is the•only
girl among the six children in the roy-
al household and has long been a pet
of the English nation. She celebrated
her twelfth birthday on the 25th of
last. October and is said to be as pret-
ty and lovable a little princess as ever
lived outside a.book of fairy tales.
Princess Mary was always a great
favorite with King Edward, who kept
her constantly in his company at San-
dringham or Balmoral.
"Mary. Is as much a boy as the met
of them," her father said once, "She
enters into the sports and recreations
of her brothers with -enthusiasm and
can hold her own with them in most
games."
Plays Cricket Like Boy.
She can play cricket and boasts of
having once "clean bowled" Prince
Arthur of • Connaught with the first
ball she pitched to him. She practical-
ly lives in the . open air, fishing and
boating continually throughout the
' summer.
Once last summer she and her broth-
ers, Prince Edward and Prince Al-
bert, were boating on' the Thames
when a skiff containing two Eton boys
collided with their boat.
"Why didn't your mother teach you
to steer before she let you come out
on the river?" said one of the boys.
"Why didn't yours teach you man-
ners?" replied thea princess.
In common with her brothers she
bas been trained to be thrifty and to
save the money allowed her. Each of
the childreu receives a stated sum ev-
ery week, .never ;under any circum- -
-.utance to be exceeded Inthe case •
of Princess Mary, however, . itis need—
never ask for an exceptionally large
allowance, for shehas a savings ac-
count of no small proportions, accu-
mulated by weekly visits to the post•.
office savings bank. She understands
the, system, does her own depositing
and frequently verifies her account.
rs "test;--with—s-considerable--er-op-•o .._rSciice-h-ay--provert—catareh---to---be•-a-
"silencers" it is probable that a really
effective eliminator of the report of a
rifle will eventually be evolved. The
next war is thus likely to be fought in
a deadly silence, far more terrifying
than the roaring of the unmuzzled gun-
powder of historic • battlefields.—New
York Press.
A King's Coin Collection.
Victor Emmanuel is considered. and
rightly so, an exceedingly clever nu-
mismatist A rather interesting story
is told of the manner in which the
king. while still little more than a
child, acquired a taste for the science
of numismatics. One day he received
a soldo bearing the bead of Pope Plus
3X. A little later, finding another, he
added it to the first. and in this way
he collected fifteen. Meanwhile his
father, King Humbert: presented him
with about sixty pieces of old copper
money, and thus was formed the nu-
cleus of his collection.—McClure's
M agasine.
•
PJI93PHDNOL
The
EleAric Restorer for Men
K>stores'every nerve in the body to
its proper tension; restores vim and
vitality. Premature decay and all
sexual weakness averted at once.
P.toaphonol will make von a new
Quaint Sewing Implements.
An interesting find 1s reported to
have been made by Professor Mestorf,
director of the Museum Schleswiger
Alters Turner at KieL In the grave
of a Germanic woman dating from the
pre -Christian era was found a stone
box containing a set of sewing uten- -
a911s, a pair of scissors of considerable
weight, a horn knife with an iron
blade, a stietto and several thorns,
which were used as needles. There
was also a stone resembling the so
called "Genidelstein," which was still
in use as a flatiron as late as the sev-
enteenth century.
Wavy Locks.
[!Even the straightest locks in the
world can be made wavy by the sim-
ple process of wetting the hair with
alcohol and pinning it in little loops
tight down to the head. De not put
the* alcohol on with 'your hands or
brush, but use a little wad of absorb-
ent cotton and dab the alcohol lightly
ovee the hair. Then, taking a strand
at a time, pinch It into loops about two
incl'es apart and pin each loop snugly
down. This can be done across the
bac% of the head as well ea on the top
and sides, and the bair will wave and
be eairfectly dry in about half an hour,
esprMally if a thin piece of veiling is
iied all over the head as tightly as pos-
sible.
A
constitutional disease and therefore
requires 'constitutional treatment.
Hall's 0 t•tarrh Cure, manufactured
by 1+' J Caeney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,
is the ouly constitutional cure on the
market. It is taken internally in
doses from 10 to drops to a;tea•spoon-
ful. It acts directly on the:blood and
mucous surfaces of the system.. They
offer one hundred dollars for any
case it fails to cure. 'Send for circu-
lars and testimonials.
Address: F. 3. CHENEY & CO,,Toledo
Ohio.
Sold b,7 Druggists, '75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation.
A curious Will.
