Loading...
The Clinton News Record, 1928-08-23, Page 3nitimusieweegiareeeessesee ALEXANDRIA GOLD, MINES, LTD. 8i ecause after careful invostlgatton we believe-fiho 'diversity of this Company's holdings in the principal mining areas of Can 'oda, eon -ileum" "with, the best 'of,managemeet'and engineer- ing talent, will make it one of the great dividend earners of. the future. In our opinion it is ono of the, most outstanding mining , speculations now before the pubIie, ' ' Detailed information will be mailed on Request. Use the Coupon. Herne, FletcherSt Co.,, Ltd. INVESTMENT SECURITIES Metropolitan Bldg-, Teronto. Nam Address entigealinIMOIMISMITIESTSIPMEMSEIDISSI Empire Settlement Commissioner Lamb in the .Empire Review (Lerida): An. active and per- manent ermanent Empire settlement board of experienced business men is Tequired. The business of Empire migration and settlement calls for initiative and drive and the spirit of adventure, rather Chau the fine and cautious spirit characteristic of.the'old type of Civil Servant. The board must be given adequate financial appropria- tions. It will soon be found that the £3,000,000 per annum will have to be substantially increased. Progr ss of the Empire Leo Maxse in the National. Review (London) : , Would anyone with any regard for truth dare to assert that we have moved forward as an` Em- piro since the Great War? Would anyone with eyes in his head care to deny that we have gone backward, especially atter the last Imperial Con- ference which, pace ' Mugwump en-. thusiasln for 'the masterly State paper" disestablishing the Governors - General and promoting our, diplomatic- kiisueeity was . the only one of the whole series sinc6 US? which deliber- ately put the clock. back. The wife who is given plenty of rope 'is liable to skip. dppY�V�r "4:A.VM.j1r: aN CON W1T11 LAUGHTER) Abo was troubled; with Ra, pain 'ITh Ilia foot and upon the advice of lvhl son ho saw a dentist and had hits !teeth extracted, The pain continued and his son then insisted that he See a doctor and ,have his tensile taken, out. The doctor' advised that this be done. A few weeireelat a the ,on ee- turned to the odtyfrom a business trip, and greeted h'is dad wutb "ROW'S the foot, : father?' "Oh, is fine I Wouldyou, believe it, filet yesterday I found a nail in niy ehoel" Tourist (in pack, looking at boul- der)—."And just Whom did you say. ti rock came freen?" the brought it down." Touriot—"When•e dad the glacier Guide—` 0h, it went back aftea' an- other rock," e, We believe it hi fairly safe to esti- mate that ;fully 85 per cent. of the happy faanilieseat breakfast In the. kitchen. "Poor man!" ejaculated the prison visitor. "I wish I could de ytolnethin'g to get you out of here." "Wall, mum," suggested the convict hopefully, "if you wouldn't mind cliantging • clothes: wilt' nue when tie guard ain't lookiin', I could do de resit." There are fakers who pretend be teach you how to get what you want, but nine so bnazetn as torpretend to teach you how to keep on wanting it after you gest tt. _ : Who ever expecitod to see the day when a main would scold his wife for dropping ashes on his office floor? • Here lest the bones Of Emily Bright;. She put out her left hoard And turned to the right. "Well," gughed the job hunter as be surveyed the six-foot questicatnaure he W11.8 handed to fill out, "this ,firm.cer- ;tainly expects a lot of applicalttton." She was only a poultryman's laugh- ter, but I learned about the chickens from her. Minard's Liniment for Blistered Feet. • Doves of peace will never be hatch, ed from cannon balls. Legal holiday: A nationally accept- ed exeuso td quit work. APPLICATIONS Are Filled As Far As Possible in the Order In Which They Aro Received APPLICATIONS Offering Annual ONTARIO. Work Are DEPARTMENT :.. a invariably OF AGRICULTURE Given the Preference Farm Help Sipplied The deionization and Immigration Brancleeof the Department of Agriculture for Ontario will have available a number- of ExiSerlenced Married Men With Their Wives and. Famllics-Married' Couples Without Children— Also Single Men. 