HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1925-08-06, Page 2CLINTN
NE "':RE OR ..
CLINTON, ONTARIO ' •
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O. E.IiALL, M. R. CLARK,
Proprietor, Editor.
G. D. IicTAGGART
M. D. MCTAGG;ART
ONE SUMMER DAY
BY ANNIE M. LIBBY.
Three pair) of''linen � three airs of " "NN othin' but p b t a second woman, and,/
Scotch plaid, hanging dejectedly on wantin' tolie skipper!" repeated Uncle'
the clothes line, one: pair of gray, Retire softly under his 1ireath.'
with little rivers of pie juioe flowing By and by Cleni'fe:r into a doze,
down the front, ono. pair of navy blue, which laSteci but a short time, when
With , a big tear.• in the back -these he awoke and saw a little man ahead,
were Clem's'short, broad trousers. in the n;;tulle of the road, a 'Omer-
-And mother was so unreasonable! lookingdieing comint toward' ',herd,
;Cf he Could only go, he would wear 13y garing sharply for a minute,
the'glays and his ulster, or the blues, Clem saw it was n toy wai'liinig
and sit still all day; but the party sail- wards on his feet and hands.'-
ed away down the Narrows without Just ar, the Horse reached :h m he'
him, and left flim standing alone by jumped to one "side,, and looking nil
"Gibraltar," a big rock on the share. between his legs,, called out:
"They think I'll cry," he said, "but
I won't!"
Two bright chops rallied down his
cleelcs as he spoke.
Olen looked surprised.
"Some of that babys tears, she's
been crying on mei". he said scorn-
fully.
Thenhe dug his toes in the sand,
wished every stick 'lyin gabout was
ills rrsh or cinnamung," and "Gib-
raltar"
Gib-
res tar' agreat sugar, doughnut.
After a time
he saw Uncle Retire
unfastening his big barn doors and
went .over,
He asked Uncle Retire if he was go -
peddling, and the old mall "caI'-
lated he might gout
Clem looked on while Uncle Retire
ran out the big red cart, led out the
old white horse, -and harnessed him
into the. shafts,
"I 'should like to go out a spell "
said Clem, -
"Wel sill" said Uncle• Retire. "
"I'm all alone," moaned Clem.
Uncle Retire brought,,.out several
bags and stowed then: in the cart,
"It's going to thunder an' lighten
storm to -day," argued Glom, "and I'll
be' killed."
Uncle Retire didn't say a word until
-he was ready to mount his cart; then
he looked at Cleni as if he just rem-
embered that a doleful -looking little
boy stood there., w
":Ain't there nobody to your house?
Where's that furriner?" ,
"Maggie? . Well, I don't have melee
-
to do with iter."
"Where's Fannie?"'
"Her's got the toofache, an' m
tie pig's dead,too!"
"Wes -cit git up."
Clem climbed up.
Uncle Retire was a short man,with
scanty white hair, a red face and blue
Billy stopped, as he alwhye did
when he met anybody. ,
"My 'mother- Who's that boy Vh^h
you?"
"What 60 you • want?"
"I'wanter know mho that' boy is.
"Na -ow. ,-- look a -here, ` Ephraim'
l ; 11 T Blake, ere your :nether wants , any-
. I'g 1- thin day se, or I'1 right"
cTA BROS.
g, Y l go along
' 's` � :and the pettier gathered up the reins.
BANKERS I g g "She does," said the boy, still star-
ing at Ie
'
Clem. "She' wantsa
g a pint, n
she's got the rags to.pay for it."
A'general Banking Business transact- ' There:was no house in sight here
i;
ed. ' Notes Dieoonnted. Drafts Issued, either, but Billy turned down a lane,
Interest Allowed' on Deposits. 'Sale go-
ing:
Sound a corner,' and they came to. a
Notes purchased, - p a'mali, white house, close by the water.
A woman looked out, ran back, and
H:' T. -RANCE appeared again isIth a big bag of rags
Notary Public Conveyancer. which 'Uncle Retire began to weigh.
