The Clinton News Record, 1929-08-22, Page 3]Lucky . Little; Canadian .:..
at theme
MEI
orNAL
Aug. 23 to Sept. 7
Empire Year
l
Scores of planes In an epoch -Making
Carnival of: the Clouds featuring air
races to and from the Uniced.Stares.
Friendly invasion of Canada by -the pur-
suit squadron of the United States Air
Force free Selfridge Field. . . Airarade
and "aerobatics" .. , stunting, formation
flights. Aeroplanes, sea planes and am-
phibians in a thrilling, impressiveepic
of the air, vividly portraying the ainaz-
ing advance of aviation.
OTHER LEADING FEATURES
Opening of ` the new $1,000,000
Automotive• Building Fourth
C.N.E. -Wrigley Maradton Swim for
$go,000 prizes and world char pionship
Aug, 23 (for women) and Aug. 28
(open) ... the Goldman and other noted
bands... four concerts,,by the renowned
z,000•voice Exhibition Chorus (Aug.
24 and 29, Sept. g and 7). , .Thaviu,
Mager Musician, his Band and Operatic
Ensemblg.. Internacional sports pro.
. gram with. outboard motor boar, yacht,
track and field events... Monster milit-
ary and naval grandstand spectacle cat h
nigbt...14 days of Education, Rccre
acion, Pageantry, Agriculture, Industry,
Sport, Music, Arc and Science.
Reservations for ExhfbitionChorus,
eindevening $pectacleinfrontof the
grand Stand should be made sow.
PRICES: GRAND STAND SPEC-
TACLE - General Admission 25e.
Reserved Seats $1.00. Boxes' $1. o.
EXHIBITION CHORUS, COLI-
SEUM ---General Admission arc.
Ground Floor 75c. Box Seats $1,00.
Write Moodsy's, 47 King St. West,
Toronto, or Canadian Nacional Exhl
bition.
Reduced •Steamship. Airways,
Coach Lines and Rai road Rates.
THOMAS BRADSHAW,
President
H. W. WATERS,
General Manager
Municipal authorities predict the
population of Bogota will be greatly
Increased during the next nine years,
because of better housing facilities
and because direct rail communica-
tion with both the Atlantic and Pacific
coasts will then be open. A popu-
lation of 400,000 by 1083 is predicted.
•w:UR "AY
Better get that
new Set a;f -
orestotot
GUM -DIPPED
Now !
When grandma'was-a little girl she
woulchm'i'liave dreamed of crossing the
Atlantic alone, even if she could have
afforded .it. Nowadays the above
picture is quite a common sight aboard
the big Vunard liners which cross
regularly 'from ' lylontreal' and •Hlalifax
to British ports and, back. We see
Pearl Remelt, -cuddled . up for press
photographers who wished the little
traveller bon voyage <at Montreai re-
cently 'abcard .the S.S. Aurania. The
world is travel -wise these days,
1VAi kid' Sh
.Buckles at t Home
. So ninny of the most expensive
shoe buckles are handmade `that
dressing up one's own evening :slip-
pers and pumps is quite the latest
thing in summer fancy Work. Orna-
mental slides, buckles, ornaments and
the like requit•e'.so little material that
the entire equipment can be tucked
away in one's handbag ready to use
during a few moment's leisure, -the
particular satisfaction ofthe work
being the 'fact et having shoe orna-
ments to match every ensemble.
The foundationforany buckle or
slide is the same, consisting of a
square, oval or oblong of buckram,
wired all arcnnd and covered on the
right side with whatever fabric is
-to .bo the background for the decora-
tion. The wrong side should be cov-
ered last of all, thus concealing the
stitches and givi'fg a 'neat finish.
Jewel-shiddeci trimming, br•"tlie yard,
applied as a border and to outline a
center, Is the simplest form of this
work. bone In closely set rhine-
stones on black satin, with larger
stones studding the corners of the
buckle and,,the'fabric showing as a
center ,there is nothing more effec-
tive for wear with black serol -eve•
'fling or fcmeal 'dresses. In colored
stones, •with a bit of metallic ribbon
as a background, the same design
Makes a buckle for wear with any
of the printed chiffons; or the rhine-
stones or other jewels may have for
a founctaticn the fabric' of the frock,
Oval buckles and crescent-shaped
slides are easily made with jeweled
trimming by the yard ,as it is adapt-
able to a curved outline.
