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Ckssifkk .'A`''aclvertisourag
ACJ), X'S WANT halt
AGENT, HANDLE 1'ROlr'ITAL'LE FAST
selling household products. 1730 Dun-
das )Nest, Toronto.
AGENTS WITH CAIS Ori TiWCTI;
wanted to sell motor MI and greases
direct to farmers, truck and car
-owners. Must be able to carry small
stock- Apply advertiser 4, V.O. Box
574, Toronto.. •
IIAJIV ODIUI:b
I'4I11L'Y'it1. AN i. yr IJI'ItV
I') Il1I'31ENT
L1EGHORN AND ROCK CIIICKS, $5.95
to 38.95 per hundred, Niagara Farm,
Niagara Fails, Ontario.
AtrHy 1'A)' IIOFU2 WHEN YOU UA4N
purchase Haden Government Approv-
ed Chicks from bloodtested breeders
at 9'fic, pullets 19e, cockerels 2'4c,
Lower prices for May. Send for free
folder, Baden Electric thick Hatch-
ery Limited, Box 59, Baden, Ontario,.
BRAY ()HI('ICS ARE NOTED FOR VIG
our, stamina, laying ability. Several
Bray pullets laid continuously for
over 18 months for G. W. Oct Bray
chicks under your brooders now.
Write for catalogue Bray Hatchery,
130 John St. North, Hamilton, Ont.
PUT BRAY PULLETS IN YOUR LAY-
ing house this Fall. Their. quick
growth and early laying ability
should catch the high. Fall egg prices.
Customers report Bray pullets lay-
ing under 5 months. Sere e ataiogue.
Dray Hatchery, 130 John St. North,
Hamilton, Ont.
D. F.'s 253 BRAY CHICKS A1Ut1VEI).
at Flirt Flon, Manitoba, all alive and
vigorous after 3 days on the train..
Truly an outstanding indication p" ;
the vitality of Bray Chicks. Write
for catalogue, Bray Hatchery, 130 •
John St North, Hamilton, Ontario.
THERM IS NO MONEY I.N DEAD
Chicle. Seven farmers within a
radius of sixteen miles of Fergus
purchased 3,575 chicks, At four to
five weeks, their lose was 24 chicks
and they have now 74 more. chicks
than they paid for. You .too, can
have the same results with Tweddle
Chicks. Send for new reduced prices
far May. Tweddie- Chicle Hatcheries
Limited, Box 10, Fergus, Ontario.
GET TRIG -4 )'RICES
FOR MAY I)EL1VERV. — CHI'CKS
backed b} Guarantee that we hon-
estly believe bas never before been
offered chick buyers. Our Catalogue
tells you why, liig-4 Chicks have
extra vitality and ability to lay more
and larger eggs because they are
backed by a definite breeding pro-
gram. Breeders Government Inspect-
ed, Blood -tested. ''rices for delivery
May 9th or any Thursday or Monday
thereafter: Barred Rock Standards,
38.95; pullets, 314.50. Leghorn, New
Hampshire, Standards, $7.95; pullets,
317.90. Guarantee 93% pullets. Cock-
erels, 31.93 and up. Premiums 32.50
more. 'Write for special prices on
Started Chleks, Pullets ell ages, ('ap-
une, and catalogue. Kitchener Dig -4
Hatchery, 1n83 King St. l?., 1' Itch-
c".er, Ontario.
V('lLY 0AMRLE
13LLY 14E--i-sl DE elite -ES 13k:CA.i.'SE
they have proven themselves satis-
factory and made extra profits for our
customers for 17 years. (=et the best
under our guarantee, Plant ,under
Government Inspection. Ilreeders
bino i -tested. Leghorns, Rucks, New
Hampshires. Chicks $7.75 and up;
pullets, 314.25 and up; day-old cock- '
erels 31.75 and up. Write for cata-
logue and complete prices. Hillside
I'oultry Farm, New 'Dundee, Ont.
CHICKS FROM GOVERNMENT BAND
ed, Blood -tested stock. T.c ghorris 7c,
Pullets 14e. Barred Rocks, N. H.
