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The Clinton New Era, 1920-6-17, Page 3SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN CANADA Three months ,.,,,,,,,,, .,,. $ 40 Hai4 year, *WOO ,9 1 9 , 9 .. • + . , .. r $ .75 • if not paid in advance, $2.00 per, annum— Once Phone 30, The ThirdPage is .the best .,•remedy known • for sunburn, ' heat rashes, eczema sore feet, stings and blisters. A skin food! 411 pwapaf, an Stem -504 CANNOT NO ADVERTISE THAT HE PAYS TAX Ruling in Connection With Luxury Assess- ment Affects t h e Merchants. Ottawa, June 3.—An important rule ing, dealing with the collection of lux- ury tax was issued last night by the Department of Customs andInlandRev enue: The ruling provides as follows: "Retail merchants and other vendors of articles subject to the luxury tax who sell to the purchaser for consump- tion or 'Ilse are advised that upon the occasion: of each sale of a taxable ar- ticle the following requirements must be fulfilled, viz, (1) An invoice or sales slip, show- ing the price at which the article is sold, exclusive of tax, and as a separ- ate item the amount of luxury tax the- reon shall at the time of sale be de- livered by the vendor to the purchaser. (n) The vendor shall at the time of sale collect from the purchaser the amount of the luxury tax shown on the sales slip. No merchant is authoriz- ed to advertise or announce that he is paying the tax for the purchaser as in point of fact he is required to collect the tax from the customer. c� You are not cape rintent- ing when a Jia+ ue UI: 19iesr rint- -menu Inc Eczema 't e Skis Irrita- tions. IC re feces at erre a:.c1 gradu- ally betty tt u skin, tiatuple.b"x Ill'. Chasers El du,eut free it you mention this paper and sera! se. sh:n,p ler onstage. Ceti a box; ail.he»teis cr t•-mtn,aon, Bates ft Le., Limber Toronto THE CODERICH SUMMER SCHOOL The program for the Goderich Sum- mer School to be held in Knox church, July 5111 to 12th under the auspices of the Presbyterian church has been is- sued. The mornings will be taken up with a program of studies, Bible studies in "The Charier of the Kingdom," oon- ducted by Rev. A. McFarlane, 13. D. Bayfield; 1"Practical plans of religious ' work for children, older boys and girls and young people, conducted by Rev. (1 A. Myers, M. A. Toronto; Foreign Missions, text book "Canada's Share in Wald Tasks," Rev. Prof. A. A, Scott B. D. ludore, India; "The Maple Leaf in Mauy.Lauds," for leaders of Juniors by Miss Agues 1, Dickson, South China; Women's Work, representeilve of W. M. 'S; Tuesday and' Wednesday; Home Missions, • Rev. Colin Young, D. p., Thursday to Saturday. The afternoon program will consist of recreation sup- ervised games, swimming, etc, • 5n the evening there will be a series of five pubife addresses as follows: Monday representatives of W. M. S. Tuesday, Rev. C,A, Myers, M. A, Tor- • onto, "Next Steps in the Forward Movement and Religious Education;' Wednesday Rev, Colin Young, D. D. "Work Anhpug Non-Atrgio • Saxons;" Tilursday, Rev. Prof, A. A. Scold, B. D. indore, ."The Charm of India," Friday, Rev. W. A. McTaggart, 13. A„ "The Challenge of Life Service," 'Committees were appoteled at a ' meeting on Tuesday aftermeon to take, d;ybarge of the various details of the school, .billeting and reception publi- city, etc , and a Successful 'school 18 looked for-Goderieh Star. Cook's Cotton itoot Compoi!nt d ante, TIn 0,, t 5•ef ti.� 4acdfetrte, 4,+td is three tie, mse sns-Nop. ei$ ete brr d, Stoor hanr 1 4%. . Adrrac, 'EKE toon a2E'b mesa PO. 1 , liftmen wn', r Sots,* whs,iunJ Blyth =Edwin Pentland Keine, son of Rev, C,G. Kafue of Cottain, was receiv- ed as a candidate to the Methodist min- istry at the bfstriet rfrcating' retently held at Walkervllie, Ile ;s pursuing a preparatory medical course do content - talon of .medical mission work, His Miter Is an old Gerrie boy and was a union pastor et dtkel seine years ago. ars. Milts, Myth is grandmother of the plalleant. Old friends of the family 'HI wish hint success in 'Hill holy Celle MA.KRIAG18 A LA CECILE SAM. Divon'cee Are on the Increase In the United States, The latest report of the National Cense Bureau of the United States once more discloses not, only"an-in- creme in the