'runners requiring help win'bo woll adVisc1 tomake early application to Geo. A. Elliot Oltector or Coloniranun Parllamter Meek. Tanta Ont. File Your Application at Once Ali Men Placed Subject to Trial Period HON. JOHN 5. MARTIN, Minister of . prtruiture ri7✓GoiON ^,o" ,i M�f ��,i,I s►� 1 ItIj: SEP A.2Arm0— 4 ',:,,- 8 TO INCLUSIVE The 'S per0 vent of 1928 f: MAJESTIC Fiftieth Birthday. Celebration—a Thrilling Fourteen: Day Festival; "A Fantasy in Fairyland," The Golden Jubilee Grand Stand Extravagan- ,za-A' Mammoth, Graphic and Entrancing Production 'by 1500 Performers on the World's Largest ",.Stage; The $and of His Majesty's Royal kr Force (by Ferinission of I -1,.M. King George V.); Four Triumphal Concerts by the 2,000 -Voice Exhibition Chorus; First National, Aircraft Show—New $600,000 Engineering end Blectrical Building—First Showing of 1929 Motor Cars—Exhibits from the four corners of the Globe, displaying every' product known; Agriculture In all ;its branches in ,the World's largest Show Building—Fine, Graphic mild Ap'', Tiled 'Arts ,Exhibits; Aneaitirelynew lJrt and different Midway' of clean entertaining and amusing shows and feature after feature throughout the eiitir'e Golden Jilbilee YearC,anadian National Exhi , ,',tion. See the THIRD WRIGLEY MARATHON SWIM the Premier International Sports Attraction in Two events ,for a purse of $50,' 000 and the championship of the world. • Parking for 1x000 caw daily, -- Perfect bigbwaya. Ample so, oommodation. Mugu',rates byrall and eteamehip Send far descdptive gloaroted literature to Department of Pub lficity, CANADIAN NATIONAJ, SxaiIBITION, Toronto, 2, Ontario.'.' ri THOMAS BRADSHA,W , President fi. .WATERS, GeneralM ger OVA fir Happy Arre'Kraal " Folk of S. Africa Their .Homes Are Kittle Af- fected bythe Culture of •'` Nearby hites and They Retain the Ancient Cus- toms of Their Tribes On the fringe of the white man's• advance among ,the primitive Zulus. and other' -tribes of South Africa -'ono findslthe_strange spectacle of two dif- ferent'r•aces within easy walking dis- tance of each other, living under total. lo. dissimliar conditions, the whites with ,ait their intricate modern con•; venieneee, the, blacks with ,still only the rude utensils and Implements that have":beon handed down to them for centuries, Families of the tribesmen dwell a few miles tram white settlements in their isolated- homesteads.' They are. not a communalpeople; like the whites, but rather take , small hold- ings, on: the grant of their';chiefe, and net up their own farms et sem° dis- tance from their 'neighbors, ' Looking over a Valley as far as the eye .can reach, one will see.acarcely.mere than half a dozen kraals, .,These consist of a` small circle of huts surrounded by a thick growth of brush, as in a.stock- Ade, ' and enclosing in the centre a patch that serves as a stable for the cattle, • The father has a hut near theg ate and after it around the ring come the; huts of the wives,' of which there are sometime§ as .manly astwenty. here ,and there among them will be small huts for the children, Outside ,tbs kraal the family will have a roughly' laid out plot of ground, which is farm- ed (e long as it remains fertile and then abandoned for a new holding. • Stories of how the black man lives e.t home, and how 'he is taking his contact with the whites -are brought by Alfred R. Martin, an English; artist. Mr. Martin was a pupil of Augustus Johns and is now Senior Lecturer in the School, of Art at Durban, Natal,• and also lecturer at the University of South Africa. For eleven years he. has spent much of his time going about among the natives wile his sketchbook. The result has been a striking collection of oil paintings, a group of which he recently -exhibited at the American Museum of Natural History. They shew the admiration he felt for the natives when they aro living under their natural conditions. Re presents them as a happy people, now 'making play of the simple bits of