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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-7-1, Page 3Tommy Shares Hlr3 Feast- One east One bright morning in the summer- time Tommy Sparrow returned from his morning fly over the country and Rattled down on the apple tree at the Hage of the ;garden,. He smoothed his tail feathers licked off his bili (he hadn't taken' time to do that sice finding his breakfast out in the woods), and' brushed up his feathers on the top of his head. Then lie look- ed around. Right over there in the middle. of the garden was Billy Robin. "Hello, there, Billy Robin," called Tommy Sparrow, but Billy didn't look, up or answer; he just went right along tending to his own business—which seemed to be digging up the dirt that had recently been worked. "Now what can be doing?" Tommy Sparrow asked himself. "I think P11 watch and see. He seems to be eating something—but what the some can be is more than I see. It worms, I'm sure of that." •To Sparrow . sat very still on the 1 limb of. the old aple tree and wat Up and down the garden Billy R walked; pecking, pecking, Peskin the ground in the most regular fash- ion. "He must be eating pebbles," said. Tommy Sparrow to himself in great disgust, "I'll watch a while longer to be euro." Se Tommy Sparrow watched what seemed to him a long, long time, then he could stand it no longer—you know the sparrow family are noted for their curiosity rather than their patience, and Tommy was no exception to the rule. He must find out what Billy Robin was doing and why. "Billy Robin!" he called. No answer—Billy went right along tending to his own business. "Billy Robin! Billy Robin! Look here! I want to talk to you!" he re- peated. Thus addressed, Billy Robin heard and looked over to the apple tree. "Oh, good -morning, Tommy Sparrow," he answered politely. "What •is it I can do for you?" "You can tell me what you are`do- ing," said Tommy Sparrow. Billy laughed. "That doesn't sound like a hard task, but I should think you would know without being told. I'm eating corn." "Eating corn!" exclaimed Tommy Sparrow. "Where do you get it;" "Out of the ground," replied Billy Robin, disgusted at Tommy's stupid- ity, can't you see?" Unconcernedly he resumed his walking up and down and his meal. r ST. VITUS DANCE IN YOUNG CHILDREN Can Only 13e Cured by Enrich- ing the Blood and Toning Up the Blood. One of the commonest forms of ner- vous trouble that afflicts young chil- dren is St, Vitus dance, This is be- eause of the great demand made on the body by growth and development, together with the added strain caused by study, It is when these demands become so great that they impoverish the blood, and the nerves fail' to re- ceive their full supply of nourishment that St. Vitus dance develops. The remarkable success. of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in cuffing St. Vitus dance should lead parents to give this, great blood -building medicine to their chil- dren at the first signs of the approach of the trouble.'Pallor, listlessness, inattention, restlessness' and irritabil- ity are all symptoms which early show that the blood and nerves are failing to meet the demand upon them. Here thing is proof of the great value of Dr. isn't Williams' Pink Pills in cases of this mmy kind. Mrs. Alfred Sochner, R.R. No. ower 5, Dunnville, Ont., says: "Our ten-. ehod. year-old daughter, Violet, suffered obin very severely from St, Vitus dance. g at The trouble came on so gradually that we were not alarmed until it affected her, legs and arms, which would twitch and jerk to such an extent that she could scarcely walk and could not hold anything in her hands steadily. She suffered for about five months before we began giving her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, but she had not taken these long before we found that they were the right medicine, and after she had taken nine boxes she rad fully recov- ered her former health and strength. I can strongly recommend Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills to every parent hav- ing a child suffering from St. Vitus dance or any form of nervousness." In troubles of this kind no other medicine has met with such success as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. You can get these Pills through any medicine deal- er or by mail at 50 cent's a box or six •oxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. IMPERFECT WORLD NECESSARY It is Necessary for the Production and Training of Moral Beings. Professor Sorley, of Cambridge University, has been engaged in de- livering a course of Gifford Lectures on "Ethics and .Theism" at Marischal 'College, Aberdeen. In one of his lec- tures he laid down his own position in the following words: "Yes, I see you eating,"said Tom- He would hazard the statement