ratio of divorce to mar- riage, but in the ratio of divorce to growth of p0pltletlon-112 divorces to every 100,000 people in 1916, as against 84 in 1906'and 73 in 1900. There were 112,086 divorces grant- ed- in the United States in 1916, con - (tenting 108,702 of which these are exact etatstics; of these 89,990, more than a third, were for desertion, with cruelty second, rho two combined ac- counting for very nearly two-thirds (66.1 per neut.) of all the divorces ra g ntod in that year, adultery deur- ing far behind, and drunkenness lag- 1 ging.in the rear, While these cameos, says Robert Grant in Scribner's, pre- serve the same order as In the two previous censuses of 'twenty years as they woessometimes t and are econceal the tive So treal reason for separation, they serve no- tice on tinea' taco that one or the other spouse had wearied of rho as- sociatjon--a decision the social mor- ality of which rests on the Individual conscience, Once more, too, It appears that the proportion of divorces granted to the wife in comparison with the husband has not stood still, the 66,6 per cent, determined by sthe 20 -year Investig- ation from 1887 to 1906 having risen to 68,9 per cent. of the whole. While a portion of this discrepancy be- tween the sexes is explicable on the ground that the wife has it legal cause for divorce more frequently than the husband, •and that certain grievances such as failure to support and cruelty are more peculiar to the wife, the assumption • that married fife In the United States continues to he purer than elsewhere in the world must face the dual knowledge that more people continue to obtain di- vorces in the United States than ever before. and that a larger number of the applicants are women. Who Was the Iron Mask? . There is one satisfactory aspect to what le perhaps the greatest enigma in history, the mystery of the iden- tity of the Man in the Iron Mask, It happened so long ago that the imagination is at perfect liberty to disregard all evidence connecting flim with a person of minor interest and Importance and enjoy full belief in the tnost romantic theories. Two hundred and twenty year's have pass- eci since the masked prisoner was brought to Ile Melillo from the Islands of Sante -Marguerite, and a problem that has persisted so long In undiminished vigor deserves a bet- ter enshvet' titan a Bulende or a De Mat'shiei, or a Count Mattioli, If fie had been any of these, why should he have been treated with such deference? Who was this man AVM wits guarder, with such secrecy, whose face was always covered with black velvet, and before whom even M. de Saint -Mars had to stand bare- headed? It was Voltaire, in his "Sle- cle de Louis XIV„” who first gave currency to the story, afterward de- 1ightf•.nlly perpetuated by Dumas In the "Vicomte de Bragelonne," that he was a twin brother of the Grand Monarch, whose existence was sup- • pressed for reasons of. state. A still more extraordinary twist to the saute tale was unearthed a few years ago by M. Funck-Brentano, according to which the mysterious prisoner was not only a son of i,ouis• XIII, and Anne of Austria, but the direct ancestor of Napoleon Bona- parte, This curious legend had it that the Man in the Iron.Mask,.while at confinement on the island of Sainte -Marguerite, had been married to his jailer's daughter, and that there had been born to this union a son who was smuggled over to,Cor- sica., where .his foster parents were simply told that he "came trona good part," which, being_ , tra 19iated .into Italian, gave him the surname Bounaparte," The right of Napoleon to the throne ,0/ Saint Louis •)trough the, Man in. the Iron'Week,tpatt some- thing beyotsl even the dreams of •Dumas, • Etataite Change Names. Sonne' 'catfish have ' been nosing around in the mud of the rivers 'to the north of Rio-.Janeire•foe thlrty- one years without' knowing .their eight name.They supposed their narne,was 8teindiachaeria," ender whieh they lied been baptised by Carl li, >.nllgentnaiin and ltosa „Smith 8llgenmann' in 1888. Beit G. Brown Goode has given` this name 'Eo some other fish belonging to'the'arist.ic'iIa- tic gadold family of Macrurids, Con- fusion and cotreepg>ldence ensued, until' Prof. David Steer Jordan