Countess Anna Maria Helena de
Noailles, a member of one of the his-
toric families of France, has made a
curious will which has just been
proved. She left her . estate at Meads,
Eastbourne, England, to found "St.
Mary's orphanage," laying down the
following rules for the education of
the girls: No competitive examina-
tions, no study before breakfast, no
study after 6 p. m., all lessons to be
learned in the morning, no girl to
work more than four and a half bours
daily. No arithmetic, except the mul-
tiplication tables for children under
ten. No child with curvature of the
spine to write more than five minutes
a day until thirteen. Each girl must
be certified by two phrenologists as
not deficient In conscientiousness and
firmness. No child to be vaccinated. •
Dr de V an'srench Female Pills
the F ife's Friend
A reliable regulator; . never fails
While these pills rre exceedingly
powerful in regulating the generative
portion of the female system, they are
stri ctly safe to use. Refuse all cheap
imi tations. Dr de Van's are sold at $5
abox,or three for $10 Mailed to any
add ress. The Scobell Drug Co. St.
Cat herines, Ont.
One Turn of .the Hand.
Bliffers—Who says women have no
heads for business? There's a woman
made $50,000 by simply turning, her
hand over.
Wltiffers—Phew! How?
Bliffers—She turned it over to Mr.
13ullion, and now she's Mrs. Bullion.—
New York Weekly.
A Good Landing.
"He was always a lucky fellow."
"What do you mean?"
"When he fell out of his airship he
plumped straight through the skylight
of a bospitaL"—Woman's Home 'Com-
panion.
Liked HI. Father.
"Don't you know that little boys who
swear don't ge to heaven?"
"That's all right, .mister. I'd rather
be with pa, anyhow. "—Birmtngha n
Age -Herald.
• Plays Jokes Upon Brother.
While her brother. Prince Edward,
now heir apparent, was at the naval
college at Osborne she sent him a
large, attractive looking parcel. As
she' had been delving into the myste-
ries of 'cooking and sending the prod-
nets ofher skill to her brother, he ex-
pected a feast and invited two friends•
to assist him in disposing of it. When
the three of them opened the package,
however, all they found was a wax
faced doll dressed in the uniform of
the Naval academy, bearing a tag in
his .sister's handwriting; "Isn't He
Pretty?"
That the little princess is well edu-
cated may be gathered from the fact
that her schooling began at the age of
four years under a governess. At the
age of eight Princess Mary was able
to talk fluently with the French am-.
bassador in his own language:
Lessons in the royal schoolroom be-
gin . at , 7:30 a. m. in the summer and
at 8 a. m. in the winter. There ;is an
hour's instruction before breakfast,
three hours before noon and two hours.
in the afternoon. Especial attention is
paid to.. English history, in 'connection
with which study frequent visits are
made to the British museum for the
inspection of original documents.
N
Ate Unvyisely?
'DR"' DYSPEPS �%if
Sometimes people do, and suffer,
because the stomach balks.
relieve the discomfort at once, and help digest the overload. The lover Of good
things may feel quite safe with a box of NA-DIR.UrC.0 Dyspepsia Tablets at hand.
50c. a box. If your druggist has not sleeked ,chem yet send 50o. and We
will mall them. 34
I laiional Dug aid Chemical ea., of awls, Lir ter1. , s . • Montreal., • .
CARTERS
CURE
Sisk IMadaeho and relieve all the troubles Inti•
dent to a billoge state of the system, such ae
plzzlnese, Nausea, Drowsiness, Dletrese after
eating, Pain le the Side &c. while their moat
gemaritable success nae been shown In curing
SICK'
Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are
equally valuable in Constipation, curing and pre
Venting this annoying compiaint, While theyaleo
correct all disorders of the stomach, etimulatethe
Cid f
d regulate the bowels. Even if they onl
HEAL
.Ache they would be almost priceless tothosewho
suffer front this distressing complaint; butfortn.
rudely their goodness does notendhcre,and those
who once try them will and these little pills value
able in so many ways that they will not be w'1 -
ling to do without theta. But after all sick head
ACH
Is the bane of so nanny lives that here Is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while
others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and
very easy to take. One pr twopillsmake a dose.
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, burut by their gentle action ple.aee as who
- CAMS =NI 100..31IW TOL
12211 S. Lull Dont Sinal !'feel
Milady's
Mirror
dor theChildreu
A French Poodle
Acts as, Chauffeur.
The dog members of the Curly Poo.
dle club held an "at home" recently.