Financial, Real' Estate and- Fire In. and bargain for, while the boy invited
aurance Agent.:: Representing le Fire Cleni into the barn,
1 sa anee Companies, •'
Dtvlaton Court Ottfoe,'Ctinton. "bid you oversee a coli with ten
legs?" he caked eagerly,"
Mem didn't know.
"There's •dne," said Ephraim, point-
ing to a pretty red and white calf in
a pen.
• "Two forelegs makes• eight, and two
hind ones ten! Don't ye see?"
0?em said "Yes" in e§o calm •a tone
that the boy was suspicious, and want-
ed to know if he ever heard that be-
fore.
Clem couldn't remember, •but guess-
ed. some of the calves at his- grandpa's
had as ready as 'lave legs,
"How could they? Now prove it.
Prove it'sante's I did to you."
No. Clem wasn't . 82100. Maybe
DR. H. S BROWN, L.M.C.C. Y 'twasn't 'leaven, maybe 'twos Aye, or
OmIIce Hours ki 1 three; but he promised not to tell
1,10 to. 3,30 p,m. 7.30 to 0.00 p.m, about Ephraim's calf and Ephraim
g
Sundays 1.00 to 2.00 p.m. ave him a rubber bo,
p
ite stopper and
Other hoursnespofntment
Phones
a large slice of raw turnip. A tranquil haunt, yet down . that
Phones - ry and ate total dreamy tide,
Mem em -was "}Lan
Otilae, 218WResidence, 21$J g' p
es• until Uncle Retire begged some gin- Dimginnael.ed with sunset, Loudon
One of his Sauey young neighbors gerbread and milk for him at a ,house walla -
said he bore the national colors wher- where they called, Uncle Retire had London, 11)0 Pool, the •purlfena aoattor
ever he went. what he calved "a bite" before they ed wide
. He had been a sailor in his younger started, from home. Of earth's first city and her hundred
days, and had never unlearned malty AR the long summer afternoon they gates. •
of the queer' phrases he had learned rode, stopping here and there, to buy -Erle Ohfimau.
on shipboard. ' 3 cents' worth of broken glass a boy
There were some ,funny black fig- had • picked u a bit of old iron a few w HOWares on his hands, and a boy had said rags, or to leave a skimmer, a coffee Dimples Come.
a ship under full sail was, marked pot,. or a broom. have you a dimple? If so, do you
upon his chest, Orem liked to stand by when thelimes what it toothy 18?
.em couldn't believe • that -sides A dimple is aetµaily nothing more
Mem v :tat
of the cart were .et down to
"'Twauld hurt!" show the tins. than a dont or .depression in 5. part of.
Uncle -tett didn't 'talk mueh,�but Be saw some. especially lovely little the betty where the. Pest is very soft,
happy to care. pa v a made
Dimples age not confined to the cheek
Clem was too'red and blue tin pails, and made upe alone, and babies frequently have dim
He tried to see how long he could his mind to have his mother buy one Pied elbows' .
look at the sun without winking; lie as soon' as he got Noma. " and knees. Plump child -
watched the horse's feet, to see if the On the whore, Clem liked peddling ren usually have several dimples on
DR. FRED G. THOMPSON hind foot went in the track of the fore -,their backs and ylroulders.
very -well, s hune sun had gone down, Dimples usually accompany a smile'
Oflioa and Residences foot; the . green, ribbon turfs, to see and he was hungry again, when they
O iofu neart the wheels grazedh rrand when. they selIdir on,.other qeo•
a tae tb Street Clinton,CiiutonOnt y without heard a voice calling, Mr. ,
touching; the while -s 'led boats in " looking Pros' clleelta we seldom thinit of sitiq
One door west of .Anglican' Church: going Mr, tledgi l I and g up' to back, saw
down the Gurnet; ' the craws andcease.. Underneath the outside akin
Phone 172. a little, gird running said,
cart, the face aee fibres er varying
hawks flying over to Pitch -Pine Hie "Mr, Peddler," she said, "your rags which run Well directions.' Occasion -
oldforgot Unce Retire -anal the is a'- pilhn'1"
old reran said: • -What a sight! Back as•far as they ally these fibres are too short in seer -
"I dumio as I ought to a -brought r tain spot, eat so'pull the• skin which
g g could see was . a' stream of rags fol forms the dimple,
ye. Did yes- mar say, that ye could _;owing them. White, black, green,
go,anywhere?" I piltlq blue, all colors, big and little, all 0 -" to
Ivo, sir replied Clem truthfully.King Solomon Stuff..
p• y sizes. --for the biggest bag had burst.
