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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-05-11, Page 7HOM EX Striith by that runs r,of S 5-000 sin the bU anti boiler— or tek Guarantee tffication to melt co hem-tat:ism, anent! Cod Liver as contained in for relieving rheum , - ave utterly failed. Riffet.-er, or feel its first Errattsion at once. TIAT YOU NEED. 1114It • "-Nremserk,eseeee ANTS 1UP H el pi wart ed irt-ANDMIS IS tiOW, ME 5py FELT ViriZt4 viE REA) It !IT 0I'MARY'SLErrat LtJrw 4t4,41t., Ao trLi/ Au-solget 4'41 iftat ettrou..4, tikat .clf 'WA/ Let ,te rev -teen/ ,leselfalfee„, *-tefst tove,/ BE LT CARE SCARE CAD_ GRANS/RE. CAN LEEK G. 150 FIRST PRIZE t.f the e§tries will be la the handsel ludges, having no connect:IGO • whose names we will telt you ludas Ants .-rit,zet agree to abide by their A •Vards b given to the S4VddrSoi the., ••t'or imswera qualified according tat rJa- the contest. In ittditiegthe plAsits of merit will be (a) sett - anel,cret (b) leneral neatncee21= oT the entry iikantiwrit ng, punctu- -•all being 4.-.onsidererin and the merit of •1.104 yottio opinions will be coupled in , on the awards. All answerarautt t: form of Marrs letter but containing the "...'utiosis for the propel...names as called for ce!im anY Ather form wilt not be eonsid• r !At will eIcsopromPtlYet PAL. 'Attgirit..,,, Ili after which Judging be contmerlesr," • -ces acvarcled, Study_hlary's lettere:33d ter pirc.-ct &caution !tow. Entirely in addttion t� etitnie Pates.10 extra t't rts'iVard13 gUargIM.• S it4C1.1vC4 Onee, by every conteetant a V tth tbe conOitions of the contest. Address Wt. ir 7 Continental nide. Toronto, Ont.* MAY 8th OCTOBER 30th Every s TU -D AY 41Alele RAIL." -- ale° by TIWRSDAY-IS ST ENVIER " Great Lake e Routes" (soaceil Your ..Fellisari iss the Weat praities have put Western Canada or. ihe map. Tuore aro still thousartils acres waiitnq for- the man who war.'z. ; ahd .rrossorily. Take advantsio Rot.4. and tievel via Canatfiariacfic Infonnation from Ticket Ofes: 1412145 St. James St., Phone NI 8125, Windsor Hotel, Windsor and Placa Vioar Stations. IdifG R. S. }1tYS. Barrister, Solicit- f'orareyencer and Notary Public gol;c1tor for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the 'Dot minion Bank, Seat Ttle '.iloirey to loan. J. M. BEST, Barristet, Soliciter, Conveyancer and Notary Public, Office euPstairs over Walker's Furr.iture Store, 1Vlain. Street, Seeferth. P. HOLMESTED Barrister; Solicitor, Conveyencer and Notate; Pe-blic, Mieitor for The Canadian Bank a Cinumerce. Money to -Loan. litarms for epee. Office in Scott's Block, Main Street, Seaforth. PROtJDFOOT,KILLORAN AND , :COOKE. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pubs lic, etc. , Money to lends lin Seaforth on Monday of each weeks Office in Kidd Block Proudfoot, .C., S. L. Killoran, 31 D. Cooke./ VETERINAstY. )1.4.:RBURN, VS Honor graduateeof Ontario Veterin. ary College, and henorary member of the Medical. Association of the Ontario Veterinary Cellege. Treats diseases of all domestic animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fev- er a specialty_ Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth, All or- ders left at the hotel wilt receive prompt attention. Night calls receiv- ed at the office. Frank II. Spear an (Continued from laat week.) Du Sang answered: "No;- we're from Sheriff Coon's office at Oroville, looking up a bunch of Duck Bar steers that's been run soteewhere up, Deep -Creek. Can we stay here all night?' They dismounted and disarmed Bagg's suspicions, though the condi- tion of their horses might have evolv- ed him had he had his senses. The unfortunate man had probably fixed in his mind that a Tide from Tower W to Deep Creek in sixteen hours Was a physeial "Stay ere? Sure! I want you .to stay," said. Bagg's bluffly. "Looks' father neck, to-nie like. seen ryou down at Crave.. wjtil AM- around his fath • talkine - to him. Whispering Smith he lits beside men oid egieafl to the house IS °OW:the creek vying t14 evening, and at eleven k Whispering Smith rode down r 6in the south eiassete find that four of the nienn they were after bad taken fresh 'horses, after killing Baggs' and passed safely through the coition Banks had drawn around the as and along Deep Creek. Bill