The Clinton News Record, 1929-10-03, Page 2Clinton
News -Record
CLINTON,- ONTARIO
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Commualcatlons• intended for pub•
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or?tithe wetter
•
0. 5, Hall, M. It. CLAI-1,
Proprietor.' Fel ger.
M.D
c
IllicTAGGART
BANKER.
gegerai Banking'tfustnese transact.
ed. Notes Discounted. Drains Issued.
Interest Arowed op llrpoetts, Sale
Notee Purchased.
H. T. RANCE
Notary Public, Conveyancer.
Financial, heal P'state and Fire' In.
(menace Agent. Representing' L4• hire
Insurance Con,panle,,
Division Court' Office, Clinton.
W. BRYDONE
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc,
Office:
SLOAN BLOCK CLINTON
DR. J. 'C. GANDIER
Office tiyurs:-1,30 to 3.30 p.m„ 6.30
to 8.00 pan., Sundays, 18.30 to 1,80 p.m,
Other livers ey appolnuuent July.
Office and Resldonce - Victorle St,
DR.- FRED G. THOMPSON
Office and Residence:
Ontario Street - C I inton, 'Ont.
One door west ot Angtleau Church
Phone. 17(1
Eyes e''xannneo ane glasses dtted
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
Office and Residence:
Huroh Street - Clinton, -Ont
Phone'39
,(leortuerly occupied uy the late Or.
U. W. T emeseor'
Eye,: examined and glasses fitted
DR. H. A. MCINTYRE
DEN'rtk r
Office hours; 9 to 12 A 31, and 1 to
6 P.M., exeept Tuesdays and Wodees•
days, Office over Canadian National
Express, Clinton, Ont.
Phone 21.
DR, F, A. AXON
DENTIST
Clinton, Ont.
Graduate of 0.0.0,5. Chicago, and
il,C.D.S,, Toronto. e
Crown and Plate Werk a Speolatty
D. H. McINNES
CHIROPRACTOR
Electro Therapist
Masseur
,O1Uaet Huron St. (Few doors west of
Royal Bank).
flours -Tues„ Thurs. and Sat„ all day.
Other hours by appointment.
}Leman Once -Mon„ Wed. and Fri.
fo'enobns.
Seaforth Office -Mon., Wed. and Fri.
afternoons.
PHONE 207
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneet for the County
of 'term,.
Correspoadeuce promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be made
for Sates Date at the Netts -Record,
Clinton, or by calling Phone 208,
Cbarges 'Moderate and Satisfaction
Guaranteed,
i B. R. HIGGINS
t 1 ClInto.s, Ont,
General b'Lre and Life insurance Agent
fair Hartford Windatrnl'tn, ,Live Stock,
Automobile and Sickness and Accident
Insurance. Huron and Erle and Cana
;da Trust Bonds,.'AtUolntments made
to meet parties at Brucefield, Varna
and Bayfield. 'Phone 87,
TIME TABLE
Trains will arrive at and depart from
• Clinton as follows:
Buffalo and Goderich Div.
Going Past, depart 6.49 a.tn,
„ tr 2.50 p.m.
Going West, at. 11.50 a.m.
• " " at. 6,08 dp. 6.43 p.ni.
.." " .ate 10,04 pan,
• London, Huron a Bruce Div.
Going South; ar, 7.40 dp. 7.40 a.m.
<c. ,t' " 4.08 p.m.
,Going North, depart 6.42 p.m.
1 <' " ar. 11.40 •dp. 11.53 'aan.
Thils usaquesti ,.tip% a l?
is the fa est "green, fez
RtE] N)
13APAN
'Faces i fr at the gardens' 656
Age raves
Middle.� �
''t0 Youth
h
t� Gii�,Ce
A SearchingAddress by 'Sir
;
Frederick Sykes Delivered
Chancellor to the Stud-
ents of- Bombay
University,
"Ther Governor of Bombay gave
sumo valuable advice to the new
graduaes of the Bonbay University.
