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The Clinton News Record, 1920-5-6, Page 6i Kure, Clean, y01So•iia8 IPreserved & said only in See,1ed alp—tight packet t . to Preser re,..its native 1 goodness. e874 s o ` ea.,Pots Daily ;��� 118A Millions 9 ce` lilawatesto Our •Beautiful Hands. I dry corner', of the towel used iintil the Hands were meant to be beautiful, 'hands. are as dry as dry paper. Then The hand that reeks the cradle might they cannot chap. rule the world more easily were iti An early start in teaching children always a beautful hand, beauty, in to care for their hands will bring its this. eaee being a matter of inclination own reward and -in after years, they r will be so thankful to mother for this and 'nds •subject training.Shapely lingers depend Ilands'subjected to tl>;o,hardest�lcfnd of work . will respond wonderfully to' much on the caro they receive.in early a litt.e regular -care. The outlay for; every an .hour yeHujf two weeks is Me few articles needed for this care is small only compared and a ne time the interest of ' good looks whish result from their' Wauty and surely every woman is uses' .These articles are! • ' entitled to spend this much tine en Mapicure scissors, flexible steel nail her hands. Beautiful, eomfortab le file; orange .wood st.ck, emery board, hands are worth much to every w o - nail brush, bowl for soap water, good tnan, buffer, small package of absorbent,Lo,uiso's Diary. cotton, peroxide,' liquid or dry nail) ' polish, aemail bottle of oil or warm' Downstairs .there were• sounds of fresh lard, cheerful goad tri- Oliye oil; which: is -the best oil to umphant whoop as he get his"'Betty's five in use; is almost prohibitive in .price. a row in gobang in spite of Betty s Warm laid or .vaseline does very watchfulness, father's voice reading nicely, or'any sweet o.l. There is no bias aloud to mother, the alternate substitute, which really cars' take the snatches of music and chatter :that place .of olive oil. It nourishes the were always to be heard when Doreen cuticle at the base of the nail, keeps sat down to play before she had the nail itself soft and pliable and emptied her day's budget of news. prevents hangnails. But. Louise, up in her room, sat after desk, her seft lips -shut in a hard line and wrote in her diary: "Nobody understands me. Mother thinks S. care Tor, nothing except good times. Mother. is 'a dear, of course, but she' has forgotten how a girl feels, and anyway things have changed since she was a girl. Doreen is so absorbed in her war work that she hasn't a thought for anyone else,, and Jimmy is growing!rude. He humiliated me A substantial buffer with, a remov- able clamp is a good investment. This clamp allows the chamois to be re- placed when soiled. . The wrong aide of an old k d glove is a good buffer. The nail brush should be moderate- ly stiff. y,.. It is fun . tib rest and manicure the nails at the same time. Brains as well as fingers can relax, • Cutting the nails tends to make When Dreams Camp Irtit. By "BLANCHE CTERTBVD1. ItoBl•3Irl$ CHAPTDR 111, Somehow the wistfulness of her oyes had been swallowed up in a dazeling lustre, There were roses in -her cheeks, wrought by the night winds sweeping the elifls. The new- ness and growing charm of the house had suggested a daintier dross than her. plain -blue linen and to -night she woke a eorn colored own 'With a deep dace fichu collar. She really did not know how lovely she 'looked, and in her heart life sting. In a little the ]rouse would be cone pleted, and Jean's service to Captain David ended,. What would happen then? Why of.course she would ntalce friends with Captain David's CCheo- doaia. She would come up to the house on the cliffs—. Suddenly she turned`from the Dutch -blue "room and ran breathlessly down the stairs. No, no! not that. It would all be changed. It would no longer be her drefn worked out in reality. • It would belong to Captain David's Theodoeia and she, Jean, would feel strangely, watching the new mistress move about her dream house. Sud- denly a strange terror surged through her and she stumbled blindly into the kitchen, the enchanting little