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The Seaforth News, 1934-10-18, Page 2PAGE TWO THE SEA'FORTH NEWS HURON NEWS. Murdie-Woods Wedding,— Belt ,kn'own and highly respected Ex- eter barrister, crossed away in Vic- tori.a hospital, London, on October 9th at the age of 06 years, The de - !.Ruth Webb, Miss ,Dorothy C1mm, Miss Lillian Webb and Miss Olive English. Mr, and .Mas, ,lfousseau will es.ide at 'Kippeu. A pretty autumn wedding was sol .ceased contracted a cold which was ,emnized at the home of Mee and Mr+, followed by 'complications and for Reibinsten'Wood St, Ild-elen4, on tint- several days was conllned to his .thrdav ;October (nth, )whet their elder home. On Thursday he Wan removed daughter, Nl ;bel Laving. was united to the hospital and towards the end in marriage to Mr. :\'lexander Snth- pneumonia developed. Mi', Carling erland Murciic int of Mr. and Mrs. Wan a life-long resident of Exeter, be h\ m. Murdie, Lucknow, To the strain ing the youngest son of the late Isaac of the Bridal Chorus us from Lohengrin and Ann Carling. He was a - nep'hese. played by .\hiss ,Florence Macelivride of the late' Sir Jcihn Carling, one time of I:htrhant the bride entered the liv- !Post Master ;General and Minister of Mg tooth on the arm of her father and ekgriculture for 'Canada, His father took her pia:, in frontof a bank of was Exeter's first reeve in 11137'4, His. autumn leaves ;aril tlowers where the early education was received at the wedding .•eremone was performed by Exeter public School alter which he Roy, 'I'. C. \\illcin„n e. The bride was attended the St. Thomas collegiate ;hey, min.,:y attired in a white satin institute, where hesecured his :mat- geen tirade "n princess lines. Her veil riculation. He graduated in arts ,f embroidered tort was caught in cap from the University of 'Toronto and style e'eith rage blossoms. She cat- later attended Ong000de 'Hall, After reed a bouquet of Per net roses and being called to the bar he entered into lily of the valley. 'Eder sister, Miss Ir- law ,partnership with the late Judge etre \reek of Waterloo, was brides- maid. dressed in a graceful gown of pink corded crepe made with cape ef- met and trimmed with 1Colinsky lar. hHer botullset was Butterfly roses and corn Unser.. The groan was sup- ported by his brother. Mr. Kenneth Nlurdie of T.ncknow, After the cere- mony a dainty luncheon scan served it the /Mine rearm which was pret- tily decorated with pink and white streamers and ,bell'. - The table at - ten lants ,Sere the immediate friends ,i the bride. :\iter the luncheon -the ,appy couple left on ;i short motor. trip ;he bride being attired in 1 Mee travelling snit with thatching. access- ories. On their return they will take up .c•etileisce in'1'oroitto, Fiftieth Anniversary.— Special sem lees 5., mark the fiftieth ;uen:ver,ery of the estahli-hing of the S,i vati in Army Ceres in Clinton errs held sitccessiubiy for threedays intmeucin i Oct. lith, The principal speaker :or the occasion was Staff Captain 71aittsy of New fork City, 11 0, as Captain Nellie Basks, was sent out from the headquarters in London, Enge to establisdt a corps in Clinton in 1155-, Lewis H. Dickson with whom he was "associated for seventeen Fears. Coe a number of years he had been in partnership with ,Mr. James Mor- ley. 'About four years ago 71r, Car- ling bean appointed a • K. C. by the Hon. (Howard Ferguson, the two men being classmates at Osgoode (Hall, \)r. Carling was one of the honorary presidents of the Exeter Horticultural Society, 1-1c is survived by one bro- ther and four sisters, William, of Ex- eter; Nlinses Elizabeth, Mary and Ida, at home; Nlre. 'Reginald Elliott, of Toronto, Dazed by Fall from Horse.— \iter wandering all night in a daz- ed condition +Percy Willis, son of Mr. and Nies. Jensen Willis of Stephen township, ryas found in the fields by sone ,'i the neighbors \\'edttesrday morning and was taken to his home where for several days he remained in an unconscious condition. Percy had gone across :he fields on horseback the previous evening and was return- ing ,th at mirInfghl. Hin ;cath crossed ;he railway track :cid the horse he vets riding' ran into an iron gate. ;Both horse and rider revere tit rown for some distance. Former Zurich Resident Dead.