In his first~ Couvotation Address as
Chancellor of the University.
"'When you go forth from this feni
varsity,' he said, to face the impar'
tial test of the world, think and go on,
thinking of yourselves' as perpetually
on probation. Education is a matter
between a man and'himselt The out-
ward trappings of education, its insti-
tutes. and its carriula, are all relative-
ly obstructions, and the only' thing
which counts Is what. the individual
student has been able, to make' of him-
self and of the opportunities at itis
disposal'," -Times of India.
Wisdom of Middle Age
"Middle, age brings with .it a certain
belated kind of wisdom, for which it
can claim no kind ot credit. 1t is a
wisdom, such as it is, which comes by
the simple passage ot years. ,For it
is then that, in most cases, a man
ceasee.to "look exclusively forward,
and begins to look backward as well.
And looking back, he can see '(not in-
frequently, with 'bitter regret) what
he might have done, but has not.
"He can see in what directions he
might have employed his tittle and his
energies better. And ire can see
(though possibly this is an illusion.
born of vanity) what lee would do now
if he had.those past years to live over
again. And although -I hold strongly
that the least justifiable of all things
is for age to impose its own sobrietles
ort youth though. I feel that 'as •a
man grows older, he loses, in many
ways, far more titan he Baine -yet 'I
also feel that the elders will not be
wholly fulfilling their duty unless they
pass , on occasionally some of the
things that have strucic them In that
retrospective vision.
"The backward-tookiug vision - to
the man of fifty, let Ine say, glancing
back at what he, was in his twenties-
these dividing lines between One
period and another tend to fade away.
To the young mall "lust emerging
from College, Ills entrance upon what
we call 'the -World,' seems to mark a
definite crisis. The first chapter of
his life has been closed; another is
opening before him. The transition
Is,, in his view, epochenalting and Mo-
mentous.
"But as we grow older life is seen
as a continent. Viewed through the
ml st
o years ea s the a landmarks y s disap-
pear.
n
pear. We, realize -and the younger
among you will also realize, when a
few more years have passed -that
what seemed so definite a breakwas
really no break at all. We see that
on either .side of that apparent gulf
was the same personality, that the so-
called 'change' did not change that,
and that what we are to -day is the
living product of a progress of grad-
ual shaping, which stretches back un-
broken to our earliest years.
"And it Is because of this contfnttity-
of personality that we realize that it
is impossible to place one's finger on
a particular date, and Say, '.Here end.
ed my education: Whether we are
conscious of it or not, our education
is always going on. We are making
ourselves the whole time, and it
makes little difference that, in such
and such a year, we left an official
educational institution and entered
upon the larger School of Life,
"Ono Of the most remarkable things
in life Is the enormous force ot habit;
and almost equally remarkable is the
degree to which -Lf we have strength
and po1'sietenoe enough -a habit can
b0 cultivated. A man can :go far to
nlalte his own nature: It is merely a
Matter of having a clear idea of, what
he wants to do, and sticking La it.
"And thio is just where the man of
fifty or sixty, looking back upon life,
sees his own, and almost everybody
else's mistake. He says to' himself:
'If I had.oilly practised this or that
4uality ow activity, deliberately, for a
short time every day, what a vast d1f-
ferenoe It would have made!' Tore le
a span of twenty or thirty years, those
short periods mount up and you will
realize how much it is possible to do;:
if you only take hold of time and turn
it t0 your own purposes, 'instead of
letting it' slip by you unused.
"I know that this is hard advice.
When a man is young, and looking
forward, he does not see' how valu-
able are the minutes and hours. It
is only later, when he looks back, ho
Seas how much he has thrown away.
"There conies a tine when: the kind
of qualities, which (let me say) en
able a man to pass exeminatlons yua
easefully, cease to be of prince value,
They are superseded by that group of
qualities which, whoa we meet and
talk with a man, and particularly
when we have to deal with hint over
work, makeus feel that here le a per-
son whose judgment is to be respect
ed.
