The Exeter Advocate, 1921-4-14, Page 2t1hissCaada' s Wireless . Year
Fully li^rn ed
under ', Sar , r-1
anal. canaeeea
General 8.i,.: tr:c
>i a;, ms.
Whether you are resident in a large city or two or
three htlnclt•ed miles .r1way. Amateur Wireless EituiP-
m nt furnishes you with endless instructive entertain-.
ment. We. can supply Receiving Apparatus which will
)Rt, > np signals from the big Wireless Stations and
e'a tt le you to "listen in" for wireless telephone eon-
certs radiated by the :Marconi t.onpanv. Secure e.
Transmitting Set toperated directly oft at lamp socket)
and communicate with your friends a. hundred miles
away! A.mateur Wireless hirings the great world to
;our lir?or Out out anti grail this asci, to us with request
fr r 1'41• e i t t .'t ' and ask us anything you would
lilt. to know aacut Amateur Wireless,
Sall rine or parts and teeh
ricat ? ccks always in stock.
IE �TiFIC EXPERIMENTER, Limited
sa ire S "rx T'sT EAtsT, - TQUOZETO
THE DEAREST ACHE
".1TIiFI; I:4 Ii,
TAYLOR.'
a =>
thlia
a 'Ir•t 1 - 44.•.„,%.,T `R3 th i.
ves-
t
r
-el sham as-x'y as she hear
,reath'eten. _
-Mother," .he vahi»pe='ed fr m the
l arX.t>r ed doorway, -are V3'..1 aa3 al€e `a F,
its., ;ea»
•:\ e' w': hese a quick an d the high
^'' m, 14%,:, y:rat ct4 :tt
. ccs m at.11ed Elizabeth's'.
•y•s
qe e c eel R lez btnh Leelt by the'
,w, lE1!1 "•11nag. I've iheuttrlxt--ail E 's_.aug•
en r : x n C t£ a ti- ,x:a;' '12::1 y.ii :were buey. . l)F»t t.:t l
E.p 1 sal. r. I tie nese soil+„ '1
I . .qa� .t, lr:- Wilkins, plti..,ut An .::1. Tal
Ire ., 'iii. "'tie. ' s ';•:; h arse "Tait rs neeh. _ t ,. l T � ,,, t'
1 g, nE I; "I7e,,R :tl. she v:hir, ere.,: and
,a. 4 3• n s=• p x
.t,, f'c, wf:„' T Etre -"1a" toe sieacl ,
1 'a just this way. Mother. went
r G ,. e ' 7':i'.e Ti,, o l.::r 1!,.':h, Ler" voice Z=ha ting the
. a ,: :. ._a 4 -:w:.i at.l ',.,seta
• I,,C:t a£'ath.� it tries: to reveal; "we
r ;• ,r: r 1w,..d a -wee nem yogic all the time -all the
: r< . s,
; E: '- inn ;'ftil''l't made us. for you
at tat °€'aa:1. La:at">,_'" that no one else
•'. , •.ail glee. �i a1, \tether il: , ria el"
» Q hlr ,. nketl. 51
t 1 t 11. t t1::E' Sit ; « atilt -eailrrt:et1 for. herel-!
,.1 r. tf Inca 3 i., aril fins. trt;.i the;
1 • t� �, t . t that ally ley scars Ow; healed;
.., _ 4+rir,. `� n^. ; liui S G- M'eat, of an the othcre. i
n ,..0 re 3'E to ••1 x'111 �A '1. h .,r,eR �. Ta 1
i :4a ace ame : she whl ,,arra.
atn••£.ei .. e .leae l 1' r to oar:sten.
°'t.• `l Olt. Mother. if you lcnewee." ben
ee viiiare:'u-etj to go tits, "If you.
a `the hexer--. , to managed to repeat.
"';'hat's iii xt:is?" asl;e;1 Sam from;
•a°q1
tl
a
rensoee an en, ,...
