RUEIIIATK TRE1TIEXT This Trouble Can Only be Got Rid of by Enriching the Blood. In no disease does the blood become thin no rapidly as In rheumatism. Not only does It become thin, but It la loaded with, rheumatic poisons. With- out proper treatment these poisons In- crease, the general health is under- mined, the inflamed Joints swell, and are very painful, and often the suf- ferer becomes crippled. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills build up the blood and enable It to cast out the rheumatic poisons with the natural secretions of the body, thus driving out the pains and benefltting the gen- eral health. Sound proof of these statements Is offered by Mrs. George Stanley, Sparta, Ont., who gays: "For a number of years I was troubled with rheumatism, which at time* was very painful. My general health was also affected, and I could scarcely drag myself around. I had been doc- toring a good deal, but did not get any better, until one day my daughter brought me a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. By the time these were used I could notice a slight Improve- ment and I continued taking the pills until I had used about a dozen boxes. by which time I felt like a new person and looked like one. I could do my work with ease, and have since enjoy- ed the best of health. I have since recommended Dr. Williams 1 Pink Pills to several others who received the same benefit as myself." The best' time to begin taking Dr. Williams' Pink PUls Is the moment you feel the least bit out of sorts. The sooner you do so the sooner you will regain your old time energy. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail post paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- rille, Ont. erver told of heari&g the explosion of a distant gun at the precise instant when the moving light band reecheJ his feet. These also are believed to have been visible sound waves. In either case,| gun or volcano, an explosion gives risej i to a steadily expanding "shell" of con- I densatlon In the air. which, followed by a shell of rarefaction, spreads cut; from the source at a speed of a lit-] tie more than 1,000 feet a second.; Under favoring circumstances we mayj see it in outline. When it reaches ourj ears the vibration it imparts to our ear drums enables us to hear the ex plosion. The spreading spherical shell in thej air is made visible by its effect upon the paths of light rays coming to our j eyes. We gay that air is invisible, i but it is not always so necessarily.) I Everybody has seen air shimmering; I over a Iiot stove or other heated sur- 1 i face. The spreading shell may be aptly ] ' compared to a soap bubble in process ! of bio-wing, and the "flashing arc", ' to the circular outline of the bubble. "Copyright Law" of the Northwest Indians Th-at a "copyr^-ivt law," very similar ir.ff weavth to meet the occasion. to tbat in farce amon? the civilized; These preparation* uwially began a SAYS SHE HAD ACTUAL DREAD OF MEALTIME COUPLE WANT BOjLRD. FARM OM mountains, irtve particular*. Bo* 160. Wllsun Publishing Co.. Ltd.. 19 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto. naticns of the world, exi'ted among , year in advance; in some case* so the primitive Indiana of northern Brit-! a time a* ttoree years was spent in pr-j ish Columbia and Alaska long before; liminariea. While this ww* going on, 1 the white man came, a remarkable \ the prcspective owtver called in the Montreal ^Voman fact which a writer discovered re- ! artist of the tribe, a man of a di*-| certV while traveling through the tinctdve cia=s whc*e wages were very; Was Verge of Breakdown But WANTED FOR TRAIKfNO : A^ School In marge of grad-aute * ; Johns Hopklna Hospital. Apply Supertn- ! t*nJ/lt. Homewood danit&rium. Guelph- N'URSEri School northem wikterness region of British j high. To the artist the prospective : Columbia in company with William j owner related all the traditions of each' Beynon. of the Canadian ethno'ogical ' figure and crest he wished carvd.| re-search. The strange thing is that The artist then started to work, spend- HEI.P WATTED MALE. ANTED PERSONS TO QROW rooms for ua; waste apace In ~ / T cellars, out-houses or gardens can fc* IS LOne, lOO. made yield to ISO pr week. