Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Jan 1934, p. 7

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Branch lovement Mill W b in Trying to quell a woman‘s wrath is like sitting down on a bunch of lighted Rreworks to prevent them going off Officers who have to travel less than 100 miles and who have cars of their awn are entitled to an allowance of up to 12 cents a mile. The motorceycle allowance is $15 a month, the bicycle vllowance is $2 a month. The committee holds that the Govâ€" erument should us more hired cars in view of the cheap rates, which are as low as 12 cents a mile. It proposes a Axed allowance up to $24 a monthâ€" with an additional $16 a month if the officer is authorized to employ a chautâ€" ‘eurâ€"for officers who travel an averâ€" age of 200 miles and over and who are required to keep and .se their own :ars for the purpose. Georgetown, British Guiana. â€" The British Guiana Government will disâ€" pense with its departmentai motorcars next ear it the recommendations of the Traveling Allowances Committee are adopted by the Legislative Council. Taxis for and as a result the yield of sugar will be greater than in 1932, although the total tonnage of beets is less, an acreage yield of 10 tons per acre voth years. The average sugar content approximates 17 per cent. this year, compared with 14.7 per cent. last year, Sugar beets are yielding Leiter than weather conditions early in the season indicated. The acreage shows some reâ€" duction from last year, being 33,300 in 1932 and 31,900 this year. Producâ€" tion in 1932 was estimated at.333,000 tons and in 1933 at 319,000 tons, with The dry bean acreage this year is placed at 52,300 acres, with an averâ€" age of 14.9 bushels per acre, giving in estimated total production of 179,â€" 300 bushels against a fiveâ€"year averâ€" ige production of 1,027,000 bushels. The bean crop was very spotty and the yield extremely variable. The price being received by growers is conâ€" siderably more than last year and in wpite of a much smaller crop, finanâ€" rial returns will be larger than last CA ) The hay crop in Western Ontario was heavier than last year and of better quality, There is also a considâ€" erable carryâ€"over from the previous year, particularly of timothy and grass mixtures. It is estimated that about fifty per cent. of last year‘s crop of market hay in this part of Ontario is still available, but it is being fed at a rapid rate owing to the early winter. The movement to prinâ€" cipal consuming centres has been draggy, but the general demand for hay is expected to improve as the winter advances. Alfalfa hay has been in fair demand all fall for the manuâ€" factare of alfalla meal for which there has been an excellent export deâ€" mand, As a result, the supply of seeâ€" ond cut alfalfa hay for grinding is rapidly diminishing. Current prices being paid growers areâ€"No. 2 timâ€"| othy, $5.50 to $6 per ton; mixed hay,| $4,50 to $5.25; alfalfa, 2nd eut, $9 to| $10; alfalfa, first cut, $7 to $8; oat| traw, $3 to $3.50; wheat straw, $3.25| 1 to $3.75. ¢ An official report on the hay market situation shows that in Eastern Onâ€" tario the crop was short again this year, but there has been little moveâ€" ment of market hay as yet. Current prices to growers are reported as folâ€" lows: In the St. Lawrence Counties, timothy, $12 to $14; in the Ottawa Valley from $8 to $11 according to kind, and straw $4 to $4.50 per ton. In Northern Ontario hay prices range from $11.50 to $18, according to the| ocation Bearing in mind that a potato is at all times a living organism, conâ€" ditions must be provided which will prevent severe losses in storage. Inâ€" deed, conditions are widely prevalent in Canada which cause in many cases a high percentage of loss in stored crops. Above all, it should be borne in mind that the tender skin of A freshly harvested tuber is easily scratched or broken, that diggers or implements may cause cuts or bruises which prove disastrous when such poâ€" tatoes are placed in unsuitable storâ€" age. Rot and decay soon follow. Moist tubers, especially when cut or bruised, are the first to succumb. Therefore avoid bruising and, if at all possible, the placing of petatoes into any kind of storage until they are perfectly dry. Mmiiizutitraires i+ o5 id od, the heavy part of the ration may ve increased to fully threeâ€"quarters by weight. Oil cake is highly valued by many sheep feeders. It may be substituted for the bran, when the proportion.of heavy grain should acâ€" cordingly be diminished. From