+$ re' ,
r
ate.•4 r". i± •-.= 1 Eeaiell), after another embrace,
.a. fel •' an ,..:e presoo re of her motet: cheek`
* o 1 t a' tfi!11 C•rc 0.14 'c'1 nl 'tt. 'e' .
fl : f +l : � .aEs't. It s*� a with ?:c; , � , 3 t 1. r
a1 rw ne oral le r.; ;•i14 `al. 110;1:, to the edge of t1
a cs F�Cr -, Y.i.:,1 oast f tA :R}tY} her.; ,. +, -, mt.”
t Bete::1 :..•, +pEi"" .13�. 111414 g.: 141$ r' elet ♦ lieh ? to have nit. 1 '.,-..
1 '� e ra}t,n«i a .obB"y, :fait with A :ghtne,.
tr�� t:a�, :L:tt•�1s £'1a e•.1 i.,,�:li .�� -. 'I
t1 aw...o , r: glen. ere,tt•vu oe ledar''l:E,.t, ,.l ne leas eoveeed what he felt,
ware._ : gal:f e4 - ,11:.1 e:1 ;'t•' ' 4111�t;;. -h•�1 1w,}! '.;1 to tell ycu 1 WON DX zn'g to
♦ ,•, ; ,, , t"0 :t:, bet ,req 1 want Out, teat I eotild'1 t.
zl,i , 4Ykr. BaE.w tat. " 11,E u.,l t'•t.d':ilf
\ ,t:
Fla-, 'ea,/ rl a ;e -6 ea -e 'teas Mt"ther, 1 ('*didn't (w01111 you; I"
ga61:»:'1'1.: t'�3k "air w re ell eat-1wae tit 'roil';.: site wottlti"'t-.
1,:1:. at L . e r ,trl.,le.3. after an the ! , Riti11f4v 1"
Ct'1 E•:� * t x ;e° FcE'.c? f•r R 1. upset -••t ..r • + es. 1 I'M All right, Mali t it?"
•ill' tee ,.». 11 . , : its st... a)d- iris t,,ar tier`. I
i erhi, t "Lets of fellows turn oil their
>3£' w r 4 t' 1 At :tee 11211 tt'tt. , 1 t:£'`� A} ttl:nR. t ev:.f; maybe. I would
xa t r' aE, '•l ,,;r,.'resatel, 111r tit:klkt}s1.1.»ava tee. est-= he fumbled for his
Ii€a
anat gent l;;d'- the Lege or a.eere Int.t h 11an f ori:fa reeding ft• t`lo: eiy.
,,. .i, i , ' ::° e ie 't'llt. to , with, 'Ica knew hilly I think
ine t4' t Ji :t eel! 1 t•t.. r alEll£.a.. , ,: ' 1 its ax<1 ,� r.,, y a. wm?
that Fie t1.! w eyal l fa11e;S �.. • ,:111£', lr;,e••"• ttt:4 le..}.'ren On:
cat 1:43 1" i 1: night 1 alar 1:, t`"o t /1 Li r der: 't e' ,.4, .1j111i t? 14 0 1 Itl1011
sant :mei 1•:s tiZ meeeee :i ee i,t° lex t :::, w 1L, ?sloth to tl - alweyS date
t 41'-a. t':Zre, ;;;/t,'-":'j:tri La:* t1144 , 1tia? t,'slim^, fried 1 , ,tial fol 1
1't t, Alld '' iti " : the it i 1' Zlinl\- me` Ir ; t, end tee arab®-:ts111. r `s Ott. YOU
S. t(ir 'i 14 .ith (', tin \Xiill 111 ° hC' eoulln't finish, and he
tt! tt.'^1 M\totalt.1tia: t':+ '.i ets.tee:wily ed,,eao Ce hated beteg gtil'red, having
di£1ii't atm" " C•" "Mati er, will Otr,'a e, C11 res mother See ham starred, he
i)ta ,°,t ,i amend her betel nOsqui- st4l;itt tip to stretch elaborately.