Reds, Se, Pullets 12c, cur ker els le-
Super Quality une cent more. bt'rrted
Chicks two weeks old add three
cents, three weeks add (Ivo. Free
Folder. Top Notch Chiekt•ries, 16
Wilson Street. Guelph, Ontario.
II['Llls
EXHIBITION GLADIOLI'S, NAMED,
from $2.00 per 100; mixed, 31.25 per
100. Lists free; mail orders only.
Sausby, 107 Bellefair Ave., Toronto.
GLADIOLI'S — RAINBOW MIXTURE,
including' Picardy, 85 blooming size
bulbs 31.00 postpaid. R. Corman,
Harriston, Ont.
.CLOTHING POR SALE
FREE HATS, SHOES, SHIRTS. TIES,
etc„ with clothing purchase. Write
for free Illustrated catalogue of
clothing bargains, Dept. N. Yonge
Street Clothing Exchange, 529 Yonge
Street, Toronto.
DEVELOPING AND PRINTING
ROLLS 1)LVEhe1' tD, PRINTED, 1
free enlargement 25e. Re -prints 1.0
for 250. Photo -(`raft. 183% King E.,
Toronto.
ZERO PRICES EXPERT WORK. ROLL
with free enlargement Trevanna
t at gement 25c. T eve a
Studios, 93 Niagara Street tit. (`.ath-
arines, Ont.
ROLLS DEVELOPED AND EIGHT
Prints with free enlargement 25c.
Reprints 3c each. Commercial Photo
Service, Dept. 13 Outremont, Que.
FREE ENLARGEiMENT WITH EVERY
25c order. Roll film developed arid 8
prints, 25e. Reprints 3e each. Bright -
ling Studio, 2 Richmond St. E., To-
ronto.
PO II SAI.1
PERE MAPLE SYRUP, first quality.
'Write for prices. Order early. John
M. Gillespie, Abbotsford, Que.
II Mil GOODS
WIGS, TOU1'T]S, TRANSFORMATIONS,
Braids, Curls, and all types of finest
quality Hair Goods, Write for illus-
trated catalogue. Toronto Human
Hair Supply Co. 528 Bathurst, Toron-
to.
HAIRDRESSING
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN LEARN
lIairdressing 6 months 375. Jones
Hairdressing School, Listowel, Ont.
HATCHING EGGS
i4i5W I-IAMPSI•II.R.ES AND RI10DE IS -
land Reds, Heavy layers, exhibition
winners. Fifteen egg's, $1.00, Fifty,
33.00. M. Fisher, Enterprise, Ontario.
RAYMAR, Canada) Foremost
Adviser on human problems, grill send
a Character and Personality Chart free to
anyone who write( him, This amazing free
offer is made merely to advertise
is MASOid'S 49 COLD REMEDY
and is avaita6le for a limited time only.
WNW today, enclosing a self-addressed,
stamped envelope and your bird,.date.
Address—Rahrmatr,
MASON REMEDIES LIMITED
MatAUL Si. . TORDNTO, CANADA
IDESaMIONZSZWA
Issue No. 18---'38
$LOO i.AM/SCA ITU) 104IIGAIN:I
23 1'E1i1JNSl.tl,ii —. 411.tS'1.'.i DAISY,
Catch11) Cone:lower, (luidentuft,
Marguerite, Canterbury 13e10, Uail-
iatrillat, etc. --2 Ever'g'reens; 1'i'ee;
Shrub; 0 1111 hs 250 heeds. Prepaid,
Two orders 31.84, 1)011atr Nurseries,
Foothill, Ontario.
P'I usil (RI,,
LYONS' ANNUAL SPRING
CLEARANCE SALE
Reconditioned Furniture
We must have flout space regardless
01' cust. This is Your opportunity to
buy high class recunditioned furniture
at a fraction' of the actual value. Here
aro some ' of our amazing 'bargains
picked at random from our enormous
stock:—
$4900 Beautiful these place Mohair
Suite, pillow arms, Marshall
reversible cushions, thureuglhlY cleaned.
