Loading...
The Clinton News Record, 1929-07-18, Page 350\ PEP eo7i �:I.s' PEND PEDAL'S. HOU61HOLO NAME ,N 14. - GOUNTR,CS'• •' Chess bathe Earth - Let the brawn'la.rk fly , That has wvings,#o fly, The ant, the beetle, The 1itole, sena I, Keep close to the earth 'Where we like to lie. Consternation ruled in dor humble: v.orntc,i]e.,., The valtons members of the 1amily were i`o u beteioen ajo c irxg_and,"regoeting, because May hada come home to spend a month with ni and, .'Lor rot" 01 horror,; sire land' brought'a kitten with her! Now nobody, in 007 110010e d anY dee for cats, and wlicn I- sayobedy it is a. pretty gencrat,classifr on be-. cense the age etif our. home,dwellers range from ,fourteen Years ninety and includo both `sexes. ; 5 e ,kit- ten, a tiny package of soft ',. met -with a rather' frigid reeep .and oven May's reception was lightly_ tinged - with fii\ost,' Beci we thionght ; doetin't "she know at we; have trirables eiio>ig1 alreadywithout_ having a cat arotmd here. make things :worse? Cale, -,.we told ono another, are all right in the but in the city` where people=the clili-dwell- ors. ofoldin that 00 Monday when one' ha he family wash it dangles 11 ' the neighbor'S windows, cat place. We had all of us had pleasant experi- enoe of being 1 in` the middle got the ,night feline Caruso who bad+„gathered s of opera sing- ers under ours, and I person- ally had a 0 gainst cats be- cause they; in leading my dog off on chases 11,? lInaily broke her Of the h So we ask by in the world she ever Uro t into our house and' we 'threatened 11 aorta of dire punilbnient ,little nnfmal, 'But' May was 'wi psychology without knowing it b are. She'offered ne verbal argument.Instead she put the kitten' d he floor, gave it a spool to 1 ail. dawited re- ETE nerves are fedi by the blood. Poor blood means starved nerve tis- sue, insomnia, itritability ati4 depression. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will enrich;' your blood • stream and rebuild your over-worked nervesc'Nliss Josephine M. Martina of, Kitchener,' Ontario, testi-. res; to this "Y suffered from a nervous breakdown,"+ she writer. i l isheadaches, hadterrbescc 'dizziness; felt very weak and, could not sleep; had no apps. . ' tits. I felt always as if some - to thing"terrible," were � going happen. After taking : other PP o g treatment without success,' on my sister's advice, I tried Dr. ' W.iiliams'• Pink Pilin, and new allthesesymptoms'are gone, and 1 am,strong and happy 054in,» Buy Dr, Williams' Pink Pills now at'your, ,druggist's or any dealer in medicine or by mail, 50 cents,. postpaid, from the Dr. Williams 1Nedi. eine;Co., Brockville, Ontario s2 ha n Ceti e -du to So th fin tion s ,5051 that to country, Hive like tiers so rigs out t right unlet s ]rave no d the un awalceno by a a chem window grudge a persisted lases not shit. eaMaye ught a eo atened a to the se in y that ria ownent Clay with Results were not long in conning. The kitten stalked the epee] with all its inherited cunning and sprang on it much as to lion; might spring on an unsuspecting gazelle. It, roiled over • and over on the floor In such antics that we, the jury, laughed gleefully and _began to argue with one another for the privilege of naming the new member cf the household. The first Oa ywe tolerated. it. The second clay we 0551 edevoted:to it. Watching the. kitten play became an indoor sport which took precedence over bridge and the, radio. We had become ac- quainted with the new member.' The same process is. tatting place every day in other homes. Usually it is a small child who fights to intro- duce an animal .pet • into the family circle.