Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 28 Nov 1907, p. 2

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¢++ HH+WH§§++9#+¢++ + J. I i About the Hausa Prevnnt Waist-s Bulgingâ€"To prevent ,a waist from bulging up around the .neck iron from the collar down to the t-(rt‘tam of the waist. Also good for shirt bosoms. Kerosene Dust Clothâ€"Dip a piece of cheesecloth in kemsene and let Oval)- 0 late. Then use the cloth as n duslier. it will take up dust without scu‘tter- M++H+HWM ,ing if. and polish at the same time. CHOICE RECIPES. Make. Malling Rugâ€"To make u Pl'l‘l.‘ ly mallim,r rug for your room that has Delicious Fruit. Compole.â€"-One and a matting on the floor, got some simnph-S half peek of pears. pared and culled, two ounces of ginger root, from the stores and with some string four pounds Fmv them together with large. stilettos. of sugar one pint. of water stirred in f Siv or eight pirees make. a grxld sized sugar. l'ut pears and ginger in I Syrup; boil slowly for one hour. Boil lwo lemons twenty llIlllUll'S, or until Jelldcr; take out lemon and Gimp l i the i rug. '1‘.) Chum (tar-ref on Fl<‘)or.â€"~Tcke half a damn largo. imintmsvwhich will be“ cmugh for cur-pot of one l‘OOlllâ€"â€"f.{l‘flle dhe lemons flnc. Add them to the [WWW them and rub well with dry nag into (klok until the syrup is thick. carpet; then take a cloth wrung ouf Potatoes on llalf Shedâ€"BUM llll‘xégof hot water and wipe off thoroughly smooth potatoes of uniform size until-mm Your came; Wm book like um“ ,they are soft. Divide each carefully in half lengthwise, scrape out the m- terior, do not break the skin, mask the Daintfly Laundered “lustsâ€"When ironing lingerie and shirt waists iron the sleeves first. When one sleeve is potato with a little hot milk and melt-i ironed ml u, “in, crushed issue pawn 9° mm” “M” 3'9“ can be“ ‘l‘ 1° ‘1; the second one the same. ’I‘hrn iron the. prelim; season “nth 51““ and Pepper“ body part of the waist and the sleeves ‘bcat in two large fablesjnonfuls of grated cheese for two cupfuls of pota- to «and return to the shells; set in the oven until hot and slightly browned. Serve in 'l-hc skins. Jelly of a New Colonâ€"Take tho pur- ple (kmcnrd grapes, wash and pull), placing the pulp in one dish and the skins in another; 000k and strain son- aralely and make your jelly separately. From the "pqu you will have a most beautiful amber color, and from the ,skins a dark red. and each has a deltcl. (ms and distinct flavor of its own. One has so much jelly that. is mid that it is a pleasant change to have another Bloc color. Vegetable Eseallop.â€"â€"Put a layer each of flncly cut celery. onion, and bread- crumbs in a buttered baking dish; sea- ~lion with salt and pepper and repeat until dish is nearly full, having the crumbs on top. Dot with pleocs of but- ter and sprinkle with grated cheese. then "fill dish nearly full of milk and bake one-halt hour. This dish is oriâ€" ginal, but was voted :1 great success at a dinner prepared on short notice for unexpected, guests. Fish Hash.â€"One pinlt bowlful of cod- flsh, shredded fine; ‘two bowlfuls of po- tatoes, pared and cut in small dice. Place in a stewpan, cover with water. and boil twenty-five minutes; drain off all the water and let it remain on the stove two minutes to steam, and then mash until perfectly smooth. ’Add. One small cup of cream and one well beat- er; egg, and beat the mixture rapidly With. a spoon for five minuta Ifave hot in a frying pan the fat from sever- ' 8 pieces of bacon, into which put the hash and cook until the edges look brown, being careful to'burn. Turn» carefully, bottomside up. on a hot plat- ter and serve hot. . Sea Piaâ€"First make a thick pudding crust, line a dish with same. or a cake .tfnyis much better; put a layer