The Clinton News Record, 1930-03-13, Page 3Canada's
Participation.
art g
d-
ANAl A is taking a profit-
anenr part in the Fourth
World's poultry Congress,
London; July 22 to 30, 1930.
National Exhibits.
Provincial Exhibits,
Commercial Exhibits.
Live Bird Exhibits.
1,000 birds—the largest ex-
hibit from any country.
500 delegates—the most
frotn any country except Great
Britain.
Two
Affter,Congress Tours
After. the Congress -an eleven
day tour of the British Is[es.--the
Shakespeare country, North, Wales
--Ireland, Lakes of Killarney, Dub-
lin, Belfast—Scotland, the Tros-
sachs, Edinburgh—back to England,
Lancashire, the English Lakes.
Then a Continental tour—
Brussels, Holland, the Hague, Am-
sterdam, Frankfort, Munich, Ober.
ammergau (to see the Passion Play),
Switzerland, Paris.
Canadian and United States dele-
gates and visitors sailing together
from Montreal, July 12th, on the
"Duchess of York."
For detailed information write to
the nearest of the following:
Dr. P. N. Marcellus, Ontario
Agricultural College, Guelph.
Prof, W. A. ,Man,- Macdonald -
College, P.Q. '
j. D. Backman, Department of
Agricutture, Quebec, P.Q.
J. G. Morgan, Experimental
Farm, Nappan, N.S.
i
or
P. C. Elford,
President of the World's Poultry
Science Association, Ottawa,
•
'pna:
c
CANADIAN NATIONAL
CONGRESS COMMITTEE
Tha Hon. Dr. W. R. Motherwell
Honorary Chairman
Dr. J. H. Griedalo
Honorary Vite•Cf.erman
H. B. Donovan—Chairman
President Canadian National.
Pollskey Council
1.. F. tu'e ws—Seaotary
114 moria St., Ottawa El
OIL
Ga OVERNIGHT
"M Bolls on neck, Doctor said
n
Ioe. Tried'Sootba-Sulva' drat' boils
vanished overnight" C. T. 5eott.
'Sootba-Salvestopspalainl ulot
boltsgoinfowhours. Ataadruggiate.
"1 think radio broadcasting one of
le greatest developments culturally
jat the world d has ever seen,"—Mme.
elultuann•Heluk.
_ HI
INinard's Kills Dandruff.
t"
'I saw more drunken women In
leaven months in the United States
khan I have seen in England is seven
;pears."—St, John Ervine.
Ult
Owl Las
Easy Street le reached by Hard
Luck •Alley:
Hazel—"Where are you going,
Ilelen?"
Helen—"Dowit to the drug store to
buy a package of dog bisculte, 'Where,
are you going?":
Hazel--'-"OVer to the grocery to buy
a box of Aspirin,"
.A. subscriber wrltes to ask wiry
some people have electricity ie their
hair? 'Of,equrse we are not speaking
from personal: experience, but it may
be because aitch people. 'hay° softie-
thing shocking on their mind,
Electricity in the Home
Everything electric is an ad,'you often
Me,
Let no cheek up on its uses,
Everyone will soon agree
Curls your hair and. washes dishes,'
Toasts your bread sobrown and nice,
Rings the door bell, sends best wishes
In summer time it makes your ice,
Cools the house and cleans the car-
pets,
In a trice it startsyour car,
Turn a switch and as you listen,
Yes, 'tis music from afar.
In the honeymooner's kitchen.
Not a moment need they waste,
The percolator, on the table
Has the coffee Just to taste,
IEges are cooked. Just press a button,
Hens lay eggs by day or night,
Ohl what a useful little witch
Merry little Iiilowattl
Every job just needs a twitch.
First—"Did you read about the man
who swallowed the teaspoon?"
Second—"No, what happened to
him?"
First:—"Ile can't stir."
The modern wife doesn't know
where her husband goes he the even,
Inge, says a critic. Site should try
staying at home one evening; she
might find him there.
It was necessary for taxation.pur-
poses to decide which side of the
Canadian and United States border a
farm, which an old lady had Just put,
chased, actually lay.' Surveyors finaI-
ly announced that the farm was iust
on the American side of the holder.
The old lady smiled with relief. "I'm
so glad to know that," she said. "I've
heard that winters in Cauada are ter-
ribly severe."
Cheer up and let the dentists do all
the looking down in the mouth.
She's a good mother, confides a
Mend. She ,never strikes her child-
ren except in sell -defense,
Tones—"Well, old num, how are you
getting along with your poultry rais-
ing? Making Expenses?"
Smith—"Not yet; 'but my hens have
taken to eating their own eggs, so I
hope they will soon become self -sup -
Porting."
People wito can't write their names
so anyone can read them, will often
complain if they are not spelled right
in the newspapers,
Something in a Name
It Is said that a young lady by the
name of Adeline Moore invented the
postscript.
1st Suburbanite—"We are getting
up a league of nations in our suburb.
Have you heard about it?"
2nd One -"No, What Is It? A straw
vote?"
let One—"No, it's an agreement be-
twden those who are planning to make
a garden this spring and those who
are going to raise chickens.
He Is one of those fellows who, if
he were a singing celebrity, would
spend hours listening to his own
pliouogr'ape records, said a Man 01 a
friend.
Simile: As unpitying as a Iden
shark.
'1
'1"I am enthusiastically for every-
thing
verything that increases knowledge"—
Michael Pupia,
oENUeNe
PHICLLiPS
o^r MAGryA,,
�` tt
For Tr ebbsel
due to Acid
eN0IGr5T10N
alp 54.0MAett
emAceraCN6
HBADA
G.Sa5.NAUSEA
Malty people, two hours after eating,
r lifter indigestion as they call it. It
wally excess acid. Correct it with
n alkali. The best way, the gulch,
armless and efficient way, is Phillips'
Ilk of Magnesia, It has remained
r,ior 60 years the standard with pbysi-
•tl aus. One'spoon$ut in water neutral.
7
i of a hi stomach
acct
`rf u mo it um Lo
•�R a ma times s v
ss y
kids, and at once. The symptoms dis-
. ppear in live minutes.
You will never use crude inethods
when you know th s better method.
And you will never stiller from excess
acid when you prove out this easy re-
lief. Please do that—for your own
sake --now,
Minority Problems
Canada, recently, dr rather dosing•
the past year, has contributed coil-
eideralily towards the solving of MI11-
bnity Problems in Europe, 'Senator
Dandui'and, her representative on. the
Council ot the League or.Nations,las
suggested methods of procedure in
dealing with the Mittoritiee, which it
is toped will help to iron out some of
the difficulties that ariee between the
minority populations and droll sove-
reign state.
' In the Covenant of the League of
Nations there Is no moution of Min-
orities and the League as a League
was apt consulted before this task was
assigned to it. This responsibility
was -laid on it by a eerier of treaties
betweeu the Allied and Asaooiated
Powers and various European States,
Most of the States of Continental
Europe have always' included 'within
their borders a certain number of por-
tfolios
er-
t ons'Whbse race, religion,' or language,
or all three, differed from that of the
State in which they lived: In 1919 the,
Peace Treaty created new Minority
problems'throughout Central Europe
by its rearrangement of froutiere,
Races which had formerly been donna=
ant hi a country suddetely found that
they belonged to a country now'guled'
by .a race over which they had held
power,. Bitter 'feelings followed in
many. cases and difficult problems as
to the best methods of administration
arose.
Austria-Hungary was one conutry
seriotlsly affected by ' the Peace
Treaty of .Trianon in 1920. leer 1024
years the Hungarian nation was con -
Mined within boundaries which` were
destroyed by this Treaty. In 1910
Hungary had an area of about 120,000
square tnileswith. more than 19 mil-
lion inhabitants; out of this the
Treaty of Trianon left her about 35,-
900
5,900 square miles and about eight and
one-half million inhabitants. Parts of
Hungary were given to Rumania,
Czecho-Slovakia, Austria and Jugo-
slavia (the former Serbia): Iu Tree-'
sylvania Roumanians were formerly
ander Hungarian Sovereignty and now
Hungarians are under Rumania, Aus-
tria's .feat and suspicion of certain of
the Minorities within her borders was
one of the prince causes of the out-
break in 1914. The League's task,
therefore, its guaranteeing or attempt-
ing to guarantee, fair treatment for all
Minorities le .neither light nor unim-
portant.
Ar,typical case is, one of the bound-
ary line between Hungary and Czecho-
Slovakia which runs through the very
ceatre•of the e[ty of,Satoraljaujltely,
so that a citizen who desires to go
from one side of the street to the
outer must have a Itaseport. Besides
these diflicultiee arising front the
course of rite boundary line there are
tate diliicult1as in connection with re-
ligious and linguistic minorities.
Old Huugary had eight universities
but under the Treaty of Trianon two
or these -Universities' belong to other
countries, Rumania and Czeelto-Slo-
valtia, It is uatural that feelings be-
tween countries who believe that their
lauds have been unfairly divided,
should be strained and it is also na-
tural that an Infinite variety of prob-
lems to settle should arise. These
problems aro now brought before the
Commit of the League of Nations to
solve. Several eases, in connection
with the problem of German minority
SSeitools in Upper Silesia were reter-
red to the Permanent Court of Inter-
national Justice, but the majority of
oases are decided zy the Couucii.
Hungary is only one of many of the
countries In Europe, whose boundaries
were altered by the Peace Treaties,
and who have Minority problems, all
perltape of a slightly different nature,
but serious enough to provide con-
siderable ground for thought and work
on the part of the Connell of the
League which. endeavors to settle
them fairy.
The study of Minorities is an ex-
tremely interesting one and nay ot the
readers of this article who wish to
pursue tate matter further will find
literature on the subiect at the head-
quarters °Mee of the League of Nix -
dons Society itt Canada,
Beaverbrook's Proposal
Sydney Bulletin (Criticizing the
"trailf truce" conference, which was
barren of results, the Bulletin com-
pares It with the ".Empire Crusade.")
The idea is some relation to news-
paper millionaire Beavel'brook'a cie•
lueuted proposition that all tile British
Dominions shall somehow be tricked
into an at'rangemellt for absolute Free
Trade within the Empire, So that an
the products .01 the United Kingdom
and of some 350,000,000 attached nig-
gers shall enjoy the rub of the Aus-
trallan market, and this, Common-
wealth shall throw the biggest item of
its revenue lute the ash -heap, and go
btoke immediately;amid the vitupera-
tions of John Bull, its biggest creditor.
Minard's. Will KillCorns.
"The quality of an .act is in inverse
ratio Le the mumbets who support it."
Channing Pollock.
Be sure to. get the geuttite Phillipa' I 6A19� ®®®u
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by phvsi• au
V 9
clans for 50 year's i0 cbrrocting excess
acids.' Bach bottle contains full direc-
tions—any drugstore.
APPLICATIONS
Aro Filled As Far
Ao Possible In the
Cirder,in Which
They Are
Received.
ONTARIO
DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE
Farm 114 "Supplied
.
The °colonization and Immigration Branch o tit
department of Agriculture for Ontario will leave aVallahle a
number of Experienced Married Men With Their Wivek
and Families—Married Couples Without :Children--
Also Single Men.
F eMern soeairlug nein wilt be well
05155ed to shako early apglioatloa til
G££o. A.,,Elliott
\Dire tee of Colonization
Paellament Blame,
Toronto, Ont.
APPLICATIONS
Offering Annual
Work Are
Invariably
Given, the
Preference.
File Vont
Application
at Once
All Men
Placid Subject
to Trial ,Period
HON. JOHN B. MARTIN, Minister of Agriculture
1
SUFFER FROM
CO1 S11FAT I® a
Countless remedies are advertised
Tor constipation. Many relieve for
the moment but they are habit form-
ing and must he continued. Others
contain calomel and clangorous inin-
1era1 drugs, which retrain in,,the sys-
tem, settle to the joints and cause
aches and pains. Seine.are 1'asee
purgatives which crampaid gripe
and leave a depressed after effect.
. Avoid lubricating oils which only
grease the intestines andencourage
matures machinery to become lazy..
A purely vegetable laxative suchas Carter's Little Liver Pills, gently
touches the liver, bile starts 0 flow,
the bowels move gently, the iutestines
are thoroughly cleansed and con9tt .
tion poisons piss away. The stomach,
,. liver and bowels Ate now active and
the system enjoys a teat tonic effect.
All druggists 25c and 7$C red pkgs.
ISSUE' No. H--'30
The Opportunity
Of a Lifetime
Tito opportunity of a lifetime ie real-
ly what is offered in the post -Congress
tome which have been arranged to
follow the •closing session ..01 the
Fourth Virotls's Poultry Congress,':' to
be held in Old Loudon, July 22nd' to
30th, this year,
Tile tours have been arranged, one
following the other, Tile gest starts
July 31, and takes one through the
historic, storied and scenic wonder -
tends of the British Isles. The. Shake•
speare country, North ,Wales, Dub-
lin, with its Rocky Road; the Irick
Pree State, youngest of the British
Dominions; .Cork and the lovely Lakes
of IKillarney; the Glahjt'a Causeway
and, ot course, the Blarney Stone will
be `on the route. Crossing again to
Scotland; Grlasgow and the Burns
country , is viewed; : the Trossaelta,.
Edinburgh, the IEnglieh Lake Country,
and Liverpool provide days full of
wonder and amazement, This part of
the tour returns to Loudon .August 10.
Then coves tate visit to .the oon-
tinent which begins with a -twenty,
four hour. stay at BPusBels, Front
Brussels the quaint Holland country
is visited,, then the .party proceed t0
the lovely Ititine Valley country, pass-
ing on•the way up. that river the his -
theta cities of Oobleua, with its cathe-
dral, and Bonn with its world-famous
.universities, both places which were
held by troops of the Canadian Ex-
peditionary Force immediately follow -
lug the armistice. Frankfort and
Munich ' are also visited, then the
party proceeds to Oberammergau for
Sunday, where they will be privileged
to view 'the famous Passion Play,
which exemplifies what is regarded by
most of us as the greatest event of all
history. Returning the party are the
guests at a government reception at
Munich before proceeding to Switzer-
land for a four-day stay, tvltich will in-
clude a vleit to. Geneva, seat of the
League of Nations. From Switzerland
the party r Turn to Paris, where an-
other four days will be spent.
The Paris visit may be cut in half
and those desiring to do so will be
afforded an opportunity of a two-day
tour of the battlefields of the Great
War, To most of tate party this visit
to the battlefields will be the climax
of what all will regard as truly the op-
portunity of a lifetime.
Mammoths' Graveyard
Is Sought Along Yukon
Fort Yukon, Alaska,—Seeking ante -
alluvia!' monsters with hair and skins
intact, two .scieutist•traders have be -
gen a leisurely Journey down tate
frozen Yukon River in. the hope of
finding the burial Place at mammoths
lit the high bluffs of the stream uuap-
proachable duelug the season of often
water.
East spying frost forces huge bones
out of gravel beds along the river.
Many valuable finds of ancient ivory
were uncovered in the same manner
its recent years and marketed by the
two traders.
The last well preserved carcass of
a ntantntotlt was found near Dawson
111 1904 and sold to an Eastern college
musetnn for a largo sum. That there
are more such remains still intact in
the frozen subsoil along the Yukon,
Where nature may do the excavating,.
is the opinion of the searchers. They
expect to okeitmtge dog sledges for
barges early in the spring near the
moutli of the Tanana River's dime
fluence with the Yukon.
