HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-12-08, Page 6r4"
iR, F. J. R. FORSTER
ekq Ear, Nose and Throat
lvAldo in Medicine, University of
101,
assistant New York Ophthal-
g>Etd Aural Institute, Moorefield's
and Golden Square Throat Hos-
'a, London, Eng. At Commercial
, Seaforth, third Wednesday in
ch month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Waterloo Street, South, Stratford.
babe 267, Stratford.
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
James, Proctor & Redfern
Limited.
Se Toronto 8t.
Bridges Pavements, ora
Arbitrations. xs
MIR FEES --U n old out of the
°°r
climb. Cao.
terworks. Sewer,
AIM Systeme, Incinerators. Factories.
Litigation.
,Phone Adel. 1094. Coble; "JPRCO"Toronto
Q see Y P
money we save
res
MERCHANTS CASULTY 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.,
8778-50 Toronto, Ont.
n LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and
Rotary Public. Solicitor for the Do-
Minion
in
Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to
BEST & BEST
Barristers, Solicitors, Convey-
ancers and Notaries Public, Etc.
Office in the Edge Building, opposite
The Expositor Office.
PROUDFOOT. KILLORAN ANiD
HOLMES
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Poli-
tic.
ubtie. etc. Money to lend. In Seaferth
ea Monday of each week. Office in
£Idd Block. W. Proudfoot, K.C., J.
L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN. V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
airr College, and honorary member of
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary College. Treats diseases of
all domestic animals by the most mod -
ma principles. Dentistry and Milk
/ever a specialty. Office opposite
Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth.
LA orders left at the hotel will re-
ndes prompt attention. Night calk
teaived at the office
JOHN GRIEVE. V. S.
Honor graduate of -Ontario Veterin-
ary College. All diseases of domestic
animals treated. Calls promptly at.
treaded 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
C. J. W. HARN. M.D.C.M.
426 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 Surgeons
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, Seafortit
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 is
Chicago Clinical School of Chicago;
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lon-
don, England. Office -Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5,
Night calla answered from residence,
Victoria street, Seafortk. -
dere and bow beta DPW/
eiaeet can Its down at nicht
the weigh ties *Wrote 1114 at
el three pouniki minas A
e }wood newsh ip new Wedscroon
district and already. ddtteral want to m
try it. I feel so I ow* the new •�j,
life ea it were. I like to tell °there. " a
= 'BRIGGS' ASTHMA REMEDY' a
51.50 per bottle. Money back if not F.
▪ satisfied For sale at Limbach% Drug =
▪ Store. or by mail from H. T. Briggs
Whitby, Ont 5861-2C ..
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AUCTIONEERS
THOMAS BROWN
Licensed auctioneer for the counties
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence
arrangements for sale dates can be
made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth
or The Expositor Office. Chargee mod
*rate and satisfaction guaranteed.
JAMES WATSON
Shirt Street - Seaforth
Agent forSinger Sewing
Machines, and General In-
surance Agent.
0
000000000000
o W. T.BOX&CO. O
O Embalmer and O
O Funeral Directors O
0 H. C. BOX 0
0 Holder of Government '0
0 Diploma and License 0
Charges moderate O
I / Flowers furnished on short O
R. T. LUKER
Licensed auctioneer for the County
Oj liittrbls. Sales attended to is all
Parteof the county. Seven years' ex-
p,ifhnCe in Manitoba, end Saakatcha-
15Mair.. Terms,'reatonable. Phone No.
,1V r 11, Exeter Centralia P. 0., R.
No; 1. Orders left at The Huron
kat 01110, Saafar* promptly
r i►i i'tltor
icy o 9 qA Mr o ,Arg'
rlcuiture 'i a pa[►$' is entitled
apex n,.h*nada,'d the au -
'there being essrs.. J. A. .Allen and
J. ilinnis Smith, "respectively, Anial
Pathologist at the Fox Resoarehh Sa-
tion at Charlestown, i' E.l., and o-
chesntiat at the Research Station at
Hull, Quebec. The subjects, dealt with
include the construction, the manage-
ment and sanitation of ranches, the
diseases of foxes, and the scientific
nutrition and the feeding of,foxes.
