HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-06-17, Page 6>�• '. ~ FORSTER
Esr. Nose and Throat
uelte in Medicine, University of
0.
Assistant New York Ophthal-
mid Aural Institute, Moorefleidrs
e and Golden Square Throat Hos-
la, London, Eng, At Mr. J. Ran -
'a Office, Seaforth, third Wednes-
y in each month from 11 a.m. to
fi
,'pm. 63 Waterloo Street, South,
tratford. Phone 267, Stratford.
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
James, Proctor & Redfern, Ltd.
E. M. Proctor, B.A.,Sc., Manager
36 Toronto St-, Toronto, Can.
Bridg®. Pavements. Waterworks, sewer-
age Systems, incinerators, Schools,
Public Halls, Housing*, Factories, Arbi-
trations. Litigation
„ Our FeesUsually paid out of
the money we save our clients
MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO.
Specialists in Health and Accident
Insurance.
Policies liberal and unrestricted.
Over $1,000,000 paid in losses.
Exceptional opportunities for local
Agents.
904 ROYAL BANK BLDG
2773-50 Toronto, Ont.
JAMES McFADZEAN
Agent for Hawick Mutual Insur-
ance Company. Successor to Juhn
$arris, Walton.
address BOX 1, BRUSSELS
or PHONE
42. 2769x12
LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and
Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do-
minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to
loan.
J. M. BEST
Barrister, Solicitor. Conveyancer
and Notary Public. Office upstairs
over Walker's Furniture Store, Main
R`.r'eet. Seaforth.
PROUDFOOT. KTT.T.ORAN AND
HOLMES
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W Proudfoot, K.C., J.
L Killoran, B. E. Holmes.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College, and honorary member of
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary College. Treats diseases of
all domestic animals by the most mod-
ern principles. Dentistry and Milk
Fever a specialty. Office opposite
Vick's Hotel, Main Street. Seaforth.
All orders left at the hotel will re-
ceive prompt attention. Night calls
received at the o91ce
JOHN GRIEVE, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College. All diseases of domestic
animals treated. Calls promptly at-
tended to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and residence on Goderich street, one
door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea -
forth.
MEDICAL
DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN.
Osteophatic Physician of Goderich.
Specialist in Women's and Children's
diseases, reheumatism, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, Close
and throat. Consulation free. Office
above Unback's Drug store, Seaforth,
Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m
C. J. W.
H
ARN.
M
D.C.M.
425 Richmond Street, London. Ont.,
Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin-
ary diseases of men and women.
DR. J. W. PECK
Graduate of Faculty of Medicine
McGill University, Montreal; member
of College of Physicians and Surgeonsa
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.
Hensel], Ontario.
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich street
east of the Methodist church. Seaforth
Phone 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DR. C. MACKAY
C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin-
ity University, and gold medallist of
Trinity Medical College; member of
--the College of Physicians and Sur-
geons of Ontario.
DR. H. HUGH ROSS
Graduate of University of Toronto
Faculty of Medicine. member of Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario; pass graduate courses in
Chicago Clinical School of Chicago;
Rt>ya1 Ophthalmic Hospital. London,
'England; University Hospital, Lon-
don, England. Office—Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5,
Night calls answered from residence,
Vietorin street, Seaforth.
AUCTIONEERS
THOMAS BROWN
Licensed auctioneer for the counties
of Huron and Pe ,'^;Correspondence
°arrangements 'fo a dates can be
llitalle by calli'ng`vpp +hone 97, Seaforth
ExpositOT
CO. Charges mod-
d'Malefaction' guaranteed.
American Cititen Will
Accept the Opportunity
To Become an Irish Peer
EDm UNDII MOof f 1CFI BURKE
WWI New Yurk, is to
assume his position us au
Irish peer. The despatches
say he will "renounce. his America')
ei;ieensliip" and "become a member
of the House of Lords." That, how-
ever, i3 raffia, unuutp,titug things.