—. Word has been received of tate tpaesing at Winnipeg of Mr, Maitland T inlin, beloved husband of Mine (Doan, fonmerly of -Zurich. Death of Mrs, John Clubb,— Mrs. John Clubh of Whitechurch formerly Clementine Inglis, was found dead at her home by her 'husband when he returned from work at 6 o' - Clock Tuesday en•enitg last, The de- ceased had ;not enjoyed ,good health for some year, but her sudden pass- ing 'was a great shock to her neigh- bors and friends, She was apparently its her usual 'health when her husband left Inc work and it is thought that a he art attack was the” cause of her death some time before Mr. Clubb ar- rived home from work. She leaves to mourn her passing, 'besides her hus- band, three daughters and two sons: Mrs, (Jean) Norman Stewart, Luck - new; 7Irs, (Cora) Harris, ;St. Marys; Mrs, (IAda) Oogilore, Toronto; Kelvin' of London and Fred of 'l"oronto. One son, John, .predeceased her several years agoMr. ani Mrs, Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Harris and family and her son. Fredspent last week end with their parents and on Monday rutubned t,- their homer. She is also .ursivecl by xis brothers and three sisters: James, Kitseotr, Alta,; Fred- erick, Gibson Landing. P.C.; Robert, !Gilbert 'Plains, Man.; Andrew and John. Robbin, Mane Thomas, on the hisesteal in West \\iscano It; Mr \\it. Dow, 'frucefeld; Mrs. Sarah Stewart, Risers. \fan.; lbs. James Sheriff, .Star City, Sa.k, The funeral was held in Chalmers Presbyterian Church, at \Vhiteceurch at 1 p,nt:' on Friday, October 1111 h, the service be- 'ing conducted by the Rer. J. Pollock. Interment was in \\'iagh:n s cemetery Old Landmark Disappears.— The old \'isle:n hnntc • on West treat, Goderich, genes, from the skating rink, is being cared by wreckers and with its passing goes en old landmark of Goderich, believed tc be u'arl' egle hundred yeas old. The late Thomas \'ide.us, 311,',', the present 1h.lcrich \ :dean.., es,s .horn in the hslise 04. rears met. as were the thirteen children of his parents, the ;:etc George \'idean and Mrs. \'itle:ul, Two Goderich Citizens Dead.— 'At 4 ct'cloelc Thursday afternoon • the 'hotly of Henry 'Snyder was found in the River Maitland near the golf .:.parse and directly under the C.N.R. Bridge, The head was badly crushed, ;,rad are presumption is that - he had fallen from the bridge, sixty feet ab- ,;:s'e. The disco,wery -vas' made by Jas. *Donai,.gson and \\'ns. Somerville w•+ho '-ere fishing in the river. Later Mr. Snvrler's aatemsnbile WAS foisted park - tel near the gob' ennr-e, a short dis- tance ;away. It had been there since, illfit' fu the morning. It is less than three weeks •since NIr. Snyeler was ta- ken with dizziness at the elevator • wharf and fell into the ,eater of the hntrhsr irisin 'which he was resoled by elevator employees after he. had held et a ledge on the pier 3or nearly - half all hotly. Mr. Snyder was horn in Colisorne township about 511 years ago, it son ,.f NIr. and Mrs, Jesse 'Snyder.. -l:Iarry L. Watson, Inc of (iocier- ch. best known citizens. died sad- . dimly Thursday afternoon at his home ton South street. He had been working an the garden and about 5 . clock 05555 tet,the hnnsr acid A' a; sitting in a chair when he passed away. He was in hi: sixty -sista, year, a native ,\f .odcrieh Anel for nmi11\' years was a sale:matt at Craigie's. Firewood from Old Schooners.— The olrl schooner the Scotia, which leas reposed in the marine graveyard' south of the Sunset hotel at the wat- .srfrout for se'eti. years, i, about to yield ifs last stielc elf firewood. lit the ,lash few• years, ,Swung to Isw teeter, it has provided hundreds of cords of oak and Norway pine to thrifty Goderich families and a cirm'binatiou of unpre cedented law- water and fine weather :hiring, the last hew weeks lila:, made it possible to clean up the juts, Some Linc faamilies- have benefitted. There are other craft. at the graveyard, how- ever, on which the industrious wood chopper, can go to work, The old :\ibe'corn now rests in only a few feet of water and the Olga will soon he ac- cessible. if the .water continues to re- cede. One family in thelake •section has forty cords o'1 .splendid firewood piled iup in preparation for the -Winter. • e•Cod'eric'th ;Signal, -Death of I. R. Carling, ;lir,•I-saac iRoutledge Carling, T{,C;, Two Old Exeter Residents Gone.