Loading...
The Clinton News Record, 1930-03-27, Page 2Clinton'. News - Record @ ecor CLINTON, 'ONTARIO 9'erms of Subscription-i$2A0 per Sear in advance, to Canadiau'addresseS; 42.60 to the U.S.. or other fo'eign Oouutries. No, ,taper 'discoutinued until all arrears are paid winless at the option of the publisher. The elate to which -every subscription is paid is denoted on the label. Advertising Pates—Transient adver- tising, 120 per.count line for first ensevtion. 8c for each subsequent insertion. Heading counts •2 liuee. Smali advertisements, not to exceed one inch,•such as "Wantett,"•"Lost,'; "Strayed,"' etc., inserted once for 30c. each subsequent insertion '150. Advertisements sant in without•in- structions as to the number of in sertioes' wanted will run until order- ed out"and will be charged accord- ingly. Rates 'for display advertising ..made known on. application. Oonnnuiications intended for purr 1i -dation must, as a guarantee of good - faith, be accompanied by 'the name of the writer. fs D, .HALL, M. R. CLARK, Proprietor, ` Edit • or. • M. D.&TAGGART Banker A general Banking Business transacted. Notes Discoliinted. rafts Issued: Interest Allow - ted on' Deposits, Sale Notes Pur- chased. • IL T. RANCE' Notary Public, Conveyancer IFinaucial, Real Estate anti Fire Iu sllranee Agent. Representieg 14 Fire 1Wsterahce Companies. Division Jourt Office. Clinton. W. BRYDONE Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc, Office: SLOAN BLOCK • CLINTON' CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary Public, Com- missioner, etc. (Office over J. E. Honey's Drug Store) DR. J. C. GANDIER Office hours: -1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 0,20 to 2.00 pen., Sundaye, 12.30 to 1.30 pan. Other hour's by appointment only. Office and. Residence — Victoria St. DR. FRED G. THOMPSON Office and Residence: Ontario Street — Clinton, Ont. One door west. of Anglican Church. Phone 172 !Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted 'DR. PERCIVAL HEARN Office and Residence: Huron Street — Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 1, • (Formerly occupied by the late- Dr. C, W. Thompson), Eyes Examined and Glases'Fitted. DR. H. A. MCINTYRE DENTIST Office IHottest 9 to 12 a.m. nod 1 to 6 p.m., except Tuesdays and Weenies: - slays. Mee over Canadian National Express, Clinton, .Ont. Phone 21 DR. F. A. AXON DENTIST Clinton, Ont. Graduate of 0.C.D,S. Chicago, and R.C.D.S., Toronto. Crown and Plate Work a Specialty, D. H. MCINNES - CHIROPRACTOR Electro Therapist Masseur Office: Huron St. (Few doors west of Royal Bank) • Hours—Tees., Times, and Sat., all day. Other hours by appointment. Hensel Office—Mom, i(Ted, and Fri. forenoons. Seaforth Office—ikon., Wed. and Fri, afternoons. Phone 207 GEORGE ELLIOTT .ticensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. -immediate arrangements coo be made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, or by calling Picone 203.' Charges Moderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed. '^B. R. HIGG.INS Clinton, Ont. BEGIN HERE TODAY Peter DelVolfe, visiting et the Bon hams, Li England, becomes interested in Breva Selooss, .s tut•le1 Benham tells Waite to keep away from 'Brena er he willvanish, like the others," Peter meets Brene:•i,n London. Drena tells hint iter story. -:When but, seventeen years of ;Vi age and living at re, VV'ilkio's boarding house an Dallas, Texas, site meets NMI Hennepin. Iiennepin ar'r'anges'to. Meet her in St. Louis and marry her, Brena goes to St, Louis but Hennepin fails to 0110w tin and Breva returns to lErs. Wil- kie's, Hennepin Sias disappeared and bas not been heard of 'since. 