All he can ,lo lit pn-sent is to take up
!us residr•n,:e in til'.' old eotuttry and
let people call hitt, lewd 1•'erulby in-
stead of Sir Burke Ruche. Then,
afler live years. be can become u
oat l u'. ic.-d Brit L;:: a, „•...1 As tar
,he !!,use td Lor,::-. 1:,- tv.11 novel- act
alt, -le .:,Hess I,.:t. f,•!low-per,:, of Ire -
Lind suet hint An It ish PIrera;;t•
thanent
sterin,
v9
tie not carry 811 i,ii. ❑ ,t Itt Ile
I,.,'1.,.t hut. arta',
'':o;',t' t'.Vetttl -,',,;Itt tit tlnl,lht'r
ter tit, honor at MO 11:.:, of the
V..s10r 10 1Su1, and nil vac:mein as
111 ) u rut. Thr SI'l,11611 ,1.5 clines.•
:=lxlet•:t, bill elect the,. anew ;atter
every dtssulut tun of Parliament.
In the lirutolt law, lIr. li trko
i:ur he al tuna lea Ily became li,u'uu
Feeney 10 1 0 the third baron died
I:.:,t fall. And while his halt age does does tial Plate tom w I!,.• 11 [,use
tit Lords, it Is 1ho one peerage wht,'h
I -ales him free to be a candidate for
the House of Commons. Lord Curzuu
chose au Irish peerage with tllii tit
view, but un his return from India
was givau all earldom of the United
Kiugdom, which thus cut (tint off
trout the Commons evim as it placed
him In the }lou.,, of 18,1,14.. A num-
ber of Americans hare dune what
Mr. Burke Hoche now. proposes to du,
and hate gone to the ()Id Country to
take titles which they could not as-
sume as residents of the United
States. Plain "Mister" Fairfax, whose
family had been in the United States
since the revulnitoo, removed his
residence to Creat Britain, and, as
Lord Fairfax, became one of the re-
presentative peer's elected by the
Scottish peers to the House of Lords.
In the British lists, generations of
Fairtaxs were carried as "lords,"
though they were residents of Amer-
ica and without title on this contin-
ent. "Nr. Duncan, of Boston•" has
also been so carried is the Earl of
Camperdown, but Ito has refused to
take the title.
The rase of Mr. Burke Roche has
attracted particular attention because
of the efforts put forth by his Amer-
ican maternal grandfather to ensure
against his taking the course now
announced. The new Lord Fermoy
and his twin, a few minutes the
younger, are grandsons of Frank
Work, millionaire railway financier,
the man who once said that "inter-
national marriat'as should be a
hanging offence." The divorce which
his daughter had secured from the
father of these boys had led him to
that conclusion. and when he left an
estate of $6,000,000 he stipulated
that they would cease to be heirs if
they continued to call themselves
Rothe Instead of changing their
name to Work; it' they went to for-
eign cohnrries; or it they visited
their father. They wore enabled to
do all these things, however, by the
action of their mother's sister in dis-
claiming her right to take advantage
of the terms of the will. And Frank
Work may well turn in his grave now
that Edmund Maurice Rorke Hoehn
has committed the crowning offence
of assuming an Irish peerage.
•-Fish That Growl.
A tisk that growls and meows like
a cat is found in certain parts of
:`ouch America, Africa and Australia.
11 molts much more like a snake
than a lists, It has lungs, and is oblig-
ed to put its bead out of water to
'
bre;Uht u
i,ng •:h•r
0. IL . r rre-
a
1Ices are called, arc a link between
( 1 tors nearest. kind
reptiles and fish--
to
the original stock fruit' Which
sn:' kis and dish both sprang.
O'le reason why these o-.ttatlre fis11
h 've been ore,e:veal tlo,,•aa,ls and
thousands of years after their pre-
historic ancestors were extinct is be-
cause they can line thrun6h
long • drnu hts. Attigators and their
S
\ft•icau ronsins, tttr crocodiles, are
,,Ic,ust the only enemies Ihey have to
I:5r except man.
Their rich salmon flesh is highly
-!zed by the Indians, who go after
,hent w!th spears.
In the n':I.trtl clave•, th Afrir•an
'•,1: 11:=!1 i.•r e..:I, I,.r11 inches
long, but when kept in aquariums
:td fed lite yt':u• rmm11d, instead 01
lying dormant for lark of u-ti„r. they
:;row In hr 1...n reel seal 0 half long
.i nrl weigh sly: pelt -els or more.
II is a fart IIIA there are fists
which eartnnt =.win. :1 Brazilian fish,
e!,1 lett th^ '-slit's, ran only crawl,
walk, or hop. It has a long, tip -
tarn.
p -
turn. r, snort, , 11,1 resembles to some
c'Sta:'t n 10,d. T lin an„ -Fine fins of
the mOItha are r-lil.e small, and are
reality thin paws, which are of
no aetViefi for swimming.
