The Clinton News Record, 1930-12-11, Page 3Honours To Bill
Everything Depended on
the Flay Getting Over
and It Was Fall-
ing Flat!
By Muriel, Cotronl.
Jack Militias hadn't hada meal that
'satisfied :for days. But young actors
out of a job get used to that!
"Something's bound to turn up
soon,"'mussel Jack, with the b'i•ight op-
timism of youth, 'to his brill -terrier,
"eh, Bill, 'old .fellow?"
Bill cocked a pointed ear and thump-
ed a thoroughbred tail, Intelligent*
gleamed from his small eyes- Jack
smiledfondly. lie dodttt-t -wind being
hungry a bit, himself, now aud again,
so long ,as old 13111H
Something did.tttrlt up next morning,
A. letter from Sack's agent offering
6 him a part in a touring company.
The play was a'new 'one,to be Pro-
, duced, by the author.
"Don't-kao'ir what kind of a show
101 be," said the agent, when Jack
called. "But it's better thau nothing,
eh, Dundas, old boy?"
"Yon batt I'm on to of the world.
Juvenile 'lead, too! Richards, you're
it pal; Come,on, B111 you old 1i1ight-
er!
Rehearsals began,, but, as they pro-
gressed, Jack's heart sank. There was
no• 'tpep" in the play. The dialogue
wits fiat: The situations were improb-
able. Still, the author -producer was
enthusiastic. It Was his 'first play,
and if it :went weil, even moderately
well, the•first week on the road, a -well-
to-de.uncle had promised to finance
3t Maher.
Jackeput his :nest into the part. So
did little Myrtle Blythe, who was to
play opposite him. Site, also, knew
the unrest of 'resting." .
"It is such a pity," murmured Myrtle
one morning, "Beale is such a dear;
so enthusiastic-. It's heartreudering!
This show'll never run a week --if
that!" t
"1 kuow," replied Jack glumly,
"You're right; it's pathetic!"
"Well. I'm doing my best, but my
lines are so hackneyed." Her eyes
were troubled.
'And the e3tma.:es are so banal," put
in Sack. "Still, we must neve for the
best. The public's funny! Some plays,
with absolutely nothing in them, have
the dickens of a run!"
"There's no life in the action—the
show doesn't March" contributed
Blessington, cast for the villain. Fie
was young, and qu the threshold of
his career. "Well, cheerio, chaps!"
'I love your dog!" murmured Myrtle,
stooping to pat Bill. She looked up at
Jacic suddenly With her clear eyes, the
exact- bluey-violet of hyacinths: emA
dog's a great pall"
"N -none better!" stammered Jack,
momentarily knocked out by the bat.
tory of those clear eyes. 'By Jove,"
he thought, "if I can't make a love
scene get across with a girl like that,
I ought to be shot!"
And Myrtle had been thinking al-
most the same way as she looked up
et Jack Dundas, tali, lean—ahnost too
lean—with his kind, dark eyes and
cheery optimism.
Value and Satisfaction
•
The young man in the: picture has •embarked on a new undertaking .in' a distant city. All day' he has been
on edge, eagei• to do his best, to sell llimseff:.'to his associates. When evening comes lie is tired, restless,' perhaps
just a little homesick. 'Instinctively he reached for tits. telephpne as ire has done many times at home' thinking
to talk with .someone. LIke a. flesh: thethought comes to Niru, "Wily .net calf home?, --and tell them all about it-
they will be cheered also". .Toe wonder of the three-minute visit with Uses/lop*. folks 'over tile telephone puts
new life into him and he Is repaid many tires •over for the small expense of the telephone :call. As Albert ,Shaw
'Editor of Review of -Reviews, says: "No other service of any -kind.' -in the world gives so much-human:sail"sfaction,
and so muck. sheer monetary value for the amount paid by the ,User as; the telephcne."
e * s
The opening night at last!
The place was a North Country mill
town, whose inhabintants were noted,
in the profession, for their candour.