1:Sennopin's boss, Comptom Parmelee, then .asice Breva to marry hint and she agrees. As they aro 1eevin@" on their ltoneyma0n, Parmelee'suodenlY turns to her and asks her .what is the "fate" that. follows her, declaring that he feels a horrible, un- accountable terrors 13rena's'father, be- fore he died, left her a note in w111oh lie tells her to never feat' as she will always be protected. - • The extraordinary transition in Compton Parmelee began with his Marriage, Apparently an inexplicable fear had st zed hint within a few minutes; -in- explicahle fear little by little took pos- snssion of ,his life and made him a source of the contagion' of unreasoning, dread. Therefwas a six-month period after the departure of the strange ,bride' from Dallas wherein, whatever •emo tions of apprehension he may have felt, a struggle was made to conceal them and 'to give Brenna Selcoss the Variety; content and luxury that he had said should be hers. He, Who never had more than touch- ed her hand with his own cold, refined fingers, sometimes burst forth with all the zealous energy which had made him a great gambler. Y a are my speculation!" he would exclaim. "I have bought a future in eau!" He lied two livos, not at the sante time, I'," alternately. The one was in. her; the other in himself. When he meld pot his own life into hen's he for- got Itis own. Ile procured her emey into rare so- cial circumferences.. In the first year Brena, considered by all strangers to be several years older than she, in feet, was, mrd of wheta no one would have believed it if it had been `old them that she bed been plucked oat of that kitchen garden cf. Wilkie's boarding house, had tibial with for- eign nub nesado+s, hunted. with Lady Treutayn Nash, been courted over, through and under her disgust by a Cousin of the ex -Bing of the Pmt'"ngu-, cse, =meted a vile:: in the Italian lakes ami voyager; in a luxurious yacht :round the Baltic in midsummer with the family of ;)wlckholm's largest na+Ilcer. Other Wren, 011'111It subconsciously • her uneven and unused a11'ectio e, brought all their sophistication to their aid in making love to her. Dozens of men in various capitals, noting her beauty, gave amusement to the Dallas brokee wet annoyance to her. She Might have been thrilled by these idol- atries were it net far the fact That she believed they always carte either from those whose attentions to women were quite general and. macceesive or fruit those wheel inray:patine could conceive only e very plain driveway from the thoroughfare of fiental so- ciety to the sequestered dwelling place of a woman's heart. "There ere times when yet. look at me as if I Were the bearer ,;f some evil," she duce said. "It is absurd," he told her, but his face showed the sudden twist of fear: "You have some knowledge teat I have not," she Lsserted accusingly. "None," he answered; after it pause he said: "Your father Was interested in Azte architecture?" "Yes," Her eves opened .n an10110- e•ent. • He went to Mame(' more than once," snit Pnrmalee. "IIe considered that the civilization of the Mayas was far more extraordinary than Even exs ports like Thompson and l\ptingele have repreeented it, IIe believed that General Fire and Life Iltsurauce Agent for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock, Automobile and .Sickness and Accident Ioettrance. Huron and Erie and Cana- da Trust Bends; Appointments 211100 to meet parties at Prncetielll, \'n1'na and tiayflold, 'Phone 57 THE, Mcl<ILLCP MUTUAL! Fire Insttra<1ce Company Head O c Seaforth, Ont. 1>11 I C.fi)) 1 the:A(1clt, James Je m Lev hui,d; VI a lames enannll\ t ,delieil ice,- -.. Treasurer, f) 1. ),-) 1,01. 8enrm. i Directors: uen,pe \ic•, artney, Seaforth; Samos Sho.ndlee. Walton; Murray Gib- son, Bruoe1eld: Rin. Ring, Seaforth; ;Robert Faroe Garlock: .700n J3enueweir, 73rodlageu; las, CeiInolly,' fetich. A cots: Alex Leitch, TIM; 7; W. • 'Yee, Oodericli; 1182. FE11101l''{ . Seafo ••f�tn a, A., Murray, 1J •lnondvf le; R, G, oda smith, 13roclhage 11.ny money to be raid 1na » at to incCuth 's Gedo , loft' Ji, or a Calvin art Cntt's Grk to Ga era .,. Parties destr ag t0 ePfee't WittGL 1'lf'S-is good company on any trip. Its delicious flavor adds :est aitdenjoyanent. The sugareup- plies pep and energy when the day seems Song. ' 11 shore it's good and good for you. antA c 11 After Every Meal TIME', TAHLE Traln_s'win arise at and 6tart from °Beto1: as felionee: Buffalo, rid., „4lederiah Djv. owing tiler, devert i't 6.44 fun, ' u. 2.0.6 Pin., g1jlg Wrest, - r, • 1.160 a tis. fi P ff 0.08 cep, 34 p tri. ar. • 10.31 Palk, Loudon, Huron &, Bruce Oleg South, ar. 7,40 ftp, 7.40 a.m. 4.05 pan. Going North, depart 0.42 p,ni. ar. 11.40 di). 