kitchen with its sunshine and white enamel fixtures and listening cupboards. "Jean! ::Jean! It is time we start- ed for- hope," Captain David was calling, and blindly, dully, her heart throbbing with its bitterness, Jean went slowly out to the wide porch. Captain .David turned off the lights and together they walked .along the beach, Jean silent-, dimly conscious of the thunderous roar of the breakers against the cliffs and of another tumult breaking against her heart. Sunshine, gloriouslyexhilarating, submerged .Captain David's house on the first day of April. The tide, beat- ing against the cliff below, dashed the bright surf high over the boulders. them thicker. They should be shaped dreadfully. when Joe Potter brought with the .file, following the curve of his college chum over the other even - the; finger .tip. Sharply pointed nails ing. As for Betty, she stuck.like a do not look well. leech.e anybody'd have thought Mr. Rough edges left by the file may Jordan was calling on her! When I be token Or .with the emery board. complained to mother, she said, After filing, the fingers should be held 'I ouiea, dear, do you realize what it in he warm soapy water until the means •to have and 'to keep thelove cuticle ;s soft,.and pliable. The flat of a yffunger .brother and sister?' I ends of the, orange -wood stick should don't see what that has to do with it, be used'to loosen the cuticle. First They're all downstairs this minute, dip the stick in the oil then gentl and nobody misses me It's a` selfish run it under the skin, lifting it just.lvmrld—"' -' a tiny bit. When the skin is loosened,' Theft. she heard a shrill call fteen push it back very gently, bringing the Jimmy, and her pen jumped. -and blot - half moon at the base of the nail into ted the page, She went impatiently full view. Aii'y rough edges should to the head of the stairs; there was no be trimmed off with the scissors. 1 sidetraelring .Jimmy when he started Fruit stains, dye stains and ink out for anything. stains cannot be perfectlyremoved b "Come ori down, Lou; we're going simple soap and water. Peroxide does' to pop cern." - the work. A half lemon kept on theeLouise .frowned. She did not want kitchen sink will work wonders with! o pop corn—that was all the consid- ordinary hand stains, Peroxide on a !ration the ation people had. But a would bit of cotton. wrapped around -the end I lave to go sooner or later; so it might of the orange -wood stick will remove as well be at, once and get it over. stains under the nails. It may take set?oral applications before the stains disappear, but this method is prefer - She' started down.. No oneteVer knew exaetlywhat hap- pened. There was a swift, terrifying able to using the pointed end of the moment 'when Louise felt herself fall - file whieh bruises the tender skin and ing, and then she knew no more until causes hangnails. she found herself on her. mothers bed Polishing' mimes next. A drop of with the doctor exdinining her ankle. the• polishing fluid of •a 'b;t` of the It was the beginn'i:itg of a strange powder should be placed on• each nail 1k then the buffer applied gently and lightly. Polish the entire nail. After the polishing.:-pspcess comes a bath in the soapy water to remove' every particle, of powder. Then the hand should be -carefully dried and the• polishing completed with a perfectly dry buffer or chamois. The buffer must be carefully, %led.l her neglected diary. As- she read the new life that lasted eeks—Vbeeks of pain, but weeks of constant loving sur- prises. All the people Louisa had ever known sent hei notes and flowers and things • to eat, ande as for the home people and mother—words could not describe theircaveand thoughtfulness. Th•e seventh week, Louise finally was able to limp across te her desk and Too much friction;1 a'ill heat the „nail and injure them. Too much polishing makes thein .brittle. A high polish is. not in good'taste. Lacking a buffer, the palm -of the hand makes" -,a wetly good substitute. Rub the nails of one hand over the palm b£ the other. A ylittle talcum powder shaken into the # hand gives a more lasting polish,' A: thorough manicure