half apoundtoone.ndnbdfpomdso! grain per head per day, according to the ends to be attained, constitutes a‘ fattening ration, when the coarse fodder used is of good quality and fed liberally. I OFFICIAL CROP REPORT. Oats are peculiarly suited to sheep ‘eeding. This grain is nourishing and safe to feed. Two parts oats, one part was, and one part bran is a good raâ€" ion for sheep of any class. Corn subâ€" stituted for the peas answers well, Towards the enc of the finizhino now SHEEP WINTER FATTENING HAY MARKET REPORT British Guiana Plan Farmers‘ Notes ! A "Watch" Sto; TUBER‘S THIN SKIN he tender skin of a d tuber is easily kern, that diggers or cause cuts or bruises the finishing perâ€" A week‘s menu planned in adâ€" vance is a definite means toward economy. Money, time and labor all are saved. The tendency toward extravagant marketing is checked and the frantic haste when it is nearâ€" ly meal time and nothing is planned is done away with. In many inâ€" stances it also enables one to double up on cooking processes. . Enough potatoes can be boiled at one time for the immediate meal and a potato salad or creamed potatoes for the following one. # A meat pie, tinbalés, hash of croâ€" quettes are planned to take care of the leftâ€"overs from a roast, Planning Menus A Week Ahead is Economical When the plucky girl herself was ready to jump she was already badly burned and the fire and smoke blindâ€" ed her so that she fell on her back and fractured two vertebrae,. with the reâ€" sult she became an invalid for life. The reward will make it possible for her to get medigal treatment and learn some trade that may enabhl her to make a living. Gunhild was in charge of the other children in the upper storey of the home in Stockholim, the lower part of | which was in flames. She took the children one by one by their hands, stretched down as far as she could from a window and in that way helpâ€" ed them to escape unharmed. One of the children, a 10â€"yearâ€"old girl, reâ€" fused to risk the jump. Although alâ€" ready surrounded by flames and smoke Gunhild took time to let her down to the ground by means of a sheet. A fine gold watch with an inseripâ€" tion and about $400 has been awardâ€" ed by the Carnegie Foundation to Gunâ€" hild Leimer, aged 15, of Stockholm, Sweden, for her heroic deed in saving her five younger sisters and brothers from being burned to death. ‘ Heroine of Fire Given Reward and Watch "‘Ahâ€"my grandmother‘s watch â€" my dear, dead grandmother‘s last gift to me. . . ‘" "But he almost did one time; durâ€" ing the rehearsal of ‘The Comedian.‘ At the very last second I stopped him. Even so, I bhave an idea he would have got away with it; would have exclaimed quickly, after smashâ€" ing the second watch: "I laughed. ‘Guv‘nor,‘ I suggested, ‘you can‘t break your mother‘s watch twice in the same place.‘" "‘That went over big, you damned heathenâ€"eh? " ‘You bet!‘ I agreed. "He continued: ‘Remind me to buy another one of those dollar watches tomorrowâ€"will you? â€"spoke to me in confidential under tone: « * "And they threw themselves into it, with renewed enthusiasm and vigor and, really, doing beautifully, while Belasco pulled at my sleeve anrd â€" winking at me broadly, forgetting the insults and tLullying of the past week "‘And nowâ€"childrenâ€"will you try â€"to workâ€"for me? Iâ€"I am so oldâ€" and tired. . .‘ "Another silence. A single tear roll ed down his cheek. He smiled sadly Then he went on: "He looked up. "‘Forgive me, children‘ he whis pered humbly. ‘Iâ€"ohâ€"I am ashamed of myself. So ashamed. Iâ€"I am my own very worst enemy.‘ Again he sobbed. . He mumbled disconsolately: ‘My dear, dead mother‘s watch. .. / ‘He trembled. It was superb. The entire company, including myself (it was a play by Achmed Abdullah unâ€" der rehearsal), was profoundly affectâ€" ed. " ‘Dear Lordâ€"‘ he mumbled â€" and sobbed onceâ€"‘my mother‘s watch â€" my dear, dead mother‘s last gift to "There was complete silence. The actors exchanged frightened looks, Then he stumbled back a step. He stared at the ruin on the floor. He drew an arm over his eyes. | A priceless account of rehearsais, as conducted by David Belasco, given by Achmed Abdullah, novelist and Pplaywright (in his very lively reminâ€" ‘ iscences "The Cat Had Nine Lives"â€" in which Achmed goes the Cat a few better, but that‘s another story.) The personal performance of Belasco durâ€" ing rehearsals of a new play, it seems, never varied. Always before the re hearsal downstairs, he would rehearse ; himselt upstairs. He would