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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1914-2-5, Page 5DENTAL Di',G. I''.: ROULST.ON, L,D.S„ D.D.S. DENTIST Ihem'ber of the 8.0.10.4, of Ontario and Hong Giraduato of Termite University, Offl seOver Dioltson & Carling's rave Orme. Closed Wednesday afternoins. on. A. le, .I,CII;'ISMA,N, Honor Graduate of' Toronto Urieversity DEiNVIST Teeth exttcacted without pain; or any bad effects. Office over ,G1adman & Stan1iuhay's .Of•ice, Main Street, Exeter. LEGAL DICKSON & CAii.LIt`iG, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notarfe'b, Conveyancers, Com- missioners. Sbtibefors for the 'Molsons Bank. etc. Money to Loan at lowest Rates of interest Offices—brain-Se, Exeter L R, Carling, '13.A, L. H. Dickson MONEIY1 TO LOAN We have .alarge arnawnt of private funds to loan on farm and village prop ernes at low rates of interest. GLADMAN & STANBURY Barristers, Solicitors, Exeter. J. SENIOR Agent Confederatlen Life Assurance Company, also Farre Insurance in Teat. ing Canadian and British Complenies. Main -St., Eieter. rC0I8AtI Thousands of ambitious young peo- ple are fast preparing in their own homes to occupy lucrative positions as stenographers, bookkeepers, te)egraPh,ers civil servan face every sphere of i islnese "tic ties You 'm'ty finish at college it you so wish Positions guaranteed. Enter college any • day. Indrviduar instruction. Expert tea- chers, Thirty years, experence. Aargest trainers 1n Canada. Seven colleges, Spec- ial course for teachers. Affiliated with Commercial Educators' Association of Can- ada. Summer School at famous Spotton Business College, Lon- don. GHO._SPOTTON B. F. WARD President Principa SYNOPSIS OP CANADIAN NORTH WEST LAND REGULATIONS ANY person who is the sole head of e. familenor any male over 18 years old: Ivey, homestead a quarter sectid'n of available Deaninion land fan Manitoba Se.ska tchew2 n or Alberta. The ap- plicant must appear in person at the Dominion L• ands Agency or Sub- agency for the district. llnflry by pro- xy made be made at any agency, on certain conditione by father, mother , eon, daughter, brother or sister ,,of in- tend ing homestead er Duties—Six months' residence upon and cultivation of the land In each of three years, A hounes'tieader may live evethin nine melee of hie homestead on a farm of at. least- 80 acnes soltely owned and occupied by him or by his farther, mother, son daughter, brother or ,sister: In certain districts a homesteader ;:n good standing may pre-empt a quart .sr-reection . along side his homestead. Price $3.00 per acre. Duties -Must reside upon the rrome stead or pre-emption six menthe to ecce, of .six years from date of home- stead entry (Including the tens re- quired to earn homestead patent) and cultivate fifty acres extra. A homesteader who has exhausted his tvotnestead right and cannot obtain e pre-reniption may enter for a pur.. chased •hoanea'ead in certain distil:els Pelee $3.00 per acre. Duties Must reside sixmonths inn, each of these years, cultivate flay acres and erect a howee worth $300. W. W. COItY, Deputy of. the Minister of the Interior N.B:-etenautho'rized publication of this advertisement will not be paid for. CENTRAL STRA 7 F'OiW. •ONT. Canada's best practical training school. Three departments, COM- MERCIAL and 'TELEGRAPHY. The courses are thorough and practical, Individual instruction is given by a strong, experienced staff..Our grad- uates succeed, Students may enter at any time. Get our free catalogue and see what we can do for you D A; McLACELAN, Principal. TAKE A COMPLETE COURSE in the Popular and Successful ELLIOTT ,r Toronto. Ont., and you will soon oc- cloy e. good position and enjoy a good e; salary Enter now, Write Lorecatalogue WWoma is ieterested and should know about tire wonderfnl aryei` WhirlingouehdSperay. U ask..ear nlrntllet:for It. 1 na ,., ”riot Supply the elente3e accept no other bat tend stamp for illus. - tratee boair. -,.mind. it gives fell ppaarterein an r tions iavnluable to';ludies'" s l,i„o^1'riUPrLyCo..Wiiideor.Ont teenef•ul Agnina .1" et Canada. KEPIIALDOL BIDS PAIN DEFIANCE This remedy, new to Canada, tlhou4h well known in Great Britain and on the (continent brings to all wiho are "tos't n the