at an imperfect world was neces- my Sparrow in a puzzled voice, "but' saly for the production and training there wasn't any corn around this garden when I left any .nest this morning. I. know, because I hunted worms in that very place and not find- ing any went to the woods for my breakfast." "Which just goes to prove that you would do better to watch your own garden rather than to forage else- where," explained Billy Robin. "After you left this morning a little boy came out of the house' and planted this patch of corn. He thinks he is going to have a fine patch of corn for „popcorn this fall. He planted it all in neat rows, too. It's very good eating, better help yourself!" Tommy needed no urging. He flew down and soon learned the trick of following the rows and getting the most corn for the least trouble! So that is the real reason why there • was such a poor crop of popcornfrom that carefully planted patch! SHOULD HAVE HAD CONVOYS. Three Ways to Save Lives on the Lusitania. The loss of the' Lusitania might have beenavoided, or the loss of life much minimized, according to Hud- son Maxim, inventor of high explo- sives and authority on warfare, if three methods of protection had been utilized. He says: "In the first place, there should have been a convoy of torpedo boat • de- stroyers. A protective) convoy should have patrolled the course of the ship and blown out of the water any submarine that dared to show a con- ning tower. "In the second place, torpedo -nets might have been used. It is a popu- lar belief that these can only be used when a ship is at anchor, and in that way they have been used on warships for years. A protective screen may be constructed for a liner which would extend below the water line end explode any torpedo which came in contact with it before it could reach the side of the ship. Such a • screen would lower the speed of the ship perhaps one4ialf, but when you think that the Lusitania was struck when proceeding slowly you can see that a net could have been carried without reducing her speed any fur- ther than it was already. "The third method of protection is rather away of saving lives after the ship has been struck. There should be on every steamer self - launching rafts that would float the Minute the water reached them. It is certain that a number of rafts of this kind would have saved many lives in the lose of the Titanic, of the Tour- aine, and of the .Lusitania." One epecies of white ant produces 86,400 eggs a day. Intrinsically, Victoria Crosses are Worth only :a few pence. ' ED. 6. of moral beings. A world of com- pletely unerring, finite beings creat- ed and maintained . so by the condi- tions of their life would be a world of marionettes. Not such were the beings whom God was conceived to have created for communion with Himself. Those spirits must fight their way upwards from the lowest beginnings. In this progress they had to attain reason and freedom so that the good might be known and chosen, and, tried by every kind of circumstance, to find and assimilate the values which could transform the world and make themselves fit for the higher spiritual life. This meant that it was possible to regard God as the author and Ruler of the world as it appeared in space and time, and at the same time to hold that the moral values of which they 'were con- scious and the moral ideal which they had come to comprehend with increas- ing clearness expressed His nature. On the view which had just been sug- gested they would. explain all reality, nature and persons, laws and values, as depending on a Supreme Mind whose purpose was being unfolded in the history of the world. A GOOD THING When It Comes Along Don't Let It Get Away From You. "I really feel that it is hardly possi- ble to say too much in favor of Grape - Nuts as a health food," writes a lady. "For 9 or 10 years I had suffered from indigestion and chronic conetipa- tion, causedby the continued use of coffee and rich, heavy foods. My ail- ments made my life so wretched that I was eager to try anything that held out a promise of help. And that Is how I happened to buy a package of Grape -Nuts food last spring. "That ended my' experiments. For in Grape -Nuts I found exactly what I wanted and needed. From the day I began to use it I noticed an improve- ment, and -in a very few Weeks I found my health was being restored. "My digestive apparatus now works perfectly, and chronic constipation has been entirely relieved. I have gained in weight materially, and life is a very pleasant thing to me so long as I use Grape -Nuts once or twice a day. I have found by experiment that if I leave it off for a few days my health suffers. "A physician in our town has great 6uccess in treating stomach troubles, and the secret of it is that he puts his patient on Grape -Nuts