Hr' Pt'll. Proud.
An old actor, who had been rest-
ing fur n. long 1i111e, wag standing in
the bar of a public bans' murk fro-
qurnteri by the "profos.d in," when
a. well-dl'CSsed man ramp In and nr-
tiereil a. drink, for width he tendered
"Fisher."
The harnlairi,ronld nal change it,
and the man turned to Ihnenid actor
and *eked':
"Pardon toe, but could you change
me a Fisher?i
The Actor (after he had gotover
his surprise): "I.eu sorry I cannot
oblige you with the change, hot"—as
he took off his hat—"I thank you
for the cnlnpliment."
• He Saw IIt First
it. T. L'1JlKRR
ed auctioneer for the County
Sales attended to in all
e'CA4 try,. ,seven ears' ex-
Oba and
Saasokatelie-
ne
alla P. Ch,.
ddb' di Tice 13
Father Hennepin, a Jesuit priest,
le said to hn.ve been the first white
man to gaze upon Niagara Fails, in
the seventeenth Century, who has left
any account thereof,
To keep doors clog c e, g has
Moen invented that '. � ' ' to
ih aosti' airy, lbitiga,
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
.,.uunat t cop Improvement Service.)
"It:rliling the weather out is fully
s important as maiutaiuing a fire In
the furnace. In the old days when
we srurrhed our facts and froze our
•
,Icielts at the open fireplace, we went
'ii n ring In bed and breathed icicles
1,,; I ho cuvorlld.
"Wo Irate l'vrtieti to plaster our
ho•tsi, i:tsid,••und out, bat In -frame
roast rust ion we have always had d1f-
licnt)y through expansion and con-
n':, ion of preventing the plaster
-eon, cracking and scaling off.
"But the introduction of triangular
rtlnkrrreuleltt and the improve-
ment of outside plasters has correct-
ed this evil and a house now could be
tumbled end over end and Its plas-
tered wails remain Intact," says Mr.
II. S. leder, president, Canadean Steel
& Wire Co.
"Another feature is that reinforced
SI errs never has lo be painted, which
is something every home owner will
11ppreC t ale'."
filled bYlightning
o444.......,,, ...
d1� p e
geljElitAgi
1g./,/ /1
2001
1 National Crop 1 ,thruvement Service.)
In the summer time when the
thunder caps appear in the sky and
the storm sweeps down on the farm,
the farmer thinks less of his safety
than he does of his live stock.
When the stock is in the 0old dur-
ing the storm it may happen that the
animals drift against the wire fence,
which may be heavily charged with
electricity, and are shocked to dbath.
The ordinary fence built on
wooden poses should be grounded
every sixth post. by means of a wire
six or eight feet long twisted around
all of the line wires of the fence and
then st'illit'ed in 0 hole in the ground.
The hole should be dug deep enough
so that the wire conies in contact
01111 moist earth. A fence so ground-
ed offers no danger to live stock dur-
ing the thundetstnnn.
'fire wire fence built on galvanized
to'l farm: posts is already grounded
et every post and no thunderstorm
tcitlt its dist'hargn of lightning can
injure the cattle enclosed by such a
lice.
ram. for Export
JUN! 17, 1921.
mother --sharp, `childishly round, ole
bleared old eyes, all excited and anx-
ious to catch glimpses.
"They are very, curious to see
you," said Me. Palford. 'Those two
laborers are touching their hate to
vou. It will be as well to recognize
their salute."
te?
II II 111 III I�^U if111 I n,,
B : good to your.
- pipe'
re feed 1t
ORINOCO4
Our motto is "Service." If
we haven't your brand of
cigars, tobacco or cigarettes
fell us, and we will get them
for you.
W. W. ROBINSON
SEAFORTH
111 rlU pt
I'1l II
1e
NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE.
A pneumatic hammer has been de-
signed for breaking pig iron and cast
ings for remelting.
Sharp sounds are reverberated 60
tinges by a remarkable echo in a room
in an Italian Castle.
A new dish washing brush has fibre
cords on one side of its head and stiff
bristles on the other.
A c. Algerian tree yields a fruit from
which a 5uao can be obtained with the
aid of alcohol or water.
Inserting a leadpcoci1 completes a
circuit and starts tit operation a new
ti,'ttrie pencil sharpener,
The first shipbuilding plant in Jugo-
t lavto is planned
for Belgrade.