"Chief' among three qualities is. xis:
interestedltess of outlook; but almost
asessential, perhaps' equally. essential,
4s ft that a sawn ehoulcl da 11Ls;tltiniciug
for himself. ,He ehobld be capable oC
forming his ,Own conclusion on. the
basis of arguments which he himself
fleas thought out and 'approved. 1•e'
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
t Fire Insurance Company,
1 Ht id Office, Seaforth, Ontt'
? DIRIDCTORY1
President, James silvans,' Beechwood
Nice!, James Connolly, Goderich; Seo..
't'reasurer, D. 11', MoOregor, Seaforth
treotors: George McOartney, Seaforth
times Shouidiee; Walton' Murray Gib
'son, Bruceaeld; Wm, L{lag, Seaforth
Robert Ferrle liarlook: John Bennewety
odhagen1 Jas. 000011)', Goderich,
Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J, W,
i'eo GOderleh: Ed, Hinohley, Seaforth;
a. el. Murray; ligmondville; R. Q. Jar
fnnth, Brodhagen.
L Any money to bepaid In may be paid
iso Moorish Clothing Co, Clinton, or e
atvin Cutrs lrOeerY,(:nderich.
Partler. desiring• to effect lusurance or
;transact ether business will be promptly
•e.ttended to on application to ant of the
;aboee °Marrs addresse. to +liar, realise.
•;4100 -peat oface, Losses; Inspected 43, the
'Director who lives nearelt the teems,
should be an originator, not an echo.
Nothing .is more unsatisfactory to
deal- with than a mind excluS t r•et Y
furnished with second-hand. materiate.
And perhaps I may . add, ,nothing is
more uninteresting:
Meaning . of Success,
"Wizen yye ,speak -of success, what
do we nlean?' We tuoan, fa a very
large measure, ,lieu a mea manages
Lo impress himself upon- others Sue -
cess isathing that can very seldom;
bewrested, from au unwilling wo11d.
' "As a 'ride, success has, to, a, great
extent, to be ceneeded, The world
lets this :or that man go. ahead; be-
cause. (quite simply) it trusts him and
admires hie qualities; and the world,
in titose instinctive judgz 1entp, 1s us-
ually exacting and nearly always hon.
est. It may be deceived for a time;
it is 'seldom permanently decelyed;
and when once it has found out .its
mistake, it is• always unsparing,
"Life is one long examination" in
which` successis within the reach of
each individual according t0 the
quality of the effort which, he makes.
Lt is not mappere out with clear roads;
its safe passage needs individual calm -
age, confidence and steadfastness in
pursuit o ftlie goal aimed at.
'Sometimes itmay seem that the
modern world, in the elaborate or-
ganization with -While ft surrounds the
life of each individual, tenth to force
all tato a commou,mould, but this is
only a partial view of its meaning. In
the ever-changing problems which it
presents, in the manifold demands
which it neahee on the character.
there is still the widest scope for am-
bition, for originality, and herein lies
the whole interest and fascination of
the adventure which you are about to
undertake.'
Autumn Recipes
With cooler days, hearty dishes
which have been shunned during the
hot weather come again into favor.
Stuffed, baked potatoes are always
popular and the Variation in season-
ing, given. below, should make them
twee greater favorites-,
• Tomato Stuffed Potatoes
Bake six good-sized potatoes and
when clone cut off Oue end of each and
scoop out tate contents. Mash this, add
one chopped onion, one-half cup of
canned tomatoes, three.fourths tea-
spoon muotard,' one•fom'th teaspoon'
celery salt and salt and pepper to
taste. Mix well and refill the potato
shells. Return them to the oven to
heat thoroughly,
Pork Roll
Cut one whole pork tenderloin
lengthwise and sprinkle with. salt and
pepper, Make a potato dressing, with-
out sage, and spread this over the
meat, Roll asou would ell
y aj ycake,
tie with a string and put into a bak-
hig pun. Add a little boiltisgwater
and bake, basting frequently, until the
meat is tender. A strip or two of
bacon may be laid over the neat be.
fore putting Rein the oven. Remove
tate meat fromathe °vett, slice it es a
jelly roll and 'arrange the slices oh a
trot platter. Make a graoy of the
liquid in the pan and add to it a table-
spoon of tomato catsup with salt mid
pepper to taste.