The miniature motor shown' in the plc.
ture was a feature of the occasion,
with the Drench poodle Olga, a prize
member of the club, acting as chauf-
feur.
He was a funny looking dog with:
his tiny beady eyes covered with auto-
mobile
utomobile glasses and his body :wrapped.
in a blanket.
"I• suppose that every woman who
motors ,works out the theory of com-
plexion treatment which best suits
her," declared a woman the other day.
whose face does not look as though
she had traveled thousands of dusty
miles in her automobile in the last few
years.
"You see, it is useless to use.water,"
she went on emphatically. "Perhaps
soft water might be cleansing, but you
can't get It while traveling. So I ex-
perimented for the best results in the
most condensed form, and I've found•
what suits me.
• ,'Before we start—indeed, while I
ant dressing for the journey—I smear
' my -•-face• •and wthroatsstoo; vithsscold--•
cream. The cream ismade from white
wax, with just enough almond oil and
rosewater to make the wax soft. You
see, my object is not to make a tissue
builder, but to prevent dirt from get-
ting into the pores, to make a mask,
and 1 object to grease. ' Therefore. I
melt some white wax in a cup by put-
ting it into boiling water, and then I
remove the cup from the heat and stir
in the oil and rosewater. When I can
I 'put in a little more rosewater than
oil, and I always scent the . mixture
with a few drops of essence of roses.
This goes in last in order that the heat
,shall not detract from the fragrance."
A Fashionable Cure.
If one could get well by going o '.
to a fashionable sanitarium and mak-
ing garden, why couldn't the same
pursuit in one's own back yard prove
as beneficial to the health and more
so to the. purse? Doubtless it would,
but as with all 'remedies that cost lit-
tle it is hard to convince some people
of their value.
"Gardening as a curative pastime,'
says an exchange, "is the newest
idea, introduced' by the head of a fash-
ionable sanitarium for nervous wom-
en, and each patient bas her own par-
ticular plot to look after. She is even
given the task of spading up the
ground and is expected to spend a
certain part of each day cultivating
it regardless of the weather. On clear
days, after the garden hour, the en-
tire force of fair women is supposed
to turn out and rake and burn leaves
and fagots as another way of playing
amateur farmers."
Baby's Irish Lace Cap.
Bonnets for tiny babies are made of
baby Irish crochet and catlike Dutch
caps.
They are mounted on an undercap of
padded crepe de chine.
The Irish lace Is threaded with tiny
satin ribbons of blue or rose color, and
a big cabbage -like rosette is fastened
at pACh wvhAre thn Can atrtnara run.
Planting Lily Bulbs.
Instead of throwing away the .bulbs
at spring
1111e$ that have bbeen gro
win
g
in their pots without bloom since Eas-
ter, make the experiment of setting
them out in the garden In a good soil.
Do not cover the bulbs too deeply.
see that nn' manure is near them, and
yon should have lily, blooms outdoor*
in the watt tall. y.t
Camphor Ice.
Some women find nothing so soften-
ing to the skinas camphor ice. This
can be bought with good assurance of
purity, but is easily made at ' holne
from the following recipe:
Six drams of camphor, six drams of
white beeswax, six drams of sperma-
eeti and two ounces of olive oil. Put
M the ingredients together in a porce-
lain lined saucepan and melt until
stnoot14 Set the pan in a larger vessel
of hot water or use a double boiler to
prevent burning,
Pour into small glass jars to coot
Porcelain jars used for certain cheeses
ate excellent to keep this grease. That
not intended for immediate use can
have the lid sealed on, with strips of.
adhesive plaster.
When making the grease in hot
weather half the onnntity is sufficient.
To Develop the Neck.
Thi quickest way to accoreplish good
results in developing the neck and
fillln;q out the hollows is to inhale
deer. y and force the breath agatnut
the throat, holding it for ten ur twenty
seconds. As you inhale rise on your
toes; as you exhale drop on your heels.
It• is well to stand before a mirror
while practicing this to see that the
breath tills out every hollow.
A School For Cats.
"Let's play school," meowed Tabby.
"Yes, let's," answered the others.
So they made Tabby teacher, and the
fun began. The cats simply wouldn't
sit still, and then Farmer Jones' big,
fat, juicy chickens kept running up
and down, peeping in at the barn door.
"Um, how I'd relish a chicken pier
whispered Ted to Malty. "Shall we
bag school and help ourselves out-
side?"