"She didn t have time, cause all any "Jes le' me it this hose hove to "' in' a Coal camp in the heart or the
g '• Rockies a justie° of the peace, 'with
of tiler sail was: 'Where's the salt -said Uncle Retire excitedly. ' '
•and -who has the piclties??' But one "I'd help," said the little girl, "but a desire to emulata Solomon, was Iis-
day•I asked her if I couldn't be a ped- Im going to carry this pail of milk tening to a case involving the owner-
dler, and she asked nee when "I gotmygrandmother, and the wolf might shin of a colt, There were witnesses
some money, tind I don't have any catch me if I wait, for it 3s almost of.equal veracity eu each aide, The
money. -I- had 10 cents, but it got -dare now."- jaatice was undecided what to do;
away. All my money gets away!" i So she slapped •away. but
--
Here.-the old horse stepped at the 'The peddler and C:gem went belt to: "Each or you follows bring your
top of a Steep hill.1 pick up the rags, Clem looking a little mare,,' he told the litigants.
On one -side of the road was the anxiously along the:road for the wolf. Tiley did so,
graveyard; thickly set with white He ordered one (ware tethered to his
stones and Overrun with golden rod He had heard of going round the right and the other mare tethered to.
and Iow blackberry vines. On the world -lie was sure that stream of his left,
other side were pinewoods, rags did, but ha never thought of stop- "The colt will go to its mother," he
The old man stood ep hi his piece and Ehe�lhob the lfastenedast one vas inthTb g toad them, after taking pains that colt
gird looked silently for a moment over P should see both mans. 10,
the burying round then sat down, perched on the cart agait}, with a long Then he slipped the halter from ilio
Y g !?yawn, he adlcedrf Thiele Retire didn't
and Billy jogged on. colt olid l t wen it with a whip,
„ wish Bily^ivas an -okstriteh so they.
171d you see Injuns7 asked Clem, ,j The colt went up over the hill.
could get home awful twiek.
"Here we be!" ; said Uncle Retire, Poor Pay.
turning into a new road. "There's
yeee.eause over there, and here is the
- W. BRYDONE . •
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public,. etc:
Office:
SLOAN BLOCK - C.LiNTON
DR. J: C. GANDIER
Office Hours: -3„30• to 3.30 P -m. 6.30
to 8.00 lam. Sundays, 12,30 to 1.30 P.m.
Other hours by appointment only.
Office and Residence"-. Victoria 8t.
DR. METCALF
BAYFIELD, ONT,
Office T•{ours-2 to 4, 7 to 8.
Other hours. by.appofntment,
pulled in -how his back and logs'
ached! -and than, then what were
aching rand waiting -when Uncle Re-
tire
e -ti e topic out one of those Littre blue
pei1S, and gavel him for his own?
And Leff and Fannie andc Josie
Bryce and Scott,'$'rnlc,et r,l'-came to-
meet him, for inothmi had come from
the picnic; long ago, and they had had
"I shall get some water for 1ny own
supper in my new pail," said C:0111.
Scott and Josie swung on Om long
swam?, to; bring 'it 'down in C., m s
reach..
You'll lose it,' C n1 you'd surely
'osa its .said. Lee; but Clem ctlmly
slipped his treasure .b/er dice catch
With the big wooden bucket, and they
went down with a plunge -went 'down,
but only the hig pail,calue.'bucic,
'Josie almost' won't down, too, look
ing in.
Lee talked phlksophically'bf a look''
ink glass; and magnet, but most of
them concluded it was "gone,, for t
"For there isn't any bottom to this
well " said, Scott. ,
"No, air!" ' chimed a Pi'iny , Wade.
