' J For One Dollar! A Gillette shave is now everybody's for a dollar within the reach of all. Nothing stands between you and a genuine Gillette. ^ The Gillette Brownie Razor and 3 Genuine Gillette Blades for $1.00 That is the offer of every general, hardware, drug and jewellery store throughout Canada Gillette Brownie Safety Razor Razor and blades made and guaranteed genuine by Gillette Safety Razor Co. of Canada, Limited 967 harmless fun, innocent joking and playfulness every day. Originate some nonsensical byword. Oh, the value of these Httle nothings in holding two people together and endearing them more an.l more to each other! We can make our lives one continued lov*- story just the same as we can make them cold, dreary, sordid and scarcely worth the living. Revive An Old Art. The art of story-telling suffers from The Boss's Bounty BY WILL PAYNE. STAMMERING I or tuttarlitt otrcom positively. natural methods permanently rurur* I ; natural nwch. Graduate pupil* rery- | ; where. Free adrlce and II tratut. THE ARNOTT IN8TITUTK KITCHENER, - CANADA PART III. There were some preliminary mat- ters testimony of the physkian who neglect. A story is likely to have had 1 examined the body, identification more influence on children than many I of the deceased, statement of the first injunctions to be good. Children can' policeman on the scene. Then Don- ,. .. . . u* A ,,.,- ,,,r m r,fo avan took the witness- stand and Uie d.stmgu.sh right and wrong "*,. mechanically gave his name and clearly through the means of a "tory.^^^ bricfly descr ;, bed the situ a- than they can in any case where they tkm in his office just . bctl , re ne heard themselves are actually concerned. It y le shot. is best to allow them to draw their| Aad Sometn j n 3 happened without own conclusions without suspecting' his being aware of it. He had tfone that the story-tcllcy is "preaching" I up to the witness' chair in a strange to them. Let the ideas that one wishes kind of inner palsy, which permitted to impress upon the listeners be put, him to walk ?teadi!y, yet set up a in unsuspected, and have the children trembling a!l through his body. The give their own views about the right *ne Murred before his eyes At the and wrong of the matter. Then you JJ an^er ^aWt^d^hl really knowing it, all that passed away. Somehow his tortured spirit, know them more inti- Woman's Sphere 1 will come to mately. ^_ Long before schools or text-books J which had" been ceaselessly wrung for were invented, instruction was given i hours, escaped the rack aiid floated at through stories told to children group-i ease on a full, steady current, ed around the mother's knee, and hun- "Yea, sir, I recognized him," he dreds of these stories have come down answered readily. "It was Handy to us in the traditions of the races.! Andy Hatch." Many of the old tales are worth tell- The Assistant State's Attorney, ing to the children and will open a combing one wing of his curly mua- new world to them. But whatever the! tache between thumb and forefinger, story, it should be a wholesome, happy ; K^Mj^ the >" un man was P^ m B world they view. Stories of wild lifei In wood and field interest, children he-lthe'cjue'stiojr sides developing their observation and making them kinder to all creatures. The test of a good story is the chil- dren's desire to hear it again. Inter- sperse good poems with the stories; "Yea, sir," said the witness; "there he is," and stretched out his arm, leveling a forefinger. Asitute Aibe Truman stared, scandal- ized, like a stage manager when an children grasp more of the meaning acto r speaks the wrong lines. Hatch's cousin turned an indignantly question- of these than is suspected and may remcml>er them through life. Among suggested books on the sub- ing look upon Truman. Hatch him- so'f opened his lips as though to utter an objurgation and protest. Mang!r right back here if you want to. It would get the Old man out of a bad hole, you see, and you, too. If you're out of the State there's nothing to hold Andy Hatch on." Donavan should! have had a new overcoat that winter. He looked rather seedy. And he was unfeigrnedly grate- ful to Gus Whelpley for his friendly intentiors. But with a humble and rueful little smifle he replied: "No, Gus. I've thought it all over. I don't want to