- , The kitten and the puppy, given a chance, will win places for themselves by their human -like antics. A full-grown dog wi111'win a place more quickly than a grown cat be- cause a dog will' flatter the grown foBts with tall wagging and grown folks like flattery. It's ell in getting acquainted. Afewyears ago, when I began en - For close to. the earth a beetlemay trundle Its treasure below in a .claw -clipped • bundle;i 'And close to the earth an ant may • funnel 'Earthwork in tercets the length of its tunnel;. ' And close to the earth the secret mole May fit to itsbody its cool, dark hole; • And I, who have never a wish. to tering the woods- with a camera, the climb blue jay and the red squirrel were cit- The 'sky with a lilt or a whistling Sects of ray bate, They scolded and rhyme, I warned every wild thing in the woods May stoop and listen and -mask the that I'vas corning. But after a while time {I got to know these tivo rascals better 01 surer songs than . a bird ever and later still I admired them. Why sings— snot? I boasted because my dog warn - Songs slow with the pulse: at the root :ea rile wheat st1'angers stepped on my 4.. .of, things.. !verandah. The jay and the squirrel -Margaret Emerson Bailey fn • were' but :watch Bogs of the woods. The only thing to do,t obviously, "was Making the Railway til ?. 9ohn Caesar, pioneer 05 Canadien Pacific Station Gardens, 2.—First`Can0dla p Pacific Station Carden at Markdale, Ont., 1881.•' John Caesar,,liko lr's'great prototype, "same, SSW and conquered." -When he first started as station agent at Markdale, Ont„ back in 1881, it w<as ju0t a ,station with the rails rnnr rug nastit, He decided that passengersshould sit up and take notice vlhee they passed through ]ifs territory, so he started in tis landscape garden+it. Sogn.Ise had a beauty spot where before there had been little to interesttile traveller. Canadian Pacific officials were chick to recognize the value .af the work and the Playa) IIe1?artmont'of. the railway. was formed. Mr. Ciaesar-wan chosen to look after the beautificationof; the road and be has to his credit a large number of stations through Ontario; Quebec, New Brunswick, and'111aine. Since 1871 Mr, Caesar has been draw- ingpay cheques froth railways has and probably as signed more than any outer living railroad malt. When he retired in 1917 on his', agent's pension' he went en to;:woric at landscape gardening and has literally created' Hundreds of station gardens, some' at them real showplaces, "I have yeeeived new life the il” h n li It 'compliments on his fresh complexion from a sa q e say, t rep es o - and. alert manner, for'• re ,Ss a man well in the seventies, and he hopes to make many moreigardens before he completes hie life span. , Animals forthe' Zoo 'When I went on board a freight ship at' a Western, port the animale had onlytotendure about a' week more of a voyage that had lasted the best part of six months, On the deck there was a row of wooden aa'sas into which the animals fitted like eggs in a crate; tigers; pan- thers, kangaroos, and a lioness.;' It was summer -time, and partly to shade (them in their confined quarters, and partly to screen them from the activi- ties of the ship, there were awnings of -sacking hang' before the bars that imprisoned these panting- captives from the open plains of Australia and the fragrant jangles of India. 1-Iarper's Magazine. Tariff on Meats to make friends with these , watch dogs, .tit tdolc time, but it brought re - New. York Sun: "The Fordney-btO sults, 'Cumber Aot imposes on cattle a. duty Lately there ]las been a tendency cuing Frere a cent and a half 50 two to name special weeks throughout the Year, . "Be Hind to Animals Week" is one of them. 'Do make 'that week doubly effective let's have et "Get Ac- quainted With Animals Week" just before it. Or, while we're about it, why not extend that "Get Acquainted" idea over the whole year. It's the surest and meet positive ivay to 100011• liness and humane treatment. No person who has ever seen a wild deer botmd through its native tweet and clear a six-foot barrier with effort- less ffort less ease would ever consent to hav- ing a herd of them penned up in a half -acre let to•bestared at by a' lot of well-meaning folks whose worst fault is that they don't know what it is ail about: Edtieatioir, it 'Seems to me, is the best method 03 combating this prat- tice. And T believe that moving pic- tures 03 wild life in its native haunts will go a long Way toward making the viewing of captive animals seem rath- er tame and uninteresting.