HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-12-06, Page 7'1�".`.y'M1 f. • •t0. '�m�� 4 '�.� �;v,v
Old Tea Looks All Rivht
Q ld tea and fresh tea, poor tea' and good
tea all look alike. No wonder a woman
often gets a bulk tea she doesn't like.
Red Rose Tea in
the sealed Package a is
always fresh, always
good, always worth
the Trice on the label.
Kept Good by the
Sealed Package
rlelf0
1. Fashions For the
'Wok
t There are bloomers to wear with
this sniart little dress. The skirt -but-
tons under the, tuck. McCall Pattern
iNo. 8056, Child's Dress with Bloom-
ers. In 5 sizes, 2 to 10 years. Price,
15 cents.
pc Motets
This frock of tan broadcloth has a
'white broadcloth collar of unusual
shape. McCall Pattern No. 8068,
Ladies' Dress. Pattern in 5 sizes; 34
to 42 bust. Price, 20 cents.
-These patterns may, be obtained
from your local McCall dealer or from
the McCall Co., 70 Bond Street, To-
ronto. Dept. W.
Auntie's Mistake. '
The spelling lesson contained the
word "wool," and little Clarence did
not know what it meant.
"What is wool, auntie?" he asked.
"Wool," replied auntie, "is fine hair
istaken fro the back of a Tam
that from b.
It is used in making yarn, cloth and
other things. The trousers you have
on are made of wool."
"Oh, no, auntie, there are not made
of-wool!They are made from an old
pair of papa's,"
fits the spirit of
the times per
fectly. It. is
Healthful
Kcopiomical
without lose
(without
picasilrec
Convenient
(ready for
instant use
>
and is a pleasing,
wholesome, drug-
free drink good
for both 'yolxm
and old,,
"Thelce 1; 4. -.a .. Reaxso us n"
Ctnadian Poqtum ('erten Ce., Ltd'
Wtndoo$ anotia
LAND SHOULD BE CLASSIFIED.
--
The Tragedy of the -Deserted Farm
Should ;Happen No More,
INVENTOR OF BEST PAPTtlt BAG..
Little Massachusetts Girl Made whine Ma -
'
To Turn Out Tiede.
t
Nearly fifty year's ago a letter was
received by the 'United States Board
of Patents at Washington asking for a
patent on a machine for making pa-
per bags, The letter was signed by a
girl,
"Who is this?" questioned the men,
in Washington, "The machine cannot
bp worth much. Who ever heard of a
girl inventing a machine that was
any good?" But when the machine
arrived it was a surprise: Not only
was it nearly perfect in every detail,
bat the paper bags that it turned out
were better than any, that these men
had,seen before. And the girl Was
awarded the patent desired.
This girl was Margaret Knight,
born and bred in. Massachusetts, When
she was still . a little girl her dolls
would be left scattered over the floor
while she ran out of doors to play
with her brothers, She could run,
play ball and romp as well as the rest
of them, A jackknife gimlet was her
favorite toy, and hour. after hour she
would sit on the floor, surrounded by
pieces of wood that the boys had col-
lected for her, making playthings for
them.
"Lot me coast with you," begged
Margaret one 'bright snowy morning.
"There isn't room for girls on this
sled," replied her brother, trying to
tease her.
"All right. You wait," and she ran
home. All that day Margaret worked
in the woodshed. When asked what
she was doing, she would reply, "Just
wait and see."
And they saw. For next morning
from the woodshed came Margaret
dragging a , sled with better runners
than the boys' sled possessed. Her
brothers stared at her.
As she grew older she tried making
more difficult things, first of wood,
then of heavier material, until she
Completed her paper -bag machine.
The Ontario Department of Agri
culture is making a survey of the
waste lands of old and. new Ontario
for the purpose of obtaining informa-
tion regarding their possibilities for
cattle and sheep ranching. This sur-
vey should reveal some interesting
facts and be the means of obtaining
valuable information.
