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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1913-7-10, Page 3COLD FROM OCEAN'S FLOOR PEW DIVERS HATE DESCEND- ON,;.E IIUNDItED FEET. Hest UulihelY That the Wreck el the Titanie Will Ever Re Reached., reds of millions of dollars weeth of gold, eilver copper, and Precious etoes axe lying on the bottom of the eea, ready .to the hand .of the first person, who. will devise means of re eeveripg them. Investors in every part of the woold are bui/ding eubmarine boats, div - ng armor, dredging apparatus and other devicee, eolely for the purpose of .finding awl bringing to the surface these eunkeu treasures. The two main problems to be solved are those of protection 'Ast water pressure and of pro- viding light in whieh to work. The atter problem is more easily solved than the former, Modern develop - merits in. electric lifahKag ma'a it praeticahy certain that ii,owertul searchlights can be devised whiehl will give suPdeient illumination for salvage operations at depths aS great as -10a feet, Diver'who have been doWn, 150 fet.0 agree that even when the sun is slilning brightly, the ocean depths- are In semi -dark, ness, which iiterease.s ae one des- cends. Problem or Preseare. The other and more serious job !ere is that of pressure, The ordi diver '§ equipment depends up-, O V.nonstant aupply of air ptunne(.1 lu frem above, end milker auit math a Metal let, an air -light, or nearly so, to keep OM Water rrOM rushing in the minnte the Pressure ef air pumped through the Le becomes less than the watea pressulv fivte the enteide. Theor- etically, ef couree the'air pressure , conic.] be maintained at a piont that uld equahze the watev ptvesur bitwhat would th divr I ,Meez working in •comprees ir ceEesons under a erFeesure of Pennd9 to the equa Inch are ri 4rtg the lives—and 44 pen CS a depth of only 104 feet vater. At 200 feet the water pre eure is a little ever 801-2 ponnas to the sql1Are inelz, at 2e0 feet it is .er 103 pounds, and at WO feet i is 120 pemule, end many r.,f tit ezzaken treaeure ships lie at -even greater depths. Very few tlivere have deeeezided deep as 100 feet. One adyentur ORS young man "vent down 100 fee in Puget Sound, but on a second attempt his helmet was crushed by the 80 -pound water pretzeure and ho woe hauled up dead. Two Eng- lish av1 ofileers are saUl to have di zzdcd 210 feet, hut could r It that dePttt 014 a few se Hooking a Copper Ingot: The problem of getting down to the deep -lying treasure ships, there- fore, is eseentially ono of construct- ing a meehanisra satilieiently rigid to withstand the terrific water pres- sure. It must, carry its own supply of oxygen, since any sort of flexible air tube would be crushed flat long before a depth of .400 feet is reach- ed, and it must be so constructed that the diver inside it eau accom- plish something after he reaches the wreck, even if he can do nothing mere than attaeli a grappling hoop to a copper ingot. Encouraging Inventors. The encouragement for inventors working along these lines is found in the knowledge already at hand of wrecks bearing treasure, seine of which have been stink for htmdretls of years. In 1502 a Spanish fleet carrying quantities of gold from Santo Domingo sank off the Island of Santa Lucia at an unknown depth, in a hurricane that drove the E hips of Christopher Columbas into a nearby harbor for safety. From then on, for two centuries, the re- cord' ol the Spanish conqu,est of America is filled with reports of sunken treasure chips bearing the' riches of Peru and Atexieo back to Spain. Titanic Down Deep. _Probably no diver will elver reath the wreck of the Titanic, whicbelies two miles deep in mid-Atlantic, where the water paessure reaches the tremendous force of 4,574 • pounds to the square inch, but it is easily possible that some of the in- ventors now working' on the main • problems involved will reap incat- • culable i:lehes from wrecks yeb to be discovered at depths of 'a thour ee t or mor e (1. A practitioner in Glaseow -vas called a few days agoalLend an elderly lady of his acquaintaace Re is •a free -and -easy fellow, and after he liad done his duty as a doctor he stood in the middle of 'the floor to have a few niinutes' 'chab.with his patient. "A, I )-enia,rked, "and you bi-ought up 'fourteen of a Ian -lily in a atnall house'like this? Why, when I st,and liprig-lib I can teach the ceiling." `Ali, but doctor,'' eel -iliac -1 the old atty, "nano o' my sons ever ,Wore, ir hat Mahe hoose hdoo teen: the hint. 4, NERVOUS TROUBLES ON THE INCREASE TheY 1r Bt10 to an impoveris'hed Bonditim of tlia Blood Neavoneha, ti nettretee ex, us on ---- or thenia; as medical men call ite—ie one of the gi'eatast eVils of the pre, sent,. day,for it is destroying the life and energy- of thousande of mon and R-019.011., or werge, driving tlioni- te insanity, Tile causes 0.t. this trouble hie -hada everWork, mental woirtri',jwnsdliso,crgtipopens: and enetmea olloe algae of this ta.ouble are neually great aveakness after anY exertion, nervona headaches, trembling hands, shalneess in the lege, irrita- bility of temper, weak digestive power, insomnia. The life of the ,sullerer becomes full of miseries. The trne treatment 'for this. trou- ble must consist of a bniltliag ip preeese, for the above signs mean that the exhaueted nee e are ca.11- 4°.g. for more Aolpisb,-aient from the blood ,supply, Dr, Willianie Pink pin$, uriken Rew, rich bleed that feeds the sia,rveki complaining nerves aild in this way they have mined 'thoneande of times neurae- thenia, neuralgia, and otlwr nor -- retie dieelalers, and halT? Xestorof,1 strength end ilerm-Quora- to do- enairmg people. Airs. Isaac AA al - era Calabegie, Ont., gives thanks. having been Te't0IVAI tOt health ough the use of tide medicine, aays.: "When 1 began using Die Wiarnet Pink Pilie 1 was a ner- wreck 1oeuldn't de my avork, eould not. sleep at mght, euffered from net.evotte heade, acheand the least notee would cornnletelY unlaRt nie. °nix thoee who have suffered from nen-oue .tronble en tell what milk/fired, 1 4:teetere4 or a thee, but dzel nO't, „get any benat. Then learned of Dr. 'Williams? Pink Pills and sent, for a half dozen Tly the- iitne 1 had used these I was almeet well, and a OCIR- pi,o mere ouxes cempletely teetered my health, and 1haxe 1,42d no re - urn of the troulde. I can cheer- fully recommend Dr. Waarns' Pink Pills to thoee who suffered from any forni of uerveus trouble." If you Tiro weak, nervous or out health begin to 'Qom yourself ta- rty with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. n een get them from any 'well - dealer or by lentil at f.'10 eents a box or eix boxee for $2.60 from Tho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont., A HEFOICRING A CR1MEAL. 1 ell' a Pox Terrier Waft Cu ot Bad Itallt$, Attached to the packs of fox - rends that hunt the wild hill -coun- try on both sides of the border be- tween England and Scotland is a, little band of terrier; whose busi- ess it is to follow up the chase, to go to ground when required, and to drive.or draw out the fox. Such a dog was Pompey, part <if whose history is related by a contributor to the English Country Life. Pem- pay was a ndschievous creature, and more than one cat had reason to regret haying ettra,cted his no- tice, He also acquired a taste for mut- ton, but so cunning and stealthy were his methods that he had com- mitted the erline of sheep -killing several times before he was caught „red -,handed. Thus convicted, we sent him out to a hill farm where there was a man who knew how to break dogs from annoying sheep. The old shepherd promised that within a week Pompey would not "bide in the same -field with sheep." When the shepherd began the treatment, an innbcent-looking lit- tle terrier might have been seen chained up to the lowest, rail in the sheepfolds, A number of alert Cheviot rams kept him nrider, con- stant surveillance' -while they snort- ed and stamped their, feet threat- eningly. After an hour or two of this, Pompey was chained to one of the rams, and the shepherd drove the pair backward and forward. The terrier was dragged about like an old shoe. -Whenever he got on his legs the ram charged and batted him until his ribs were neerly cracked. Then, as he still showed signs of fight, the gate was opened, and the ram rushed out to join his companions.. The rams 'were driven round and round the yard, and the unresisting little terrier was drag- ged ignernineusly behind, until hardly is breath was left in his fwor battered little body. He was given a respite ol some hours, and in 'the afternoon they took him out again and tied him up in a gateway, through which a,„fiock of sheep was driven baek and forth over him, At the eml of`three days of this course of treatment he was discharged, quite cured. He was never again known to cast so much as a glance at a sheep Some , pert:unit ,h ,FPY indstone4 reVer'recognize an op usde,s it is labeled. ' y to keep the -he it,td instal"a mo 413BEFt SIGHTS IN CHINA. Blacksmith Shops Rank First -- Forge Is Cook Steve. When travelling -in the interior of China, one Meets many .str,ange things, strange because one is not used to them. AmOngthe eights of the land, 1 think.that the black - •smith shops- a.re4perhaps the InOst amusing. Aa i America, each vil- lage has its village blacksmith, but what a different way he has of do - in a his work than we are accue- a tomed to zeeingl FOr.i,i1Stailef,r a horee to be shod is taken out in the yard, where four atrong peate stand ftrinlY- set in the ground with a, windlase attached, to tWo.'" A large piece oLf leather euspehaled,ficnn the other two pests, oompletea the equipment by `which the horse is drawn up until it is clear of the ground eimilar 'to the way that ox-ozi are famed up when ehed. The foet that is to have tbe,ehea ie fas- tened in aaclamp for.that purpose, so that the horse can't move it. Then the shoe, consisting of a very na,rrow strin of iron, is fastened on with hal-id-wrought nails that the biackanrith niakea at odd times. All four shoes would net make one of the shoes used on American horses. Lt costs about eight cants to Pnt ou all for' ehes if new, and less if tbe ohl Ones aro ref_ated. The forge is roughly made, bitt is sitniker to, any forge exeept for tho attaalunents 'tsa go with it, e fire, has 4 covering with an opening through whiell to thrust the iron that is to be heated, In p of tho coven is fitted a large kettle, and families sen rice to the blaekemith to ed for a slzare of the riee or 0 quarter of a cent a pellnd- When finished, it is put aside until the owner call5 for it: As it takes eev- e ral families' rice to All the kettle, whieh i5 large enough to hold 12 or 15 poputle nt a tirce, to give petron his 471k4DC ezemetimes cans trouble for the bleeksmith. to judge the quantity brought eaelt cue, and when it i elde the rico in the cam proport after f.etting.aaiie h25 share. Geeerally he has lese trou- ble boiUng,he T4Ce than he deee liverinn it, for there is sure to be woman who wants just et. little more than sho brought, but often the very sntalleet bezeue, even itea. spoonful, will send her away satb fie& So the woman eaves twene bechmec it is cheaper to have the bled:smith boil the rico than to buy fuel to 000k it herself, and tho blacksmith gets his riee witheut. any expense. This is not all that the bWile.- smith ,gets from his fire. Along the side of the shop is a platform, gen- ally of brick, 4s wide as a man is all, and loug enough eo that 10 or 2 ttle11 lying side by side, close to- gether, can be accommodated t sleep or rest. The hot gases from the forge passing under this plat- form keep the sleepers warm, aud this the blacksmith ()bargee for by a. regular schedule according to the length of time that the person wishes to sleep. In the suxnraer the smith does not reap intioh from the sleepers, but he cooks more rice; in tho winter his beds are full, but he does not boil so much rice for the people must have A fire at home for warming the house. and can cook it themselves. TIIE KING- OF SYRIA. Resides in Paris, But Rules Over Three Hillion Subjects. It Kinn& strange to talk of an unknown but naughty Eeng,,fo speak of a monarch who is Wealt117 and owns iarge possessions, but whose position a.,Ina'isTouis'WAlfred tregniezelt.: nEiTig of Syria. and Arabia, who still is, citizen of France. The fact that he is a King might have remained un- known even ill, Paris, where he lives in, the erowded artiste quarter of Montmartre, had he not had a pute with one of his, neighbors ever ,onie simians to which both laid When the case was brought into court it, was. discovered -that / 'Mon- smar le Vicomte Alfred, German de Breuil," by the grace. of God and by the election by the twelve emirs or Arabia and Syria, has ruled over a territory six times the size of France. In Paris King Alfred 1. lives high uP i0 One of the modest apartment houses erowded with artists and tisaes His favorite pastime is driving in the parks and boulevards na visiting the open-air