THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JANUARY 5, 1931 PACE FIVE Women's Interests in the Home --- and the Community RSE ARSET ES Social & Personal | Mr. and Mrs. L. 8. Bigwood, of Oshawa, were the guests yesterday of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Osborne, Darlington. Mr. and Mrs. M, M, Hood, of Toronto, spent Bynday with their son, M, McIntyre Hood. and Mrs, Hood, Simcoe street north, Miss Doris Bennett and Miss Vrances Hoskins, of Oshawa, were the guests of friends in Toronto and Hamilton recently, Mrs. B. J. Hazlewood, King street east, entertained at an even- ing party on Saturday for her son Brenton Hazlowood, a student at Toronto University, The guests numbered about thirty, . Miss Elizabeth Emsley and Miss Eve Emsley, of Oshawa returned home today after spending the i Inmae vacation in New York Ry. Miss Maudie Cornwall who has been visiting for fhe past two weeks in New York City return. ed home on Saturday afternoon, Mrs. M. Wynn and daughter, Miss Marjorie Wynn, of New Ham. bourg, Ontario, have been guests of Dr. and Mrs. R. Belt for the past few days returned to thelr home this morning. Mrs. P. H. Dawson, of Win. nipog, is the guest of Mrs. R. Belt, John street, Miss Lillian Pirie, Drew street, entertained at bridge on Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss Dorothy West, of Toronto, who was her guest over the week-end. Miss Margaret Hurst, Mrs, 8, Stevenson and Mr, M, A, Wareham of Toronto, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. George E, Bull, Simcoe street north. Mr, and Mrs. Wesley C. Harder and daughter Betty of Dotroit, Michigan, have returned home af- ter spending the Christmas and ildren's Colds Checked without When You Feel - A Cold Coming On! Stop it at once by taking ZUTOO TABLETS, Remember that Grippe and Pneumonia begin with a common cold, These tablets stop the pain and fever Immediately, and assist nature in throw. Ing olf the cold. Taken in the begin. ning, the cold is often stopped Arry FOR SALE EVERYWHERE 2 Visit ¢ ur Store AND SEE OUR LINE The Fashion Shopp 84 SIMCOE ST. 8. GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE BEAUTIFUL SILK STOCKINGS $1.50 and $1,95 LAMBLE'S Kayser Chiffon or Service Hose, Silk to top. $1.00 Guaranteed firsts ATKINS' HOSIERY AND LINGERIE SHOP 134 Simcoe St. South If you suffer from biliousness or indigestion there is nothing better than Beecham's BRING HEALTH \ wh New Year's vacution with Mrs, Har. | der's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Sam- | uel Johnston, Simcoe street south, Mrs. Gordon Ratcliffe, Masson streot, is leaving tomorrow for Simcoe, Ontario, where she will re. main for the rest of the week and conduct training classes in ad- vanced work for the Girl Guiders of the town. While in Simcoe Mrs, Rateliffe is to be the guest of Mrs, Tomlinson, Miss Alice Corbett, of Hamilton has been visiting her parents, Mr, and Mrs. B. 1. Corbett, Louisa street during the wintor vacation, Mr, Clarence Corbett, Renfrew, Ontario, has been the guest of his parents, Mr, and Mrs, B, H, Corbett CRUMB CAKE 11 cups flour, 1 cup brown sugar, 4 rounding tablespoons firm butter, crumble these fine and take out 4 cup of the crumbs, To the remainder add 3 cup 'Wour cream or sour milk or buttermilk, into which has beon dissolved 1 teaspoon soda, 4 cup, raisins, 1 teaspoon bak- ing powder, 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon, & teaspoon ground cloves, Mix and put into a pan and sprinkle over batter § cup of crumbs. Bake in moderat: oven, PRINCESS ROYAL, for the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Casgeron (nee Jennie Moodie), of Norwich, Ontario, were in town over the week-end visiting Mrs. Cameron's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Moodie, Ar- thur street, Miss Wilda Knight. who has been visiting her mother, Mrs, W. Knight, Fairbank street, for the winter vacation, has returned to New York where sho {is studying Art and Interior Decorating. WEDDINGS SPARRQW---SHORT An Interesting wedding took place In St. Johu's Presbyterian Church, Port Perry, at 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon when Bertha