A survey of this nature should be
conducted in every province of Can-
ada. In. fact, all of our land should
be carefully classified preceding settle-
ment, to prevent settlers making the
mistake of locating on land unsuitable
for farming. In travelling over Can-
ada, one cannot but be impressed by.
the need of this. In Ontario, in the
Trent watershed, there are to be found
to -day pitiful cases df disappointment,'
the settlers having expended their en-
ergy for years on land that will never,
he anything more than patches of
gravel and sand. In places in New
Brunswick, settlers are merely exist-
ing on land which is not suitable for
agriculture and should have been kept
in forest. In one part of southern
Saskatchewan, there is an area known
locally as 'the burnouts' where set-
tlers have been forced, out because
they could not make a living. Other
provinces have similar difficulties.
Various excuses may be made as
to why these errors have happened in
the past, but' none can be offered for
their continuance. Whether the
Crbwn land in a province he under
provincial or Dominion control, it is
the duty of the government having
jurisdiction to see that it is properly
classified, and, that settlers are al-
lowed only onland suitable for agri-
culture and where there is reasonable
assurance that a decent living can be
made.
Ecclesiastical Confectionery.
One Sunday a young man from the
north of Scotland, while walking out
with his sweetheart, noticed over a
doorway the sign, "Dairy and Confec-
tioner." Wishing to give the young
lady a trreat,' the youth entered the
shop and asked for chocolate creams.
"I dinna sell chocolate creams on
the Sabbath," said the old lady behind
the counter severely.
"But ye self sweeties to the woman
that has just gone oot," said tllhe
young fellow, who indeed had seen the.
transaction through the window.
"Ay, some ecclesiastical Confection-
ery; but nae chocolate creams," said
the lady, and wont on to explain:' "Ec-
clesiastical cortectionery ys'pepper-
mint draps, pan drops and ginger
lozengers, but nae chocolate creams."
•
THANKFUL MOTHERS
Mrs. Willie Tiheriauit, Pacquetville,
N.B„ says:—"I am extremely thankful
that I' tried Baby's Own Tablets for
my baby. Through their use baby
thrived }wonderfully and I feel as 1f I
cannot recommend them too highly."
Baby's Own Tablets break up colds
and simple fevers; cure constipation,
collo and Indigestion and make teeth-
ing easy. In fact they cure all the
minor ills of little ones. They are sold
by medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Di%,Williams'
•
Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont,
STILL TRUE TO FORM.'
Kaiser Thinks That German Sword
Will Win Respect.
If any one has any idea that the
Kaiser is not ready to blurt out his
inmost self on the slightest provoca-
tion, all he has to do is to read the
latest outburst to the effect "that, the
German sword, will regain for -us the
respect of the whole world." That, he
is still true to form in his belief that
might makes right, as he is in living
up to the ideas that the old heathen
religion. of Germany is a thing to con-
jure with, by calling Ilindenburg "Wo-
tan" and Ludendorff "Siegfried," is
made evident once more. Indeed, it is
part of the general mania that ob-
sesses him. For as the world shud-
ders at the naked German sword,
dripping with the blood of Belgium
and the babes of: Northern France,
this madman Of Potsdam complacently
opines that the sword will make him
and his respected. But the delusion is
one which cannot be cured exce{1t by
the stern poliice measures of an out-
raged world being carried to theib,fin-
ality. "In Belgium, in the spring of
this year," so runs a chronicle, "a
train came from Aix to Antwerp bear-
ing 255 returned exiles, forty-eight
hours on the way, no food on the voy-
age, with every one taken from the
train on a stretcher, and on fifty of
the stretchers, dead risen; men who
died on route, not from forty-eight
hours without food only but from three
months' experience of German ways
in wan" This is the German way that
the itifatuate Kaiser believes is win-
ning respect of the world, ' Could there
be any more evidence of the unfitness
of this man with the sword to arrange
a peace? Out of his own mouth he is
cothvicted and by the damning evidence
eoming :from men like Gerard and
Hugh Gibson,
THE CAUSE OF BACKACHE.
