HomeMy WebLinkAboutExter Times, 1910-06-16, Page 6t_
[riiie Diamond Crescent
.s-
Or, A MODERN ROMANCE.
TORTURED FOR SEVEN YEARS
"FRUIT•A•TIYES" HER SWOON
siircd rue it Intl been very 11111(11
to the point indeed. "\\'r (heed
:lull went to the play together, and
line rather a nasty accident into
the bargain on our vas heir.( "
"\That kind of ace.clent1"
I told hits the particulars, which
1(4.111(41 to iutcle.1 hila very much
(1'o be continued.)
THIRTY '!'I101 S.1NI) PATENTS.
I'I)ing 11 :whines, Ilalpin Protec-
tors, ;old Sour Milk.
AIM the British l t ,;
reat Office rcceiv-
«I 30,503 applications last year.
Of these (1.18 were from women in-
ventors. The United States was
rosponeible for 731, Germany 431,
Canada 48. Patents in the feed of
loeoinotioll are more Illlmerotas than
in tory other class. While railroads
and horse vehicles show a falling
elf in the attention of inventors,
ll stage is on it Fu • t la F y
but just as many devices for the
my astonishment, that they were a,1 action of the bowels. Six different doe. itnprovene•nt and safeguarding of
suffering more or less from set e r,• tor; treated sae autl fora year 1 was in
motor vehicles aro being worked
nhc ata} deprea )ion. Ralph and :\u bed, conatautly facing death. Then out. These have largely inereased
l constant
coaxed Inc 10 try "Fruit. with speed indicating and signal -
g(
o fun
t 'cine and T><'
is nedl
now sitting ruefully i• s" andth t K
5 e
el w
were Ka t
1
lu
there
titer on an utt•anan iFeside the else, cured uu and sa►ycd my lite." ling. Then in aeronautics
(Signed) Mine. JOSEPH I.IR1iT'rm acre three times as many pat( tits
painting-tahlr, littered with its (Signed/ tic. box -6 for JSo-or trial lox
various rouges and creams 111141' . S -.tt dealers orfront Fruit-a•tive. applied fur last year as in the year
before.
,< ag1
e•(1 to the
e
s til fad l h
The .ours k
for
1 methods
c'nir in to im•entaon di several
a: , comm o item, , ave the culture of the various milk be-
thinking champagne with due re-' done for "No
now." cilli, and many patents have been
applied for on appliances to render
harmless the points of ladies' hat-
pins,
t'IiAI"FE,lt V1. -(Coned)
"Stage -fever coating on al-
ready," said Charles, in a differ-
ent tune. "All, it is your first ap-
pearance, is it note: Go and rest
now, and yen will be all right
when the time conies. 1 have a vis-
es.' of a gr' :at success. and a call
before the sustain, the boquets, and
otter delights. Only go and rest-
Dew."
est
mew.,'
e o
candle for
u1
iMac
And h
o went t
AK
her. He seemed very thoughtful
fey Evelyn.
It was the signal for all of us to
disperse -the ladies to their rooms'
stage appliances. 1.VCI1 Ct►arlty, °Sc Ottawa.
K
� 1.
ut
ate
1 ( t
tie men to the only retreat. left who had established Evelyn on a;
to them, the smoking -room. As 1 • tl wings at the side she' said,in n voice of extreme exhaus-
Aurelia went upstairs, 1 saw her h 1 to n fr nh and was uuw,
ales longer; eyes were applied to
the hole in the curtain, and then,
everyone being assembled, it ells
fell that the Awful moment had MADAM JOSEPH IJRETTC
come at last. A more miserable- No. lit George St., Sorel, Que.
looking set of people I never saw. "For seven years I suffered from
womb disease and dreadful torturingJ,
I always imagined that, the actors ,aims, and 11tad constant Dyspepsia and
behind the scenes were as gay off 'Iironic Cunslipatiou-the latter to bad
Is; but I found,to 1 • t o►nctin'cs 1 went ten da s without
tit No favoritism. 1 h
beckon Ralph and whisper to him:
”Wear what, to wear my angel)
iemhlI le Card to his paint• -even Charles "\\'That! Are you not, going 10
owned to being nervous. deuce any attire 7"
ewels '1 \\1,,., good gracious! 1 .,I wish to gexx}ness firs. \\'right "No, not limes' Evelyn will give
ehadmi quite in rc tten weara(1f wt uld begin!" !to said. "Ah, there n►'- another lure later, which she
course, 1 tt1, r a f ty,'them. Frebahly won't. There she goes TO BE USEFUL FI'L COiONISTS.