It was about the last place on earth
in which to open with a "try -it -on -the -
dog, play. But Beale's well-to-do uncle
happened to live in Hilton, so Beale
had no option.
The audience showed no, eine of
hostility during the first stet, but there
was au undercurrent of restiveness
that told the tali plainly enough town
.actor of experience, There was not
even a ripple of applause until
Myrtle's big scene with Blessington In
Aot Two, t- But she really was sweet,
With her ardent young face and clear,
ringing voice. Her personality got'
Well over, but her lines lacked eatu-
ality.
The curtain fell on the act in al-
most complete silence. Jack Dundee
looked glum.
It'll be all right, Dundas—in the
last silt," murmured Beale, patting
him on the back and trying to smile.
But his face showed strain. The fin-
ale of Act Two should have got rounds
of applause.
"Go all out in tine big scene, Myrtle,"
:whispered Jack, as the girl brushed
Ipast him •on the way to her, dressing-
' eon. "If we don't hit 'em then, I'm,
:afraid the play's doomed!"
Myrtle smiled.
"Rely on me," she said.
* 8 e.
The next act evoked more interest.
One or two of the more witty lines got
hand." Beale sighed with relief;
ut Jack still' harboured doubts, and
big ones, too.
it wits a kitchen scene. The come-
tdians' had retired, and the action had
hadpally worked up• to the 'dash of
e climax..
lrlyrtle, .in a plain little gingham
{{frock, was Sewing by the fire. In
iihe opposite corner her aged father
'sat, filling hie pipe.
"1'11 just be golu' to the Golden
Morse, Mary, lass, Shan't be long!"
A suave' face, unobserved, peered_ in
thr'bugh the open window,—es the old
'Man rheumatically rose and made his
Tway to the door.
A second later the eon of the mill-
towner appeared in the doorway. Nou-
'chalantly he glanced in, then',strolled
towards the girl, who retreated to the
:other `side 'of the room. He' began
peaking love—passionate, practised
e.
'Bill why wait, Mary darling? You
'snow you care! Come with rue to-
night!" .
"Oh, but 1 ,don't know! How can
('be sure? I—I hardly know you, Mr,
Rookwdod!" Site stood looking pity
' fully at him, with the innocence of a
glrl'who' had hardly reached' womaa-
llll000d.
' Roughly he caught her to him, and,
'''At her scared scream, Jack, manly .and
Iastndsoino, appeared at the door, -\
It was a very homelyadram, a
f t4inaril's Liniment foe Frost Bite,
little too homelyy as eneor two stifled
yawns, naught from the auditorium,
testified. Followed a shufBing' of ,feet,
evidence of breaking• tension. The
threads between -actors and audience
were slowly snapping=
snapping.
Jack's speeeh, which ought to have
raised a torrent,. was received with -but
mild enthusiasm. The villain, thwart-
ed, clenched his fists. Then, with a
snarl, he flung himself at Jack. A
scream broke from the girl.
Suddenly there flashed from the
wings a burly streak of white, and
a huge bull -terrier hurled itslf at his
master's seeming assailant.
Blesington darted swiftly aside to
escape the gleaming faults, dodged
behind the table. Here. be was corner-
ed. The dog, back to audience, had
him set. In vain did Jack call—Bill
might leave been stone deaf. The vil-
lain backed to the open widow, see-
ing escape that way; but, with a
bound, the dog was over the table.
A ripple of surprised applause rose
in the pit, Here was acting—the real
thing!
Then followed a chase round the
small etage; the viten of the piece
pursued by, a now thoroughly enraged
bull -terrier. Bill overtook his quarry;
with a triumphant snarl, his teeth
pierced good cloth. Came a loud 1•end-
in, tearing sound.
Applause was now general. Hearty
whistles of approval from the "gods"
this was worth spending money to
see!
When poor Blessington, 'Maus a sub-
stantial portion of Itis nether gar-
ments, took a clean dive through the
open window', joy was unrestrained.
And When the dog, 1iJA oyes wells of
wickedness, deposited a large square
of black cloth at the feet of the hero,
the applause became riotous.