theatres and restaurants, He dresses isi faaltie,se taste, and makes it a point to follow and ofteu lautiell the styles in men's dr<ss; Tie is ft, etecky num, not eiucb more than five feet eight iriches CUBS' FOOD. They Thrive on Grape -Nuts. Healthy babies don't cry and the well-nourished baby that is fed on Grape -Nuts is never a crying baby. Many babies who cannot take any other food relieh the perfect food, Grape-Nnts, and get well. "My baby was given up by three doctors who said -that the con- densed milk on which I had fed her had ruined the child's -stomach. Oae of the doctors told me that the only thing to do would be to try Grape -Nuts, so I got .sorn,e and l pre- pared it as follows: 1 soaked! Peel, tablespoonfuls in one pint of eold water for half an hour, then I strained off the liquid and mixed 12 teaspoonfuls of this strained Grape -Nuts juice with six- teaspoon- fuls of rich milk, put in a pinch of sa,lt and a, little sugar, warmed it and gave it to baby every two hours. "In .this ,simple, easy way I saved .baby'.s_ life and have built her Up to a strong, healthy child, iti:SY and laughing. The food .must certainly be perfeetao he such a wonderful effect aS this. 1 can truthfully say Inthick it is the, best food] in the world to raise delicate babies on and is also a delicious healthful food for grown-ups as weehave dis- eoaered in our family." Grape -Nuts "' is equally valua.ble to the strong, healthy man or wo- men. It stands for the true theory of health. "There's a reason,'' and' it is explained in the little hook, "The Road to \Yellville," in plrgs.'e ' Ever` reed the, 'above letter? A new on aripears trent inns to time. Thel. are enuine, true, and full, of ,humar1 Interest t e .`Tornrine ti:waye ears leen we have friends at ilPle I- • is that, er.'' ',II'113' " Ooo we don't eret. tall, but he looks rnneh taller eonsbe.- he elands erect and is well proporttonod. Despite his years his friends have designabsd him the "young cavalry ()Meer. Though he hen tho right to b ailed King of Syria and Arabia, be is indifferent about his title, His kingdom is bounded VI the north by the Ottoman Empire, on the east by the Gulf of Persia, and the Indian Ocean, on the west by the Red Sea and a strip of land be- longing to Turkey, while the Indian Ocean and British Somaliland are its southern boundaries, Xing Alfred explains that he was given his position and title because these people pould not find among them a man who waa able to rule all of them without rivalry and jealousy. He rules over three million tnen and wemeb, who call themselves Nazarenes or primitive Christians, men who follow the doctrines Of Christ as they were zmelerstooel and ecepteel 2,000 years ago. That he is an able ruler is proved by the fact that when he was nude King he induced a French company to build a railroad whieh runs from Port Said to Luwa, on the Gulf of Oman. He is now negotiating- with the company for the erection of a branch line through the wonderful petroleum lakes discovered by Prince Wrede. It is not known how rich a man this strange and unknown ruler really is, but certainly he is worth many millions. For there are few -riches that are not found in Arabia, His treasures include geld, silver, , turquoise, pearls, horses, camels, sheep, goats, fruits, wheat and zinc. Besides these possessions he is given a large salary every year, which is paid in the wealth of the country, 600000 .shcep. Some men never get past their rst success. t, A Bore. ---"She doesn't think much -of her husband." 1" "No. She says even the things he says in his sleep are terribly dull and uninter- esting. , HAIR UAME GUI ;IN HANDFULS Scalp in Very Bad Condition, Dan-, druff Could be Sten Plainly, Lost! Most of Hair. Cutieura Soap and! Cuticura Ointment Cured, -t „ 42 Lippincott St.; Toronto; Ontario...—. /*About o year ago I had very bad attack. , - of tvaleia and ina scalp was ia a very bad 'condition The dandruff could be seen' plainly and Ilcst ra.08 ofTny hair. MYhatr Yell out gradually, but after having it sham- Pooed 15 came out ni -bandana 1 asod cull - cure SooP to shampoo my hair, then .rubbA., the Outicara Ointment into the ocalp. The dandruff was very soon, removed and, my, hair stopped Nilo% out. Outicura Soap and, ,Ohltment clar0 Tae,,", (SiUngd) 11* cringberlain, linty. 