It was not until as late sg, 191.0
that their fox -breeding ttecamrec-
ognized industry in this country. In
that year a pair of foxes sold fpr
$3,000, and in 1913 a pair sold. for
$20,000, but the top price was reach-
ed when $35,000 was paid for excep-
tional specimens. At the height of
the boon, speculators took options
on unborn pups. The war brought
an end to such practices, and the
industry became stabilized, To -day,
states the bulletin, the market value
of foxes per pair ranks from $500 and
upwards, according to quality and
last year over 600 pair of live foxes
were exported from Prince Edward
Island, and that 6,000 pelts were sold,
the average price of which was $276
per skin.
While to Prince Edward Island
must be credited the inception of fox
breeding as a commercial prospect.
the business has spread until ranches
O now exist in Ontario, ,Quebec and in
notice. several other provinces. The bul-
0 Night Calls Day Calls O letin constitutes a guide to the ac -
0 Phone 175 Phone 4E O ceps principles of fox ranching. and
0 0 0 o 0..c. 0 0 o 0 0,0 0 indicates how some of the pitfalls
incidental to the business may be
0000 000000000 avoided.
0 S. T. HOLMES 0
rflte
0 Funeral Director and 0
0 Licensed Embalmer 0
0 Undertaking Parlors in 0
0 Beattie Block, opposite The 0
0 Expositor Office. Residence 0
0 Goderich St., opposite Dr. 0
0 Scott's. O
0 Flowers furnished on short 0
0 notice. 0
0 Phone Night or Day 119 0
00000000e 0000
GRAND TRUNK sYs ".:i
TRAIN SERVICE TO TORONTO
Daily Except Sunday
Leave Goderich . 6.00 a.m. 2.20 p.m.
Leave Clinton ... 6.26 a.m. 2.52 p.m.
Leave Seaforth .. 6.41 amm. 8.12 p.m.
Leave Mitchell .. 7.04 a.m. 8.42 p.m.
Arrive Stratford 7.30 a.m. 4.10 p.m.
Arrive Kitchener 8.20 am. 5.20 pm
Arrive Guelph 8.45 a.m. 5.50 p.m.
Asrlve Toronto ..10.10 a.m. 7.40 pm.
RETURNING
Ledve Toronto 6.50 a.m.; 12. 55 p.m
and 6.10 p.m.
Parlor Cafe car Goderich to To-
ronto on morning train and Toronto
to Goderich 6.10 p.m. train.
Parlor Buffet car Stratford to To-
ronto on afternoon train.
STRATFORD, ONT.
The leading business school
of Western Ontario with Com-
mercial, Shorthand and Tele-
graphy Departments.
Graduates are assisted to
good positions. Students may
enter at any time.
Get our free catalogue now.
D. A. McLACHLAN,
Principal.
CREAM WANTED CREAM
Ship by Express; send by our
cream drawers, or deliver your cream
to the Seaforth Creamery.
We are determined to give our
Patrons better service than ever.
Watch our prices, consistent with
our accurate weights and tests, and
consider the many advantages of hav-
ing
aving a thriving dairy industry in your
district.
Do not ship your Cream away to
other Creameries ; we will guarantee
you as good prices here and our very
best services.
Write, or call in our cream drawers
and we will send you cream cans.
When in town, visit our Creamery,
which we want also to be your
Creamery. We are proud of on:
plant
THE SEAFORTH CREAMERY CO.
C A. Barber, Manager.
2884-tf
Three Years "Over There"
Two With "The Mounties"
Sitting astride a "Mountie's" horse
he was as ane a specimen of man-
hood as one could meet. Six feet tall,
bronzed, muscular and keen. he made
an athlete of no mina ability. Three
years in the war hnd seemingly made
"a man out of him," but It took a
had cold to show thnt the war had
far-reaching and terrible effects.
One day he 'played and worked
hard, then went for a dip in the lake.
A tittle cold came on, then got worse
end worse and finally -consumption.
Ills three yearsi 'Over there," and two
spent in the "Mounties." have given
him a fighting spirit.
During these last eight months the
foe has not killed his hope, he,s Buil
hoping that God's freak air and -man's
skill at the Muskoka hospital for
Consumptives ran retain something.
of his old manhood for active service
yet.
Only with the help of many warm
friends can this great work he carp
pled on. Money la urgently needed.
Contributions may be sent to Hon.
W. A. Charlton, 223 College Street.
Toronto.
sI'ro,u tb��i,A"2?{rar iY•i�t �L7f�ti,�rf ',A.