tc •,. They mrele her eetile bitterly.' "Of t•our.-e, Julia loves you," he
and then came ti mernent'a doze. an}:oul eed, after he'd given his moth-
Thr.;tlrh its rcxtr:'le." lraeeate ai111 en's hand a fir al squeeze and gone to -
physical ' ehtxaat cin 4 ,e 51:14:>ped :,zero ward the doorway, "Everybody does.
ea the pare arca nee 111"!. She 1..,,.;w 01 Good right. Call me if I sleep oyer.''
waking that. without douitt, she had "Good night, dear.'
been alb,;,lyd in atlleeeng ;I1 the little; There was another interval. Alice
lrrlta :*ts1 R rk: '1 c da: an fix hex mood;None up, called 1n some infermation
s.he knew that she was loved Oral: about the party, who had been there,
iter s: and ems she :canted. more what had been eaten, said she'd forme
than ate £t,iiig lir a e .en cr on earth. over after she'd undressed; and then
to give, to give a iW had ±het day, ee Edward, for once mindful of the time
11 -::he: a1::1 s thought anti her. and his to -morrow, appeared.
Ione adorn feet didn't swatter' „Pain all gone?' he asked anxious -
meth. ,, i t } tlty helise<l to drake for ly
a man the s.1t of ptaes fur home that His wife sat tip in bed and laughed.
he needed after a long rr.'lsy day an; "No." she answered.
the cite. His "Gee:: to go' here, hear. It isn't'?" this very anxiously.
Awfullyni, e :eel quiet. dere are "leo. it isn't. Edward, you're a dear
any slippers?" helped to erase that stupid. I love you, but you are stupid"
sort of disromfctt.... The Jack of "I know, dear,,' he admitted, and
thought in the girls came from youth.. then. "You've got to have that fixed!
She thanked God that they were You've just got to go to Dr. Benders
young and had ahead of them the and have that fixed. I won't )lave you
glorious chance to work, to be tired, suffering. Till tell you, Molly -you
to love, to give. It was a pain, she may not know it, and maybe we don't
had net changed her viewpoint about always seem to -you're the centre of
that; but it was a heaven-sent pain this wheel. Molly, we can't go with -
without which women grew old, hard, otit you!"
unlovely and -•-lonely, and without "oh, Edward!"
only a half of life.
which they caught. Honest! Look here, is it still had?"
The memory of her tears and' ' "No," she answered "It is a pain,
elle perturbation they had made •but it's the dearest pain in the world,
shamed her. She would be herself in Ed! The very dearest! Oh, Edward,
the manning, and she'd try to see I'm so happy and I've been su•rh a
whether she couldn't squeeze enough fool! Ache?" Again she laugh -
out of the housekeeping money to have ed. . "Yes, it is an ache, but it is the
a roast of lamb in the evening with de'arest ache, the dearest ache hi the
mint jelly, the sort that Alice liked. world!"
Asparagus witr it, she supposed, and (The End.)
brownecli potatoes... , They were all
Minard's Liniment Relieves Colds, etc.
so dear. No woman. had ever been so
:.r
`,IN ty :a gioerwtay. a jubilant Stint, who
rt., ; •„• terra 1 0,1 the tial light and entered
ors' •ly: ,N- 1 154 the set ;1,3 o ,4 anA» who lute done
g ei .larxi( as -1 t1 42a! it w€!ll. ”"t'ut incl .
: i.44,;,•" errs' 44:41 f t:le 7::11." a, t:.-ea0ei gree 1y:. i..1•we goti
1 ten. '"T -:t' - ate pair setae telkieg 11;, alp, a
happily surrounded as she, Oddly Mule Drill.
enough, the voice -of Elizabeth as it An Irish drill -sergeant was instruct -
had been when she was a tiny thing ing some recruits in the mysteries of
came hack, her Mummy, Mummy!
Want my mummy!"