go over | each gesture, each intonation, each ‘ sign, each word of praise or blame, each pyrotechnical display of temperâ€" ament which he could turn on and off like a tap. , Flattery, during the first week was the order of the day. Came the secâ€" ond week of rehearsalâ€"and promptly 'Belnco changed his tune. He would work himself up to a fine frenzy. "And finally," chuckles Achmed Abâ€" dullah, "in a terrifying, frenetic rage, & rage so beautifully rehearsed and yet so well stimulated that he deâ€" ceived everybody and possibly, at least for the moment, deceived himâ€" self in the bargain, he pulled a watch from his pocket. He slammed it to the ground. He jumped on It, stampâ€" ing, grinding, so that it lay shattered in a thousand powdered pieces. "Even the game of golf has iu‘ evile," says a writer. And its upâ€" Genius may be swifter than perseâ€" verence, but the latter wins in the long run. The immediate cause of the exâ€" plorer‘s death was & blood clot which stopped his heart after he had appearâ€" ed well on the road to recovery from an attack of botulism. %._ Last year, the explorer was at the head of an expedition which surveyed 12,500 miles of Greenland‘s southeast coast, and measurements taken by that expedition proved that Greenland: was moving westward 20 yards a year, Later, he announced he had ascerâ€" tained that the Eskimos originally were Indians who had wandered east and west from the coast. After making his first expedition to Greenland in 1902, he visited all of the known Eskimo tribes between 1905 and 1924, studying their customs. Dr. Rasmussen was born at Jakobâ€" shayn, Greenland, June 7, 1879. His ancestors on the maternal side were Eskimos. Dr. Rasmussen was seriously ill when he was brought home November 3. He was removed from the ship to his residence in an ambulance. It was said at that time that only a transâ€" fusion aboard ship had saved his life. Copenhagen, Denmark. â€" Dr. Knud Rasmussen, Danish Arctic explorer, is dead after a long illness brought on by food poisoning contracted on his last expedition to Greenland. He was 54 years old. Dr. Knud Rasmussen, Arctic Explorer, Dies nd| Liquid Assets At $362,471,645 Are Equal To 55.76 Per Cent. Of ts Liabilities To The Publicâ€"Total Assets At End of Yeub%ere 8729,2_60,476 â€" Gratifying Increase Of Over $18,000, In R Canadian §avings And In Demand Deposits â€" Many Busiâ€" dt nesses Evidently Showing Large Turnover, "*| The Annual Statement of The Roy#1| 699,215, equal to 24.26% of public * | Rank of Canada covering the fiscal|liabilities. year which ended November 30th last | _ The t0tal of $106,850,615 invested in f < Dominion and Provincial Government sâ€" | should afford satisfaction to the pubâ€" securities represents an increase of 4| lic, as well as to shareholders. The $17,401,771 compared with the preâ€" y statement discloses a very strong posi.| vious year. A small decrease is shown |e ‘ tion, with an increase in liquid assets | !" ICjana(lian.municipal securities and 'to a total of $362,471,645, equal to fer::]l:iltliel';)relgn and Colonial public 55.76% of liabilities to the public. It While certain lines of business are !â€"| jig understood that a particularly inâ€" less active than a year ago, other inâ€" f+ teresting feature of the year was an|dustries have experienced a keen deâ€" increase in Canadian Savings and Deâ€"| mand for their products in recent ) mand Deposits. A lower volume of| months, with the result that inventorâ€" "commm-cial loans and increase in the|ies have been b;ought down to abnorâ€" ’por:folin of Government bonds is in‘ mally low figurés. Both these factors Oj!ine with expectations in view of the| have contributed to reduce the need r’redut-ed demand for banking accomâ€"|for banking accommodation, and this ° | modation. The necessity for investâ€"| iÂ¥ reflected in a decrease of $44,442,â€" ‘|ing larger amounts in Government| 954 in loans and discounts. Commerâ€" ° | bonds is one of the causes contributâ€"| cial loans now stand at $316,119,392 “ing to a reduction in earnings, but|against $360,562,286. Call loans in ~| after making full allowance for all bad | Canada and abroad were reduced by land doubtful debts and providing for | $3,598,571 during the twelve months‘|. | cost of management, profits were period. amply sufficient to cover the payment Canadian Deposits Increase of dividends and the usual appropriaâ€" A feature of the Bank‘s year was an ioi Sekeine £A40000 . ds n TurIBer I noresseiof $18,010,004 10 Gapatian, deâ€"| 1 contribution to profit and loss account. mand and savings deposits. As Canaâ€" The unsettled state from which busiâ€" dian demand deposits represent in the ness is now emerging, has emphasized | ) ,;,, the working balances of business the nsefuiness of strong inner reâ€"| a,q4 farming customers, the substanâ€"| $ serves. The directors‘ recognition of tial upward move in these figures is of this fact is evidenced by a transfer of particular interest as an indication of $15,000,000 from Reserve Fund to reimâ€" increased commercial and industrial burse the inner reserves of the bank, activity. 