11.63 a,M; trahsaot other business will be ptrd1Y'pL3j" (4 attended t0 on application to any o; 1334, above officers addressed' to 111ei1' respa live host (Aimee, Losses l000ecttt! Sly t e C( Dlrector who lives nearest the scene. COURAGE Yet shrink :eye thou, wiioe'er thou art, xroTxal° c`i'g great purpose set enact, Before Whose far -discerning ryes, The tectum as the elegant lies. -3, G. \'Vhittin. they had developed forces quite of known to lnoderll.life." "How did you know this?" she asked sharply. • ' Parmalee was quite nonchalant; he said; ".You•forget that my library is full of -documents and books and mono: graphs which your father asked per-' mission to consult. . I am sorry, I did not'sneet your father." ''You would have foiled hila a ha0 quite, ineapaltle of believing in the supernatural, whether it he a thing of today or attributed to alis ancient people," she said. e, - "You would say more?". he asked with his uncanny ability to read her thought,• • "Yes. I think that you .`.rave some purpose in creating this atmosphere of strange and unreal things." "You spoke of a piece of paper giver, you in a roll of bills," he said after another silence, with a. marked absence. of his usual. assurance. "It fluttered out. You saved it—" . Beene drew back as if the- subject were odious. He appeared frightened, but went on: "I think you said there was a drawing of an arrow and a Iizard." "I said lizard. I don't see what dif- ference, it makes... 52 wasn't exactly a lizard," , He thrust toward her an envelope and a pencil. "Draw it," he said. 'nr told you I had almost forgotten," the girl replied. "I lost the scrap— the figures and the words." "Draw it," he repeated, "the best you' can." Brena searched in her memory for a photographic impress. Then sudden- ly with quick precision she outlined q strange figure on paper. Parmelee snatched it eagerly and stared; he saw a figure, half snake and half bird. "That?" said he in a muffled voice. "Well, do you know what that is?" Brena raised the arch of her blows. "It is the Kuk-ul-can," said P'rr- maiee. "The Kuk-ul-can," she said, repeat- ing it, "The symbol of the Mayan—the Aztec cultare. The supreme object of reverence. The fools who go about the Southwest, driving their oil wells, end laying their railroad ties incl eating their prepared breakfast foods forget that this symbol is to be found among the present day Zuni and other Pueblo tribes, the degenerate fringes of a civilization which flourished before Rome was suckled by a wolf ! They forget that a thousand years ago it was cowed on rude adobe walls in memory of a lost grandeur and lost practices, dead these six thousand years!" Brena possessed two Inughs, both quite natural and sincere. And now it Was her merry Irisin laugh. "What of ail this?" said she. "I will blush for- their ignorance, but' what more titan that can I do on a sn011y Thurs- day. I and not intrested, Comptom, in that which is dead. I—" ' She stopped suddenly, sobered by a recollection, "The kink -til -:111," eaid Parmelee. "You've never seen that -scrap of pa- per again, have you?" This was the last thee he ever spoke of it. , p ., a ,1 Winter had come again when the Parntalees had settled into a quieter life in New York. Brena tact turned the back of her interest upon dining the a t se est of new t- out and 11u, n. ac- quaintances. . There was in Parntalee's face that weariness i'rom some tensity which w,,uid not relax, an expression that increased as the weeks went by and the lives of the two drew more apart. Less and less did he appe,'1• inclined to go out of their apartment; less and (les did he go anywhere alone. I "There is•a book. auction—the Odin Collection with two volumes of ilium- , butted MSS. from the old monastery at EI Mayaguez," he said one day in 'March. "Will you go with me, Brent'?" "Of course," h3_ said, but