She smiled as it rang through her
heart. She couldn't see quite why she,
a plain., stupid woman, who did little
beside making a house ,comfortable
and meals eatable, should: be wanted
and needed as she was. . Her lips
quivered suddenly, "But I couldn't live
without it;' she reflected, "slot a clay:"
Two big tears, which weree not even
coueills of those, that she had shed
'before, i olled down herr cheeks. She
l
sed al. u b t
-F RL:Ala-8Y snreas - Terme; e; US7 D
7a ears of all types; all ears sold sub -
Joel : to delivery op to 300- miles, or test
rut of same distance tt you wish, in els
goreorder as purchased. or purchase
fundeci
ret co mecitanie of your own choice of his lungs: "Squad, halt! �Vhoat
t^, look them over, or 1.sit us'to ,
;ase any car to city representative for (. f(:y:
i:nspeotion, Very large stook always on
band, Canada has 3 500 00'
8reakey's Used Gar Market 0vice p; Anse
/lee vcrna'e ,9ta.'eet, "Secant,, traria, 80,000,000; TJnited States, 40,-
000,000; Great Britain, 27,000,000.
marching movements, and found great
difficulty in getting a countryman of
his to halt when the command. was
given. • After explaining and illustrat-
ing several times, he approached the
recruit, sizer: him up silently for a
couple of minutes, and then.cietnanded.
his name.
Casey, 'sir," was the reply.
"Wel] Casey, diel ye iver drive a
mule?"
"Yrs, sor."
"What did ye say when you wanted
him to Stop?"
"Whoa,,,
. The sergeant turned away and im-
mediately put .ltiis squad in motion.
After they :'lead advanced a dozen
yards or so he bawled out at the top
1 operation, there would soon be snail
a laalnd¢ y in nearly every country
community. Orte thing is certain: If
the farm woman does not enjoy the
benefits of a central laundry, she is
4 *u . """"�""1 �0 sr entitled to a modern laundry on the
_ > e:.y 4 fame properly equipped: with a power
'genf 1
;'yam- -^; _ a�.i ;-,'' al t washing. machine, mangle and the
' �"'" wenn" "'' other machinery that takes the drudg-
How to Make an Toeless Cooler.
T
Refrigerators can be made to do
their part in conservieg food this
Stammer. If ice is not obtainable, .an
ice;e-s refrigerator, cooled by evapor-
alien, Tan be casfiy e3nsiructed, This
refrigerator eon ':sts of a wooden
frame covered l \\ ith Carton flannel,
bunlep or heavy duck, It is desirable
that ,.,�,
e
frame b
e sel>, .a,.fl a aho•i a
1
+' 7 b
this is net necessary. Wi ks, made
of thea :nae material as the covering,
resting in a pan of water on top of
the ceder, conduct the water over the
sides and entre of the pan and allow it
to seep down the sake. of the box.. i
The evaporatice from this n.,istened
covering causes a tower temperature
inside. Cln ehy, ,hot days a temper-
ature of fifty degrees alas been known
to be obtained in the cooter. This is
the way to build it.
Melee . seree tell c,tet. 3t.n feet high
with the other n mensions 12 by Ifr
invitee. If a soli;: tem is used, sirply
p'.^,ce the seeter pan en this. Other-
wise tit the ran e!:, e1y: in to the open-
ing of the tins m i and support it
by 1 nett cleats fa atene:l to the inside
af' the frail P. Place t1',a moveable
shells., in the frame, 12 to 15 inehes..
teen. Use a bi :uit pen 12 by id
inches on the top to held the. rater,
.ar.i where the rcfligvettur is to be
u' ti It eo;. have the Miele thing
starling in a lalrge pan to cath any
cifi; . The pees and ease nay be
painael white, hallowed to dry, and
then enameled. A. avenin,. of white
Centea flannel sltr ul-.l 1:e made to fit
the freecie. Have the smooth side out
an.:l uu:ton the covering to the frame
with buggy or aatemobile curtain'
heck a„d teas arranged so that the'.