—W, Earl Paddock in "Our Dumb Animals.' cents a pound, of two cents a. pound n bacon and ham, of a cent a 'pound n lard; This protection has helped the 'breeding industry to its present pros- aerity, put it in a healthy and indepen 'dent condition in which competition from foreign sources has been satiss 'teetotal), net. The burden of proving 'that further tariff increases are nedea- teary rests upon the breeders, If they Lave a good case they have not yet (Made the facts known. ftEPDXCN7digh7heTin rheliane TlyCa � �e s.._— ,'Y u Must `Do Your Bit w +�, �,. roe H in the w ageing the fly,cutlet warCA 1 8 ' of germs and breeder of tliscsse. .. .,..............,, It is prov0n that AEROXON in one of the moitconvenient anti meet effic!entmeans of co,nbating this 1 fly evil, it 1, convenient, because i of the pueh-pin, 1t ,f' hyslenlo ` (ljoe never get gwfy when epeel taught. Each spiral sires three ,vieeke perfect service./ ' eE0ARE 'e. IMITATIONS ,al dr g, troen,aw a,c stor • quid at dreg, aroccry and hardumre stores. CW Ce"C O Genesi & File; limilde � x33eneroincof0. enc.] "'l3 noir ec1Nr,, Distributor for-Ontarlo NEWTON A. 1-I1LL le rront St. E., .Toronto t , neglected confinement of a prison ship.. Lorna Ryan in. "Our Dumb Am. trials." The bulla of the animals were'in a compartment that was below the deck and yet above the 'water line. I don't know what the technical term. is for that part of a vessel, but as I eine -down a long passageway andpaused at the entrance to this place, )G' saw that a seetjon'of the ships side was. w*hdrawh to allowa flood of light and ah\to- tl0 what it cbnid with- a prison which had long been in dark- ness. I looked around, and although the place was full of livYng things, there was not a single 5oalld except the lapping of the water: outside. The atniosphere wins charged with such mute and hopeless misery 'that I could not help thinking of the slave ships of olden clays. All the smaller animals of the .Anti- podes were huddled in the boxes that lined the walls, but many empty cages testified to the toll that death had taken among the more delicate spe- cies. A few wallabies,; Wombats ani bandicoots still lay supine on their grubbydoles of'gtraw, but I did not see any koala bears, IIf there had been any, they had not borne the trials of that suffocating dungeon. In a corner a valuable and are par- rot, the last, of •an original six, clung, drooping and nnhaPpy,to his perch. 'The snakes lay motionless in their glass eases, mod -it is so difficult to tell when a snake is miserable, that I could not' make out "'how they were facing the situation mentally. Physi- cally they had pi'pved hardier than either the birds or the animals, and had come through the voyage beter than anything else In the shipment, excepting the tortoises (tiny turtles,. or terrapin—I don't know which). The whole of the barrel that contained them seemed alive with the swarming mass, crawling all over and under each. other with complete unconcern, and a total indifference to the_ uta pleasantness of their condition. e The birds, were separate from the animals. How many of them there had originally been in the 'tightly Ducked cages that filled the cabin. which had been converted to their use it was impossible to judge. Their number was greatly reduced by this time, although there still seemed to be several hundred too many•of the i Made - to t �4 , k 'Ibe Errztie Mr. Mart I had to laugh Atoldthan hart; lie lost 71x0 head Then loot Inc heart.. The normal wey, I've heard ,11 said, Js to lose one's. heart Ai>d- then one's head, Grandmother — "Welly dear, have you done your,'dood deed today.?" Boy Ocollt—"Yee—I've taught Cour Lucy net 10 poke Icer tongue out at BoyScouts!" A `cable mess0ge can go around the world In eight minutes, lint of eoutOe gossip. is much cheaper. i4o—"Wouldn't you like to hear me sing 'Because'I Love You?" She—"15o; if you love me, please don't sing."' Ivlaisies—"The jury awarded ice five j Y thousand' :dollars damages ..lt'om'that fellow who kissed me."