i- u^ X- /.. iK. .- »N >^.^ â€"- /^ A' / ^ '^ •s i* â- A' h- *â- h .A >> K ^^ «^ A' A .*; f- A" A ^^ >- i H K K •*' \ r y â- j»^ -! â- t :5 «' > * ^ ^ ^« *. V • r 1 », < > i» <* .4- <»â- - 4' A.' A .K; ,*. A Jt -i A. .-< <>, 4' J; â- % > ;v j; i A ,* *: .a; > A « »â- « < > -*> A -*S /*, •^ ^ -•> (^ i % 5 *' *. ^ â- > /» \ T» ^ ♦ ^ % >^ A ^ * ^ , ». A ». < ,*.â- *v -â- % /*• .A' A. X A r A ,'^: /*, ;♦â- 5 f ^ .r*» *-> /!â- -^ M' A^ T' -< ( 1 4 A. >- â- 4 * * 1 A •^. « < i â- \ (^ â- A A ; . I„ Encore Performance â€" After Willie Garrison was bitten m uie arm by a mule named Bill, a photographer was sent out to s^et a picture of the two making^ up. Just as he was about to snap the peacemaking picture of Willie and Bill, the mule took another bite at the boy. This time he chewed the shirt instead of Willie, but the youngster says, "No more pictures.' ^rr^yf^Jii^Thty I hit ::hronicles ^wqerFarm Gvervdollrve P. Cla-rke Last Friday was a lovely day â€" just pleasantly warm â€" and was I glad because it was my day for going to the Exhibition. So away I went on the 8:45 bus. I could have caught an earlier bus â€" but not after canning all day Thursday 1 Anyway it was only 10:30 when I reached the Exhibition grounds â€" too early for it to be uncomfortably crowded. So for once in my life I was able to take my time in the Women's Building and really see all there wag to see. Such beautiful work, and so much variety! Like •veryone else I was absolutely sold on the beautiful little shell pictures made by an inmate of the Mercer reformatory, in fact had I been given the choice, I woiild rather own 'Cap shell pictures than the fabulous Hope diamond! That dia- mond ... I looked at it, and looked at it, making several trips to do so, and to me there was something un- canny in its flashing blackness. One thinks of a diamond as being bright, with sparkling lights â€" but this was a greyish-black, hinting at some hidden but sinister beauty within its depths. It was very easy to connect the diamond with all its Ill-fated history. The display of period fashions through the centuries was very in- terestingâ€"although I think ^^hey mu»t-have run out of shoes as the "footwear on some models was very modern. The quilts were lovely â€" some of them quite new in design. The one that appealed to me most featured the crest and motto of the Women's Institute in the centre of the quit. The design was very cleverly car- ried out. The Canadian Handicraft Guild had a wonderful exhibit â€" everything made by hand, and made In Canada. From silver to wood- work, and pottery to weaving^ There are a lot of clever fingers in Canada. There were two other exhibits that attracted me so much. One was an exhibit of wallpapers and the other was Canadian fabric used largely in making drapes. The de- signs on both the wallpapers and the drapes were really marvellous. What one could do with money to spend and a house to furnish! One wonders why anyone ever chooses anything that is drab and colourless when there are so many beautiful things to choose from. After seeing all this â€" and plenty more I haven't even mentioned â€" I made my way to the tearoom where I had a luncheon date with the Exhibition! ^'hese luncheons are really something to enjoy â€" rooms with a restful setting, look- ing out towards the lake, over the heads of the milling crowd. Good service, an appetising meal and m- teresting companions. This day was Press and Radio Day, and so tliere were many people familiar to most of us by name who were there in the flesh. It was all very frieiKlly and informal and I enjoyed every min- ute of it. 1 met several lady edit- ors whom I knew â€" but it didn't really matter if you knew people or not â€" everybody talked to every- body else â€" press people are like that anyway. After lunch a little woman from Manitoba asked if she could walk around with me a bit as she was alone. So we stayed together almost an hour and she thought everything was wonderful â€" on this, her first visit to the Exhibition. It was too cool to listen to the band for very long so I went into tlie buildings again tlirough â€" tlie flower show and the .Vrt Callery. Then a cup of tea and away to get the bus down town to n-.'