M ay 30, 194 T THE STOVE WITH 3,000,000 FRIENDS 000,000 housewives have discovered the way to better cowling, cooler kitchens and less work, They use the New Perfection Qil Cook Stove Ask your neighbor. She knows the New Perfec- tion Oil Gook Stove is dependable and easy to operate. She knows the Long Blue Chimney gives aclean, intense heat--without oder, or smoke. She knows the convenience and economy of using oil for fuel. > 4 The New Perfection Oven bakes unusually well --makes the stove a complete cooking device. i The Cabinet adds to the appearance of the stove and provides extra room for utensils Royalite Coal Oil gives best results IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED BRANCHES IN ALL CITIES NEW PERFECTION fone O1L, COG: TOVE a so A Sudden Call Jed 4 bud bruwe on his forepead 'imunii-Jomea: who bux kee e em, {tod cheek which be struck on. Falmund Jones who has been an the em:| the Shame walls and which 'in ploy of John R. Scott, R. R Ny. 1, Cree: | thought was the fatal blow, Drs. Bradley more, for the pust seven yeurs, Met instant and Ardill of Creemore were summoned deuth on Monday morning, May 13. Mr jand upon" -xemination stuted that death Jones hud been over 10 Jus. Leighton's ! wax instuntaueous. Deceased was in his dunng Sunday evening and did not" get! 38th year. His sister Mrs, W. G. Morren home till a late hour. He srose ss usual | and brother Chas. B. Jonex came down from 'on Monday :norning and Went to the barn | Collingwood on Monduy afternoon aud took to feed the stock, When breakfast was /the body back with them for interment. rewiy, Mrs, Seott went out and called him | Bewider his widowed mother, who lives near and on receiving no answer went on to the |New Liskeard, five maters and seven bro- , < barn to what was the matter. On| thers survive, three of whom are overveas. reaching the feed room rhe found Kdmvunid | Deceased was born and raised in Minesing Jying on his head in the corner having | ynd is a nephew of Mrs, Jus Keast of that fallen from the barn floor. Deceased v.2¥ | iLace. { subject to epilepsy. and it is supposed he was seized with one of these spells while coming down the stair leading from the threshing floor ty the feed room. He receive If you have any news items. ring up The Examiner. Phone 194 UT TTR I The Wonderful Pathe' Records HE Pathephone plays its T records with a polished jewel sapphire ball--instead of digging, scratchy needles. This ball glides in the wide grooves of the Pathé records so smoothly that the records last indefinitely. And you never have to "change needles." In Pathé Records, you find a new unexplored mine of music wait- ing you. World-famous singers-- some you have never heard before-- many have not yet sung on this wat y continent. Distinguished orchestras and bands. Indescribable musigal novelties. All are double-fac thus you have low first cost and everlasting wear. The Pathephone plays ail makes of records. Your own make of instru- ment can be readily equipped to play Pathé Records. Hear the Pathephone and Pathé Style Records to-day at your nearest "Willem Mery Pathé dealer's. Send for Pathe Catalogs of Period Designs. 'The Pathe Freres Phonograph Co. of Canada, Limited ' ¢4-8 Clifford Street_~ Toronto, Ont. "Montreal Office: 1004 New Birks Bidg. POTENT OTT GARRETT'S MUSIC STORE Phone 259 P. O. Box 178 THE BARRIE SPRING COLORS AND MATERIALS EMBROIDERY FOR DISTINCTION AND TUCKS FOR STYLE NEW YORK, MAY 16, 1918. Oh, the delightfully, deliciously dainty things one may wear this summer! Along Fifth Avenue the shops fairly dazzle one with frocks and sccessories, so simple and bewitching. Each thing one sees one thinks the very loveliest, until « glimpse is caught of the next one. 'There are heavenly shades of voile, made into fairy creations with tucks and tucks and tucks, by way of em- \phusis. There are tucks on the skirt, tucks on the waist, and on the sleeves, in fact wherever it is possible to put a tuck! The Wyre morse 8327 Gray Voile with a Touch of Embroidery collar nd cuffs be of filet | mish, for there is a decule favor of thw latter trimming. i und perhaps the ribbons at wrist und neck, ure of wonderful contrasting color | More About Organdy When ll is suid there ix nothing more |churming for summer dayx than orgundie, } Jerixjy and cool. About every other dress is made of this msterial, or there is a touch | of it for the collar, cuffs or sash. Often or: gondie is combined moxt effecuvely with Voile or linen, sometimes even gingham is | chosen us the complement of organdie. It | im rather unusual to see a pluin organche, | there are so muny other kinds. Stripes of varying widths, from the narrowest pin stripe to the quite wide ones are favored, | 'There ure cromburs und plaids and uny | checks, Here, too, one sees the invasion of jeinghum, for the quaint old-time patterns of thus material are being reproduced in or: | | gandies \ Old Colors for New | Volumes could be written Jhinations of color and the old ties that are being so widely used today | Ever since the Government asked the pa: jtriotie women of our country to refrain from the use of khaki, there bus been a | veritable riot of colors. Flaming roxy pinks, jcorn-flower blues with" that marvelous touch of violet in the blue, greens that seem to have stolen their tints from the April trees, und yellows and tans, and grays und lavenders, by way of contrast to the more intense hues. All white promises 16. be very smart for summer, at well as black- und white, Just a Touch of Embroidery | If one wishes to be very elegant, one puts just a touch of embroidery on one's very best dress. OF course, the embroidery may. y, be beads or braid, but it all Featuring the One-Sided Tunic comes under the general title of embroid- ery. On the dress illustrated bere, the simple design ison the waist. 