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The Huron Expositor, 1927-05-13, Page 6• Sid to it al PRAY Of from 1.1 moot. , to 3 terloo Street South, Brat O,:2674. Strafford, 9 - c7'a xc e tar P.M °O eoranaeX dei orth , . Monduy LEGAL le e, 91 JOHN L HUGGAED Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, Stn.th, Out, Beattie Block Q. atalrIng It is possible eat i!te ere lerrig men will no lunger need to ahav ' every ;morning, and v oz'<1en villi have no Mono 'worries with bobbed hair. As a resailt of experiments carried out by an English naturalist, the growth of the lar can be regulated. During experiments a strain of mice were produced whose heads became bald in sixteen days. A few days later they lost the fur on their backs and a little later all their hair had gone. Another scientist has been making discoveries about the life of a hair. He kept a record of one of his hairs for seven years, and found that it grew on only 264 days in a year. In sumrner he found that hairs get a quarter of an inch longer than in winter. R. S. BAYS Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary: Public. Solicitor for the Dominion Bank. Office in rear of the Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Money to lean. BEST & BEST Barristers, Solicitors, Conveyan- cers and Notaries Public, Etc. �Thcee in the Edge Building, opposite Expositor Office. VETERINARY JOHN GRIEVE, V.S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic aat- tended to and charges moderate.mals treated. Calls Vt- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich Street, one door east of Dr. Mackay's Office, Sea - forth. placing, a little of odic batter in tb,e mte:-''a tins, then a spoonful' of jaxn or r,karnmlad'e, , then a 'little ¢Wore batter. For a quickly made desert, place a little of the jam in the bottom of the we11-,greased muffin tins, place batter on top, and when baked, turn out on to dessert plates and serve with a hot pudding •sauce. Cornmeal Muffins. Two cups flour, 1 cup cornmeal, 1-2 cup granulated sugar, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 2 eggs, 3 tablespoons butter, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 3-4 cup of sweet milk. Mix method of No. 2, beating yolks and whites of eggs together. Bake in a fairly hot oven for twenty min- utes. MISTAKES MOTHERS MAKE IN CARE OF LITTLE ONES Many mothers give their children solid foods at too early an age and say proudly that their babies "eat everything that grown-up people do." Such a course is almost certain to hring on indigestion and lay the foun- dation of much ill -health for the lit- tle one. Other mothers administer harsh, nauseating purgatives which in real- ity irritate and injure the delicate stomach and bowels and at the same time cause the chilldren to dread all medicine. Absolutely no meat should be given to a child until it reaches the age of 18 months, and then only if approved by the doctor. For medicine, all strong, disagreeable oils and powders should be abandoned and Baby's Own Tablets given instead. Baby's Own Tablets are especially made for little ones. They are plea- sant to take and can be given with absolute safety to even the new-born babe. They quickly banish constipa- tion and indigestion, break up colds and simple fevers and make the cut- ting of teeth easy. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A. R. CAMPBELL, V.S. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, University of Toronto. All diseases of domestic animals treated by the most modern principles. Charges reasonable. Day or night calls promptly attended to. Office on Main Street, Hensall, opposite Town Hall. Phone 116. MEDICAL DR. W. C. SPROAT Graduate of Faculty of Medicine, University of Western Ontario, Lon- don. Member of College of Physic- ians and Surgeons of Ontario. Office in Aberhart's Drug Store, Main St., Seaforth. Phone 90. ALL -YEAR USE OF CAR STABILIZES INDUSTRY Haw's the automobile business—is a question asked to -day on most ev- ery side, indicating that the motor car industry is coming to be recog- nized as a business barometer. The answer is the automobile busi- ness is good and will continue to be good just so long as people demand individual transportation. The motor car industry has pass- ed from a seasonable business to one of twelve months. This has in a large measure been brought about by the equalization in price between the open and closed type of machines as well as the more general use of the automobile during all seasons of the year. Perfection of the car has made is almost as easy to operate during the coldest months as during the Sum- mer. Starters have been built better, battery capacity to turn them over has