When using detached beads for a
square buckle. ,attach strong thread
to one corner of the buckram and
string on It a needleful of beads ser -
1 fitment to reach to the. opposite cor-
ner. Sew it firmly at this point and
then go back to take small stitches
, between every few beads to hold them
in place. After a doable or triple
borcier•Is so arranged, the center can
be decorated with a star -like; spark-
ling button, with thank pushed
through the foundation and sewed
firmly. An inexpensive brooch of
mock' jewels makes an effective cen-
ter and one ingenious girl utilized a
pair of the cheapest hoop, earrings,
removing the screw portion and sew -
Ing the hoop flat to the foundation.
Many delightful bits of mock jewel
and enamel work can be picked up 4n
this way, when a particular color
scheme is to 'be carried out. Fili-
gree'bronze buttons and iridescent
beading on a buckle covered with
a strip of beige suede' cut free the
.wrist of a glove were combined for
the decoration of a tan' slipper .that
well repaid the wearer for the little
work involved. '
Evening pumps that need' some re-
furnishing take on an altogether dif-
ferent look if a'lalicete vine of rhine-
•'stones outlines the deep front. curve
at the instep and an inexpensive lit-
tle brooch of the brilliants 1s fasten-
ed,at the 'outside of the'curve of in
the center. A Stuart, up -turning:
tongue, either of plaited Lace or ribbon,
is seen on some of the 'newest eve-
ning slippers, silver and gold lace
both being used for this purpose.
Mirard's Liniment for Summer Colds
It is imagination which rules the
liunian race. Naliolec0.
ra
MEWS
`y,FovriAGgti.
It ,
el
For Trouirle9''
due to Acid.
iranoeSTIDN •+�`.
ACID STOMACH
1- ,frAirrOUR$
i,.HEADACHE.
ames.HAusrA
About two hours after eating many
,people suffer from sour stomachs.
They call it indigestion. It means
alai the stdmacb nerves have been
'overastimuiated. There is excess
`acid. The way to correct' It is With
au alkali, which neutralizes ;many
times its, vcilume in acid,
The right way is Phillips' Mills of
Ivlasneela- ;just a tasteless dose in
Water. It is pleasant, efficient and
liarmiess, It Into remained the eland-
Wirs
•
and with physicians in the 50' years
since Its invention,
It is the quiclt ,method. Results
00nne almost instantly. It is,the ap-
proved method, Yon will 'Sllavoi'r use
another when you know,
The Lobster
The 'lobster is one of the mailed
warriors of. the sea; land . having a
segmented body and jointed legs, ltd
belongs of the Crustacea, the higher.'
division 'o1 the Arthropoda (animal
with jointed limbs). He is a relative
Of the, eraylish, is a saltwater animal
and; is foundabundantly along the
North Atlantic coast. 'He belongs to
the sixth division of animal life,=whicl
contains more than four-fifths of the
whole of the living 'beings ,on ` our
globe, end ;which includes insect -life,'
wasps, bees, and ants;
-leis body consists of a,head,'th'orax,l
and a clearly '
abdomen. His
color is very dark green or nearly
black all over his color is not red
until he is boiled, One of his great
claws is always a good deal larger and
stouter than the other. The 'larger
clawis a
weapon e,pon with which he fights,
while the smaller one is an anchor,
with which he clingsto the weeds on
the reeks at the bottom of the sea.
One of the largest krorn specimens
h'ls weighed more than twenty-three
pounds,
When the lObsthr swims, lie
stretches his body. out, and then.
doubles it suddeply up. • As he does
so, the plates of the tail spreadout
and form a kind of: very broad and
powerful oar, which strikes the water
withsuch force as bo drive the animal
swiftly backwards. With, a• single
stroke of his tail a lobster" can dart
to a distance of forty or fifty feet, and
that so quickly that even the swiftest
fishes could' scarcely overtake him.