In- sisted that the catfish change their names. Therefore their sponsor$,have re -baptised them "S,telndachnert- dion," and the catfish can now nose around in the mud of the Rio Joquit- inhonha, the Tito Doce and the Rio Paralnyba without fearing that the piscatorial" mail intended for thorn may get carried out to sea and doity- ered to the Macrurids, Two Kisses a Year Not plough. leaving to start the fires in 'the horning, fetch the water from the pomp, and 'then receive just -two kisses during a year of married life, le not conductive to conjugal bliss, says Mr's, Blanche Geraldine Elliot, Who asked separate maintenance, re- lates the Chicago Tribune, Mer preacher husband, Clarence Ivficltael 33itiot, is accused of n number of 0t.her failings in the bill, Elliott was it student at lcmatnuel 1.legionary College when first Mar- ried, Visions disturbed hie nighi.ty repose and informed hila that "his wife. wee untrue to him," so he de- serted her, elle charges. Later the renege asked him to leave because of his marital dielcultfes, site says, and he "greed to live with. her in order to remain, in the ?seg, Pour gills tate pint; two plrlcs 000 gnarl; four quarts one gallotll ono gallon one rivareel one quarrel two fights; . two ,fights. Sour policemen:, tont polioenten one lnagtsti'1tte;, and magistrate One month. -.- London l it -Bite. THE CLINTON NEW ERA. Thursday, June 17th, 1920, Mouse Phone 9L SUBSCRIPT/011iS OU'if'SIDE Of CANADA (Advance Only) Great Britain ,.,,,,, $1,50 United States „ . 1 1 , , .. .. 1 . , ... 2.00 RTanCe,. 1, 9 9 9. 1 9, .9..9.1,... , 9' 2.0 i& i SINCE g 1070 3O STOFSCOiJ tills LET'S CO! Put ole- hundred Wren on an island where ,fish is a staple article of susteu. ance, Twenty-five of the men catch fish, Ttwenty-five others clean the fish. T entY-fI ve cook the fish Y T en - N t five hunt fruit•and vegetables. The en- tire company eats what thus is gather- ed and prepared. So long as everybody works there Is plenty, Ail hands are happy. Ten of the allotted fish catcheres stop catching fish, Ten more dry and hide part of the fish they catch. For we repeat that you can't east, Five continue to catch fish, but work buy, sell, steal, give away, hoard, wear only part of the day at it. use, play with or gamble with What 1 Fewer fish, go into the community ISN'T.—.Exchange, kitchen, But the saline number of men insist upon having the sumo amount of fish 'ot,'S PHO>Ph1ODINE. 1 The Great English Preparalrnn. to eat as they had before, Tones and invigorates the whole The fifty men who formerly cleaned nervous system, makes new Blood •n old Veins. Used for Nervorr s and cooked the fish have less to do ' 'h�^ ' Debility, Menlo! and Arain Worry owtn to the undersupply of fish. But Despondency, Loss of Energy, Palpitation sit theyOwingpA Ythe Heart, Failing Memory, Price$1 per box, six they continue to demand food, for $5. Sold by all druggists, or mailed in plain Pkg, on receipt of price. New pamphlet muffed Gradually greater burdens are laid free,THEWOOD MEDJC,NE•CO-,TORONTO.ONT. upon the fruit and vegetable hunters. These insist upon a larger share 'of fish, Iu return for their larger efforts in gathering fruit and vegetables, lit Is denied them, and soon twenty of the twenty-five quit gathering fruit and vegetables. But the intire one hundred mein con- tinue to insist upon their right to eat, The daily food supply gradually shrinks. The man with 2 fish demands three bananas in ea;change for tone of then), The man with two bananas refuses to part with one for fewer than three fish, Final le u ten xe»alwork quit in disgust,. Everybody continues to eat. The hidden fish are brought to light and consumed, teomes a day when there is no food of any kind. Everybody on the island blames everybody else, What would seem to be the solution, Exactly, We thought you would guess it. i' Hot Springs Allity /IF Air Aar .411V,Y, r), GILLETTS LYE The planes and rudder of a new sea- plane can be quickly detached, permit- ting the hull, motor and propeller to navigate the surface of the water un- impeded by them, in case of a mishap in flight, at .Banff and Bath i •Recently the Canadian Pacific Railway film of the tout' of the Prince of Wales lb Canada was shown three times a day for three days at Bath, England: The mayor of the town and thousands of the residents of, the. Iowa and district were exgeedjpbly • intei'es'ted 'in those pfotu api, .