'The dress is of French gray voile, and the design is worked up in white bends and silk of a darker shade of gray. The long lines of the dress are very good, as are the three-quar- ter tucked sleeves, 'and the tucks in the skirt, Bordered Materials and Flouncings The styles this year are so very appro- priate for the bordered materials and em- broidery flouncings. The short little Eton jackets have straight lower edges, as the narrower flouncings may be used, and the IN WOMAN'S REALM \that the most varied tastes can be pleased, ["Highlund'" Inn,' for those who want to be some more » the wild an, yet ry all the ok good service and social conpanl Jersey Cream EXAMINER are most attractive developed in the simple styles of this year. The graduation dress of 1918 will in all probability be of flouncing. Bewitching frocks for the little girl und her older sister are made of thia material, and there is nothing more charming for the af- ternoon summer Braid and Buttons On the coats, capes and suits that show a decided military influence, braid and but- tons abound. One emart little suit had all the edges braid-bound in the same delight- ful shade of green-gray us the gabardine of the suit. The wide belt, and the skirt from the belt to the deep bem, bad double rows of brass bu.tons. The One-Sided Effect There in quite » vogue for one-sided ef- fects in dresses and suits this spring. One- rided collars, one-sided cuffs and one-sided tunics are considered very smart, The stun- ning dress illustrated here has e one-sided tunic-blouse. It is very simple, as all good dresses ure, und relies on its tiny vest, col- lar and cuffs of white pique for trmming, "Y es---They're Cleaner, Fresher--- "when washed with Sunlight Soap. I find it cleans the clothes more thoroughly and with less work than ordinary soaps. It doesn't hurt the clothes and I must say my hands never feel the worse for it either. I really do not find it hard to look after the wash myself, because Sunlight Soap does so much of the work for me." Sunlight Soap Madam--there's nothing but truth in this lady's remarks. Sunlight Soap is made so well and so honestly that our guarantee of $5,000 that it contains no impurity hes never been challenged. t ALGONQUIN PARK The Algonquin Park of Ontario is a great reserve of nearly four thousand square miles. It is on the very ridge of the famed "Highlands of Ontario." Its _ altitude above the sea level averages 1,700 feet, while some of the lakes in the Park are 2,000 feet ubove the sea. Its tonic air fil- ters through millions of acres of pine and balsam and spruce, The fragrant bush, through which roads snd trails are con- stantly being extended, the tree-fringed lukes, disturbed only by sportive bass or trout or the swish of the paddle, the seren- ity, the impressiveness, and the beauty of t it 'sll combine to place the visitor under a the spell of this wonderful natural domain. i, . The park makes an especially strong sp- All grocers sell Sunlight Soap. , eto te Bee oe er LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO. 10 . . fare mote than 1,500 takes in the park, and the excellence of the sport draws an glers from every part of the Dominion, and from every State in the Union. Among the special varieties to be caught are the genuine square-tailed brook trout; the gamey bluck bass of the small-mouthed variety, ranging from half a pound to four 1 pounds, the black-spotted salmon, or its neur relative, the grey trout The accommodation in the park is such Mother may! have lease, Erm i 4 There are hotels, including the well-known Sodas? They're awfully good." 'There ure log cabin camps, Nominigan Camp and Camp Minnesing, comfortably furnished und ideal for fumily parties The park is easily accessible by the Grand Trunk Railway from all parts of Ca: nada. It is two hundred miles north of Toronto and one hundred and sixty-nine miles west of Ottawa. For reservations at the Highland Inn, Nominigan Camp and Camp Minnesing apply to Miss Jean Lind- : say, Manuger, Algonquin Park Station, butter, sweet milk, Ontario. For more detailed information, high-grade flour and maps, routes, ete., write to or call on C. E. pure shortening. You'll Horning, Union Station, Toronto. like their delicious, Correspondence Looked For A subscriber in the United States, in a letter to the Editor, says:-- "1 wonrer I never see anything from Big Buy Point in the Examiner. Does no- thing ever happen down there or have the old boys all gone away and the younger ones all in the Army? always look first for Painswick and ten Big Bay Point." This shows how eagerly the country cor: respondence is looked for, especially by those at a distance from home, The Exam- iner appreciates very highly the snlendid service given by its staff of correspondents, and the above extract is quoted to show them how much their contributions mean to the readers of this paper Sold Everywheré in Different Sized Packages y the new bigger . bar m=xes soap 'cheaper The bigger Comfort Soap bar for the same money is pretty goad news in these days of high prices isn't it? What, does it mean? Simply that our tremendous buying powerin the soap-materials market can give you infinitely better value in Soap than it can in premiums. Owing to the war hundred: than premiums, and the premiums of quality, and are certainly too ls of factories are now making more essential goods till offered us are too far under Comfort standards high in price, to be good value for you. So we will discontinue premums until after the War, anyhow. All premium-bearing Comfort Soa wrapperd and coupons now oat will still be redeemed from our present ample Premium stock. No pre --but every fraction of every cent you pay is returned to you in splendid Comfort Soap--the best way in war time. us Pugsley, Dingman & Co., Limited, Toronto tunics can be made of the wider flouncings. The tight little underskirts and the waist usually match the material of the flouncing chosen. There ere bordered voiles and crepes, as well os challis and silks, which