For household use a steam cooker
has been invented that blows an ill h a-
larm whistle 15 , I t t es before its
water boils away.
Italian seaplane,
edgers and mail it,
link Brindisi, Corfu,
Alexandria.
A patent has be
seat with a handl,
enable Iwo persu t,0
Several Persian ei
will tarry pa5-
a new service to
('rete, Herne and
et, granted for a
• at each side to
to carry a small
ties will lx• linked
by a motorbus passenger line, the
vehicles being rebuilt American
trucks.
Novel in the jewelry lint is a watch
11:'m that can be unfolded to display
three tiny photographs and a mirror.
Seed of a pour grade of Russian
flax when planted in Egypt hats been
`,5 nal to produce 11ax of the highest
quality.
!AQl'EUR FROM PARSLEY
Substitution, particularly in alco-
hol, is the order of the day, and even
pour France has her own "moon-
shine" Problem, says the Scientific
American. A sudden shortage of
parsley, so universally used for cook-
ing and garnishing in France, became
apparent. It was found that manu-
facturers were buying it up to make
a substitute for absinthe. As usual,
the spurious product is more power-
ful and deadly than the outlawed
green liquor.
clop, sounded the horses' hoofs along
T. Tembarom the road, and from his corner of the
• carriage Mr. Palford tried to make
(Continped from page 7) polite conversation. IFacea peered
out of the windows of the cottages
sometimes a (whole family 'group of
faces, all crowded together, eager to
look, from the mother, with a baby
in her antis to the old man or wo-
man, plainly grandfather or grand -
As Tembarom had known few per-
sons who had ever been out of Ameri-
ca, he had not heard that England
wast beautiful, and he saw nothing
which led him to suspect its charms.
London had impressed. him as gloomy,
dirty, and behind the timet„jespite its
pretensions; the country lhitruck him
as "the limit." Iiully gee! was he
going to be expected to spend his
life in this! Should he be obliged
to spend his life in it. He'd find
that out pretty quick, and then, if
there was no hard-and-fast law
,against it, him for little old New
York again, if he had to give up the
whole thing and live on ten, per, If
he had been tt certain kind of youth,
his discontent would have got the bet-
ter of him, and he night have talked
a good dual W 1llr, Palford and said
many disparaging things.
"Batt the mean was burn here," he
reflected. "1 guess he doesn't know
anything else, and thinks it's • all
tight. I've heard of English fellows
w?tu didn't like New York. He leaks
like that kind."
He had supplied himself with news -
.papers and tried to read them, 'Their
contents were as unexciting as the
rain -sodden landscape.— There were
I no head -tines likely to arrest any
Horn's attention. There was a lot
stout Parliuntent and the Cuurt, and
one of thef had a column or two
itbout what lords and Indies were du-
ing, a surt of English up -town er
down -town page.
He knew the stuff, but there was
no snap a Ill • 1
t and her
p there were no
photographs or elcscriptions of dress-
es. Gallon would have turned it
rw•
t n. fir uta could n • • •
1 have ntad
r
good if he nad dime lie better ,I,:,n
th at. He grinned t1, himself when
lie read that the king had taker a
drive :,rid that,a baby prince had .he
stat -les
"I wonder what they'd think of
the Sunday Earth," he mentally in-
quired.
He would have been much at sea
if lie had discovered what they really
Weald le.ve thought of if. 'They
p,;ss:d through smoke -vomiting nten-
ufd:tutiug towns, where he saw mune
la is seemingly- bearing bearing about unt-
1.eel!tts, but few entire people; they
whizzed smoothly past drenched su-
burbs, Wet woodlands, and endlc.is-
lonking 1,r.,wn moors covered with
dead bracken and bare and prickly
gorse. He thought these last great
,-date stretches worse than all ;he
rt'st
But the railroad carriage was lux-
eieusly t pltolster•ed and comfortable,
though one could not walls about and
stretch his legs. In the aftornu,n,
lr.
Palford ordered in tea, and niain-
ly expected hint to drink two cups
and C at thin :bread arid butter. Ile
felt inclined to laugh, though - the
tett lyes all right, and so was the
bread and butter, and he did not tail
1,1, c<npanion in any respe•:t. The
inclination to laugh was aroused by
the thought of what An Bow:c5 and
Julius would say if they could see
old '1' T. with nothing to du at 4.30
but put in cream and sugar, as though
he were at a tea-party on Fifth
Aventu.