4 and to provide reserves which they Shareholders will be interested in consider adequate for future continâ€" seeing that despite the lower level of gencies. This action is in line with interest rates which particularly atfâ€" adjustments which have been made by fected the return from liquid assets many of the leading and most powerâ€" maintained at reserve centres, profits |I ful banks in all parts of the world, for the year were $3,901,649. This and will be regarded as a prudent amount fully covered dividend requireâ€" and constructive move. The published ments of $2,975,000, contribution to Reserve Fund is maintained at the QOficers‘ Pen’sio;x Fund, $200,000; apâ€"| M substantial figure of $20,000,000 and propriation for bank premises, $200,â€" $1,383,604 is carried forward to the 000; reserve for Dominion Governâ€" credit of profit and lose account. ment taxes, $310,000, and left $216,650 Strong Liquid Position,. to be added to profit and loss account, | a Total assets shown by the Stateâ€" making a total of $1,383,604 to be carâ€" ment for the fiscal year which ended |ried forward to the next fiscal year. Ww November 30th last are $729,260,476; The Annual General Meeting of the liquid assets of $362,471,645 aggregate shareholders will be held at the Head 55.76% of liabilities to the public; | Office of the Bank in Montreal on w cash and bank balances total $157,â€" Thursday. January 11th. Royal Bank Annual Stateme;t Showfs Strong Liquid Position Youngest of film sponsored for Los . Left to right: Luci "sEsl ol NMim stars and a group | d for Los Angeles reliet work. right: Lucille Lund, Daisy Neysa There is a real danger to the Caâ€" nadian export cheese trade in permitâ€" ting the volume of cheese to decline further. Some dealers in the United Kingdom even now question the adâ€" visability of dealing in Canadian cheese in view of the limited quantity available, and the relatively short time during which they are available. â€"Dominion Dairy Commissioner. 1201 Central Bidg., Teronto, Ont. Ignorance is the stepmother of most The Annual General Meeting of the shareholders will be held at the Head Office of the Bank in Montreal on Thursday, January 11th. Mrs. Babb: Yes; even the fact that she has all the brains. Shareholders will be interested in seeing that despite the lower level of interest rates which particularly afâ€" fected the return from liquid assets maintained at reserve centres, profits for the year were $3,901,649. _ This amount fully covered dividend requireâ€" ments of $2,975,000, contribution to QfMcers‘ Pension Fund, $200,000; apâ€" propriation for bank premises, $200,â€" 000; reserve for Dominion Governâ€" ment taxes, $310,000, and left $216,650 to be added to profit and loss account, making a total of $1,383,604 to be carâ€" ried forward to the next fiscal year. Mrs. Todd: A tactful wife keeps many little household secrets from main the working balances of business and farming customers, the substanâ€" tial upward move in these figures is of particular interest as an indication of increased commercial and industrial activity. a group of featured motion Canadian Deposits Increase A feature of the Bank‘s year was an increase of $18,610,694 in Canadian deâ€" mand and savings deposits. As Canaâ€" dian demand deposits represent in the Maintain Cheese Volume While certain lines of business are less active than a year ago, other inâ€" dustries have experienced a keen deâ€" mand for their products in recent months, with the result that inventorâ€" ies have been b;ought down to abnorâ€" mally low figurés. Both these factors have contributed to reduce the need for banking accommodation, and this iÂ¥ reflected in a decrease of $44,442,â€" 954 in loans and discounts. Commerâ€" cial loans now stand at $316,119,392 against $360,562,286. Call loans in Canada and abroad were reduced by $3,598,571 during the twelve months‘ period. The total of $106,850,615 invested in Dominion and Provincial Government