food—it al- ways brings back the power of diges- tion." Name given by ''Canadian Postuniil Co,, Windsor, Ont. Read, "The Rotd RWellville," in pkgs.., "There's a eason." Ever''rsad the above fetter? A new one appoare Trani time to time, They aro Bennina, true. and full of human Interest. ISSUE 26—'15. Periscopes ae Fife Savers. Probably no instrument invented during the present European war has been the means of saving ae many lives as has a small periscope now in use by the British soidiere, With the growth of the trench mode of fighting the skill of the sharp- shooters, especially at short range, hoe increased to an alarming extent, Where the trenches are close together, in sonic instanbes so close that the fighters can talk to one another across their defenses, it is impossible to thrust a head above the ground with- out drawing the fire of half a dozen rifles.. Consequently the pocket periscope has been brought into use. The peris- cope is simple in construction, consist- ing only of two mirrors connected by a collapsible framework. Both mir- rors' are fixed to the framework at an angle of 45 degrees. When the frame- work is extended and the upper mfr- ror; is raised above the trench, the view is reflected by the upper mirror down to the lower one, which reflects the light rays horizontally to the eyes of the observer. Before this instrument came into general use it was necessary to raise above the trenches every few minutes in order to prevent a surprise. These occasional moves endangered the life of the investigator. With the aid of the periscope the watcher may remain in the security of the trench and guard against any move from a trench with- in range of his vision. Paying Our Debts. Any man making •a pretence at be- ing honest will try to pay for what he gets. But having admitted the justness of the claim that he do so he ,nay be surprised at the wideness of the application of the principle that lies at the back of it. The earth pays for what it gets—the rain and the sunshine, and the breezes of heaven —with fruitfulness, waving grain, buds and blossoms and fruits, and the smiling green of fields. It is not a mere sponge, receiving always and never responding to the giver. It gives back everything, with an add- ed something of its own. The earth is honest, generously honest. And a man ought not to be any less so. He is getting every day and hour and moment of his life, getting from all sides and in all possible ways. WHEN BABY IS ILL When he is troubled with constipa- tion, indigestion, vomiting or worms, give him Baby's Own Tablets. They sweeten the stomach, regulate the bowels and cure all, these troubles simply because they banish the cause. Concerning them Mrs. Philias Duval, St. Leonard, Que., writes: "We are well satisfied with Baby's Own Tab- lets, which we have used for our baby when suffering from constipation and vomiting." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers . or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.' 4: Save Us from Our Friends. Mrs. Crawford -I supose they won- dered how he could afford an auto. Mrs. Crabshaw—Not exactly. They asked if I knew how much you owed on it. I was cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by MINARrD'S LINIMENT. MRS. A. LIVINGSTON. Lot 5, P.E.I. I was cured of a severe attack of Rheumatism by MINARD'S LINI- MENT. Mahone Bay. JOHN MADER. I was cured of a severely sprained leg by MINARD'S LINIMENT. • JOSHUA A. WYNAOHT. Bridgewater. FREIGHT SERVICE TO RUSSIA Received the Victoria Cross. The latest official list raises the total number of British soldiers who have received the Victoria Cross dur- ing the war to fiftyy-one. The line regiments, of sours&, having secured the largest proportion, twenty-four having been divided among members of seventeen corps, in addition to five given to the Brigade of Foot Guards. The artillery has received as many as eight, and the engineers five. The cavalry and the navy have each ob- tained two, the Indian Army one, and the Native Army three, while the Royal Army Medical Corps has se- cured one, as well as the clasp award- ed to an officer who had won " the Cross in South Africa. Of the nine- teen officers upon whom the decora- tion has been conferred eight" have been killed, as have four of the thirty-two non-commissioned officers and men among the recipients. ,F Been Deceived. "Uncle, why did you never marry?" "I' never found a girl who would have me." "Somebody's been fooling you. Our sex isn't that particular.", Corns Cure Guarantee4 Never known to, fail; acts without path .4gn 24 house. Is soothing, he11•ling;' takes the sting Fight out. No rorned'y su !quick, safe and sure as Putnam's Pain- leas Corn Extl''act i. Sold every-' !there --25o. nor betile. Germans have been using shrapnel composed of glass