of sliced onions. then a layer of salt beef cut in slices, in layer of sliced potatoes, a layer of pork, and also another of on- ,le13; sprinkle pepper over all and then cover with a crust which must be fled down tightly with a cloth previously dipped in boiling water and floured well. Boil for about two hours and serve hot in a dish. Luncheon Eggsâ€"Boil six eggs until hard, after which pezl and cut in halves and lay them on a plate or dish. Over them grate two tablespoons of cheese. ,Put into a pan a cupfu‘l of milk~nnd ,when this is boiled stir into it a tableâ€" ,Slto'onful of butter and two of flour, well creamed h’igedier. When this is cooked to a thick creamy sauce season with salt and pepper and pour over the eggs. Serve hot with salted or toasted crackers. Grape Piaâ€"Take one Corfee cup 0‘ Igrapes, one tcacup of sugar, one egg. {1 pinch of salt, a desserlspoonful of flour, and a teaspoonful of butter. Bake with two crusts. This makes one pie and is delicious. HINTS FOR THE HOUSEKEEI‘ER. Beat Blankets Unml Softâ€"Beat your blankets with a bamboo carpet beater when nearly dry on the clothes line; it makes them light and soft and they look like new. you see lying. around and pin it on the Lwlll dry shape without wrinkles. To Use a Table Cloth a Weekâ€"ladies .who are their own maid of all work pan make their tablecloth do service for a longer time. After numerous spots disfigure its snowy whiteness. rub a piece of chalk over the spdts as they appear. This has a magical ef< feel and omnp'letely mncerils them from view. if the spot-s are of grease the chalk absorbs it. To Bleach Cotton Cloth. â€"â€" Thirty yards of cotton clot-h may be bleached in 15 minutes by one large spoonful of sat soda and one pound of chlor- ide of lime dissolved in soft water. Af- ter fairing out. the cloth rinse at once in soft water so that it will not decomâ€" in proper pose. Good use for Broom-s‘iiekrrAn old bmomstick with a good sized hook screwed on the end will serve various {purlmses such as drawing (a shado that has rolled to the top; taking a package from a high she-if; taking a picture from the wall; getting baby‘s playthings that have rolled under the sideboard, etc, etc., until you can hardly do with- out it. Remind Careless Onesâ€"flew is an idea that has helped with the older ones. as well as the children: Stretch a strong cord across a place where every one can see it. Take a piece of paper and write on, it: “This string is for careless people." Pick up everything inn, with the owner’s or user's name written on a piece of paper pinned on the top of the article. You will be sur‘ prised how quickly every one will hunt a. place to put things away. Stockings Give Extra Warmth.â€" In 'the fall when the weather is change able have a pair of stocking legâ€"ready to pull on if it turns colder. it often saves girls from taking a hard cold; also saves, putting on extra skirts, bc~ sides they can be taken off easily if it gets warmer in the midle of the day. In traveling always have an extra gauze vest or long sleeved corset Caver. together with the stocking legs. handy. They take up little room and may be of great service. Decorate Rooms Simplyâ€"in decor~ aimg a mom do not use too much brie- a-hrac, especially the cheaper ware. A few pieces of fine ware will give beauty '40 a men] where a large num- ber of trashy articles will confuse and give a common appearance. Several large vac-cs of delicate design add much to the room. A large and hand- some clock will beautify a mantel or shelf much more than several small ones. With a few carefully chosen pictures. the mom may then become it tight, to the eye. Care‘ of Rubber Glovesâ€"Rubber gloves will last. twice as long if treat- ed in the following manner; After dry- ing rub thoroughly