HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1929-08-29, Page 3Win .Scholarships.
. Canadian Poetic Railway scholarships, covering five years' tuition at
McGill 'University have been .awarded 'to 'O. P.'Sturdee, (left), son,of,lll. le L.
Sturdee,assistant general passenger agent; and William P. Dunlop eon'of
P, •.
john Dunlop, in the pension department of the railway, S
These young .men
Y
have both done brilliant Warr' in,theii'-respective 'school 'careers and closed
them by malting the highest average in the, matriculation :examination ler
Owl Leafs
We aro not here to drag" and to
drift,' Wo are hereto do and date.
Lady of the House (interviewing a
new ntaicif—"Apd.now, Nora, are you
efficient?" •
Nora— Luciano. I"am that, mum, ,,Ie
my last place ivery marnin' I got up
at four, made me fire, pot 'tellkettle;
onp prepared the breakfast' an' made
all the beds before iveryouo was up 'in
the house.' '
Most ,persons' have come to regard
poverty, as a handicap instead of an
inceintive>
Gary-"Witat would'I have to give
you for a little kiss?
FaY—"Choloroform "
The friend iu need -turns ;up more
often,than the, fried in deed,
io
n
i
She, game tato the police station
with a photograiih.in her ,hand.
"My.husband has disappeared," she
said, "This: is his photo." And site
handed, Exhibit'A to the inspector.
`.tl want him fotend-at one," she add-
ed:
entrance to the university. Ass minor eons of C.P,R, employees the n° The �inspe,ctor looked up from'the
iyo
w
the right to the scholarships awarded them:' ' photograph; . "Why?" he &eked,
About the, best way for a young fel-
low' to Stand- in with his girl is to
stand out 'with her ma. •
Why Cain Kiiied Abel:
"Val, going to -Adam : and -Eve's
piece „ •
"Adam , and Eve's place? I neves`
heard of• that. Where is`ler ••
"281 Apple"
the diggers with: the most interesting Isn't_11 aggravating the way you can,
discoveries,,. Under the;deep bed of sleep late every%`rtoining ereept°in'
sand they found a tektite to the God- day, when yondon't have to: get up
dess Nlneltiga[, "Lady Plf ICatna,"- as. early?
the, inscription on one of • the walls The knew baby had extra0rdiu&ry
said. This inscription Identified the..
town as ICatna, e ot•'the greatest lung, power. One day the., baby's
cities of autignity.onbrother, tittle Johnny, said to his;
Inthe temple Count du Mesnil •mother:
found 'two chapels' 'where saerificee "Ma. little brother came fret". Heav-
were made to Nin-Egal. In large en, didn't he?"
basins of clay were still seen. the . "Yes,, dear."
tracesof a brownish substance, which "Johnny was ;silent 'for a "minute,
after analysis by Paris police' experts and then he went on:
was identified as bull's blood at least "Mom, x don't blame the angels for
4,000 years old. getting rid of hint, do you?'
But 'the blood -thirsty goddess was
not satisfied with animal sacrilege. Some women seem to believe they
In the foundations of . her templelay have sufficient will power to gossip or
two vases and a jar containing akele- leave it alone.
tons of children who had been Immol-
ated to Nin -Beal to draw her bless- A girl can stand for a man with a
ing upon till) sanetuaiy. Around past if he has good presents.
Katna in the desert several minor -
towns are believed to have be The. honeymoon Is over when she
burled. Last spring Count du Mega looks sloppy around the house and be
nil began to :unearth one of them, doesn't give a darn.
and he intends to explore them all
Syria Desert
Yields Key to
Era of
Moses
City 'Unearthed byFrench
Fre h
Fills in History Back to
Cu eifornt Library Found
Exodus from Egypt
Paris—An entirely new page in the
'history et mankind was deciphered
last spring by, French archeologists
iyorking in Syria, ' Their' discoveries
of towns, palaces and tombs' several
thousand years old have thrown a
- new light on an almost pre -historic'
age extending from the time of Abra.
ham to that of Moses,
This Period has now ceased to be
legendary, so far as Syria is concern-
ed. With the documents unearthed,
historians soon can tell in detail the
ancient history of that country, wniek
has always been the crossroads be-
tween the East and the Weat.