- Mamie -"Gee! that's.swell." Maisie -"Bat' he hasn't got the five thousand dollars and nobody else,, has offered me a hiss. RED : DDT JULY DAYS HARD ON THE BABY July—the month of oppressive heat; red-hot days and sweltering nights; is extremely hard on little ones. Diar- rhoea, dysentery, collo and cholera in- fant= n faritnm carry off thousands of pre- cious little lives every summer. The mother must be constantly.` on her 'guard to" prevent these troubles, or, if they come on suddenly,: to fight them. No other medicine is of such aid to mothers during the hot sum- mer as is Baby's"Owu Tablets. They regulate the bowels and stomach, and an occasional close given to the well child will prevent bummer complaint, or if the trouble does come on sud- denly, will banish it. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers . or by mail at 28c. a box from The Dr. Wil- liam's Medicine Co-, Brockville, Ont. The Naval Pilgrimage Toronto Globe (Lib.): It is persis- tently rumoured in Britain that the Right ikon. Ramsay: MacDonald is 9ltortly to set out on a naval disarma- ment pilgrimage, to Washington, and that he is to invite the Canadian Prime Minister to join frim in . the pourparlers with the United States'. the matter, is none of Canada's buss. President,'•Strictly speaking of course, the matter is none of Canaries' bud. Imes. The Motherland pays the entire cost of her own navy, Canada's con- tribution to Empire naval defence con- elks on eilt's of'two borrowed second-hand de- stroyers. That force hardly entitles her to a Voice •in international dis- armament dlscessions, APPLICATIONS.. Ara' Filled As Far As Possible in the ONTARIO' Order in Which EPARTMENT Troy Are f OF AC-IRICULTurte APPLICATIONS Received.. Farms o� d Offering Annual Work Ara Invariably Given the Preference. rho Cplou]zotl5li and > m},�igra' tion 13rda cif bf thh3 �e taxtl!o t Qfi A iic ltni # fti"t0 0nitjl i 3 i111'av ,a'vafl'b e>t ml>1%, 9 Exp j'leriob :INsrriecl IbIn With nei i)ve's and Falnhles—rylaliried Couples Without Clilldree • Also' Single Men, Fanoerd roaufring carp:. t5i11 be -well aoleet to tn50be early eo gttcatlon to Geo. A. Elliott oh'tettii' og Colonization Parliament 131881:. ToroftO, Ont. FIjb Your p,p`piioatio'1,� at`Onee All Men' Placed dubJect to Trial Period fNARTINs Minister of Agriculture But What Is That? The weeds are rank, The: grass uncut, ' The vines swing wild, The door is shut; The iloejr: has'stopped, Stark is the bed, The fire's out, siMy love 1s dead- But what is that? In here! Out there - Was. that the wind Along the, sten'? Was that a hand That stirred the curtain? Was that a laugh? I am not certain— Love! Are you: there? 01' is it only That I am mad As well as 'only? :Elizabeth Hollister Frobt in the; London Spectator." ' The height of something or other is getting Mit on the wrong aide of a lower. berth in a Pullman, Mine Too I call my gbr)•Wrigley's,because she is always after meals.. There 'is - no reason why women can't succeed in business. A woman who can get the rolls and the gravy and- the'roast and the potatoes and theocoffee all on the table steaming hot at the same time and then' "get all the family there too, can succeed, in anything. Now, I want some $umane moth- balls; something that won't: harm the Moths but will just make them lose their'appetites, A thing done right. today less trouble to -morrow. means Nothing For Murphys ' "Anything for the Murphys?" in - (Mired a freckle -faced girl, putting her head ; nat the postomce door. "No, nothing," replied the clerk, "Anything for Jane Murphy?"' pur- sued the girl. "No." - "Anything for Bob Murphy?" "Nothing, I tell you." "Anything for Biddy Murphy?? "No; nor for Pat Murphy nor Den- nis Murphy; nor for Pete Murphy, nor Paul Murphy, nor for any of the Mur- phys, individually, jointly' or. several- ly." , The girl -•.regarded the clerk for a moment in open-mouthed astonish - Meat. 