Dincmg, who had riden with Bank's men, Was at the house when Whisperiug Smith arrived. He found some eupper in the. kitchen, and the tired man and the giant ate together." - Whispering Smith was ton.sexperi- °need a campaigner to complain. His party had struck a trail fifty miles north of Sleepy at and followed it to the Missions. He knew now who lie Was after, and knew that they were bottled ui p n the Cache for the night. The sheriff's men were sleeping on the floor of the living room when•Smith dame in from the kitchen. He Sat down before the fire. At inter - was selia eeve from the bedroom where the body lay/ and after listening a Moment,Whispering Sinith got stiffly up, andatiptoeing to still the jingle of his alnire, took the candle from the table, pushed aside the curtain, and entered the bedroom. The littk boy was lying on his face, ing Stone, o,intt- I?" he asked .of Karr,. Karg was lighting a eigaTette,- used to rgeek. at the Dunning Ranch," he ang-eerett, throwing away his match "That's hit. Good! The boy is cooking supper. Step up to the kit- clien and tell him' to -cut ham for,feur xnere." "Four?" bent a monient ever the bed, and, set- ting the candle on the table, put his hand on the boy's shoulder, -He disen- gaged the hand from the cold neck and kitting down took it in his own. Talking low to the little fellow, he got his attention after mueb patient effort and got him to speak.' He made him; though Struggling with terror, to un- derstand that he had &nee to be his friend, and after the child had sobbed his grief into a strange heart, he ceased to tremble, and told his name and his story. 'and described the tarp horsemen and the horses they had left. Smith listened quietly. "Have you had any supper, Danriie? . No? You -must have something to eat. Can't you eat anything? But there is a nice pan of fresh milk in the kitchen."ej A burst of tears interrupted him:- "Daddie jug brought in the mirk, and "Two' of Ed Banife men 7 -will be here by six o'clock.Heard about the hold-up ?- They..stepped Number Three at Tower W last night and shot OlLe Sollers, as white e man as ever pulled a throttle. Boys-, a man that'll kill- a locomotive -engineer is worse than an Indian; I'd. help skin him ." "The hell you would!" cried Du Sang; 'Well, don't yo e want to ,start in on me? I killed Sollers. .Look' at nie; ain't 1 handsorae? What You going tC d bout it" ON*4 MIS Vet All "of u felt so had when we rode in and had so much to do we email% attend to taking tare of'. - your father. Did you know there are tVi0 *tall out at the crossing; now, guarding it with rifles? But if you eathirinagl Lephirmeavvi. while tthwe ezn-in are (10 asleep; they have to ride all der W. - morrow, We must wash hi 4 fee? and hands don't you think so? And lirtish his hair and beard. If you, could just find the basin and some water and a towel—you couldn't find a, brush could you? -Could you, honestly Well! I call that a good boy—we shall have to have you on the railroad sure. We must try to find soire fresh clothes these are cut and stein*tl len I Will change his clothes and we will all feel better. Don't disturb the men - they are tired. They worked together by the candle- light. When they had done. the boy had a violent trying spell, but Whis- pering Smith got him to lie down be- sid0 him on a blanket spread on the .floor,where Smith got his back against the sod wall and took the boy's head in his arm7 He waited patiently for the boy to go to sleep, but Dan was afraid the murderers would come back Once he lifted bis head in confidence. "Did you know My daddy used to run an engine?" "No I did not, but in the moening, you must tell me all about it." Whenever there was a noise in the next room the child roused. After some time a new voice was heard; Kennedy had come and was asking questions, "Wake up, ,here, aome- loodyl Where is Whispering Smith?" Dancing answered: "He's right there in the bedroom, Farrell, staying with htrhee e b:I: There some stir-ing Kennedy talked a little and at length s .reiehed hixnself on the floor. When all was still again, Donnie's band crept slowly from the breast of his companion up to his chin and the little hand, feeling softly every feature, stele over the strange face. "What is it, Dannie?" "Are YOU