with flour and pull them off wrong side. out. Nerd. time put them on flour side in. This keeps the fingers from sticking together, makes them go on mom msily, and by bringing them on each hand altematr- ly distributes the wear. Never wear them when washing in gasoline, as it stretches “them. aooaaoowaowwwwwcoooo, Grippe or Influenza, whichever you like to call it, is one of the most weakening \ diseases known. Influenza. Scotf’J Emulsion. which is Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites in easily di- gested form, is the greatest strangth-builder known to medical science. It is so easily digested that it sinks into the system, making new blood and new fat, and strengthening nerves and muscles. ” Use Scott'J EmulJt'on after Invaluable for (70113115 and Colds. ALL DRUGGISTS: 500. AND $1.60. 6¢¢¢¢®©¢$¢$¢¢Q¢¢¢¢¢@§¢¢ f SOURCES OF FORTUNESI lVlIl‘IRE SOME MULTl-MILIJON/“RES CAME FROM. twist of Them Started on the “0nd to Beginnings. It is n Lul‘ii'lllfi and instructivn fact that. of (hr. world‘s llllllllrlllilll-.Vllftlf‘<§8, at least four out. of five lmvo been crud- led in cottages or [Xll'f‘l‘lyvsll‘if‘lv'f‘ll farinlwuses, and have ounnience-i their Ntl‘enuous' climb of the ladder of FlCIlCnl from its lowest, rung. it was in a very modest. farmhouse in Wellington County, Ontario, that Mr, James J. Hill. who today is the most powerful railway magnate in the world, first saw the light nmrly seventy years ago. At fifteen he was toiling early and late in the fields to support his widowed mother, and he thought his fortune was madt} when he found employment behind the counter of a small country store. A few years laicr he was glad to earn two dollars bors. Mr. Charles M. Schwnb, America's “Steel King," had for father a strug- gling factoryâ€"(narrative, and earned his {list money by working on neighlmring farms and driving the mail-cart between Cresson and Lorctfo. From plough and cart he migrated to a small gro< very-store. where he sold ice. and su- gar over the counter FOR T\\’O DOLLARS A \V'EEK; and he first set his IOot. on the ladder of fortune when he. was engaged to drive stakes at. a dollar a day for the Carnegie Company. Within twenty years from this humble start he was drawing a stilary of $8,000,000 a year, and owned more millions than he had ever dreamt of possessing. Less than sixty years ago Mr. Wana- maker, the ’mlllionnire “Store. King," Philadelphia, thankful to pick up a crust or a cent by any kind of menial work. The son and grandson of poor blickidycrs. it seemed as hopeless for him to win wealth as to capture a rain- bow; and it was a proud day when he carried iman a dollar‘and a half, his; first week's earnings as errand-boy to a Looksellor. MR. JOHN D. ROCKEFEIJER, who is credited with a fortune of $500.- 000,000, began his sensational career by handling a hot) and driving a pough on farms in 'l‘ioga County, un- til he was promoted to an office-stool in Cleveland, Ohio; and he regarded his fortune as good as made when he purchased‘a raft of hop-poles, steered it- down the Ohio River, and sold it‘ to a miller for a profit of Mr W. A. (Ilark, who is said to have made $50.- «0,000 out of copper, was a farm-ta- borer for many a yearâ€"spending nine months on the farm and three at sehootfiunlii he. set his face towards the West in quest of fortune. For two years he was a school-teacher in Mis- souri, and it was only after a heart- bmaking spell as u quartzâ€"iner that he got on nodding terms with Fortune in Montana, Mr. W. S. Siraffon, the well-known “Gold King,’ was one of the nine chilâ€" dren of n struggling lxiaL-buddcr, and forty years ago W115 working at a carâ€" penter's bench in lndiuna. After six unpalatable months of Marking in (in [own store he drifted. with soonâ€"an hi; worldly mssosslonsvâ€"in his pockrl. to lljnlorado, where he spent nineteen years in a fruitles‘ search for gold, un. ill “STRA’TTON'S il.i.