Last Sunday evening, Rev. Mr. So- per, a missionary from China occupi- ed the pulpit in the United Church, and preached a very interesting ser- mon on his work among the Chinese. The Young People held a success- ful Hallowe'en masquerade in the The young people will meet on Fri- tt't11"itlg, at 8 o'cloek in the church. Th meeting will be in charge of Mr. Clarke Peters. THISTLETOWN PINKY DINKY JEWELLER AND OPTICIAN Phone Junct. 9717 2S Starts Saturday Nov. 9th Matinee Monday anksgiving Day Mount Dennis Theatre Free Parking Space At Your Vaudeville WEDNESDAY, Nov. B, 1925 "W "THE GIRL ON THE BARGE" MBS LS'.1 d ' _BrS!tr1R8, ii? t tally i, ' k LE 2yatllE _ N , ' tQ Ligifi ll Mi CN 4::2.‘ â€v x i' gr»: we, f,r,d tthe, 'lllhl1 'qiEgiti"ri"iigc:s: 'ss, gittttgr . _ ‘i‘ -- ' * . - . , Mllmll I W" - ‘,.’-'" - . "- "HIS CAPTIVE WOMAN" Special Holiday Attraction THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7-8-9 MILTON SILLS AND DOROTHY MACKAILL IN Comedy Auetlon Nigit every Tuesday "Nigh"'t. Ladies' Silver Plate Night every Thursday Night. Veydevipe pureistprjiht every, Mo!1day_Night. First Chapter of "THE FATAL WARNING" MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 11-12-13 SALLY O'NEIL IN MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11th At 2.15 P.M. SHEPPARD tt ss1iusc1v5', 'iitsl Her First 100% Talking, Singing The Laff's on You v1jljEt0t,t)hlrll'l,1r OSCARMMARY SHAW EATON Presenting the sereen's most charming star Colleen Moore ii P _ 3- 7 , THE 'lr' v 'e? _".iii.tftii"ii BROTHERS ' IN l) - Hall on Thursday evening last. lst prize among the adults for best cos~ tume went to Mrs. Ella and Mr. John Parr. Miss Grace Farr received 2nd prize. lst Prize among the children went to Norma Kingdom and Helen Neuton. Dora Cameron received the 2nd prize. Games were indulged in time was enjoyed by all. g The choral society met last Monday Evening. Next week the Choral so- ciety will meet on Tuesday evening gt 7 o'elock in the Hall owing to the The mornings are getting dark when it is time for rising. Do not be late. Have one of our Alarm Clocks that never fail to alarm. Fine line of Mantel Clocks. Beautiful Musical Chime Clocks. Moderate priced. Picture WITH CLOCKS mes Aw - F'wvw No; GIMME SOME. E'IVE CHESTNUT?) A'. WILL YA ? _ 8T . It " ' sggtgtt 'dt - "N ' a. RfWaRRE t Eid " 'sri, n v » 111:“? 2-" 'dt] , I tr . “f 45;? - f, :t I 3 _ M ‘ _ E! Eh C,'.2,t - I FiiM P, ~ , ttNtNitNRi , th 'l' itmr Etrgi = I C i"igS FF'e-_-2 Ietrey ,;\‘_~_,., .7 M%FI .3 ap,,1 _ _ St,iiriigts'ii;fi'1,s,s] _ ffiiiiiiiissrssdE a: 2915 Dundas St. Phone 1128 Vaudeville tt 6 It is not what happens to ydu in life that matters, it is the way in which you face it. The most difficult courage of all is not the two o'clock in the morning courage we have heard so much about; it is the courage that will see a thing through.---D. Lloyd George. Shun no toil to make yourself re- markable by someone talent Yet do not devote ourself to one branch ex- clusively. gtrive to get clear notions about all. Give up no science entirely, for all science is one.---)-. V One man's wrong is always another man's perquisite; too often the drunk- ard's ruin is the brewer's dividend. Every noble work is at first "im- possible." In very truth, for in every noble work the possibilities will lie diffused through immensity; inarticu- To be a chemist you must study chemistry; to be a lawyer or a physi- cian you must study law or medicine; but to be a politician you need only to study your own interests-Max O’Rell. You are strong, not if you can take something from someone else, but if you can give up something to some- one else. It is very easy to begin a quarrel; it is very difficult to forecast how it will end. The 'Hospifal Athieiic Club are holding a dance this evening in aid of the Sick Children's Hospital. Mopiacbeirrsr _a holiday. The denouement comes as a com- plete surprise and Sills makes of the character one of the finest imperson- ations of his career. This is a George Fitzmaurice pro- duction adapted from "Changeling," a story written by Donn Byrne. Milton Sills enacts the part, and he is eo-featured with Dorothy Mac- kaill, who plays the role of a girl of the white light district who murders a man and escapes to the tropics. Sills is sent after her and on the way back they are wrecked on a desert island. A typical New York "cop" whose devotion to his duty is something to be marveled at, plays an important role-indeed one of the two most im- portant roles--- in "His Captive Wo- man," the First National picture at the Major Mt. Dennis Theatre, Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday, November 7th, 8th and 9th. . d TVA» [tties ll I Irl ell . F Ci?) - , s,s,-aas=azzasaivrsm'i'ii liis:sr ' A tiii" Honolulu, famous for its lovely Hawaiian dancers, its splendid-physiqued swimmers, wreaths of tlowers, Waikiki Beach and 1ordly Diamond Head '.tffiif.'i' GEMS OF THOUGHT V News-†(ENE you" BECAUSE , N..