thorny bed of payn" a means of. speedy and grateful relief. Kephaldol offers the sufferer from. Lumbago, Sciatica or Rheumatism quid: and certain cure, even where the caste is of long standing. No morels it .necessary to endure tire agony, enforced immobility, backwrack-: ing^and exhaustion of Lumbago attache the toxture of Sciatica -ridden limbs, the cramping grip of Rheumatism, Kephaldol is not only a sure, safe and natural remedy, but an exceptionally prompt -acting cure. Kephaldol may be taken without fear There is nothing in it to give rise to bad after-effects—nothing to injure the heart or other organs. Thousands of letters from medical. mentestify to the wonderful power of Kephaldol to dispel pain and banish agonizing disease. Get a 50c, package of Kephaldol tablets yourself and ex- perience these benefits, Kephaidol Limited 31 .Latour St., Montreal, Mail Contract SEALED TENDERS ADDRESSItD to the Postmaster General will be ie- ceived at Ottawa until Noon, on Fri- day, the 13th day of March, 1914, for the conveyance of His Majesty's Mails ona proposed Contract for four years Six times per'week; over Zurich (South' Rural Route, from the Postmaster General's pleasure, next. Printed notices containing further in formation as to conditions of propos- ed Contract. -may be seen and blank forms of Tender may be obtained at the Post Office of Zurich and Sar-- ept;i and at the Office of the Post Office Inspector at London. Post Office Department, Mail Ser- vice Branch, Ottawa, 30th Jan'y,1914 G C. ANDERSON, Superintendent. CLINTON—On Wednesday even Eng of this week the home of Mr, and Mrs,- Robert Colclough, Goderich township, was the scene of a quiet but pretty wedding when their daugh- ter Harriett. Bertha, became the bride of Arthur Elmer Finch, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Finch of Clinton. Protect the Heart From Rheumatism RHEUMA PURIFIES THE BLOOD AND THROWS OFF COMPLI- CATING DISEASES Weakening of the blood tissues by continued attacks of Rheumatism af- fectsthe heart and produces compli- cations which` result fatally. RHEUMA puts the blood in condition to ward off other diseases and eradicates the Rheumatic conditions from the whole system Recommended for all forms of Rheumatism. 50 cents at W S. Cole's, This letter will convince you of its great value,— "For nine weeks I was unable to work owing to my feet being 'sadly swollen from. Rheumatism, I also suf- fered`severe, pains in the back. after using two bottles of RHEUMA the Rheumatism' has entirely left me; '- F H.: Morris, Fort Erie, Ont. R PTURE (SEE DATES AT BOTTOM) T ''uss Topture Once Thought Necessary, but Now Your Search for Relief. Is Ended, Wonderful Method Retains Rupture Without Knife, Danger or Pain. J. Y. EGAN, Specialist of Toronto Old-fashioned truss torture is no longer neces- a:try. Galling, slipping trusses and barbarous methods of tleatmgg rupture are done sw, y with by the wonderful ittveinticn of A, specialist who has devoted flay yeare to this one afflic- tion. The marvelous new EGAN "CURATRUS' gives to the ruptured instaht relief, lest and security, where all others fait.. It Stops ell Irritation and restores every part t0 its na- tural position as soon as itis used and for all time and old style trusses are thrown away. "EttAN'S CURATRUS" cures are absolutely with - ma opUerationand the cost is small. Mel etudes of cured men, women and children testify. .Also endorsed by.Many physicians, Where others fail is where I have myreatest success. Nothing complicated, 00 Pale drlrri tation, but just a natural retentive method:. lnnntediate relief guaranteed, No fakes or lies -just straight business, Ido not lay his aside, or delay, but tear off free coupon now. Ft'ee Consultation Coupon.. The; erobpon, upon presentation to J. Y. tone rupture spur talist, (mac, leo. am,,14 East 'Wig Street, Toronto) who will visit the toWns oh dates zneeMtinned`:below, will entitle bearer to free eoneilltation, the examination of samples, Ask .itt hotel, o41ee for inllnbee df nyroom. Note dates. Goderich—Bedford Hotel, Feb, 12 Exete:r--,Colntnercikil Hotel, Frudav All day and Evg,---1 day only Feb. 13th. Win ham—Queen's Hotel, .Peb,14 and l$ ; and other western towns -see .local