When the Iobster:swims forward, he'
uses five pairs of odd little organs
underneath /the tail, which we call
"swimmerets." They "'spring from
either side of the soft hinges by which
the.joints -of the tail -are fastened to;
gather, and -each consists of .two thin
Oval plates ringed with long hairs.
Each swimmeret. really consists of two
that paddles, and by waving them to
and fro the lobster managesto travel
along with some little speed. ,
The mother -lobster glues her eggs to
the hairs with which the swimmerets
are fringed, where, they , remain until
they are hatched. At first their young
hold to the swimmerets by threads;
later they cling by 'means of pinces,
and .after some days become indepen-
dent.
The lobsters and crabs struggle
hard for the livelihood. They spare
scarcely any ceature 'of the sea of
moderate size, whether dead or living.
They care but little for lost limbs,
for these will grow again; and when
wounded, so that they may net bleed
to death, they throw off the shattered
limb' tit the next joint, where a new.
skin quickly forms.
One lobster will produce 20,000
eggs, which she will earry patiently
for six months under her abdomen,
festered together by gluey threads.
Even after she has broken open the
eggs by the movement of her tail, and
releasedthe baby lobsters, she will.
carrythem till their Coat is hard and
firm, and only then will she leave them
to wander 'alone. The crab and the
prawn, on the contrary, turn their lit-
tle ones out at one8 to swim as scarce-
ly visible specks in the open sea, where
they feed and grow till their strange
changes of shape are worked out.
All the crustacea eat dead animal
food; consequently they are 1 seful in
keeping water free from dead ma-
terial. In order to increase the num-
ber by artificial propagatieu, some
States have gassed laws forbidding
the catching of immature lobsters, and
lobsters with eggs,
Be sure te-gst•tlie genuine Phillips
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi
Mans fee' 50 yearte in coerectng, 0.
eels acids. Each bottle contains fel
directions—any drugstore, •
SUMMER COMPLAINTS
KILL LITTLE ONES
At the first 'sign of illness during
the bot weather give the little ones
Baby's Own Tablets or In a few hours
he may be beyond aid. These Tablets
Will. prevent summer complaints
given occasionally to the well ohifd,
and will promptly relieve these troub-
les if they come em suddenly. Baby's
Own Tablets should always be kept
in every home where there .ere
young children. There Is no other
medieine as good and the mother has
the; guarantee that they are absolute
ly safe, They' are sold by all drug-
gists or will be mailed on receipt of
price, 25o per brae by The Dr. Wil -
dams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
•
Farms and Firins
Philadelphia Ledger: There. Is -a
wealth of elgaiilcanee in Mr. Hyde's
definition of agriculture as "a far-
thing industry chraacterized by small
units." in his public addresses Mr.
Hoover has frequently pointed out the
,undesirability, if it were possible, of
eliminating the one -family farms, even
though he fully recognzes the. rapid
progress of "power -farming" and
"mass production" in, agriculture.
"You cannot inerge 0,000,000 farms,"
says Mr. Hyde.' But today nearly 2,-
000,000 cotton farmers' "Compete for
the 'markets of the United States and
the world," corn i?produceti 0n .near-
ly 0,000,000' farms "and all of these
farms . ser in competition •with each
other' No manufacturing industry
could flourish under such conditions.
hlr.
Hyde invited his hearers to fin-
agine the manufacture of motor
vebicles by 2,000,000 small, indepentl-
ant firms, with the resultant high
costs, price -cutting' and financial dis-
tress.
Communism in Toronto
Toronto Globe (I,ib.),: Persistence
of the Toronto Communists in defying
tine police can have but one ultimate
result, and it will not be the winning
of a mar'tyr's crown by those who
preach revolution, except in the
Opinion of the Communists them.
selves. The British system of gov-
ernment is founded on observance of
law, and order',. by ,Choice of the Bei•
tish people who have delegated to the
courts and the police the task of pre-
serving it. Proponents of the Soviet
system ting Snethods'mtish expect a
' hard road, 'growing harder until they
- yea the, futility 0ftrying id tweet the
Y• .rest form et government yet devised.