Veal Heart Loaf
toil a veal heart until tender and
put it through a Ineat chopper. Add
half as much bread crumbs as there
is of the heart and season liberally
with salt, popper, sage and red pep•
per with a dash of nutmeg if you like
that condiment. Moisten with ' the
liquor in which the heart was cooked
and put the mixture into a square pan
which has been well buttered. Dust
the top of the loaf with bt•eat lamin,
dot with' butter and bake for thirty
minutes in a moderate oven. Serve
hot or cold, cut in thin slices,-
Cheese Ringers
These are excellent to serve with
the salad course: Blend otte•fourth
pound soft American cheese with otic
tablespoon tomato catsup, add one
tablespoon butter, a clash of cayenne
!and a little salt. Spread over very
t1ltt slices of bread, cut each shoe in
stripe one inch wide and toast quiclt
ly in a hot oven. Serve at once:
Wheeler House Eggs • e
'Saute one pound of fresh mush-
rooms until tender -a can of,prepai'ed
mushrooms Mar be substituted -sea-
son with salt andpepper and a, few
• drops of onion juice, cool and, {tat`
thropgh a coarse sieve, Scramble one.
dozen eggs and remove to a hot plat-
ter. Cover with the mushrdoms, Imr-
e-18h with parsley and toast points and
send to the table .while hot. This
Makes a fine Sunday night supper
dish for six people:
Mulled Cider
To two quarts of sweet . cider add'
one and'one•half cups of brown sugar,
one -Wirth teappoon 0(51x, 0110 teaspoon
cloves, ;elle teaspoon: allspice, six inch-
long sticks of cinnamon and a little
nutmeg. - Simmer efor ten minutes,
strain through cheese 'cloth.and re-
heat, ' This is' best Served 'teaming
hot in earthen tnllgs,
Wk,:
YESTERDAYS
Otir yesteldayls tomorrow now in
• • gone,
Alid,still a new. to -morrow -does come
o.i:
We by ao-morroy;• draw, out all. our:
store
Till ,the exttaustad well exity leis no
moro.-Cowley,
TAIN AAE,DRNCLE-
BEGIN RE+( TODAY
Alden Drake- 1'o,'lOo, ty ,t sailer, grown
soft andClubby Ihrougli. a fire or idle
ease: ships •.boned I. he sifter. urootes
as Im1<, unddr the 'command' t 11'e
Stevens,. whose enmity he 11101,14 br <usn
or ti mutual " love fou.'!\! )))) 1111 i,nR•
daughter of the ownet'19hb le a passen-
ger. At Cape Town Captain Ste,cos IN
supersededas captain of the Orontes by:
['mice, whose lawyers have o,Lch tsd0
the vessel during its 22u100, Prolto )s.
forced to trounce Slovens and Limn. Iter-
adoelea:lly Ile saves the es.caplun I11'u
fro' the hands '01' a. rows OC <3 NI
minus In .Cape Town, Tire fight between
the 1)11NCI'S and Drake and -Stevdis Is
tong and furious. but the -Orontes men
are victorious. No,e' Stevens meekly ac,
Cents Di•2118 a3 tnastet•
NO.W GO ON WITII THE STORY
On the day before sailing Drakd
Look 'Mary off to some old friends at
Rondebosch, and told the : !nate he
might permit the men to run ashore
at two, Watches, ee long as all were.
aboard' by ,nigatfall. ' Adams and
Twining, stood by, ,wafting fpr orders
as to the division of the :liberty men,
and Stevens somberly, followed with
his darkling eyes tho,departing figures
of the captain and his passenger. Two
or three, seamen 'loitered nearby, hop.