"Maybe .a Chinaman's got your pail
this minute, drinking, puppy soup out A detachment of Royal Canadian 01011nted Police are shown taking part.
of it." in the historical pageant at the Calgary stag:aped° recently,
"Never mind, -little brother," eaid
li
Fannie, "you can have another," �r
Clem winked hard, Aal
Eskimo Banquet.
"Yee," he said, "I can go peddling
most any day and get another," and
they all went 0 the hoese,
-"And,so," said his mo„ner, kissing
him agin and again after bearing his
adventures, "my little hero toiled all
-day, and lost 'all his wages!"
"Not all, mother."
'Why, your rubber,.you loot that."
"Yes, I'apose it's lost. I.don't know
where it is."
"And your turnip?"' -
"Yes, I ate that up."
"And now your pail?"
"No,' not that, mother;" says Stem,
putting down his mug and shaking
his• head earnestly; ``that isn't Nest.
I can't get it, but 5 know where it is!"
A Thames Backwater.
My boat swings free 'in this-mid-Eng-
land
hismidEng-
land aalm,
A palm too deep' for labor atthe
oar -
Cuckoo and einging reed, an air like
balm,
A dulcet'Thanuee above the last
weir's roar.
Beryond, those meadows, tool with af-
terglow,
A thin smoke rises and an ancient
spire
Baste in that mellow peace the 'Eng-
lash. know,
The ordered quiet :Setae English
shire,
DR. PIERCIVAL HERRN
OfUce and Residence
Raton Street Clinton, Ont,
Phone 69
(Formerly occupied by: the late Or.
C. W. Thompson),
Eye: Exeminod and ,Glasses Fitted;
Dr. ANewton Bradv,.Bavfield
Graduate Dublin University, Ireland.
Late Extern Assistant Master, Ro-
tunda Hospital for Women and 00111 -
ten, Dublin,
()Mee at residence Iately occupied by
Pers` Hours z---9 or 10 a.m. 8 to 7 p.m:
Sundays -1 •to 2 pan.
D. I:t. MCINNES
Chiropractor -Masseur '
Of WYingham, will be at the Comaierd.
ial Inn, • Clinton, on" -Monday and
Thursday forenoons each Weelt, -_
Diseases of all kinds^ sucoessfully
haililed,
DR: J. M.. ATKINSON
Optometrist •$, Optician -
Graduate Royal College of Science,
Toronto, Licentiate Ontario Board of
Examiners anti Washington State
Board of ii]xauiinere. . Eye1t examined
and glasses. fitted. Will be at Bayfield
every Tuesday and Saturdy, from 2 to
6 p.m; at Dr. G. S.'Atkinaon's Dental
Office, Main Streit, Baybeld,,Ont,
12.8.p.
GEORGE,ELLIOT'1[` •
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
at Huron,
Corresliondenoe promptly answered,
immediate a•rangenients can be made
for Sales Date at The News-hecord,
'Clinton, or- bye calling 'Phone 203,
Charges Moderate• and Satisfaction
Gunranteede
B. R. Clinton,On HIGGINS "Why,' there's a woman et your barn: he, added, as Bisly stopped with
ton, Onto house row," his nose Against the door.
General Fire and Life Insurance, A "She? . m she's nothin' hut a sn Clem serambcd down said "Good -
for Hartford windstorm, gent 0 b "
im, Live Stock and woman! I s'pose I cried .apint o' night," and was'runnin ` away,when
Auohioliile andSfakuessaad Accident p g 8
Insurance. Ifuron and'irie.`and: tears when died," said the old Uncia Retire _asked him to stop.'a
Cana. matt, meditatively. ."I was putty weak minute.
da'Trust Ronda: Appbintments made
to `meet parties at 'Brueedeld, Varna --I Melt bade Shs evas•an awful good Clam waited a mintite while the
and Bayfield. 'Phone 57. woman. -G'isng; Billy!" horse was unharnessed, ' while. the
::hey rode a long way in sr.slt e
OSCAR KLOPP horse was fed while the cab -t was the .day,
Eerier Graduate Carey Jones' National
School of Auctloneering, Chicago,' Spe-
cial course taken in Pure Bred Live
Stoock, Real Estate, Merchandise and
Farm Sales Rates in' keeping with
nrevafling market. Satisfaction as-
sured,- Write or wire; lerfcll, 'Ont,
Phone 1.8-03.
anxiously.