Mayriene, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Shortt, of Port Perry became the bride of Mr. William Goorge Sparrow, son of Mrs, 8, Sparrow-Noble and the late Mr, J. W. Bparrow of Toronto. The church was beautifully decorated with palms and ferns and vivid daffodils, roses and narcissi, Clus- ters of evergreen lent charm to the ceremony, which was conductod by Rev. Willlam Arrow. The bride wore a travelling dress of green with hat and shoes and purse to match, Later she donned a seal travelling coat. The bridesmaid was Miss Jean Lawson, of Toronto and Orillla, She was smartly at- tired in black and silver. Tha best man was Mr, James Fries. After the ceremony a reception was held at the homo of the bride. Later Mr. and Mrs. Sparrow left on a wedding trip to Bermuda for two weeks and on their return they will reside at 249 Indian Road. What New York | Is Wearing | LESSON FURNISHED WITH EVERY PATTERN The flattoring capelet collar is the very newest feeling for smart afternoon wear. This one is par. ticuraly desirable because of its smart tapering movement toward the centro-front waist that gives & lengthened line to the figure. Note how slendering is the skirt with its unique curved seaming. It 1s black canton crepe with lace trim, so favored this season. Style No. 2889 may he had in sizes 16, 18, years, 36, 38 40 and 42 Inches bust, Pastel flat crepe is modish to wear beneath the fu: ap. SISTER OF KING DIES IN SL | J 4 ) i g (Continued from page 1) sister. King George at once or- dered court mourning for six weeks, The Princess had been in fail- ing health for several years. In 1926 she suffered a gastric hemorr- hage and heart weaknoss. She wus stricken again in 1929, and forced to remain in bed for several weeks. Was Quiet and Retiring Princess Louise, Dowager Duch. ess of Fife, was naturally quiet and rotiring. Bhe participated less than any other member of the royal familly in soclal and state functions, Charity was her chief hobby, but her activities even in this direction were curtailed in re. cent months, partly on account of her age and partly on account of {liness, From the age of ten the Prin. cess Royal developed a keen dis- taste for court routine, Her bro- ther, King George, thon only a midshipman in the British and second in line for the throne, one day drew his sword and "dub- bed" his sister "lier royal shyness," 8 title which she has born among Intimates ever since. She was created a Princess Royal in 1905. A great favorite of Queen Vie. torla, her grandmother, she was | slated from an early age for diplo- | matic marriage with a prominent | continental prince, Louise. how. ever, defiled her grandmother and the entire royal household, declar- Ing she would marry 'for love." Married Duke of Fife She married in July, 1889, to Alexander, sixth Earl of Fife, who was created a duke at the wedding brenkfast. The princess boasted | that slfe had the distinction of ac- quiring two titles in a single day In this manner, The princess at the request of her husband, immediately dis- pensed with her ladies-in-walting, special guards on state occasions and other royal formalities, They resided for years at Duff House, Scotland, the duke's home, until the princess's health broke down Later they travelled consider. ably on the continent and north ern Africa. The Duke died in Egypt in 1912, and from that day the princess spent most of hor time more or less in retirement, only coming Into public notice at the opening of bazaars and charitable affairs, The princess was colonel. In-chief of the 7th (Princess Roy- al's) Dragoon Guards. She was an cnthusfastic motion pleture fan. Her life for the most part was tranquil and uneventful, yet con. tained one big adventure. The ad. venture was when the liner Delhi, carrying the princess and her hus- band to Egypt, was wrecked at night in a furious gale on the rock- near Cape Spartel, ten miles from Tangler, The princess and her hushand reached land with grant difficulty and afterwards had to remain some hours in a torrontial rain on the rocky coast before help arrived. The Duke of Fife died the following year and his death was generally attributed to after- effccts of the exposure he under- went on this occasion, NEW BRUNSWICK Wool crepe, marocain crepe and printed crepe silk dro fascinating fabrics for this model, Size 36 requires 4 yards 39-inch with % yard 39-inch over-all lace. Our Large Fashion Magazine shows how to dregs up to the min. ute at very littlo expense. It con- tains wost attractive Paris designs | for adults and children, embrojd- ery, etc. Be sure to fill in the size of the 13 EDUCATING YOUNG FARMERS Fredericton, N.B,, Jan. $.