Keep Minard's Liniment always handy
Now site is
fl:; !longer
aeani
r RE you worried about
your daughter ? Xs
she growing too fast for
her strength ? Is she pale,
thin? anaemic?
You can build tip her
blood supply with Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills.
They lcontaiii the vitals
life-giving nourishment
which anaemic b 1 o o 4
cries out for.
"I do not think,,that Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills have an
equal for building up the
system" writes , Mrs. Albert
Powers of Picton, Ont. 'II
gave thein to niy eldest girl
when she was anaemic, pale
and thin and had no appetite.
They `restored her to health
and later when my • youngest
daughter was run-downafter
diphtheria, I, again brought
thein into use. My daughter
was thin, pale and extremely
nervous but the pills soon set
her right." •
Start your daughteron
this proven treatment now.
Buy Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
at your druggist's or any
dealer in medicine or by
mail, 50 cents; postpaid, from
The Dr Williams Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Sas
IN °,r;IP
A HOUSEHOLD NAME
IN 08 COUNTRIES"
Extremists Both
"It Is the sorry fate of every hu-
man institution to be finally corrupt-
ed by amnions conspiracy between
its critics and its friends," says Rein-
hold Niebuhr.
Critics are apt to see only the
weaknesses of an institution, and its
friends are always blind to its short-
comings and fallings. The - great
temptation of the critics .18 to sur-
render to a whole -loaf -or -none philo.
soppy,where as that of the loyalist
to to surrender to a my -country -right
or -wrong -love -is -blind philosophy. The
loyalist loathes the critics who con-
demns the institution that holds the
loyalit's devotion. On the otber
hand, : the critics has only contempt
for the loyalist who blindly clings to
the institution that bas aroused the
critic's doubt.
The critic who has no capacity for
loyalty and t're loyalist who has no ca-
pacity for criticism re poles apart,
yet they unconsciously join 111 a dans
germs partnership. - It Is difficult
to say which moat menaces the in-
etitution. Perhaps one is as bad
an influence as the other,
Consider the community and its
boosters and knockers. It needs
both, and is fortunate if its citizens
ere loyally critical. Tbose who find
nothing wrong or lacking in their
city or town will never be the in-
spiration for progress. The critic
may show the way to Improvement,
but lacking a sense of loyalty, he in,
variably deserts the community in-
stead of remaining to help make it bet-
ter.—Port Arthur. News -Chronicle,
The Lesson of the Vestris
Ottawa Journal (Ind. Con.) : Let us
hope thpt the lesson of the'"Vestris"
will be learned, despite the conplacenf
excuse • of over -zealous 'patriots, and
that hereafter ships, particularly pas
senger ships, on the British register
will in fact as well as in appearance
be subject to British regulations. As
Britishers we have a faith in , our-
selves and in administration of British
laws that we have not in foreigners or
foreign law -adniinistration, and 3t is
small comfort that British ships sail-
ing between. United States forts and
other foreign poets are inspected sole-
ly_by American officials and agents,
The blame for the overloading of the
Vetris may belong directly to inspec-
tors and agents in the port of New
York but back of everything are the
British register and British honor,
Foy the Children's Sake -
1dnmonton Journal (Ind, Con.): (In
furtherance of .its campaign for the
Pasteurization , of milk, the Journal
quotes extensively, from an .editor'iel
in The Montreal Star, commenting on
the report of the city bacteriologist.)
This expert, whose business it is to
count the bacteria in Montreal's milk
supply, finds that there are.more dis-
ease germs in "special" or "certified"
milk than in pasteurized. Montreal
had a bad typhoid'epidemic just a few
years ago which was traced to the
milk supply. The demand for pas-
teurized Intik grew out of this out-
break. .Islow, with the neither -of
dairies allowed to sell "raw" milk 10 -
creasing,. Montreal notes a coreespono-
ing' increase in infant mortality. In
other words, little children are being
sacrificed foto meet the wishes of num-
emus interests."