Every muscle in the body needs
constantly a supply a rich, red blood
in proportion to the work it does. Tlie
muscles of the back are under a heavy.
strain and have but little rest. When
the blood is thin they lack nourish-
ment; and the result is a sensation of
Bain in those muscles, Some ,people
think pain in the back means idney
trouble, but the best medical authori-
ties agree that backache seldom or
never has anything to do with the kid.
neys. Organic kidney disease may
have progressed to a critical point
without developing a pain in the back.
This being the case pain in the back
should always lead the sufferer to look
to the condition of his blood. It will
be found in most cases that the use of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to .build up
the blood will -stop the sensation of
pain in the ill -nourished muscles of
the back. Ilow much better it is to
try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the
blood than to give way to unreason-
able alarm about your kidneys. If you
suspect your Kidneys any doctor can
make tests in ten minutes.tllat will set
your fears at rest, or tell you the
worst. But in any event to be perfect-
ly healthy you must keep the blood in
good condition, and for this purpose
no other medicine can equal Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills.
You can get these pills through tiny
dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from
The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockyllle Ont.
RED CROSS SPIRIT SPEAKS.
"I kneel behind the soldier's trench,
I walk 'mid shambles' smear and
stench,
The dead I mourn;
I bear the stretcher and I bend
O'er Fritz and Pierre and. Jack to
mend
What shells have torn.
`rI go wherever men may dare;
I go wherever woman's care
And love can live;
Wherever strength and skill can
bring
Surcease to human suffering,
Or solace give.
"I am your pennills and your pounds;
I am .your bodies on their rounds
Of pain afar;
I am you, doing what you would
If you were only where you could—
Your avatar.
"The cross which on my arm I wear,
The flag which o'er my breast I bear,
If but the sign
Of what you'd sacrifice for him
Who buffers on the hellish rim
Of war's red line."
—John H. Finley.
AN EXCELLENT SERVICE
For the last two years the Canadian
Pacific Railway, In connection with the
Pacific steamers of tho Canadian Pa-
ciflc Ocean Services, has carried a
very large proportion of the passen-
gers from the United States to Russia,
and as these passengers have included
a great many American railroad men,
Who have been surprised at the excel-
lence of the service, a, remarkable
volume of trade is developing, greatly
to the benefit of Canada itself. Among
these passengers was the American
Railway Advisory Comnlisston, con-
sisting of the lending railway experts
of the United States, who travelled
from Chicago t.0 Vancouyer, and
thence to Yokohama via the Empress
of Asia. , Mr. Henry Miller, vice-chair-
man of this highly important commis -
eon, has written Vice -President G. M.
Bosworth a letter of deep appreciation,
In which, after referriug to many in-
dividuual Courtesies along the route, he
romarlto: "Yost have geed 'reason to
be proud of your organization and
Service, and .,'We take this method of
thanking you heartily for your kind-
ness and eoulteey."
rots 'aphop Oeind sootutapI e,pxnn{y4
"To shape n huinail body and mind,
new little human body and mind,
for good—in plliee, perhaps, of one
that has gone—there can bo no great-
er war work than that,"-,-I3aiel
Clarke.
"One, Meatless Meal
a Day" is a good food
slogan for war time, or any
time—better ,make .it two
meatless meals a day—it
would mean health ,and
strength for the nation,
But be sure and get the right
substitute for meat in a
digestible form. Shredded
Wheat Biscuit is the ideal
substitute for meat. It is
100 per cent. whole wheat
prepared in a digestible
form. Two or three of these
little loaves of baked whole
wheat make a nourishing,
satisfying meal at a cost of
only a few cents. Delicious
with milk or cream or fruits
of any kind.
Made in Canada.
TRENCH -MADE WILLS.
Tommy's Efforts in Will -Making Are
Interesting and Effective.