-~The effort which the New Brunswick Department of Awriculture is mak- ing through education to guide the interests ok young people on the farms of the Province to a realiza- tion of the advantages of farming as a. vocation is meeting™yith grati- fying support, be Since the opentug of the New larger proportion of the students will be those whose interest has been aroused by participation in a calf-raising or poultry-raising pro- Jeet. A feature of the registration Brunswick School of Agriculture in 1923, 150 young mon have attended the annual fall short courses practical agriculture, The attend- ance at the 1930 course just con- cluded was the largest on record, the number of students being 2b. The membership of young people's live-stock and poultry clubs provi- des an annually increasing propor- tion of the students of this school. This year half of those enrolled bad been club members. that as the number of ex-club men. bers of teen-age increases an even this year was the growing propor- tion of French-spealing young men, Pubie: support of the policy of spreading agricultural knowledge among the young people of the Pro- vince is evinced by the contribu- tions toward assisting students to attend the school and the prizes donated by various agricultural so- cleties, co-operative associations, service clubs, financial and business firms and private citizens. A fea- ture of the closing exercises was an ister of Agriculture, Hon, Lewis Smith, in which he stressed the ad- vantage whieh farm boys in the residence-school such ag this within & few hours' journey of thelr homes, He urged them to continue the stu- dy and practice of agriculture and to tell other men in their home communities of the character of the lessons and the demonstrations taught and performed at the schoo) MIXED FARMING IS es New Farm Policy | For Alberta | Edmonton, Alta., Jan. 3.--Much | has been said in recent years about | [the advisability of the farmers in | the Canadian West going in for mixed farming, and a considerable number have done so to a certain | e<tent, but it has not become gener {41 on the prairies, The importance [of mixed farming was stressed by the Minister of Agriculture for Al berta, Hon. George Hoadley, in a speech at Vegreville, recently, Mr. Hoadley expressed the beller that the salvation of agriculture in the West depended upon mixed farming. |the Department of Agriculture is | doing in zoning the province as to its agricultural possibilities, That | 18, certain distrets gre being set a. | #lde as containing land suitable to vheat-growing and in which the cultivation of wheat is recommend- | 1 by the Department, while other tricts are being set aside us pare eularly suited to mixed fagming nd so recommended. r The Minister of Agriculture ~laimed that one reason for the | "resent depression in the West is {that high pressure salesmanship 1as placed on the farms a good deal 'f machinery that the farmers have not required, and now the farmers |nrre being pressed for payment of [the debts whieh they contracted when thoy bought the machinery, POLICE FINDING ~~ RADIO USEFUL B.C. Provincial Police Use It Extensively In Hunting Criminals " Vietoria, B. C., Jan, 3.