"My woman's buried over there,"
said Uncle Retire, poitltins• his fore
linger.' over hie ahou:der.
"lying. Caesiday," said her grocer;
when she ' called to do her day's Mar-
keting, "your neighbor, Nirs. Clancy,
wants to open an account with me. Do
you think-511e's be good pay?"
"01,do not!" Was the reply. "She's
owed me an apology for three years!"
Plants grow faster betgten 4 and G
a.m. than at any other time during
TIME TABLE
Trains will Rtrfve• at aid -depart' from
Clinton as follows:
Buffalo and Goderich
Going. Bast, depart 6.25 a.m.-
„ , „ • '. 2.52. p.m..
Going West, ar, 11:10' a.m.
ar.• 6.08 tip. 6.51 p.1mr
'"aft 10.04. mm.
London, Huron'.&,Brucc 'Div.
Going -South; ar.'1.58 dp, 7.56 a.m.
r," „ 4.15 p.in.
Going North, deport 6,50' p:nl.
11;05 •11.13 a.m.
• Callans of trouble, may come out of
a pita fe isle:
R:G''LAR FELLERS -By Gene Byrnes.
ITS OVER -AT
DUFF -VS!
- t. 00IJ1' KNOW
v1HERE. 'OUR
CeiECk5b CAP iS t
WEAR `FOUR
0L) TAN CAP:
...THEN
YOUR oleo,
CLOTH
HAT'
The '1• skimos, Mr. Frank I7, Klein-
sohmidt states in a •recenit interesting'
article; start- otbtbi'eakfastless whenthey. go 'hunting• the seal, It wee.,
THE PRINCE'S
FRIENDSHIPS
SSI FS
1
twenty below sero on the morning `
when berose early an1 y to accompany. his
When the Prince of Wales returns
P W e ettt s
friend: and hast, Ipnoralc -a yearned
to York Iouse a t after his South
htirvter,:and headmits-that he yearned 1 �'r} o
for eal'east a cup of coffee -for a taste' American tour he will bring back with
_fora sip, But not it woiili• have ! him,1mongetiany other !trophies, some
been against the code. The hunter Photographs of new friends he has
viho hunts. fawting AO believed. !to be
fiercer, more determined, surer 'of suer
cess. Perhaps he is. Anyway, the
fixed mule is firstea,toh your seal, 'Then
They were fortunate that day. They
caught an ugi:uk-a great bearded seal,
weighing over a thou'san'd eounds-
and there was gi'ewt rejoicing on their
return to the village, Courless were
dispatched from house to house, in-
viting everybody to the feast:
The banquet was a sight in itself.
Some score oP persons of all ages. from
I four to.• sixty fell on the seal meat,
which was cut, distributed in strips con+ld be intimate' and friendly only
and demolished, every morsel that wee with those 'of royal blood these friends
edible. They all sat round In the open were -few. But the war changed all
on the frozen snow and ate the meat
just ase It was cut from the frozen
joints. In this way the Arotic natives
prefer to eat meat -arid Mcleod -fish
clue.
'Nie ebildren were .extraordinarily
well behaved, as all Eskimo young-
etere appear to be. And then isa res,•
sou, The belief of the l5slgmos 1n the
reincarnation of departed spirits pre-
cludes ell ohastisementtor their. pro-
geny. The child been to -day is verily
believed to embody, without regard to
sex, the spirit of the relative last de -
Ceased, Often I have had a small boy'
presented to me by a fond parent as
"my grandmother," or a little girl as
" my late uncle." Hence an erring the -Prince soon leaaned, and he began
child is corrected only by a ,shake of to talk to him on the subject The in:
made, and these will be addled. to a
-special photograph album he posees-
ses mode up entirely -of people he has
meet and really liked while violting is
different parte of the world.