KEEP THEM HAPPY BY
KEEPING THEM WELL
It is natural for children to be hap-
py, active, and full of fun. When they
are fretful, fussy and disinclined to
Play you may be sure something is
wrong. Almost invariably that "some-
thing lies in the digestive tract.
It is to meet the need for an abso-
lutely'safe corrective of childhood ail -
meats that Baby's Own Tablets have
been designed. They gently regulate
the stomach and bowels and thus
drive out constipation and indiges-
tion; breakup colds and simple fevers
and allay teething pains, Concern-
ing them Mrs. W. E. Forsyth, Dover,
.N.B., writes: "I would not be without
Baby's Own Tablets as I know of nett-
ing to equal them for fretful, fussy
babies who are troubled with, colds or
sour stomach."
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers oe by luaii at 25
cents a 'box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Econonny and Politics
Perth Western Mail: (The Ceullin
Government in Australia has abolish-
ed, on the ground of economy, the De-
velopment and Migration Commis-
sion). In the interests of that very
economy which the new Government'
would hug to itself for justification,
the continued functioning of the Con -
mission would have meant Bruch to
Australia. . , Whatever its meth-
ods, it stood for a very necessary prin-
ciple in Australian public lite, pre-
venting the dissipation of public funds
in political ventures whose otily rela-
tion to development was their descrip-
tion.. Its executive death is a calamit3
—a calamity Of peculiar concern to
Western Austrelia, whose spaces cla-
mour tor people and production, but
whose political "pull" against Eastern
States' interests is weak,
"Mr. Edison doesn't like dancing,
bridge or golf; he thinks the latter ia-
yolntetl Por men 51 O.oyt too muoh,"--
Mrs. 71.1.oniai reason.
"It might be a good idea for igen to
learn to hate women a little these
days:"—Artltiir Stringer.
"To' '' times each
play one's part 91gr.,t �
week is too much for any 'ac,.�-„,'"`-'
John Sar•
tymore.
"I fear there is too mpbh `'lighting is
the peace conference lteelf to lead to
success." -?rand Duke Alexander.
Use Minard'snthei Sbe.
WAS RUN DOWN
AND VERY WEAK
Too Little Blood, the Trouble
and Tonic Txeatmenit
Restored Health
"I am,tvri,tiiig to tell 3'on," Says Mra,-
3ames A, Haughty, ,Bridgewater; N,S„
"tee great health benefit I received
Unwell the use of Dr, iSTilllanis' Pink
Pills. I had become badly run down
and very' weak; so much so that I
Could only with diliicuity do iiiy house-
work. I. suffered from headaches, and
had very little desire for meals. The
trouble affected my nerves, and as a
result I 'did not sleep well at bight;
and would often awake with a choking
sensation, and would' have to alt up in
bed. -I was taking treatment; but it
did slot help me and Lwas losing cm--
age,
oneage, when I saw' au advertisement of
a ease which, seemed natclt like" my
own, which had been relieved by the
use of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills.' 'I de-
cided to give this medicine a trial and
got twp. boxes. Before these were all
gone there was an. improvement in, idly
appetite, which seemed a hopeful
sign. I procured a further supply of.
the pills and found_ a steady improve-
ment in my health, I could eat well,
sleep soundly at night, and my houge-
work was no longer a'task .beyond my
strength. From my own experience I
would advise weak, run -clown people
to give Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills a fair
trial, feeling that what they have done
for me, they 'will just as readily do iu
other similar cases.”
Ig you will send Your uanie, and ad-
dress to tate Dr, Williams' Medicine
Co„ Brockville, Ont„ a little book,
"Building Up the Blood," will , be
mailed you prepaid. This little book
contains many useful health hints.
You eau get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50c a
box from Tl'e Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co„ Brockville, Ont,
A Glorious End
Fram, Ship of Polar Explorers,
Equipped for Her Last
Voyage
Oslo, Norway.—Tire battered ship
Pram, which has carried Norwegian
explorers t0 their conquests during
four decades, is being equipped for
her last voyage.