instead of lead. Ask for Minerd's enc take no other. When a Woman S o'ers Witli Chronic Backache There is Trouble Ahead. Constantly on their feet, attendin to the wants of a large and exacting twith nniilytnerwomenvousexhaoftenustion, break dawn farm the Weak, factories, men on - ged down with' tortu ing backache and bearing down pains, Such suffering isn't natural but it's dangerous, because due to diseas- ed kidne s. The d1gxiness,:, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptoms of kid- ney complaint can't cure themselves, they require the assistance of Dr. Hamilton's Fills which go direct to the seat of the trouble. To give vitality and. power to the kidneys, to lens. aid to the bladder and liver, to free the blood of poisons, probably there is. no remedy so suc- cessful as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For all womanly irregularities their merit is well known, Because of their mild, soothing and healing effeet, Dr, Hamilton's Pills are safe and are recommended for girls and women of all ages. 25 cents per box at all dealers. Refuse any substitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. d' In the lamp -room of the Royal sta- bles at Buckingham Palace there is a pair of lamps made of pure gold. To Measure a Man, M a meeting ab which a minister, who is short in stature, was to speak, the chairman, endeavoring to be was some- whtat,.disappoint dd isappointed ut the m ni- ster's,physical proportions. "X had g I hoard sc much about blr. - -,' he , said, "that 'I naturall$' expected to meet a big man in every sense, but Many :a one would have been upset by such an unfortunate begin- . to the proceedings, but not so the minister. "I am grieved to find," he said, with a monk seriousness, "that your chairman is disappointed in my' size, but this is owing to the way you have here of measuring a man. In Ayrshire, where I come from, we measure a man from his chin up, but you evidently measure him from is chin down!" Granulated Eyelids, jraa Eyes inflamed by cape - sure to 508, Dust and Wind qfluickly relieved by lllurlas )ak eye Remedy, No Smarting, ",._. lust Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's SOC per Bottle. Marine Eye SeiveinTubes2Sc. For®ookoffheEyet'reeask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago ' Gingham is so called because it was originally manufactured at Guingamp, in Brittany. LOW FARES TO THE CALIFORNIA EX. POSITIONS VIA CHICAGO & NORTH. WESTERN RY. Four splendid daily trains from the New Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San Fran. cisco, Los Angeles and San Diego. Choice of Scenic and Direct Routes through the best of the West.- Something to see all the way. Double track, Automatic elec. trio safety signals all the way. Lot us Plan your trip and furnish folders and full particulars. B. H. Bennett, G.A., 45 Yong„ St., Toronto, Ontario. According to the latest figures, one man in every forty-eight in England and Wales is is pauper. 36TH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE HIGH COURT CANADIAN ORDER OF FORESTERS Over Five Hundred Delegates In Attendance. The 86th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Order of Foresters convened on Tuesday afternoon, the 16th of June, in the City of St. Catharines, at 2 p.m. Delegates were in attendance from all parts of the Dominion, every province being represented. The High Court meets in this city for the first time since its inception. The following officers of High Court were present at the opening session: J. A. Stewart, High Chief Ranger, Perth, Ont.; J. A. A. Brodeur, High Vice -Chief Ranger, Montreal, Que.; Alf. P. van Someren, High Secretary, Brantford, Ont.; Robert Elliott, High Treasurer, Brantford, Ont.; Dr. U. M. Stanley, Chairman of the Medical Board, Brantford, Ont.; W. G. Strong, Superintendent of Organization, Brantford, Ont.; W. L. Roberts, First High Auditor, Brantford, Ont., and A. Shunts, Second High Auditor, Brant-, ford, Ont., and N. J. Stevenson, Toronto, Ont. R. T. Kemp, Listowel, Ont.; A. R. dahlin, London, Ont.; F. H. Davidson, Wmnipeg, Man.; A. R. Coffin, Truro, N.S., members of the Executive Committee. In addition to the above, .A. L. Jones, Dist. H. C. R., Brandon, Man.; A. K. Berry, Past Dist. H. C. R. Hol- land, Man., and D. E. McKinnon, Dist. High Secretary, Winnipeg, Man., representatives from the District High Court for Manitoba, were present. The Annual Reports of the various ments being of a similar nature to those made of the Insurance Funds), amounted to $18,723.10, and after the payment of '7,819 sick and funeral benefit claims, amounting to $188,- 430.36, the amount standing at the credit of this fund was $403,284.77; the same fund at the present time standing at $409,583.63. The General Fund is also in a satisfactory condition. Many