diver may be epi ed wiihcut u:rfasten
rag the,* hoolee. This can easily lie
done 1•y putting cite raw cif h;.oks on
the edge of the door near the latr:h
and the ether $list opposite, the open-
in;f. 'a h the hem on each side extend
-
del far enough to over the crack at
the edge of the dcor, so 113 to keep
cut the warm: outside air and retain
the cook: ear. This dress or covering,
will have to be hookedr:iomzd the top
etge e',so. Two double strips, cne-
half the width of eaeh'side, should be
e we: on the tcp part of the covering,.
and allowed to extend over about 2?
to„il.., ,
es in the pan of water. The
bottom
om of the covering thodad extend
into the bower pan.
Place the refrigelatcr in a shady
glace where air will eireulate around
it fre":y.
Swat the Fly.
A female fly lays about one hundred
and twenty eggs at a time. She lays
two, three, or four batches of eggs.
111 0440 day the eggs hatch into little
white maggots. At' er five days each
maggot goes into the pupa stage.
Five days later the fly emerges full
grown from the pupa. Fourteen days
later the female flies lay eggs and
start other big families on their way.
Swarms of flies during the late sum-
mer mean than we have not been busy
swatting flies during the aorly spring
months,
Let us ni•ake up our minds that we
will not have flies in the house. Every
member of the family should know
that fliers carry filth and disen-se
germ. Don't let mother do all the
fly swatting. Every member of the
family should help.
Screen porches, door and windows.
Trap the flies -swat the flies.
Haul out the manure.
Bill the winter flies.
Make all privies sly -proof.
Each community !breeds, its own
flies. Flies do not travel more than
one hundred yards from their breed-
ing plaices.
The fly that creep§ over the face of
a tubereular• patient in the palatial
home, in the cottage, or hospital, may
deposit a deadly germ on the lips of
a healthy person in your house, mark-
ing another victim for the great white
plague.
Trap the fly before he gets into the
house. There are several traps whaoh
can be made easily. Hang the trap
about ten feet from the back door or
put it near the stables or •outhou:ses.
Protect -it from the wind. Bait it
with banana peeling, sugar end vine-
gar, or a piece of meat.
Sonne people think they can keep
their home sanitary by cleaning up
their yard and. dumping the trash on
the other side of 'the fence. But the
height of the fence does not brother
the fly.: •
Filth a1W,ay5 attracts flies, and
carelessness about leaving tg:arlbage
about or throwing refuse or shops in
the back ,yard soon advertise itself to
the flies: If you want to know about
a family look at their back yard. It
is an insight totheir eharecter, their
health and their citizenship,.
Finally, keep everlastingly at it.
That is the only way to succeed in
anything, and it is especially true in
combating a pest, such as the fly
wbieh multipl':es with sneh alarming
rapidity.
For the Little Cenv aleseent,
•
A game fora sick ehild �ho.4e
hands are too weak to hold even a toy
require, only a pair of scissors, sane
'sheets of white paper and a box off,
colored erayons. Fold the paper and
cut out birds in pairs -big birds, little
binds., all kintis; then Brix them up
in a bee and give thein to the invalid
It will take a long time to find the
mates end lay thein in pairs across
the coverlet.
The next clay let her classify the
Epc 'ie:, and cheese the right eolor:-
for each;,: then give her the crayons
and let her begin til eoler the had e,
As r,t tint she pobabiy can work only
a few minutes at a'time, it will take
several days to color thein all. Then
she can place them to suit hear feney.
Perhaps an eagle will pefeh on a high
cliff o11 the eemfoa'ter, a .Van Will
swim on the sheer, partridges will
creep in end out among the little
and Skylarks g'a Failing up into
the air, The hleekce can be a sandy
sievert where an Old ostri.1t lives, and
the plllolwa can lac snowy peaks in the
Fee North where the wild geese are'
l
piing.