Why Stand
When One Can Sit?
English sportsmen are to be thank-
ed fee the introduction of the, port-
able "Wallcinpstick seat" which is
gaining in popularity each year .and,
is vapidly becoming an intornacioiial
sport,sraeeessory. Until put In use,as
a ,seat this, tivopurpose article re-
sembles a sturdy walking stick With
Tubber , tip and an .easily held double
locpod handle, When this stick is
to be converted into `'a seat, while' its
owner watches a golf or tennis tourna-
ment, the rubber hip is first enserew-
o]
1 and changes Aloes with 11 (lisle
headee spike, which, up to this- time,'
has been, concealed inside the upper
end of the cane from sinking too -far
important item as it keeps the spiked
end of the cane frcin sinking too far
into the grpund. The double loop-
ed handle is then opened and forms
.a slightly etnve(1 seat, which is sur
Prisingly comfortable, The anglo_at.
which the came is ' thrust into the
ground can be adjusted' to individual
needs and 'manner of sitting.
Women have been quick to appreei-
ate the convenience of these walking.
stick seats, and some have already
been ordered with'th leather cover-
ed seat portion in a; Color to conform
with other sports equipment. The
more expensive of this type of port-
able seats have a strip of leather
which opens and closes with the icon
handles, but the model most in vogue
depends •entirely for its seat upon its
rigid'framework of the widely spread
handles. Tha rubber tip'end its fee-
rule, when the seat is in u1e, are
screwed in, position to act as a con-
venient ,hand
onvenient,hand rest and .brace, •When
the interest of the game makes the
change.of position desirable, it is only
necessary to pull up the horizontally.
spread -halves of'this curious walking
stick until they are parallel verti-
cally, and their utility as seat has
temporarily ceased.
Another masculine accessory which
1s just now enjoying renewed popu-
larity'is the walking stick in which
is concealed an umbrella. So quick-
ly is the adiustment made in case of
a sudden shower that the practicabil-
ity of such a two -purpose article can
hardly be overestimated. The styles
of handle conform to the favorite
club or crook designs, equally suited
to both canes and umbrellas. The
wooden' case that serves both as walk-
ing stick • and umbrella cover, teles-
copes to such small- dimensions that
when collapsed it easily fits in any
pocket.
These two accessories, the portable
seat and t11e combination cane and
umbrella are increasingly to be found
in the wardrobe of the up-to-date man,
who is at all interested in spirts.
When traveling, the two pieces are
easily strapped together on a suit
case or carried in a golf bag.
izX 0
w,
FOR THM HAIR
Ask Your Barber—He Knows
Sow Versus Golf Club
The Red Rose Tea guarantee xneans what it says. If
not satisfied return the unused part in the package and
the grocer will refund your money, �. efik
RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE iI3 O31:trea gorget
T .• Ido ; emple
Hides Goddess
Ten . Centuries
Skeptics Declare Golden Idol
of Mercy is Only Wood
Like ' Duplicate Copied
1,000 Years Ago
• STRANGE LEGEND
Tokio Western skepticism is
penetrating the 'Japanese mind and
causing discussion about the authen-
ticity of the reports regarding the
statue of tire 'Goddess Iiwannon, 111
Asakuss; Temple, Tokio. For mere
than t'en.eenturies the statue has not
been seen.
The image, one foot and eight inches
tall, has always been thought to. be
made of gold. No one has seen the
linage far centuries, but : a wooden
ICwannon carved a lk
by' St. J ahu, a
Buddhist. priest of the tenth „Century,
as a copy, 'has induced the:author-
ities of the temple to believe that: the
original image is also of wood. Since
the authorities of the temple adhere
to the itme-honored custom of thir-
teen centuries, an inspection of the
image of ICwannon has been impos-
sible.
Priest Disregarded Custom
St, Tiltaltu is said to have been the
only one to disregard the tradition,
and fie was able to do so because of
the reconstruction of the temple. It
was at that time, legend says, that
the priest carved .his replica of the
original Goddess of Mercy.