-, ASKED "White Empressesl to Call at Honolulu. WON‘T 'PrNy YOU l t THE WESTOEU‘ WW ig GYM"??? AW GEE/ . if -__ - Will T Viii 13'0“}?in THEN‘ , " ASK vou YOU DON'T ' R, FOR AND.) j WANT ( ""----... - , _ ANY / f i), ~k/7 T L, .1; F . ' i rr _ ‘ Fe , A, E , F ‘44 31:) "" ' _ _' it , Cl . firl)): ‘:v‘ tiff' . T, tltth 1ti, i = __,__..:_. MN _rs_' , - H Jp-is £21531â€? I (iii! #51539 w, C " q . ". "ifffii?Jeih': Rig, â€H.642 lllltlNlll1 F. (ft) (l ililm L' = M 21¢b§$ï¬ â€™ qll INK, ~:‘I;:§eۤ;':?2â€"as§\\ T-side-h-"") aisTc>s, tfrMIlMi, - a a " I: MMaII. ASM' ii2iierci:-iiise e SftaE4= K , m "" PSE',", Fereign names of musicians and composers always seem-to be some- what imposing and sonorous. When they are Anglicised they appear to lose much of their dignity, and be- come quite eommon-plaee. Guiseppe Verdi becomes in English, Joseph Green, Wagner becomes Cartwright, Bach becomes Brook, and Weber, Weaver. Some names are less com- mon when translated, and while Strauss, or Straus, is one of the com- monest names in Germany, its trans- lation is Nosegay, which is quite unknown here. Handel means trade Belfast, in Northern Ireland, where a successful Trade Union Congress was recently held is a very different city from that which Arthur Young visited a century and a half ago, when the population was still under 15,000, and the only public buildings he found worthy of description were "the new assembly room, with card-room ad- joining." Lord Donegal then owned the whole of the land on which Bel- fast stands, but counted the S2,000 a year he drew therefrom in rents but a minor part of the revenue from his estates in northern Ireland. The ground rent of Belfast today would not be despised even by a Ford or a Rockefeller. late, undiscoverable except to faith.-- Thomas Carlyle. During the day all the forces of nature combined to loosen that beard around the edges and give it a "fake" effect. Before going into a scene, Hersholt always had to have the edges touched up. Perspiration loosened it. The growth of his own beard during the day loosened it. Too much exer- cising of the facial muscles in scenes loosened it. Next time, says Hersholt, he'll grow his own. ANGLICISING FOREIGN NAMES Every day for two months, Jean Hersholt, star of /sUniversal's "The Girl on the Barge/tfat the Major Mt. Dennis/Theatre, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 11th, 12th, and 13th, donned a shaggy beard in the morning and took it off at night. It was all a part of the role, he played, that of MacCadden, the Scotch skipper of a coal barge. Hersholt had a special make-up artist in constant attendance during the entire period of fheprodyetiqm _. .- A MODERN BELFAST AW GEE/ (kii DION ASK 7‘04 FOR AN Glimpses of some of the features of the "Island Paradise of the Paelfic" are shown above, with (left) the giant prow of the 21.500 ton Empress of Canada. Behind the flower-decked maidens may be discerned the stately outlines of Diamond Head, famous in song and story. At the right is the Aloha Tower of the docks, that spells a Hawaiian welcome to the traveller. V Passengers to the Orient by the new Canadian Pacific service will be given the opportunity of stay- ing over for the next ship or of paying a visit during the twelve hours the Empresses remain in Honolulu. Visitors to the Islands who plan to leave Jack Frost behind have many options for' their return voyage. Several lines have co-operated with the Canadian company, and, after a long lazy winter on the sands of Waikiki Beach, travellers may return to Van- couver by the Canadian Australasian Royal Mail Line direct, or may come back by a Matson Line steamer to Portland, Seattle or San Francisco, or to Los Angeles by the Los Angeles Steamship Company. "Ffiiir ESE toiart'iii"s' (iGsCoss the