To make nests for the :si1:;;, cut oast
cedes of lariees sizes and let the,
invalid draw the eggs in then:. As
she grove strorger rhe call stady*'
bird i}eoks to learn flow ninny eggs
the differens birds lay anti how to
tolur them. When sire is well again
she will not forget the paper birds,:
but will wateh the real birds anal
study them with new interest,
When a Baby Gets Its Eke Souses.
You are born with the sense of
taste and, make geed use of it at once,,
It is not until you reach the age of
weeks that you could focus your
eyes and really get a. clear vision.
Smelling and hearing conte aloes to-
gether when you are about oro week
olio:. A sense of tenth conies 'when
yea are about two weeks old.
While the baby sees thing; early,
in all probability vision is net com-
pletely developed much before the
baby is three of three and one-half
months old. Many authorities insist
that the new-born baby is eompletc?y
deaf for the first twenty-four or'
forty-eight hours of its life, and sonic
authorities maintain that the baby is
deaf for several days.
When objects are brought close to
the eyes of the new-born baby it does
not ,:ink or close them and it is
usually not before the sixth week
that the baby will quickly shut the
oyes if something is moved rapidly
toward them,
Why Not the Co -Operative Laundry?
Ilf these modern days when co-oper-
ative effort on the part of farriers is
proving so helpful and so popular, it
is strange that there are not a large
number of co-operative leufidric s
throughout the country. For some
reason the co-operative laundry idea
has been very slow in obtaining a
footing in our rural districts, yet
there, are few community co-operative
experiments that are so attraetive.
The ,central laundry is one of the
great necessities in city life to -day,
taking over a tremendous burden in
congested living .centres. There is no
reason,. why the same burden should
not be turned over by the busy farm
woman to a central plant, It has been
suggested that the farm woman is
embarrassed in. sending out the fam-
ily washing. The city woman has com-
pletely overcome any such embarrass-
ment. It has allso been suggested that
the farmer is not willing to spend the
extra money for outside laundry.
Whatever the reason may be, we be-
lieve that. if our readers should ob-
serve
b
serve the success of the rural co-oper-
ative laundry, as we have seen it in
■ ORCAN
FANCY GOODS CO.,. Ltd.
7 Wellington St. East
TORONTO
Importers and Wholesale Dealers
In Fancy Goods, Cut Glass, Earth-
enware, Fancy. China, Toys, Sport
ing Goods, SmalIwares, Hardware
Specialties, Druggists Sundries..
Travellers. Exerywhere
Wholesale Only,
'When you think -of painting
Remember that the paint for every
need and protection is made by
r -m"0 and I " The Piglet Paint to Paint Right"
ASK YOUR DEALER
4a
ery out of one of the roost irksome
tasks on the farnf, Relief from un-
necessary drudgery lifts the standard
of farm life to the levels of su'ecess.
64111ard'e Liniment for Dar4as, etc.
Me Sunday $' hoofs Dying?
Sunday schools are the patent of the
English-speaking peoples of the world.
They are found wherever Brit
ish and
d
American people live, or where their
missionaries have taught, but nowhere
else.
It is an amusing thing that the Sall-
day -school til 1 €i)e- dates ba lt
to
1803, and that the very first Sunday-
sebool iu, the world was opened at
Bristol less then 150 years ago. When
there were no p eentee 5040015 in Tang.
rads: Many an alilbitotts lad learner
to read and write at the Sunday-
school,
undayschool, but Vett sloe coning of the.
Beard -schools, religious insiru€:tion be-
came their stale purpose,
About the end of last century Sur-
d.y•rehoole reeehtd their high-water
mark asfat as attendance is concern-
ed. The average attendance at the
world's Sunday -r ehools every Sunday
I:fterneon ran into tees of millions. Of
late years there has been a steady cle-
Forestall
Colds,,
Chills and
Influenza.