special charges, incident to the war, including donations to National and Patriotic Funds, and the arrangement for carrying members on overseas service, hereafter referred to, have been arranged as anticipated without any inconvenience to this fund. In respect to membership also sub- stantial progress was made, the mem- bership at the end of the year 1914 standing at 91,557. Besides the ordinary benefits from its Life Insurance and Sick and Funeral Benefit Departments, special provision is made, under the constitu- tion of the Order, for assistance to those of its members suffering from tubercular trouble of any kind. A special grant is made extending over to asst ting to defrays th thcost of treatment in any of a number of sani- taria in Canada, making a specialty of such cases, and the membership is urged to talcs advantage of such treatment in the incipient stages of the malady. It is gratifying to note after a per- use o the reports of all the officers, C.P.R. Will Represent the Russian officers of this Order are again of a the far-reachm b Government. The traffic arrangement by which the C.P.R. will represent the Ru sian Government in providing fo through freight services from th Dominion to -Russia by the Trans- Siberian Railway and the Russian Volunteer Fleet, which is an auxiliary of the. railway, is an amplification of the connection which the company has sustained with the Trans-Siber- ian Railway, which is a state-owned system. The Company has offices in .Moscow and Petrograd in which it very satisfactory nature,show!n that) g enefits that are be - the steady progress which hasgbeen ing derived by the membership in the its experience since its inception in various yiendeaivorsi to be of assistanceons in which oto Rus 1879 was continued in the year 1914, the individuals composing r which is the period covered by these Since 1879, about ten nd a alf m I- e reports. lions of dollars have been id out in This Order confines its business en- benefits by 'this Society, and, in fact, tirely to the Dominion of Canada. In the whole record of the Order, as sub - all its departments, in spite of the ad- milted in these reports, is well worth beenverse experiencederal conditions natioCanada,wieh have m the perusal of those who perhaps have ie) �fesdemonstrCbeen skeptical regarding the perma- P gg nency and stability of fraternal insur- auThe iihe year amounted funds ante concerns. These reports furnish 295.94 this increase beingthe second evidence of careful management in the conduct of the Society's affairs, and largest in the Order's experience, and reflect credit on its administration. only some $5,000.00 less than the A Point of general interest, as inaicat- largest increase in any One year, !ng proper selection of risks, is the death which occurred in 1912. The standing year, ,'ate, This for 1914 was 0.04 in the thou - of this fund at the end of the sand, and the aver-ge death rate since the inception of the order, over a period after the payment of 599 death of nearly, Ss years, Is 6.91 par thousand, claims, amounting t0 $618,890.12, I. In loolcing into ttla report of the Sailer. showed funds on hand of $4,740868.01; intenaent of Organization, we) find he has bean able to report the instlttitlon of the amount at the present time being forty-two (49) new Courts, demonstrat- $4,884,441,13. The yearly revenue de- int; thnt the'Oreter aontinuee to establish rived from the investments of the egeneles pe new Reids for the pl.oeeou- Order now constitute a verysubstan- tial tion of Its business open up, ParUen]ar. attention is evidently being paid t0 os- tial amount of the annual income, tablishment or Subordinate Courts only Interest earned on investments of b - in such places as offer a reasonable nros- surance funs during 1914 amounted peer of permanency. to $223,761.64, andTho n l'so has pursued a very liberal paid 86.44 per policy in respect to these of its member - cent. of the total death claims on the ship who have voluntsared, or enlisted, Order. for overseas service. Not only is the in - In respect to the matter of invest- aurones In such 00508 kept in fordo at the ordinary rates, of those who Were in merits, it 15 interesting to know that member hip at the date of declaration of the Order confines the investment of {lvver byg}ln land, but the Insurance and its funds to the urchasin 91dk antj Fuharal Benefit Assca purchasing of muni- for all Bach tnembors ora bein smento' c pal and school debentures of the well Court out of tt�e Genersgl or! ,177C•. ominio of CRl�ada. DurinE the 1 at ni'ti�4Fgn0 of the Order. New business Ole years wit an%xceptional market g r risks has of necessity to a dtllne , and 1 the only safe 0011rse rt aitch d�ree on, from the investor's t-4;t1/ r the Or,or, jj,u the arrangement e, pojnt of 'view, the Ei{e8litlVe Commit- had - reli4Ves tho members. or bidet tSe, 'al belie ab o to take Wry exten- Unsling from the necessity of payor nt IVO advantage'of the sitliatidn, y tpb1i of their. erdiiiaiy asesesnit,ttts, apt rovideg to the ro ser premium Th, Sick and F j ersjl Benefit Fund is. as et, a ted and Dred to 0119111 a tar er ne 11 gb p drive. 