When John Doe wants to make his
"last' will and testament" he usually
has his lawyer do the work for him to
avoid the possibility of complications
arising after -his death, but when Tom-
my Atkins" in the trenches wants his
will made he has to draw it up him-
self as there is little or no time to
seek legal assistance. Although the
results of "Tommy's" efforts in will -
making may be somewhat crude from
the legal standpoint, his product,
nevertheless, has proved interesting
and effective. His testament is fre-
quently written,in his little pay -book
which is always with him, whether
"going over the top" or at rest in his
billet back of the firing line; and many
of these trench -wills have "Tommy
Atkins's" characteristic touch of hu-
mor. Some of them are in dialect,
others in phonetic spelling, some in
rhyme and some have even been in ci-
pher. Occasionally wills have been
inade leaving imaginary possessions
to institutions or to fictitious persons.
While on duty, at a "listening post"
in "No Man's Land" a soldier wrote
the following will in rhyme:
I haven't a sweetheart, I haven't a
mother,
I've only one sister, not even a bro-
ther;
My sister Katy is all I've got,
So of ought that's mine, she can have
the lot.
This will went through the court'
without a question.
The War Department authorities
make every effort to have the soldier's
wishes executed, no matter how crude-
ly they may be expressed or however
fantastic they are.
"DECLINED WITH AGONY."
How 'a Chinese Editor Rejects a
Would -Be Corftributor's Offering.
Canadian editors do not as a rule
waste words in rejecting a would-be
contributor's masterpieces. But in
China, if report speaks true, it is even
more delightful to have a rejection
than to receive an acceptance. I£ the
story, article, or poem is accepted, lit-
tle or nothing is said; lint if the MS.
is rejected, all doubts on the head are
dispersed, for the editor will write a
letter with the rejected screed some-
thing like this:
"We have read thy manuscript with
infinite delight. . By the sacred ashes
of our ancestors, we swear that never
before have we revelled in so enthral-
ling it masterpiece, If we printed it
we should henceforth he obliged to
take it as a standard of quality and
achievement, and henceforth never
print anything inferior to it. As' it
would be impossible to find its equal
in ten thousand years, and we have
to go to press with our poor, unin-
spired paper once a day, we are com-
pelted, though shaken with sorrow and
blinded with tears at the necessity, to
manuscri t and for
• thydivine
'manuscript, P ,
doing so we ask thee a thousand par-
dons."
LEMONS WHITEN AND
BEAUTIFY THE SKIN
Make this beauty lotion cheaply for
• your face, neck, arms and hands,
At the cost of a small jar of ordinary
cold eneam one can prepare a full
quarter pint of the most wonderful
lemon skin softener and'complexion
beautifier, by squeezing the juice of
two fresh lemons into a bottle eon -
bailing three ounces of orchard white,
Care should be taken to strait the
juice through a fine cloth so no lemon
pulp gets in, then this lotion will peep
'fresh for months. Every woman
knows that lemon juice is used to
bleach and remove such blemishes as
freckles, sallowness and tan and is the
ideal shin softener, whitener and
beautifier. ,7
Just try 111 Gel three ounces of
orchard white at tory drug store and
two lemons from the grocer and make
up a quarter pint of this sweetly
fragrant lemon lotion and massage it
daily' into the face, nock, arms and
hands. It is marvelous to smoothen
rough, red 014111ds.
There is no special provision made
in Ontario to supply nursery stock of
forest trees or shrubs for the orna-
mentation of school grounds, says J.
B.'Ddndeno, Ph,D,, inspector of ele-
mentary agricultural classes, Whore
school boards are desirous of obtain-
ing such material, they are expected
to secure it either from near -by woods
or swamps, or from regular nurseries.
Whore the schools aro maintaining
classes in agriculture, a portion of the
grants apportioned to the board tor
equipment may be used to purchase
trees, sitmubs, or pei'erinials. In eclreolq
where agriculture is not taught (the.
subjeet is optional) according to the
prescribed regulations of the Depart- '
went of Education, no financial a.ieist-
onee is received for this purr ego. '
.ininard'g Valmont autos Glint ih COWS MI, 7..