The Fram carried Fridjof Neilsen
toward the North Pole in 1893 and
brought slim back two years later
when he reported having reached tati-
tude 80 degrees 14 minutes, the north-
ernmost point visited by man up to
then.
The same Fram, with a felt- new ac-
coutrements, carried Roald Amundsen
south in 1911 and carried him back In
triumph as discoverer of the South
Pole, to be acclaimed at home.
Now the Frain fs to proceed to
TrondhJem to take part in an exhibi-
tion on the occasion of the 000th au-
niversary of tate introduction of Chris-
tianity info Norway. When she re-
turns site will be placed ht the Arctic
Museum here,
On her final voyage the Frain will
bo captained by Wisting„ the only
Mg num man besides Rear Admiral Rleh-
ard E®Byrd who has seen bout poles.
Wasting was with Amundsen at the
South Pole in a dirigible in 1928.
The Pram's crew will be made up of
old polar explorers from the Nausea,
Amundsen and Sverdrup expeditions.
A Perin to Egypt
Cairo Sphinx: (Egypt is menaced
by vast swarms of Locusts in the Sinai
Peninsula), At any moment, a strong
east wind may drive the swarms of
Iocusts across the narrow strip of des-
ert and sea, but a still more serious
sltuatton may arise if the Iocusts sue•
teed in breeding in Sinai. Indeed,
this is more than probable. The
hatching of locust eggs requires a can-
tata amount ot moisture in the soli
Normally, Sinai is too dry tor this to
happen, but thie year's rants are with-
out precedent, and there is a possi-
bility that the sand will t'emain moist
till tate weather becomes warm
enough for the locusts to breed. The
situation is a grave one titat calls for
immediate action, but it, is difficult to
get the authorities to realize the mag-
nitude of a danger that is at present
just at their doors. The swarms can
be destroyed now if a fleet Of cars is
employed in sufficient numbers and
equipped with flame guns and trained
teams.
"I have never been hurt by anything
I didn't say:"—Calvin Coolidge.
ANY SEASON
Is Vacation Time
In Atlantic City
ANY VACATION
is An Assured Success
°�, If i�yYou Stay at the
�y
�e W.d . r :a.�' e1�d Iia
With the P'ines•r Lncatton mud the
Longest Porch on the I.:oa-dn-ait:
Offering the ultimate in i erriee with
Unexcelled Cuisine •
nOAS
Dry up and disappear with Min-
ard's. It kills the poison and
thaws out tits inflammation.
Faain®us Elosts„ fry
In London Closes
Lest 'Guest Malas Through
Door .of Hotel Cecil
London,—Thiety-four yearn age the.
stand was filled with carriages and
milling ttlnongs. Hundredsof, eyes
turned toward a magnificent steno -
titre, Society' called it a "nine days
wonder."
Tbo Hotel Cecil was Closed.
Yesterday taxicabs, buses and huge
trucks fumbled by, Pedestrians hur-
ried to their' offices and shops. No
one gave the bail?ling more that% a
passing lance. The last guest walk-
ed through the doors and stepped Tato
a taxicab:
The Hleotel Cecil was closed, .
Banquets will be held there until
late in April, but the hotel closed to-
day for roomers.
As the famous hostelry passed out
of the city's busiaess life, it was re-
called that its builder, Jabez Balfour,
.n'as not in , the josteing -crowd that
eaw it officially opened, He waa
serving 14 -years in prison for fraud
charges growing out of his liberator
concerns.
Tite heard -earned pennies 01 widows
along- with the • savings cif workers
went into the 13,000,000 that Balfour.
is said to have setuandered,Into vari-
ous palaces, of which the Hotel Cecil
was to be the site of bis offices "as
an abiding memorial of my enter
mise,"
The shareholders soon wilt receive
their first and last payment from the
"liberator" concern, when the' Pro -
coeds from the hotel sate of
000 to the Shell -Mex concern are dis-
tributed,
The Cecil was closed once before to
oommerciat travellers when during
the war it was conunandered by the
Government to house the Air MInistry
and the Royal Air Force, It was
known then as the Hotel Bolo.