Whispering Smith 7 "Yes, Dannie. Shut your eyes". At three o'clock when Kennedy lighted a candle and looked in, Smith was sitting with his back against the wall, The boy lay on his arne ; Both Before Bag e could think Du Sang I wa_s -frying the ham,and I heard them. shooting. . "See how he took care of you till, t14e last minute, and leftslmething,for you after he was gone. Suppose he -could speak now, don't you think he would Want you to do as J.say? I ani your next Mend now, for you are go-, wag shooting Inan cown... It was wan- ton, Du SanestooS in no needs of the butchery; the eseape could have -been - made without it.' Hie yiedin.had pull- ed an engine throttle teo long toshow the white feather, but he was dying, by the time he had dragged e revol- , ver from his pocket. Dir Satig did' the killing alone. At least, Flat Nose ing to be a railroad anart and have a who alone saw e/1 the niurder, after! big engine!' - ward maintained that he edid not Dannie looked iip;,, "Dad Wasn't a- . draw because he had no occasion to, frail" °f tb°5e men' 1 - and that Beggs was dead, before he, "W"n't he Da.hhie I ' Karg, had finished his cigarette. With "He said we would be all right and his right arm broken and two bullets ' "t/tA) be afraid!' ' through his chest, Beggs fell - on his -"id he?" "tle said Whisperin face. That, however, did not check his murderer_ Rising on his knees, °Curling!' sake! Pin helplef..ts gentlemen! I'm ",MY Poor boy," • "He is coming don't be afraid Do Beggs begged for his life. "For God's Smith was helpless. Don't kill me like a dogl" you know Whispering Smith . lie, is JOHN GRIEVE, But Du Sang, emptying his pistol, coming . The men to -night all said HOTIOr graduate of Ontario Veterin- shrew his Title to his shoulder and sent be was coming." - ory College. All diseases ol &pestle bullett after bullg crashing through The little fellow for a long time animals treated. Calls promptly at- the shapeless: forin writhing and could not be coaxed away from his tended to and, chatges moderate. Vet- I twitching before him . until he had father., but his companion at length b t is it in the dust soft and fiat and got him into the kitchen. When they. came back to the bedrorn the strange man was taming to him. once more about his, father, "We must 'try to think how he would like. things done v. s. 47 - I heve half of the whole-shootinernatch haepened to be near there and rode in , to be the last. So you think af- if you'll cross Deep Creek and help me last night. He can't get out; the Can ter yeti do you? Well, if I, Nvete Nvhat run the gang,' Such was Rebetock adian plugged. I won't stand. for are yeti going to do about it? Reb- free from anxiety and in a confidential I the killing, and it is Du Sang or u i stock, do you think, if I V.,anted you, moment. Under pressure he was, like 1 elean-up in the Cache all arouna, and I would send a message for you to all men, different, wouldn't cost. you a cent, and you can mine last night at Mission SpeingS, there you err, Rebstock---it is la goin! 1 Whispering Smith had acctuaintance even in the Cache,. aud after a little careful reconnoitering he found a, crippled up thief, driving a milelf cow down the Cache who was willing to take a inessa_ge to the boss - Whispering Smith gave his instnte- then rn get Du Sang anyway, Le gards." Riding circumspectly in and ebeut the entrance to the Cache, the party waited an hour for an answer. When the answer came, it was unsatisfac- tory. Rebstoelt declined to appear upon so trivial a matter, and Viliisper- ing Smith refused to specify a -further grievance. More parley and strkmger messages were necessary to stir the come out and meet me? Not on your life! When I want you 1•11 conic to your shack and drag you out by the hair of the head. Sit dowrir roared 'Whispering Smith. Rebstock, who weighed at least two hundred and seventy-five pounds lifted INlionslvselhfeuLtoppgeldaraen;nrifilys;h"acark freely were were fast asleep. On the bee the tions explictly, facing the xnesseetger, two sat m their saddles with f.hair. "Well, who do you want," dead man lay with a handkeTchi& over an importunate eye. "Say to Reb- he bellowed in kind. his face. as the t , , , Deep Creek monaach, but at last he stock exactly these words, ' he insisted. railroad man's fe."Thae A smile softened the, asperity of the want Du Sang. He killed a friend of mCC. 