Jack, very white, 1q ked. across at
Myrtle, Her small face was set, but
her violet eyes welled inspiration, •
"Carry on!" was their plea,
Jack almost panicked, for the dia-
logue to follow was now worse than
useless. He thought of poor Beale in
the wings. Came inspiration! This
golden opportunity was too good to
be missed. The continued applause
had allowed him time to thick.
He closed to Myrtle.
"Play up to me," was his whisper,
as the applause died,
Then he spoke, and Beale, in tate
wings, stood open-mouthed, as though
witnessing the big scene in4tis own
play for the first time.
"Dear heart, I love you!" Jack end-
ed, taking the woman be loved in his
arms. "Say that from this moment
you—you'll give me, and item"—point-
ing to Bill --"the right to guard and
serve you! Dearest, riff you be my
wife?"
Her bluey-violet eyes, that reminded
Jack of hyacinths, wore dark with
wonder; her red lips parted,
"Dear, don't you know that I love
you? Haven't you—guessed':"
Two soft arms slid round his neck,
and, bending his head he kissed her,
"Right from the very moment we
met, I know that you wore my woman!
Dear, -you'll starry me, won't you?"
"Yes, 1'11 marry ,you!" Ch, the
pride' in that clear round voice! 'Tor
I've loved you, too, right fromlite
very first moment!"
Re lifted her on ;to the table, :then
perched beside her., Suddenly, with a
bound, :the bull-terfer was• between
them, acith his, larg� head snuggling
against. Jack's neck.,
"Just we three'—from Jack—"now
and for always!"
"Jost we three, now and far al-
ways{" repeated Myrtle dreamily; and
her smile was, beautiful. • '
"Sour -won£!" contributed Bill,
thumping a thoroughbred tail. Aird
the curtain dropped to roars of :ap-
plause.
Three "curtains" they took—Myrtle,
Jack, and BIll—for the, audience in-
eisted on Bill, who, bewildered, bark-
ed heartily at his admirers.
Then came a call for the villain;
and Blessington, clad in a dressing-
delvn, made his bow, one eyo ou tIle
audience and one on—Bill,
e p o
"Good enough, Ralph. my boy! I'll
keep my promise. That last scene
was a brain -wave; that dog brought
down the house. Without him that
last act would have fallen fiat. Yon
might cut the first and second acts
slightly, and, -for goodness' salve, In-
troduce the dog a little earlier--
peaceably, my boy--peareablyt" The
well-to-do uncle beamed approval.
Back -stage, in a quiet corner, Jack
faced Myrtle.
"Hots cleverly you 'gagged," mur-
mured the girl, "You saved the play!"
But she did not meat his eyes.
"Gagged?" He took her by the
shoulders, almost shaking her.- "Gag-
ged be hangedt T was not 'gagging'
—nor acting, either, 003' girl, aud you
know that as well as I d0! I was pro-
posing to you!" -
"1 know," whispered Myrtle, aud
raised her eyes in which tare stars
were a -shine.
"Sou meant what you said, too?"
His eyes searching hers.
"0f course I did!"—very shakily.
And Myrtle raised bar soft lips.
N 9 P
The following pat•agraplt ended a
long criticism in the "Hilton Gazette"
the next day:
'But why was the real star of the
play—the cleverest slog we have seen
either on the boards or the silver
screen—not even mentioned on the
programme? This is an unaccount-
able oversight. It is this clever canine
actor who is going to slake the play
a big success"
"All very well," nsuslnuted Myrtle,
as Jack read aloud the above, 'But,
darling, do you think you can train
Bill to carry on?"
"Train Bill?" he gasped, when he
could speak, "It's not a 'matter of
training Bill, but of persuading Bles-
sington! Still, he's scene lad -and
Bill's a great fellow! We'll fix it be-
4weee us, believe me!"—"Answers'.
It is good to be children sometimes
and. never better than at Christmas,
when'its Mighty Founder was a Child
Himself.