— Chitties 'i'Itnnlas Brooks, aged 84 !ears. Said Oct, lith, after some years i failing health. Nlr, Brooks wan for many year express agent in Exeter and carried the retail between tate sta- t ea a':1 the post, deice. 11' was been in 1)arliugton town. iltn near Oshawa. ,em of Daniel Brooks and Mary NI.tnnin:; il'rouks who came to Can- ada from England. \t the age of nitre :titer the death of his mother he came to Exeter too live with his sister the late Nlrs. Chas. Swell. Ids learned blacksmith with the. late John Trick and worked Inc a time at Cred- iton and Farquhar. int 11873 he went h. Ilrnssels where he married Ann J. \Voges, who predeceased him in He lived for a number of years in \Vinnipe1, returning to Exeter in leaf/. .His second wide was Mary Tay- lor, daughter of the late John Taylor. 11is second wife flied in 19110.:\noth- e of lExetcr's old residents in the person of - lir. Thigh Spackman, died in Guelph General hospital \Vedncs- day io:lowing a paralytic stroke, 1)c - ceased was burn in tExeter 78 year, age, and for many year, conducted a hardware business, selling 'out 14 scars ago to B. \V. F, Beavers, Of late the has been living in 'Guelph with his son Clifford, Ile- was reeve -of Exeter for years and was at one time warden of the county and also ,.unlit) commissioner. tFlis wife, Jane Isobel Weekes, predeceased hint in '1025. Besides Isis eon ;Clifford he in survived by a son Earl, manager of tate Bank of Montreal at Tweed and else by his ,brother, 'Edward. of Tor- onto. .Funeral was held to'Exeter ce- metery. Mousseau-Brown,- A very pretty wedding was solemn- ized at the I.iurns' United Church, manse, Sarnia, whets \1audie Mary Jean, second (lusghter of 1Ir. and Mrs: Dean Brown of tireenway, 'be- came the ,bride of air. lilzar Ndous- seau. of Zurich, Rev. W. 'J. Maines' officiating. They were unattended. The bride wan very becomingly gowned in powder blue silk organdie and carried- a shower bouquet of glad - Mb with fere. For travelling she wore a navy bine crepe suit with aecessor- its to match. Following the cerens- rely -Mrs, 3'. ,J', Maines served a dainty wedding dinner to the bride and grunnt after which they left on El motor trip to fort 'Ffnron, Niagara Falls and ''I'orontn and returning on Saturday everting where aw-aiteel a re- ception of the immediate relatives of rise butte and groom. The fable was centred with a pretty three-storey wedding cake with pink and white streamers extending •to the corners of the table. The decorative scheme was !nether enhanced with two silver iud eases filled with dahlias, c i ,i and, numer- ous other bouquets. Four girl friends of the liricle acted as waitresses, Miss Ushoene. The 'men have been forgot- ten .but the townships remain; a;sd poor told 'Tucker math has 'been hon- ored in the following verse 'which ap- pears to have a apolitical origin: oT,he Township of Tuckersmith, 'Joe e IR)vnal said, Could he worshipped without any .sin Fur it looked not tele anything else upon earth, And nothing the waters within 'So outrageously mangled .poor old Tuckersmith 'By the great gerrymander had been." There is also a township bearing - the Indian dame of 1\Vatvanosh. This name Was .given to the township near- ly a hundred years ago at a time when it appears 'to 'have 'been a popular, In- dian name. At that date the +Chief of the 'Clsippewas on the 'Sarnia 'tResen•e was so called; and in the year 1547 an educated Algonquin of 'the same matte whilst on a visit to the United 'States wrote a series of getters to a memiber of his tribe; in one of. which he said: "1 have already seen lunch of this people, but have not yet been able to perceive that they are happier than the simple sons ;of the forest." - Sir John Cotborne.