securities represents an increase of $17,401,771 compared with the preâ€" vious year. A small decrease is shown in Canadian municipal securities and British Foreign and Colonial public securities. «~â€"_>A Lucky Young Man The benefit was Vhe!d at the with baby Leroy and Lois Ja and Lois January, picture players at TORONTO are the six points of Dr, Davenport‘s doctrine of the Long Life, as she imâ€" parted them to an audience of woâ€" men in South Bend, Indiana, the other day; ‘.Never get angry; learn selfâ€"control; develop agility; be quick serves the Providence Journal, These } We may listen with especial interâ€" est and respect to the advice to woâ€" men given by Dr. Marie Charlotte de Coliere, Davenport, who was born, so she says, one hundred and nine years ago, in the Russian City lately known Leningrad, and is now utonmunxlyl The little evening muffs of feathers are the darlings of fashion right now. They were seen in several styles and in the range of this season‘s popular afterâ€"dark colors. These little feather bags are effective compliments to featherâ€"trimmed frocks, or to feather Most of the new styles in daytime bags are not discernible as a muff, resembling instead a moderate sized pouch bag, which closes at the top with a zipper, clip, or tricky fastenâ€" ing. The muff is in the fuiness of the pouch. 1 Chicago.â€"Muff bags can be had for daytime and evening wear, They are developed in fur, furâ€"like fabrics, feaâ€" thers and fabrics. Either utilitarian like wools, or dressylike velvets. Muff Bags Among I like to think he found her still the same, And that she read between his twinkling lines More than pretending, more than just a game. ‘ Undimmed by any doubt of ouru,‘ there shines ‘ A light that child has given us to hold, When darkness gathers and the story is told. }That was his wish. How many years ago _ Were the words written? Into what ‘ small hand Fell that enchanted letter? Did she know, As Alice did, the way to Wonderâ€" land? Some clocks run backward, whether we accept ; The shadow on the dial, the years that pass; Arid time will never touch us once we‘ve stepped Across his threshold, through the Lookingâ€"Glass, "I hope you will be a child still when I see you next."â€"In a letter from Carroll. ESCmm PCYR & steady decrease of that flabby fat which is as unhealthy as it is unsightâ€" ly. Kruschen is a scientific blend of six mineral salts found in the waters of those European spas that have been used by generations of overstout peoâ€" plé to reduce weight. If you are overweight take one halfâ€" teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morning. There will be no rapid or alarming loss of weight, but just a steady decrease of that flabby fat c ce ie d _1 F "Three months ag0o," a woman writes, "I was persuaded to try Krusâ€" chen Salts to reduce my, weight, which was 222 lbs. I had tried other things, but all to no avail. Now I know that Kruschen Salts are different. In three weeks I lost 5 lbs., and I felt five years younger. I really must say I feel a different woman. I have now lost 28 lbs. to date."â€"(Mrs.) S c r ‘ CAST OFF UGLY FAT Shrine auditorium, Los Leslie Nelson Jennings, in The New York Sun. Woman To Live to Be 100 a glant Immortal Child New Accessories 3 Months benefit periormance 28 lbs. in Angeles, , MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS | Write us tgr l.amx’"og’n?c:' mo::?vfiu;, etc. s ! Connâ€"Leedy Musical ‘ precautions to preserve the food value. For cabbage, turnips, onions,| cauliflower and brussel sprouts use | only enough water to cover and boil | gently, Cook green vegetables, loch" as spinach, in a very small amount of water, or none at all except the Daughterâ€""I know, dad. â€" Brtitfl‘i& cided to take off twenty per cent. for cash." Fatherâ€""You are going to marry that insignificant little fellow, Percy! Why, you used to say you would never marry & man less than six feet high." Johnâ€"‘"Naturaliy, the light headed ones go first." Jimâ€""They say there are more marâ€" riages of blondes,than brunettes, J wonder why.