4 lnd F bd�0 tliO Insur- g ,�r`c?. th'lCn that of th al''r1'1.'1.1,106'441 �i e�vnoftt Funds IteL'iied ii" pro i an pr'e'vious 'year {n dh-�� aft Stich ooa.sons, a very he O���r's histo the' increase for cahsld 1raa�sio amount or blit is does business, the only railway on this continent to have such offices in Russia. If it would seem strange that the Company should do business in either city, it need only be men- tioned that the C.P.R. is the only railway in America which is a mem- ber of the Round the World Confer- ence of which the executive of the Trans-Siberian Railway is a chief element. The Canadian Pacific, in its round -the -world tours, uses, of course, the Trans-Siberian Railway line, which the average Russian al- ways calls the "Transcontinental" line—this being the notion the sys- tem 'conveys to his mind. On this line there are three types of engine the wood oil and coal using engine. T e wgo engine is a special type, which i' not bpilt at al) on this Con- tinent, tint it serves the purpose in 1 the physical circumstances on the tystein, which is differentiated In seeral ways from those on this s 9 c itlnent. 3 Light takes 8min. front the sun to the Sienese%s Liniment uses by Phyeielani. on 18sec. to travel earth, a year being S ,071.68. Interest the att n ion oil the delegates.eand"It is earned on investmbnts- of Sick attd °x dots that the sessions will probably. unera enefit Funds (these invest- otomy t it sessions the 13th in- A Smart Boy. A teacher was examining a class of small boys in arithmetic. Addressing a partieular smart boy she asked: "Can five go into one?" "Yes," came the answer at once. "You stupid boy!" she'said. "How do you make that out?" "Please, ma'am," he said, "I put five toes• into. one stocking this morn- ing!" Meo,, Minera's Liniment in the house. HOME STUDY Arts Courses only. SUMMER SCHOOL JULY and AUGUST QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY IUNGSTON, ONTARIO ARTS EDUCATION MEDICINE SCHOOL OF MINING CHEMICAL MINI MECHANICAL CIVIL ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING GIrO. Y. C$OWN, Registrar Pays for its&9 f In Seven Days 1 if41' evei'Ij' ►Pt 11" and RECREATION `YP'OY•EY �9� CE'eCff ta161h4y@Lr o he if !lln�l r SOLD BY ALL Q_009 $,IOC 0EAiEN5 (k�a3'1�1't"'�*1�?"�A»triz9ur�rsnu:�r,egpA This Man Hires a Gardener. "Haven't you any perennials in your garden?" "I don't think so. Are the seeds very expensive?" Minaret's Liniment Lumberataa's Prien4 FARM FOR RENT. IF LOOSING FOR A FARM OONSUL'�. me. I have over Tiro Huoelrod on my 31st. located in the best seetione of On. tart°, All sizes, H. W. Damson, Brampton. NEWSPAPERS FORSALE. E, PROFIT-IMIAIgING NEWS AND Offices .for sale 1n good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Com. Deny, 73 West Adelaide. St., Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS. MANGER, TUMORS, al, our, IsT0.r Internal and external. cured with.. out cut pain by our home treatment. write us before too late. Dr. Bollman Medical Co., Limited, Colllugwood, Oct. CUTTER & FOSTER Mixing Concrete with this 1915 Model HAND MISER saves you time, labor and money. You get a better mix with less cement. Write for+catalcgues. WETTLAUFER BROS., Improved Concrete Machinery, Dept. w. Bpadine Ave., Toronto, Ontario. 0 -13TOPS Ford owners write for our catalogue. SEARS -CROSS . Speedometer Station. 179 Queen Street West, TORONTO, - ONT. "Overstern" V BcrttomU Motor Boat ��I" Freight Prepadd to any Bailway Station ,ink Ontario, Length • 16 Ft., Beast 8 Ft.: i) Depth 1 Ft, 6 In. ANY .MOTOR PITS. Specification No. 2B giying engine prices on request. Get our gIt-o`ta8ons on—'The Penetang Line" Commerotal and Pleasure IA:fiche% Row{ boats and Canoes. THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAW - :as THE A T - THE STOVE THAT HELPS YOU HURRY wITH a NEW PERFECTION Oil Cookstove you don't have to wait for the fire to come up. Just scratch a match—the NEW PERFECTION lights instantly, like a gas stove. 'Your meal is prepared and on the table in no time. A NEW PERFECTION in your kitchen means cool, comfort- able cooking all summer. Made in I, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes. At hardware and department stores everywhere. If your dealer cannot supply you, write us•direct. EOYALITE OIL ,. •- "NOW. SERVING l'i'V REST RESULTS :6'e s ,.'�:''JA . A• 2')"°o GIVES • `01 E3 p THE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY Limited BRANCHES IN etlt: ALL CITIES HOMES..