once •in. te;c weeks and 'a little care every dab, will keep the hands in good condition. Pushing back the cuticle with the towel when drying the hands helps 'to keep it from growing onto the nail, Should the cajole be inclined to be - pone hard and dry,.eold cream, vase- line or oil rubbed into the base of the nails at night well keep them Loft and pliable:. : • It pays to wear gloves while .doing sone kinds of 'work: Rubber gloves are •expelisive and aid icid.gloves too tight. White canvae gloves are eom- fortable and eaatey washed. It is aoodplan when g working in the garden to help Matters by draw- ing the niiilg over a over of soap. When you wash yont,hande in waaan • +seater, the'sbep washes.out, leaving the nai'l's clean and' unstained. There area number of good..lotionb on the market for freckles and, chap. Icing, some of 'vehicle . agree With one skin and some with another:- , equal parts of glyberine and ?S'se water Make a lotion which le economical and generally effeetive. "Geld cream ie eels jot cod. Plain, warm vaseliit i. , �iltl �Ybd@ • t't�'iho ', , .•.�?, love a bad case of' chapel when. no • 'thing' else''' wilt.. This••tls especially good- for' children's hands., It should e applied before going to • bed;' e;tteii the ktands haverbeen washed with 'Warm Water and• soap. What the skin does not absorb should. ,be Wiped orf with a soft cloth,. One principal a' p pal c use of huatl,�ehap» ping le berried drying,. If a woman. Can remember sad can take} the time to dry,3ler 'handl 1)6r/06111y, eche will 'have nb l cable With chapped laltfni the Aast41, shotilb 416 with ''le perfectly last record a hot color burned her cheeks. What a different world she was living in now! . Selfish? Mother •and Doreen and Jimmy and Betty? She pulled that page dirt and tore it into little bits; then she turned to the day's date. "The world •is full of the kindest people, but mine are the very, very dearest of all," she wrote, tq f y ak n m'ay re DYES .HER GARMENTS BUT NONE CAN TELL "Diamond -Dyes" Turn Faded, Shabby Apparel into New. Don't worry about perfect results, Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadelesscolorto any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen; cotton or mixed goods, -- dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, feathers, dr`aper'ies, coverings everything! The Direction Book with each patio age tells how to diamond dye over any color, To match any material, have dealer show you "Diamond Dye" Color Card. , Jean MacAllister ran hurriedly along the beach, her black hair shin- ing with glossiness and awave hi the breeze. She had left .Milly with the children and run away for one last look at the house of her dreams. Last evening she had gone over the house with Captain David. Into every nook and corner they had crannied, the perfectness of the whole thrilling Jean into a strange sense of tender- ness. Captain David had said that he hoped his girl—the dearest girl in all the world—would come to him there. to-day—this first day of the sunshiny April. And it had come over Jean suddenly, thit if she wanted ti dream alone once more in the home she had helped to stake, it -must come this morning. -It seemed out of place to wear the linen morning dress in the bride's house and so she had slipped on -her eorn.-colored dress,• covering: it with a Jong, brown cloak. On the .threshold she doffed the cloak and puslied'openthe new, heavy door with its dull brass knocker. Very softly she stepped into the wide living room where romance breathed from wonderful, old mahog- any furniture. She caught the gleam of richly bound books in cases that had been empty the night before and of two new, water colors on the wall, and she wondered dully how they had come there. Sunshine flooded the sweeping window',and she turned for one last, glorious look -out over the Bay. The window draperies of old blue stirred, and Captain David, boyishly eager, was smiling at her. In con- fusion, site stepped back. She thought, of course, he would be at the ship yard this morning. Why was he here? Was he waiting for his girl—the dearest girl in all the world—,to