—This is a name that 'Western Ontario cannot 'forget, It is brought to our notice in many forms. The Township of Colborne its Huron county is one .of those forms. fn the city of London we pass and re - ;as Colborne Street almost dally without giving a -thought to the ori- ein of the name. 011 the shore of Lake Erie we find Port Colborne to be a thriving village, These daily remind- ers prompt its 50 inquire into the his- Limy ,is1 wry and character of the man Isim- elf, One historian says that the bio- graphy of this great ratan should be written ire letters of gold. "Sir John 'Colborne was a soldier, it is said; Ise was Governor of Canada before Sir 'Francis Head," Tette. he was a first class lighting man, but. Ile was not a diplomat or a statesman, [ is Song military career had. made him -a man of a stern and unbending character and, as such, he had little sympathy with the aspirations of a ,,cevale whn were just ,beginning to grasp bhe principles of constitutional liberty. Before he was appointed to the -office of Lieutenant -Governor of Upper C',ahada, lie had distinguished himself in the peninsular War and had also fought at Waterloo; but his only experience in the •field of diplo- macy was gained when serving- as Cu,vernor of the small island of Guer- s,scy, Itis appointment as 'Governor of C':peer Canada was made in' the year i112.1 and shortly after ,his arrival at Toronto Ise allied himself with the hearty known as the "Family Com. pact." This action displeased the Re- form party which, to express its dis- like, exhibited -Sir John in effigy in the streets of Plansilton, Those were troublesome tines in Uipper Canada, hut. Sir Je+lun's administration possess- el tate necessary rithalitien of ester *y Surd strength. During his terns of of - lice many measures of reform were adopted; the Welland and Rideau Ca- nals •were opened; the judges were made independent of the Crown; and when Ise telt Canada its 111838 he parried 11 11 him the thanks and good wishes of a grateful people. - Township of Stephen.—Phis town- ship was named after James !Stephen who was the Cinder Secretary of State for the Colofnies in the govern- ment of Lord Goderich in the year Of course, as under ,Secretary, James 'Stephens 'had notch to do •with the affairs of Upper iCaneda and ac- cording to the evidence of .his con- tensporarien, he thiel not achieve suc- ess or popularity, Sir Francis Bond 'I--tead, who was then iGoverisor of Up- per Canada, wrote - to the eColonial 1Secretary in 11537 complaining that Nlr. Stephen',- conduct, sentiments and political character were detested by the people of Canada; and in e1838 the Montreal Gazette said: "ll r. ;Ste- phen has' for many years been the cosrficlential :adviser and director of the colonial department, and to his evil influence must be ancriiaed all the misgovernment which these province; have sutler(' for so long a period. It is time that the baneful domination of 11 r. Under .Secretary Stephen should Ise got rid of and that all en- tirely new system of things 'be adopt- ed." Happily the Township of Steph- en: has ow:l.ived the stigma attached to the name of the ancestor, The Township of Howie': is also tabled Cfter"in 'Under Secretary of 'State for the Colonies namely, the third Earl Grey isi,hn entered the English iParliztMent in 4118129 under the title of Lord Ilowick, and became Urnd'er Secretary for 'the ;Colonies in the following year •w+hen 'his .father, Earl ,Grey, assumed the office 'of Prim e Nlinnister, !Lord ,Flow -ick Seas Secretary 'for the ;Colonies again in 19416 in the ,government led 'by :Lord hfel'hourne, The Totenssip of Tnrn'berrr careI ries its to ,Se.otland in search for its'. ancestry. It ;was named after Turn perry Castle -:which is located on the coats of ,Ayrshire, a shod: distance Lumber Shipped to Guelph. A large quantity , . lthmaer, sawn last spring by Jats. Stevenson saw•nnill ort ;F, Slcight'fh.lns's farm near Ethel. has been Taken to Guelph iss huge truckloads by the .purchasers, Nice Allister and-7ic'Allister of Guelph. Celebrate 60th Anniversary.— . Thr annual at -conn of the L0,0,F. \.. s. i149, Brussels scan nbsers•ed nn Oct,vber belt, coin-mennoratifle tile (tlth :urniversary of the lodge. Golden Wedding.— \n interesting Trent hook place on Thanksgiving day at the house of Mr. and 71r;, 1.11svard \\'cl:'h, eldest son of Nile and NIrs. Robert Welsh, Clin- ton, it being. the celebration of their golden werlding anniversary. 