been increased, devices for pre- heating the gas before it passes into the cylinders have been perfected and accessories have been devised which will' keep the motor warm almost in- definitely. These things are of but recent perfection, but before their advent the use of an automobile during the Winter weather was somewhat of a job. Also the closed type machine has afforded such protection from the weather as to make it comfortable to be out in at most any time. Perfec- tion of braking systems has made skidding on slippery streets, even without the use of chains, almost a memory. DR. R. P. I. DOUGALL Honour graduate of Faculty of Medicine and Master of Science, Uni- versity of Western Ontario, London. Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Office, 2 doors east of post office. Phone 56, H nsa1, Ontario. 3004-tf DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY Bayfield. Graduate Dublin University, Ire- land. Late Extern Assistant Master Rotunda Hospital for Women and Children, Dublin. Office at residence lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons. Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m.; Sundays, 1 to 2 p.m. 2866-26 DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence Goderich Street, east of the Methodist church, Sea - forth.. 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. Ke THAN 50 YELArlf. RECIPES Plain Muffins. Two cups flour, 31-2 teaspoons bak- ing powder, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 3 table- spoons sugar, 1 cup milk, 1 egg, 2 tablespoons 'butter. If sour milk is used, spoon baking soda, and spoons baking powder. Method No. 1. Following is the method used for true muffins, which seldom contain a large amount of either butter or sug- ar, and seldom more than one or two eggs: Mix and sift flour, baking powder, sugar and salt. Beat the egg thor- oughly; add milk. Make a depression in the flour; pour in milk and egg, then melted butter. Stir as little as possible in mixing; turn into well - greased muffin pans. Bake in a mod- erate oven for 35 minutes. Tempera- ture 350 to 375 deg. F. Note: Too much mixing will make the muffins coarse and full of large holes. DR. IL 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 ; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon- don, England. Office—Back of Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5. Night calls answered from residence, Victoria Street, Seaforth. use 1-4 tea - only 2 tea - DR. J. A. MUNN Successor to Dr. R. R. Ross Graduate of Northwestern Univers- ity, Chicago, Ill. Licentiate Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office over Sill's' Hardware, Main St., Seaforth. Phone 151. DR. F. J. BECCHELY Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office over W. R. Smith's Grocery, Main Street, Sea - forth. Phones: Office, 185 W.;esi- dence, 185 J. AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties of Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale dates be by calling np phone 212, Sea - forth, or The Expositor Office. Charg- es moderate, and satisfaction guaran- teed. Method No. 2. VThen a richer muffin is made—con- taining a larger quantity of sugar and butter, and several eggs, the method employed for cake mixing is some- times used: Mix and sift flour, baking powder and salt three times. Cream the but- ter, gradually add the sugar, heating between each addition; add well beaten eggs or egg yolks, then add sifted flour mixture and milk alter- nately. If eggs are beaten separately fold in the stiffly beaten whites at the last. Note: When baking soda is used, it should be sifted with the flour. Many of the submitted recipes stated that the soda should be stirred int.) the sour milk. As the acid in the sour milk acts with the soda to pro- duce carbon dioxide—which lightens the muffms—and as this reaction starts as soon as liquid is combined with the acid and the soda, the soda should be sifted with the flour instead of adding it to the sour milk. One easy vary the muffins by sub- stituting bran, whole wheat or Gra- ham flour, corn meal, Roman meal, oattmeal or other cereals, riced po- i -toes or boiled rice for a portion of white flour called for in the stand- ard recipe. Equal quantities of white flour and substitute will produce ex- cellent results. The flavor of the muffins may be varied by adding spice -a, cocoa or chocolate, cum -sesta, peel, cocoanut, nuts,dates—s2eweil, drained and chop- ped figs or prunes, berries—either fresh or canr*d and drained from their syrup, jams and marmalades. For Bran Muffins. Use slightly less liquid; use five tablespoonfuls butter (melted) and, if desired, use 6 tablespoonfuls of mo- lasses instead of the