---Getting sur man by radio is the new meth. nd used effectively an the British Columbia coast by the provincial police. plete and successful short-wave wireless chains on the continent, the British Columbia police radio system has handled 3600 messages, | containing 180,000 words, at operation. Many smart are credited to the system, which keeps the headquarters in Victoria in touch with its far-flung posts from the Yukon to the internation- al boundary, The police sets of fifty walls pow- or, operate on wave lengths of 40, 46, 62 and 86 metres, and have a | range of 60 to 700 miles by daj- light. Test cases could maintain | contact with similarly equipped air. | craft operating over any part of British Columbia, through one of | the stations operated at Victoria, | Vancouver, Prince Rupert, Prince | George, Kamloops, Nelson and also | the police patrol vessel operating | out of Prince Rupert. Arrangements are now being in | It is expected | address to the students by the Min- | Province today possess in having a | HOPE OF PRAIRIES | Minister of Agriculture Urg-| navy | print classifications, so that the out- wide posts of the service may obtain fnstant recognition from the crim- inal investigation departments files here of avy « ints they photograph |at the seene of a crime, | SIWHILL WASTE | made for the transmission of £4 NOW BEING USED | Material Formerly Burned | Now Valuable For | Chemical Products Priceless Book Over 250 Year Old Has Been Found _ Montreal.--Locked in a strong box inside the strongest and safest of all archives vaults in the Court House volume™ bound in is a quarto-size leerhide thongs that kept it tightly closed, It is the first register of the parish of Lachine, a veritabe*news- paper that tells the story of the fort | and settlement between 1676 and 1707, | written, in the main, by a parish] | priest whose flair for detail almost | were buried in the cemetery or this | | journalistic has made his record uni- | church the body of the deceased Jean Leen entirely consumed," On the | 29th, he describes his personal visit | to each of the temporary graves, | gives their location and details the | faded brown linen with remnants of | rcburial in the parish cemetery with | | all the ritual of the Church. One little entry will give an excel- lent idea of the manner in which Fa- {ther Remy introduced practical nar- | | rative into his acts of civil status: "This day, the first of May, 1689, | ing in Quebe ADVICE IS GIVEN T0 WORKING GIRLS Quebec Wage Board Recom- mends Securing State- ments of Length of Service -Women and girls work- industries are recom mended by the Quebec Minimum Wage Board 10 secure from their Montreal que, rare and priceless for historians. | Barbary, aged two years and seven | einpldyer, when leaving, a statement | E. Z, Massicotte, Court House archivist, opened the register months, and of Anne Barbary aged and | fiye years, who were found half burn- | few $ Vancouver, B.C., Jan, 5, There was | from its rag-paper pages, browned | ed on the twenty-eighth of April last | ceive d from of the length of their service. have women and girls that, af= cases, complaint a time when a British Columbia saw- | only at the edges, took out line after | beside the summer kitchen attached | ter the period stated in the ordinance | mill owner | on a single refuse | the air with smoke, The fashion then | was to burn all sawmill refuse such | as slabs and sawdust, ut now all this is and | sawmill operators are finding profit- | mtlets for their waste products. | In fact, up-to-date sawmill men say there is no longer any waste in their industry; everything is converted to | the use being installed in many of the mills, | { where the raw material is handled in | such a way as to make all parts of the felled tree marketable Green hemlock, spruce, alder, fir and « labs are freed of knots and bark and arc then shipped up ready for pulp digester There | is a good market for this by product | { at all the coast pulp and paper mills, Otlier waste wood not suitable for pulping purposes i "that is tc say dropped into enormous hop- pers in which huge grinders are at work which convert the wood into material suitable for use as fuel for | furnaces of industrial plants, Scientists are now working it making use of the mained in impos gard changing, { able en cedar pro valu British | tant de- | | ire expect- e next decade. | | | ses for chemicals « Columbia timber, and | velopments in thi 1 cd ring tl | mg acts of civil status | riages burner to pollute [on the days it was written around | Barbary, which fire caug 250 years ago. By far the greatest number of entries is terminted with the signature "Remy" written in boid hand with a quill pen, Old Customs "Father Pierre