•inch te not' da�ly . , h.s eili tyat 1R461sgeae.dn:tlfe iotiinfnhtro but altro gave ,tivld �detaila of:;elany 'self the' of our country, Note *rho hare visited 'the hot sulphur ilesie sge at Banff iti'tlie tan- eeliritl Pacitid1Roekieteor•the`.fihl-cyon ; as tits Arrow I4Mee; and de- rived kealthful hems it from ' them •wttt'hii glad'to' Inaba ffoitieu,jo1g 'about Lite altriliga4'8b BatTi'"winch e1e the 94,ttlti§tP•tSRpr?n'Ee.i •tbeGrittedRing- rd?n b4ui tie middle" of 1756 the., ofd Irdtire or Tnedidival Abbey, which .steed lit the: •holith-western• corner of • the r,# ttleg,,Qhboy at Bath, was pull-, ed. dofip to ,,•)rive pace to a salts of Vide( dor the ;bike ,of'i la stop, in teitioirsig the louriiiatioSie ' ''nuanber 'r• of stone ooffinb lwebe 4e`vnd, and, on r lijglliaP further, the Irgt; mineral we r 1i�� Porth and intteerr•yptaed the. ' evert 15e site b®iris `Qtfatted'', !`tont- tan saaa•nry was disclosed; and sub- aequeeday a nusnber of baths and au- datoriea That ,there clay Ieur'ed stili further re mltlnd' at what Atittetloye aeeii ext an &lire Reiman bathing � re tndh.a Tens were unmis n Rite ed? uguiar ; bath, nowtak- iirr4titeetily 1Ci(dtih"as 'the' Lucas bath, was umcevered,.and at either end of it a eemf-circulpr deep both, ,ent,ered b7 .even ,•step's, The laiidatoridg'fay on the eastern side, together • with a numbtW'of 'sdiiiare 1a4hs and other apartments which apparently bath- ers used prepahatdry to entering the hot chambers. Some of these rooms were paved with /lag stones, others were beautifully treated' with vat -lees colored teaserre. Excavations were not then pur- sued; other buildings were quickly erected oyer the site, and during the next hundred years no attention was e'en to the place. It was the year 1878 that marked the moat important epoch in the re- 8lsbeotery of the baths. Engineering **Ate were at that time undertaken to remedy a leakage from the prin- 1iui epring, and It was discovered thatact f m this leakage the Xlnipston tS in private hands, derived tlie'v/heie of their. supply. raterrup- dohs'ensted, hut the Gorponatlon en- :Woad hold thole' e rights in respect to the p isk from the ICtng s sprint•', enti' the •draining of the site eased other n11aesslieet wro tie peeeeed- 6d. It wan theif'perceivad that tine •foundations of a number of the 01e& ar1A',Jadlslsesi heisted itiktti erhtdt 'WOO the bathers. an ow River... -Guests watching (2) The Abbey and Roman Bath, Bath, England, little better than a morass, a d Ma -,side of r Davia, to whose unwearied zeal and skilful excavation the city is set much indebted, found, after further exploration and careful tunnelling, that he had at last alighted upon the bidden treasures, Difficult and cost- ly as wits the subsequent work of un- covering these remains, the late Ma- jor Davis set himself with indomit- able perseverance to push It forward. The Poets Chet the baths were some 20 ,feet below the street level and that continuance of the exeavatfans hecostsarily involved the demolition of mush valuable property were seri- ous cougideratio:Is which ail had theft' effect to retarding progress t Later on puhlio faterest Increased and the 501581e were removed, the tmen tisae deposits of other tittle caste ed awry and the large area of /WYO.an structures revealed. About 1876 Whom the great reerangular hath was Opened lip pOl't.lons of the culvert at the outfall drain were discovered, TO 1II83 he hypoaattsf on the "(cetera coveted, tin ' i$86uiar the clroularbath ws batt, Itself ; to 3888 the latrine`a and elrau. lar hypecuust; in 1887 the bath be' neat) the basement of the modern baths, said in 1896 another rectangu- lar bath Was excavated. That the builders of these baths were attracted into the valley by the hot eYiritlge about the middle of the first century, Certainly not very long after the Romans first occupied Brit- abs, e-fairly we have ce, .4 coin ofC audiusiwas toting in aueh a position as to suggest to Some authorities the theory•, that it Might have been specially placed to commemorate the foundation of the