Archeologists Vision New Era
in the poor Alawit villages called
Benit el Melee and Ras Sharma,
Schaeffer, French Savant and his'as-
istant, Georges Cheret, found the
ruins of a palace built about 1300
B.0.—approximately the time of the
exodus—and a vast necroprlis with
princely tombs,
Although these underground tombs,
solidly built in stone, had been rav-
aged and robbed several thousand
years ago, they still contain, many
valuable indications of the religious
' rites eS those who built them.
But -the most remarkable discovery
01 the arohaeologlsts was a library of
about sixty tablets, found on the
grounds of the palace. Seine of the
tablets, written in Babylonian cunei-
form signs --the diplomatic language
of that time—were letters from Egyp-
tian phaloahs to the princes of that,
mysterious town whose name the
savants have riot yet discovered.
Some others wore the inventory of the
King's treasuries.
• World's First Alphabet
But the most interesting among
' them have not yet been deciphered, as
they were written It what le believed
to bo the world's first alphabet: Twen-
ty-six or twenty-seven lettere could
be discerned in it, but it probably
will be, some time before the experts
In old alphabets' identify the sounds
twee' lettere represent. The-excava-
tiona in Ras Shamra will be continu-
ed next spring—spring being the only
season when digging in Syria is pas-'
eible—and it is probable that many
other discoveries of. equal historic
value will be made. On that site
evidently existed a large town, pea-
sibly an Aeglan colony, that was a
center for trade with Egypt and anel-
ent Greece and Cyprus.
.No less interesting than M. Schaef-
fer's; report was the communication
made at the academy, by Count du
Mesnil du Buiesou On his digging at
ICatna in the middle Syrian desert.
The 'town of ICatna has long been
known 10 historians, but no one could
Indicate its location, •
Advised five years ago by a Jesuit
ihissionary, the archaeologist explor-
ed part of the desert near Mishrife,
-where an accumulatio of sand indicate
• ped the possibility rt finding an under-
ground town, ad Count du Mesnil un-
earthed there, after several expedi-
tions, the ruins of three towns built
WI-IEN IN TORONTO
EAT AND SLEEP AT
SCH°LES HOTEL
400 Lunch or Supper a specialty
YONGE ST0 Opposite Eaton's
Hotel Rates: $1 Per Day and Up
one. over the. other. The first, of
which only the gates could' bb diseor-
eyed until now, had ' existed In the
third rnlllenium B,C ;before • Abrar
ham's time. The ,second bad- been
built about 2300 B.C: and' destroyed.
by, [evaders in 1375 B.0., and the third
was evidently of the' Neo -Babylonian
era, with its maximum ofprosperity,
under Naniitchodonosor's. reign,
It is the second town that supplied.
•
The Homing Call
From far-off hills across' the sea,
Beyond the ocean's mounting foam,
I smell the scent;of;heathered lea --
I feel the call oigirihood's home.
I must go. back , I cannot stay:,
01d ties, old scenes have strong allure;
I want to tread the well-worn way
That leads to horn across the moor.
Once more to greet the friends: of old,
Once more t0 view old Scotia's 5Ceees,
Whose charms have been so oft un-
rolled
As one the songs of poets. gleans.
Old, memories stir at fancy's call, '
i know fond welcome waits nip there
From frleads of youth, but, best of all,
From her of swiftly -greying hair.
—Jean C. Watt, in the Calgary Herald.
Dairy Cattle •
The prise money fca the dairy. eat-
tie classes for the Royal Winter Fair
next November at Toronto has been
increased in four of the. classes as
compared with last year's figures.
The prizes as now scheduled are:
Holsteins, total $4,440, an increase
of $710; Ayrshires, total 23,300, an In-
crease of $280; Jerseys total $3,220,•
an increase of $200; and Guernseys,
total $3,220, an increase Eat • $2004
VELVETS AND THE DYE -POT
Velvets are very responsive to dyes.