.S dai'uhtcr, so we could liave \'m Hip home to- gether. That bus trip down town was a bit of a nightmare â€" we got tied up in the five-o'clock traffic and waited for ages on Front Street. Vou will notice I haven't men- tioned Partner: On farm we often have to divide forces, as it were. This day that I had arranged to go to the E.xhibition, Bob was away to a threshing and we w'ere also ex- pecting a coal delivery, so Partner stayed at home. But the next day Father and Daughter made the trip. And they did things properly. They not only went to the Exhibition but they took in dinner and a show down town. They had quite a day â€" thanks to our local bus service. Teen-agers swarmed the bus, leav- ing less nimble older folk standing room only. Coming home. Partner and Daughter were at the regular departure platform on time. No sign of the bus. When Daughter made inquiries she was first told it would be along any minute, and then that it had pulled in at a different platform and left â€" un- announced. So they had no choice but to wait for the late bus. Again there was standing room only. Partner refused to get on and was then told another bus was on its way. It came â€" an hour later! Two a.m. when they arrived home. Quite a day! LAST CHANCE "Dad. why was .\dam made first?" "To give him a chance to say a word or two, I suppose." For Quick Relief Beyond Belief, . , From the pain of ARTHRITIS, RHEUMATISM, NEURITIS, or SCI- ATICA ... get a bottle of DOLCIN tablete today. DOLCIN has re- Ueved the pains of thousands of sufferers. DOLCIN tablets an not harmful, easy-to-take, tea- sonable in cost -100 tablets for $2.39; the large economy-siie bottle of 500 tablets, $10. «Mnol tapply DOLCm wriltto OOlUH DOLCIN LIMITED • Toronts 10 • OnUm ANN£ HIRST What disconcerting discoveries we make in tlic first vear of mar- rii^e! The ador- ing man who was so perteot in our ejes re- veals trails which amaze and confuse us. And a brule shocks her hus- band by a cas- ual approach to her new re;punsibilities that sets the man back on his heels. One such young husband sets down on paper his disillusions: His wife doesn't siart getting din- ner until he arrives home, and the menu, he complains, "belongs in a tea room"; Her afternuons belong to her bridge club (!;e has not yet toiind what she does m the niorninfi) and the bedroom is not strai'.ilitened up before nigln : O.teii, coining in his front doui, he hears her at tlie telephone chat- ting with her old boy friends: She dre.-ises up after dinner (leav- ing the di-shej in the sink ) and is ready to go placesâ€" wliile he yeaiiis for the quiet evenings of rich com panionship they used to know. M.\RRIAGE IS NOT ESCAPE * Too many girls marry with the * idea of doing as they please. They * seemed to be the perfect fiancee * diuing courtship days, when * actually they were playing a part, * with the idea of "when we're * married. I'll have my own way!" * Marriage to them does not * mean a partnership. It means an * escape from the life they have * known, with a husband to pay * the bills and provide escort for * the good times they feel are their' * due. And f/ie RELIEF IS LASTING For fast, prolonged relief from headache get Instantini. This prescription-like tablet contain! not just one, but three proven medical ingredients that ease the pain fasti And the relief is, in most cases, lastingt Try Instantine just once for pain relief and you'll say as thousands do that there's one thing for headacha t . . it's Instantine! And try Insiantin* for other aches, too ... for neuritic or neuralgia pain ... or for the paina and ache* that accompany a cold. A single tablet usually brings prompt relief. M Instantine today and always katp It Iwmly 4istaiitine l2-Tablt»T1n25^ Eoonomical 4B-Tabl*t BottI* 69i If you want to bo vaSLj bright bruak up with NUOOBT BuioK. OK-abooo iWD ju* wuwi or Mwim i YOU NUGGET " YOUR SHOES THIS MORNING ' * This particular wife (her htw- ♦ band explains) was raised itt a • home where order and co- ♦ operation prevailed. Her mother * was a fine housekeeper, a loyal • and devoted wife, and raised her • daughter to follow her example. * But alas, the girl somehow got ♦ sidetracked