June 29, 1917. 
NORTEHOSHORE BR E EZE and Reminder 53 
-_-— 
es 
YPSOGONY, 
Perfection. 
Chimney that does it. 
PRINCIPAL OFFICES: 
NorHine WILL SUBSTITUTE. 
“Few people realize the downright 
brute strength of rubber,” said N. E. 
Oliver, of New York, Sales Manager 
for the Diamond Rubber Company, 
Inc, “They are apt to judge strength 
by the rubber articles they handle 
every day—pencil erasers, overshoes, 
and the kind of rubber bands that al- 
ways break in the wrong place and at 
the wrong time. 
“They would be surprised to see 
some of the tests conducted in the 
No coal-hod or ash-pan drudgery. 
Cooks fast or slow as you like, without soot or ashes. 
In use in more than 2,500,000 homes. 
about the New Perfection Kerosene Water Heater. 
laundry or bath at low cost. 
-For best resulis use SOCONY Kerosene. 
of NEW YORK 
BUFFALO 
STANDARD 
The Cook Is Known by her Kitchen 
A clean kitchen is the sign of a good cook. Anda kitchen that keeps 
clean without constant drudgery is the sign of an up-to-date cook—one 
who uses the New Perfection Oil Cook Stove. 
Visible flame that stays ““put.”’ 
OIL COMPANY 
NEW YORK ALBANY 
rubber that goes into the tread of a 
Diamond tire here at the factory. We 
will give any man a cord or strip of 
such rubber and let him try his 
strength on it. He will be surprised 
to find that it is only after quite a 
tussle that he can break it, if it all. 
“We frequently hear of some Don 
Quixote or would-be scientific Chis- 
topher Columbus, who is trying to 
produce a “substitute” for rubber. 
While we may be wrong, and while 
there is a remote possibility of some- 
‘ 
‘ FE | | 
Wik 
ih 
. = NEW PERFECTION 
a) 
Ce 
You never have to sweep up after cooking on the New 
Ask your dealer for booklet. 
It gives abundant hot water for 
ee ee 
It’s the Long Blue 
Inquire, too, 
BOSTON 
_—— 
body surprising us, still nothing makes 
us rubber men laugh so well as the 
synthetic rubber Johnny. When it 
comes to a substitute for rubber, ask 
yourself the question, ‘Why a substi- 
tute for rubber any more than a sub- 
stitute for steel?’ 
“There ain’t no such animal.” 
A few million more of our people 
ought to be tilling the soil—we should 
have a happier and healthier popula- 
tion and fewer tramps and idlers. 