make trouble any more than you do. But I'm going to stick.. I can't fc> anything else." An incor- rigibly stubborn young man, doggedly bent on destruction. "You ain't doing right by your fam- ily," Gus accused, with the license of a friend. Certainly the family was not flour- ishing, but Donavan simply couldn't help it. Gravely, Gus tried the last shot. "You know you're in the way, Gene. Handy Andy Hatch's got plenty of friends some of 'em reckless enough, too. They know youVe keeping him in jail. I'm afraid they'll bump you off one of these days if you ain't reasonable." "Well, I can't help it, Gus, I've got to stick" Genial Gus, regretfully, gave the blockhead up. The family had tb/eir Christmas at an outlay of $2.50. Every night as he left the ware- houses sometime !wi*bif>ig'isnowflakeij sifting thickly dkxwn through the field of light shed by an arc lamp, some- times in a barrage of sleet, always in the dark, Donavan wondered whether the bumping off would hap- pen then, Recalling Your Wedding Vows. How long has it been since that eventful day when you were at the ame time happy, sad and scared to death? I mean your wedding day. It was all too good to be true; at least, it seemed that way, and you felt in- dined to pinch yourself to see if you were dreaming. Wasn't it funny to see the big husky fellow you loved, mostly for his very strength and manliness, become panic-stricken with fright Why, his knees popped to- gether hke a schoolboy's when he mak-s his first speech. And you were cared too, but somehow it sweetened the episode for the two of you to be nervous. It is neither here nor there as to whether the preacher included the word "obey" in the ceremony, but when he asked you if you would cher- ish and comfort the man by your side, your "I do" sounded mighty sweet even to the spectators. How it must have thrilled the noble fellow by your id*! The question I am about to ask you to not put In a critical, taunting, sar- castic spirit, but purely for your own Hike and for the sake of the happiness vt your husband. When the minister asked, "Do you promise to love, cher- ish and comfort this man In sickness nd in health?" your "1 dw" sounde<l mighty sweet. Now, the question I want to ask in all good-nature is, "Have you kept that promise? I be- liovf that in a great measure you have. I venture to assert that you h\e fulfilled your "I do" as well and perhaps better than Husband has. Household responsibilities are so numerou", so monotonous, so nrrve- trying that much allowance must be made for little omiftfioni, und for a degree of what might be called occa- sional oversight. But if necessity compels us to be a trifle negligent, let's see to it that our negligence is not directed at Husband. In fact, let's nll'iu everything to go wrong before he is slighted. Oh, I don't mean "slighter as to his meal* or his cloth- ing or as to a comfortable bed, but flighted in those little loving atten- tions which are such trifles, but which are the very Hfc of a husband. Call men over-grown babies, suy they are spoiled and unreasonable, or what not, the fact is and will always be that they not only like to be "made over," but must be made over if you get along with them. One of the sweetest traits of a sweet woman is to recog- nize this little whim of her husband and humor it. Authorities on the subject say that It is the man's business to do the woo- ing before marriage, and that the wife should do so after marriage. Most men will respond to a little loving. They are few, far between, and "freakish" who won't thaw out under its influ- ence. Where marrind life has become a cold, sordid, matter-of-fact proposi- tion, it is because the flower of rom- ance has been choked and smothered by the cnres and irritations of daily life. These unseemly weeds must, as fur as possible, be pulled up by the roots. When you get them out of the way you will doubtless discover the little flower of romance struggling to grow. Help it along all you can. Water it, enrich the soil in which it is planted. Keep the hurtful weed* pull- ed up from around it. It is'impossible to lay down any but general rules for the treatment of a husband, and the first one is treat him in accordance with his temperament. Don't try to make him over. Love him as he is. If he Is a