Boren ps the Site of the Gigantic
Krupp Munition Factories,
Tho word "Krupp" in Germany
almost stands for guns and War ma-
terial of all kinds, Essen is the home
of this vast concern, and exists for
it, as it was made by it.
Before the was, Krupp'k had 8,500
steam-engines, 1,500 furnaces, 500
gigantic steam -cranes, capable/of lift-
ing the biggest guns like the toys of
a child, and 200 steam -hammers. To
anyone who knows' the inside working
of a munition factory these few de-
tails will present a picture of the stu-
pendous output of munitions of war
which the Allies have had to overtake,
and upon which the Hun rested his
belief that he could dominate the
world.
The works, furthermore, contained
within their immediate neighborhood
50 miles of railroad, 100 miles of tele-
graph wires, and 200 miles of tele-
phone wires.
Linked up with the works, in all
hundreds of
parts of Germany, are
mikes, chiefly coal and iron, besides
innumerable quarries. A fleet of
steamers, too, plied for the supply of.
material.
A woman is the virtual head of this
vast concern—Frau Bertha Krupp von!
Bohlen und-Halbach, and the Kaiser
himself has shares in the concern
•
YES! MAGICALLY? . v
CORNS LIFT OUT
WITH FINGERS
O-0 —0—o ---
You say to the drug store man, "Give
me a small bottle of freezone," This
will cost very little but will positively
remove every hard or soft corn or cal-
lus from one's feet:
A few drops of this new ether com-
pound applied directly upon a tender,
aching corn relieves the soreness in-
stantly, and soon the entre corn or
callus, root and all, dries up and can
be lifted off with the fingers.
This new way to rid one's feet of
corns was introduced by a Cincinnati
man, wlio says that freezone dribs in
a moment, and simply shrivels up the
corn or °anus without irritating the
surrounding Edo,
Don't let father die of infection or
lockjaw from whittling at his corns,
but clip this out and make him try it,
If your druggist hasn't any freezone
tell him to order a small bottle 'from
this wholesale drug house for you.
If short of roots and cabbage gather
up the clover leaves at the edge of
the mow and save them for the hens.
They can be fed dry or scalded and
fed in mash. They take the place of
green feed.
PAO Granulated Eyelids;
�.../ ` 21 sSore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by
ID w, *Sun, Dustand Wind quickly
_ relieved by Murine. Try It in
y' yourEyesand InBaby's Eyee,
o�
d��� mll�NaSmartiag,J?tstEyaComfort
Marine Eye Remedy ,^a,iiY, oots of c.Drlotuo ie rt�'a
Eye salvo, In Tubes Ole. For (So(te Sym -Free.
Ask Marl= Eye Remedy Co..' Chicago d
Don't forget to nark the yearling
hens this fall so that you can distin-
guish them from the pullets next sum-
mer when culling the flock. A band
around one leg serves the purpose. It
seldom pays to keep a fowl beyond
two laying seasons.
I was cared of terrible lumbago by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
REV. 'WM. BROWN.
I was •cured of a bad case of earache
by MINARD'S LINIMENT,
MRS. S. KAULBACIC.
I was cured of sensitive lungs by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
MRS. S. MASTERS.
Pnddin C
oak the
Apple and Sago Pudding
.—Cook
as you would if cooking for an
infant food. Slice apples, put into a
well buttered pudding dish, sprinkle
with sugar, pour over the sago and re-
turn to the oven: Cook until the ap-
ples are tender. Serve with milk and
sager.
MONEY ORDERS
Dominion Express Foreign Cheques
are accepted by Field Cashiers and
Paymasters in France for their full
face value, There is no better way
to send money to the boys in the
trenches.
Tn storing the farm implements in
the tool shed it will pay to arrange
them in such order as will save time
and effort next spring by making
those first needed easily accessible. •
Minard's a,inhaent Cures Distemper.
Brown, Milk Gravy., --2 cups skim
milk, '1 level tablespoons flour, 4
level tablespoons butter, oleo .or sweet
dripping. Melt the fat, add the flour
anti allow 'to brown, but not burn.