ing to get,9rst-shore leave, When the
skipper's boat touched the steps, Ste-
vens abruptly- underwent a 'shark
transformation. He raised his fists,
and the grinding of his teeth sounded'
like the grinding' of clear ice on rock:
' "She's mine! Mine by every law of
right and justice! By every human.
and divine right she's mine, by Hea-
ven, and Mine she' 041 be!" gritted
Stevens in a gale of passion, and the
two other mater drew' back atinazed-
at the depth of feeling in the man.
bus paroxysm passed -otter` quickly,.
and he gave orders calmly; but sailors
running forward to get ready for a
"I"
could not forget you, ,Mary,n.
he
said; "and as fol being 'beneath my
notice, you know that : cannot be,
either. You forgot it was notice of
you which first of all drew the down
to the Docke,"`
She, looked sharply at him. There
was something' about his , words and
tone which puzzled her, l And last
right see had thrilled in her very in-
nermost. fibre to the ardor of his pas;
stun. '
"You're not under the weather, are
you?"; she asked,
"I? Good Lord, no! Never felt
better in all my life! Do let uta give,
you seine mo>ie omelette. Do you 'feel
the ship leap? She's out for a record
to Java' Head, .Mary, I'll show, you
what she can do with a aail}ng•C;or-
inthian to drive her. No more omel-
ette? ,Jove! you haven't the, appetite
of a canary,"
When Mary sat its her dock chair
after` breakfast, making's a pretense at
reading, she wondered if this first day
at sea was affair ,example of the many
other days that must pass before,Ja'va
Read was rounded, even • supposing a
record to be made.
"Why, he's no more to use or I to
him than simply captain and passen-
ger!" she angrily told herself. Per-
haps unwittingly she had stumbled
upon the exact situation. Captain
Drake might hold so eigidl3 to the.
religion of duty as to consider her
nothing but a passenger while,his ship
called for his vigilance. She had heard
of such men. if truth were told, she
admired the man who could,sacrifice
all for duty. But Mary waa fetal -
"SHE'S MINE -MINE BY EVERY
shore jaunt carried joyful news of a
chief mate who was hot against the
Old Man.
* s * '0 r
Drake turned and smiled at Mary,
and she started towards him all
.brightness and rosy armth. But his
sr -tile was not. what she expected; it
was the couoteous smile of a captain
t
for his favored passenger. He passed
inside the chartroon; and began to
pore over the chart.
Last night he was
the. perfect
lover!" she breathed, angrily. "I sup-
pose it was wine!"
When Drake finished, his chart work,
he took down a volume of Sailing Di-
rections for the Indian' Ocean and sat
down as if he expected to stay there
for hours. Mary turned away its a
temper.
She went to the breakfast table all
printed and loaded for the face to face
explanation she meant to demand
from Captain Alden Drake.
He came dowr, all smiles and pride.
Her wrath was swept away as a fresh
breeze dissipates smoke. He looked
ruddy and clean; the bruises and stars
of battle were no more than very
masculine embellishments to his hand-
some, strong face.
"I thought you had forgotten me,
or considered me ,bettenth your august
notice,' he challenged hint He touch-
ed her 'hand lightly' and laughed,
LAW OF RIGHT AND JUSTICE!"
nine woman. And what woman,ever
lived who wouldn't feel enraged if
her own man sacrificed her own com-
pany for his duty?
Her lipswere prim and pressed as
site took out her father's letter from
her book and glanced over parts of it
again.
"Mr, Drake offered sneb a price for
the Orontes that I could not refuse,"
Captain Manning wrote. "He must
have plenty of dibs, Mary. He can't
Make a profit on the ship, paying
the
price he did. But according to his
lawyer, profits don't bottle. him. Ap-
parently he was at sea before, and
never quite lost the fever. Oh well,
Wish him luck. I am assured that
none of the officer's I had will lose
in the least, unless they choose to turn
cranky toward Captain Drake." At
the end of the letter, where n sailor.
would put such news, these lines seem-
ed to Mary to be written in dancing
flames:
"13y the way, my girl, I'm not try-
ing to influence yott, but Drake's law-
yer asked my permission for Drake to
court my daugl,tee. If he does, and
you find him spliceable, I, won't put
snarls in the hitch."