But, gee' this rain did gi:0 hint
the Willies. If Ito was going le, be
sorry for himself, he 'nigh: begin
eight now. But he wasn't. Ile was
,wing to see this thing through.
The train had been continuing its
smooth whir through fields, wooded
lands, and queer, dead -and -alive lit-
tle villages for some time 'before it
drew up at last at a small station.
Bereft by the season of its garden
bloom and green creepers, it looked
a bare and uninviting little place.
On the two benches against the wall
of the platform a number of women
sat huddled together in the dampness.
Several of theta held children in their
laps and all stared very hard, nudg-
ing one another as he descended from
the train. A number of rustics stood
about thetom la f r
giving it
P g h + some-
what crowded air. It struck Tem -
bailee that, for an out-of-the-way
place, there seemed to be a good
litany travelers, and he wondered if
they could all be going away. He
did not know that they were the
curious element among such as lived
in the
irrtitt
ediate neighborhood
of th•
c
station and had come out merely to
see hint on his first appearance. Sev-
eral of them •touched their hats as
he went by,, and he supposed they
kriew Palford and were saluting hien.
Each of then[ was curious, but no
one was in a particularly welcoming
mood. There was, indeed, no reason
for anticipating enthusiasm. It was,
however, but human nature that the
bucolic mind should bestir itself a
little in the desire to obtain a view
of a Temple Barholm who had earn-
ed his living by blacking boots and
selling newspapers, unknowing that,
he w -at "one e' th' gentry."
When he stepped front his first-
class catlriage, Tembarom found him-
self confronted ;by a very straight,
clean -faced, and well-built young ratan
who wore a long, fawn -colored livery
coat with claret facings and silver
buttons. He touched his cockaded
hat, and at once took up the, (.,lad'
stone bags. Tenvbarom 'knew that he
was a footman because he had seen
something like, him outside restaur-
ants, theaters, and shops in New
'York, but he was not sure whether
be ought to touch his own hat or not.
He slightly lifted it from his head
to show there was no it) feeling, and
then followed him and Mr. Palford
to the carriage waiting for them. It
, was a severe but sumptuous equip-
age, and the coachman was as well
dressed and well built as the foot-
man, Tembarom took his place in
it with many mental reservations.
"What are the illustrations on the
doors?" he inquired.
"The Temple Barholm coat of
arms," Mr. Palford answered. "The
people at the station are your ten-
ants. !Mem'b'ers of the family of the
stout man with the broad hat have
lived as yeomafi farmers on your
land for three hundred years."
They went on their way, with more
rain, mote rain, more/dripping
hedges more soaked fields' nd more'
bate,
hedges,
trees. Clop, - *'lop, '
LATEST iN TYPEWRITERS.
There is a new typewriter on the
n: trlcet which sets up a whole line of
ty.:ei before printing. The impres-
n,n is made directly from the inked
type, without a ribbon, and the opera-
tion is practically silent. For a fifty-
hve letter line there are fifty-five per-
pendicttl::r rows of keys, each con-
taining forty characters, making a
!:eyboard 28 by 10 inches. The open.
ator works from left to right, depres-
sing one key in each column about
one-eighth of an inch and sometimes
setting whole words with one motion.
The line finished, a lever is pulled,
which inks the type and presses the
platen and paper against it, the lev-
er's return restoring all parts to
neutral,
I1 -
National (cop Improvement S rve
e.)
-1)111 t is Ie taft
wnY for a tersee
,•,porlinn of f anadian grain," says
Mr. C. F. MacDonald, secretary,
1)ullr.h Board of 'trade, "S ltd at no
nthor point does Canada come into
-1011 0100.0 contact with the United
'10te5.
"Millions of bu<bels of gratn are
'}lipped :,erns the mean, all of 1t
"Ong hedged to protect the operator's
well as the banks. hanks gen-
.•:1115 refuse to lend ruoney on grain
•. ttirh is net protected by hedging,
shine, e Ides not desire to
zeedit by a rise, but merely wishes
his ordinary profit of a few
ruts per bushel for handling.