-l.U(tl{" passed inh a proverb. Equally hopeless wore the early years i:-’ Mr. John W. Mackay. who was dc- stined to make millions in California. [him in Dublin seventy-five years ago, his parents. despairing 0f making a living in Ireland, emigrated to Al'ncriea when the future (ll'crsus wa~ a boy of ten: and three years later he was help- ing to support his widowed mother with his poor earnings as a shipbuild- cr‘s apprentice. .\ir. liouss, the “blind millionaire." was earning, sixty years ago, a dollar a week and his board in Mr. .1300!) Sonseny‘s store at \V'innhus. fer; and sixteen years later had made so little pmgress on the road to wealth that he was glad to earn food and shelter by mlrklng on his father‘s farm is. the Shenandoah \'nllcy_ Mn pm. tr-r Fuhrer. who left behind him an enormous fortune a few years ago, tuilmi for many years on his fathers farm on the bunks of the Hudson lie- fcri- tux nimie lll.‘ wry, Zil the age, if (hunk-on, in Durham. \'«-w York Nair. \\llf‘li‘ he {fulfil «‘znn‘nvzlmm u; a CM.“ in .i smut! Sore; til ll ‘11» l: ad :v-‘ll two» i\-si\' _viuirs' of [tin when he winery-.1 )ig, 'mg‘icst drapery .~l20p in Luke. Street, ,iihicng-i. It is :1 curious. coincidence that Mr. Levi Letter and Mr. Marshall Field. who wore .\fr. Painncrk' partners. like himself «or? sun: of pol-r farm-l Ivrs. and hqu torn (-lrrks Ln \\‘l:o'=c;~‘ulel ldrnjvcry hails-N. i Rift. ANDREW r‘\I‘.\"~-‘.Hll-l. l in the world knnws. “m cradle-i in a‘ V"l'.l' lowly “l-ui and lmil” ;.l lumi-~rr::-t 'lfine. Sellrilnl. the rail} of 't luwr .i:lâ€"‘. nl:l‘l\.'\\'Ui-l\'l 1': :lll-l lll.‘ ll."I ‘ns‘wlntf-llfi (-f the many in 102.: that inm- ll-M‘wl; into his exalt-111: ‘r was his lli‘a‘l \i‘ccii's Fortune “'ith Very Small 8 ifumiiy of good of the railway giants of the. world, is was a barefoofed lad in the streets of 0p MAKE NE“! BLOOD. earnings of $1.25 as a bobbinâ€"hoy in Allegheny filly, Mr. C. T. Yerkes lie- gun its hril‘innf career as u llllillny- maker by work n»: as clerk in. a flour and grain mlnldidnnt‘nt. proving for in: first year's lzil>>r a present of 351). x i t i That is \thf Dr. Willinms' Pink Pills [loa’l‘ha‘l is Why They (lure .\lr. Edison's liis! mum-y was earns-ii So Many Diseases. - ' \ll‘ 0 -\v' rm -r. . mind ' and H V ,m“ m I] ' ' .‘. L, L. ‘ , , leen persons lune not enough l‘i‘tiâ€"nllls. on Grand trunk lluilu a) V _. v I “.1.” ,_ m)! h _ “ d H“, mm .n “w Illa-id, or win-n their inod is nch < l \ l ". . l. . 4 ' ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ and Willcl‘)’, tie no. i- rs name the ii'ix *f ii :cfl-nt (if . H 0‘ 1”” { Hum” '0 h" I M“ troublo alumni-la. lllmvllii’SFlii‘SS is the direct mum. of n my rmnnmn (llSfiliS- es, such n:_ii " 'r-sfon, p2il;.iénl.i-ui of the heart. da‘; .iy. (lichize, neuralgia, licrvriusurss. I'll uma’fs n null consump- lion. 'llw :uils‘, signs («I lo r flood EN painnsfls, bulish lips, rolll liunris un'l feet, general weakness. low spirits ltllil li-l‘uachg) :n'd burkucies, If tillaf-llllil .s rot rhekkv-d ill line it will pl‘~=l.\af;l)' devwlop into olli.~'ulnpt,ioll. mmwmmarmamwmmflraauwkkawnc All mutinmillivmriiron, lznwcvsr. llilVQ. m-fu‘illv lll"l\"\ I'rw m. rwlalilmll. EL“ maf.h“‘l if)?“ “0”” (“m-sum "‘““’1w'-;-i.~h m.- um ve'ns and l=rin : new . Ellllllllbx. g-yr'd “LN”! m Mil. I’ItIIlI‘UN’I‘ MORGAN waving a l‘.lilw.l_‘,’ mnployn'»; child fmzn l~=ing lilll mcr li)’ a train, the grate.â€" fut intllrl‘. by duty of reward, initntlllg the lad into the lny~f9itczs of telegnlgiliy. Mr. W. l.. l'lezns. the Hi Rilt‘lplllll millionaire, \\’.