his re- quest marked sharply the moment of Iter realization that unless he were :behind the Closed doors of his library, !lie aiWays wanted somebody with hint. She tried to remember the various 1110asfon5 when he had found trivial ,excuses to take the butler or the chauf- four on some short excursion beyond the pretentious entrance of the apart- • tweet house; she concluded that he did not ask her to ecCOfltpany him Or the pleasure of companionship. I He .seidotn conver-ed with her as :he had once clone; if there was a choice between going with ]ler or in ;the limousine with Paul, he chose the • silent and cynical ,chnu(feu le I Nor was this alt. She began to notice frequent repetition,' oz the fear teat had aetzed him within 50 short a time of their odd marrings. He never spot o of .his but she .eaw over. .nd over again hit face, which lead '110010 lees you:herl tow, co..trrt, the 'color leave it, his eyes grow restleee nl d fill with term ` She hail observed nim in the the- latre, even at a nlomeat when a tens,' i dramatic situation was h dn, enact ce pis the stage, turn around as e re turtle who feels eyes from behind, and search the faces of those who sat in rows farther back. - • She had,. seen hint walit front ehd to end ofa limited Bain gazing /rent left to; right It those in tale drttwiog- them Chairs, 3055, es One does to dis- cover an aequaiatance, but with his cotietenance smeared over with . gee- tesque apprehension. • 'Irene felt it her duty to interrogate him; she VMS mit by elle Rr,t burst o', rage lie had ever projected et her. "Let me cilonel" he said evilly, es die thrust a vicious 'glance at her, :"I. ]nave problems that are 01y ewe. Keep your hands off!" "You forget that ,whatever i, is that ISSUE No. 13—'30 le malting ,yeti .sit straege.1 fleets 'my l:fe,,elso," said Brena. "There are tines when I wonder whether this nevy then in- out lives ie not connected in• some way - with me," "New tusn'?,'.r • ".Yes!" She:evas ,vehement., "This. thing '_Which hangs over, us like a guillotine blade. 'This thing which makes your eyes flicker from side '1c side as if• every street' corner were an ambush. The thing which neal(es you afraid to be alone." I -le sprang up. "What if 1t were'?" he said It is possible; isn't it? 1t is possible that some people might tarty around in their trails some strange destiny, There night be 'some extraordinary forces behind you; mightn't there? It is possible that some tragic end awaits all even who bitad their lives with Yeu sl" Beene opened. wide her. dark eyes: "I'm going to leave you, Conpto l." she said. The idea knocked Iran ail to his knees. `c g0, vol" he cried. Woe the love of heaven;don't leave mel" "Then speak no more 0f mystery trailing upon my heels," she said. "Never bring this insinuation that a curse follows nte, This is the twen- tieth, not the twelfth century, and those who now attempt to: raise super- stitions will. fare badly if others be- lieve as I do." . He stood. "Very well," he said at last in cold, hard syllables. "You shall not hear of it again. But the time evill come. There are stranger things in the world than you know.". • He Ieft her alone, somewhat ehalten. His Physician later told Brena con- fidentially that Compton' Parmelee was suffering only from a iniad forth of neurasthenia in which dread had attached itself to some particular chain of morbid thoughts. - (To be Continued.) - The Dipping Hem Endorses Snug Hips and Lingerie Cnitar BY ANNETTE A fascinating black silk crepe re- veals chic femininity in Alencon lace collar with jetbot frill at front, The lace is repeated in cuffs of fitted sleeves that are trimmed with buttons to elbow. The fitted shaped band through hips achieves the lengthened line so im- portent to slenderness. The dipping points of skirt contri- bute further slenderizing effect. Style No. 239 is designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 130, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust, It's an opportunity to have a stun- ning dress at just the cost of the ma- terial and a few