'Mrs. Welsh was formerly \hiss Jane Jcilin- son of the (io,lien line, She spent her girlhood days in Stanley. goitres to Clinton as a bride and has resided there ever since. Fler husband spent his boyhood in Goderich township, he being born on tlse farm now occwp- ied by Arthur \Velsh, his nephew, Mr. and Mrs. \Welsh were married by Rey. Mr. Smith at Varna in 188., They are enjoying. good health. For 37 years l -Ir. \Vel..lh ;vas police constable and slight wee:Milan in Clinton, Mr, and Nh's. 'Wel .nh were blessed with four sons: Edward, at whose home the celebration was held; Rupert 'Nixon, principal of Victoria school, London: Lorne, who passed on some years ago, and Wilbur, of Stanley- tem, Buys Residence,— NIr. +\1. FT, Cochrane has purchased Nies. 11c\lath's residence in Clinton where he tend his family will live. Engagement,— Mrs. L. J, \1'illiams, of el3lpth, an- nounces the engagement of Pearl R. \Pillions, to Nlr, \\akcfurd Ross Fitz simuns, elder sort of Nlr. and Nhs. TT, W. 'Fitzsimons of Clinton, the mar- riage to take place the latter ,part 01 Octcncr: ANCESTRY OF HURON NAMES Twenty -fire utiles north from Lon- don we enter the County of 'Huros and send it to be a large tract of land divided into fifteen 'townships. The County- takes its name from Lake 'Huron which forms its western boun- dary; and the lake had previously ac- quired its nano from the tribe of don- tians that had :once inhabited its shores and the adjacent toms lry, 'the name 'w•as originally applied to 1 larg- er territory knsi'vn as the "Euross Tract out of which the. present Coun- ty of Huron was detached and 'form- ed into a new County 0. the year 3184,1. The land -grabbers or speculators who had formed the C-sussada Lancs Consnaon'y hotiglit a large tpoetion of the Huron 'Tract and had it surveyed' into 'townships which they nailed a -- et. the .director; of the ;Company. thus procedure may have tickled the 'amity of the directors, but it impos- ed upon the townshipsthe names el tH•ullett, 11dlCillao Tuckersmitls and THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1934 WH E your boss is a czar ... and he expects you to be two places at the same t0e . and he won't take excuses .. Use your telephone . Distance will help the impossible. - ■ Loing you dao jThe telephone will take you to the next town or township or across the continent with equal facility. It's your quick, easy, de- pendable messenger in any emergency. And it's inexpensive -100 miles for as little as 30c. See list of rates in the front of your directory. south 1,1 the Town of Ayr, Turnberry Cantle was the property of the Count- ess o: Carrick who married Robert Bruce, and it was their :sou, Robert the Bruce, who became 'the King of Scotland. It is emsposed that 12.1bert the Bruce was horn in this castle; in any event Ise passed Itis youthful years under its roof and that accounts for the name of 'Turn'berry Township, * * * * * * * * * * * * NEWS AND INFORMATION * * FOR THE BUSY FARMER * * CFurnished by ,Ontario Depart- * * ment of Agriculture,) * * * * * * * * * * * * Injurious to Wire Fence Many times the advice is given it: the fall of the year to 'short out the fence rows" to get rid of harthifui w•eeav and insects, This, no doubt, 1, a good policy from these standpoints, but it should Ise kept in mind that is distinctly harmful to any type of wire fence. Zinc melt; at a contpar- tetivety low- temlierature told the heel from burning grass or weed, le often sufficient to scores the protective coating and well) probably shorten by several seasons the useful life of the fence, 0. A. C. Team Third The dairy cattle judging team of the Ontario :\gra tiltnttti College placed third, only live points behind the winners, among the 16 teams competing in the intercollegiate judg- ing - competition at the'\Vaterloo Dairy Cotsgress. Cornell University was first and Tennessee second. The Ontario team consisted of A. C. 71s4Ta'ggart, Appin; !R, T. Jeffer- son, Mahon; J. A. 'Dalrymple, Sntith- ville, and NV. A. lftiir, Woodstock, all fourth-year students. 