'So do I, dreadfully,'' she re- she goes" -as Flha asceudcxl the, 1
a killinglance over the stage steps. "Thcro goes the bell.i with Lord Breakwater again. How Lady Ernestine Hurst. the noted
plied, with '' K We are in for it now. She starts, i 1 do dislike that young man! t\'!d h, lsewomnn and traveller, has es-
bnnistcrs. Only, if I am, you and I tomo on next. Up goes the look at Carr, 5atlsing with Aurelia! tablished a school at ('osharn l'ark.
must bring them down in good time, curtain. Where the mischief has any' He seems to be leaping on her feet near Portsmouth, England, where
and put them on in the green room, ht ok got to 1" I a good deal, and she looks 115 if see she is traini,•g girls to become use -
lin hope you have gut them sumo- ware telling him so, does out whet`ful colonies. The
where safe." In another moment ho
was
1 [ There i they hate subsided into the (•10111 eighteen to , n years irth upwar(Ie
"Sato as a church," replied wings, intent on hisT bus window. 1 thought she wou'el
Ralph, forgetting that in these saw .him throw down his book and yKare taught huulewifcn, needle
days the simile is not, a nod one. gt, jauntily forward. A moment
net stand it long. He dues m' t work. home nursing. first aid.
in his strong_ mere, and there was a thunder of dance as well as he acts. Heigh-ho • ra;rdening, riding and driving. No
"Father has thein 8 l'onhe into supper with alis, Mitl ( servants are kept, all the house
box. I will ask him to get them aeplause. All the actors looked at
out -at least all that canbeworn each other, and •siniled a feeble d'tton. The supper -room will be and stable -work being done of the
en ptier now, and I ata dying of
hunger. You must be the sante,
for you had no regular dinner any
more than wo had. Come along.
tee dress u1 an old-fashioned livery
\1'c will get a certain little tab!(
servant, proceeded to mount the fir two that 1 know of in the bay
steps. It dawned upon me that 1 wied.,w, where I took the fair pig -
was missing the play, and 1 slur tail just• now, es the e't ldelit auxi
tied back, to find Charles convt,:s et; of the parental chignon, who
It was uc nrly eight o'clock when it g the audience with the utnu"t
t‘;19 at the large table. \\-e will '
1 came down. The play was. to be- ("(laws, and evi,lcutly elli" il.c have a good fetal in peace and
gin at eight. The hall, which was himself exceedingly, Then Ete!_ ti quietness."
brilliantly lighted, was one moving rens on— But who cams to ren 1 In a few minutes we were estate
mass of black coats, with here and ad.'s riptiun of a play 1 It is sof I,i.hed in a quiet nook in the sup- - (1� .
fit tent to say that Aurelia looked which was now half
the re a red one, and evening dress- per -room.
es Many colored, the people in them charming, and many were the whir empty. and were making short
chatting, bowing, laughing, being 1.".4'41"1"1"e"" on her mngnifieent: stork of everything before us.
ushered to their places. Lady tlearls; but on the stage Evelyn ; "Hew well Carr acted :" said
Mary and Sir George Dancers sate surpassl+d Ler, as much as athelia; Charles at last. leaning back, and
5tllpassed Evelyn tiff it. 1 leisurely sipping his champagne. "1
be•• side received their guests at the , pl K
foot of the grand staircase. Lady Ralph and Curr did well, but ran t':ink of something besides
Mary resplendent in diamond tiara Charles was the favorite with er- f,,, 11 note, Did not you think he
and riliere, smiling as if she could cystine, from the Duchess (.f a , t••d well 1" { Spending bnndr,d.etdollars to
Crus}lin ton in the front scut to'II . r building a aplcnd,d home or barn
never frown ; Sir George twilight, g ' • \•es.," 1 said ; "brit you cut him and then d.liberstty l,Uuw it to
courteous, a trifle ,'tiff. as most 'scullery -maid on t•he staircase. H.• ,,,ht " r gaffer for paint.
English country gentlemen feel it wa• su boll, MI wicked, so insin•1 '•Intl 1l•' said Charles absently,
Martin-St'nOL'f Paint
incumbent on themselves to be on attng, in hi, plumed eat) and short lseekoning to some lobster salad
such occasions. clunk, so elegantly refined when 1►e eject, was passing.