'The method of mental progress is
a more careful examination and a
whittling down—Often a blowing sap—
of beliefs;', —Clarence Darrow,
inhale Minard's -Liniment for Asthma,
Prince's Horses at Fair
"Prinoetoa Carman", percheren mare raised by the., Prince Of 'Wales en
his farm at Pekisko, .Arra,, is making horse history le Canada by the fact
that she has been sold to Lord Middleton and has 'been sbtpped'•to.England,
-being the first instance Of blooded .Canadian horse :being Seat ',to- Great
Britain, the home of fine percherons, "Princeton Car tan" won sec,ond prise
at the Royal Winker Pair Ter mares foaled in 1927.ia Canada, and is tine lvin•
ser of many ribbed in Ciao peroheron class throughout the west.
IF
Owl Laffs
May the joys of • the Christmas
Season be -Yours in abundance,
CH RISTM'AS, '
Christmas turns our thoughts to ,
values that are eaips'essed by such
words as ,hone, children,' friendship,
love. Its coming snakes us realize
that the aim, - of progress -is' the pro-
tection and elevation'of these values.
Whatever in civilization contributes !
to, the happiuees and well-being of
hone and children is good; whatever
threatens them is -bad. `
There is no substitute for the joys
of the Christmas season. They are.
the essence of life, and all ,tbat gives
meaning to life.
And so we give .expression to the
usual greeting and sincerely wish at
everyreader mny en,oy A MERRY
CHRISTMAS.
I am a Christmas tree, I erd not
the kind' that is 'all aglow ohe days
in the year and then is cast aside aud
.,forgotten, I am a sturdy evergreen
which tools foot in this: community
longago, grew as•it grew slowly, then
flourished in its days of prosperity un-
til now I stand as a i'andmark tor
the Community throughout th3 year.
But as a Christmas tree I bear upon
my brandies gifts for all of you. • My
gifts ate these: 'News—all the news
Tor al the people, all_the time; clean
news, wholesome news, news of hope
and not despair, the kind of news that
you can read. and stalls over around the
family circle;' Ideals and-- Faith and
Courage - ideals toward which to
strive to make our community a bet-
ter place. in which to live, faith the
essential righteousness .and honesty
of,our`people; courage in upholding, the
cause of justice and condemning the
wrong; Leadership and Progressive-
ness ansi Service—leadership in those
causes which make for the good. of
our community, pl'cgressiveness in
seeing beyond the immediate need and
the ' immediate fulflIment of that
need service to rho conununity in
protecting its people from danger and
fraud and sorrow. These gifts I fear
for ell of you—for your schools, your
churches, your public institutions,
Your . homes, your children and for
each and every one of you as indf.
vlduals. Ali these gifts that are free -
1y yours to have throughout the year,
I offer you again at this glad season
of peace ou earth, good will and happi-
ness to all. For I ant . Christmas tree -
I am your HOME PAPER.
EXCEPTIONS TO THE RULE.
(With apologies to Rudyard ICipling)
If You can rise at five, while all the
Yamily
Sleep sweetly on, and leave it all to
you,
And still can radiate a cheerful pa-
tience,
Nor call them till you've made their
breakfast too;
If you can wait for them still sweetly
Smiling,
Nor worry, if the food they criticize.
Or hot and tired, don't give way to
frowning
Because the bread you've set has
failed to, rise.
If you can work and not make work
Your master,
Still cherish dreams and always play
the game,
If you can see your menfolk scatter
ashes,
And .sweep them up, nor speak one
word of blame.
if you can bear to see the floors you've
polished,
Tracked up by muddy shoes on care-
less feet,
Or see your Uric -a -bac and china
broken,
And yet, when asked forgiveness, can
be sweet.
Tf you can bang your line with all your
washing,
And then go out aud find it in the dirt,
And do ft once more; as in the begin-
ning,
And do not Look too sour, or feel) too
hurt;
Who waste your time, nor soon away
are gone, •
And hum to replace those idle mo -
And so from morn till eve keep brave-
ly on,
If you can wait on crowds and keep
your temper,
And do not feel too cross. or look too
glum,
If you can hurry when your feet are
weary,
Yet do not rave too much, nor keep
too muni;
If you can fill each unreturning mo-
ment,
With sixty seconds 'worth of busy life,
Yours is a sweet and generous dis-
Position,
And—what is more you'll make a
farmer's wife.