LLOYD GEORGE AND THE
BISHOP
Lloyd George tells this one on him-
self: Some years ago he was an-
nounced to speak in reply to a well
knower Bishop who had the week be-
fore expressed some rather unpopular
views regarding Welsh Disestablish-
ment. The chairman was a deacon
of strong convictions but very meagre
sense of humor. Presenting his bro-
ther Welshman he said, "Ladies and
gentleman, I have great pleasure in
introducing to you a gentleman of
distinction, the H onorable Lloyd
George, who has come to reply to
the remarks the Bishop of St. Asaph
made in this hall last week. In my
opinion the Bishop is one of the great-
est liars in creation, but thank heav-
en -I say, thank heavenl-we have
his match here to -night!"
IT PAYS
It is not easy -
To apologize.
To begin over.
To admit error.
To be unselfish.
To take advice.
To be charitable.
To be considerate.
To endure success.
To keep on trying.
To avoid mistakes.
To forgive and forget.
To keep out of the rut.
To make the most of a little.
To maintain a high standard.
To recognize the silver lining.
To shoulder a deserved blame.
But it always pays.
WWI to qh ,1)346
l m ,1.ea all ° the,fee they Chart,
Teaser,' eIfec 'ad Coati"
!suitable for fia$ehing• thouena+p d.
' Meets, the relative virtues_' -of lightt.
and heavy grain feeding, methods of
feeding, preparing steers for ship-
` ment, and the requirements, of export
steers.
FINISHING BEEF CATTLE IN
ONTARIO
"A close study of the beef cattle
feeding' and market situation in
Canada, and particularly in the pro-
vince of Ontario, reveals a few facts
of economic importance to the beef
cattle industry which we, as'live stock
farmers, cannot afford to overlook,"
states Messrs. G. W. Muir and S. J.
Chagnon, of the Division of Animal
Industry, in their introduction to
Pamphlet No. 21, on the Winter Feed-
ing of Beef Cattle in Ontario. It is
hardly necessary to state that the
pamphlet is a continuation of the
series on the feeding and finishing of
beef cattle, each covering a different
election of the country, now being is-
sued by the Experimental Farms
branch of the Dominion Department
of Agriculture.
Before going into the subject in
detail, the pamphlet points out certain
weak spots in the live stock industry
with the object of bringing them home
to farmers and breeders and with the
idea of effecting improvement. These
weak spots are six in number as
fellows: That the percentage of an-
imals marketed between December
and April, inclusive, is relatively
small; that finished animals always
demand a premium - particularly
during the last and first four months
of the year; that owing to poor
breeding, poor rearing, or lack of
finish -or to a combination. of all
three -a large percentage of the
steers marketed do not command top
prices nor hold the trade; that the
Canadian public discriminates against
frozen beef, which means that were
the markets kept regularly supplied
with fresh beef better prices would
prevail; that relatively few export
steers are sufficiently well "finished
for the trade, which indicates that
proper finishing is necessary if this
department is to prove profitable;
that sufficient use of the beef bul-
lock as a medium for the utilization
of rough feeds is not made.
Four charts are contributed by the
Live Stock Branch to show the trend
of prices and receipts in each month
for the last four years. These in a
measure emphasize the statements
previously made. The pamphlet,
which can be obtained free of cost
by applying to the Publications
Branch, Ottawa, then proceeds to
tell of the proper type of steer to
feed, the value and cost of dehorning,
as proved by experiments at the
different Dominion Farms, the, age of
steers to feed, the relative profit de-
rived by steers kept and fed for less
;ars +ii'.& . f't "
CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM
In the opinion of a college presi-
dent the average American is unable
to name thirty conspicuous figures in
history. however, any kid in the
country cad give you a complete list
of the movie d,ars.-New Orleans
Times -Picayune.
Someone has said that petrified re-
ligious institutions are to nations and
races what hardening of the arteries
is to the individual. Just now we suf-
fer less from petrified churches than
we do from over.jazzed churches. -
Toledo Blade.
A Florida husband killed his wife
because she couldn't play the piano.
But then maybe she insisted on bang-
ing away at it. -Detroit Free Press.
Another fine thing about being a
nobody is that nobody will expose your
weakness in posthumous letters.-
Binghampton.,Sun.
A member of the Wanderers team
writes to ask us whether grass -hopper
glands wouldn't be a great aid to foot
hall players. Help! -Halifax Herald.