Mary gazed out over the rolling sea,
"Oh, I find him spliceable! • I feel
lace splicing him with a inarlinspike
right now!" she breathed.
"Gentlemen Adventurers" ,Still Flourish
HUDSON'S` BAY. CO. OFFICER'S AT OLD FORT GARRY
Gov. of Hudson's* Bay Co. with 'members of Canadian' committee, taken
recently<in'.Winnipeg, near site of old Fort Garry. Leff to Right=James A.
Richardson, George W. Alien, IS.C., chairman, Canadian cominittee, 'arid
Charles V. Sales, governor, whose wife comes' from Napanee, Ont.
CHAPTER, XVI.
A f11,SPulv0 FROM - .7A1017,
Man! currents and counter currents
tatue high yeas off the Cape of Goode
Dope. !tgulliar seas are the most
cave -inspiring of any ..OLtu, when they
rise in their majesty: But the Agul
llas currents were .not more intricate
or perilous than the human cues cur
rents that ebbed and flowed aboard the.
Orontes. Mary had gladly given her
maiden troth to Alden' Drake; on a
never to beforgotten night in the.
flower jeweled rubura of Rondebosch.
The kiss he had pressed upon her
lips still burned. She still shivered
ecstatically when she recalled the
moment coining home when he swept
her into his strong armsand all but
crushed her to his heart. Mary 'vas
no soldier\of fortune ,in Love's cam-
paign, pai gn Drab. was her first love,- She
had !lever known what 'love meant
until she felt as if she were melting
deliciously in.his arms, her bodp and
soul merging into his. But that,first
lesson'' was all •sufficient to her. ' She
was a woman full grown, of full and
warm passions; no longer inoxperienc,
ed, since she was of the kind one les-
son teaches thoroughly, if the teacher
were able to touch the right chord, as
Alden'Drake,had been able'to.
So she was not satisfied with the
-way natters developed after the ship
got to sea. That first (ley had been a
chilly experience to' her, She had.
forced., herself • to patience, knowing
that sailing day was ever an ordeal
to r new, captain, But she had 'erg
pected, had evetei right to expect, that
wher'the day was done, and eve.Iing
found`the ship running free over long,
easy swells, that gave nobody the least
uneasiness, 1101 lovem would lay, elide
his prim dignity and become.agait, the
human being she had surrendered to.
But Alden Talbot Drake,had shown
'an amazing change of front, . She drew
him gently'over to the leeward, into
the soft black shadow of the clew of
the mizzen course, her hands elasped
on his arm, She looked np into his
face shyly. Surely a girl might look
for a kiss, an embrace. Drake patted
her hand, drew her nearer to him, and
she shivered rapturously,
"This is the sort of night which
nnakes even a sailor love the sea," he
srid softly, She waited, nestling
closer. She didn't like . that 'talk of
loving the sea so well, bat she was
net one of the fd''ttward sort. Love of
any sort was promising, But the kiss
came not. Nor the embrace.
"Alden!" she said softly, but with
a little note of displeasure.
"What is it, Mary? Shall 1 get
your eoat?" '
(To be continued.)
Picture Getting
Photographing Lions in Their
Native Wilds and Volcanoes
in Eruption are all in the
Game to the Knights of
the Camera
"My boy is so timid I don't know
what to do 201111 Itim, " said one ot two
ladies who were discussing their child-
ren's careers. •
"Make him a photographer; it's a
nice, quiet job," counselled the other.
The man who, quite innocently, had
overheard their conversation, smiled.
In tate newspaper he was reading ap-
peared•.a photograph of a lion feeding
on a zebra. 'It 'had -been taken at live
yards' mange. ' ,
This photograph was only one of a
number of similar "snaps" that have
appearedpin the ne stater recon 1
newspapers t.