Beason with black pepper and salt.
Add the milk and cook until smooth
(If you make this once eorreetly, you
will make it often.)
5$SUI 19 --'17,
BOW to Meet Trouble,
`Rlso above smell things, 'The we -
men who lets small thing's wormy her
will•be• completely undone the first
time she meeits with a really big' prob-
lere; It is disintegrating to your
mental and.nervous condition, not. to'
Mention your physical condition, to
worry, You need not be resigned to
fate nor slip your troubles off as the
old friend duck's back throws water,
But you eon meet troubled with a will
to conquer them or adjust them—arid,
after• that, "they sliould worry;' but
not you.
•
AEtri5rdis Liniment Oures Dinrttherla.
Darwin tulips are an improved rase
of the flowers, nearly double the size
of the early old-fashioned sorts and
with a greater richness and variety
of color.
The Soul of a Piano Is the
Action. Insist on the
as OTTO mow'
PIANO ACTION
Toronto's
Famous Hotel
Many
People
Make a
B -Line
for the Walker House (Tho House
Plenty) r
of a ty) as soon as they arrive in
Toronto. The meals, the service
and the home -like appointments
constitute the magnet that draws
them there.
Noon Diaper 60c.
Evening Dinner 75c.
THE WALKER HOUSE
Toronto's Famous Hotel
TORONTO, CANADA
Rates Reasonable
Goo. Wright & Co.. Poops,
Ac#Enc2$. WANTED •. ••�•,•,"
ID 01i 7' li A I't' AGENTS WANTIN'cl
good tints; finishing a apsrla;ty;
framesand everything Jit 1QWeg2 prices;
egiasy 'etooe". Iialtra Art CO., 4 titans-
moll Ava., a' aonIe
;77C111LP,'JWfJII' 1 A U laWJ 8--S i.JN D Pa
t.a,Cuibaue, white solar and bromide
finished portraits, convex or fiat; frames,
glass and all supplies. Merchants'
Portrait Company, 'Toronto,
FROPUOE
NEW )SOLS, VOci ll.X, I'ISA A
imams, honey, onions wanted. High-
estprices given, .I. D. Arsenault, 1105
St, Catharine East, Montreal,
mxscELTrAnEOtt ...
i et . l5AVIAIN ANDIII7i,Tf'-Sweden-
1JI, berg's great work on a real
world beyond and Ilia life after death
490 pages
cents
I, 40) only
elisAvuPointo
C,tiven8, TIJAt0ILS, Lumps,=v..
Internal and external. cured with -
rut pain by our home treatment Write
oe before too tette, Pr, lhelirnaa Medics!
Co., limited, Collingwood, Oat
ACure Phuples
"Youdon'tneed nrercury,potesh
or any other strong'mineral to
cure pimples caused by poor
blood, Take Extract of Roots—
druggist calls it "hdelher Seigel's
Curative Syrup—and your skin
will clear up as fresh sea baby's.
j)(((( "stomach
and
J Itwill eweeten ou.
Y
regulate your bowels." Get the
genuine. 50c. and $1.00Bottles.
At drug stores.
FIELD CASHIERS
/20
PAYMASTERS
IN FRANCE
CASH
DOMINION EXiPRESS
FOREIGN CHEQUES
THE BEST WAY TO SEND MONEY
TO THE BOYS IN THE TRENCHES
elieves Stiff Neck
When you wake up with a stiff
neck or sore muscles, strains or
sprains. use Sloan's Liniment. No
need to rub; it quickly penetrates to
the seat of pain and removes it.
Cleaner than mussy plasters or oint-
ments. It does.rotstain the skin or
dog the pores. Always have a bottle
handy for rheumatic aches, neuralgia
soreness, bruises and lame back. in
fact, all external pain.
Generous sized bottles at your
druggist, 25c.. 50c., $1.00.
IesEasyToGetliciDandruff
Gently rub spots of dandruff, scales,
itching and irritation with Cuticura •
Ointment. Next morning shampoowith
Cuticura Soap and hot water. This treat-
' ment every two weeks is usually suffi-
cient to keep the scalp clean and healthy.