'Well,' elle said at last, "have you anything for ,Clarence Murphy?? Jones—"Do your daughters live at home?" Mrs. Smith—"My, col. They are not married yet." He made no enemy here below, For him death held no terror; And now he's where the "Good The French Debt to the U.S.A. Philadelphia Ledger:. It is reason- ably certain that the people of this country., have no wish to be hard rip- on France. Indeed, the terms' of the Mellon-Berenger agrement, which in effect canceled tjre priuoipal al the French debt and arranged for the pay- ment of the interest alone, show un- mistakable generosity. But it 1s now more than three years since that agreement was made, and though its obligations aveh been met regularly by teb French Government, It has not yet been. ratified. Speeches like M. Henri Franklin Bouillon's, leader of the National Union group In the French Chamber, who spoke of delih- erating with a knife at our throats, make interesting reading, hut they brilliant little creatures n so cat e• are of assistance neither to 111s own oath a space. Government nor to this ono 150 reach - here again there Iva dreadhil sit- ing a final settlement of the debt ehce. This time it seemed even morel (location. striking because many of the birds = — were naturally ammeters in their na- tive forests, and even birds that do not sing are seldom completely dumb under ordinary bearable circum-. etanees. They are allvays associated with a wealth of little twittering sounds and puttering movement. In that cabin there was -only stillness and the hush 'of 1130 that has lost in- terest in living. Every now and then the gage -doors were opened and the dead removed from among the alas- teased rows of feathers that crouched on the perches or littered the floors' of t11e''boxes with orange and gold and scarlet, with yellow and green , and blue. As I went up the companionway later I happened to meet the man who. was in charge of this living and—in some cases—priceless freight. '.. He appeared on the verge of falling to pieces, andaif he Tae not aptually drunk when the officer introduced him, he had no'tlong been sober. Nor had ho been on his fret for any great period at a tir,le during the whole of the -trip. I undorstaud that he was lows" go,. No runs, no hits, no errors. The lit -test tea yoll can15uy--Red lose Orange Pekoe. acle from jt.arlr; flavor filled leaves,..-a4;t ir'ee days an, bud. Every package guaranteed. fss. REO ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is s�xflraa good hy ct+'r 'y e Once upon a time there was `a (Res- taurant which was equjpped, with (Tot and Cold Dunning' Waiters, And the Waiters were, accustomed to wait, and so were the Gamete. And there was a clay when: I was there, and a -man entered, and he said, "I desire a Steals, ani! I 7..ant it -to-day and not to -morrow, for am about to. talcs a Train " And while he waited,'he sang softly concerning the. Waiter, saying, ';Ile never came back,.lie neyer came back, he' never came back any more; but his. neolt :I' will break' if he bring not that Steak' when we meet : on that Beautiful Shore." ' And it came to pass after' a time that the Walter returned, And the man said, "Art thou tile same Lad that took. mine Order for a Steak?" And the Waiter answered' and said, „I am." And thesman said, "Thou must per - don ,me for the question„ Thou bast grown."' Fel- "I:hope," said one wife to another, "that you don't mug your husband." Only when he is beating the ear. gets," said the second one. "When he is thoroughly irritated he makes a much better job of it" The 'thing that looks dangerous about the new-fangled underwear for men, in all the pretty patterns, is that someone's apt to get the fool it1e11 it will take the place of Dents. Don't expect to be taken for a genius if you're only a common crank. Rrainesort. —A place where you pay $1& a day to look through a window at the The Disappearing Indian Quebec Evenement Cons.): In the greater part of the old bunting grounds'of the natives of the country, there barely remain a few thousand descendants of a Imuran family which lacked neither intelligence nor nobili- ty. Outside British. Y siColumbia. and the least hospitable parts of the Pro- vince of. Quebec, there are no longer any forests where the .proud