sugar, and re- duce the amount of milk to 3-4 cup. Dates are a pleasing addition to bran muffins. "Surprise" Muffins may be made by heo.. cake in air -tight, waxC -pap This means 1101140 superior keeping Ask for ROYAL Yeast Cakes and all substitutes. thie ter tired to his own room and fell asleep. He remembered no more for some days. But the police independently dug up a couple of curious facts. One of them was that the morning after the quarrel Dr. Houck went to a drug store which he patronized and tried to burn in the furnace the torn nightgown of his wife. But the clerk became suspicious and rescued the garment for the police. There was a stain on it which sug- gested blood, but an analysis showed it to be something else. Then the maid who used to go every morn- ing to the Houck home testified that on the morning of December 15th, she found Dr. Houck sitting alone, and looking as though he had been crying. She went into the kitchen and soon afterward the doctor fol- lowed her, picked up a wastepaper basket and rushed out. He seemed greatly excited. The police learned that the waete basket contained the nightgown and kimona of his wife. They gleaned these facts while both Dr. Houck and his wife were, miss- ing and where only their small child remained or the little family. Cir- culars were despatched to police chiefs, and in four days Houck was located in Hornell, N.Y., where ho was raving in the streets only partly clothed. It was learned that he had taken a train from Washington to Buffalo and put up at a hotel. Before leav- ing for his pilgrimage to Hornell he had smashed all the furniture in the room. But he said that he remem- bered not a thing after he had taken the sleeping draught. He did riot know where his wife was and did not seend ti care. "She's gone away and I'm glad she has," he said, callously. Ile said that she would be sure to come back, and that she had left the child behind to give her the excuse four returning. Another time he suggested that his wife's body should be looked for in the Tidal Basin- But though the police continued their search months elapsed Lefore the body was found. Then it turned up in the Potomac River. It was fully clothed and its condition did not suggest that Mrs. Houck had been either beaten or strangled be- fore hring thrown in. This means that after the quarrel Mrs. Houck got up and dressed herself. If she feared further violence from her husband, if she ietw that he was gong out of his mind, would she leave her infant son at the mercy of a maniac and seek safety alone? OSCAR HLOPP Honor Graduate Carey Jones' Na- tional School of Auctioneering, Chi- cago. Special course taken in Pure Bated Live Stock, Real Estate, Mer- chandise and Farm Sales. Rates in keeping with prevailing market. Sat- ffaetion assured. Write or vire, ? ear Klopp, Zurich, Ont. Phone, 18 93. 286642 He Suffered With His Back and Lumbago ONTARIO RETIRED FARMER SI'EAKS HIGHLY OF DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. Mr. John Bloom Says They Acted On Him Like Magic. Toronto, Ont., May 12th—(Special). Writing to us a few weeks ago for a sample of our Dodd's Antiseptic Healing Ointment, Mr. J. Bloom, who resides at 46 King Edward Avenue, says: "About eighteen months ago I took six boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills and they sure did me a heap of good. I saw your coupon for a free trial of ointment and thought if that acted with as muoh magic as your Dodd's Kidney Pills, I would like a sample box." Dodd's Kidney Pills act directly on the kidneys. They have become a family remedy all over the woeld be- cause people have tried them and found them good. They are purely and simply a kidney remedy. They help rheumatism, lumbago, lame back, heart disease and urinary troubles. Because all of these are either kidney diseases or are caused by the kidneys failing to do their work. Dodd's Kidney Pills can be obtained from Druggists everywhere, or The Dodds Medicine Company Limited, To- ronto 2, Ontario. u. T. LUKER Lieensed auctioneer for the County HuronSales attended to In all parts of the county, Seven years' ex- Aitt'lenco to Manitoba and Saskatebe- Wal , aims reasonable. Phone No. 1 a :r' 11, ' cater, Centralia P.O., R.R. It ii i.. Orders left at The }broil Ex - gttot' Office, Seaforth, promptly at- tetlded. , W. AR TIS auction �o 'Pah lied, lie's. Teri: Ali fdt'fn *Wry d�t'•I1god-_ i Piles Disappear No Cutting or Salves Needed External treatments seldom banish Piles and for the very good reason that the cause is inside—bad circula- tion in affected parts, veins are flabby and bowel walls weakened. To quickly and safely rid yourself of piles you must free the circulation —send fresh, healthy blood to the raw, sensitive membranes. Internal treatment is one safe method. Oint- ments and other external treatments can't give lasting relief. J. S. Leonhardt, M.D., a specialist, set at work some years ago to find a real internal remedy for piles. He succeeded. He named his prescrip- tion HEM-ROTD, and it has proven successful in thousands of cases --so successful that now HEM ItOID is sold by druggists under a money back guarantee. It is a harmless tablet, easy to take, and can always be found et all druggists, who will promptly refund the purchase price if yoti are lis atis�ed. HOW CHEMIST PUT POLICE ON TRAIL After a search of three years and four months carried out by American detectives, Hugh d'Autremont has, been arrested and is now awaiting trial in San Francisco for a quadruple murder, one of the most cold-blooded and unprofitable in the rich history of American,trime. It is only a partial triumph for the police as his two brothers, Roy and Ray, who are twins, remain in hiding though they too have been sought for since short- ly after the murder in the Siskiyou tunnel, in South Oregon, on October 11th, 1923. There is a large standing reward for these men, and naturally the police are hopeful that they will sooner or later re discov- ered. The real hero of the play is Edward Oscar Heinrich, an instruc- tor in the University of California, who calls himself a legal chemist, and who put the police on the trail of the murderers by the use of his micros- cope and other delicate instruments after they seemed ready to throw up their hands. From an examination of a pair of overalls, and a search that immediately followed, Heinrich was able to give a pretty accurate description of the man who wore -them and to prove that three men were implicated in the crime. There followed the search , and eventually the discovery of the names of the men who were wanted and every other de- tail about them except their where- abouts. On the night of the crime a South- ern Pacific Express train, southbound along the Klamath range in Southern Oregon, had just entered the Sisklyou tunnel, when armed desperadoes sud- denly appeared on the tender. They forced the men in the cab to stop the train at the far end of the tunnel, and when this was done they shot and killed Sid Bates, the engine driver, and Marving Seng, his fireman, for a reason that nobody can understand. The train was at a standstill but lurched forward a few yards as one of the murderers, leaping across the bodies of the men in the cab, in- advertently touched a lever and start- ed it. This jolt alarmed those pas- sengers who had not been awakened by the shots or the sudden stopping of the train. Ten seconds later there was a terrific explosion, which an- nounced the blowing up of the mail car. When the train stopped and the shots rang out, C. O. Johnson, a brakesman, swung himself down from a rear coach and started forward on foot to investigate. He had got as far as the baggage coach when a man stepped out and shot him dead. The passengers began to awake and dress, end some of them proceeded cautious- ly toward the front of the train, only to be driven back by the smoke and nauseous gases caused by the fire in the mail car, where afterwards the mail clerk was found dead of as- phyxiation. There were no more shots, no rob- bers in sight, and it was not long before word of the crime was flash- ing over the wires and police were swarming on the scene. They found that no plunder had been taken, since the explosion was so violent as to have destroyed or dispersed the currency and registered mail. It was obviously the work of amateurs, desperate and even fiendish to be sure, but yet unacquainted with the use of high explosives. The neigh- boring hills and hush were scoured and the police were able to gather together a magneto with which the charge had been fired, a knapsack in which overshoes and some other art- icles had been carried, a pair of dirty overalls and an automatic pistol bear- ing finger prints. The police were at the end of HOUCK'S STRANGE CASE i'UZZLES THE POLICE Dr. Knute Houck of Washington and his wife have provided police records with a mystery that proms - es tc be insoluble and which has at- tracted the interest of amateur de- tectives and criminologists in many parts of the United States. Her_ was the case of a man going sudden- ly insane and his wife disappearing from home on the same night. The man vanishes, and is discovered a few days later raving and unaware of his identity. Some months later his wife is found drowned. If the case is complicated by events that are mere coincidences and not related as cause and effect it still presents a few points that have baffled