's a fair sent word asking Whispering Smith to. come to his cabin accompanied only by . "This is from Whispering Smith: I erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on GoderiCh street, one door east of Dr, Scott's office, Sea - forth =.1 MEDICAL. DR. W „T. GLA.NFIELD, M.B., Physician, Etc. Honor Graduate of University of Toronto, six years' experience. Brueefleld, Oatario. -C. J. W. HARN, C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont. Specialist, Surgery and Genito-Urin- ary liseases of men and wemen. - DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. - Osteopathic Ph,ysician of Goderich. Specialist in women's and children's diseases, -rheumatism, • acui ee chronic and nervous disorders; eye ear, nose , and throat. Consultation free. Office in Cady Block, over W.G. Willis' Shoe , Store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays 8 a.m. till 1 pan. Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR Physician and Surgeon Ofike and Residence, Main Street, Phone 70 Hensel]. - Bank's Me-ix:carat up Within. an hour to find the ranch -house deserted, They eaw a lantern in the yard below, and eeeenne...-....nesereee • eteeste. - esse DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, irfontreal; Member i of Colleen Of Physicians and Surgeons 1 of Ontario ;Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, 'Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office Phone 56,1 Hensall, Ontario. ' DR. F. BURROWS Offiee and residence, Goderieh street east of the Methodist church, Seaferth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of -Huron. ,etar-neetens-- ees tese..nses: ▪ see.tee,..7 DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY J. G. Scott, gsraduate of Victoria and • College of Physicians and Surgeons t Ann Arbor, and member of the Col -1 lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of .; Ontario. C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trill. 1 ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; -m.ember of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. DR. IL HUGH Rms. Graduate of University 01 Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate ceurses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic H.ospitar, London, England, University Hospital, London, England. Office—Back of Dominioni Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night I: Calls answered from residence, Vic-, toria street, Seaforth. THOMAS BROWN. Licensed auctioneer for the counties of Huron land Perth. Correspondenee. arrangements for sale dates can be made by calling up Phone 97, Seaforthe I or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- 1 elate -and satisfaction guaranteed. 1 4....1.011, R. T. LUKER . Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in a grits a the County. Sev n years' ex- perience in Manitoba and Saskatehe- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. 175r1.1, Exeter, Centralia P.O., R. B. No. 1. Orden left at The Huron Re- postter Office, Seeley* promptly at- , taisdsd to. ... ..... .. . 1 .. • ............. - . " re sees,- seen - nen-a ------sesz!neteeeente tree tr. .. • eee ertle . .. ' .... ••• ' . . . ' .. .. ..... ........... ......... .......... . .... .... .. ..................... . .. ............... . . ............... ....... .1( ..... .. ' . • ..... . . .-t 4 ess, . ............ • - 4 ............... .„.. • =III:. ......... ...... .. . rLr t he roun ation not the mod . imp rtant thing True, you can't have a good barn without a good foundation, but don't forget either that the roof has to stand most .of the punishment. Upon it -falls the burden of resis.ting the destructive influences of weather and changing seasons. Now, tke. question is "Where am •going to find a roof which will meet these conditions?" Certainly not in wooden shingles which have rapidly deteriorated durir.g the past few years. .Not in anything so perishable as wood, nor yet iron, which lets in driving rain, but rather in a permanent mineral composition such as Brantford Roofing. Now, leiles look at a section of Brantford Roofing. First, you notice it has a pure, long -fibred felt base. This