bathe, At any rate from Mei atones and altars dug up trent time io time (one *tone beards reference to a deft. site date A.b, 17-8), sad the chat**. terfatfes of a few of the sculptured remains, some vigorous oeoupation of Bath tura yh to asserted, 11,Ink '1f01 o fm ,iia of ow thou tit'et'eentht'.y, . STARTING BEEKEEPING LETTER FROM Suggested Outfit for the Apiary Novice, Start With the might Hive -- The IO -France I.tingstroth is Hoge ed as the Best—,flow to Prevent Swarming -- Care of Freshening L'Owib. (contruted by Ontario Department es Aterteuiture, Toronto,) E>TI'33D 'honey production is the MOM satisfactory et CLO ry ,for be t ane g re Steil w t t with th th e re colonies and suIDeleut up -to - ,date equipment and then make the bees pay their way • Ono colony does not give the beginner an opportunity to right mistakes or accidents profit- ably, Three colonies can be managed by devoting one evening weekly to the apiary, Avoid many troublesome pitfalls by starting with the right hive, The 40 -frame Langstroth hive has given the best satisfaction In Ontario, Ail beekeepers' supply houses carry this hive and its parts in their regular stock. Buy your flint Hives from a good manufacturer. It is very neees- sary to have all hive parts inter- changeable so that they may be used in any colony in the apiary. Uniform- ity and accurate workmanship alone can ensure this need. One conpiete 10 fr. Langstroth hive consists of: 1. A bottomboard. 2. A hive -body with self spacing frames and wire. 3. A telescoping metal roof cover In addition the beginner should Provide for each colony one queen ex- cluder; two extra hive -belles emu - Piste with frames; and '1 lbs. of Me- dium Brood Foundation which runs six sheets to the pound, to f111 the • frames with a' guide and foundation for the future combs, All hive m terinl should be. nailed, wired and painted before the opening of th spring tush, It is advisable to commence with a 2 -Ib, package of bees and queen; a swarm or a nucleus. Less danger from disease attends the buying of pound packages then the buying Jr swarms and nuclei. Pound packages Wray be securest for delivery from May 1st to June 30th. Early pack- ages will yield a surplus if carefully handled. Enquire of the Provincial Apiarist re disease in your locality before baying swarms, nutlet or col- onies. A small colony of bees Is Winch less vindictive than a full colony and thus offers a better opportunity for the beginner to grow with his bees. The accessory equipment .for the hegiuner er'-std consist of: 1. A veil of black cotton tulle, 2. A standard bee smoker. 3. A hive toot. 4. A spur wheel wire embedder, 5. An uncapping knife, 6, An uncapping box. 'r. A complete set of Department literature, Bulletins 213, 233 and 256, and a good reference bee book. 8. A small honey extractor. With the exception of Nos. 6 and 8 it. is advisable to ecqult•e the nta- teelal needed from n supply (hint at once. The uncapping box can be made at home, and the beginner could probably co-operate with another bee - keener in securing the use of an ex tractor'. With the increase of col- onies to .tem, It would then be advis- able 10providea storage ran to assist in handling the crop.— W A. Weir, 0. A. College, Gttelph. ma • To Prevent Swarming of Bees.. June is the swarming month an time of supering for the main hone Row which begins between the 101 and the 20th of the month, depend - hug on the season and the latitude Be sure to .give supers- enough t avoid any er,Nding which may, cans the bees to begone discouraged, qui work and 'swernn excessively, 1 should be the i?eekeeper's aim to pre vent swarming as much as possible THIS. le 'dobe by keeping your queens,' gating plenty' of room and a systematic texaminatf0n of brood chambers to detect colonies .;which are preparing to swarm. When queen cellie'kW'tounii• far advanced they should all':be dest.11oyed'and the queen herself removed, After .the colony pati been queenless, one week tike e0mbs'ehotttid'again be examined and 'all 'except' one removed. This • one will provide; them••with a queen and If only one ie left they will not swarm again. Wi�lejie an improvoment of stook is' debfiOd' the new queen May be given'lnstettd of leaving one