work by which they carry on their lives, now held spellbound by 'the beauty of a vast stretch pt landscape; or again at the, height of their glory when decked out with primitive wea- pons for a tribal war. White civilize ion, he says, is draw- ing more and more of them because it offers` convenient ways for them to make a livelihood, As children they often work as herd boys op the white forme.. Without fear they run among a herd of cows to drive .them in the desired direction; and when two bulls are fighting they will separate them by twisting and pulling their tails. lis older boys they plow the fields of white farmers, cutting- wattles to sell to the mines or for use as fences. Women, too, do this work, Tall and, powerful, they are quite as good at manual labor as their brothers,, They are often seen tying up huge" bundles of the cast -oft wattles, such as a white plan would find difficult even to lift, ,and carrying them home on their heads—perhaps a walk of miles. Young men and girls work In the towns as servants. The thief ;appeal that civilization has for the pried eve youth is that it gives'him a chance to earn the money for his .margfage. Brides; among the natives, are bought outright. Fatness being a virtue, the price depends on the girl's sleekness. For a girl .rea- sonably plump the price is seven or eigh.' cows; for better one, particu- larly if she is a chief's daughter, it runs up to as many as thirty. Elven among the cultured natives' this coneeptdon of Ale solid worth of the bride still lingers. Mr. Martin tells how Mrs. Martin's maid, an ad- vanced girl who had been to college, clung to the idea that a daughter Must be held at a price consistent with her dignity. She asked Mrs. Martin ono day "how many cows" she was going to get for her daughter, and when Mrs. Martin explained that she did not expect to receive any at all, the girl asked in amazement: "Don't you love your daughter?" - A youth about to set up hie kraal must.first acquire the necessary num bor of cows for his bride, add the simplest moans is to take a job with a white man until he has saved the moneyabout $10 for each cow. The white employers find this arrange- mentehighly satisfactory. Since the youth usually applies himself persist- ently to his Job while he 15 saving the'money, and 'since the pay amounts, in the country districts, to riot more than 35 cents a day, he is sure, to re• main on hand for several months. While living In the towns' the na- tives adopt -many of- the white man's ways, especially his notions ,man's clothing, - On Sunday afternoons in Durban they have what amounts to a fashion parade. Yet the rude kraal with its thatch- , od roof enc ,its pounded curt floors calls them back, The urge comes up- on them' :after they have been away, about 'a year, and they will quit their jobs'aud go: beak for several months., Off coneo`the• few .bits of. European clothing,, and in their place •1e worn the Simple covering,pt the waist and the heavy hide apron, White food is divan up•teethe plain faro of mealios,: a kind of corn, ground and 'polled. Assamf the native hotne of the tea bush, produces teas: which are famed the world oyer for their strength, rich- , nese End flavor. The superior and ;distinc- tive quality of Red Rose Orange Pekoe is largely due to these fine quality Assari fang,: of .which it is chiefly • composed. Every package. guaranteed. fen The attachment for the quiet but lu the valley is not entirely sentimental The man, theligb he may bd turning his back on conveniences, probably goes to a life of comparative ease, since his wives do most of the Worit. They do the chores and 'ulost'ot 0118 plowing' an harvesting, if there are enough' of them, and are even sent oft to near -by farms to earn extra money. When the beer -making season is on open house. is held by all the kraals. These affairs' are always merry and sometimes homicidal. The beer -mak- ing seamen comes when the "mabella," also a kind of corn, is ready for har- vesting. First the natives go about