The success of prohibition must
largely depend upon a conscientious
enforcement of the law, and Mr. Ra-
ney has been the subject of many at-
tacks by wet opponents and would-be
law breakers. He is entitled to the
support of the people of the province
for courageously administering the
law so that public opinion is coming
to' realize more clearly the benefits
to be derived front the enforcement
of the Ontario Temperance Act. -Ot-
tawa Citizen.
B. Law. Formerly L. George.
Business as usual. -London Free
Press.
The British Labor Party has been
broadening out and taking in men
who are difficult to place under the
ordinary labor man's conception of
"workers." It is to be noted that
Labor is now making political gains.
-Manitoba Free Press.
It is high time that all of us paid
more attention to the building up of
the little town and less to making
the overgrown city larger. -Rural
New Yorker.
"Repartee" is the heroic side of a
conversation that a fellow relates to
his wife. -N. O. Times -Pica 'une.
Originally men wore robes like the
women and the introduction of
breeches, often of the most gorgeous
materials and colors and tied with
decidedly feminine ribbons at the
knee, marked the first step towards
the modern trousers. There was a
time when petticoat breeches were the
fashion, puffed and slashed out to an
immoderate degree. -Maritime Mer-
chant.
HOW NEW YORK IS SUPPLIED
WITH PURE MILK.
Few city dwellers have the faintest
conception as to why they can so con-
fidently open a milk bottle and drink
its contents without fear of imbibing
disease germs, and as to what hap-
pens between the time the milk leaves
the cow and reaches their table.
Some extremely illuminating facts
were learned at Homer, N. Y., a vil-
lage about thirty miles southeast of
Syracuse, where the pasteurizing
station of the Clover Farms Corpora-
tion, from which comes the milk that
is found in all the baby feeding sta-
tions in New York.
The writer reached the Homer milk
station at .about 8 o'clock in the
morning, while the pasteurization
process was in full swing. The plant
itself is a model of sanitary construc-
tion, and its walls and floors and
equipment are maintained at the ulti-
mate maximum of cleanliness. The
floors are under a constant flow of
water. The workers are all dressed
in clean white uniforms from head
to foot and are under rigid regula-
tions as to personal cleanliness.
Trucks bearing milk from the dairy
farmers were arriving in a steady
stream at the station and two men
were carrying the full cans of milk
from the unloading platform to the
test room. Here one of the white
clad workers was moving about tak-
ing samples of milk from the cans
with a long narrow glass dipper and
pouring them into small bottles, which
were immediately sealed and taken
in groups to the testing laboratory in
the building adjoining the pasteuriza-
tion plant.
Everry� day the milk of each supply-
ing fa7'mer is tested for butter fat
content, and once each week each
farmer's milk is tested for bacteria,
always on different days that the
farmer may not know when his milk
is being tested.
Immediately after the taking of
the test samples, the mijk was pour-
ed into the weighing tank, for the
farmer is paid for his milk by the
pound. The empty cans were placed
on a conveyer and transported into
the next room, where they were thor-
oughly cleansed and sterilized before
being returned to the farmer.
Once weighed the milk is released
into the pasteurization equipment. It
is conveyed through pipes in a series
of coils of graduated temperature
until it reaches a temperature of at
least 192 degrees, it having been
.scientifically determined that all dis-
ease germs are killed hr. liquids
which are maintained at this tem-
perature for thirty minutes. The
automatically regulated heat of the
coils at the Homer station on this
pa'rticular morning ranged bettween
143 and 146 degrees, well over the
minimum.
From these coils the milk passes
by force of gravity through three
perpendicular, cylindrical tanks in
'Saki td
itattl Froin a temperature si g
,tdB than 142.deggr�oees to: belay/At,.
freezing point, Se tlwrti the malt Reel
is down to approximaliely $4 tlegre , W
when it leaves on the last lap of
journey to the bottles being piped
from the cooling to *the filling room
where the bottling take place.
The ,outstanding feature of the fill-
ing room is the bottle washing ma-
chine, the latest development in the
milk industry and a marvellous ma-
chine, just recently installed. There
are, it is said, but three of these ma-
chines now in use in the East -one
in Brooklyn, one in Philadelphia and
that at Homer.
It takes a bottle Just twenty-three
minutes to pass through this machine
and every moment of its journey is
devoted to cleansing, sterilization and
the removal of the last possible atom
of impurity 'from its surface.