conte? "Jean! You came! I was hoping yod' would come this morning, when Another", atter seizing -prey, swallows all this'world is so full of lure and it by turning inside out like a glove finger, the outer skin becoming for the time being a stomach lining. Yet another finds his home hi a branch of coral, and obliges the coral polyps to build a tube to inclose him as he grows bigger, Still another linea its "Yes, I was waiting for the dearest house with an exquisite mosaic cont - girl in all the world," he ansevered huskily. The luminous light of . love was radiating Captain David's blue eyes as he spoke of the girl, but he was looking down into Jean's face and Colons of tee rainbow, and have the his arms were stretched • out to her. appearance 01 the loveliest Bowers, "Jean, darling!- Haven' I told you a thousand ways and �11 the time Last But -Not Least. „Hq•'jted lettered revolutionary state• meats by' the yard, but no one inter- fered eIff Met, the other metuberet of, the chip boned lis . would 'go qn; he was amusing Minn. But they were all watching their Chante -eo ..take, a riee out of hifn; and at lea aiimt'saw an opportunity, "Look at your monarchs!" be shrieludd, "What use are they? How many- kliegs twill he left in ten year' nine? "rive," intermitted one watchful listener, "drivel" scoffed the "sunt! -every thing" ,man, "whieh?" "King of He,aS'ts '.Cin of'S� [t. Ug g 'Spades, Ring of D1 ittryncls,lRing. of Globs, and Ring George," replied the'i'loyal' club - matt promptly: Buy Thrift ,S"talupa. Pressed her lips against the•cheelc so close to here, "Dearest, all these 'months I've been fooling you!. Do you know what, day it is? Thin very first day of April?" Captain David. laughed merrily. And ,Jean laughed softly, gladly, tenderly, and, turning to "the girl's houses! she flung her hands out to it in. a rapture of acceptance, crying, "Willat' a beautiful, beautiful joke!" (The End,) Murder Will Out. Dr, Smith, a weld -known phyeiclan and gin-gedn from central Ohio, com- plained that he hail not had a satls-' factory vacation fol' many years, No matter where he went, sooner or later he was called upon for profes- sional services, "Rut I'll 'fool them this year," he said, s"I'm going so far away that 111 forget where I am from." He crossed the prairies and the. mountains and finally alighted trona the stage at a little hotel far from his native state. The fishing was good, the woods abounded with game, and the doctor congratulated himself' upon his good fortune. The guests. at the hotel seemed to be` a jolly lot of buijnees and professional men; no questions were asked, and each went and came to suit himself, yet there was a floe spirit of goodfeliowship.. It was the evening of the fourth day after the arrival of the doctor, who had registered as John Smith, Smith- eraville, U.S.A., that he was met in the lobby by the old landlord. "We have been looking for yrju, Dr. Smith. A lady was thrown from a horse a few minutes ago, and I think she has dis- located her shoulder." At the first' words the doctor's fish- ing tackle rattled to the floor, and he threw up both hands in complete sur- render. "How? Where? Who on earth told. you I am a physician?" he exclaimed. The landlord's eyes twinkled. "You told us, sir, before you had been here twenty-four hours; not only that you are a physician, but that 'you are a surgeon as well." Tho doctor's face was a blank, ° "You seemed to enjoy our cakes," continued the hotel man, ''and at breakfast you -called for a second or - dor." "Well?" snorted the doctor. "Do only physicians and surgeons call for second orders of cakes?" "No, many of our guests give second orders for cakes. But when a guest persists in addressing the waitress as nurse; I stemma that he has spent more time in a hospital operating room than he has in a country hotel." ar Why Rolf Changed. His .lob. • The offices of the Walpole Brick Company web bait a demon rooms on the third floor of vita Stpl'y Building, Of these noon's, two the plain oiflce and the room used by Roll, opened up- on the outside corridor. The otlieers •of the firm and..Mllsa Arnett, th0 presi- dent's etonograplter, Itad