The greatest day the hotel enjoyed,
members of the staff say, was when
Hing George ascended the tlu'one,JAI[
of its 900 rooms were filled by "r0yai
visitors. A detachment of guards
patrolled all entrances to guard the
millions of Ware wterth of jewels
brought by the royal visitors.,
The Sultan of Perak was there, So
amused was he by the opera hat and
a cane-tunbreila that he took 30 hats
and 72 canes back :to Itis country atter
tiro ceremony.
A Chinese prince brought Itis own
tea -blenders, hairdressers, corks and a
troupe of entertainers. One et his
wrestlers pinned a young Loadoa
blade to the floor of a theatre after
his queue had been pulled.
Then there tvae the late Major
Campbell, retired officer of the Indian
army, who insisted on making lits owa
curry in the Cecil cuisine, much to
the therein of 1.1. de Costa, tee chef,
who felt he bad penetrated all the
mysteries of that popular dish.
The betel will be used by the Snell -
Mex company to house its many oh
flees,
innar'd's -50 Year Record of Success.
"The man who succeeds in hie work
is the man who can keep gttiet and
placid when there is very severe Pres-
sure."—Charles E. Hughes,
YOUR HAIR NEEiDS
TO GIVE IT HEALTH AND LUSTRE
ASK YOUR BARBER
% a, ? TOTAL
�'AE,ES
CA8 AI A
DV N :; ED
BRIT 1Sl-IERS
in Canada may now bring
forward their Families,
Relatives and Friends
on Easy Terms,
For full details apply:—
D, CADlrs DOBr,
Ylist, Supt. Colonization
Canadian Pacific Dat1way, Toronto
BRITISH
RE -UNION ASSOCIATION
1/2
Childrenerolork
fog o)NSTSFAIYAstSSSSE VEYialS SC133
'nese
HEAD
d
ROO IN BACH
O5,Ar5S• eSSSST
eN Mtisvnis,...
05,25 Ali °osselets Descriptive telco' on request
A. O. LEONARD, ane.
70 Puns Ave.. New Yorl( Cats
Classified - Advertising
70ra s/L54m
01-e BABY 0212004—W05 HATCIi1Di)
J1 212,000 last year in bout varie-
tlos. Write for free catalogue. A, 01,
Switzer, Granton, Ozlt,.
-- LATEST 9AN1.0. 10 CTS—
Words or 19Q latest song, into
of stage and. screen sent for 100,. Factory
Surplus Sales Co„ ,0 43, Windsor,. Oat,
' �.iy AUMS. NEAR. TORONTO—WRIT17
D- for our interesting free list; Lock-
hart St Lockhart, 319 Bay St., Toronto,
13) IIC%ISTInRI]D 1-IOLSTItIN BirI.LS
itj ready for gem**, Cheap, L'eter
Arbogast, Mitchell, Ontario.
BAB'S OHtO3cS
0 - t INO,L13 00et13 WHfTEI LEGHOR'N-
and Barred Plymouth .Renk Baby
Citiolcs, Wossder'ful winter .layers, Wo
have been hatching for 17 years. Dela-
mere Poultry harm, Stratford, Ont, ,
"A sense of fatigue is Nature's ad.
vice to rest."—Sir W. Arbuthnot Lane,
--FAR, ' .,1 EL
fi
BRITISH BOYS AND
SINGS EN
Weekly Parties During Early
Spring.
APPLY NOW -The Secretary, The
Setvatton Army Immigration:
803 Dundas Street, Woodstock, Ont,
019 Jarvis Street, Toronto, Ont,
114' Beckwith St, Smiths Valls, Ont.
1120 University St„ Montreal, Quo,
flash
on Coughs & Colds
A speedy, eate,proven remedy
for children and adults.