The 'third Shogun, Tokugawa Iye-
mitsu, is said to have seen and ad-
mired it, but this is denied by the
authorities of the temple.
At the time of the Meiji restoration,
tylion Buddhist temples euffereti con-
slderable persecution at the hands of
the government, high officials of the
government are said to have inspect-
ed the temple, but the present care-
taker says that the image was not ex-
hibited. The Iiwannon statue was
wrapped in a Buddhist robe and in
cased in a triple or quadruple box.
The government opened the first box,
and then the next, but when they
opened the last box they were so
frightener` that they did not remove
the robe,
Present Temple Built in 1848
The present temple, which is now
being reconstructed, was built by the
third Tokugawa Shogun in 1843,
Since that thne the temple building
has undergone repairs on a large
scale every seventy years. The edi-
fice, 103 feet square, is regarded as
the representative temple in the
IC eanto district of Tokio.
The Asakusa tempi0 is known as
the most popularly patronized institu-
tion in the wintry, but the Fudo Tem-
ple at Narita, in China Prefechhre, has
the greatest income, more than 30,-
000 yen a year while that of the
Asakusa Iiwannon Temple is estimat-
ed at 170,000 yen.
William Thomson, -well-known west-
ern golf professional, and Chief Sit-
ting Eagle, of the Stonies, differed
as to which could beat the other at
golf, each armed with Iris chosen
weapon. Sitting Eagle took his
trusty bow and arrow; Thomson re-
lied on his golf clubs. At the end
of a nine -hole try out the Chief was
four up on the pro. His target was
of course larger than Thomson's ob-
jective and he could and did "hole
out" from long range. The contest
was staged over one-half of the
ehanipionship course where the com-
petition for the Prince of Wales
Trophy will be staged in the "Cana-
dian Golfer" tour of Canada, starting
Irons Toronto August 12,
Earthquake in New Zealand
Auckland Weekly News: Though it
Is perfectly true New Zealand is of-
ten given abroad, notably In Austra-
lia, a wholly undeserved reputation
for being earthquake-ridden—the
whole country being included when,
as a rule, the shocks aro purelylocal
in character ---It can not be denied
that, especially In .certain well-defined
regions, the liability to experience
them is always.in the background...
Calm 'consideration shows thatthe
risk to lifeeliurb and property over a
span of years is not very serious in
New Zealand, What toll of life have
earthquakes taken in the last- ten
Years ccmparecl' with the victims of
road and street accidents? ' Flow
great has been the material loss bid--
aimed
ad-aimed aginst the enormous annual fire
wastage in the Dominion? .Consid-
ered in this W±y, the earthquake disk
to till New Zealander is exceedingly
small, the loss of property is 111005-
siderable,
LIFE'S ROAD
I expect eo peso through this life
but once. If there 10 any itindness or
any good tiring I can do to my fellow -
beings, let me do it now. I shall
this way but once.—Quaker Saying,
DISCONTENT .
There are two hinds of discontent
in this world the discontent that
works and the discontent that wrings
its hands, The first gets what • it
wants, and the second loses',what it
has. There's, no cure for the first but
success; there's no cure at all for the
second,—G. Graham,
Minard's Liniment far Neur7lsla,
THE PAST
It is because so much of the past
still exists in our Iives that it is so
dear to us. These are compensations
for the loss'ot youth and fresh im-
pressions; and one learns little by
little that a thing is not over because
it is not happening with noise and
shape or outward sign; its roots are
i nour hearts; and every now and
thea they send forth a shot which
blossoms and bears fruits still.—
Anne Ritchie.'
HELPERS
The rules demands no impossibilt
ties; but it does' demand that every
sphere, however humble, shall be filled
with divine endeavors. You have not
done what. you could if you have not
made it the problem of, whey day:
How many burdens can I- make light-
er? How much heart sunshine can I
Shod about mil? HOW 120011 can Lin.
crease .the tum of Inman blessing in
the eirole where my lined have fallen?
=Eduuncl
11.' Sears.