keys to the main office;' Rolf and two salesmen had keys to rite other roam, Rolf, the youngest man iu Lite oni- ony, was•just out of an engineering school, ' lie was bright, ambitious, and a hard ,worker, and censiilered en- gineering the leading profession in the world, incidentally, he consider• ed an engineer, young or tad,' a little higher socially than a man In any other occupation,, • l8ltts Arnett opened the of ce at. Balt past eight, and more than once when she arrived sliefound Rolf there before her. -But when he was first to,'eeme he never opened the. oifice. door; he cousfidered it beneath his dignity; nor did he .ever answer if anyone knocked before site came. Once when she met a messenger with a sj'ieolal delivery turning away, and, upon unlocking the door, found Rolf inside, elm spoke •to him sharply. "This letter," she told him,—she opened the mail,—"calls for an esti- mate to be submitted before noon. if I hadn't met the messenger, the let- ter wouldn't have reached us until too late;' Rolf flushed angrily. "I'm an en- gine4er, not an office boy," he replied curtly,..,; "The Walpole Company doesn't hap- pen to possess an office boy," she re- torted. "Mr. Eaton doesn't hesitate to open the office when he happens to tomo down early. I think you can answer a knock without lowering your dignity if one comes• before half past eight. Don't you see that it might be something that would make a differ- ence to the firm?" But Rolf could not see it that way. He repeated that it was not an en- gineer's liusinoss. • Then one day something happened. Miss Arnett had the grippe and could not get down to the office. Her sister telephoned several times between eight and nine, but Rolf did not nes- wee the telephone.. At nine o'clock Idr. Eaton entered with a telegram in Ms hand. "Miss Arnett not here?" he asked, "She must be ill—she's never late. How long have you Ikeen here?" "Nearly an heir," Half replied. Mr. Data, looked at him sharply. "Did. the, telephone ring?" "I—believe it did,' Rolf answered reluctantly. He 'did not like the look in Mr. Eaton's eyee. "You didn't antiwar?" "I was busy. I didn't suppose the telephone wase my job." "Did anybody knock?" "Once, I believe." "Do you come down early often:" "Oh, yes, air! Nearly every day." That, at least, was easy. "And never open the office or ans- wer the telephone or a knock? If I hadn't met the messenger just now, we might have lost n ten -thousand -dol- lar contract. You may be a goad en- gineer, young man, but this firm needs men • who put the firm's business be- fore their own dignity." And that was why two weeks later Rolf was looking for a uew job, Flower -Like Sea Worms. Some worms are 'attractive and even beautiful. If we fail to realize Mai fact .1.1 is because .of lack of In- timate acquaintance, One bight not, it is true, admire cer- tain giant earthworms 'of India which attain a length of two feet and a thick- ness of nearly two inches. Nor do we care much for leeches, some 01. whieh. fotind in South America, are huge in size—veritable vermicular vampires. The leeches used by doctors for blood- letting, by the way, are imported from Europe. Ofir native species me not fierce enough, ' The really beautiful worms live in the sea. They aro the most gorgeously colored of animals, many of them re- 'sembiing the brightest blossoms of the garden. Some. species of them dwell. itt tubes, and one ltiud closes its tube with a stopper when it wishes to re- tire from view. Another always keeps a pair. of live crabs in its house as boarders. One species of sea worm, the' ''sea centipede,' is covered with bristles,. .sunshine, I was waiting." "You were waiting for her,"she responded dully, a stabbing pain in her heart. It had been there, 10, these many weeks but not till now had site admitted its presence. Posed of the prettiest gravel and peb- bles it can rind. • \Viten seeking food these, auimale wave about in .the water brilliantly tinted tentacles,. vii'id with all she in Ventilating Device p` that we were ''bu building 'the dream , or rritchen'S. house together, that. it'weeInc you llc?arSe lworth wltlle, and the- beginning