$23.50 Large three piece repo Suite,
Marshall reversible cushions,
full Webb -construction. thoroughly
cleaned.'
$13.95 Lnrge three-pieee Suite in
English Tapestry, pillow
arms and Marshall spring cushions. A
real buy.
$39.00Nmf•t 3-pleee Chesterfield
[sed Suite in a goodquality
repp material (brown shade), with
lame wardrobe hox, in splendid condi-
tion.
S9 o5 Three Piece Suite in English
tapestry covering. Reversible
Marshall spring cushions, thoroughly
cleaned.
te9.00 Modern Bedroom Suite: Chit-
onler, vanity with venetian
mirror, full-slze bed and sapless spring,
completely refinished.
°'$5f 00'Large Suite in rich walnut
finish, dresser, ehiffrobe,
triple lnirro', vanity. full size bed and
saglesa spring. Completely refinished.
'Beautiful three-piece Suite in
two-tone walnut 511051, dress-
er with swing mirror, chiffonier, full
size bed complete with saglecs spring.
Thoroughly reconditioned.
$9150 Solid Oak Dining -room Suite
—Buffet extension table and
six leather seat rhnit's: new condition.
$45.00 Nine Piece Dining -room Suite
in cnlid nnk, buffet, exten-
sinn table, rhirin cabinet and 6 Ionther
se•st chairs. Completely retinislied.
$65.00 Beautiful fl -piece fink Suite,
buffet, extension table, china
eahinet and 1 leacher sent chairs. Com-
nlctely refinished.
$119.00 17ngltsh ()a}( Su'te, sample,
nine nferns: hnffot. (ered-
renza type), refectory table, closed
front china rahinet and ft leather up-
holstered (+hairs.
'kitchen Cabinets. 571.00; Prealcfast
Suites, 6 pions. 518.30: Singer Sowing
Machines, a7350: (ins Stoves. $4.915;
Dining-rnnm Extension Tables, $0.50;
Rccriareratnrs. 54.95, Tilts.
Write for our free illnstratrri cata-
logue of new and re-rnnditioned furni-
ture and hundreds of valuable gifts
free with purchases. All merchandise
thoroughly elenned and re -conditioned
and sold tinder a definite money hack
guarantee of sntisfartion.
LYONS' TRADE-IN DEPT.
478 Yonge St. — Toronto
$49.00
MALE EMPLOYMENT OP'POR.T1 NITY
Tae a trained expert In Practical Radio
•-• and Eleetrotics , . the industrial
•field with world-wide scope.
Our ten years of special service among
Canadian industrial firms has
brought us recognition, resulting in
our placing many of our graduates
in worthwhile positions.
We train students in our home study,
half -resident or full resident clurses.
Applicants must be over. 18 years and
mechanically inclined. Write today to
RAT)TO COLLEGE OF CANADA
863 Bay Street — Toronto, Ont.
"The. Premier c'anndian Institution of
its kind"
PATENTS
AN OFFER 7'c) I'1Vf1RY INVENTOR.
List of inventions and full informa-
tion sent free, The Ramsay Company,
Registered Patent Attorneys, 273
Rank Rt. 1)1t,rrva ('5n
I'ERSON41.
13E POPULAR: .LEARN HOW. GET
a -hat you want by making people
like you. Personal charm will give
you more acquaintances, friendships,
fun. Valuable social and business
contacts. Individual, confidential co-
operation in easy lessons by mail.
Send 25 cents for introductory trea-
tise and membership. (Prompt re-
fund if dissatisfied,) Canadian Charm
Club, 681 Broadview Ave„ Toronto.
ARE YOU RUPTURED? RELIEF,
comfort, positive support with our
advanced method. No elastic or un-
der -straps or steel. Write Smith
Manufacturing ('n.. Dept. 2111 Pres-
ton, Ont.
KI.TK HAIR REMOVER. PATENTS
)'ending. K11k is a tried and true
remedy. Safe to use and sure in ac-
tion. Kltit contains no harmful in-
gredients, leaves a clean, soft skin;
is guaranteed to do the work or your
money back. Klik, 31 per package,
postpaid—$1, anywhere in Canada.