hours of your time., Later for Spring it can be matte of flowered chiffon for Paris decrees flowered chiffon as the smartest after - neon and 'evening fabric. Purplish -blue chiffon is most charm- ing for immediate wear with the col- lar of lace or of self -fabric. Paquin red chiffon is decidedly chic for immediate and later wear. Lanvin green silk crepe with egg- shell' crepe, Paton tan crepe nlarocain, R•.ya1 blue Alencon lace, printed crepe silk in dark greentones and canton crepe in navy blue are only a few of many lovely ideas for its development, HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your mane and address plain - 1y, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in s 001113'o' e0811 '(1011 preferred; wren? it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adeltiide St., Toronto, ' Yes, 'Willie, t when the. Pilglien tat ded at Plymouth Rock it was rlreaclfi111y cold and they suffered Ler- 1'ihly.r' Wily fdu't they go to Florida for the whiten2"- "' Woman's Dream Of Happiness 1353 )4e)iry Ford eletny oke . OOP 1 w110 think their working clays are over are making at great mistakfe, They don't realize whit ,they, can do—women as well as amen. Only a, fel' 2tiys ago I found an old woman Of ninety-three who was anxious to be:•of some use,. • I said: "Isn't there something She Orin do? Then we found om tl i I s e n, ng .for her to' do, something that • would. keep her busy and occupied aed happy. • I should lee 801153 to see the day come witein old people .left industry. I dont' care• how old they are,, they leavesomethipg other's haven't -they have experience, the meet precious thing in the evoi'ld. ' I know an 'old timate who, .in Mr. Densoil's youth, taught kiln telegraphy, When Ile was ol'd anti seemingly use- less, he event to Edison for Something —anything -to do: Distend of giving him just anything ;Ildison put him to work at a nice inventive-problen. He protested it Was far beyond Itinl,; but in the end lie invented ie set of simultaneous alarms which had been requested. And lee thought he was finished. ' The Quickest Way to Die One thing that keeps old people tit is dancing,- It is fine for thein. It gives them exercise. I have known old people who were so timid and con- scious of their age that they were sure they couldn't dance. With'much urging they got np and could hardly move their legs, but oece the embee- easelnent wore off they started having fun, Now they fiance and dance .and dance. ' If you are Old, don't sit still. That is the quickest way to die. Keep active. Oic1 people should try and apply their experience, instead of tarring it with them on a shelf. eViten I look forward t0 old age 1 look forward to but oue ,thing—that i5 to be chock-full of doing constructive things, to be active, to ego somebody good. That is the only happiness. 1v01530,le is looking for happiness, and it is always somewhere else, People forget they are living in the Present. They cannot live in the past or In the future. If yol 1111 interested in what you are doing now you cannot help but be happy. That is the only kind of happiness I know. Women alwaye want to know 1100' they can be happy. On way is to Have interesting ideas, but I find usually that ideal love is the happiness wo- men long for And dream of, The Great Power of Lasting Love Love is a conglomeration of every- thing al earth. That is wily it is the greatest thing on earth. It has more elements than anything else. Tbat is why it is so lasting it is everything expressed in the 'relation of two pea- ple toward each other. It is physical all'aetion; yet this Inas something deeper bellied it, and that le love. It is the possessive in- stinct, yet that goes,' and love re- mains. It is youth, yet that goes and love remains, Love in more than a paseio11 or a dream—it Is dynamic force. All its counterfeits pull their victims down, but love builds its possessors up, strengthens them, purifies them, and makes them keener. Between a true Ulan and a time woman it creates the Perfect human personality and thought, Women talk of love, and