"Have some 1
Presently the continual roll of wiped his sword upon his sec"ad's Ili,. M iddleto 1. We can but •1 i•
tete carriages outside ceased, the hetelk( rehief. He took everyone s once. You won't. Well, I w
tamps were toned down,the orches'- heart by storm. Ralph, who rcpt. j }{Ave' you often seen Carr act be
fin struck up, and Sir George and Feinted all the virtues, with retie r' f„re'”
Lady Mary took their seats, look- truck ankles and false moustache, i "Never." I said. "1 never stet
'log round with anxious satisfae- was nowhere. When the curtain fell bin, till he carne on board the hos
tion at tho hall crowded width !leo- fr r the last tome, amid great and phren+ at---"
pie People lined the walls; chairs continued applause, the "heal;: ; "Indeed! Oh. 1 fancied yeti were
stere being lifted over the heads if mother," Italph, Aurelia, all were (;nits old friend+'''
the sitting for some who were still well received as they passed befors' ''We made great friends on the
standing; cushions were being nr it ; but ('harlt s, who appeared last, et( atner.
meted un the billiard -table at the was the hero of the evening. "Did you gee much of }dim in
hast: for a covey of white waist- 'Ile is engaged to his cousie• ( Lowlier f" he asked, filling up bis
cents who arrived late; the stair-
case was already crowded with
servants; the whole place was
cranium'.
1 wondered how they were getting
on behind the scenes, and, slipping
out of the hall, I traversed the
great gold and white (treeing -room,
prepared for dancing, and peeped
into the morning teem, which, with
the, adjoining library. had be •n
gitcu up to the a• 1,�1 a. They were
ell assembled in the morning -room,
)n-wcver, waiting for oar of the els
*ler ladies who had not ''Inc•down.
The protnpter was getting fidgety,
and walking about. 'file two sccne-
slbiflers--pale, wears looking men
who lead come (town with the Peen -
MAPLEINE
A gaveling used the eam• as lamoa or venule.
lir d.es.l ire gn.culata) sugar in water Int
*Aid Mo.I.tr s. • delirious fyrup 1e mane a -•d
a syrup batter than maple Yay'dne m aold b,
gr aero. (1 qof crud Sue fie 7 ca. bottle a,:d
r.re(.e took. Cro.sat Mfg- C'e., dsatile, Wa
-and I will give them a rub up be- simile•
fere you wear thein." "Ho will do," said Ge•,erel Mars•
"Ah." said Charles sadly, as we ten, the Indian oflicer, who, now :•t
walked upstairs, ''if only I had
known Sir John
PART II.
CIIAI'TEIt I,
J
ss q;t
GGks4rt�
Mime Derrick. isn't he i" said li
iauly near me in a loud whisper to
a fri(•11<l.
"Huih 1 no. Charles can't mar
ry. Heats over ears in debt. They
sty she is attached to one of her
((reruns. but 1 forget which. 1 ata
net sure it was not the other enc. ,
"Then it is elle second son who
is going to be married, is it 1 1
know 1 heard sons( tiling about one
of them being engaged."
"Yes, the Peeond son is engaged
t, that gIo,d-looking girl in die -
mends. who acted Florence %for -
daunt. :\ lot of money, 1 l,c:lieve,
bet not touch in the way of family.
(irnndfathe r 5.,1(1 aliens( traps iu
Birmingham. se people ray,"
cry -were sitting in the wings, per- "Sins Peaks like it !" replied the
fectly apathetic amid the general ot1•er, who hall daughters out, and
excitement. Charles and several could not afford t', let any praise
ether alert were standing round a of ether girls pries. "No breeding
lee•t►nan who was open;iig chant- er refinement; and she will be
pagne bottles at a surprising rate. stout Inter, you will see.•
s 1 saw Charles take n glass to Eve- The piny being over, a general
syn. who was slrisering with n sharp met anent new set in tew•atds the
attack of stage -fever ill an nrm- drawing room. where the band whs
chair, looking over her part. She already installed. and making its
whiled gratefully, but as she dirt sol preserve kneels iry au insi:irit101
lies rtes wandered to the ether )'a1s'' time In a few ,moments
side A' '•be r'Koh, where Ralph, on; to enty, thirty, forty couples were
Armlet,hi. knee, eefore fast• I` sensing to the ankle : Aurelia, in
(conn n di,lrnond star in her dress. I h( t acting custunn•. 55a• dancing
Diamond.. rubies., and emeraldsaway with Italie] in his red stock -
flashed in her hair reel en her whirr' inks. Carr with the ••llr'Ity tree
heck and arms. Ralph was risen! i 1 ' and Charles in pre.enic ev•
the last ornament on (o her 511,•111 Bring dress was tis int :est with
(ler 5dith wire off n champagne Let le, is ii. all . rt•.tt th:11 ,he had 11 1
ile. there being nu (Anse to held Lo•e4T her ec t!lh'ul -cage (ornp!' -
it in its place f Paw 1:5(13 n turn , len, looked pale :aid gra%( as e%4 ,
:may again. and Charles, elle was 1 suppose it was 41 eapatal hall.