papers. NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK Impprtant Events Which Have Occurred During the Week. The Busy World's happenings Care- fully Compiled. and Put Into Handy and Attractive Shape for the. Readers of Our Paper -rA Solid Bones Enjoyment. W'7DNESDAY. The highest seas known on the Pacific coast ::ince it las charted anu lighted for navigatio.a "oy the U. S. Government, were recorded .during the recent eerier of gales. An invention ` for ,rubber -plating battleships is being experimented. with by the British Admiralty accord- ing to . The Globe, , usually well- informed on naval matters. The Yankee is being ousted, ,.nom the fauns of '•Massachusetts by set- tlers of foreign blood, accordinee • to the ,sate boardof agriculture's an- nual report issued yesterday, Three small children of Mr, and Mrs, Perry Rowland at Haleyville, Ala., are doad to;d:ty,.`the result rf eating rat poison while .their parents were away from home visiting. Nine men were Injured, seven ser- iously, when the engineer at San'. ford mine No. 1, four miles west of West Terre Haute, Ind., lost control of the mine cage and let i' fall 200 feet. Mauling by a .ion caused the death at Nairobi, East Africa, yesterday of Fritz Schindler, t. member of an Am- erican moving picture expedition en- gaged in takingpir:ures of wild ani- mals_ It is stated that Jack Ben -tett, wanted for two years for murdering a woman on the In,.ian rese-ve at Brantford, and who eluded arrest at the time, has returued to the resery where he is hiding. Burglars entered the store of J., C. Champagne, 151 Dufresne street, Montreal, and carried awa;'. a 500 pound safe. Th ;y -vere likely disap- pointed when they opened it, for it contained only $10. THURSDAY. Duncan A. Camphcll, a - pioneer. resident of Lobo Township, died .at his home there Tu.sday, aged 74. An antidote for -i-chloride of mer- cury poisoning 's said to have been discovered by a Chicago physici .n. Cables from Sydney, N,S.W., indi cate that Lord Chelmsford finds favor as a successor o Lord D nm an for the Governor -Generalship of Austra- lia. Harry Peters, an old resident of London, and a veteran of the Amerl- oan civil war, died at his home,' 326, ..gay in his 7S t year. There is a strong probability that action will be taken at the present session of th3 county council towards securing ,.an'.industrial•,farm. in..Mid.c dlesex. A powder magazine of the fortifi- cations exploded yesterday in Genoa, Italy. Five soldiers and one civilian were killed, and nine others were ser- iously wounded. The "Jim Crow" law of Oklahoma was upheld by the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in a decision handed down. yesterday when a colored doctor wes refused damages. Twenty thousand Swedish peasants will march to Stockholm on Feb. 1, to present to the. King and the Pre- mier, petitions in favor of strengthen - ng the navy and the country's defen- ire forces. A challenge to a duel sent by Gen. Alexel Kuropatkin was refused. in St, Petersburg yesterday by Michel Os- ipovitch Menshikoff, a writer on the Novoe Vrernya, who has been "roast ng" the veteran. Former Senator Shelby M. Cullom, f Ilinois, died yesterday in Wash- ngton. His last words were a wish hat he might have lived to see the ompletion of the national meeaorial o Abraham Lincoln, who was his ersonal friend. FRIDAY. Lord Knutsford, formerly Conser- ative colonial secretary, died yester- ay in London, aged 89. He was dis- inguished as a lawyer and a church- man. Five convicts who have been mak- ing counterfeit five -cent pieces in the machine shop of the state prison at Joliet, Ill., were detected yesterday. The nickels were passed in the pr' -en store. Capt. and Mrs. William McClain, 134 Jarvis street, Toronto, celebrated the 67th anniversary of their wed- ding yesterday. Mrs. McClain is 85 years old and Capt. McClain 91 years. The first 1914 robin in Welland appeared amid the bright spring sun- shine of yesterday and sang gaily from the boughs of a tree ` on West Main street when seen by George Scace. Pennsylvania passenger train 19, New York to Pittsburg, was wrecked near Conemaugh, Pa., yesterday when it ran. into an engine and caboose. Three trainmen were killed and one injured. Five years in the penitentiary was the