"After awhile. We'll watch our
chance," replied Malty.
The lesson on the blackboard was
"how to catch mice and eat them
properly." All was going well until a
robin new into the barn and perched
itself saucily on a rafter.
"Meowl" cried. Malty. "I want it."
"Meow!" said Ted. • "I'm hungry,
too."
"Silence!" shouted Miss Tabby.
"Flossy, leave the room for miscon-
duct"
In a little while, just as Malty and
Ted were planning their escape, Flossy
came in, carrying a big fat mouse in
her mouth.
Presto, change!. The .schoolroom was
transformed into a dining room. Away
went books and slates and pencils!
Over went benches and desks! On to
the mouse went the cats, and in less
time than it takes to say "Jack Robin-
son" poor mouse was a thing of the
past.
Rememberthat fresh air and open
air exercise brace the nerves of the
atomacn and so nretent indigestion.
0
Suffered For Years From Pain
In The Back and Headache,
About -H o rses hoes'• -
Horseshoes are lucky .hung up over
a door because they keep the devil out
of the house.. It happened in this way:
Good St Dunstan was a famous black-
smith, and the king of evil, who used
to travel around the world in person
before he became so busy, stopped at
the saint's forge one day and asked
the blacksmith to put a shoe on his
hoof. St. Dunstan knew the person he
had to handle. He took the ropes that
he used to tie horses with •and' bound
the devil so tightly that that gentle-.
man could not move. Then .the saint
set to work. The: devil roared and
screamed as St. Dunstan put a redtiot
iron shoe over the hoof; and pounded
it in withlong nails: ;He pleaded with
his . captor. to let him go, promising
anything In ,return.
"If I let you go," said St.. Dunstan,
"will. you promise neverto enter' a
house that has.a horseshoe nailed over
the door?".
"On my honor as a gentleman I
promise," said the devil 'solemnly, and
then St. Dunstan let him go. And
from that day to this. so they say, the
' devil has never entered a house so
prc-tatted.—Chicago News.
Pain in the back is one of the first signs
showing that the kidneys are not in the
condition they should be, and it should -
be attended .to immediately for, if ne-
glected, serious kidney troubles are likely
to co:low. There is no way of getting
rid of the backache except through the
kidneys, and no medicine so effective for
this purpose as Doan's Kidney Pills.
Miss Ida J. Dorian, 28 Sprin St.;
Charlottetown, P.E.I., writes:—"I have
received most wonderful benefit from
taking Doan's Kidney Pills.
"I suffered for years from headaches
and pain in the back, and I consulted
doctors and took every, remedy obtain,.
able but without any relief until I began
taking Doan's Kidney Pills. This was
the only medicine that ever did me any
real good, as after using several boxes I
mydread-
ful
am now entire, free from all
y
headaches and backaches.
"I will always recommend your medi-
cine to any of my friends who are troubled
as I Was."
Price 50c per box, er 3 boxes for $1.25,
at all dealers or mailed direct by The T.
Hilburn Co., Limited, Toronto,` Ont,.
When ordering direct specify "Doan'.'..
The Hind T'cu Ilave Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and I::ts been made under his per-
, _c. sonal supervision since its infancy.
Allow no oho to deceive youin this.
All Counterfeit:i, Imitations and «Just -as -good" are but
Experiments tltat trifle 'with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What as _ G' TORI/A
• Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotics
Substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms'
and allays Feverishness. It cure, Diarrhoea awl Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates tate Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. I`
The . Children's iPa`nacea—Tice Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTO IA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
TheK(ud You. Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THC CENTAUR COMPANY. 7T MURRAY STREET NEW YORK CITY.
The Scarecrow Game.
& straw figure, completely dressed,
Is fastened to a .tree in such a way
that it hangs about a foot from the
,;round. . He must have one arm fas-
tened akimbo to his side and the other
banging free. After the players have
had their eyesbandaged and been fur•
niched with a stick the game begins.
The object is' to thrust the stick
through the opening made by the arm
which 18 fastened akimbo. Whoever
succeeds in doing so may claim a
prize. Of Course it often happens that
the player misses and receives a light
pat for clumsiness from the straw
man's hanging arm. . If any player
misses the goal and passes the naughty
straw man the bandage is removed
and the player is considered out of the
game.
Conundrums.
W'hy' Is wit like a Japanese lady's
foot? Because brevity is the sole of
it.
Why are parliamentary reportee call-
ed "blue books?" Because they are
never re(a)d.