A. Adams, Fort Langley, D.C. Refer-
ences Royal Dank.
IF YOU WANT AN AFFECTIONATE,
romantic sweetheart with money,
write: Mary Lee, 415-0, Rolla, Mis-
souri.
QUIT TOBACCO, SNUFF, ETC. EAS-
Ily, inexpensive home remedy. Guar-
anteed, Testimonials. .Advise` free
Dox 1, Winnipeg.
MARRY — WOULD YOU MARRY IF
suited? I-Iundrecls to choose from.
Some with means. Many farmer's'
daughters and widows with property
Particulars, lOo. Confidential. Cana-
dian Correspondence Club, Dox 128,
Calgary, Altar,'
PIN WORMS
IF YOUR CHILDREN SUFFER FROM
these annoying pests,• send two dol-
lars for simple home remed3'. Grat-
tan Kelly. Postal Station 11, Toronto.
SALESMAN W'A:V'I'l,l)
MANUFACTURER WiSHES TO CON -
tact prospective salesman, Severs1
protected territories are being op -
end and wi11 give the maur chosen a
permanent opening, Personal inter-
view will ho arranged to discuss
cumpcnsatinn basis on receipt of de-
tailed application 00 i'``'nset• Vacittnn
Cleaner Co. Ltd., Toronto. Attention
J. It r .
S'I'ltANV11NRi2Y PLANTS
STRAWBERRY PLANTS — D NLA P,
O.A.C., Dr. Burrell, Aberdeen, 40e,
100; 43.511, 1,000. Fairfax Ridgeway,
4.5c, 10f1; 31.00, 1,000. Latham Minne-
sota raspberry, 31,75, 100. Year old.
asparagus routs, 75c, 100. Not pre-
paid. (.'.has. 1411erbedk, Sydenham,
Ont.
ST1Z N'WBEM tY PLANTS, CLEANED
read' to plant. Parsons 'Beauty, four
dollars per thous,ind; •Kelloggs Prem-
ier, five dollars Per thousand; Fair-
fax, seven dollars per thousand.
1'1,010, strong healthy roots. Order
Herm t1il5 advt. Fred Nflwman, Wat-
erford, 'Ont.
Fact And Nerve
Aid In Business
Chicago Expert Declares Imagin-
ation Is Aloo Needed For
Business Success
Imagination, tact and nerve Were
advocated by John M. Kumler, ofChi-
ca go, as the main requisites for a
stecesfiful business as well as a sales
career. He spoke last week to the
Windsor Ad. and Sales Club,
"A recent survey revealed that a
Large percentage of the industrial
leaders started out .with only those
three assets," said Mr. Kumler. "The
chief difference among men is what
they do with an idea once they get
it," he added.
Promotion Schemes
Mr. Kumler explained in (retail the
Various sales promotion schemes that
have been used by some of the larger
companies in the U.S. for the disposal
of their commodities. He strongly ad-
vocated the uses of sales contests and
premium saving . plans as business
boosters.'
The speaker told of the successful
results of many promotion schemes.
He related how one company offered
valuable prizes to their salesman for
every order of $10 or more, and al-
though it lost money when the sales-
man earned a prize, it more than
made up for it in the increase of sales
of $6 and so forth made by the clerks
in their efforts to attain the $10 ones.
Rowell Inquiry Will
Report b Autumn
Findings Likely To Be )'trust Vol-
uminous On Record
OTTAWA.—A report l.; the Rowell
Commission on Federal and Provincial
relations is not expected before next
fall. The record will be monumental,
the largest of any commission, not
excluding the Duff' inquiry into the
railway probit'•", In addition to the
formal submissions, and what arises
out of them, a corps Of experts is' an-
alyzing all these statements and mak-
ing reports of a financial or constitu-
tional nature.
Hearings to cotyle will be jn New
Brunswick, Ontario and Quebec, and,
finally, in June, at Ottawa. By that
time it will be July incl mid -summer,
as a rule, involves some respite for
such bodies. The inquiry's experts,
however, will go ahead and, some
time in the fall, the report should be
ready.