After the coloring process • is com-
pleted, they should be thoroughly
rinsed in clear water, and pressed be-
tween the hands to extract the water.
After drying in a perfectly straight
hanging position, they should be
steamed over a :tot iron and occasion-
ally brushed against the nap,
Minard's Liniment for aching joints
A man -lent a friend a book, "How
hi" live to be a hundred.". Meeting a
tittle later, the Iriehd told the lender
that his wife was ,reading the boob
la all the spare time she had. The
lender was delighted, A month later
they met again, and the lender again
inquired about_his friend's wife. "She's
doing wonderful," replied the. friend.'
"She looks over a hundred now, and
she isn't fifty' yet"
Just a tasteless dose of
3ltilk of Magnesia, in water. That is
an alkali, effective, yet harmless. It
,,;,,..:has been the standard antacid for 50.
lease among physicians 'everywhere.
One spoonful will neutralize at once
many times its volume in acid. It
is the right ,way,the quick, pleasant
and efficient way to kill the • excess
:aoid. 'The' stomach becomes sweet,.
Phillips'
The sleek little man was walking
from the funeral of his 'big and mac-
tertul wife. Suddenly a dislodged
slate' whirled down aud landed with a
resounding crack on his head,
"Gosh1" he murmured, looking up.
"Sarah must have reached Heaven, al-
ready."
y
itap„
( e,
HAT does ``after
VV
forty" mean to you?
Are you less capable than
you used to be? Nervous?
Easily tired? Run down?
Tr the effect of two or
three, boxes Of Dr. 'W 1-
Hauis' Pink Pills, the tonic
that has made hundreds
of middle- aged women
feel ten years younger!
Itwill nourish and invig-
orate the blood, so often
thinned and devitalized
by advancing years, tone
it up to better service,
make you feel strong
again, eager for life 1
Buy Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills now at . your drug-
gist's or any dealer in.
medicine, or by snail,, 50
cents, postpaid, from The
Dr. Williams Medicine
Co., Brockville, tint.
n,'4
• i R
INKPRIS
"A tiou0EHot,O NAME
IN 54 COUNTRIES'.
On the Arabian
Sea
Toour right were the ocher -colored
mountains of "Baluchistan, almost in-
visible against the clear sky, like the
shadows of an even greater range be-
hind. them. Although my memory of
charts told me that we could have
saved time by cutting directly across
the Arabian Sea to Sohar, the helms -
ma Plaid his course witI1n sight of
those pale mountains, to be prepared
to run 8n, I thought, hi case a ehimal
blew up.
Thus wo were following an ancient
route, the same that the 'ships of
Nearchus had taken after the eon -
quest of India; the same over which
Crops are so good this year the
countless thousands of richly laden
farmers may melee nearly enough to vessels had traveled to Bagdad in the
Pay the interest on what they owe. days of the Caliphs: The ships of
Cyrus and Pahlavi had skirted these
Does Your eon- 'testi ever come back
to visit you since he got in the mov-
ies at Hollywood?"
"Every summer," answered Tuttle,.
proudly; "every summer of the three
years he's -bon gene."
"And did he bring his wife with
"Each time," she answered, "And
Ahoy were three as purty girls as you
'ever laid eYes on."
"Here's something queer," said tate
dentist: "You say this tooth has
never been worked on before, but I
find emelt lakes of gold on my iu-
etrument "
"I think you have struck my back
collar button," moaned the victim.
tIto pain departs. You are Happy
again in five . minritee.
Don't•, depend cn crude 'Methods.
Employ the best Way yet evolved In
all the years of; searching. That is
Phtlline''Milk of Magnesia; and ip obstacles are placed in the way, ter for teaeber and pupil.. At best
KEEP CHILDREN WELL
116T WEATHER
Every mother knows how fatal the
hot summer mouths are to small
children. Cholera infaatltm,diarr-
hoea, dyselttry, colic' and stomach
troubles are rife at title time and
often a precious I11110 life is lost
after only a few hours illness. The
mother who keeps Baby's Own Tab-
lets in the house feels safe.) The oc-
casional use 'of the Tablets prevent
stomach. and bowel troubles, or it
trouble comes suddenly—aa it gener-
ally 004s—the Tablets will bring the
baby safely through. They, are sold
by medielne-dealers.os by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine .Co.,, Brockville, Ont,
Dearer Bread
London Daily Chronicle
Bread, winch rose a halfpenny in
London last Monday, is- to,rlse again,
before the- end of the month.:. ,From
fluctuations of this cert mankind to-
day sulfers less than ever before in
its history., Nevertheless they stili
exist, and before 'the winter is over
we may have found this one serious.