‘ Maybe they named it "Call" money because somebody wants some every time the front door bell rings. A man begins to be moneyâ€"wise when he doesn‘t want anybody to lend him any money. A rabbit is a little fourâ€"legged ani mal that grows the fur that other ani mals get the credit for when made in to a woman‘s coat. one respect. The more it works the harder it kicks. When we have universal finger printing it will certainly go bard with the small boy who samples his mothâ€" er‘s jam, 10 Shuter 8t. + ‘Toronto rou trust your wife. That‘s confiâ€" dence. Your grocer trusts you. That‘s confidence, too. _ You trust yourself. That‘s a mistake., Boiling vegetables calls for The two most unsatisfactory things in the whole world are soup and love that have grown cold. In the old days the youngsters used to be troubled with the whooping cough. These days they have the whoopee cough, There are folks willing to blame their troubles on the Lord and expect manna from the same source. appears to be all right for two. A lad says that while sitting out in the moonlight may be bad for one, it Cider is very much like a man in a living A man‘s success is not measured by the number who cheer him, but by the number who envy him. We‘ll have faith in the sincerity of the rich man who desires to die poor when he takes to writing poetry for Women teachers don‘t get a fair deal. They should be paid enough to support a husband on before they get too old to want to. You trust your wife reply "How do you know she phonist ?" "I have said Hello twice Look at the télek;tnré;is( at the next table." A man is as breakfast and she looks befo Noticed a newspaper headline the other day which read: "A Sad Death.‘ Well, who ever heard of a merry one? extent, A dog has nothing to give his ter but faithfuiness and a good tite, but he gives both in the +# Next to making mistakes, the est thing in the world is to eri the mistakes of others. Next to illiteracy, ;he in the world is the ma education than he can 2 000C moue Te eeeuiekL but it might be wise to say it over the radio to make sure and certain, Experience "Know anything about cars?" "Been mixed up with em a bit," *"Mechanic?" "Noâ€"pedestrian."* It‘s not what you‘d do with a million if riches should fall to your lot. But what you are doing at present with the $1.35 you‘ve got. word to the wise may be sufficient PC 7" PP enz s as old as he feels before and a woman is as old as before breakfast. C CCUCSs5 and a £ood appeâ€" gives both to the fullest No Reply Hello‘ twice and got no , the saddest sight > man with more can use. is a tele §, the easiâ€" to criticize VEBETABLE comrouns mmareiunoncd.g kx when you can‘t stand the children‘s noise :; ; when everything you do is a burden:;:;;: when you are irr}â€" table and blue ; : : try Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound. 98 ous of 100 women report benefit. It will give you just the extra enâ€" ergy you need. Life will seem worth living again, o medicine can give. a bottle from your druggist today. SNTWY that the cost is only a few cents. _ _One dose of l.BUC‘.K.'I.EÂ¥'S MIXTURE gives unmistakable relief. Two doses very dt.h.&nmamfiorcold for good. Nou.hqumcwghorco“hu hung on, Buckley‘s will stop it=â€"quick! That‘s -bymhuy."h-mlh-fluhâ€"-mh wip proves it." Beware of substitutes. Buckley‘s is sold everywhere. The weight of a coat so much difference in a transport p‘ane that are careful to select will cover well _ Lig quires more coats to | ing finish, IAmZ ETT In these days when even pennies c finl to have a remedy like BUC} IXTURE, that banishes coughs and qfidflyht&mh-]y.ltwr QUIVERING Get Rid of That And all things w beauty here, All little things i Quick blossoms th: by year, Kisses that even bered not, All these are now w# bring To krow the hea thing. â€"John Drinkwater, Classmate, Beauty forgotten yet is | For nothing lovely eve Not Helen‘s face, nor Al« Passing to death, but to birth, In some new brain the will waken, Courage and love tha and were done, Called from a night by th * forsaken, Will know again the gl sun. Cuticura The Soap That‘s Known and Sold The World Around Cough or Cold Nothing Better for Daily Use : _/‘!>~~>* PMb 256, 4 NERVE S The Coleman Lamp and Stove Company, Limited 9 Davies Ave., . Toronto, Ontario No matter how well made any product occasionally f needs to be "tuned up." Just ship your lamp to us prepaid with your name and address, toâ€" gether with $1.50. We will repair it and return it to you prepald. (This does not include replacing a fount beyond repair or a broken shade.) Always ship lamp without shade. All other repairs are included in above price, n C PahPama For Only a Few Cents Instruction now the ’udgmpr we have know Repaired For $1.50 Light "TC° count, it‘% like BUCKI EY $ Lu pennies mes count the dawn remem nA ve the weight of manyfacturers colors which ‘ver up Alexand paint makes e weight of mufactyrens beaut s colds so € a last lo m y lovely nnat that PCO 1 Car n C an he Or h

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