—Recited by Mrs. A. It. Gray, at Mani-
toba Co-operative School --• "The
Scoop Shovel."
Higher and Lower
The man had just informed the
Pullman agent that he wanted a berth.
"'Upper or lower?" asked the agent'.
"what's the different?" asked the
man,
"A difference of 50 cents int this
case. The lower is higher than the
upper. The higher price.is for the
lower. If you want it lower you'll
have to go higher. We sell the up-
per lower than the lower. Most peo-
ple don't like the upper, although it
is lower on account of being higher.
When you occupy an upper you have
to get up to go to bed and get down
when you get up. You can have the
lower if you pas higher. The upper
is lower than the lower because it is
higher. If you are willing to go high-
er, it will be lower—"
But the poor man had fainted.
WASHING LINGERIE
When washing delicate Lingerie, add
a. little borax to the water. •This not.
only makes the' water delightfully ,
soft, but also helps to remove dirt.
A :small .piece of orris root added
to the solution in which lingerie is
to be washed will impart .a lasting
fragrance to the material
It is a'mistai a to add 'lode. to the
water in which tiny kind of lingerie is
to be washed, as: this is harmful to
the material.
• If delicate lingerie is required in a
hurry, and no starch is available, dip
the ostiole or garment into fresh milk
and press in the usual way, This
gives the -material the desired stiff-
ness.
"Who was Shylock, Aunt Ethel?"
"My dear! And you go to Sunday
school and don't know that! "Life".
Cutting' down the'' Overhead.—You
don't love me any More. When you,
`see ins crying.now you fleet able whyf"
3 L'ln•awflsliysorry,. n y dear,but these
• questions have already cost me such
a lot of money:" • —'Montreal Start
Minard's Liniment`for'all Pain. •
APPLICATIONS'
Are Filled Ae Fac
':'AO PoPiitbte. in the
Order, in"'Which
They Aro
Resolved.
APPLICATIONS
Offprints Annual
ONTARIO Work Are
DEPARTMENTR• invariably
OF AGRICULTURE • given the
itelpStipa, - Preference,
nt a �
Depavtma t of Agriculture Mr Ontarioowill have available
numbernumber'of -Experiences Married Men With Their Wives ••
ape' Families—M'arried Couples Without Children—.
Also Single' Men.
Farmers requiring help will be well
advised to make early application to '
File Your
Application
Pt Once
Geo. A. ,Elliott
Area for of Colonisation
Parliament. Ridge.,
Toronto. Ont,
All Men
Placed Subject
Io Trial Period
HON, THOMAS L. KENNEDY, Minister of Agriculture
the lights for the Christmas tree and
throws the whole home in darkness-
, Radio loudspeaker, which an-
nounces "Christmas carol, God rest
you Merry Gentlemen, Let Nothing
-You Disnlay." broadcast .from station
WOOF,
Ec}i®es of Iceland
In that strange island Iceland
burst. up, the.. geologists says; by fire
'from 'the bottom of toe sea; a wild
land of barrenness and. Java; swal-
lowed. many months of :every year: in
black tempests, yet with a "wild gleam-
ing,; beauty in,summertime; towering
up`tltere,,stern and' grim, in the North
Ocean ... where of. all places we least
looked for literature of •written mem-
orials, the record of these Wings was
written down. . On the seaboard of
this -Wild land is a•rim of grassy coun-
try, where cattle can subsist, and men
by means of them and of what .tbe
'sea yields; and it seems they were
poetic, mon these, men who had deep
thoughts in'them, and uttered musical-
ly -their thoughts. Muco would' be
lost, had Iceland net been burst up
from :the sea, not been discovered by
the Northman! The old Norse poets
were many of.them natives of Iceland.
