ain en the insuf- fet provided. It A at , o> doctor in ¢ harge | | th the patient as a "resumption of solid food is bring on kidney trouble. lications such as inflammation iddle-ear ave especially seri- account of the possibility of ; resulting, and' must be est attention by the physi-1 charge. The throat congestion 'relieved by antiseptic gargles, tions, ete., which rs even the slightest disc from the nose or throat may the infection although the hardly noticeable. cases 'of 'this dis cause of all the epidemics that oceur,| they being just as infectious as 'the more severe cases. x asks how to relieve chronic | eveise are the two "the thi weeks. fate) flingss is. Mild or "missed" e are the chief ie 'Answer: Diet and to deal with. Do not eat too of water, Use ex- y-. dry food. Dri plent believed that infec: rut and vegeibit every day. " by tha loose particles | during desquamation, but this no longer held, it 'having {® ly proved that it is from |, t or ear discharges become infected, To Be therefore to leave the or place of quar- possible. Preferably out aly allowed ingmber cough. wi no ed For the: well child icines as much as ifn exercise, 2 i a child who ig whooping BING Cough should be 0 80% achool if another Answer: There Se is first necessary to see that at longer appear enlarged inflamed and that any discharge from the. pe throat or ears is com- HE Pp. ley uamation should also clothing that, ischarges. ! To be tired after exertion 1a ' Rest and food restore the tired the time is a symptom of anaemf, pdt that Ted 3 £0 lack ten difficult to persuade the - 8 to do 'anything for it. sult from thin blood, ig is dis rb. ed and a general breakdown, may oc- 'Mr. Wilson Johnson, Nineveh, N.S. says: "A few years ago my system 'was in a badly run down condition. My nerves seemed always on edge, and' I found myself so weak that I could hardly do any work. 1 Ha t! from headaches and from pains in 'the back and under the shoulders, and pL Fr | was often so sleepless at night that ges getting on the The onioe 4 has now:a contemporary in: "Scout! | ing." a stmflar paper publiéhed, by the . | Saskatchewan Provincial Couticil; "| Both are greatly appreciated by thoge for whom they, are published and are already wielding a big influence An sand bright; the next raw 'blustery, is extremely hard on the Conditicns are such that the er cannot take the little one out air so much to be de- H is confined to the house h often over-heated and bad ; Tol He catches cold; his lie lonach ;and bowels become dis- the mother soon has a Sieh, y to look after. To prevent "occasional dose of Baby's Own be given. They regu- oh stomach 'and bowels, thus pre- banishing colds, simple co-ordinating the work of th Scout Movement throughout Shel Te spective Movinces, up an ol ty wi orders for e Boy. * * . "Persons Slanted in the Wolf Cubs' the junior branch of Scouting--will be glad to know that a néw hooklet "describing their work is now avail able from, Provincial Scout Head: quarters, Bloor and Sherbourne Sts. Toronto, upon application. Selling Young Trees. "A boy in northeastern Ontario, built Profitable bu business shade t: J 'and when morning came I felt as tired as when I went to bed. I was king niegiche all the time, but it was 'do. ng me ho-good. "Then I read the testi- mounlal of a man whose condition h been similar to mine, and who stro ly recommended Dr, Williams' Pink Pills." I decided to give-this medicine , and when 1 had taken six' boxes I felt much better. I continued taking the pills untfl I had taken six more boxes, and I can only say 1 am glad I did so, as I am now enjoying the best. of health, and I advise all mén who feel run down to give these pills 4 good trial." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can bé obs tained from any dealer in miedicing, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six hoxps for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams? Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Large Teli of Whitefish Eggs. The Dominion Fisheries Branch re. ports that upwards of 50,000,000 white- a fair trial fish eggs "have been placed in the} Smoke Island' "hatchery, Lake Winni- to '"Waterhen Lake, ence to Lake Manitoba, With Lake Winnipegosis freezng early in Novem. the greatest difficulty was ex- in securing the eggs, the outfit finding it necessary to tug winter at the egg-collecting camp. The collection of 1920 is 'treble the quan- He. eollested the: previous year. te 5 as in no other sport, ceeding in imitating the 'especially of the birds float, like gulls; hawks] good skater will thout apparent ef- lent motion tantly changing kd body. 