Why is it useless to expect a pretty
girl to be candid? Because she cannot
be plain.
Why Is a well trained horse like a
benevolent man? Because he stops
at the sound of whoa (woe).
Why Is your nose in the middle et
your face? Because it is the scepter.
The Stars We Can See.
According to the best astronomers,
the number of stars that can be seen
by a person of average. eyesight is
about 7,000. The number visible
through the telescope has been esti-
Mated to be between 76,000,000 and
130.000.000. ... wu•.. �,
Advertise in the New Era. F. W. CUTLER
Painter and Paper Hanger.
Standard [levator
Phone : 64.
Best Manitoba Blended and Pastry
Flour, Oatmeal, Wheat•germ, Bran,
Ss
and Chopped Feeds at lowest prices.
Highest prices paid for good',
clean grain.
The L. Suitter Company creenin
Midlings, Wheat g , orn
Ford & McLeod
Having secured a commodious Grain
Storehouse, we are now buying all
kinds'of grain, for which the highest
-prices-wttl-berypaid:--••-
Bran, Shorts, Corn and all kinds of
grain, Seeds and other feeds kent on
Sheep on Roughage.
If Corn is scarce sheep will beat hogs
• on pasture, provided they get plenty
plenty
p
of corn, but• when the hogs getp y
of eons they 'willrange pretty well
with sheep. Both animals have their
pince. flogs are of no uge to work at
roughage. A small .lock of sheep Weill
[lit better than a large one.
hand at the "storehouse.
Ford. & McLeod
•
All work guaranteed.
Prices reasonable.
Residence nearly opposite the
Collegiate Institute,
Blue Serge Suits to
Order $1:00
Ih order to meet the demend'.we are
offering a Blue Serge Suit for $17.00.
Made in style, right up to the minute
if .you'want it. �a putting this Serge
Suit up at 817.00, to your measure,. we
know it is Filling a Gap
This Imported Serge has a smooth
finish, which makes it suitable for -
Sund_ay wear. We also have it in
black if-'eefedce 1
+ P
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED..
G. W. Barge&Co.
Agents for British American Dyeing
and Cleaning (Jo:, Montreal. •
w: 11. WATTS & :SON woo L
•
store opens at 7430 a m, closes at 8 p m.
We are Practical Boot and Shoe mak-
ers and repairers: `Boots made to or-
der from one to three days notice and
repairing done while you wait.
Farmers Attention
We have on hand seyeral pairs of
our own make. boots,just the thing for
the Spring wear. Come in and see
them, .
W. K. WATTS ec SON
•+•+•4••••1444+•÷•°i'••i'• o°l'•+
• •
• • •
Opposite Post Office
Benlniller Woollen Mills
The Oldest -established Custom
Mill in Huron Coiling':
As usual I Shall be prepared to buy
and give the. HIGHEST. CASH FOR
WOOL; both washed and unwashed,
or will exchange for my manufactured
articles, •
You will fin4.a_ fine assortment of
'tugs and Bed Spreads, also a good
supply of BED BLANKETS, . HORSE
BLANKETS and YARN of various
Zolors. .
The above goods are guaranteed to
be pure wool and will give satisfaction..
i Dow Many Jesse _Gledhill
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•in a Dozen?
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Twelve .! and you count' i
: them to. see if you get :
: them,, to. When you buy .:
• a Wedding Ring and pay
ifor 18K, you can't count :
:them, you, take the: deal-. :
er's word, and often get .
1 17K or less:. We . sell :
• Wedding Rings, and there :
:is exactly 18K in . every 4:• • 18K Ring. Test . them :
: any way you like. • .
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is W. R. Counter i
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• Jeweler 'find Optician.•
i Issuer of i
• Marriage Licenses. ••
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BLNMILLE
CANADIAN
PACT FI C
BEST SERVICE TO
MUSKOKA
Four Trains from Toronto
(1..40 a in • 12 15 p
6.05.pm 10.10 pm
Bala sleeper carried on 10:10 p.m.
train Fridays.
Enjoy the Cool Breezes
of the Great Lakes
Sailings daily, except Friday and
Sunday, from Owen Sound.
Special train from Toronto 1:00 p m
sailing days
Meals and berth included on boat.
Most Pleasant and Cheapest
Route the i nipeg and
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LEAVE YOUR ORDER NOW
For the Printing you are bound
to need next month, and have it
ready when you want it. We
,can give you the best service.
The New Era Printing Office
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