81; 1912. HAWS COVERED. WITH 'ECZEMA, da cap. 944.1)0,—"Abr94 04e. ag4 my daughter 11/4 her 4,441e cevered 1,10,#FX.',ge414. 1,10, broke oat ht. a Pah, 044 W44 IMO* 0 put her handais vatea and she used to scratch the= until they were; ar4d btftamed ?.ad cra4;ed, mad used ti teed. She Ti4S. U4a324 t eta* s,pella i'as,xs the pato and burning. 'we tried soy,: csai realedias. wAthoUt, tece,tvinq any relicf.: ebeZa4w5a11l05vithOUticWo$4' Outicuro nan,ant shgea auto aad af545r teq. f44Y4' tr-44WOIA I'Zkeatfroa oared. baby whea teethir4, brol.te out withi pimple., on be race. After three deaol taaitment oOut1cur4f1aaawlse 'Was cure4,"1 elanian Mad, D., CaubnrN *rftb, .10. ;n915., cupegro $9,4st anti Outleurg oteneeet are!. aid by druntsto and 4ealqn1,eTerry,I4er'0.i For 4 liberal fro?, Sample et each, with 22-41„ 40Pkt glIsi Post card to 1ottec.93nt5aa155aa Corp., Dept. aeD• 1.leatea, la 5. Shoeing nor,ies in Vbbnt. Th Chi bl k The neso ac eMtbipks great deal of bis anatomy, wbeul 5hoeing horses, wide)), are not num- erous in China. lie -is so skittish Iv iri doing a job ef shoeing, And et), your teens about handling the hoofs of ce4ier tbeanimal, that, when elweing is only atoiesa as !toir,A, the ilOYSO is strung up zou ,Tataaal' " wtth ropes in. sueb a manner as to event leieking. No exeeptione ane niade, even theeeh the Levee be v street plug of advanced NEW ElIPORER ADVANCED. Electricity Never Allowed in Jap. aneee Palaee Before. The late Emperor Mutsuhite, of .Ianan, who reigned during- the '"Era of Enlightenment," was averse to photography and electric„ ity. lie never sat for hie portrait, and he never allowed an electric light to be installed in the residen- tial part of the palace, which was lighted With candles and oil lamps. succeseor to the throne, Yo- sliihito has changed all tbiS. Tbe new imperor chews no disinclin- ation toward either photography or eleetrieitY, -lie has sat time after time for his photograph, In fact, be is an amateur phetognaPher him- self, He has a number of cameras, and is fond of "snapping" oh! - siren in the royal garden. Ae for leetrieity, he has ordered the candles and oil lamps in the Ohi- yeda'Palace iu Tokio to be replaced by modern electric lights, the in- stallation of which has just bee completed. In naanY other ways the new Em- peror shows modern tendeneiee. He was formerly an ardent bicyclist, but since taking on the dignity Of a mcmareii he has P„hanclo4ed the bicycle ia favor of high-power auto., wohiles„ Ile is a crack billiard, player and lias had two beautiful billiard rooms installed in the pal- ace, one with American and the her English tables, Here, after dinner, he challenges his court chamberlains to a friendly game and usUally wins—quite on his own merits. The Emperor and Empress, who have been living in the Aoyaroa Pal - aye, will seam oceuny the Chiyoda Palace as their main and peaman, ,00t„ resulenee, FWt MARR1BL etinertee Liniment cures lphi srta. lTc worked all day .And he worried all night; Be shattered his nerves And he ruined his eight; He scolded his children Ansi he railed at his wife; He lost all hie friend And bartered his lite For a pile in the benk, And a swell block of bricks— Ansi he nOw makes bis home In a hole two by six. Illuard'e Liniment Co., Limited. ourod 4 valuable hunting dog tit racing* with LL.N1.3i132,11' after several veterlunries lvad t.reaied him without doIn ldrn iny permanent good. You, oto., W ILFRID GACINE, Prop. *I Grand. Central liotel, Drunnuoud- ville, Aug. 3, '04. A. Compromise. Gibbs—I often wonder who those fellows are that loaf around watch- ing a new building going up. Dabbs --Easy They are men who start out in the morning to lee& for work and compromise by look- ing at it. IVIinard's Liniment Cures Carget In Cows. Fact and Yawl. . Ossified raen die hard. Siberia ha e red cats. Every married man should join some good society—preferably the society of his wife anti children. Husbands say that the jokes about wives shopping all day without buy- ing anything are funny, but not true. A kleptomaniac is one who can afford to pay for what he steals. Look out for the man who looks put' for himself. Mexican schoolgirls smoke. The chance of two finger -prints being alike is less than one in 64,- 000,000,000, Potts, the popular novelist, says he eannot write on a lull stomach. Well, Potts, we never thought you enough of a. tatooing expert to write on an empty one, either. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. Little Willie, being a city boy, had never seen a, cow... While on , a visit to his grandmother he walk- ed out into the ile.lds with his colts- ; in John. A cow was grazing there, and Willie's curiosity being greatly excited., he asked : "Oh, Cousin Jelin, what is 1 -hat?" "Why, that is only a cow," John replied. 'And what arc those things on her 'Horns,'' answered John; 'Before they had acme far the cow mooed long and loud. Willie was astonished. Looking back, he de- manded in a eery fever on interest : "Which horn did she blew 1", ."Yei (I bettereat it sloevlya isad WJIie to the clergainan., who dinine with the family. "Nlam- . t to The delight. The picnicker's ehoice- Evetyhody's favorite. W. CLARK. 1Wrr. POTTED MEATS Fan flavored and perfectly cooked make delicious sandwiches. *etre, ARMS FOI DAVVSONs fflnety Co1orno Streeti Toronto. JTi unrr. STOOk,'"'GRALN AND DAUM 4orrae t s2i sectionof Outatio, e cinema. Y F. W. OAW5ON C 3Q00 ocre, DePsraradi. nary. Write Oentanl Trs4s, Rembdalt. Sa3f, tuAt.EtiELP WANT ATt 'a' ON saeet Prartle ; fOr IrOler COI 1' T 4 Gee ,51 szi Queen le cot. es -e, tereut Fore: Stamps, Alboicr. onlY sove4 ce4ug. coinpenr, Toronto. CEL war .ieetnic Plahts ot 10,000,00011 $ . inouding t000,000II .ogdt, will he , , ort h G mlusy as etmated rtel. There is UWey rau hut it is deeiared that. the pe.ab ot this part ef the country will, supply all power demands for 2e0 yeasis. Try Murine Eye Rem d If you have Red, Weele_Watery Eyes r Granulated Doesn't Smart —Soothes Eve Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25e, 50e. Murine Bye Salve In Aseptic Tubes, 25e, 50e. Bye Books Free by Mail. An Poe Tonic good for An Eyes. th.it Nood Caro Murine Eyo lkornedY Co.. Chicago ••••••••• The Other Pet. 'jock never snarls nor growis at inc and stieke close by me when - ver I go elite" "What a nice dog he must. be." "Dog: Sir, he is my husband 1" Minard's Liniment Cures Ceirls EU. What Strucic IIim. A man going home at a ;ate hour in the night saw that the occupants a house standing flush with the street had left a window up, and he decided to warn them, and per baps prevent a burglary.. Putting his head into the window he called out---itilanoa good peop That was all he said. A whole pail- ful of water struck him in the face, and as he staggered back a woman shrieked out ----"Didn't I tell you wha,b you would get if you wasn't home by nine o'clock." Yell will find relief In Zara -Buie! It eases' the hrning, stinging pain, stops bleeding and brings ease. Perseverance;with Zamn Buk, means cure; Why not prove tig3 4111 d)rugr:sto and ASToreowt., port )11.4. SUPAIvt.£ -.+1, • Swedenborg's great work on ['leaven alit( Tien and'41clife ai.ter death. 400 pages, only 25 cents postpald. 11. Law, 485 Eaelia Ave.,Torooto, got. "BLUE FLAN SPECIAL To lowe by July 31sb—our stoektaki g ---we of- fer thee- e e=ellimt Plugs at Per Set of Four "BLUE FLAM2S" e give perfect igni* tion and will give a hotter spark than any plug at this priee. RUSSELL MOTOR CAR CO. • Limited. Accessories Dept., WEST TORONTO RICHEIRE_ °NM NNIGATIOkCO.' 111AllokRA THE SA vonr Vacation Trip IVITERE TO GO Niagara Falls, Toronto, Thou- sand Islands, SI. Lawrence Rapids, Ilentreal, Quebec and the Saguenay Riven ---one of n a ur e's most impressive scenic wonders. LOW rates for tickets inelndingme,115 and berths, Per !uter- i:Lotion apply tO 10051 ticket agent* or liugb D. Paierson, (len. Agt., Toren- -to, Ont., or Foster Chaffee, P.T.M., Mont, troal. Que. CAPE TVOre Susi! a "Stewart" at aSpecial Price „ An overkobli in. Otir warehouse must be cleaned out before Augia8t let. Hence the Price. Three inch dia1-60 mile speedometer enclosed:w10,- 000 mile season odometer, Regular ;16.50. Special Price 10.81 RUSSELL. M OT •41‘ 'nee 1 sges. :ds eapee 55 eel vad 1155 ene -thee tht key' - leek eepn .3112 term entsiz tu ,rpezi to t t1.11. 2.en, t :ent Three inch 0ia1-60 nine. speedometer. . 10,000 mile season -.Odometer. Auto- matic reeettiog trip regis- ter . and ,a guaranteed watch. Regular Price $27.50,, Special Value $17.25... . • ' ' R OAR. 01I/1PANY, 1.1KITIE 1, Apcy9sstisrleas Deprirr'irrizrif, VV,ri:ST TO R,0 NTO , pnliea,Ile"ver giv. ,es • n one piece 8ra,riches at Toronto, MontremMolbH0,:-.471nleR:',An,u\t„VInnliaeg, Calgary, Vancouvo