'C'hey were coa- ched by IPrtef. George H. lRstith•lay of the Animal Husbandry ;Department. The tears placers second in Holstein judging, fourth in Jerseys, sixth ill Ayrsleres, ninth in Guernseys, and tenth in Brews Shvias, 1nCIiiidually, \lis. MOTaggart teas fourth in the whole competition and third in Jersey judging. Jefferson was fifth in judg- ing all breeds and ninth in Ayrshires. 1)ah•ynsple was third in Ayrshire judging. Menace of Low •Grade Seed 1,nw grade seed is a menace to the reputation of Canada in the export markets, and a drug in the domestic market. The marketing of seeds in general in the last three or fouls years has been attended :lay serious difficul- ties and comparatively foe- prices to grow'ee3, 'brit has at least taught the value of producing a !sigh grade pro- duct. ale, .1 seed 'has almost always sold at a profitable price, while low grade seed has been unsaleable or sold at a loss to the grower. it should :he. the practice of every grower to save seed 'only from cleats field's, so that i1 mciv be cleaned ite ,;grade No. 1. Canadian Wool Demand ;One of the meet encouraging fiet- rs in so far as Canadian wools are concerned is the iecrea in,g use el 'Canadian wo'od's 'by 'Cana dian manu- facturers. Wall -graded wools, wheth- er co-operatively consigned for ofec- ial grading from producer,' .'sipnscute or whether graded by At isr bleu, are in steady demand for. insnted's. mill requirements. There are stall some lots of wool in farmers' han.ln, having been held miser from low prig yearn. '.l'Isese will likely be markete.t it 1934, if present prices are main- tained. In addition, eiepression condi- tions hate increased home spinning' and weaving, as we'd as other text:le handicrafts, relieving the Canadian atarlcet front 11s•e to sic million pounds of ncuol per :ouminn, t\ lest of 'the soil ehonhl be trade to stroke sure that it requires lime, Lf the soil proves to be acid then the autswel- to the question when to apply lime alight be "when you have titre" Lime is for the benefit of all :1 �4 in the rotation, hitt particularly of benefit to legumes. '.Ilse best time 15 possibly just before sowing a 'train crop that is seeded down with alfalfa or clovers. Liming land plowed for fall wheat which in to be seeded with clover in the spring is a convenient and satisfactory practice. Limy 0 not a fertilizer, 'hurt simply neutralizes the acidity of the soil and ,should be tho- roughly worked into soil during. the preparation of a seed bed to become efficient. It is poor business to farm lanes that r lacking 0 line and• strongly acid in reaction. The prodtte- tive power of the soil is reduced when it becomes acid. Correcting this eons clition with the use of ground lime- stone increases the efficiency of tate mantras and fertilizers applied atid. therefore contributes to the cutting clown of costs of crop production. Branch Plowing Matches Branch Place Date Ontario, N., Sanfordi,....u.... .,Oct 15 1..eeds Co„ Seeley's Bay....,... Oct 16 Muskoka District,Bra.ce- hridgl e . ,t. • i,..e............. Oct. I;13 Russell Co,• Rrssell , ;Oct. li Six Nations Indian, Ohs - Victoria Co., Ontensee 'Oct, 11 Brant Co„ Sour S:prin Rd., 'Brantford ....,.,,.,,,a.,., Oct, 17 'Bruce S., \Valice•ton ,,,,_.;Oct,.,1D Dundas \Vest, .Nlountain , , .. , Oct. '17 Egrenrntt Tp., Holstein • Oct, 117 Lansbtuu Co„ Inwood ..b,,Ocx. 117 T.ogan,-.Perth Co, .,.....,5,,,.JOcY:'17 !\orntauiby '1'p„ Ayton . , . ,,, ,IOct, I1nn7 Ontario 5., 'I'p, E. \\°hitby 10ct. h7 Origlia,'Sinhcoe Co, .,.....,t,. Oct, 17 Pastille's, Wellington Co. .,.,'Oct. !17 'Welland Co., \Ve,lland .,,,..-.,+0ct.'117 Halton Co.,'Hornby u , . n..a.. Oct, 118 ler ler cm, Bruusels Oat, 1144 Tent Co„ Dover Tp„ . o,_'Qct, 1,8 Perth Co„ near "Stratford .. , ,i0ct, 24 Huron, S„ 'Exe'ter .. .... (Persian Baden- -there 0 nothing like it for creating and preserving 'a lovely complexion. eCooling; caressing—it esaothes and dispels all roughness or 'chafe- caused aby weather conditions: Delicately fragrant, it adds exquisite charm to the most 'finished appear- ance. I:)eaiihty+ wonted inevitably choose Persian Psalms A velvety- smooth elvetysmooth lotion, it makes the slain rose - leaf in testate, lRccom-mencled also to. soften and isv4hitcus the hands, 'Trudy a. peerless toilet requisite for every woman,