from one kraal' to another, reaping, gathering and flailing. A week later, when the >beer has been made, the whole party returns and takes ito share of the fruits of its labor, With all the kraals; entertaining, eaoh in its turn, the social season is long and active, Alligators Profitable For Fashion in Shoes As a'.reeult ofthe fashion of WO' men's shoos made of alligator akin, the )tilling of those reptiles far their hides has become a profitable busi- ness in the swamps and sluggish stioains of south-east Texas and west - 'ern Louisiana. It Is a vocation that Is fraught with danger, and many stories are told of thrilling encounters by hunters with enraged saurians. Doota Falrchilds, of Orange, Texan, bears the reputation of being the most daring alligator hunter in all this re- gion. Ballad an unusual experience recently. Ile' found a big alligatorin a den In Birdeye Bayou, near hare, and crawled Intb the hole to rout the saurian from its lair. He caught hold of it by iia lower jaw and pulled it into the open. To his astonishment. there was a seventy -five -pound logger- head oggerhead turtle clinging to the alligator's tail. "• With the usual commotion that goes with the killing „pf. an alligator, the turtle did not relintiuish the hold that had brought it out of the den. The turtle's head was savored and yet its jaws seemed to clinch the tighter on the alligator's tail. fn addition to the price he. obtain,- id btain,'ed for the alligator's hide, Fairchilds said that there was meat -enough in the turtle to last himself and family for a week. MANY MOTHERS RECOMMEND THEM Baby's Own, Tablets Are Fine for Nervous; Sleepless - Children. \ From Canada the fame of Baby's Own •Tabids is epreading over the world, Mothers recommend'thom to other mothers and evherev'er-they are tried nothing but words of praise are heard for these pleasant tasting Little tablets that promptly relieve the minor ailments of young children. ' ' "Baby's Own Tablets ere one of the beet remedie0 for children's ailments I have ever used," says 1Vlrs. Arthur T. Allen, of Auburn, Me.. •"My little girl was nervous and could net sleep. I tried the Tablets and 'she was re- lieved at once.. She was naso troubled with constipation and nothing seemed• to help her, I had used the Millets but D. short time before her bowels were regular.- All mothers should; keep Baby's Own Tablets in the house for they are a,vateable remedy. Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all druggists or will ho mauled an receipt of price, 25 cents per box, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Oo., Brockville, Ont. • It. Ain't Life. • (W111 ,Tames in The Bookman). I wonder why, when- a feller picks' up a ;-extern' novel nowadays, there has to he; so much smoke and dust, smoke from six-shooters and dust from one man cheating another., It seems like there's no rest for the good any mode than there is for the wicked, and a feller wonders how comp all the' characters aint killed In the first round of the first chapter; hat -if that, was the. case there wouldn't be no' story much, so the characters have got to suffer on through and live any- how, only the bad `boys are relieved at the end, by sudden death or by a terns in the pen. That's proper and as it should be, assure. enough, but that aint life. I don't,object to thee gime, as -long as they aint pointed towards me. What I object at, by making that big • fuss over 'em, is that se much that's, good in the western life 10 coy ered up by 'eta The British Burden Ottawa Journal (Cons.): Since `1014, through the war and since, Britain las counted her gold as dust to pay -her share in the War. Enable: to collect frons her own debtors, and willing to let them go scot-free 1f that could have been arranged with justice to her own ,people, ohs has been tax- ing herself white to pay'• every cent of her own debts` and to pay for poll - clef oe oli-clef.oe reconstruction. It is the sort of thing that ,has made England what she is., The "word of an English- man" means