"However,` it takes time 10 get his
hipnlrn1 pliri'hast'd and under way
end as tie price of the grain may
,','cline r'tiitgh in the meantime to
tvip• nal all of his profit, ht'.makes
a practice when be buy's the wheat
f: lit the country, to sell future de-
1Sr"ry rnn'traets against. it in some
gain exchange, thus one offsetting
too other,
"This method of eliminating risk
Li no: speculation, in fact It le the
i:'ry opposite, 'there is always a
1. ier',laor who is willing to under-
t:,k„ this contract, 1:11 the grain
handler who hedges insnree himself
• •,ins[ any possible loss. The grain
rlealer, the flour miller and the ex-
porter are not in a position to take
chances and that is why they take
this kind of Insurance.
"I wonder," say( he, "whether
farmers realize in shipping grain
abroad, that they are building up the
fertility of European farms instead
of their own? It would seem to me
that this grain ought to be milled on
this side of the water In our own
behalf, shipping flour Instead of
I whole grain."
•
Both the British Government and
' manufacturers are aiding China in
the establishment of aviation schools.
Tij
Dependable P
e S arlC Plugs
3
Jeep-el p
I
1'1'BLJIC ATTENTION .
We have now opened business
r. new quarters and wish
ton
solicit a fair patronage
rr,10, the general public. We
hate on hand for sale a
li,mber of good used cars of
lt„rent makes: Chevrolet,
and Fords, all of which
hove been overhauled and are
n first class order. Wehnve
deo for sale 2 rubber tired
toggle, 1 trailer. 2 motor -
Prompt attention given
to repairing of all 'malct'a 01
We carry a full line of
repair, for the followinft:—
l'hevrolet. Maxwell, Overland,
I:ray-Dort and Ford. We
carry a line of the different
bnding makes of tires and
lubes including Goodyear,
flomininn, Dunlop, Royal
Oak and Ames Holden. We
also sen coni oil In
targe and small, arhnntitiea,
Mondani and High Teat Gas-
oline. Our sign the VlS[13Ltq
GUARANTEE MEASURD
PUMP. 1
Carlin Bros.
I
I
Brown's Garage,
North Main St.
SEAFORTH.
Champion
"HeavyStone”
B-13, WM.
a
t;Y w,,,dv1,
nvtud:,. 5k:eirl
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thdt Wears for Years
A DD that touch of refinement—that tint of color
to ---that improved appearance which increases the
value of your borne, by roofing it with
rantford
It Slates
A basis for anaylsis is given below:
INITIAL COSTS OP MATERIALS—Brantford Asphalt Slates
n are" sometimes higher is initial cost for the material.
21—Nails REQUIRED—Brantford Asphalt Slates require ONLY
`
684 nails to lay a square. Brantford Asphalt Slab Slates require
ONLY 450 nails.
3—COST OF LAYING—Brantford Asphalt Slab Slates are four
on one strip—require only • ase operation in handling, one oper-
ation 1n spacing—Individual slates are 8 x 12( inches—Cut
easily, fit easily fit on. angles and bend over round eurtacea.
You eve 30 to �0 par cont. la laying.
".fto PAINT OR STAIN REQUIRED—The surface of Brant-
ford Asphalt Slates is In nature's permanent colors, (Freon and
red, unfadeable, always attractivey-requiring no stain to pro-
duce artistic effects, ho liquid coats to make them fire—resistant.
5—SAVING OF INSURANCE --Brantford Asphalt Slates are
classed asnon-combustible by are insurance companies --a
direct saving of from 10 to 20 per cent. on premiums is effected.
In certain localities fire regulations demand asbestos paper
under some roof materials. but Brantford Asphalt Slates are
tiro -resistant and are immune from special regulations.
bCOST OF REPAIRS—From the day they are laid Brantford
Asphalt Slate roofs show almost I00 per cent of the origiml roof
untouched. Brantford Asphalt Slates do not curl, split, crack
or rot. Complete protection and permanent protection are
built into Brantford Asphalt Slate Roofs.
There are Brantford Roofs in your neighborhood.
Look one up. You will be convinced that our roofs
embody all the good features of other roofing without
any weaknesses.
Brantford Roofing Co., Limited
Head Office and Factory - Brantford, Canada.
Branches at Toronto, Montreal, Halifax and Winnipeg 119
For Sale by Henry Edge
and N. Cluff & Sons.
"It' good
aticco"
,y
LL Plug,
cents
V0U'LL say it's
ayd and you'll
ell
appreciate the
value you get in
the big econdnlical
pug.
A
1
S►�K �G mils
5
Western University
London, . Ontario
Summer School
Arts and Sciences
July 4th to August 12th
For information and Calendar write
K. P. R. NEVILLE, Registrar
e