watching her. suddenly went off to leery. '• seemed es enjoy it. I
tee fire. and begun to complain of del tee ,lance nes' If. but 1 like,'
Ile cold and of the thinness of his w:itclhing the itli•rs: and after .1
silk stockings. time Charles, who had be.'ti (tan'.
The elder lady "the heavy me- ere indefatigable with two who. 1
flier." as Charles irreverently teem girl( with pigtails, entre, ail T
called her- new nrrived : the. or- Ili :ng himsrlf Clown on the other
ehestra. which wits giving a final half of the ottoman on e11i •'1 1 ea.
fh.urish, was h'ggrtl in a hely..( -fitting.
whisper 110 keep g('iy" g a few min "Thref tinter eith each:. : e
glass and came.
"Net, mlch, naturally," I said
laughing. ''I was only in London
t.wl• nights."
".\11: I forgot. Very good of you.
1 ant sure, to conte down here se
aeon after your arrival. Yen
would hardly have seen hitn at all
since you landed. then)"
"Carr 1 Yes," I replied, think
ir,g Charles's talk was bee.,nhing
very vague; though when 1 tal
heel hire nh. iit it next day he as
100••t. ('u re, Preserves
It fe.,ts the hungry epee eche of the
era.' with pure luwd oil• lewd and
eine -making the surface ahrolutely
Impervious to climatic changes.
1t wale vend fr'vn damp...me—pm.
vents 11 from splitting. cracking. hoar
sun and (met, blistering heat .r d Woe -
inn duet, which help the preu,ewe of
decay and ruin. Gird par• ta,nt buys
more than oncosts worth of insurance
against the of time.
The Inrredi.ota of a pure r tint aro
well kno. n. In the main theyare Car -
tenets of 1.1,110. 0,,!. of ne pore
Colors, well mound tor specially admit -
led machinery, and thinnest with pure
knewd o•1 and p:lre t.,rpenttne direr.
A Loading owner who fall. to
alr.e�,�
Mae (M reell,"M,x
de. n/ rb,grer Ili
•(SM **Int will see hie proprrty veli,••
d,:re... white he grows aged and
peevish wonder's. why.
Notify nit if your dealer cannot sup•
ply yl,. we'll Flatly direct you where
real paints can be had.
'ter__ Refuse All Substitutes
l►� illustrated bnktrt,
Mom. Breutif,l,,,
a nit Int.r,.ttng
enler card Free
fir the aoktrg.
be thesis Seem Co.
morass;
Pi.n..re Pen Pablo
PAINT FORII for nr. 5
rse 41
is
who wIaant:+ ityog..+•hal You know It
you
rot•te more to put 011 poor paint
1h. .1: In pat on toad pant Your
house should he punted with good
p.•:tls, with
�
AMSAY'S
PAINTS
to keep It looking bright and clean
for years- costa not loo much but
Jut right for right paint We
want YOU 10 a,•e our handsome little .
booklet telling all about house
painting. 0 will help you. Write
P for fid.v or our Booklet 'AV- free.
A. RAMSAY & SON CO.,
r,1.1111. -1.r.1 4'
The Paint Makers. Montreat.
TITLES OF THE CROWN
GATHERED IN THE ('OI'BSE OF
l'ENTI'ItlES.
Tito New Ones Added lc Britain's
store Since 1 ictoria'b
AeeeSsiOu.