nations who have been despoiled and humili- ated can taste the illusion of their lost liberty. And, it is the represeuta tives of the most generous nations of the white race who Neve' accom- plished tbis inhuman bfe lc Can, we, after ,this warning, blame the yel- low races for rebelling against Eur- opean penetration? Men are no whit different from iish or ants. In- stead of dominating by intelligence and kindness, the survival of 'the lit. test is' ensured by war, strategy, ex• ploitetion, Irani) ancL clestrueticn. And. the Waiter said,"Art thou really for thy Steak?" And licaserved the Steak. And the man essayed to cut it, and he said, "The Steak also bath grown; it is old and tough." But ho was hungry and he ate, and the meal was not a Total Loss. And - the than said, ''Such is life. They also serve wllo only stand and wait, and a large part of the. service; i for which one.payeth wells 1st of that sort. And he who filetli an order for Success end tvaiteth for it to come must often find that when it comotb it is Too•Tough to Cut" Now I sat at a table near at hand, and I said, "My friend, thou hast some reason for thy complaint, and I also have suffered here and elsewhere by reason of the Alacrity which Wait- ers display hi Quiescence. For there are few things so stationary as some Waiters. Nevertheless, we have eaten and are refreshed, and theprice of the meal is within our means, and we still have time for our Train.? And he said, "Then hast well spoken. Aucl it was not so bad a meal at that." And I said, "May it be ao with thy life's Success. And though it be some- what toughened by reason of the de- lay, I trust thy Knife may be..-dharp On - and thy Digestion good. And I hope. �> that4� Successor thee i ��"��0e s f e not very fax away" And he said, "I thank thee for thy good wishes, and as for the Success, it isnot so bad'or remote as it might g� be. Pare thee well,„ 6 ti yl' IDIE 3a. And I said, "I rather think thou wilt gain Success and, enjoy it. Fare thee wets. And if the Steaks were slow in com- ing and rather Tough when they conte still were' -tee each the better for each other's good wishes. And 13 the wait be long and the Steak be tough, there is no use mak- ing matter worse by fretting about them. Cflassified Advertisements n.a1100 C212CIES • A. 3Y CI -TICKS; JULY AND ATJ`p'UST'r)oc ce 120, Brown Leghorn0 are An 5a 1 White 1 1+nS.155 as- s s- Ancones. elos 5 S Ip 200 or • e• 'sr; creel;S t gue. es5 paid over; free .catalogue,: A... II Switzer, Granton, Ontar1o. •q Yery Important 1 he morning The master 1iad;;ipo t t ening .his boys ofthe wonderful . trades that science had made since the days of the war. He bad noticedthat the most bade- ward boy of the class had' paid the east attention Of all. "Smith;" he said. sharply, "can you tell me 000 titian ofimportance that did not exist fifty years ago?" The boy came out of his dreams svith a 'start: "Me, 0 LAXATIVE FOR BABY THAT "STAYS DOWN" Baby's tiny system rebels against castor oil and strong purgatives; but here's a medicine that just snits him. And it does the work quickly and so gently . that Baby doesn't feel` it. Fletcher's Castorla is soothing cross, fretful babies and children to sleep and making the feverish, constipated, upset ones well and happy, in mil- lions of hones to -clay. Castoria is purely -vegetable, ..harmless and en- dorsed by the medical rrofession. Avoid imitations. The Chas, H. Fletcher signature narks genuine Casto•ia. Headache Bathe the bead with Minerd'c in water. Also Beat and inhale Minaret's. . OMEN OF Safety F'a'st La Presse (lad.); The Safety Lea • / gee of the Province of Quebec fns re- cently 'addressed to more time 1,200 "I'd like to see all the bootleggers cares of our province a circular let Minard's Liniment for Earache, He, reading—"A so they were mar- ried. That is the way alllove matches end." Site—"Yee, they dont burn long." ' News reporters speak of "covering" a story, when, as a matter of fact, what they do is '"uncover" it. Mrs. Cyoodkey Tells Her E:iperi- ence with Pinkhom's Compelled Byemoor, Alberta. --"The