Per. the Prince of Wales has a na-
tural'gift for malting friends. There is
no effort about it, no, condescension,
and it is all the more powerful when
one eonsldees the traditions in -which
the heir to the British throne was
reared. Before 1914 the Prince's
friends were ohosfor him, and since
the idea prevailed at the English court
that members of the soyad family
l�or enN�ed. More
•�
ettt wi° B1ocia
Tq I!o strong, well, equal to demands
of home, society, office or shop.`
It is a fact provenor, thousands o2
grateful lot -tore that 'l1ood's "Sarsa-
parilla is remarkably beneficial to
young or older w0010,1.
The most common ailXnent'o of
women drain and weaken ilio system
and sometimes result in anemia, net,.
eons weakness, general break -down.
I- food's Sarsaparillagives tho blood
more vitality and better color, makes
stronger nerves, and' :contributes to
the length and enjoyment of life.
something of, what he saicb gotinto the
press anti helped to make the Prince's •
visit to Tokio a most complete. sue-
Friendships
uc-Friendsh p1 of this kind have min-
i tribut
anitrlbut d enos•monelyto the succes0 of
'lite to,us and have fo1•nred a link be-
tween him and the common' people 02
11110 countries he. has visited,
When he vis5ted:CSeorge Larne, a
Canadian ranches-, -he neat a cowboy
who ltad 'Serval' in .Prance clueing the '
war. me Prince got into conversation:
with hint while;riding:acrose the ranch
and soon the two were tempering ex,
perielhces and cracking jokes as if they
had -been two old. pats, and by the time
the Prince left .the rairch'pals' they had
A Soot hailing from Aberdeen, and
aloes thio club Paofeesional of the links
"at Banff, has .his photograph in 'the
"special" album at York Douse, Wbon
the Princet
visited Banff he played a
round with: this man, and as he knew
the part of the country he came from
very well lie talked to hila: about it.
When the round was over the Prince'
and the "pro" sat molting, talking
and laughing- together' as IP they had
known each 'other all their lives. Nor.
was this the last time they met.
Not long after - the Prduce had left
,Alberta a P'reaohman visited the same
Iinks and asked the "pro" what he
thought of the Prince. "He's the kind
of man, ye Would lest dee for," was the
reply, .
His Odd Idea.
First Stene --"The idea or your Work-
lug
orklug steady eight hours a day: I would
not think of swell a thingl".
Second Steno --"Neither would L
It was the boss that thought of it"
•
that, and now .the Prince Choose* his
OM friends - T McKillop
"--^^ Mutual
Since him' tours" a acted 1n -1919: he
give made real friends of people in all
tively rumble degree.
many of them mon of comparesA
Atypical incident occurred 'when the
Prince visited the 'Japanese court on
his way home after his Indian tour.
Be. went out boating one afternoon on
the lake in the palace grounds and
was attended by a servant from the
court, one who, like many of the Jap-
anese coact °holt, spoke English.
well, Now, this servant had made
a hobby or the study of botany, a; fact
an
parts of the world and in all ranks or F9 �
soeletynsura ce Company
Head Office, Seaforth, Ont.
'DIRECTORY:
President, James Connolly, Goderich;
Vide, James' Evans, Beechwood; Seen
Treasurer,' Thos. E. Heys, Seaforth,
Directors: George' McCartney, S.
forth; D, P. McGregor, Seaforth;.J. G.
Grieve, Walton; Wns. Ring, Seaforth;
11I. McEwen, Clinton; Robert Ferries,
Harloclt; John Benueweir, Brodhagenl
Jas. Connolly, Goderieh,
Agents: Alex, Leitch, Clinton; J. W.
Yeo, Goderieh; Ed. Hinehray, 'Sea -
forth; W. Chesney, Egmondytlle; R.
G. Jarmuth, Brodhagan.
Any money to be mid in may be
pals to Moorish Clothing Co., Clinton,
or at Cutt's"Grocery, Goderich.