sentence handed to Raymond Byrnes in Montreal yesterday for holding up A. W. Moffatt, cashier of l i.e Herald Publishing Co.,and tak- ing $500. According to an anonymous letter received , by a Los Angeles paper, Francis Lewis Clark, the, Spokane millionaire; is being; held for ransom of $75,000 by blackmailers in or near Los Angeles. Two men loot their lives by asphy.;- lation at Rogers' Pass, B.C., Wedgies day, where work on the C.r.It, tun- nel has just been started. The dead are C. L. Powell of Denver and D. Turner of Vancouver. SATU ODA!. A standing : army of 3,000 men Is to be fortncd frbm th0 Ulster volun- teers It will' be modeled Mainly ' af- ter the i3ritieh AMY. . Cobert Piokford..of Halifax, a re- tired 'member of the well-kiiawlt ship- ping firm of Pickford d 1#laelt, died yesterday in Nies, France. Radiant is just as valuable in the treatment of rheumatism, gout, indi- gestion anddjsbeie.,, as cancer, ae- cording to 'Dr, San:lusl Tracey of New York, Burglars who entered Lord. Mount Stephen's London, long., residence on Thursday night only' managed to Se- nn five pounds before being dis- turbed, ' The'London. Times hears that the German Emperor is trying to bring. about a reconciliation between the Hamburg -American and North Ger- man Lloyd companies.. Cash amounting to the e quivalent of $50,000 was stolen while the mails were being transferred from a railroad train to the posteffiee 'at Rostov -on -Don, • Russia. At a conference yesterday :between. Scandinavian steamship lines engag- ed in the transatlantic trade, it was decided that they should set together in the threatened passenger rate war. Norton Griffiths, otherwise known as "Imperial Jack," Who has many Canadian interests, and is at present in the Dominion, is retiring from re- presenting Wednerhury in the British Commons, As Gideon Jewell, a carpenter, who was found partly asphyxiated at his home on Sunday, was leaving the Chatham hospital yesterday he was arrested on a charge of attempting to commit suicide. The Lord Mayor of Liverpool pub- licly' awarded medals to Captain O'Reilly, Chief Officer Russell and Third Officer McPhee of the Cana- dian Pacific .finer "Montcalm" for rescuing tie.) crew . of the brig Evelyn. MONDAY. The majority for the Canada tem- perance act in Welland is now said to be only 01teen. • The entire Chinese zection of Blue - fields, Nicaragua, was destroyed by ftre which broke out Friday night. Mrs. Richard Tayle:, aged 86, who was born in Belleville and had lived there all her life, died on Saturday. The aged couple, asphyxiated on Manning avenue, Toronto, has been identified as Mr. and Mrs. John Rich- ards. Lorne Minshall, two years old, died in convulsio,,s at Mount Pleasant, near Brantford, three hours after eat- ing some pills. Bridge Street Methodist Church, Belleville, was rededicated after al- terations a••d improvement to the ex- tent of $26,000. Canada's total trade last year ex- ceeded one billion dollars, the largest increases being in agricultural pro- duce and manufactures. Ex -President W. H. Taft addressed a brilliant audienc at the Ottawa Canadian Club on some significant features in modern Canadian history. Fifteen persons were injured, some of them so seriously that they may die when Chicago and Alton pa. sere- ger train was wrecked near Lockport, Ill., Saturday. An insane steerage passenger shot and killed F. Wendt, third officer of the North German Lloyd steamer Brandenburg --an the voyage -from -Gal, veston, Texas, to Germany. Sentences ranging from eighteen months to sixty clays were imposed in. New York, Saturday, on eleven nail wagon chauffeurs convicted of con- spiracy to obstruct the mails. TU ESU.L. John Olsen, aged 29, and Andrew Damon, aged 25, a powder man, were blown to their death by a dynamite explosion at Courtenay Bay, N.B., yesterday. Two million pounds of frozen beef and mutton, the first direct shipment of this kind ever sent from Australia to Seattle, arrived yesterday on the British ship Waimato. The general store of Samuel Haw- kins, New Dublin, near Brockville, was burglarized by thieves opening a rear window. The till was rifled of a large sum of money. Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Sir Lomer Gouin will be the guests of honor at the formal opening of the Montreal Reform Club's new headquarters on Saturday evening, Feb. 21. Capt. Gaston Niquet of the 1st Ar- tillery, and Lieut. Jean Louis Del - vert, of the French aviation corps, were killed yesterday at Bourges, France, by falling with their biplanes. Katie , Schwab, aged 18 months, was frozen to death in her mother's arms in the Estevan district of Sas- katchewan, when her parents and an- other child were lost on the trail in the storm. The Jesuit priests, Father Allain and Taille, who were captured by bandits when they Sacked and burn- ed the town of Livan-Chow recently, have been released and have reached a place of safety: In 1913, according to the report of the National Highways Protective Society, made public yesterday, 302 persons were .killed by automobiles in New York City. This is an in- crease of 81 over 1912. Workmen blasting at. Popham Beach, Maine, yesterday uncovered what is believed to be a vein of can- nel cpal, leading in from the ocean. Lumps of coal have been washed ashore at that point for many years. Maeterlinck Is Surprised. NICE, Feb. 3. - Maurice Maeter- linck, the Belgian author and Nobel prize winner for -literature, whose works have been elassed as forbidden by the Sacred Congregation ,of the Index, said: "It Is comprehe: sible why the theoriee' expressed in my book; `Death, have been disapproved by the papacy, but I am unable to under- stand why the innocent fairy 'piece, the `Blue Bird,' the chaste and pure 7` lleaS,and Melisande,' the pathetic 'Leonne Vienna and the 'mystic Mary Magdalene' should be condemned," Goderich ex -Mayor Dead. GO11IflRICH, Feb, 2,—John Thaler. who twenty years Ago was a proud- nent figure in Goderich .municipal life; died yesterday morning at the age of 80 years, He was mayor of Goderich for seven years, 1889 to 1895, and afterwards held the posi Mori of police 1a1agistrate for severe'. yearn. He conducted' a book and sir tionery Store until his retirement i• r ago, He was not niarried' en,:en,:moaires no 'relatives here:. Success depends lar ely on Good Health ,In your race for success don't loose sight of the factthat only. through good health can yetiattain siccess. The tension youmust necessarily place upon your'nerves, and the sacrifice of 'proper exercise you have to make at times crust be baiancedr`in some way, Dr. Pierce's G s .. of ,.�.. den, Medical litssover fur the balancing power.. -a vitalis ng power. It, acts .on the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition, thus purifying the blood and giving strength to the nerves, indirectly aiding the liver to perform its very important work. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has been successful for a generation as a tonic and body builder. Sold by tnedicine dealers in liquid or tablet form -- Arial box of "Tablets" mailed on receipt of 50 one - 'vent stamps. - If in failing health write Dr. R. V. Pierce's faculty at Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, New York. Ut. CIRRCE'S GREAT' FAMILY DOCTOR 80O1‘, Th. Peoples Cornmeal Sense Medical Ariviser newly revised up-to- date cditIae--of 10g8 pages, answers /loot/ of delicate que#tioai which every woman. sin leorprarried,ou ht to know. Sent FRE in cloth elading to any address on receipt of 60 op. -dint stamps, to cover cost ofrapping tn and .iling a nly. Ladies benefit by this oven test— It allows you to use less flour. For only flour that makes more bread and better bread in our oven test is offered you. From each shipment of wheat delivered at our mills we take a ten pound sample. The sample is puRroy ground into flour in a tiny mill. The flour is baked into bread. If this bread is high in quality and 'large in quantity we use the ship- ment from which it came. Other- Wise, we sell it. , So your . benefit from Lou„ bearing this name is sure. •` r/ eT ''More Bread and Better Bread" and "Better Pastry Too" • 530 Sold by R. G. Seldon, Exeter. Ifeeete ALE --- STOUT --- LAGER PURE — PALATABLE — NUTRITIOUS — BEVERAGES FOR SALE BY WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWHERE LOCAL OPTION—Residents in the local option districts can legally order from this brewery whatever they require for personal or family use. Write to JOHN