Sample Each Free by Mail. Address post-
card; • Cutioure Dept. N. Boston, U.S.A."
Sold throughout the world.
A 9 Ha.l'SL.4Ir d Yi. Et ;O esJ L L E it I.1 `I
THE SEASON'S BEST FICTION
&SEN@ OOvE Tan BZNei - 51.50 azzlaftaiEb'S BABY - - 51.09
By Maly Roberta Rinehart. ISt' hoary Irving Dodge.
"Will prove the greatest of Mrs. Rine- Even morn amusing than "Skinner's
hart's sucoosees."—New York Tunes, Dress Suit"
THE ENDIAN DRUM - 91. aSA I511v1i$S1HLI1 SANTA CLAUS
Sty Wililam 80oMarg and Edwin Balmer - --
A mystery of the Great Lakes, as
goodiO
if not better, than "`.Che Blind
shits i'es.°
TUE NBNT OS NEN, or Thom; Who
., Wait and Wonder - - - 51.20
By Nollio 0, amo01ung,
This book reflects public) fooling in f FOLLY AND TI0III PRINCESS, 51,09
typical towns and country districts By Bmaia 0. Dowd.
throughout Canada, and snows with All lovers of "Polly of the Hospital
telling effect how Canadian men and Staff" and 'Polly of Lady Gay Cot•
women aro doing their bit In the war. tage" will want to road this new story
The whole book le strong and fearless, by the same anther,
but always comforting and healing, TUN TELEPLBaS - lgi,eo not
TWO 1?,OAD 'Jf0 US1D813r1TA87DINe; By Broderick Oriu Bartlett
$l,do
By Eleanor Ei, Portal.. How a charming heiress attempts to
A delightful love story, by the authorescape a horde of suitors by a mar -
"X t
ar -
"Just David," doge of convenience.
.
lay Meredith Niehonson.. w.
A Christmas atary of .mysterious sure
prises and a Joyful holiday spirit, by
tho author of The House of a Thou.
sand Candles."
TWO BIG WAR STORIES
CRUMP6, The Plain Tale of a Canadian E 00CU iE1R'0 aoOE - YOo,
Who Wont - - 91.20 not By James Homan Za11. .
By Lottie Beene, 0.21.1'.
of tl is famous tribute,
A vivid and Contingent.
. account of one of A now edition i
of re bast
t it emir's Arm One ,tl s
• t alliin oat Illuatratefl byo E: oh Y
the Fite C g
the author, booksoftha war.
rl'®rMO `TU 1r ALLEN
Publisher
otcl
cI Coronado
GorooEJo Beach, Calitoi ilia
Near San Diego
POLO, MOTORING, TENNIS,
BAY AND SURF BATHING,
FISHING AND BOATING.
18 -Holl Go/j °ourso
Ilobel is •equip'ped throughout with Automatic
Sprinkler System.
AMERICAN PLAN
JOAN J. HERNAN, Manager
dstaaro stir. trr� m aa�k n
%
at ,. a,
r Sal
1 WHEELOCK ENGINE, 18x42. •
New Automatic Valve Type. Complete with suppiy and exhaust piping,
flywheel, oto. Will accept 51,200 cash for immediate sale.
1 ELECTRIC -GENERATOR, 30 I{.W., 110-120 lTglts D.C,
Will accept $425 cash for Immediate sale.
1 LARGE LEATHER BELT. Double, Endless. 24 inch x 70 ftg
Will accept $300 for Immediate sale, although belt la In excellent Ootid
dition and new one would oust about $600.
PULLEYS, Large size,
26x60.580 ; , 12800--420 ; 12%zx48-412 ; 12x30-••$6.
'2 BLOWERS OR FANS, Buffalo crake.
One 10 Inch, other 14 Inch dlsoliarge--$00 oaoh,
REAL ESTATES CORPORATION, LTD.
60 Prost St. West, Toronto