The,'effect of dear bread is soon felt.
in many. British homes; but it 18' a
much sharper pinch for large 1)opnlar
Lions on- the Continent•
Canadian 'Trade
London Times Trade Supplement
and,); 'There would, seem to be lit-
tle to dim the prospect which the Do-
minioh offers to the capitalist, 'ttt'e
the exporter, and the settler, and it
is posstbte to attach too maelt signi-
'llcance to the agitation caused. b$ the
Amer[cati proposals to impose higher
duties on Canadian produce. -The
market for foodstuffs is world-wide,
mountains! perhaps Stubad, himself,
had taken refuge beneath the calm of
their barren peaks. I followed in the
shadows of the great, yet only the
encompassing majesty of sea aud
mountains gave cause for exultation.
A school of marvelous. spouting
whales frolicked to the south; their
coarse always betrayed by tate glisten-
ing flocks of .seabirds that followed
them. We passed over ocean that
was . made red by swarms of
almost imperceptible protozoan forms,
like peridinium, that floated in' clouds
beneath the surface. We'came upon
great. yellow turtles swimming .with
their heads above water. Once, a
huge fellow, covered with. barnacles
and seaweed, swam directly toward
us. Three yards' from the bow he be-
gan to sink'; and from the high•after-
deck I could see him sinking through
the clear green water until he was no
larger than a twenty -dollar gold piece.
On the fourth day from Karachi the
wind calmed down to such au extent
that we scarcely moved. We must
have been over a reef, for the bottom
of the sea was spotted with•huge
white and black patches .that looked
to be sand and • gigantic marine
growths. Schools of bright ‘fishes
swam beneath us, and occasionallya
large fish, like a grouper, would zig-
zag among them like a grumpy old
man looking for something.—From
"The Great Horn Spoon," by lifageoe
Wright. ' - -
History and -Doctor
Johnson
He' had ',no;,opinion .of;history. ;.Once
whom Charles :lames Foie insisted'dr
talking to him- of the Catiiinarian
conspiracy{ ilo,. "withdrew his atten-
tion and thought about, Tont Thumb."':
The study of history, he argued, was,
not a '.valuable •study, for; We "know.
nothing but a few facts and dates."
"The colouring was eonjectural,", he
added:
It is the opinion'of Boswell that he
Made this remark primarily to an-
noy Gibbon, who happened to lie
present. Whether that was his motive,
or not, the remark raises a very in-
teresting and debatable .point. His-
tory, it has been said, is philosophy
teaching by example, and the only
trouble seems to be that, if you
select 'your examples with a litdle
skill, there is no limit to the philoso-
,phies'which can .use history to bolster
themselves up.... ' .
I think•, that on the whole history
'did moreharm in .Johnson's ,'day
than it does in this. It had not then
been found out. In 'the eighteenth
century youmight say, "History
teaches us," and then Pretend: that
all history "was but an extended 'ex-
ample of Some pet little fad of your
;own. If, only you wroth well enough
you might even be believed. And 'the
period of history to Which Johnson,
particularly objected was that. of
-republican: • Rome, to `Which it was
then the fashion to appeal for fan-
testie examples of civic' .excellence.
"I fan -
.know nota" he 'wrote, "why any-
one but a schoolboy in kis 'deelanta-
tion-should `whine over the contmon-
wealth' of Rome." . `
'Phe collapse of the two large hopes
of the French ]?evolution and ;_the
elm and flows in the fashion -s ;of his-
tory have made us a little more scep-
tical than was the generation of
Jenough. ohnsn, thHisghounost en 'nearto-ly sceptical
tory day teach.