smoker, light his pipe or cigar for him, and let him knock the ashes anywhere he pleases. You love him bettor than you love your house furnishings. Let him know, every chance you have, that you didn't marry him merely to make you a liv- ing. If he is not adapted for such things (and many men are not) don't complain at him because he doesn't asi?t you in cleaning up the dishes or nursing live baby while you are busy or doing anything that is properly a woman's job. No matter how busy you are while he is at home, kee.p up a lively conversation all the while. Cultivate an interest in what he loves to talk about. I/et there be lots of , | ject of story-telling are Sara C. Bry- i j n real surprise, ceased combing hisf u H nad , a bout Jamie's Part. One day a little boy came to sohootf with very dirty hands and 1 the teacb^ said to Mm: "Jamie I wish you would not corn*'' to school with' your hands soiled. What would you say If I came to school with soiled hands'?" "I wotUdat ay anything" WM tb* prompt reply. "I'd be too polite." - - Mlnard's Liniment for Warts. One to Practise On. Young Wife "The trained nurse t going to tea*h me how to give t* baby ite bath," Young Husband (anxiously) "Don't you tbtak we'd better send out and' hire another baby?" It take* a gallon of milk to make , pound of cheese. At the present rate of decrease France's population, now 39,000,000y will be 3&,000,000 in 1940. Catnpana's \ITALIAN r BALM/ ant's "How to Tell Stories to Chil- ! mustache. The witness' forefinger dren," and "Stories to Tell Children," was pointing straight at Handy Andy "True Bird Stories," by Olive Thome Miller; and "Among the Meadow Peo- ple," by Clara D. Peirson. Hatch not at the cousin. "Yes, sir; that's the man; I'm sure he chosen to cast in his lot with Uncle Frank, the boss' powerful, informal' government would have protected horn I against the formal law like a shield of Prevents chapped hands, cracked lips, chilblains. Makes your skin oft, white, clear and smooth. All drugeitti *eU it O f jk brass; he would have 'been in no dan- Nothing could shake him from that, ! **?-. , Bu . 1 .** formal kw . 5^2* a .... and his patient, invincible stubborn- , shidd of tissue paper against the ven- Make a Bead Necklace. ness carried conviction. It had the Seance of the in-viable powers. He A pretty brad necklace may be 'indubitably veracious air of a bulldog, m! F ht lbe bumped off as snugly and made of sealing-wax thus: Heat a with set teeth in a leg. Astute Abe ' el T, ," e t 08363 awa >' an " good-sized steel knitting-needle over| T ^ u _ ma _ n _P^*ently perceived _that he j^ ^ ras ^ ^i^^^ damaging his case by pursuing At the spring elections the Martin- dale-Brophy-Oochran-Hanson machine won easily. I an alcohol lamp and press carefully i into a piece of sealing-wax about the | size of the bead desired. Hold the Donavan^ TeVtVmo^tr^t^tch^was _ , .-. piece of wax which is on the needle f held to answer a charge of murder I The follow| nK we e k Hatch was put above the flame, turning it slowly Donavan d'id not go back to the pay- 1 on , trial for . murder; and Donavan until an even round bead is formed, master's office after the inquest nor| ratlher wondered at the strange post- then dip it in water to cool. If the 1 go home. Something had happened P"ment of that bumping off. He bead* are to be made in blended col-! to him, and he wanted to be alone. He f a _ hls SPSH* ^.. he _ ^ * lven rt or?, heat each stick of wax in turn the Pvate opinion that his wife 1 and dot a little wax on the cool bead;'*"/" 1 ?' pret ^ and . &lim . and youth- , ., ., a fu for the mother of a big two -year- i then hold the bead over the flame ; M ^ The idea of not trusting her again and turn. The colors, when in anyth j n g would have seemed ab- warm, will flow around the bead, in-; surd. But something had happened to termingling nnd forming pretty him that he could not talk about even stripes and designs. Cool the bead as to her; he bad no words for it. There In-fore in the water; dry and pass over ' s the "I," way down deep, beneath the flan-e again to restore the lustre. | evei T other tie an 'l obligation, that If you wish the beads to have a raised U ^ 01 *^". *S*f share^ with another, "ill-face, apply the colored wax when the foundation is hard. To remove th " a man