It is not often that the general
pl:blic, though tolerably fami1 ar
with the abbreviated versions in-
setibed in the coins it, uses, has the
. opportunity of seeing the titles ap-
pertaining to the British crown set
out fully in black and whit( us they
are revealed in the pruclau'ation
signed recently at St. James' Pa-
lm.° by the first Privy Council of
King George V., says the London
Morning Poet. It is, therefore,
net an unsuitable moment to con-
. skier how, and from what begin-
nings and in what order the Crown,
in the course of centuries, has gath-
eied about itself these titl-
Queen Victoria's title on her
cession in 1837 was "Queen of
United Kingdom of Great Brit
and Ireland, Defender of th
nd
e legend around,
}••ailh, and lit g
say an 1858 shilling runs "Victoria
Dei Gratia Britannia Reg. F. 1),"
wl.ereas King George is proclaimed
as "King of the United Kingdom
of Great Britain and Ireland, and
of the British Dominions Beyond
the Seas, Defender of the Faith,
Emperor of Lldia," and his coins,
when struck, will bear the words,
or abbreviations, "Georgius V. 1);
(S. Britt: Omn: Ilex 1': I): Ind:
Imp:" Two fresh titles. then have
been added since 1837-- both, 'n
fact, within tho last thirty-four
years.
1 "KINGS OF THE ENGLISH,"
1 Of this mass of titles the nucle-
in is, of course, that of "King of
Ehgland," or in its original form,
"King of English." Legend attri-
, butes his appellation to Egbert,
the famous King of Wessex, who
at the opening of the ninth century
practically united Britain under
himself as single ruler. Not, how-
ever, to Egbert, nor even to Al-
fred the Great, belongs the honor
r having been the first "King of
tee English," but to Alfred's
s i andson, Athelstan, a warlike and
t= •rgeous sovereign, who subdued
tee Danes of Northern England
!and such chieftains as still in tin-
! tented an independent existence in
the remoter parts of the island. Of
the outlying countries, disrespect-
fully spoken of to -day in the heat
of controversy as "the Celt'
fringe," Wales was the rst tt
' incorporated with Engle' 1n
one crown. Edward T. annex
Wales in 1264, declaring by the
Statutum \\•alliae that the country
;tad its inhabitants had been
brought in proprietatis nostrae do-
' minium. 1t was, as every one
Lnow e, the birth of the luckless
Edward 11. in Carnarvon Castle
that led to the bestowal of the fam-
ous title "Prince of Wales" upon
the heirs to the English throne.
KING OF IRELAND.
The Anglo-Saxon Kings had
vague pretensions to the lordshil3
,f Ireland, which they had no pow•
er whatever to translate into a sem-
blance of actual domination. Stubbs
says that Edgar apparently acted
as patron of the Ostmen--Danish
settlers who had colonized a strip
of the eastern coast. -and quotes
at:tlwritics to slow that coins of
Ltheirecl and Canute were struck
at Dublin. Henry 11.'s expedition
in 1171, however, was the first de-
fteite attempt to exact from the Ir-
ish chieftains recognition of the
English sovereign's lordship. Princes
Jt lin was Blade by his father lord
of the island. It was intended that
he should be crowned King, and
the crown of gold was actually sent
1e hint by the Pope, but the coro-
nation never took place. Had John
been crowned King Ireland would
Lave been included with England
,n the royal title at Johns acces-
sion to the English throne in 1199,
batt as it happened the idea aban-
dened by Henry 11. was net resist-
(
eviv( d until, more than three centuries
'later. Henry VIII. assumed in
1181 the title of King of Irehoel.
England and Scotland were
brought wider one ruler by (18
ecceesion of Jatnes 1. to the Englisle
teems- in l6(i3, and early in hi
teem the well-known post net
case. known also as Calvin's ease
,1, (141011 that Scetsnhrn 1)0111 a,Ltvc
lie aieession were English eili/eoiis
le.11 lice versa. At the fled•,ratiol
11,c hereditary right of Charles i1.
1., the Scottish throne was declared
le the Parliatii' at at Edinburgh,
111111 twenty -eight years later, when
lames 1I. ells expelled, the Srot-
tirl, crown 55115 as a matter of
course 'gyred to William and
Mary. Still. the complete union of
the crowns slid not take plate till
the passage in 1707. of the Act of
("e ion, which declnied England
:,' •I Scotland to be one kingdom.
•t ,1 Anne ei be the first sovereign
.t the United Kingdom of (1reot
Britain and Ireland.
McKellzie Mina at Elk Lake
Has Stared Bagging Ore
Successful Operations at the Mine Which Make
the Property a Coming Shipper.
ELK CiTY. may 4. --With the open•
Ing of navigation, which is now In full
owing, the greatest of activity prevails
at the variona mines and prospects in
lhia vicinity and the city is rapidly
recovering from the recent fires.
The district is likely to become are.
other Cobalt and the veins run to
depth with values. Among the ship-
pers and properties bagging ore are
the Lucky Godtrer. the Borland.