`us at least one great lesson. We learn
from history 'that there is very little
to be, learnt from history. We learn
from it also, if we are wisea decent
scepticism concerning political pana-
ceas.There hus never been a Golden
Age.. , .For, under any constitution,
power, Must ' be- put into the hands
of men; and men abuse power.
All these things Johns= knew very'
well. He !num them so weir that he
didnot need History to teach them
to him. Anr his objection, I fancy,
was not really so much to history
as to historians. He knew that hu-
man 'natre rir, not change. He ob-
jected to the historians who told him
that it did."All history," it has been
said, "is a history of one's own cen-
tury." Johnson was doubtless igno-
rant of 'the aeidents'of'the'past..,.
of what its men were like, he had
far too keen a sense to be willing to
spend much tune in Iearning what
the present said about then:. Ile was
avid to study "modes of life." It was
only that small part that "kings or
lora :can cause or cure" which he
round tedious. He, more almost than
any other person, was the type of the
normal man. The normal man does
not take kindly to history. His objec-
tion to it is that it does not men-
tion him, ---Christopher Hollis, in "Dr.
Johnson."
Ways and Means
J. L. Garvin, in :the London Ob-
server (Ind.); The fate of this Parlla-
meut and the whole battle of the fu-
ture will turn on finance and nothing
else. - Mr. Snowden has to find the
money for alt the plans of his co-
leagues. He has to satisfy a party
which believes crudelyy, but fervently,
in the £1,000,000,000 Budget and in
the unlimited social dividend, for the'
Have-nots at the expense of the
Haves: ,This theory put into practice.
means the appalling folly of a suicidal
island, utterly dependent on. its rela-
tions wit ha capitalistic world. It
would attack investment, restrict
trade, and spread unemployment.: tt
is the Achilles' heel:through which in-
sular Socialism invites its death -
wound.
Mistake
After the letters, the noeturnat'triais,
The melancttolles.the stubborn clutch
of breaths,
After the, useless beauty of dettials,
The gods heard -my pathetic crew of'
triumph;
Fcr she was mine—and wished that
she were Death's.
And now -1' knee* that Altera is no
believing:-
One's own• Soul, 'which can lie with
willing lige; '
While. she,- poor , girt, ,thought that -I
was deceiving •
Ontylierself. Godsi•is there no way
• of seeing
The pride beforehand of these little
slips?
—S. Foster Damc n in ' the Atlantic
Monthly.
Teaching By Movie
London Daily Telegraph • (Cone.):
If wo regard 'education as an affair
purely,.ef the intellect, then no amount
of instruction' by means 01.111mo w111
teach a student: to read for biniseli
o think 1or himself, o• to make
of t t n ims , t
his own discoveries. And if we re-
gard education in a wider sense, alien
jit becomes even More a personal mat -
Hot Air and Cold Fact
London Morning Post (Cone.): We
are sorry for the miners. What they
really wan tie good employment ,and
good wages; but they are become the
"cannon fodder" of telr' Trade Union
"Militarists"; ;their employment and
their wages and the good of the indus-
try are all sacrificed to political -re-
volutionary ends. Mr, Cook talks non-
sense about being "the orphan of the
storm,'' and the "hard-headed" ,Her-
bert Smith talks nousese 'about "in-
ternational regulation," 'Neither •the
one nor the other has the courage to
admit the simple truth that -the mines
of this country - must compete for
trade with the mines of other" • coun-
tries—and on much the same basis of
:tours and, wages, ig the miner is to
keep in employment. .
Potato Prize
The Royal Winter Fair, desirous of
varying its awards In order to add in-
,trinsic value as 'well':as interest to
the winners, welcomes the form taken
by the latest gift that the .Executive
has acknowledged. The N,V, Potash
Export My., Montreal, has d; •mated a
sblid gold watch, suitably,tengraved,
for the best % bushel of certified
potatoes exhibited at the Royal Win -
'ter' Fair to be held' in Toronto on
Nrvember 20-28.