is thoroughlysaturated with a filler coat of asphalt or mineral pitch. Then it is given another coat Filially, the surface is thickly covered with. crushed slate. You can imagine what a job rain, snow, fire or heat would have penetrating a roof like that. As for comparing ra tford Natures Water- . Roofing bproofmg yith shingles on the score of permanency, or protection, or appearance, or even economy, there is no comparison. You • put a Brantford Roof on once, and it will last as long as the building; it will always look well and it will never need - W!irepairing. y not let us send you smiles, also a copy of our booklet which explains bow rantiord Roofing is "always on the job?" Or, if you will give us the dimensions of your barn or house roof we will gladly submit estimates without charge or obligation. Brantford Roofing Company, Limited Brantford, Canada 116 For sale by HENRY EDGE 4,0e CHA.PTER XXIX Willianis Cache Ed Banks had been.recalled before daybreak from the middle pass. Two of the men wanted were now known to have crossed the creek, which meant they must work out of the country through Willa= Cache. "If yoli will take your best tsvo men Ed," said Whispering Smith, sitting down with Banks at breakfast, "and strike straight for Canadian Pass to help Gene and Bob Johnston, PH un- dertake to ride in and talk to Reb- stock while Kennedy and Bob Scott watch Deep Creek. The boy gives a good description, and the two men that did the job here are Du Sang .and Flat Nose. Did I -tell you how we picked- up the trail yesterday, Magpies. They shot a scrub hors that gave out Ori them and skinned the brands 'ate hastened the banquet but we got Were before the birds were all seated. Great luck, wasn't it? And it gave us a beautiful ttatil. One of the party crossed Goose River at Am- erican' Fork, and Brill Young and Reed followed him. Four came through the Mission, Mountahis; that is a cinch and they are in the Cache —and if they get out it is our fault personally, Ed; an dnot the Lord's." - Williams Cache lies in the form of a great horn, with a narrow entrance at the lower end known at the Door, and- a „rock fissure at the upper end' leading into Canadian Pass; but this fissure is so narrow that a man with a rifle could withstand a regiment. For a hundred miles east and- west rise the granite walls of the Mission range broken nowhere save by the fortnaliOn known as the Cache; even this does not penetrate the range; it is a pocket, and runs not over half way into it and ont again. But no man really knows the Cache; the most that may be said is that the main Valley is known, and it is known as the roughest mountain. fissure be- tween the Spanish sinks and the Man- trap -country. Williams Cache lies be- tween walls two thousand feet high, and within it is a small labyrinth of canyons. A generation ago, when Medicine Bend for one winter was 1,he terminus of the overland railroad, vig- ilantes mercilessly cleaned out the town, and the few outlaws that escap- ed the shotgun and the noose at Medi- cine Bend found refuge in a faraway unknown mountain gorge once named by French trappers the Cache. Years after these outcasts had come to infest it, came one desperado more ferocious than all that had gone before. He made a frontier retreat of the Cache, and left to it the legacy of his evil name, Williams. Since his day it has served, as it served before, for the haunt of the outlawed men, No honest man lives in Williams Cache, and few men of any sort live there long, since their lives are lives of violence; -neith- er the law xior a woman crosses Deep Creek. But from the day of Williams! to this day the Cache had had its ruler- I and when Whispering Smith rode with a little party through the Door into the Cache the morning after the mur- der in Mission Valley he sent an envoy to Rebstock, whose success as a eattle thief had brought its inevitable _pen- ! alty. It had made Rebsteck a mari of consequence and of property and a' man subject to the anxieties and an- : question and I give you a serseght an- swer. PM not bluffing; I want Du Sang.' Rebstock squirmed. He swore with shortened breath that he knew nothing about Du Sang;that Du Sang had. stol- en his :cattle; that hailing was too MOW *GM. RE11111•11111.1,10M,MINFINSIMIN