of I Was making the home nest? That Though electric ventilating facts pre•ctlt al railroading had to wait near - you wore 'the dearest girl in all the have been nosed foe. a number• 6f years ly two decades for George iStophcnaon. world?"' • by hotels andreslaurants to expel ilia'. •'a'l'e 'steamboat developed more .. A. soh caught in her threat and pure,air fret kitchens, it was not un- rapidly. etn 1803 Watt cid suspert- Jean MacAllister swayed diexily in til comparatively recently that these nee, Matthew Boulton, sur lied Robert the blinding'sunehine. Capta% David devices were manufactured for instal= Fulton with an engine for iate t'ier- caught:her and held her' atone. - lotion in private homes. Among' the pian:, •P1te Chtulotte Dundas,, a small She lied been blind. Why had she new contrivances of. this type is oitu ploesurq boat, was already plying to never lb/wined- that its follow:t:g het designed to be placed - in the npp3r the Forth and Clyde Canal ct a speed lightesle suggestions, he had bear sash of an ordinary window, and to of•seven mita! an hour, but the 010r- inaking her dreams come,true. a ; be alienated, with' current 'through a most Vas the fleet passenger steam- ' "Sweetheart, I; could never linve' plug -equipped coved, which can he at- strip, and her trip of one Menthe' and 'won 'your love down in that house of lathed to. any conVenieit li;flrt aoelcot. I fifty utiles between blew Yorlt and dare and int'ert'tijtidns. I -bad to'dreg.' A notable Jeanne S1 this fan is an Albany provedthat she was reliab:o you off here so that I. sometimes ingenious motet' -cooling system; whicii arid ii:eful for commerce. might have you to myself. If you inductee a, _ eurved pipe, extending from I .We hese travelled, a lees leg: in had known the servic0, 1. asked was' the motorltousipg to the edge of theeng:nes ;3;nce'Watt's arty, lent it le in - indeed for your• dear self; you never, feet guard.- Outeld° air is drawn irate; terestin;; to t'Cnee'ntber lira', ito wrote 'Would have given it. For others' this duet, and passes over the 'motor! ofhis early triumphs: 'rhe, velocity, saketi, •y(O would have turned' away." before -being discharged through holee violence; ntegnitntlo and horrible noise "But Joe and the children—I eaiitiot leave them, 'Wito• will take care of theta?" she ,oried,; •' "They ,are all provided for," Cap- taiin. David laughed softly, preeeitee his'lips'close'to a rosiest. `Joe and I have arranged that. My eeusiu, Theodotia -Spence, a widow, . kibd• hearted and ntothetlegg but fmrontan tie, is Qomtatf;' to -•day. She will fit lute the 1'011411e of, tha'old house. No, you shall net go back. This very dui' you shall he trade et'bride in your decent He" stooped fined hissed agu, l and aga!n the firiolied' cheeks. Jean's ,un? believing oyes• drank'' in the depth of loved shining ile the man's face, Then The Beginning of Steam Power. A recent coutetlary that passed vi>;- tually without notice, at least in this country,-' says a writer, was that of the death of James Watt, the Scot- tish inventor to whom the modern world owes so much of its wonderful material progress. James Watt set out from Glasgow for London at the age of nineteen ti seek his fortune; and it is recorded that he travelled on horseback and took twelve days for a: journey that now, as a result of bis invention, can bo accomplished in less than eight hours. Of course he was not the first man Power— Hereexperiment with steam t Hero oil Alexandria 'did so about two thousand years ago --hut ho was the first to build a real steam engine, The best- previous effort was the so- callacl atmospheric engine of Thomas Newcomen that was used in the mid- dle of the eighteenlit ceuttu'y to pump water out of coal mines. In 1764 Watt was called on to repair ono of those primitive machines, and the im- provements that he invented took shape a year later in tite oarlictt Watt eat;;n e. trichoid 'rrevlthidc, a Cornish min- ing engineer, first used Watt's ideas to propel ears, in 1804 Trevithick had a steam -locomotive, probably the first railway enghne in the world, that ran on a colliery ti•ainelay at Pen-yDar- ran, in