—From '+heroes and Hero -Worship,"
by Thomas Carlyle. '
"Civilization is nothing but a con-
quering of human instincts."
—William l..ynn Phelps.
Minard's Liniment aids Sore Feet.
"There are two determining factors'
in the life of a species—nature and
nurture, character and environment"
—Dean cage.
'Twas the night before Christmas,
and all through the house not a crea-
ture was stirring, with the exception
of—
Father, who wants to know what
happened to the Christina t tree stand
when he put it away last year .
Another, who is trying to answer the
teleiihone and father at the same time
. . Norman, aged 11, who is calling
from the crib and wishing to be In-
formed If tete noise he hears is Santa
Claus—, . , An expressman, aged 150
by the way he feels, who Is delivering
a rocking horse at tete side door—.. •
Aunt Agnes, who has just dropped the
library table drawer seeking a pencil
to sign the receipt-- Grandma, who
can't remember what she did with the
bedtime stories she bought for Nor.
man's stocking and who wanders
about like Lady Macbeth— .. Anna-
belle, aged 16, 'Whet skips endlessly and
wants to know if they can't unpack
the new phonograph cabinet tonight
instead of tomorrow so site can ask
some of the boys in to foxtrot while
father trims the tree—, .. A delivery
ratan, who sounds like a troop of cav-
alry in the front vestibule and who
is with difficulty` convinced that he
has tate wrong house—. , . Nora, the
maid, who has just dropped a plate In
the liitclten—...Jack, aged 10, who
blows out a flue while monkeying with
WELCOME t .
NEW YORK antoL
3
(],INT N
51" St 0. TRAVi.
opposite PENNA.R•R.STAT!O!d)
1200 Rooms
each with(
Bath ands
Servidor
ROOM acne BA T ?1' 30.0 UP;
Use Year-. Own
Graino
YOtl(5a Own
Mathes
tes
All you need beside your grains is
Vita,Ray —' complete supplement
containing is exact
'Vita -Ray' propattious varied
will put digestible proteins,
ilio breath vitamins. and.vege-
of lite table minerals (in -
into your ', eluding Iocline),
reeds. Your total cost per
—"'--- "— 100 lbs. need not '
exceed $2.00, &big surprise awaits
you Inmore winter eggs, healthier
poultry aud lower feeding costs.'
Write to -day for interesting litera-
ture with . formulas for Poultry,
Dairy and Hog. Mashes male with
Vita -Ray.
Manamar�Fantous sea product Is
base. of all Vita -Ray Supplements.
•
VANCECa��q, gy�� ®p�p�/gy
4 \\Ia.d EROS.
Tillsonburg, Ont.
ISSUE No, 50—'3.
The above amount of looney has
been given away by us in
CASH Pi"IZES '
$250.00 more will be given
away as follows, -
150, prize $100.00 3rd. prize $30.00
2nd. " $ 50.00 4th. " $20.00
5th. to 106. prizes $10.00 ea. in cash
Solve this puzzle and grin a CASA PRIZE
Above is a Mature of an old man. Concea-
led about the picture • is the faces of his 7
E
daughters. Can you nid them? If so mark
each one with an X, cut out 3115 picture, and
write on a separate piece of paper these
words. I have found all the faces and
marked theta" and trail sante to us with
your name and address. In case of ties hand
writing and neatness will be considered fac-
tors. If oorrget we will advise you by return
mail of a sample condition to fulfill. Don't
send any money. You eau be a prize winner
without spending one cent of your stoney,
Send your reply to
COO HOPE MANUFACTURING 110.
455 Craig StWest Montreal, Can.
"feis e CG
irdash
Classified Advertising •
'IDR ARRY, RELIABLE MATEII%X0k7-
l�.i. IAL paper mailed free,.Address
lrriendship Magazine, Medina, New York.
TIL1;CTRIC M0TOR5, LARCH, STOCIs;,
i ail sizes fives- 510 0s,: ala,, motor
winding' and repairing. Len Elentric
1013 Ring,London.
W" Il CAN SUPPLY ANY BOOTS
VY published with a minimum delay.