Change of Life was the trouble with me and Y wasrun-down,thin, and weak and could not sleep, had a poor appetite and could not do much work. I am. taking Lydia E. Pink - ham's 'Vegetable Compound now nd I feel like a well woman. I saw it advertised in the papers and tried it and Lydia E. Pink ham's Sanative Walsh. I have recom- mended it to a lot of women friends." MRS. War. Goonzcnr, Byemoor, Al- berta. --x ebNefNM mor ptacH,�� Sot' Trottr91e0 Alia to Acid, 150!OEet•ION ACID s'r4MACN Ht;ARTaUaN 1 ADAtktE GASES NAUUS A..p Exctess acid is the co amen cense of indigestion, 'It results in Pain and soltrness about two hours after eat- ing. The quick corrective is an alkali which noutralizea eCld The best cor- rective is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. It Lae remained standard with physi- cians in the 50 yeare since its inven- tion, One spoonful of Phillips' Mille of Magnesia neutralizes instantly marry times its volume in acid. \11 is harms less and tasteless and its action is quick. You will never rely on crude methods, never continue to suffer, when you learn how quickly, how pleasantly this premier method acts. Please let it phew you—now. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia pree'riher1 by ph sI. clans foss ag years in ^.owe ir. t nese aclds. Earth bottle cwnc,•ns full directions—any drugstore. behind the bars ter soliciting thole active co-operation "So would ,I—nest ol them would in the prevention of accidents .. . malts exceilent bartenders. This new 01050 of the Safety League Legh' School Boards and Boards, of Education should produce good rosnite. There Liniment nior eu a. gra: is no dont ithat the ett> o is the man r L TECHNICAL AND who, in his own parish, is in.tlie best - :INDUSTRIAL, a - i e • position to educate his parishioners. ART SCHOOLS i supplyingszaa t Time to ro oleic r have a mission. Throughout the -various Government •Our cures avp build u s lg Minard'st N r 4 ' Are authorized by law to establish ei 1 With the appnovai of the Minister of Education at Ottawa ere s a @y e tl It nus th i stem tact the lives of their parishioners, of ver 000 clocks controlled directly 'whenever they ,can; sinru aria y 0 with looking after their spi'itual wol• from the Dentition Observatory. The fare, an expert curator, and bg clbeen se- majority of these take the ,,,,form of, lected iter- tars responsibility •for his '(minute dials," whose panels ro ectal itnowledgo:ancl capability `when he sot, ated ':electrically once each 'mhtute; . Large, Area Photographed out from lus own. 00110517 but few the evact' instant when the hands Thirty-three thousand, eight lam- men are able to go from "prohibition `move marks the beginning .of the god, square miles were aesthetic' ?r5 A]nerice to the \tropics without falll minute. Wade, char`{ng theseason of 1923 by in a" victim to the conditions 'e i . oblique aerlai piiotogr1P'il3, 'taken by zr.g ...T i l Pr va l o Y. tl i '. 1 : n speak the Royal Canadian. Air Ptnle tor the ink, tltet n r s instaiiee it iras It You ]chow, Jaines; I p 1 Wife, ,. ,, cargo of imprisoned animals thai suf- as I thin ic."'FIeshani1: .Yes, nay lova-- eared ova— fared for his weakness, in tho stifing, brit oftener!" Minar3's Liniment.' for Rheumatism,l `. ISSUE No 29--- 2! Photogiraphieal Survey, Department of the Interior. Minard's Liniment for aching Johtts. DAY AND EVENING CLASSES, may be conducted in aocordenoa with the' regulations lowed by Oho Department of Eduoation. TiiE0l'ST!CAL AND PRACTIQAL INSTRUCTION lc given in yerioue trades. The schools and classes aro under the dtroatior, of AN ADVISORY COMMITTEE, Applicratloe for attendance should be mads to the Principal of aha school. ' COMi 119iOI1L $U04FCTer, MANUAL TRAINING,; HOUSEHOLD SOIEN01 AND AGRICULTURE AND I•IOR'IIGULTURC are provided for In tics Coarses of Study in Pubtic, Separate, Continuatlen ant: High •Sohoole, Coilepiate Institutes, Vocational Sehoois and Departments. Copley of the Regoletiene lesued by the Willow of Education may be obtained 12051 the Deputy Mhaisier, Parliament 13ttlldlne%, Toronto,