It is a scientific fact that a one -
minute soaking in a 2 per cent, solu-
tion of caustic soda will kill every
disease Germ. In this ,bottling ma-
chine, the bottle passes through three
separate 4 per cent, caustic soda so-
lutions at temperatures ranging from
160 to 185 degrees, and it takes the
bottle 13 minutes to pass through
the solutions.
After it has passed from the last
solution, the next .ten minutes are
given over to brutihing, washing and
rinsing it inside and out by means of
streams of water of graduated heat
it is cooled down to the proper tem-
perature to receive the milk. The
machine cleans 120 bottles per minute.
Thoroughly cleaned, the bottles move
on a conveyance to the filling device,
a wheel -like contrivance which grips
the bottle, fills it and places it on a
sealing device where the bottle is
capped and covered in a twinkling,
less than a second after it has been
filled. The bottles are then pieced in
cases on another conveyor which
moves them to the loading platform
where they are loaded directly into
the railroad cars, iced and sent on
their way to New York City. And
it is the boast of this station that its
pasteurized milk averages a bacteria
count of about 3,000, whereas the
legal maximum is 30,000 for Grade A
Milk.
MADAME AND THE MONKEY
GLAND
Among all the folks who have been
trying to obtain a second edition of
youth through the grafting of some
mysterious gland, I do not think that
there' has been one woman, and this
in spite of the fact that old age is
the classical bugbear of woman rath-
er than man. She who is supposed to
dread the coming of wrinkles and
grey hairs more than any man ever
did, yet holds back from the remedy,
-and why? Not from any fear of
suffering, for she wilt submit cheer-
fully to the torture of having her
face skinned and its contours "lifted;"
nor because she shrinks from any
association with monkeys, since she
festoons herself most contentedly
with their fur; but rather because
her craving for youth is not as a
man's craving, writes Sylvania in
"The Sphere."
Woman's longing to remain young
becomes most acute when she finds
her first white hairs, and sees for the
first time that the mischevious crow
has left his tell-tale footprints at the
corners of her eyes; man's only begins
when a round of golf takes it out of
him unduly, and he notices that the
young men call him "sir." She prizes
youth when she sees it first begin to
slip away from her; he seldom misses
it until it has gone. To a woman the
loss of her youth means the loss of
her looks. It does not worry her in
the least if she cannot walk as far as
she used to do, of play as strenuous
a game of tennis; she is only concern-
ed with the fact that her cheeks have
lost their bloom and her hair it col-
or, the rest does not matter. And
when the beauty specialists and the
masseuse, and the rest of the experts
have done their best, or their worst,
she resigns herself, more or less, to
the inevitable. Besides, she may
have the consolation of being a grand-
mother, and only a woman knows the
joy of that. Being a grandfather is
by no means the same thing; he is
invariably either suspected of spoil-
ing the children or considered unrea-
sonablyhard on them, and like the
father, in times of domestic crises, is
made to fee uncommonly in the way.
But grandmothers do not as a rule'
labor under any of these disabilities.
A grandmother is a precious posses-
sion; her advice is sought and her
opinions deferred to, and when the
measles or whooping cough descend
upon the household, not even psycho-
analysis and Montessori methods can
stank against her, and the knowledge
that this is worth all the rejuvenation
in the world.
Age brings far more compensations
to a woman than to a man, in spite
of papular belief to the contrary;
when a man grows old he probably
has to give up doing most, if snot all,
of the things which to him make life
,r (ra einh e
as CMihit el t0
Tlwre its ti'w wth
a
so Good Jo
a eou9h
SOLD IN SEAFORTH BY. E.UMBACH.
worth living, while to the normal wo-
man the things which demand merely
physical strength for their accomp-
lishment will always'take a second-
ary place. Loss of power, whether
physical or mental, affects the aver-
age man more strongly than the
average woman. You will not often
find a woman who breaks her heart
because she has to retire from busi-
ness, yet it happens often enough in
the case of men. You cannot gain-
say nature indefinitely, and the ordin-
ary normal woman would never
-change a happy grandmotherhood for
a second helping at the banquet of
youth -though probably she would
never admit it; which explains why
men • are the principal clients of the
gland -doctors. Incidentally, of course
second helpings seldom taste so good
as the first.
DoYou Remember
Mu Pictures?'c4%.