something to the world, and one of the things that IL means• is that British character Is' accepted at 100 per cent. and reflected in the stability of Britishcredit aIi ever the face of the 'globe, ' - FALLING HAIR. ellrlerd's rubbed' into the scalp four does a weep ale' rests falling hair, removes fieeelrnff and promotes gl'owtll,'...,.m"0 ryeeee�he ' GIRLS AND TOME inventor Honored BLOOD Memory of Man Who MUMade Modern Ships Possible This Lady Found Dr, ',Williams' Pink Pills 'ie. friend Indeed. Just because'sh© woman a woan there are times when every ' women needs help and etrekgth in the form of a bleed -building' tonic. To thousands of girls and Women, Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills have proved a bleseeblg because they enrich the blood, Jgiye strength and restore tpiee bo thio.aching nerves, .:The palaver* girl' who is languid and pale; the wife whose back hole like- irealeing; the matron who health' fall's as she reaches middle ago,-fo:r all such suf- Pcrens Dr, Williams' Pink Mlle are invaluable because ell -health In girls and women is usually caused by woe blood or insufficient blood, ,These pills have proved a blessing to' thousands of others, why not you? At vaviaue stages of lifo Mrs."G, R. Lake, Waltohe, N.S,, has proved the yahoo of Dr, W'!1- ldams' Pink Pills, She-says;—"I"'first used: these pills whena 'young girl, for it Is during the 'teen ague when nature calls upon every bit of the reserve strength wo have, that' wo i aed.their rejuvenating help. It was them I;found Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a friend in: deed, And again, now that the girl - hoed stage is east end 1 ern a mother of four children, subject to all the cares and werrdee of the home, Dr. Williams' Pink Pins isthe.. only tonic I take to keep up my health and strength,; and they have never' failed me. Shouldany ailing girl or weary mother, due ,to my advice tr r these pills, I know they will find them an equally good as I have dons." You can get these pills from any medicine dealer or by maid at SO' cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Diedi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. Joke Was On Elfin The writers of -the new book about the U.S. National Parks, "Oh,, Rang- er!" tell a story about a Sagebrudher or motorcamper who left his, car, a new limousine of expensive make, on the rim of a,,Crater Lake along with a dozen other cars without'properly setting his brakes, while he wanted down the trail to the lake shore, a thousand feet below. While returning he heard a crash and looked up to catch . buta fleeting glimpse of an automobile cetupulting past him and crlashing/through •the trees. It came to rest, a total wreck, far below him, Returning to the rim, the Sagebrusher met a party of Dudes to whom he nar- tatedl excitedly the fearful and won- derful story of the car that just miss- ed him and had cradled en the rocks below, Glancing about as he neared the end of his Story, he said: "It smashed into a big tree and—and-- and, my Lord, it was mine!" Paris Music Halls Keep War Sentiments Alive Paris, Prance.—The war doesn't seem to be over he the music halls of Paris. All sorts of French and German political and artletio organ,,- ations are telling each other how nine the people are on the other side of the Rhine, but Franco-German hostil- ity continues to crop out on the stage. Scenes and songs between German and French characters are produced and the German invariably gets the worst of -the exchange. "These scenes," says Oscar D.