UCKLEVS
't tleaflash • A SINGLE SIP ROVES
17A
wag Ilee•Meie
"After years of rheumatism, now fa
Perfect health," says Mr. A. Duch,
mine. Thousands write rhetuaatie
pains, neuritis, vanish like matewiits"Fruit•a•tives".Constips9on,;ee,-
sestina end overnight. Nor es quiet,
Get"Erait•a•tivea"fromdruev_isttoday.
Liver—in Vancouver
" Three years ago suhife bus Vancouver, fho
house physsciass at the hotel advised one to use
Rruechett•Saas for a bad truer and constipation.
I can say C sorer have bud anything that gave
ane almost instant relief Wore, and I therefore
no lis than90 orr50 families have used its by
my persuasion. Most other remedies on OM
market leave a had effect lit many ways, bud I
can solely nay I /etre,rt been as itch in many
Years as awe I hare talc,t Ernsehen."—Airs.
0, R. AL, Wiltiamspo', Pa., U.S.A.
Orena1 Sugar on filo Or laepuatiso,
Tlrnsebon Salts 1s obtainable at drug and
department stores In Canada at 70c. a bottle.
A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or a
mantles—good health for half -a -cent a day.
FREE TRIAL OFFER
11 you Bayo never tried itte,obon—try 11 now
at our expense. We havo distributed a great
many special " GIANT" packages which. make
It easy for you to prove our claim for yourself. ,
Ask your druggist for the new "00AN15" 70a.
wimp.
Tide fon,sists of one regular 70e. bottle together
with a separate trial bottio—sualetaat for about
ono week, Oppen the trial bottle list, put it to
the test, and Elton, it not entirely convinced that
Itrusslten does everything wo claim 11 to do rho
regular bottle, is atilt as good as new, Taste It
booty, Your druggist Is authorised to retnnt
yyoour 700. Immediately nod without question.
Yau have triad 10ruueelsen Pros At our expense.
What could ha fairer 9 Manufactured by
E. Orttathe noshes, Ltd„ Manchester, Eng.
estop. 1050). atuparters: McDSSIivray ltroa,.
LLtd., Toronto.
FAD OF C
_IKE ME -1
SE
Decided to take Lydia E.
Pinkla,an;ra's Vegetable
Compound
Moncton, New Brunswick—"Before
my last baby was born 1 was very weak,
nervolts and dis-
couraged. 1: saw
an advertisement
in the paper about
a woman who had
been like me go 1
bought a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinto-
Ham's Vegetable
Compound,1 took
three bottlea and
it carried mesafe--
Asomar. ic- critical tune.tltb,I
have three ehildren to care for and 2
feel well and strong I have told / wo
other wettt-'n 1- )e", e•eirtnP tr Mpg, Cop, C T•,Aar N a i y, t >ti`et,
Alone on, W,o,v
AWED 11 Lbs. in S Wks r
4414$ And a Roy Friend." '
tsour aotaUnn3aSeho,Thousand!,
awnixed Yeast adds
130„. 8c doors
nosru iitla
t.a.aesst.twlroaxe;YM
Il
tobleu koet drwilattoday.
f
High School Boards and Boards of Education
Aro authorized by law to establlah
INDUSTRIAL, TECHNICAL AND
ART SCHOOLS
With the approval of the Minister of Education
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
may be conducted in accordance with the regulations issued by
the. Department of Education.
THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION
Is given in various trades. Tha schools anti classes aro under Lha
direction of AN ADVISORY COMMiTTEE;
AAppiicationefor attendance should be made to the Principal
of the echooi.
COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS,MANUAL TRAINING, HOUSEHOLD
.SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE AND HORTICULTURE are provided
for in the Courses of Study In Public, Separate, Continuation and High
Schools, Collegiate institutes, Vocational Scheele and Departments,
Copies of. the Regulations Issued by the Minister of Education. may 1ts.
obtained from the. Deputy Minister, Parliament Buildings, Toronto,