Remy" said Massicotte, "the first parish priest Lachine, a Sulpician whose name wis given to Fort Remy, in my opinion, vi of man, Chipping plants are [18 a exceptional figure among our | Never did he forget to give detail, never did he overlook of historical value in register- births, mar- His register : priests, every point and deaths, unique "If a person wa Father Remy, in the of burial described the murder, the scene, al the details just as would any news- paper today. If a person died of sickness--and one feature of the reg- ister is that dangers from Indians and violent death were such that this priest always noted where a person died of illness--the cause of death was stated, or in some cases the sym- ptoms preceding death were descril So faithfully did the parish priest make his description that them have been transcribed fron register and handed to phy Af assassinated, act ed some : the 18 in | Montreal who today are able to dia gnoze the fatal disease and state the cauee of death. Father Remy over looked nothing. He was meticulous | ght by | cident." | Register of Marriages | | But the register is not mercly the | | repository or signatures of Father ! Remy and of other priests, Marriage ceremonies reveal the writing of the humblest and the highest serving as | principals or witnesses, There is the signature of a bride and bridegroom painfully traced with the quill, and | beside the flourish and elegance of | some higher placed friend of good | education, Thus, in 1689, one Charles | Belonele, son of a Norman merchant, | and Petronille Andres, daughter of : sergeant in the army of New France, were wedded. Among the witnesses who signed the register in fine flow- ing hand was Le Chevalier de Beau | repos, a lieutenant at either Iort Remy or Fort Rolland, [he fact that few ceremonies of that na-| ture, and presumably the festivities | | which followed were without a good | | delegation from the garrison. Father | Remy knew them all and entered their names, their titles and t | ranks. In tribute to the most modest | { settlers, never did he forget marriage entries testify to to | ) ' ¢ 1 | note when a marriage or funeral was | / | | attended by "a large the population." ref { of epresentation | spent as muel as $20,000 | line of ink script, almost as fresh as [to the house of their father, Pierre | applying to their industry, their emss ac- | ployer had refused to give them the | higher wage on the ground that they certainly had not served the period in his plant, and had no proof of prior service, Tl situation, rather than bad relations between employer and employee, is responsible for the complaints in qu on, the board as- certained. Then was that the board advised women and girl workers, when changing employment, to request, on J £, a statement of service, so that they can prove 10 their next employer they have exs perience and the time at which they are entitled to inc s can be satiss factorily fixed. Complaints of cases of pure under- dealt with, and it was d had been suce at all payment were tated that the cessful in securing women and girls, in one instance the to $145. arrears amounting 18STH AMENDMENT IS RULED CONSTITUTIONAL New York, Jan. 5--=The United States circuit t of appeals held today iendment was con- It made ns jon 'unanimously af iction of Louis I. ir, Vt., accused of possessing and selling two pints of whiskey. to the last degree; one proof is that HEAVY VOTE 13 There Should Be B.C. WILL PRODUCE mnct and bequests I have been able to trace fifteen. dis wills He referred to the work | its | [seven stations in the first year of | captures | Canada. ITS OWN NITRATES Product Formerly Imported From Chile Is Now Made in Canada Jan been brought all the f of Vancouver, in the past has way to Canada from the mines Chile will soon be produced in large quantity in British Columbia as one of the chemical fertilizers to be turned out by the new plant of the | 'onsolidated Mining and Smelting Company at Trail, B.C i Canadid's larg- l manu t nd pot needed for oil, First » the prai- or 1he spring planting dollars has heen ed in the big chemical fertilizer plant at Trail. One of the features of the project is that it will