‘l>‘ of humble birth. nil-ti was for some yum-4 mx :ilr‘pald clerk in a general s‘orn; Mr. lines it. Keene was in his early year: :1 whirnmmr; inf/i. as a boy, Mr. lrimn li’lld‘ll saui‘ petrime and popc'un at (oliirv lama rir’i. life. new vrcrgy usd blfuldlf‘fii pm .20, [ll plvmf of llll~; Miss [Val I ("e l ‘1! If \"" 1' ll . i l . . z I uu : 1 s . - a ,. , . i ., hm. .. It .. n n....r.,. _ .tzpura a, .. had it Illllilollzuo IJI Iltilu‘, and v (mi. ‘1‘, ‘ “E‘m‘ tw“ yams I “more built his I'ileirnwu»: fortune. on it Very substantial basis of inhirilvd mmml/H His father. however, lmgan his work- ing (lilyri as n inl‘ln-lxiy. and did not have his clerk‘s desk in :1 drawers from anaemia. l was weak. thin. had no rp'e lie. 1 \e z:e€:1=ics had dirlz‘i‘x“â€" 1m: h-‘nlaclim and felt Iv: spiz'ilt'ii. Mv hand “on”! pallitnln \‘l.1‘:v’1lll)’§ I it day as a dOCli-IaIOFEP (ll SV- Pm'l- A , I . , , ,., l mu‘d (In in work armiuvi the ll-‘lllSCZ Mlmmsow. \VhC‘FL‘i “WW 3 romp-mic Cumming-huh” ‘mm he .“Hb “hm” I lie/Flinn, \‘rrv 1=nle nn'l ill.V nrrvrs not wooing he married pretty Mary Muhc- two 3’3an "f forty" M“ ('I‘T’W‘wy m‘ “mirth”, 'i'li'n effmls or two good "an Idald-oball-work nt‘u little holt‘l WW ‘5 um 5”” of 1mm?“ who. can” doctors iriled {-7 h-tu inc. I was in Semi um wharf. T041“). Mrs, mu 030ml“ RN“ I‘ll” '3 \"le L’I'lllm‘fny such n pitiful state. like ilfly a friend looks down from hcr $700,000 iiiuansion ‘T‘lUC’l’lfm: M"; I" I“ Warm“ \wa” 1: urzfd me to 'ry Dr. \f‘z’ililams' Pick an fhr scene of hcl‘ early INHIle l‘d- pracmmg ‘10ch Mb” 1““ Lune” m” Pct-1R and l it‘d ~n. N‘mn i saw the . . ,- . \, g ., ‘ v .- kugm“.m Tim‘m“ L‘h" Linn; .(Ijllj‘th' pills \Vrre hat i"; the and by the time ~ .~ - ~ g . the h’mkmg ‘m “11" l’ a ”‘ I I l hm] taken buss l was (‘O‘dl- , .. mnv .. . 1 S ‘r: I 1 rr im . “Ml (Lil i rd it" had a gxyd diplfljllle; - Lileielv cured. i .7 - ~ -‘ ' i -' -n. one i . . . Lngland. Ml. l.<l\vuid llfllllllld gamed m “Wth I had,” Pn Mm or pain. could sleep well and l nm in. far Miler hen'th now then i ever was. I cannot Surat: two highly of what Dr. \‘i'illiarrs' Dirt-t Pills have done for me." Dr. \‘Jliizisrs' Pink f’ill‘: havc dan' for Miss f‘lendenning they have the son of a New Jersey elergynmn. and was himsoif partly r-duented for the Church; Mr. W. (3. Whitney had dimpat‘afively rich parents. and was trained for the Law; while the plwnl {\fhu t generations of Vanderbil's. Asicrs. (1mm hr «banana.- g‘my Wm ['41 for iifnvemeyers, and Rennelts- have. of ya”. pm V,“ WM! 94 [hp ,Pnnine course. all been born ‘0 millions. Wm, me in,“ “an,” um. Wfi‘ ms‘. But even in these. rare cases one has Pink pm; 30:. Pal. Yummy. 0!, me only to go baCk‘ wm‘ very Eewzcxcm" wra iper are and l‘\'~"f‘v Lev. if your “0va a ngn’rfllfon (‘l‘ lw“) I“ filmvnr dealer ha: not lat. the genuine pills the very lowly Marcos from which 1hr ya” 9,1,, EC; in...” at 5.3 cenig [1 box colossal fortunes of to-day have sprung. m. Six his h. 0-.) w mm The "n “a-..” ‘ Williams' Medic-me Co, Brockville. Out. "â€"3 BABY SMILES. v _ __.... ._=J..____ One mother happily expressed her A “(u-(jg m A mm}. inion of Baby‘s Own Tablets when, “‘he Sai‘L "mom's ‘1 Smile in @VN‘S’ May be Seen in the Window of a Lon- dose.” In homes where the Tablets! dun, “nflhmdrJewmpr' are used there are no cross. fretful, sacle children. The Tablets make: . children well and keep them well.;surpriséng accuracy and which are They cure indigestion, colic, constipaJ worn on linger rings over :m'iudys tion,~dinrrh-oea, teething troubles and glove, are the very latest novealzcs in at. the other minor ailments of child- l the form of pracueul ornaments to be hood. They can be given with ubso soon now in the WilhlUWS of a London lute safety to the new born child, for jew-Qlier. _ t _ the mother has the. guarantee of n The lewciier in question receivud one