- frenne, president of • the Theatre Owners' Association, "aro unfortun- ate and useless. I have urged my colleagues to drop them." The • police recently ordered one such scene, about the execution of Mme. Dubarry, either censored or dis- continued, and the censorship was so. heavy the scene was taken off. Last winter, When the German Theatre,: Managers' Association visit- ed Paris, there was talk of an agree- ment to abolish all such numbers, but nothing was done about it. Mr. henpeck—"Is my wife going out?" Maid—"Yes, sir." "Do you know if I am going with her?" ` Let Mlnard's Liniment Relieve Pain. These are awkward times, The tea - atop waitress approached a customer from behind and •said, brightly: "Any- thing • more, air—I mean, madam—I beg pour, pardon, sir," DON'T suffer headaches, or any of those pains a tablet°of Aspirin can endrin a hurry! Physicians prescribe it, and approve its free use, for it does not affectthe heart. Every drug gist has it, blit don't fail to ask the druggist for Bayer. And don't take any but the tablets that are stamped with the "Bayer Cross." {{}},o,o�t}ioa trade mark T'L' freRlntored in cahadn) .i.,+. ..�- 1.; 3 dleRee EaSOS' spine otoan ii o g5voil Snows that 'Aspirin monnn Bs re 0,00101. 10010,, to Intel the pa9tla 0ea10101 mitatlona. tiro Tablets. will 1, tamr«t wits their "Baro, Uioag't 1,000 .pieta,' •SSUE No. 33—'28 Recalled WAS AUSTRIAN Vienna.—The shape' of the ship's screw was worked out by Archimedes as far back as il.d; 281, brit it was left to .Voset, Rossi mote than 8,000 years later, to a ply 1t as the driving power for abbe. Resell whose work was recently honored by technical students here, Watt born at'Chrudlm in beat Bohemia, not far from Pardubice, After study, ing at the Linz Gymnasium, he: passed to the Univereity of`Vienna, whore he could only remail two years owing to the poverty of his parents. Ile was able, however, to go to the Mariabrunn Forestry Academy,; being granted a scholarship at that institution by the Emperor Francle'ae: a reward for 'a" Pen , eilrotch of the Battle of Leipsio, which the latter considered as a prom. !sing work for ono so young. After this training he became a forester in: 'krain—formerly an Aus- trian province, but now part of Jug° slavla—at a salary " of fl00 gulden (about 1,000) per annum. In 18tL, he waa transferred to Trieste , While; there a little paddle steamer In diffi cult,"es in the harbor made him Minh of the necessity for other *cans of propulsion, and ultimately he fixed upon the method of .the screw The first trial was made with -0 canoe in which the screw at the lace was worked by two men,, and in February, 1827, he took out a patent to—exploit his neer invention. At first little could be done, as 'a British subject named Morgan already held the right of plying paddle boats between Trieste and Venice, and there were 15 more years to run before his contract expired. The license to build his machinery was only granted by the Austrian Government in Soptem tier 1828 on condition that the whole of the plant was' made in Austria, ' The Austrian machine industry was but little developed in those days, and the first experiments with the new machinery failed because' it was not sufficiently strong. One of the steam pipes burst, and the authorities im- mediately forbade any further 'tests. But during the next few years, Ressl's experiments became known outside Austria, and iia 1830 the trials were resumed abroad, and proved to, be quite successful. From that time on- ward, the use of the ship's propeller spread rapidly. A monument was erected in honr of .Beed in the Beast Park,iin front of the Vienna Technical `High School some years ago. Minard's Liniment-Unrversai remedy Heavily Remunerated Wife (at movie)--Wby is It you never matte love to me like that? Hubby—Say, do you know What that actor gets for doing that?—Cap- per's Weekly. • 1 E THE BIFOCAL :Y011 HAVE HOPED PED FOTO it removes the hazard of stalrwaYt. It allows freedom of action of the eyes, Gives greater comfort In reading. 