'To perceive 'resembles so much of might not idl invite Ampigrants , | from any oth Gre farmers or farm hands her Colonies for the Do- minions. She is' quite willing to send out countless uy folk in the hope that they may be transformed into farmers in their few environment, but she has fewer farmers to spare than many other countries from which Canada in the past has drawn excel lent settlers. This is ilustrated by the homestead-entries. From 1897 to 1919, only eighteen per cemt. of the British immigrants made entry for homesteads in Western Canada as compared to twenty-seven per cent. of | | the American immigrants and twenty nine per cent. of the foreign born from Continental Europe. In certain parts of Europe where there is a genuine land hunger, there is not enough land to go round. Five or six acres per family is all the land available in certain parts of Belgium, and even on that the thrifty Belgian frequently brings up a family of ten. The great immigration of Ukrainians from Central Europe which has given Canada nearly 300,000 of her Western farm population was due to the con- * | stant subdivision of farms which were only fifteen acres to start with. These Ukrainians have become a great as- set to Canada, and have at thelr own expense erected four large colleges for higher education. Then again we owe our fine stock of seventy thous- and Scandinavian settlers to the lack of sufficient land in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland. Have these. foreign born made good Canadian citizens? Read "The Edu- cation of the New Canadian," by Dr. J. T. M. Anderson, of Saskatchewan, and you will say "Yes!" In one or two groups at first there was opposi- tion to the learning of English, par. ticularly among the older people; but now it is difficult to find suMelent teachers to meet the demands of the schools. And it is not only in the schools where. you find the foreign born, More than half the students at the University of Manitoba are of foreign parentage. You find children of the foreign born as leaders in the professions and in the Cabinet of at least one Provincial Government. mada is after all only repeating on a larger seale the welcome to and the assimilation of the foreign born which has characterized the history of the Mother Country, The Flemish weavers and the Huguenots who found refuge in England, are but a few of the foreign born immigrants who help- ed to build up British industry. Cana- da's chief industry is agriculture, and her agricultural prosperity is due in no small degree to the thrifty and in- dustrious new Canadians who have come to the wide acres of the West from the over-crowded- lands of Bur- ope, and whose children to-day are proud to speak English and to sing "The Maple Leaf Forever. e leat Norever43, Forest Experimental Station. The Dominion Government estab- | lished about four years ago under the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior, a forest experimental sta- tion at Petawawa, Ontario. This is on a part of the military reservation 'that 'is not required at the present! time for miliary purposes. The tract 18 admirably situated for the purpose, as it is a territory from which the timber has been cut in the past fifty or sixty years, and he new forest is|§ coming on in various stages of growth «and different kinds of trees. The tract 0 cut-over nds in Ontario and Quebec that the Tesults of the experiments made in it will: be applicable over a great' ex- of Eastern Canada. The experi ts cover too wide a range to be : wy Tommy's. Choice. The teacher had 'been speaking of unique and valuable collections of ob- Jects of art and interest, and spoke of the fabulous "that Had been | expended by some of the collectors on their particular hobbies. Thinking to obtain some idea of the characters of the members of his class in this direction, he asked them what they . thought they would like to col- lect it they had plenty of money. Up went the hand of a boy who was noted for mo particular brilliance--in. fact, answers from him were very scarce on any subject; so this oppor- tunity was seized by the teacher. * "Well, Tonimy, and what would you collect?" "Rents, sir," was the prompt reply. The lesson was changed, and that teacher is recovering from the shock. Sree His Hearing Restored. The Invisible ear drum invented by A. O. Leonard, which is a miniature megaphone, fitting