According to the probable procedure
the submission of the commission's
findings would be followed by a Do-
minion -Provincial conference to de-
tlrmine the effect to be given the
recommendations. That, in turn, would
depend upon the measure of agree -
10011t.
Claims Robin Sails
Und'- r False Ca•=fors
Naturalist Says Yellow Palm
Warbler Deserves Title of
Spring's Harbinger
WASHINGTON.—Henry P. Davis,
secretary of the American Wildlife
Institute took a verbal pot shot at
the robin as the harbinger of spring.
"The red -breasted robin," he said,
"leas been travelling under false col-
ors. Slang is not exactly in my line,
but as a figure of folklore—the robin
deserves the bird.
'"The yellow palm warbler is the
real first bird of spring in many parts
of the country. He travels, too—from
Central America.
The robin, Davis added, doesn't
range like that. He winters no farther
south than Florida and comes north
no faster than a tourist with a taller.
"Few people know it," quoth the ex-
pert, "but the Arctic tern is the un-
sung bird of spring. He goes from the
Antarctic to the Arctic --11,000 miles
in two months."
Real "Tough Babies"
Gangsters start young in Paris and
Moravia (province of Czechoslova-
kia). In Paris a "desperado" who
was arrested fot' stealing wine gave
his age as nine, and confessed that he
was No. 11. in a group of .gangsters
ranging from eight to 15 years of
age. When caught he fought his
captor with a piece of wood.
In Olnlutz, Muravia, police have
arrested a band of young gangsters,
ages ranging between 14 and 17, who
have been terrorising the district.
The boys, who belong to respectable
families, were awned with revolvers,
knives and lcnaekledusters, and used
two underground "hide-outs." They
had been responsible for 26 robber-
ies.
TAiLS>RRRO SIMI'S 00R Smarr,
ir'REE, PANTS VALUED AT 34.00. --
The
The Greatest Bargain Offer in Can.
ada. We will ship absolutely free a
pair of Pants with every Suit order
bargain priced at 318.05, a regular
319,00 value. Tailored from all wool
botany worsteds, in Steel Grey Dluo
or Drown; fancy designs, ,Advance
Spring Patterns, Single breasted mod-
els. sizes stocked 35 to 40. Limited
offer. C.O.D. orders. Prompt refunds
guaranteed, Please give chest, waist
and leg measurements, also colour
wanted. Tnclude this ad. and 45 cents
for postage. Crawfords Ciothes. ilox
395, lfontreai,
"Glue Of Llf e"
Binds Human
Body Together •
Seierltist Discovers "Plasmosin"
A Substance Which Holds
Cells Together
Discovery of the "glue of life"
vill 11 keeps, the human body working
by holding each one of its billions of
cells together was reported last week
at Pittsburgh before the opening a's-
31071 of the meeting • of tile• American
Association of Anatomists.
Di R. R. Bensley of the University
of Chicago, former president of the
association, opened Its 50th annual
meeting -with 'the announcement that
he had identified this new binding ma-
terial, which he called "plasmosin,"
Within the cells. It is the stuff which
snakes each cell an indivicluti unit.
• Fundamental Substance •
This substance„ he added, is not
like the mortar which holds bricks
together in building a house, but is
more like the attraction which holds
the particles of each individual brick
together,
lt' is apparently one of the funda-
mental substances of living things,
Dr, Tinsley said, since it organizes
the protoplasm of living cells. They
are composed of the protoplasm, a
nucleus, and a covering, or cell wall.
When studied under the micro-
scope, he said, the new material looks
like a mass of fibres somewhat similar
to the connective tissues which tie
the r'arious organs of the body togeth-
er.
The attractive action of plasmosin
is reversible, however, and when it
Iets go the cells affected degenerate
like a toy balloon bursting. Further
studies on it will aid in understandin;
the breakdown of parts of the body in
•various diseases and may also help in
prolonging life if methods can be
found in maintaining the bind fug en-
ergy of ;he substance, members of the;
association said.