'Does not Imprison the eye behind n blurred field. A British inventIon., tt Ask Vour Eye Gpeclalist. The Guest—"I say, waiter, 0 believe it's bad form to speak disrespectfully of one's elders?" The Walter—"So I 'ave 'card, sir." The Guest "Then I will be relent about there chicken," �GENTS, • IOITESIR SEX, TAKE Orders for Cfirtstmas Cards. Iligtt- -esc commission. No:,- experience notes eery, Sample book. tree. "Maitutactur ars," Dept. !'0," P.O.. Box 001,.Montrea1._ W A PAX TEEN TO FIFTEEN DOL. V• LARS weekly for spare time at home.'' Write for particulars, The Auto Knitter hosiery Company, Toronto, Do. partment- 7. ifTIT,I: ,',r1;IG MOVER—VIONtenp. DIS-' J J, TANCS movers of Canada. Largest speedy. padded Vana, Now LI'qutpment, latest methods. Two experlenced men ay.n y drip. All loads Insured. Beyond cotnpare for skill and care,- Before you move, write us or wire and reverse the Charges. Head office ilamlitoa. Ontario. Canaria. 70011 the Mover, 25 LL•eu.e5 1e1Oaaepoa,, 0 -,4 rti', t,la.,C. i'ost Pall, Other 'Palesao'Des, .Field. Glasses rand iller0Seopes to choose front, }Iandy to have anywhere. Send for list Alberts Optical Co„ std.,. 193 8t1, Ave. West, Dept 18, tlalgaxy, Alto. p �iv` egg Li° I E u` 1i O .Y`+7 Ela4° WICK TET The jar at left is filled with Gum -Dipping solution. The other jar is empty at first. One end of the wick—made of cords used in. Firestone tires— is placed in the solution, the other in the empty jar. Solu- tion penetrates entire length of the cord wick showing that Gunn -Dipping saturates the h cords. This exclusive Firestone pro. cess insulates every fibro with pbber, reduces internal friction and gives thousands of extra miles. Firestone tires cost no more than ordinary tires. Your local Firestone Dealer will glad- ly serve you, and save you money. FIRESTONE TIRE ea RUBBER CO. OF CANADA LIMITED Hamilton, Ontario Most Miles Per Dollar en our Childref. for t f7 There is hardly a household that halsn't heard of/Castor-1M At least five million homes are never without it. If there are children in your family, there's almost daily need of its com- fort... And any night may 'fintleyour very thanitfstl there's a bottle in the house Just a few drops, and that otilic or constipation is relieved; or diarrhoea Checked. A vegetable pro - duet; a baby.remedy meant for young folies. Cauetoria is about': the onlything you have ever heard dockets advise giving to infants... Stronger medicines aro dangerous to a tiny baby, however harmless ' they may be to grown-ups. Good old "Castorial Remember the name, amid remember to buy it. It may spare you a sleepless, anxious night. It is always ready, always wale to use; in emergencies, or for everyday ailments. Any hour of the day oar nigbit that Baby becomes fretful„ or restless. Oastevie wee never more ppoappttlar With reothers''than, it to today. h}very d ng'gisif has it. bGc v, ' Builds the Only GUM- l !PPM TIRES S v ,,O.i'" ?i -,?(d,°�ljl est V µ ;P., 66PINKHI S POUND IS CO ONDERFOL" 1 Read This Letter from a,'; Grateful Woman Vanessa, Ont.—"I think Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is --+—m-wonderful. x have had six children of which four are liv- ing and niy young- est is a bonnie baby boy noovva� eight months old who weighs 28 pounds. I have taken your medi- cine before eaoh of them was born and have certainly' re- ceived greatbenefit from it. I urge my friends to take it es T am sure they will receive the same help, I did."-1Vliis. MUTON NOO• MutLoN, Vanessa, Ontario,' High School Boards and Boards of Education ,Aro authorized by law,toestablish INDUSTRIAL, TECHNICAL AND ART SCHOOLS With the approval of the. Minister o4 Education. pAY AND EVENING CLASSES may„ be conducted in accordance with the reputations Issued qy,. the Department of.Education. THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTiON Is given in various trades. The echools and classes' are udder thq' direction of AN ADerSORY COMMITTEE, 44t. tyra•tKv Application for altee_a;tct al multi bo made to eho Pytaicipal of inti yF .1'�},t...,fxl� Ji'ia�l«�.ska •. 6eh�1. „ COMMERCIAL SUSJEC'r$,' MANyA!. �'iXflSOINCI oyeat$95. SCI AND AGRICULTURE AND HOf#-1•ICULTU'RRE aro prd Wo. I'M. l the G urseo of Stud to Public Separate, . Continuation 4 y pa , Co nuat on and kiifl Schools, Collegiate Institutoe, Vocational Schools and'Departlnente: .Copies of the Regulations Issued by the Mielster of Sducatton may,bq obtained from the Deputy Minister, Parliament Buildings,-Torontee