1 l y
All titesop ictures had involved end
less patience -some of them had en-
tailed the tatting of considerable risks.
And the same, of course, is true of the
jangle:films which Have proved such
a in our cinemas during the last
year or two.
Typical of the. Mica run by the
"knights of the camera" is an adveu
tare which befell Mr. A A. Pioneer,
While taking an African big -game film
to the Kilimanjaro district. He had
laid down a zebra bait in the hope of
getting a picture of.lions leading. He
got his picture all right, for the bait
attracted half a dozed lions, and
though. one of them retired with a
piece of meat when the handle of the
camet'a started to turn, the others re -
When the Lava Boiled Over
After a little, however, a lioness no -
'Heed the flash of the camera lens and
walked towards it. A lion followed
her. Mr. Pienaar continued to tarn
tite handle. Then, hearing a move-
ment just behind liim, he swung
rounclas Two gentleman lions and an-
other lioness were. just at my back.
For a moment the situation looked.
ugly; then suddenly all the lions
turned about and disappeared into the
forest.
Though it takes nerve to get uear
enough to lion to souse a really good
photograph, lnatty people would prole
ably pretee any number of Ilene to an
active' volcano. But just a year or
two ago a slumber of photographers
wore given the job of "shooting' a vol-
cano in eruption. They Stood as close
to the edge of the crater as they
staled, anti photographed the lava as
it boiled and bubbled just below thein.
Suddenly itcame up just,1 little too
far, and the. photographers ' were
forced to flee Or their Iteas, But,
even in that enicn'geney,-one• of them
managed to got a elicit of ht., col-
to .fur;s nn }h t rut
.Arlan»e_
like that, of course,
don't happen every slay, but even the
ordinary mitten° of Picture -getting in
a big city has trills of its own, 0f -
ten rt is neceseary, 'in order to get et
really good photograph, to accomplish
a distinctly nervous bit of climbing,
and tltont get the otlnzeia, into action
01011) 11 radion' precarious lierch.
GENIUS
The tlu•ee indispensables of genius
understanding, feeling, and persever-
e
ance; the three things that enrich
genius are colitentnlent of mind, 'tile
cherishing of ,good thoughts, and the
exercise of meinory.-Southey.
-meq,
A Good Rule
Thelaid rile
p } 1 is to do nothing in
the dark, to be a' party to nothing un-
derhand or m,•sterious.-Dickens.
mode in Canada - No Alum
660 -Slip on dress with V-neck and
cape 'back terminating in :a tie at.
front, attached: two-piece skirt- with
yoke back set in circular tunic at
front, dart -fitted sleeves. For Ladies
and misses, 16, 18, 20 years, 34, 36, 40,
42 inches bust. -
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of sueh ,
patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap'
it carefully) for each number, and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by an early mail.
She -"Dancing Is nothing but hug-
ging set to music,"
He -"Yes, tate music bores the too."
Life's Fulness
The shortness of life is bound up
with its fulness, It is to hint who Is
most active, allvays thinking, feeling,
working, caring for people and fore
things that life seems short. Strip a
life empty, and it will seem long
enough. -Phillips Brooks.
1S It YT-l.Yd.N.11r1a. `:: sure•
11'y brings aches and 5)311is that
penetrate to your very bones, there
is always quick relief in Aspirin, .
3t will make short work of that
headache or any litho pain. „just
as 'effectivein the more serious
suffering. from neuralgia, neuritis,
rheumatism or lumbago. No ache.
or pain is ever too deep-seated for
Aspirih tablets to relieve, and they,
affgct the heart. All druggists,
with plow °1? directing 1'00 0501002
uses which many ;ni;o le leave found,
invaluable hi the reli`.0: 9f pains and
aches of many kinds.
_ SPIR1
N
Aspirin Is a Trade111p15 Oegistered IS Opals
ISSUE No. 40—'29`