Wales. The engine, however, was found not to .be ecottottti^o.11y in the front pe the housing, - , • Military indecision. , - A sergeant was trying. to drill a lot of raw i'etsrutte, and after wpriting Bard fee three,liottrs he;thought they seemed' to be getting .lido, eon% sort of shape, so dedided to teat thein. '''Right tnrn!''j he :cried. Then, be- fore `they had ceased 16 move, came another order+. "Left tura!" • One ho6dluni left the ranks and started oft toward the barracks room, "Wheroiare yof going?" "Info hall. enouglt," 'replied the re- cruit in a disgusted tone, "You don't ]thaw yonr•ow.n.mlied for two minutes runnln, ,, of My' engine give universal satisfec- ttfon to all beholders," m .se _eery Hastens Cement Hardening, A newly. compounded substance of white, powdery form, which is prttotd. sally an •oxyoltlot'ide of lint°, has been found to possess the property of de. creasing. considerably the time t e. Mitred for hardening cement. When Will -o' -the -Wisp. Mysterious spectral lights are some- times semi at night hovering over boggy plume, They have misled many a wayfarer, luring him into inudor perhaps a stagnant pond, "Will-oi•the-wisp" is the pante given by British folklore to thil citi'nus phenomenon, which the French Ball „fou toilet," or fool fire. Tito isnot. ant regard it as supernatural, Not, until. %cry recent years has it come to be known that it is a ]unities conte produced by marsh gas, 5tfe per cent. of 1t la [gide!! re the cement at the lime of utlxltig, t7e dal- cium chloride in 11 is dtsr,oivede and calcium hydrate remains nuspeudsd in the mixture. and improves its geellty' Shaving notes is a barber. eel way of malting a living. Resists Wear and Water Every floor needs its protective, coating. Get satisfaction with A Floor Varnish ASK YOUR DEALER !Still higher•prlcesb gasoline predicted for the euinmer. Reap Torr cost down by using on your car a - NO N CAS SAVER It gives 26% to 36% «more mileage per gallon of gasoline; keeps your carbon troubles down; • gives more power on hills; and yeur car rune smoother and quieter. Saves its price many times each season in use: Ei.Iready on thousands of the highest -priced cars, as well as Fords, etc, PRICE $15.00 INSTALLED Agents, dealers, garages, write for whole, sale prices, terms, testimonials, etc. MADE IN CANADA and guaranteed by NO KNOCKS GAS SA VEinviteRSd} 102 W. Rieb:inond'St., Toroaa!t'o. Have Your Weaning J ne by Experts :Clothing, household draperies, linen and delicate fabrics can be cleaned and made to look as fresh anal„ bright as when first bought. 1e y. > ming and Dy Is Properly Done at Parker's It makes no difference where you live; parcele can be sent In by mail or express. The same care and atten- tion is given the work as though you lived in town. Wo will be pleased to advl.o you on any question regarding Cleaning or Dyeing. WRITE US. Porker's DyeWorks Lime Cleaners&Dyers 79IYongeSt., Toronto MED A, N ,'GAINED IN TIIE'801 LNTURY P3TAINED IIV THE 20t" GENTU1?N BrandrearC8 11, NUM oratine ti i ti ,i .Sn,JA 0 •LYi1. 6i dE2./4°2<' THEY used it for the stage -coach of olden days in England.—we use 'it in Canada today. Compare it with any other white lead or white paint, and you will decide that your house ---or anything you wish to have truly white and rbmain white ---must he painted with this brand which has survived as the leading white lead for nearly two centuries. Thinned with linseed oil and turpentine; it makes a perfect white paint. Combined with coloring matter, it makes the satisfactory tinted paint of any shade. It is the basis for that finest of ready -mixed paint, B-H "English" Paint, Made in a mod rn Canadian factory, and -by the same process as was employed for its manu- facture by its inventor in England, it is today the only survivor of all the patented white lead processes of that earlier generation. It ,has survived because it results in a white lead of exceptional fineness, whiteness and durability. Look for the- B.H dealer in your territory—the B..N elan hangs outgldo his store. NONTUTAL HALIRAit $,,dOHN gesedro Wieiodort '. HFP1Ct Na' HAT C11a MY R0MQNTON 'eesitatiotivan