think that love automatically brings happiness. That is a kind of selfishness. No one le happy unless he is doing something all the tinge -1 mean doing something active physically. It does no good to sit back and thinit about things and not act. You must set your thought In motion. Though without activity and fruition encourages discontent, and le a blind ally to the spirit. The Lazy Kind of Tiredness We have lied too much cmpbasie On thinking and net enough on action as the result of thinking. If people think and do not act, they wall, to sleep, They get tired easily, and t131u111 something is wrong with them. I can tell that kind of tiredness: It is the symptom of a drugged person. When people are tired, when they health or 0100001sttlnaes, yet the fault thjelt they need a lot of sleep, they really need less sleep and more cm - levity. They blame life or their is In themselves, and the remedy, too, No 0010 ever became wibappy except by his or her fault,. That holds true for emotional disturbances as well. To Live fully in the present -1n any given present—is the greatest (happiness and experience I caa think of. 'And that happiness le in reach of every willing person on earth, That's all there le to it ---the troubie, is, it's too simple, Three Cigarettes a Day "Cigarette -smoking is .still greatly on the increase, both h1 England and in America, according to the latest 'figt res. Americans, it is stat- ed, smoked 119,038,5'11,660 aigat•ettes last year -13,000.000,000 more than in 1828. This averaged more then 1,000 —or three per day-" for every matt, woman. and ,chill. "This average of 1,000 per bend cif. the total popnlaliol is toughly the figure for (3111105 1108(01,1 11158 Northern Ireland also. In recent estimate,. based on nn assumption that three quarters of the total lobnce0 con- sumed in 1928-141,725,821 lbs.—was used 111 the form or cigarettes, 101r. Ai, P. 'I`. Spelfl'ing, editor 02 the Tobacco World, gave the number of cigarette; -smoked in the year as 38,295,800,500. Although this,. is vastly below lege Americom figure, relative to Nimbi - lion, it is about the mule, "For the twelve months ending last December, the total tobacco consume. Lion ons 1111P - Lion in this country wad 147,851,707 lbs,, compared oculi 141,725,$21 for 1928, and. 388,109,900,1or 1927. There Inas been a rapid htcl'ease'sinro the war." --The Observer`. TRUE COURAGE True courage is not .incompatible with, nervousness, mid Jteeeism does pot mean the abs@nee of fear, b�ythe conquest of it,---I4enry Van babe, You will ink 32 this e,r:'itt P Fresh tr the garde ;t $l Garden Fails If Based ©n Chance Ideas. A good way to go about the plan- ning 31 81110 garden is to think of it from the house outward. How, for in- stance, does it look .from the living room window, and bow do' you reach the garden;; is it from a Piazza out- side the llving‘roonl, from a poreb at the end of the house, or must •you walk Prem the door across a stretch of drive apd around the corner of the hoose? , It the garden entrance cau be re- lated to one of the main outlooks from the house—placed, for instance, op- posite the door front the sun porch of in line with the main • window of the living room—it will fall into what is a` natural line of sight for the•0ye and the result because it is easy to follow will be pleasing and gratifying. The Mistake of disregarding the relation of the, garden to the house is very of- ten made because tile Owner 1eh1bs of the two separately. The location of the garden is de- cided upon, the space. bisected and the design made about this central axis itegardless of its relation to the holee, with tate result that viewed from the porch or living room it may 'be just annoyingly off centre with the line of sight, or make an inharmonious angle With the house. It is 'far more illl- Pertain, to have this relation of house to garden right than to have the spree within the garden itself divided synt- lnetrically. In fact the latter con- sideration Is of no importance at all because planting may be so arranged as to disguise almost