Take
Use B o v r i l in yoar
*coking. It flaTours, ee-
rie-hoe,
erie oo, nour:s1es more,
The Body-building Power of Bovril
has been proven by independent
scientific experiments to be from
10 to ''20 times the amount of
Bovril taken.
c ine in the popularity of the Sunday -
school.
It would be a world catastrophe ib
this "peculiarly EInglish institution
511001 lose the immense power it has
wielded in the making of the nation.
1O'U'tI81
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carle
TORONTO SALT WORKS
C. J, G1,1FP - TORQNTO
FOR Ey
URFACE
AV railr
,?
yea
ttt'40441.4
s�,tty
ti
Spruce. '''- Paint
Up Up
• e:r-.
New� is the time�'ak tall iteatt;: improve theMpg. ,
auto of yct'r borne with a touch of paint ere a't3
gum.% Uoti t neglect year furniture* and wes,elver41.
A scat of protect4Qn Will -mak Renders. tia.Ne ttc
1.^.. surface and 403 save all,
eep
res 't
'141414X1
.33133v1
PAINTS AND VRI NI$IflS
For the nu:o and G"ifin 1s , For lLirdeood Fillies
N r, U. TO $ r--tl:r 1-401:414, • 141tR1n.F,.1144 --The perfect
soritory f4. t a thatee ret lade Ilctr f nail thct wain*n l- the
cr rub c9 Mari'1 Icac,nz Curl har.(t:t Imp.A6.:4fin:sh that
,,Jt • :'l •e4444e t:P3a 44r 1.1063144 Ful not mar nor ttaptth wt late.
hag lax ' St 4.1:3 tic t,a,ted ,ilii wap and
For Woodwork etc, stater.
MARTIN'S Vila=. ENAMEL - For Furniture
-liar rnamr1 de au,,c) a 4,eauti- woos• ,e0 STAIN -•In many
1,4 ftni,h for 144411014;6, trd• oltade4, t'. ,:. \lahranr, t'hary,
rap :,4, etc. 11,14)a 141,444. etc. €Area to ir,t14 assn stood,
Far the ?ppe, raker c1 eta save
SENO
IooRr S F[ OOR�t 1t14'r—• c :;!� Can tp ties.
n hide mage cl r ,Errs. It For retold::
lard vials a beautiful 6 4444el OUTSIDE rotten PAINT--
11ml; that tetra and mora and drier 1110 in a IoW bourn And
14a1e'• swear, lite iron,
nor it a stead ia7 dfdRTi 1 ••SL "tOtRpalms for
wry surface 043 for !IVY tn.s 44. €vowsr our
mats, becks44(14, 444.a,e us 4444. Cur lteGkt
"Team and Co :viler:es"moik3frm on seises:.
•swe MARTIN-SENOUR Ga.
L,MR1P
Dt00utsni p* MINTS Hao 444Rn 3*114
wt":cvia+. moNTREAL'°�°a4'.,da
re
1.
u
t surae
Send for
Book of
Recipes,
TREE !
In
2, 5, and
1Q -Ib.
fins
ungry, romping children eat all the doughnuts they
want—in homes where Mother uses Crown Brand
Syrup when making them. It is a healthful, whole- -
some, highly nutritious food, recommended by
highest authorities on diet. Fine as a spread, as a
table syrup, for all baked dishes, icings and candies.
THE CANADA STARC11 CO,, -LIMITED, MONTREAL
own
!s w,
Cite Great Sweetener"
Have Your Cleaning
Done .Y b. Experts
Clothing, household dra `erces linen and delicate
fabrics can be cleaned andpmade look a.
fresh
toe
and bright as when first. bought.
Cleaning and e
Is Properly Done'at Parker's.
It makes no difference where you. live; parcels 04111 be
sent in by mail or express. The sante cart; and atten-
tion is given the work as though you lived in town;
We Will be pleased to advise you on any question
regarding Cleaning or Dyeing. WRITE US,
yL
!u"5
rkers yye orkJ: `w
Cleaners&1,r ens
iynongeSt,, mato