Keep Minaret's Liniment ilwsys handy
Lady: "I want a bottle: of iodine,"
Clerk: "Sorry, Madam; but this is a.
drug store. Can': I interest you in
.an alarm clock, some nice leather
goods, a few radio parts, or a toasted
cheese sandwicat?"
Be sure to get, the genuine Phillips' of the eats of her commodities in the j the film can Only become a more or
Mihir of Magite'sia prescribed by Phys- United States the' Dominion will - fled less valuable ,ektension cf the blaek
clans. for 50 years In correcting -01055S t.ther outlets. board; at worst: it ;might be a posi-
tive hindrance to tiro development
Minsrd's Liniment for Neuredgia, of the habit of serious reading.
acids. Each bottle contains full
directions—any drugstore.
L
FOR THE HAIR
Ask Your .Barber—He li,nows
ISSUE No, ,35—'29`
Red Ro's'e tea comes.irect to us from Hid finest tea
gardens, then straight to, Scour grocer brimful' o�
flavor°and %freshness. ' Every, package guaranteed.70
eft,:
S goo
RED R SE ORANGE PEK
99
E `$s iz;FCfE'::. , ®d➢�TI
Utilitarian ' Pets
The cat tribe; which spends mast of
Ito tune lasleeping: strolling in the
sun, and nocturnal choir practice will
undoubtedly view with alarm an ad
vertisement-that, recently. appeared in
the newspapers of Manchester, Eng-
land. It, reads: "Cat Wanted in city
warehouse,c;span,to-0 aim.; each day,
Owner -to deliver ;and collect, Five
shillings per. week Land carfare;'
The advertisement was inserted by
a' fir. m engaged' in the blouse and cos,
tame busiuea&,: Poison having failed
to 1E111 off 'rata 'overrunning the ware:
lions& the hereditary',euemy of, the
rodents is being called upon. .To cats
it 'will :appear as the thin edge of` the
wedgo, the 111 -sI move in a campaign
10 enlist eadehtial'esthetics =in the
ranks of commerce.
Their only' consolation lies la' the
knowledge that' dogs are not escaping.
These anilnals'at4 being hired out in
the west end of London to match wo-
lien's :dresses. Large black and white
dogs are in great demand to' go'with
the magpie two-piece costumes being
designed for Ascot, and brindle -color-
ed dogs are very popular, as they go
void]. ;with country clothes.
• In line with .this utilization of.pets,
and' bearing` in mind the insect epi-
demic that summer usually brings in
its train, residents of New York might
find it preftable to adopt anteaters -to
he hired out by the hour, day or week.
—Rex Hunter. r
Judges
The following will be judges .in the
named classes at next' November'a
Royal Winter Fair:—
Seeds, all grain—J. E. Blakeman,
Winnipeg; W. J. W. Lennox, Toronto;
Prof. W. J, Squirrel!, Guelph.
Fruit in packages—Prof. G. W.
Peck, Ithaca; N.Y,; It. W. Rees,
Rochester, N.C.
Fruit, Plates and Fancy Baskets-
Prof. W. T. Macoun, Ottawa.
Vegetables (except Potatoes)
James McKee, Ottawa,
Floriculture, Cut Blooms—P, Breit-
myer, Detroit, Mich.
Floriculture, Plants and Groups—
W. 0, Ball, Montreal; Chas, J. Tidy,
Toronto.
"It's no good mincing matters,"
said the doctor, "you are very bad.
Is there anybody you would like to
see? "Yes," replied the . patient,
faintly. "Who is it?" 000110d tate
doctor. "Another doctor, please,"
whispered the patient.
0
Save the Price of Your
Fare to Toronto
Permanent Waving
By Experts $5 •M
When you' visit the Exhibition don't
fall - to have one of our famous Per-
manent Waves at the Reduced Rate
of $5.50.
With or without appointment.
Specialists In the Shur Wave Method
of Permanent Waving. (For ladles
who care.) ® ry
ROBERTSON'S
288 YONGE STREET, TORONTO
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thelloneyriyUd et
You Must Do Your Bit
lin the war against the fly, carrier
of germs and breeder of disease.