be turning into profit vast quantitics of material which in the past have been wasted Ped lack of a process to make ef- fective use of materials they have been ignored and set aside on | the scrap heap, Now, however, this | hidden wealth is to be realized and | the slag piles will yield their riches the virgin ore bodies. no fear of carly exhaus- tion of the phosphate deposits in reach of the Trail plant, according to Virgil H, DD Kirkham, geologist, who | points 'out that he found nearly five billion tons in sight, and another similar amount in prospect. These figure have been concurred in by the Geological Survey... Most of the cnet mgredient fertility of mvest- arse well a I'here 'is | phosphates in the undeveloped form Operating one of the most conm- | will be brought into British Colum. bia smelter town from Idaho. In connection with its introduction of fertilizers, the Consolidated Min- ing and Smelting Company is under taking an exhaustive enquiry into the propertics and requirements of agricultural soil in various parts of When completed this sur- vey will be of far-reaching value to agriculture, as it is the first time that an investigation of this kind has been attempted NEW TITLE FOR PRINCESS London, Jan. o.~~i'rincess Mary, Viscountess Lascelles, is expected ! (door for three Sundays jt which he | made at various tines during his li { ( hanges in circumstances, changes | | nis family, led him not to codicils, bu |to a complete new testament or be quest." 17th Century Atmosphere The ancient tome fairly breat the atmosphere of the island of the | 17th century. In covering the years 1 1676-1707, it deals with the passage {and Fort Remy community. The first entries are signed either by Father Etienne Guyotte or Father Jean Fre- mont, but they were missionaries," In 1680, Father Remy went to the parish as its first actual parish priest, and there remained until 1706, when he was succeeded by Father Michel de Villermola, who served the parish for eleven years. The register ranks a Number | Three among parish registers of the | Island of Montreal. First comes { that kept by the Jesuits in Ville. Mar- ic mission between 1642 and 1657, car- ried on by the Sulpicians who erect. ed the parish of Ville Marie. Second is the register of the parish of Pointe aux Trembles, 1674. After that the Lachine register. Daily Life Recorded Fach page of the Remy register of the daily life of the commnuity of Fort Remy and surrounding lands. The Lachine of those days clustered about the old mill still standing in the shadow of Highlands bridge and was in the Ville LaSalle of today, Qutstanding among the interesting entries are those linked with the mas- sacre of ..achine, when, under cover of a storm during the night of August 4-5, 7,500 Iroquois crossed the water, { picked the homes of settlers outside Fort Remy, slaughtered many of the community, tortured them at the stake, burned their houses and car- ried off others for distribution amony tortured. Record of Massacres | On October 28 and 29, 1694, just over five years later, Father Remy devoted two whole pages of his regis- ter to acts he had performed in con- nection with the reburial of remains of massacred settlers, who had been hastily buried almost where they lay after the Indian onslaught. "In ac- cordance with an order issued by His Lordship the Bishop of Quebec," commences his narrative, he had published from pulpit and church the' com- to be the next princess royal, fols | mand that the bones should be re-in- lowing the death of Princess Louise. THREE AVIATORS KILLED Overton, Tex., Jan, 4.