ha( if he j the bead, heat the needle on each side W orld and lose his own goul?' of the bead. When the bead is loos- ened, slide it back and forth on the needle before taking it off, leaving a What shall it pain the whole! Some- j how his soul had been saved; but it | was impossible to talk al>out it to! anybody; he had no words for it. before. But Ollie Dunn now swore that he had been at the corner of the building when the second robber ran out of the paymaster's office and positively the man had a black mask over his face, completely concealing it except the eyes. Hatch had an alibi, also, and was acquitted. Commenting upon the acquittal, Gus Whelpley observed, "Well, Gene made a devil of a lot of trouble, first and last, and that's all he did do. He might 'a' known it. He's a good fellow at heart, but a fearful born's no name for it." (The End.) A SIN TO LET HAIR MIL OUT 3 5c "Danjderine" Saves Your Hair Ends Dandruff 1 Delightful Tonic clean-cut hole. The beads are then T"* little family's slender cash re- strung on colored silk cord, and kept ?""rces disappeared. It was subsist- in place by knotting the cord. <lunt made of senling-wax over a card- board foundation. Dye Faded Sweater Skirt, Draperies t at f" , , , j ,, . ,, while Donavan tramped the streets, beads can be made round flat, oblong | teU phom , ( j an<i wrotc P kltters in ^..^ or square and in and endless variety , of any ^rt of job of colors. The necklaces are usually: Then he found a job of a sort in' finished with n tassel or with a pen- a dun and cavwrnous warehouse that flanked the river, his job being to ' stand on a ptatform, exposed to wea- ther, and check bales, boxes and bundles of merchandise which flowed across the platform all day. He per- ' position ' in Diamond Dyes ____ i Bvery "Diamond Dyes" package ! tells how to dye or tint any worn. ! ; faded garment or drapery a new rich j i color that will not streak, spot, fade. ! or run. Perfect home dyeing Is formed the duties of the faithfully, but with no particular dis tin-ction. It had been said of him that he had no talent in any respect, but steady, Meanwhile Handy Andy Hatch lay in j aiL He had an alibi, but his :ustute counsel was in no hurry to oppose that guaranteed with Diamond Dyes even alibi to blockhended youivg Dcnavan's THE TEST OF TIME FOR RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS HAS PROVEN Neui I Kemeby j IB a positive Remedy for Acute, Chronic and Muscular Rheu- matism In all its various forms. COUNTLESS GRATEFUL TESTIMONIALS and Repeat Orders received during past 25 years. DOBSON'S NEW LIFE REMEDY is not an experiment but the product of a quarter century of study and research. Pleasant to take. Does not upset the stomach. No harmful drugfl. DO NOT BE PREJUDICED. Dobson's New Life Remedy will give you a new lease on life by freeing you of pain. Thousands of enthusiastic customers have written us stating that after years of failure with other medicines, electric belts, etc., they were cured by Dobson's New Life Remedy. One bottle for One Dollar. Six bottles for Five Dollars. Bobwn Brtnrhjj CtompRftfl West AdcUld* Bt, TronU Canada If you have never dyed before. Just tell your druggist whether the ma- terial you wish to dye Is wool or silk, or whether it .. linen, cotton, or mixed goods. For fifty-one years millions of women have been using "Diamond Dyes" to add years of wear to their old, shabby waiste, skirts, dresses, coals, sweaters, stockings, draperies, liiiiigingH, everything! Preserving Butter. Place the butter in crocks that have been scalded with boiling water. Us positive identification, which had such an inconveniently veracious air. Two months passed. Winter came. Donnvan wore an overcot ag h? stood on his platform, pencil In hand, check- ing bundles. Sometimes snow fell on his pad of paper, smearing the figures, j The days grew short, but the hours at the warehouse were long for bill | clerks. Often the last two hours of his i dtty's labor was performed under elec- , trie light. Then he trudged along a: mean, badly paved, pocirly lighted I street to the trolley track, where he jammed' himself into a packed 1 car and 1 For Nervous Headaches TS THE RELIEF from head- J. ache or neuralgic pains worth one cent to you ? That's all it costs for an application of "Vaseline" Mentholated Jelly. With the first indication of a hcadach* rub a small amount of it gentlvon tho forehead and temples. So convenient, effec- tive and economical t CHESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING COMPANY BaaiMMI 1880 Chabot Ave. Mnntrsil Vaseline Trade Mirk MENTHOLATED pEnroisUM JEtir Hun->'! It's your dv.ty! Each dty you se a little more hair falling oat and you are making no effort to avoid baldness. What a pity. Falling hair means your hair te weak, sick, pos- sibly dandruff is strangling It, or the hatr root pores In the scalp are not flrm and tight, thus wasting the hair- growing oils. Danderine almost Instantly stops falling hair of men or women and cleans every particle of dandruff away, then the hair Uikee on new life, vigor and strength to grow strong, thick, and long. Danderine Is delightful not s-ticky or Rreasy. Go to any drugstore now ar.d get a bottle. Use it Have healthy, heavy, beautiful hair and lots of It. Rupture Kills 7.0UU Annually n , i rode home. Of course, it was good at one or two-gallon crocks. Pack the homo-warm with love there. Yet the butter infirmly, then wrap each crock (family was tight pinched to get with muslin, sterilized by boiling.] through the weeks on $35 each Tues-, Place- cch crock or several crocks to- day, ami that distressed him. It wasj gether, in a larger crock that has been going to be a lenn Christmas, soalded, und let cool. Pour over the' Once, homeward bound, Dona van crocks containing butter, a brine made ' iWoached threo men on a shwbby of water, salt, sugar and s*!*' ' street cmneT - T N were not men Make the brine strong enough an egg. Kor every three pounds of neTV( . Si as when the hairs on"a swilt, use one pound of sugar and one-! ba;-k stiffen. It came to him, word- fourth pound of powdered saltpeter. I lessly. that there was trouble at hand. I Nothing happened, but his nerves i , were tingling when he got ly. The next Sunday genial Gus Whelp- ley tele'f.ihonod an urgent invitation and Donnvan went to seo him. Gus wished to save a brand frnm the 'burn- ing and 1 argued 1 the case with him earnestly 1 'like a kiniKy man seeking to rescue a wayward friend from the consequences of his foJIy. "You're keeping Andy Hatch in jail, Gene," he urged, as thoufrh that were a quite onw*cmble thing to do. " 'Tain't doing you any g-occf, nor any- body elae, far as 1 can see. I could fix it up for you tranjp-oi '.ation paid, some money down, aiul a gxxl j-c>b when you get there. Of course, this'll all be forgotten in ? : x m mtha public: never romom'oercd anything longpr'ni six months. By aivd by you can comoj Measures Air. Resembling u gas mask connected j by a rubber tube with a device regis- tering on a (llul is a French doctor's ' invention for Accurately measuring the amount of air breathed Into the lungs and expelled Town on a Bed of Hot Water. The town of Carlsbad sceinw to rest on n viist bed of boiling water. In the Bermuda islands water i>> supplied by rain water from cisterns, there being only three or four wells on the Mlnard'a Liniment for Colds, eto. Backaches! soreness^ by wanning and circulating blooi Stop those dull, insistent aches, by relieving the .painful con- i rsiii.ii. Sloan's does this- 1 . Without rubbing, it quickly penetrates thff sore spot, stim- ulating the circulation to and through it. Congestion is re- duced, soreness allayed, the pain relieved. Sloan'i rrlicvos tore, iching muscles. I'.niisii, ; tho pains of rheumatism and neuralgia. Breaks uu coids in cru-st. Stops sulfprinit whcrwt-f coiitffstiun rou9i?a pmn. Made itt Canada thousand persons each yar are laid away the burial certifkatt being marked "Rupture." Why? Be- cause the unfortunate ones had neg- lected themselves or had been merelj taking care of the sign (swelling) oi the affliction and paying no attention to the cause. What are you doingt Are you neglecting yourself by wear- ing a truss, appliance, or whatevet name you choase to call it? At best, the truss is only a make-shift i. fals prop against a collapsing wall and cannot be expected to act as mon than a mere mechanical support. The binding pressure retards blood cir* culation, thus robbing the weakened muscles of that which they need moil nourishment. 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