Thomp,=nn. the nevlln and the Moose
Horn mines.
The Moa,ae Horn mine put in a new
plant thio spring and are now sinking
a wing( at the 1Z5 -toot level on a vein
which has shown values from the
surface.
in the midst of the mines le the
tt,Kcnzie, a group of five properties
on which work wan begun last Jan-
uary. They base been fortunate from
the start and soon hope to rank with
the shippers.
The engineer in charge. Mr. Harry
Stellar -r, reports that the vein on
location 846 of the mmpsny's group
at a depth of 50 feet continued stead-
ily the whole distance and showed free
rilver e11 the way with the exception
of four feet. Several hundred feet of
stripping has already been dine. re.
slating In the disrovcry of two ad•
ditlonal veins, one of which Is 7 in.
.-hen wide, cutting at an angle of alt
d.•grees. it to the Intention to con-
tinue this shaft to the 75 or 100 (nett
!eve], then drift to the HrKcntie vein.
where the new 7 inch vein crosses. Mr.
McMaster state( that in his opinion
this week will result in the placlog of
the value of the mine beyond Question.
The necessary builoings have now all
been erected, including bunk house,
cooking camp. manager's dwelllpg,
blacksmith shop, powder house, anti
the necessary machinery is being in•
stalled. A good wagon road has been
built from the main r•ad which par-
allels the road from Elk Lake.
The McKenzie company are in a sery
fortunate position, owning a group of
live properties which have been Thor•
ouglily tested Sit assays made from
the veins on •:1•ich the company are
now working It ee shown results of
from 400 ounces of silver up as high
as 15.000 outlive to the ton.
This cnmpany is under good manage-
ment. and it is the opinion of the en-
gineer in charge and those who have
seen the property that it should be
brought to the shipping stage in a
eery short time. (AO pounds of good ore
having been bagged by May 1, and the
work in this regard befog pushed ra-
pidly from day to day -
Application is being made to list this+
Stock on the new York Curb.
The Transfer Agents arc The Trust.
and nnarsntce Company of Toronto
and the Guarantee Reenritc and Trans.
for Company of Now York.
r am offering 50.000 Share. of this
Stock at Z5c. per share. subJect to
prior sale. write or wire me your
.obs-riptlnn at once
P. S. HAI RSTON,
Manning Toronto, rade
MOTOR CARRIAGES
AWARDED DEWAR TROPHY.
The Dewar Challenge Trophy is awarded yearly by the
I(OYAI. At TOMOBiLE CLUB for the most meritorious per-
formance of the year under the general regulations for certi-
fied trials.
The New Daimler engine bas now been in the hands of
the public for nearly 111 months, quite long enough to prove its
merit; owners are sending ill tc'timonials by every post and
wo should like to forward to nil' person or persons interest-
ed a complete set of literature fully explaining this marvel -
Reis new motor. Send also for our new illustrated booklet,
"The Dewar Trophy and how it was won," a history of the
Greatest Engine Test on Record.
The Daimler Motor Co., (1904) Limited,
COVEN? RY, ENGLAND.
FAIRBANKS
Fairbanks -Morse factories produce the largest line of internal
cotnbustioner.gines in the world. hundreds of nun in the en -
o41 all
ti
problems cineering onnected with (nd 1 as En1gines. there isal departments arel no company in
the world that has spent as much money as the iFairbanks•?forse
Co on experimental and development work. The name
iFairbatlk%•?force is synonymous with 1::1s Engine Perfection.
l(mitontal (iyaimator Tank Login( Mounted on skill. 'iies
2. 4 and R Ilorte Power. mull in our 'Toronto l'uctoty, the finest
Engine Plant ill 1he world.
AIM
- MORSE
Gasoline Engines
For General Farm Power
Our farm engines have all the pr intit'al features of the well -
kneel) Fairbanks -Morse Engines, and arc
Horizontal types to Meet the various requirements of the farmer.
Their simplicity n•ean5 long life, and s.0: -.factory service.
SPECIAL TERMS TO FARMERS
made in Vertical or
The Canadian Fairbanks Co., Ltd.
MONTH EAE
branches: "rnron!o `I..lol,n, N ft. Winnip^a Calgary Vancouver
\t 1' t n
The Canadian Fairbanks Co., Ltd.
(:.'111(.1'1(.11 Plenst •end nae out free Catalogue,
ing full finesse Farah Engine..
Name
1011 e
\tire is chine at hran'a' Letter
ealf, or the whole thing.