A GOOD IDEA and 5_anie Money Ride to work. Ride for pleasure. Ride everywhere. And save money by it. A HYSLOP BICYCLE is thd Bicyle of SATISFACTION Ride a Ilyslop Menu facture:1 bY 'HYSLOP BROTHERS. Limited, Toronto Fe* SALE BY J. F.DALY, SEA.FORTH ,•••!eesamestegewee, n.oyances of such responsibility. i Sitting once in the Three Horses at I , Medicine Bend, Rebstock had talked ' , with Whispring Smith. "I used to 1. I have a good time,' he growled. "When, I was rustling a little buneh of steers = i —just a small bunch all by myself,1 i and hadn't ateift in theworld, no place to sleep and nothing to eat, I had a, good time. Now I have ta keep my ' money in the bank; that ain't pleasant —you know that. Every man that brings a bunch of cattle across Deep Creek has stole 'era, and expects me 1 to buy 'em or lend him money.I'm i busy with inspectors all the time, dev- 1 Ding with brands, standing offthe . Stock Association and all kinds of i trouble.' I've got too many cows too 1 much money. I'm afraid somebody' will shoot me if I go to sleep, or poison meif 1 take a drink. Whisperirig Smith 1 Fd like to give you a haU-interest in 1, 1 my business. That's on the square. 1 You're a young man and handy; i Kennedy. . The two men rode up the earyon to- gether. "And now I will show you a lean and hungry thief grown inOriS- trOuS and miserly, Farrell," said Whis- pering Smith, At the head of a short pocket be- good for him; that he would join any tween two 'leer grsnite walls they posse in searching for him; and that saw Rebstock's weather-beaten cabin, he had not seen him for three month& and he stood in front of it smoking. w.) He looked moodily at his visitors out (To be eontinued next eek of eyes buried between rolls of fat.' -. -------, ----..! Whispering Smith was a little harsh as the two shook hands, but he dis- mounted and followed Rebstock into , 'eighty ibeen r lliEUMATISL i E What are you so high and r the house. hat on the table near which Rebstock 7 _care a cripple wi,,Lt L.,..f,.!-.% "I 'have pr. . about?" he demanded, throwing his 1 -,. eraenunsesin hadseated himself"Why don't you nee seen -et rig las eonvestrystoesnreet? come out when I send a man to you, Wens& /mitt orhave eelldyou uW0grodt wtohay kit eir willabt ditolla\vVehan,tt s.,change o - assi..:4- you. been, treated right?" . _ . vex ate rgtecimnl.,-!:.-4, i,; -i .S Beilag ill no position to complain, , *Id 1 Ila" 5131.'" '"17;:lt A f•- " z1 .745 hilt Shrewdly aware that much un- .. 111111 414 2""Ir "etL- , pleasantness was in the wind, Reb- stock beat about the bush. He had had rheumatism; he couldn't ride; he had been in bed three weeks, and had- n't seen Da Sang for three months. "You ain't chasing up here after Du. Sang because he killed a man at Mis- sion Springs. I know better than that. That ain't the first man. he killed, and it ain't a' goin' to be the • last.' Whispering Smith lifted his finger and for the first time smiled. "Now c Tinr_ , rioncror erainty xeseasce Allarliggiati; 50c. a 1,:x, C7C -; Sample free if AIICATAL CO4 or 2.1,:oro40), Ammegm;arzes#861gmegrOtagggeOliffiPiakiNOWNNOtiffiaraNOSIDIIIIIM 2''--5'51IibalCajOb Cartons - 10,20, - 10,20, 0 n Bag. s No one ever do\ ubts REDPATH quality; because in its Sixty Years of \use no one has ever bought a barrel, bag or carton of poor Redpath sugar. It is made in one grade only --the highest. "Let Redpath Sweeten it. 12 Canada Sugar RefiningCo., Limited, Montreal. WasiffillwamarairommierwisszliasmanwirTal, r 20 / "INF leff.111,11M1 00/10111.010 ourse You 1?elteve THERE are good signs, bad signs and indifferent signs—indicating a variet ot fe! i This sign is a guide to all who use paint. Awl it leas a Dig double meanine. emphasizes the purity of the ingredients to be found in every can of B-H "Erioli Paint and it guarantees the satisfeetiee , :311. will have as the result of its applicatif -- Its constant uf,e by men beet etealife. to judge paint values is another Fign nt i.: Be 41tided by this true sign and buy g -...,..... i "English" Paint to beautify the t:::- pow home..terk : _ 1., r r„ ..--v-r.r, L %T. z-t....itit I 4.S', PI.F.'ORTH, ON AT. 14.1kfiD1-1').M.1-4ENDER$O▪ N NGLpH"PAINT IS IVA re% EttiMAlef. itntiltu WAITE WS 30'.41MtatiAZIK 'sta. efif. ViatriSfee e/Agassereet,