Enquiries promptly :answered. Subscrtp
tions placed. for all Canadian, Brltisg.
and American publications at lowest
'prices- World's Subscription Avner
(Reg'd), 7101 Queen St. West, Toronto,
Canada,
Mind. Your Gears.—An Eoglishmate
on a visit to .the West decided to de
horseback riding. The hostler whe
was to attend blm asked; "Do you gra-
fer and English saddle 0t• a Z'1'estern?"
'What's the difference?" he asked.
"The Western saddle has a horn," re-
plied the attendant. "I don't thisik
I'll need the horn," said the-English-
man.
he-Englishman. "I don't intend to ride in heavy
traffic." ti"Pathfiinder"
CONTRACTORS WANTED
FOR CAULKING
WE %tent .to locate and start good loi'ai
contractors everywhere. Caulking Brims .
Houses for winter. Llther.a side litie or
exclusive. Good money for right men.
Canikiag 00., 116 Earth Drive. Toronto.
ATENTS
List of "Wanted inventions"
and Full Information Sent Free
on ilequest,
THE RAMSAY CO., Dept. W.
570 Bank at, Ottawa, Oat:
93 Jas! eiperi»seizt with
unfamiliar. soaps and lotions
CzatiiC:it rilii
h.a hronebt roller and happino.a toe ear r.. e
to millions all over the world
Soap 25n, Ottoman, 23a. and 500. Talcum 25.
1
Yo
SUFFER FROM
CONSTIPATION?
Countless remedies are advertised
for constipation. Many relieve for
the moment but they are habit form-
ing and must be continued. Others
contain calomel and dangerous min-
eral drugs, which remail in the sys-
tem, settle in the joints and cause
aches and pains. Some are harsh
purgatives which cramp and gripe
and leave a depressed after effect.
Avoid lubricating oils which only
grease tate intestines and encourage
natures machinery to become lazy,
A purely vegetable laxative such
as Csrter's Little Liver Pills, gently
touches the liver, bile starts to flow;
the bowels stove gently the intestines
are thoroughly cleanses{ and constipa-
tion poisons pass away. The stomach,'
liver and bowels are now active and
the system enjoys a real tonic effect.
All druggists 25c and 75c rid Pkgs,
on Coughs & Colds
A speedy. safe, proven remedy
for children and adults.
17A
UCKLEY''
Arts Lasers lash. ASINcie S,PPaovESlt
Prevent Dandruff
and promote the growth of your
hair by rubbing the scalp with
Minard's four times a week,
�•
Ale
"KCMG OF PAW"
tt-`My daughter Catherine is
fifteen years old. She was very
irregular, often sick at her
stomach and had to stay in
bed 'two or three days at a
time. One of your booklets was
sent to us by mail so I got her
a bottle of Vegetable Com-
pound. Catherine has been
raking it regularly and she is
gaining in weight and every
way. 1 told the neighbors and
four other girls ate taking it
with ggo�odresults."--Mrs. Clar-
ence • Jenkinson, Box 1g, Thorn-
loe, Ontario.
•
High School Boards and Boards of Edticatlon.
Aro authorized by law to establish
INDUSTRIAL, . TECHNICAL AND
ART , SCHOOLS
With the approval of the Minister of Education
DANA AND EVENING CLASSES
may be conducted in accordance with the regulations issued by
the Department of Eduoatioa. •
THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION
Is given In various trades. Tho schools and classes ane under thii
direction of AN ADVISORY QOMMITTgE,
Application for attendanoe should be made. to the Principal
of the school.
COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS, MANUAL TRAINING, HOUSEHOLD
SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE AND:HORTICULTURE. ere provide-]
for In the Courson of Study in.Publio, Separate, Continuation and High
Schools, Collegiate Inatitutos,°•Vocational Schools,and-+.Deeetetinonte.
Copies of the Regulatione I eued by the Minister ofoEdueatlon May e
obtained from the Deputy Minister, Parliament Buliditlga, Tofoute.