radio," laughed Freddie Frog. Miss Frog arose when al had be.. borne quiet and said: "I have a pleas- ant surprise for you this morning, my dear pupils. The Board of Education has given us a radio and we are to have our exercises every morning be- gin with sweet music. Perhaps we will be able to do our physical cul- ture exercises to music, too. I will now turn the radio on." Bye and bye the Frogs all came back into the room. "You must not mind hearing about a dog when it's on lhe rpdio," said Miss Frog. “HE: "When they are shoes they do." There was a hustling in the school room as the Frogs all darted outside and under logs, while Miss Frog stay- ed on the platform and laughed and lagghed. - _ _ -- -- She: "Two rights never make a weryr.", _ Over the wire came the story: "The man went into the woods with his dog "Don't be silly," snapped Freddie, asAaesr_took their seats. - A . - Soon the Frogs came filing in and Freddie nudged Fritz as he asked: "What on earth is that thing hidden under that eloth?" under that eloth?" -- "Search me," replied Fritz. "May- be it's the Board of Education." Sweet music came over the wire as they all listened. In a few moments Miss Fiog bade them cover the radio and disappear, for in a little while the scholars would be assembling and she wanted the radio to be a big sur- prise. _ " . men "Let's hear," said Miss Frog as the worker turned on the radio. "Is everfthing ready?†asked Miss Fannie Irog, __ __ __ "All is ready. Shall we turn her on?" asked one of the Frog work- Just before the youngsters in, the Frogville School arrived one morning there were a lot of squeaks and squawks as Frogs busily worked abopt a huggbox fixing wires._ _.-. or commerce; Haydn, heather; and Himmel, heaven; Loewe is lion; Cher- ubini, a little cherub; Rossini, the [small red one; Schumann, shoe man, presumably the cobbler; Schonberg, beautiful mountain; Tito Mattei was simply Timothy Matthews, or he would have been so had he been an Englishman with an English name. M " 'IEEE Ga' i ‘ ll, Rh I atltila K! :3 f, , arch: Siltlitfh - Fiarii " By TERRY GILKINSON LITTLE Sits o LITTLE CALL 1 ’ L2i$i% ' , IllllUllkf tr,, P) iiiliilii'i:i,i,;-Cil: it, iL ilNGLES NCE upon a time Robinson Crusoe became stranded on a lonely island, 0 Now, instead of weeping and bemoaning his misfortune, he.showed good horse sense-and ADVERTISED. Yes, sir, he put up a white flag on a pole on the highest peak of the island. As one copy, or piece of clothing became worn out he put up a new one. Things looked pretty bad for a time, but Rob. kept his ad in the air. Then one day he got what he was advertising for. A vessel passing far out at sea noticed his ad. all came and took him home. Can you imagine old R. C. saying to anyone tbs it doesn't pay to advertise. 5 WILU rr HI". wrt.Apte l . A STOVE Pale Dry --at your next party Phohes MAE His Practy Cal says:- . _,',: If you say to Central, I want to order a full ton of Full- o-Heat Coal, she's quite apt to connect you with Irvin's!' ' Weston “waive irovE THAT; rm .IE BURNS- (s MA ME. NOT] li =Ei-75=5til " gt (it gal; i2ih)tiil'eii , itli',i:',ir,)',i,,si,i:i,j,e,,fi mm LUMBER m, SERVE Evangeline "YOU' Special Matinee, Mon., Nov. 11 Behind that Gawain ALWAYS GOOD TALKING PICTURES AT THE Advertising Pays - Try It ! THE IRON MASK This Thurs., Fri., and Sat., Nov. 7th, Sth and 9th Mon., Tues., and Wed., Nov. llth, 12th and 13th IPM, LIKE IT BETTER" T ALL TALKING With V Warner Baxter, Lois Moran Also One talking comedy and one silent comedy AT 2 RM. THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY Feature Presentation -Weston “EMS A' ' A Pl Nfl-PflE All Sound and Music Millions enjoy Evangeline Ginger Ale. Three men worked out the closely guarded formula blending fruit juices with ginger in a manner, never known before or since in any other drink Ginger Ale Evangeline Beverages (Ont.) Ltd. 74 With Douglas Fairbanks FRUIT BLEND LIMITED --BRAMPT0N-. Big, Creek Muskrat Farms Limited We sell live muskrats for breem purposes. We have a very attractive ranching agreement to offer pp. We have the largest 'enclosed and best developed muskrat ranch in Canada. We sell on easy terms, where de.. sired. You are invited to visit our ranch at Port Rowan. For full partieulars write: BIG CREEK SALES, LT Fiscal Agents, 614-16-18 Lister Block; Hamilton, Ont. MUSKRATS, J Unction 9662 PAGE 1rrtrflt