inside the ear en- tirely out of sight, is restoring" the hearing of hundreds of people in New York City. Mr. Leonard invented this drum to relieve himself of deafness and head noises, and it does this so successfully that no one could tell he is a deaf man. It Is effective when deafness is caused by catarrh or by perforated, or wholly destroyed natur- al drums. A request fer information to A. O, Leonard, Suife 487, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City, will be given a prompt reply. advt. te pi ci Spring Forest Fires. One of the most dangerous seasons of the year in regard to forest fires is now approaching and it behoves all who go into a forest on any business to be careful with fire. When the snow leaves 'the forest, last year's leaves, grass and twigs are left as dry a8 tinder, "@nd a lighted mateh 'or cigarette stub thrown down carelessly falls into material as inflammable as a barrel of shavings. After the spring rains come on and the new grass and new foliage starts the danger is great- There are always more foolish buy- ers than sellers. No one is so wise but that he has a little folly to spare. 3 Adversity is the balance in whieh to weigh your friends. It 18 a mistake to think that d er can be surmounted without d You should pay just as mu or your experience as the resultant wis. gom is worth. ------ ie MONEY ORDERS. It is always safe to send a Dominion Express Money Order. Five dollars costs three cents, 3 rr SR A Dubious Farewell. The minister of a Scottish o parish, whose estimate of himself was not of the lowliest type, had acgbpted * a "call" to a wider sphere, ang was paying a few farewell visits, 5, "So ye're gaun tae leave us,, said one of the oldest of his female sh- loners, 'as he sat down. "Whig will we dae noo?" "Oli, Mrs. Macfarlane," repliéd the minister, in affable tones, youl 'soon get a far better man!" "'Deed, sir," came the d Sndent rejoinder, "1 hae my doots: o've had five in my time, and every: 'yin o' them has been waur than the Iagt!" ntry Minard"s Liniment Relleves Distfomper ree Penalty of Success. No man desires defeat; and yet: When all the balloting is o'er, The loser need no longer fret; The winner has to work still more. Women are permitted to drive mobor-buses in the streets of: Tokio, Japan, . In some pacts of Central Africa it is @ mark of respect to turn the back upon one's superizr. - NIRA Aran CORNS Lift Right Off without Pain NIIP NANI Magic! PLA ly reduced. People do not realize that just at the close of winter, through which there is scarcely any danger from fire in the woods, comes on the most dangerous season. Care by all-who go into the woods at this time means a great reduction in the fire-bazard, re i "The head of a child does not in-; crease in size after the seventh year," says a scientist. What One of the Best Known Travellers in Canada Says. "Now I am going to give you an un- solicited testimonial, as they say in the Patent medicine advertising. Heretofore have had a profound contempt for faint medicines, particularly so-called iniments, derhaps this is .dué to the that I have been blessed with a sturdy donstitution, and have never been lll a day in my life. One day last fall after a hard day's tramp in the slush of Montreal, I developed a severe pain in. my legs and, of course, like a man who has never had anything wrong with him physically complained rather boisterousty: he good tle wife says: 'I will rub them with some Mniment I have. 'Go ahead, I sald, just to humor her. Well, in she comes 'with a bottle of MINARD'S LINIMENT and gets busy. Believe me the pain disappeared a few minutes after, and you can tell the world I said so. (Signed) FRANK B. JOHNS, Montreal, reason America's Pioneer Dog Remedies z Book on DOG DISEASES pod ow fo Poet = Mail 'ee to -dress by the Author. 1 ost treet wii Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly yon lift it right off with fingers. Doesn't hurt a bit. Your druggist sells a tiny hottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes. and calluses. you wish them to have thick, healthy hair through life shampoo regularly with Cuticura Soap and Dace rey a itchin to 1 i any, ith Cuticuts Ointu: ent. ean, p usually means gocdhair, Soap 25e. Sand Ste, Taleam 25c. Sold AE ASPIRIN | "Bayer" only is Genuine Take no chances with ii" Bayer T plets ! Subsitutes r genuine * er Tal of Aspirin," Unless you see the name "Bayer" o on package ; "OUCH! ANOTHER. SECT lieve nd relieve those Ll i i Ei or sefaticn Iu ache, pains