any discrepancy and balance very 'lonely any awkward shape. The First Consideration. The first consideration as previous- ly indicated will naturally be the en- trance to the garden, anti this point -laving been established the garden designer should ask himself where he wants- to go in tate garden, Cau a pleasant objective such as a seat un- der a fine tree be arranged? Does a central poen with a sundial to inn'It it seem tlesiiahle, or is there to be a fountain at the back of the garden to which the paths should lead? Easy circulation about the garden is one of the most desirable things to pro- vide antra path that cones to a (lead end is always a disappointment. A emitted panel of grass is an in ihience for quiet and spaciousness in a garden, and if the available area is not restricted a plan which provides such al green Carpet is one that Is most likely to be agreeable. A good rale to follow -with respect to the. flower beds themselves is to make them twice the width of the paths; a path foul' feet and six !lichee in width is about as narrow as two people can walk on comfortably abreast. In planting the contents 02 the beds itis'wise to think during what months the garden ie to be enjoyed and make' your succession of bloom accordingly, however, the matothingto remember in successful gardening is to plan 111 advance—lovely • gardelts do not just grow like Topsy, but are the result et forethought coupled with taste and • skill, SETTING OF HOPE The setting of a great hope is like the setting of the sun, The beige! nes ,of our life is gone. Shadows of evening fall around us, and the world 5eenis fiat a trim reflection—itself a broader shadow. 3Ve look forward into the coming lonely night. The soul withdraws into itself. Then stars arise, and the night is 1511013..— Loltgrellow•. THE PAST There are those who want to get away from all their past; who if they (meld, would rain begin all over again. Their life seems one long failure, But you must learn, you must Id Got. teach you. that the only way to get rid of your past is to get a tntnre out of it, --Phillips Brooks. What cincture needs, more time 131e Bill, is a big billy. • Perfeci' dyeing coed to done DIAMOND DYES contain the highest quality anilines money can buyl That's why they give such true, bright, new colors to dresses, drapes, lingerie. The anilines in Diamond Dyes make then so easy to use. no spotting or streaking. Just cleat-, even colors, that bold through wear and washing. Diamond Dyes never give things that re -dyed look. They are just 15c at all drug stores. When per- fect dyeing costs no more—is so easy—why experiment with make- shifts? akeshifts? is ron'lY ►1yess Highest. Quality for 50 Wars ' Plan Now For This Summer's Good Times! HC.\T1Ne„ fishing, pie_ nhNug. swimming, and cruising an lake, t'lver, seund or bay add to 1110 cost Of living, happiness, contentment and enioy- men of 0;rutsabouc owners. • This double cabin Ceuiauboul, "r' 1011•, 5' 10" wide and 2' d" draft Is a Completely e.iniptocl summer home and 124 priced at $4,155 at fa1'- fory, Sleeps sig, four ,u f0rvvant cabin and two in stern cabin. F:xeellen+ design, perfect 1011511es o - 1 ua tlt en staunch, 5 a11t1 1 rtUnation oche .4,1 r ut.- abouts sound andsea- worthy for oil weter. s-eyliuder, 00-11.P dray Marine motor gives cruis- ing speed OL thirteen m11er, ttrito for a mut. 10800. i eh a r' son 19 30 Cruisetboto Sales and Service by T. B. F. BENSON, N.A. 371 Bay Street Toronto, ! Some folks take pain for granted. They let a cold "run its course." They wait for their headaches to "wear off,R- If seffering,from neuralgia or horn neuritis, they rely on feeling better in the morning, Meanthlie, they suffer unnecessary pain. ary Iinnece5s, because there is an antidote. Aspirin tablets always offer immediate relief from various aches and pains we once had to endure. If pain persists, consult your doctor AS to its emote, Save yourself alot of An and discomfort Asthrough the many proven uses of Aspirin. pirin is safe, Alwaye the same, All drug- stores with complete directions.