IN52500pru�s
NAME TM PICTURES THESE SCENES ARE MON
CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S Picture Plays have made
millions laugh. He is particularly well known and
appreciated in Canada. But whether or not you have
.11 the famousCharlie Chapin* Nn•ehst Ybeing shown demeans.*demeans.*tie sentry, ow. you clever emoult to find the
eee the pima. hem
wbirh the enc re .z the dabs aro taken? If y.s as YO . ter stare - the
Manua ef $2500.00 is cash and p.mc..
HOW TO SOLVE IT.
The .biers of this bonnet is to Ming to your rated a lee of themon
pmpdr of the foram Charlie Chi settee piny.. Tie S Qaut them
right e taken tight out of five of Ai! great Omens. In sir to kelp yea
name then cowed the artist in. pot Moo these ase dogmas. .f the prys
thanl.e u lett',., Utmr.ebte ghee cher•. pts then ism the
tight erde yon .11 haw t IM IS
Scwas
pus �plays i
a Not trailer with
the envier
5ppea*iaa at Cassia nes, do arca at the Wt .31
Favorite Charts
Chapin Factures
A Day's Pluw..
TheSh.:ile
11m Admatower.
A aibSh...
J.h.
I. of� P�en1Yh,
EA De Siert`
mM Tedi
A Nemo.
Th. Rai.
Pe. Dv. The Iii.
•
lot Prize
FORD
SEDAN
These
Magnificent
PrizesGiven
For Best
Correct o r
Nearest Cor-
rect Replies.
Value $785
PRIZE LIST
1st PRIZE FORD SEDAN
Value - - - - $785.00
2nd Prize Ford Touring
Car, value - - $445.00
3rd prize $200.00 7th prize $25.00
4th prize $100.00 8111 prize $15.00
5th prize $75.00 9th prise $10.00
6th prize $50.00 10th prize $8.00
Ilth prize $7.00
12th to 15th prize $5.00
16th to 18th prize $4.00
19th to 25th prize $2.00
Next 25 prizes.. $1.00
$500.00 in extra cash prized will afro
be awarded to entrants to this contest
THIS GREAT CONTEST IS ABSOLUTELY
FREE. SEND YOUR ANSWER TO -DAY.
great contest is nothing more nor ler than
a pent advertising introduction rasitpaign.
Itob.dately free e, It ' being goon.
ducted by the Continental Publishing Co., LintEed,
one of the largest and best (mown publishing hours
Cando, end ho. the endorsement of the prat
Charlie Chaplin studio....
CHARLIE CHAPLIN HIMSELF
iS HONORARY JUDGE!
Frankly this contest is intended to further adver-
Cadotised introduce EVERYWOMAN'S WORLD,
n
s Greatest Magazine, bt you do not have
to buy anything. eubrribe to anything or spend
cent of your money in Order to enter and win a prize.
HOW TO SEND YOUR ANSWERS.
Write the names of the five pictures you think
these scenes are from, usingn side of the paper
only. Put your full name and address (stating M
Mn. Mr. or Master) ' the lower right hand
roma. Use a separate .heet for anything else you
.i.11 to write.
Mr.Chaplin u Honorary uge, and threein-
depeent ludo , having no connection with this
company, wilt award the prizes, and the answer
2nd • Prize
Value $445.00
•
g▪ aining 250 pointe wt11 win First prize. You.B
get 20 pointe for each picture yen name eoneecdy.
40 points will he awarded for the renew!
punctuation. spelling, etc., of your answer, Ill •
points for hondwriting and 100 points for fulfilling
imple condition of the mea. This condition is
only dot you assist in this tdvertising cam -
paten by Mowing a copy of EVERYWOMAN'S
WORLD,- Coad', Greatest Magazine (which
we will send you post paid) to fast. tour friends e "
neiahbows M Will ppreciate this really worth
w e Conadiron pohlicacton and want it to come to
them every month The contest will dote at 6 p.m.
June 30th 1923, hnmediarely after which the .araee
will be fudged and prizes awarded. We reeve the
right to alter the qualifying conditions from time to
time, allay appear necessary, though of course spy
such chop II not affect anyone_ who hos already
modified their entry. Don't delay sending y.,ir sumo.
This announcement may not appear in this paper spin
Address Charlie Chaplin Contest Editor. Coothraml
PubEsbing Co., Ltd., Dept 217 Tweet°, Out.
Ford
Touring,
1
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�y F+�'.��'�a K!'14 - •au$In :M rens `e'3.