,
Itis proven that AEROXON is one
'of the most convenient and most r co
'efficient means of combating this
fly evil. It is convenient, because
of the push -pin. It i} hygienics'
flies never get away when once
caught. Each spiral gives three
' ecelts' perfect service.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
&Wel drug, grocery end hardware secret.
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sotsLatMt
Classified Advertisements
AGENTS WANTED TO SDLL T'RUIT
Trees, Shade Trees, Shrubs. I:naeso,
L4eciging, and'a complete like of Nur.,erV
Stock for old established firm, .)utttt
furnished, r Cash commeslon paid -every:
week.„Good .terltery still, open 'Write
today;Maple Grove Norserles, Winona,
rf1WO STEAK PUNLS'S,, IN PERPLrOT
.5 condltlon, large capacity, - Watkins.
Room 421, 73 .Adelaide Si West. Toronto..,
'fLpf 1RTNl7 .STI]AIVI BOrrano, 100, SLP„
JI.iL very, cheap, apply Watkins,, Itoont
421, 73 Adelaide Street West Toronto.'
STIFLES , CARTRIDGES
SPORTSMEN'S SUPPLIES
Chca¢cr or Resor
WritcforCotalegne'
T. W. BOYD E'' SON
376 Noire Rama 51. W.; IiMi tEA1
A Scottish elergymau had a parish-
ioner who .was.a rabid. politician with
distinct - democratic leaninglt.' One
day when the parson called, be was
told 'of a new litter of kittens. "And
do you think' they'll be interested in,
politics?” " 'Deed yes, sir. They're'
Conservgiiiyes," The parson wps ma -
prised, and even'more rio do ids nen
visit, for he was informed they were
Liberals. "Why this change, John?"
"Och," said the old fellow, with a
wink. "They've had their eyes open
'since you were here last,"
-Minard's Liniment for Summerm'
Colds
An old colored woman went to the
dentist- and began to yell as soon as
Ile 'Put • the forceps in her mouth,
"what are you yelling for; you know
I'm • a •painless dentist," he said.
"Maybe you're painless, but I ain't,"
'She sobbed.
GIRLS`'ATa
I1'A[RDRESSING AND BI5AUTY
GULTURIit
is the moat remunerative prc.esslon
today.'
WE OFFEE TSE. MOST t7P-10,
DATE COURSE ISI CANADA.
Hundreds of satisfied graduates.
Write for free booltlet.
Toronto Hairdressing Academy
137 Avenae E8., Toronto, Dept. W
ChildrenCry
for
s� o
Rif s"<
ABABY REMEDY
APPP.41.13D l3Y DOCTOR$
I00 COUC UDHSTIPATIOH.DIARRIIEA
The Camper's First Aid
Minard's fa grod for burns,
bruises, sprains, Wounds, and
insect bites.
FAT GIRLS ! HERE'S'
A TIP FOR YOU
Alt over the world 1Crug:hen Salts is
appealing to girls and women who
strive for an attractive, free from fat.
figure tltatcannotfail to win admiration.
Here's the recipe that banishes fat and
brings into blossom all the natural
attractiveness that every woman pos-
sesses.
Every morning take one quarter tea-
spoon of Kruschen Salta in a glass of
hot water before breakfast.
Be sure and db this every morning, for
"It's the little daily dose that takes
off the fat." Don't miss a morning
The Kruschen habit means that alt
poisonous waste matter and harrnfut-
acids and gases are expelled front tate
system.'
At the same time the stomach, liver,
kidneys, and bowels are toned tip and
the pure, fresh blood containing Nature's;
six fife -giving salts is carried to every;
organ,.gland, nerve, and fibre 'of the
body, and this is followed by "'that
Kruschen fooling' oe energetic health
and activity that is reflected in bright
'eyes, clear skin, cheerful vivacity, and
a charming figure,
D1stsibator for'. Ontario
NEWTON'A.• HILL
BG Front St.,.
1;:, Tor
onto 1,
AFriend to Women
Lydia, E. Pillkhalifs
ic etabiV Compound
LYDIA 0. 711511HAM NIGDICINS CO.
andLynn, Mass„ V.B.A.
Cobourg, Ont„ Coned%