LABATT, LIMITED, LONDON, CANADA ramnn-n; '.tArtAA . A A%nnr sAnnn/VA nnnAAA &Ai AAAA At Make Your Stock and Poultry Pay Better with oyal Purple. STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS At a cost , of less then a cent a day per health stock around his place. Try it ori head of stock, it will increase their value 25 the poorest -conditioned animal you have and per cent. Permanently cures Colic, Debility, we know you'll be surprised at the result of Worms, Bota and. Skin Diseases. Tones up a short treatment. Cattle and hogs fatten run-down animals so that they quickly up a month earlier than without it, which gain weight and vigor. Increases the yield means you save a month's feed and a month's labor. You can bring six pits to the pink of condition at the cost of ;1.55. Steers treated in the same way cost 110 more than $1.00 each to put in prime state for market. ROYAL PURPLE SPECIFIC fattens and keeps well horses, mares, colts, cows, calves, steers, hogs. Sold in packages, 50c, and air -tight tins, $1.50. of milch cows three to five pounds a day, besides enriching the quality of the milk. ROYAL PURPLE is not food. It is a con- ditioner—the best ever eo'd. If there was any better we would be making it. It en- ables your stock to eat the natural food they should eat and get the most benefit from it. Here is the advice of all thorough veterin- ary doctors—"Feed .your stock your own growing"—not pamper on feed of er them with Try ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY soft predigested mush so that after a tinge they cannot digest good, wholesome feed. d fFeedarm—htheay, goo:ts, •bran,food grown chop, etc.on Yyourou knownow Do you know that ROYAL PURPLE POUL. what these things cost you and what they TRY SPECIFIC makes hens lay in winter at will do. well as in summer, and keepsthemfree from ROYAL PURPLE is an aid to these na. disease? It does, and helps them over the tural foods and if you use it as directed, we moult, fattens and keeps them in vigorous can guarantee better, results than if you : health. A 50c package lasts 25 hens over feed any of the concoctions offered on the r0 days: Shouldnt you try it? We have market as "'prepared ,foods." hundreds of recommendations from all parts of the country. If ROYAL PURPLE dose not give you better results than anything Try It On a Poor -Conditioned Animal you ever used, or give you satisfaction, we will refund your money. No matter what If there is a run-down,poorly nourished your opinion of . other preparations, we want beast on your farm, see what ROYAL you to give ROYAL : PURPLE POULTRY PURPLE SPECIFIC will de for it. A 50- SPECIFIC a chance to show what it can do tent package lasts a cow or horse 70 days, for your poultry—and a 50c .package will The cost is so trifling that no farmer in show you some fine results'. Sold in 25c and Canada has any excuse for having out -of- 500 packages and $1.50 air -tight tins. SPECIFIC on Your Hens WE ALSO SELL Royal Purple Cough Specific for cough and. Royal Purpie Lice Rlller for poultry and distemper. i`Will are any ordinary cough animals. 25c and 50e, by, mail 30c and in four dayd). 50c, by mail 60c, 60c, Royal Purple Sweat by for lameness, o heuma'tism, sprained tendons, etc. 50c, by Rove al Purple Gale Cure for scratched, r thea 60c. arness scalds, open sores, etc. 25c and Royal Purple Worm Specific for animals' 50e+ by -mail 30c and 60c, removes the worms also their larvae. l2 5c,' Royal PurPle RoupSPpeciHe for roup, pip, by mail 80e, diphtheria, typhoid fever; canker, white Royal Purple Disinfectant, in '25e, Ole and diarrhoea, swelled head, etc,, in poultry. $1.00 tins, 25c, by mail 80e. •TO STOCK AND POULTRY RAISERS We will mail for the asking our hew revised 80 -page book' on cbnrmol0 ailments of stock and poultry. Tells how to teed light and heavy horses, colts, ' 4nared, ccws, calves, steers, hogs; also how to feed and keep • poultry so that they lay winter and summer. Cover lithographed in tier colors, stowing farm utility birds in their ;lateral colors. This is a book that should be u1 every enniter`s possession. IT'S FREE. Write for your tope today.. 81 W. A* JenkinsLondon, Ca mfg. Co. Canada nada Royal Purple 5u Plies and Booklets may be obtained frtalxl. %V, J'. 'Ceama