Tiny Thermometer
Tests Star Motion
So Sensitive It Can Measure the
Heat of a Candle Sixty
Miles Away
A thermometer so sensitive that it
will measure the heat of a candle
sixty miles away has been used in
testing the motion of a double star at
the Harvard Observatory at Oak
Ridge, Mass. The thermometer con-
sists of a blackened disk of copper,
1-2000 of an inch in diameter, which
acts as the heat collector.
The heat collected is transformed
into electricity by a thermocouple
which consists of two wires, one of
antimony and the other of bismnnth.
They are .0004 of au inch in diameter
and .15 of an inch long. The wires
are in contact with each other and
the plate. The amount of electricity
is very small but can be pleasured
without difficulty by a very sensitive
galvanometer. The thermocouple is
mounted in the telescope where the
eyepiece is ordinarily located, where
the light and heat gathered by the
lah;g object glass of the telescope is
concentrated.
Young Mother — "Dear, what
makes you think our boy is going to
be a politician?"
Young Father — "He says more
things that sound well and mean no-
thing than any other human being I
ever saw."
These are the purest
and finest papers made..
and they coxae .i; the
handiest Booklet
•
ritain Teaches
Public What ,. To
Expect In War
Every Household Must Learn How
To Be Protected From
Raids
The British Government is intensi-
fying its campaign to teach the peo-
ple how to protect themselves and
their homes against air attacks in
wartime.
The home office has sent out' 500,-
000 booklets advising them to "be
prepared for war" and what to do if
enemy air raiders should suddenly
appear over the country.
If :he emergency comes," Sir Sam-
uel Isere, the home secretary, de-
clares in a personal foreword, "the
coup'`; ..111 look foi, her safety not
only its her sailors and soldiers and
airmen. but also to the organized
courage and foresight of every house-
hold."
Choose a Refuge Room
The booklet explains in detail to
citizens how to darken the house at
night, choose a refuge -room, :what to
keep in it, how to keep out gas and
prevent fire, what to do when air-raid
warning is given, how to protect their
bodies from mustard gas, what to do
if they are out of doors during war-
time, and how to treat victims of air
raids.
The booklet points out that the
head of the house should consider
himself "the captain of the ship," and
should prepare to protect his family
in an emergency just like a sea -going
captain instructs both crew and pass-
engers where to go and what to do,
not when danger threatens, but be-
forehand. The seagoing captain, it
points out, considers it a matter of
ordinary routine and everyday pre-
caution"that everything is in readiness
for a shipwreck which he hopes will
never happen, and the householder
should adopt the same attitude.
Million Volunteers
Meauwhile, the home office is pro-
ceeding as rapidly as possible with
its 'vast air-raid precautions scheme
and with the gigantic task of recruit-
ing 1,000,000 men and women volun-
teers required to carry it out.
The magnitude of the task is dem-
onstrated by the fact that the London
county council's plan to form an emer-
gency fire brigade organization alone
will require about 30,000 men and
women volunteers.
Roadway and structures mainten-
ance costs of American Class 1 rail-
ways in 1935.amounted to $393,-
967,260.
FLOWER BOXES
A brown or green -stained window
box overflowing with gaily blooming
flowers is easily produced. This sort
of gardening is highly intensive and
so a very rich soil should be used, and
in addition a fairly frequent applica-
tion of chemical fertilizer during the
season. The box nittst be of fair depth,
at least seven inches of soil being av-
ailable. Being exposed on all sides to
drying winds, a thorough soaking once
a clay is advised.
There must be tholes in the bottom
of the box to provide drainage, and
also a layer of gravel, cinders, broken
crockery or similar material for the
same_ purpose. Along the front, trail-
ing Nasturtiums, German Ivy, Lobel-
ia, Alyssum and similar plants are put
in, with Petuanias, Ageratums, Begon-
ias, Ferns, Geraniums and any other
plants especially recoMmendecl for
this purpose farther back, Shelter
from the sun for a day or two should
be provided until the plants get estab-
lished, The same treatment and plant-
ing materials will be used with hang-
ing pots.