We know what we are, but not
what we may be.-Shaltespeare (Ham-
let), '
ti,lili�l it ,ILII
4"0UIIIlllittiti l?lilI I
�,illll��
38
'9 ow well you look!
"1 ata toritfnp !lath gratin. to emprcoe 0171
sistcro gratitude for the 000111 heed 0110300 .1
havemaintained through OW daiW 4000 0J
Magellan. Only last week r a 111011 nice me (toho.
sato inn.: a few (110flt110 ago tuhc1 1 ton 011571010
With rhoamalistn)5 - Ris f>;st r0mark tots holo
well I looked. I replied, Yes, 1 have only
Rrttachec Salts to thank.' 7io said he was
feeling ' off colour' mud would start Ilio Rn s-
chair ho141 ttezt' day, 1 -always recommend -
Masao' Salts." JAS. P, Wooten%
Original Idler on filo for Inspection,
tracheo Selts.'fs ebbninnble nt ding and
dopnthoont stnroe In camas at Ito. a bottle:
A bottle conte enough to or 4. or u
mhealth health for h0.11-weec0nt a day..
ISSUE No. 34—'29
Classified Advertiseiaents
"InORSI5- RADISHWANTED, 8e•7elt
lb, Tops cut off, At once, 2, B.
Gordon, 400 Mary. St., Hamilton, Ont..
GENTS WANTED TO Sr1Lt. FRUIT,
Trees, Shade 7trees, Sl rubs Roses;
hlo0Ring., and ai pomltloto line of Nnreery.
Stoclt Tor old established dem, Outfit
uhmisthedp• Cash columlSOIOn 715111 every
wQnteek.ario. 0006 teritory still open Willatoday, Maple Grove Nurseries, Winona.
"John, you have been drinking my
brandy." _'I have not, sir," ;'Are you
quite sure?" "Quite sure. I could not
get the cork out."
Mlnard's Liniment foraching joints
There's many a bad sermon Preach-
ed from a good text.
GIRLS WANTED
HAIRDRESSING AND ' 0i3AUTY
CULTURE
is the most remunerative pros-OOsion
today.
WE 0PPE$ - TBE. atom IIP -TO -
DATE COERSE HN CANADA.
Hundreds or satisfied graduates.
Write, for free booklet. -
Toronto Hairdressing Academy
137 Avenue 3Ld., Toronto, Dept. W
RAISE CHINCHILLA RABBITS
turnsh 0210+,1 penl1,10. i t your ply roduction
All v=1.1e01301 tent free. write: —
ENTERPR1S1f1G SAtaICD.
23 ENVY HNC Avg., •roagny° 3
Shavis Stick
Coutaine the medicinal proportion of
Guticura. Freely latleerh,g and cannon.,
It p,see akin health and protects rho
newly ahnvcn eurfacefrom infeetian.
251. Everywhere
Aw AR.A1. A AA w
The Cam,
M er's First A l
Minard's is good for bunks,
bruises, sprains, wounds, end
insect bites.
Thelloneynyraterle
You Must Do Your Bit (:
1 in the war against the fly, carrier
of germs and breeder of disease.
his proVen that AEROXON is one
of the most convenient and most
'efficient means of combating this
fly evil, It it convenient, because
of the puuh•pin. 11 is hygienics
flies never get away when once
taught. Each spiral gives three
weeks' perfect service.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
Seed at ding, erocay and herdamre alerts
La Cie C. 0. Genesi & Fi1s, Gmitee
111100111000. ee6
301E 000100
nNEWTON to HILL
e Front -St. E..- Toronto
SeetesSeaeSisitiii
5,
"I think Lydia E. Pinkbam s
Vegetable Cotnpo,od is wonderful
I have had six children of which tour
ate living and my youngest is a boa•
nie baby boy now eight months old
who weighs 23 poundal have taken
your -medicine before each of them
was born and have certainly te,
ceived great benefit from it, I urge
. my friends to take it as I am sure.
they will receive the same help 1 did."
—Mas,: Milton McMullen, Vanessa,
Ontario.