government analyst that tho Tablets do 0' they! ring watches recently from not contain one particle of opiate or Swiss watcinnaker, who that his poisonous soothing stuff. isn't such: workmen make the ornament as a ~re~ guarantee worth sometling to you, suit oi un al'gullnml over the question mother? The Tablets are sold by all into how small a space the works of medicine dealers or may be had from an accurate timepiece Could be com- 'I'he Dr. Williams‘ Medicine (30.. Brook- Posed. _ ville Onf., at 25 cents a box. The icweller placed the tiny orna- ' _; a“ - __. meni in 11-5 windzw as a curiosry. out \INDNG m5, OWV BUS»,ng one day a smurdydrcsscd lady enter- ed the shop to make a close examina- For Cool swipes-session the descend: “on of me “mm. ant of Ham is hard to discount. This; 'llz-y Watlcllv's, that iril the film; wl‘h :.y and [u-rsuuded [him to sell it for $350. She slipped it trait of the. negro was illuslarfed in a. f ripen her linger over her glove and left lccant trial down South of a manlthe shop. named Chambers for shooting another Shortly afterwards the jewclicr had man. The most important witness \vasfso many calls for ring watches that {-‘rank Jenkins. a negro. who was white- i he ordered a dozen from his watch- washing a chicken-call) only a few fect , maker, and now the‘fashlon seems to away when the quarrel took plaeefil‘u fairly well established: When the lie was given. deleCflnt But this latest luxury is an expen- went llldoul‘)‘ for his gun. lsive one, for the cheapest ring: watch “What did you do then?" asked thejcnst.» $lh0. and {rem this the price cross-examiner. ranges up to three or even four times “fitness-fl jes‘ went that amount, the price varying. 'of washing dc chicken-mop." course, with the number and quality Cmss-exaniinerâ€"â€"“But when the (IO-i“! the gems used. The \vm-kmunship. h-ndunt appeared with his gun, and it‘ however, is the same In each which, looked as if someone was (going to getiand the works will stand a surprising on winte- .hurt, then what did you do?" amount of knocking about before pp. Witnessâ€"fit kept on whifewashing de- quiring repair. They keep excellent chickencwp. dat's all." time, to within a minute a day. Cross-examinorâ€"“When the shot was __.. “Nd‘ What did you .dolw . Colonel Fizzletop “"15 under the pain- “Kepl right on whitewashing. it was Ni “6.93%”. of adnfimstwing a same nor-0 of m" busing-“v “I‘d Wm” ‘ C‘lm casilgn-uun to his son Johnny. arm from in Kuliituek. l lam-ml not to lll- he had ooxuplelt‘d his; labors, he said brown) when two white gentlolnenmuwmy m the suffering vilrtim._nva' were occupied in settling a question of; tell me why I punmlcd you... wrhuvs “math 1 leg. ("med “1) one mm“! if." embed Johnny; “you nearly pound v ' ~ ' Q at de 000]) ‘H-ld “if on “huewafihmg' the life out of me. and now you dont Cresc-exainlnerâ€" Did you do any- thing when they removed the lady?" “en km“ “hy ‘Wu did It' “flimsyâ€"“Yes. Still; kept on white- washing (tat Chlckenctop." Even the jusin was moved to smile by ibis uncommon display of a dispo- sition to attend strictly to one’s own business. DISTRESSING. Of all the “untold agony," The. most profound and deep, The suffering woman feeLs who's get A secret she must, keep, The genuine “ACME” self- fastening Skatesâ€"have our registered trademark and quality number stamped on the blade. L v Don’t take a poor, cheap imitation, when you can get the “real thing.” I <‘\<“"‘6~ mu "mil: '- v- - '33. If your dealer does not handle Starr "Acme" . kafes, write for free copy of 1908 Skate Book and the name of a dealer in your neighborhood who will supply you, The Starr Manufacturing Co., Limited DARTMOUTH, N. S. CANADA. BRANCH OFFICE ’ ' ' ‘ ' ' TORONTO, CHT

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