in her ideas of mar- • riage, and patterned her behavior • after frivolous brides she knew. * The husband of such a wife • must take a stand, and immedi- * ately. He must let her know what ♦ he expects of her. and insist that • she be the wife he knows she can • be it she tries. • He will ask that his meals are • served on time, and that his house • IS properly manaj^ed. He will not * deprive her of amusement, but * together they will regulate their • life so that he finds the quiet * rela.xation he needs, when he • needs it. This he has the right * to ask and receive. • .And he will .uggest that she ♦ invite her former boy friends to • their hopie, bringing their girls * of the moment with them. * His good nature will rebel at • the orospect 1 su rgest, but if his * marriage is to last, his wife must * do her part toward making it * worth while. It is for her happi- * ness, too, and If he explaiaa thia * reasonably, she will respect him * the more. * To "AMAZED HUSBAND": * You will have to put your foot * down â€" firmly, yet lovingly â€" * and be firm about it. Your wife's * present attitude will wreck your * marriage if it continues. For * both your sakes assume the role * of the man of the house, oad * mean it * * • When a bride fails to do her part, the husband must take the initiative. She will respect him for it Anne Hirst's long experience has saved many a marriage. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto, Ont TRUE COURTESY A United States film producer asked an English friend to look at one of his "society" films to see that everything was all right .\fter watching it for a while, the Englishman asked: "Why does that man keep his hat on when he's talking tto a lady in the drawing room?" "Because," said the producer, "he can't take it off â€" another lady's coming in presently and he's got tot raise hi, hat t her." HOTEL CLIFTON NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. Reservation Request ( ) Sinde Koom. Kunuiac Waxrr I.M ( ) SlnsU Ragra, PiiraU B:ilk S.SO ( ) D«ubla Room Bunnins Water S.OO ( ) Doubla Room. PriTaM Bath 6.50 UUl Numbor ta Partr ( ) Data at ArriTsl DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? Sitting in a draft â€" working in a damp place â€" wet feet â€" there are dozens of things which may cause a backache! But there's one way thousands of Canadians have found to help relieve thia condition â€" Dr. Chase's Kidney- Liver Pills. "Thij effective remedy tones up both the kidneys and the liver â€" and brings welcome relief from pains in the small of the back caused by "cold" in the kidneys. So insist on this reliable remedy â€" proven by over half- a-century's use â€" Dr. Chase's Kidney- Liver Pills. At all drug counters. t» The BLACK HORSE "Do You Know** Advisory Panol LOUIS BOURDON pfomtnanf radio singar and moatar of carvmonlaa RICHARD PENNINGTON Univaralty Ubrorioiv McGIII [jnlvMsity GREGORY CLARK distinguishod columnist Every year, at certain times, millions of birds in ev«ry port of the world suddenly take wing and fly varying distances to foreign climes. No one yet has been able to satisfactorily determine the prime Impulse of thesd migrations and to fathom the great mystery of Ha accomplishment. > Do Yon KiOW ... that th« Arctk Tern nesto within the Arctic Circle and then flies over more than 10,000 miles of ocean to winter on the islands of the AntarcticI . , . that the Grey Plover breeds in the Arctic Circle and winters in equa* torlal countriesi . . . that swallows ringed in Great Britain have been traced to South Africa, more than 6,000 miles awayl Do Yon Know . . . that migrants usually f)y at under 3,000 feet? . . . that the average distance flown In a day Is 200 miles, even though the> full flight may be thousands of miles? . . . that many species manage to cross these enormous distances without a breaki . . . that even young birds, making the trip for the first time, make the flight unerringly, without guidance from the older birdsl De Yee Know any tnteresHng and unusual fact*? Our "Advisory Panel" will pay $2S for any authentleated rcodar*' (ubmissiont If they or* usabi*. All latt«r« bteonw our properly. Wrtle Black Horso Rr9w»ry, Station L, Montreal, P.Q.