ou could not wish>& finer Chocolates than Qjou cannot offer sweetlieart wife or friends a finer assortment of Chocolates than AULSEBROOKjS vsi/fZimt* SHSS* £& m : »m m m mm >K.<S S*S ?*»>:# J**" 1 m m & m m & ; :*S *& 16 mm *m. \i W& DELICIOUS CENTRES $&% ■^^^.^rM^r^Mi&: f * i MCLEOD BROS.LTD. 'Manu. rers LATHERS BETTER LASTS LONGER
How ro stop in Sheep Dosing with Cooper's Worm Drench is the safest and most effective way of curing worm infestation in sheep. A carbon tetrachloride preparation of proved efficiency. Cooper's Worm Drench is the result of years of extensive research. No mixing or fasting necessary, and the depressed condition usually found after treatment is practically eliminated. Economical—one gsllon will dose goo sheep or t,Boo lambs. g(J _ . t* necessary, and the depressed condition I usually found after treatment is practic- II ally eliminated. Economical—one gal- \\ MM t/tfk. STJfe %. M lon will dose 900 sheep or 1,800 lambs. W"KM = DMMktsHA |A%aa] Cooper's Adjustable Wonn Drench I HJiHIEaJ« BJi Poser (iUus. at right) facihtates dosing j and ensures correct doses being given. |,. Try Cooper's Worm Drench NOW. Obtainable from all Merchants. TIMBER TIMBER Let us quote you for that house or alteration. For tempting prices and best quality. P.O. Box 456. ,phonfi 3Wtt THE BUTLER TIMBER CO. LTD MANDEVILIE STEEET. Telegraphic address "Button." B2! Picnics by Rail GET THE FREE BOOKLET The Railway Department has just issued a series of handy booklets, which will be very useful to folk who are planning picnics for day schools, Sunday schools, friendly societies, commercial houses, factories, and so on. The booklet shows a wide range of picnicking places in the principal districts. It contains tables indicating the very low fares, and other helpful information. The Railway Department, with long experience in this field, is well qualified to give efficient assistance in the organisation of picnics. Consult your nearest Stationmaster, Business Agent, os? District Traffic Manager a
Tweezers Alley, London, a quiet old courtyard where tho ring of the blacksmith's hammer upon the anvil has long been drowned by the roar of traffic in the Strand and on tho Embankment, had its last shoeing recently. For more than a century blacksmiths had toiled in Tweezers Alley, true to the . village smithy tradition. These farriers shod the van horses of Messrs W. H. Smith and Son —horses used in the distribution of newspapers to the railway termini. Now a fleet of motor-vans is being used. Once the palace of the Bishop of Bath and Wells occupied the site of Tweezers Alley, and a relic of those days exists in the vaulted roofs of the Stables.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20711, 23 November 1932, Page 4
Word Count
433Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Press, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20711, 23 November 1932, Page 4
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