the po- lice. if there is a crime here still more difficult it is to prove anything. The Washington police have announc- ed that they do not believe that Dr. Houck murdered his wife, but they significantly add that he knows more about the cage than he has told. They entertain some doubts as to the qual- ity of his insanity. Did his wife com- mit suicide? There are one or two things that make this seem highly improbable. Nobody else has been mentioned who might conceivably have been her slayer. Nobody knows indeed, whether she drowned her- self, or was thrown into the Potomac River, or whether she stumbled in. - Dr. Houck was one of the best• known and most promi§ing of the younger generation of Washington alienists and psychiatrists. His wife was also studying these sciences with the idea of making herself an intel- lectual companion for him. On the afternoon of December 14th he went through his usual routine, made case calls, received patients and made his rounds in St. Elizabeth's Hospital, to which he was attached. He returned home for dinner at which Dr. Cun- ningham, a friend, was a guest. In the course of the meal Houck and his wife had a quarrel. He said that but for the strange events that followed he would have dismissed the incident from his mind, as it was trifling. For an account of what happened after Dr. Cunningham Ietft the police have only Dr. Houck's story. He admitted that the quarrel was renewed and that he lost his temper to such an extent that he struck his wife and even tore off her nightgown. Then, having be- come-someewhat upset by the incidents of the evenirt, he took an opiate, i - their resources, and in despair they sent their trophies to Mr. Heinrich for a more scrupulous examination. The legal chemist busied himself with microscope and other instru- ments, and presently announced that the man who wore the overalls was a left-handed, brown -haired lumber- jack, about five feet six inches tall, thickset, fastidious in his personal habits, clean shaven, and that he had recently been working in the fire camps of Northwestern Washing- ton or Western Oregon. He suggest- ed that the robbers had made a rendezvous at some cattleman's cab- in not far, from the tunnel, and sug- gested that a search be made for it. True enough about five miles from the scene of the crime the detectives found a cabin which contained some f themagneto, and a towel need speed. And the fan motor gives us this. Holding the edge of the rapidly rotating disc against a steel bar, not too hard but just enough to take a light cut, we find we are able to score the steel, and as the warden will not interfere we simply proceed to cut through that bar and others. Let's check results from old, reli- able, experience. In practice a soft iron disc saw can be used to the ut- most advantage in cutting steel bars, provided, only, that the rotational speed be high enough. That is to say that the disc turns around fast enough. With a soft iron dise turn- ing so that the peripheral speed—the speed at which a point on the rine or circumference moves—is below a doz- en yards or so per second, we can cut the disc with a hard steel tool. We parts o can score the iron with the steel. hanging on a nail with other evi- Now, if we speed up the disc, we dences that the shack had been occu- find the steel cuts less and less until at high speeds, say around 20 to 25 pied for about a week. This towel was examined under a microscope and showed that three men had used it after shaving, the different nature of the hair and skin particles showing this plainly enough. Three men at least then had been implicated in the crime. Mr. Heinrich, like Sherlock Holmes, then explained that the size and cut of the overalls gave a hint as to the size and build of the wearer, that un- der the left-hand flap were deposits of pitch while the right-hand flap was clean, showing the man took off the overalls with his left hand. A microscopic examination of a few hairs had given a hint to his age. Minute chips of wood and needles in the pocket showed the kind of wood the wearer had been working with, and this was fir. The pocket where they were found showed that the axe - man had stood with his right side to the tree. In the pocket were also minute nail pairings, proving that this lumberjack was more careful of his hands than most crf his tribe. A few grains of rock salt in the knap- sack indicated a cattle ranch. It was to find three men who had been re- cently employed in the woods and had abandoned or interrupted their em- ployment about the time of thecrime. It was a job of years and involved the use of seore•s of detectives, be- fore the camp was found in which three men roughly