queen• cell, Natural swarms should be hived on' the Old stand after removing the parent colony 'to one side. The swarms should, be given the supers from the old colony. New swarms. week with great vigor because they have no brood to care for during the first week. Colonies held .together Without swarming gather more ,honey than those which swarm, ft is the beekeeper's patriotic duty.to reduce the cost of honey production and thus increaeo the quantity he is called to produce as greatly as possible. Titay also cause the beekeeper less trouble et unexpected lames, This time be Mone more by swarth prevention titan in any other way; 3ulietn 233 takes his hatter up thoroughly and should .20 carefully., studied by all bee- .ceepers, By .mastering the methods lescribed it is quite possible to man- lg0 as many apiar'ie's Its there are lays in the week, barring Sundays wld rainy days,—W, A. Weir, O. ,t, Joilega, Cluelph, care of the Freshening Cow. This is the month when •a large .number of esus freshen. Both fresh sows and newly -born oalvos should receive special attention. Cows 08- psotod to freshen should be placed 11 'a box stall for a .few days before end after freshortlhtg, Many valuable sows and calves are lost by neg'1ect.hig to provide b01 stall gcoornmodatf0n, fits 14110551, Sio found in every dairy teublet Or clime li .ve to apeoial Ilaa'n drr lite 951280,69, MRS, INAKELIN� Tell* Remarkable Story of Sickness and Recovery., Toronto, Ont "I suffered ready from weakness „scalae( to,be tied alt au time,,gdfiadnoFoamto adoany. thi'fnkergoanypiace. M. ne eves were ' i m y bad shape, I otdd not sleep at night and then came a breakdown. I read of Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound In the newspapers and sev oral of my Mende advised mo to unit, an • sure y'py, new life into me.. Now 1 am quite able to do all my ownwork, and I would strongly advise every suf- fering woman to give Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound a trial,"— Mrs. CHARLES WABELIN, 272 •Christie St., Toronto, Ont.i The makers of Lydia E. Pinkhamret Vegetable Compound have thousandsof: such letters as that above—they tell the truth, else they could not have been ob- tained for love or money. This medicine is no stranger—it has stood the test for more than forty years. If there are any complications you de not understand write to Lydia E..Pink- ham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynch Mass. In its search for fuel the tins government has found four distince and well defined petroleum areas in that country, in addition to several manifest- ations that will be investigated farther. WOMAN CARS BE STRONG AND WELL WITH WEAK Kii?EYS. Women try to bear the daily burdens of the household, but the continua stooping, bending, never ending straia. on the back, sooner or later, may end in some form of ladney trouble. When the back aches or becomes weak it is a warning, that the kidneys are affected in some way anti on the first sign of any weakness ISoan's ICidnee Pills should be taken, so as to strengthse. the kidneys and prevent, some future trouble. Mrs. Joseph Jarvis 162 Niagara Sr' llamaton, writes; ---"I -was so troubled with my kidneys I could hardly sleep; could not do my work, and was n burden. to myself, I used Door's Kidney Pills and they sure helped ma, and I would not be without them in the house. ,I can sleep better now than 1 have for years.,, Docin's Kidney Pills are put up is as - oblong grey box; our trade mark a "'Wapiti Leaf"; price 60e. at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. BROODER STOVES d , , .Now that Hatching season:has h arrived we are in a place ; to sell . a Bruited number of Brooder,Stovets e at very reasonable prices. , Ther • t are very Hauch more aatisfactory' g r4han the uncertain Hen. Goa -Laollois &10. 14416 Tho p.to-date ' I:6'aea Canton (Branch , 1ellonc'i N. 1b. iraw.44a, Manager or Holmesvine 4 00 10. vismossewasur elsersessutemsenrweinneWseswownwommemsvonwOkeo PIANOS !Before purchasing your new piano or organ let us show you the newest de- signs in several well- known and old estsblish- ed makes. INSTRUMENTS RENT- ED AT MOiDERATE PRICES PHONOGRAPHS See our stylish cabinet designs in the best mattes. Efoa re :•