Parties desiring to affect Insurance
or trahsact other business will b
promptly attendedto on application to
any of the above -Milers addressed to
their respective post afitce, Losses
inspected by the Director who lives
nearest the Beano,
thehead, a grunt, a wrinkling or the terest the Prince took in all the ser -
"As part of the festivities afterdinner vont had to say on his pet subject was
parents nose, It is sufficient.
there.woe a game or football on the' perfectly sincereerred natural. Never
had the man a. more attentive or .in-
telligent listener, and by thetime the.
Prince's row on the lathe Ives finished
he.lead won the devoted frfendsship of
his attendant. Tris mast spread his
ice. Everybody took part, young and
old, from .little Iropuk, in his: snow -
White raiment made 18 the skin of the
winter hare, to old Agok, the sixty -
year -old grandam of the family, who, praise of the Prince everywhere, and
by the way, kioked aft' d
- The ball is made of reindeer hide
etrfred with hair. The rules of the
game, if any, are obscure. But there
is a great deal of dashing hither and
Yen : and laughter and •roiling on, the -
fi'ozen: ''anew, It might alumet seem
that this dlspiay of animal spirits in
action -is Nature's subeonscfous• meth-
od of aiding these people - to digaet
their terrific meal of raw seal meat,
The women aro quite es active and
agile as the men, and they also indulge
!u merrymaking among the pressure- `
ridges or wherever they come across
an ice' ramp that ofilers a chance for
tobogganing. Up they scramble to the
effect,and 'helter-skelter down they
come, screeching and laughing, usually
bead foremost. The Ilsldmos are a
marvelously merry people and ever
ready ter a,good laugh.
Had Never Seen It.
She -"Don't you titin' this touch of
rouge improves my ,eon plexion?"
Ele-"What kind of complexion have
You?':
51 you wan11to''s•ee•a girl's face 1ight
up, offer her a; good. matd'h.
Many women with disfigured complexions
never seem to think that they need an occasional cleansing
inside as well as outside. Yet neglect of this internal
bathing shows itself in spotty, and sallow complexions -as
well its in dreadful headaches andbiliousnese, It's because
the liver becomes sluggish, and waste matter' accumulates
which Nature cannot remove itho lit aesietance. The best
remedy is".Chamberlain'a Stomach andLiverTablets, which
stimulate the liver to healthy activity, remove fermentation,
gently cleanse the stomach and bowels and tone the whole
digestive system. Sure, safe and reliable. Sabre one at
night and you feel bright and sunny in the morning. . Got
Chamberlam'a today -druggists 21c., or by mail from
Chamberlain Medicine Company. Toronto 15
'Mot tilos° men have done, you can dol In your epara time
12ead Theca Amoo101 at home you can easily master the -secrets of sang that make.
St rle. of S mtwe le .'Star Salesmen, Whatever your experience lite been -whatever
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without cost or obligation That' you 157nail, become a 5tat
Salesman. Y will ahold you h1W' tho Salesmanship Training and
I7ee. YO'mploymont aortico of the N. 5, A. will help you to quid:
succe51 m Sellin8' - .
$10.000 A Year 'Selling Secrets
Tho
tleeeete n! Star Solo,manehip 5s Wight by the N; Si T. A, bits
enabled thousands• 5101st oyernlght, t5 lea , behind for one the dradaer5
!senau nn8 §eon 7155 5f bltn0elle5 folio that lead no0M1ere. No matter whet von
_be new doing, the told of. sonfnp' ogee Sot a big future. cel the facts.
National Salesmen's 'Training Association i'
Canadian Box 362 Toronto. Ont.
u -r OVER AT
COOK6n
Fifty -Fifty.
BUT, MOM ,
pUDbINHEADs 01ST
NAT ANY BUMP HUDSON'S)
StADA'l CAP ANY -
gPcbY'YS CAP-. .3AC' ',''
g000t 1 CAN WEAiR'.
ONE 0E' T14E1
CAt 1
t2
(C t:915 by' 'IMSon IC te•. Inc.) '11ksu°*