PUSH VEGETABLES
Tender vegetables are those which
have been grown quickly. Especially
with such things as radish, carrots
and beets, is 'slow growth disastrous
'as the roots become woody and filled
with objectionable fibres, But this
rule also applies to those things used
for salads. On this account experts' ad-
vise pushing growth with frequent
rnlfivation, which in addition to
checking weeds also conserves moist-
ure. Cultivation alone will often keep
A
the vegetables going through a dry
spell, but, of course, a few pails of Wa-
ter or an hour or two with the hose
at this time will lend further aid. And
where the supply of water is not as
convenient as it might be, it is a good
Plan, in laying out the garden, to also
plant those things most in need of ex-
tra moisture, such as radish, lettuce
and celery, closest to the pump. Fer-
tilizer is another way of hurrying the
growth and therefore assuriIlg vege-
tables of the highest quality,
CUTTING GARDENS
When a21 abundance of flowers for
bouquets is wanted, experienced gar-
deners often grow these in a special
place. Usually a portion of the vege-
table patch or a row at the back may
be reserved for this purpose. Some
well designed beds of inixecl annuals
are spoiled if too many flowers aro
picked and then again there are cer-
tain things like sweet peas, for in-
stance, that have little attractive fol-
iage but beautiful blooms.
►Y
11
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14,4
Smiles and
Chuckles
Women are fast thinkers. When She;
gets mad she can think of more cuss
words and not say them than a man
can think of and spit out,
Mrs. Gotrich (to caller) — Yes, our
little Henry is wonderfully smart in
school.
Caller — "What is he studying?"
Mrs. Gotrieh — "He's studying
French, and Spanislh and Algebra.
Henry, say 'good morning' for the lady
in Algebra."
LAUGHTER
Forgive me, Lord, if I should jest too '
much,
There is enough of grief without my
tears;
If fools alone seek peace in laughter's
touch,
Let me be one, and be more wise than
seers.
Which of all Thy creatures knows not
pain?
'Yet none save we poor mortals have
been blessed
With mirth, So let me my heritage re-
tain
In laughter's joyous strength. I only
jest
At my own self, and for a little while,
And ask no blessing but the right to
smile.
READ IT OR NOT!
All blue-eyed cats are deaf, but all
deaf cats are not blue-eyed.
Suitor — "There isn't much I can
say for myself. I'm just a plain citizen
and a taxpayer."
Prospective Father-in-law — "Tax-
payer, eh? Income or dog?"
After having seen a group of young
people cavorting in "The Big Apple"
we think less than we ever did of Eve.
WHAT'S YOUR ENTRY?
Of daily aggravc.tions.
This one takes the cake —
Dressing in a hurry,
And have your shoestring break,
The man who takes another man's
money for labour and then steals his
time is in the foot -pad class and he
should receive the same punishment.
Think!
Mr. Smith — ''That boy Cleveland Is
the very picture of his father."
Mr. Jones — "Yes, and his sister,
is the very talkie of -'e2' mother."
Sue — "Should I marry a man who
lies to me?"
Mother — "Sue, do you want to be
an old maid?"
Civic Pride is the quality that can
take 3,000 people and make a crowd of
75,000.
Silicosis Can
Be Eliminated
Silicosis 111 most occupations prob..
ably will be eliminated as a meance
to health within the next few years,
Dr, A. R. Riddell, of Toronto, clini-
cian of the division of industrial hy-
giene of the Ontario Department of
Health, told member's of the Wayne
County Medical Society last week at
Detroit.
Dr, Riddell said that the credit for
the reduction in the number of sili-
coties was due largely to industrial
engineers, not to the medical profes-
sion. He ventured the opinion that
there would be virtually no silicosis
within 10 years among miners and
very little among granite cutters.
The 250 ft. levet of this promising gold alining property
will be under aggressive development at an early date.
Details covering directorate, engineering staff. large
property holdings, diamond drilling results and under-
ground developments to date, etc„ available on request to
G. FIRTH
200 DAY tilt'., TQ?YO INTO