--Three men were killed yesterday when thelr. airnlane flying in a dense fog from Dallas to Shreveport, La, struck a tall pine tree, terred in the parish cemetery, and he had called upon his parishioners to graves, He refers to the massacre by the Iroquois, whom he invariably terms "our enemies," and notes that reburial had been ispossible before "because of the frequency of Indian raids and because the flesh had not holds its intrigues for the lover of old | things, and each page is a revelation | tl.e various Indian nat! ..s also to be | aid in the location of the temporary | BEING | (Continued from the north-east ward is no contest for aldermen. | dale reported voting as fair. | Several of the candidates have | gone enthusidstically into the cam. | paign, and a number of them have pas 1) where there Nitrate which | of four spiritual heads of the Lachine | piaced cars at tho disposal of the | voters, conveying them to the | booths. | There is a possible vote of 11,198 | in this city, including both Parts 1 {and 2 of the voters' list. A num- | ber of those on the Part 2 list are | persons who own property in two or more wards in the city. They {can vote only once for mayor and for Public Utilities Commission, but can vote for aldermen in as many wards as they have property. This means that there would probably be only roughly about 11,000 votes for the mayoralty and Utilities board. The polling subdivisions, with the place of voting, and number of pos- sible votes are as follows: Ward 1--=South-West Diy, 1.--~Centre St. School--445. Div. 2.--Burke St.--805. Div. 3.--428 Simcoe St, S.--781, Ward 2--South-East 4--Miller & Libby's--591. 6~Albert St, School--990. Div. Div, 7-165 Ritson Rd. S--856. Ward 3--North-West. Div. 8,--City Hall--728. Div. 9--Separate School--1327, Ward 4---North-East Div. 10--141 Simcoe St, N-- Div. 11--Mary St. School---12 Div, 12--98 Alice S5t.--1303. Ward rdale Div. Div | OLD QUEBEC HAD SCHOOL OF CARVING | Montreal.--The province of Quebec | enjoyed a definite school of carving | and wood sculpture under the Trench regime, said Prof. Ramsay Traquair of McGill University, in the course of a lecture in the Chateau de Rame- zay, Instancing the work of Levasseur, | Emond, the Baillarge brothers, Andre Paquet, Hebert and others, the pro- fessor showed that while Europe was modelling its work on severe Gothic lines, this province was continuing the work of the French renaissance. SEVEN INJURED Windsor, Jan. 5.--Seven persens were slightly injured in a crash in the yards of the Michigan Cen- tral Railway. Cuts by flying glass and bruises about the body con- stituted the injuries. |] 586 | El . 13--Cedardale School --683. | POLLED Cedar- | { Div. 6--8imecoe St. 8 8chool--832 | | ! | No Ugly | Women i | There are 2 classes of v omen. (1) The beautiful, healthy ands attractive creatures, (2) Those pitiful ones wh don't know how to make them= selves heautiful---rathér those who don't know the vital importance of Kruschen Salts to physica] perfee= tion and attraction! Kruschen Salts blend of the six which Nature a perfect minerals ordained, glands, blood, nerves and body organs should daily receive from feed. they're to function correctly---asiss which are impossible to obtain i this age of modern cooking. Get a bottle of Kruschen--an before the bottle is half empt your complexion should be glor are vital In a been res & back pay for thed : i # fously smooth and clear, Kruschen §i clears blood of harmful acids ang J matter blackheads and wonderful rou--mind poisonous waste cause blemishes, pimples. Your energy will surprise feels so keen and alert--no more washed-out feeling getting up fu the mornings. IT'S MADE IN ONE PIECE THEREFORE IT CAN'T LEAK! Every Leakproof Hot Water Bottle is guaranteed for two years. If the bag yom _ buy wears out before that time, return it to your Rexall Drug Store and get a new bag free. A Leakproof can't leak be- cause it is all one piece of live Para Rubber. No seams, patches or splices. Leakproof Hot ' Water Bottle $2.50 Defender Hot Water Bottle * $1 49 Belmont Hot Water Bottle. Guaranteed fo one year. Special .. va 89 Save With Safety at Jury & Lovell THE REXALL STO ; King E. Simcoe Phone 28 ~ Phone MAC, MR. { SARS qf pattern, Send stamps or coin | (coin preferged). Price of k 10 cents. Price of pattern 20 cents stamps of coin (coin preferred). No, 2889. Size ... EE PSS HER ANOTHER LETTER TROM THOME SANSSTRRS . (vr Mi SED A L 4 [WY FRIEND GAYS HE Gavs THE TEN ARAND TG Your. NN THE © NEAR "THE 88 JoNig YOUR ELoND oie 10,000 In A SACK CROSS 0S oR ™ &. TAK THE |S TERRIBLE, MR. SIMPRINS - WHAT SHA. | Do] = NOTHING | THAT @O To pret EVERYTHING y Russ W By R hy (-) rg MISS You so MUCH, MAC YOULL ONLY COME +) BACK , LL NEVER LOOK ANOTHER FELLOW CaF Vv + \ enn A ot dea which | new | 8