answering the des- cription was located. There it was learned that the three were the d'Autremont brothers. After that, more minute descriptions and photo- graphs were secured, and the world was circularized. The brother now under arrest was found in Manila, where he had entered the United States Army. Could he have affronted her so deeply that she took her own life, thus tragically abandoning not only her husband but her child, and leav- ing not a note behind? It seems hardly probable. The ordinary the - cries do not apply in this strange case and unusual ones have been ad- vanced. lir. William A. White, sup- erintendent of St. Elizabeth's Hospital is firmly convinced that Dr. Houck's temporary insanity communicated it- self to his wife and de prived her of reason. Some months previously his mental condition had alarmed his friends. They thought he was apply- ing himself too closely to his occult studies, and especially to his investi- gation of Oriental cults. At that time he was threatened with a breakdown. Dr. White suggests that it was his wife's fear that he would go insane or had gone 'insane that drove her out of her own senses and led to her death. To this it is objected that no- body previously had noticed any men- tal oddity about her though her hus- band's rase had _attracted attention. The physician's mother says: "He dominated her mind and there is no doubt that, he infected her with the germ of insanity.'_ yards per second, or more, the iron begins to chew into the steel—grind the hard metal away. Speed up still more and our soft iron dise will cut into granite and Score case-hardened iron. In theory, if we could get speed enough there is no telling what we could not cut with this soft iron in which, at rest, we could make a dent with an ordinary nail and hammer. A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOR AILING CHILDREN MILLER'S WORM POWDERS CONTAIN NO NARCOTICS. EASILY TAKEN. QUICKLY AND TNOROUQHLY CLEANSE EVEN ENS MOST DELICATE SYSTEM. AS SWEET AQ' SUGAR THE DECISION I about School Work for young peo- ple leaving High School is a real problem. Probably our curriculum may help. Mailed free on request to Shaw's Business Schools, Dept. 4, 46 Bloor West, Toronto. YOU CAN CUT STEEL WITH SOFT IRON IF YOU ONLY ROTATE DISK QUICKLY The best bars in the best built jails in the country could be cut cleanly and completely through by nothing harder than a disc of ordinary soft iron. This is not a monograph on jail -breaking because it is quite im- possible by hand to make the soft iron disc seriously affect even a soft steel bar or rod, so there's no harm in imagining ourselves in a cell and that the warden is an obliging jail- er. We will ask him for an electric fan. Now we will take the lid of a round cake box, step on it and flatten it out, punch a hole in the centre, and then fasten it to the shaft of the fan motor, using the fans as a driver or spider. When we are through we have a nice little circular' saw, lack- ing, however, just what we are ac- customed to regard as saw-essentials —teeth. This need not give us any pause. We don't need teeth for this saw eve 1 �(t t That Far! We wouldn't say that Wrigley's has a place at the wedding ceremony, but in ttimea of stress or when you have a trying ordeal to face — use Wrigley's new DOUBLE MINT—it's real Peppermint. Mar Bev Most P"'4 ams sr monsitomailimimammar hat the prou pa dayou get- for • Dealer for Chevrolet, Oldstanbilo & McLaughlin E. W.FAWM, DISTRI13 TTOR MITCHELL E WELSH, MA AGEE, SEAFOItTH. / VALUE is not a matter of price alone. It is sim ly what yqu get jor the price you pay. Chevrolet is low in rice --but not at the ex- pense of quality. It i9 economical—because ft is not cheaply built. It is supreme id value because it gives more of tSe things you want for the price you pay. First and always, quality counts with Chevro- let. There is quality In the distinctive Fisher bodies; in the long, low lines; in the rich lustrous Duro colors; in the smooth, powerful valveen-heed engine; in the scores of refine- ments, suet as air cleaner, ail filter, gas strainer; in the luxury of its appointmetlts and • upholstery; in the long, resilient splints: he the easy, three•speed' transmission. The Most Beautiful Chevrolet in Chevrolet. History is now selling at new and lower Dirket —the lowest for which Chevrolet bas ever beets sold In Canada. Roadster • . - $655 Touring . • • • $653 Sport Roadster $730 Coupe $799 Cut$110ch $760 Sedan $ C.brfolet = • • 6690 Landau Sedan %9 Imperial Landau Sedan • - i Roadster Delivery $655 Com're'I Chassis $490 t.Ton Truck Chtsai. • . - • . •' Prices el Factory, Oshawa—Gonernsgtt rare* ,Extra CF•4916 ul Chevrolet evrolet History I YP% f;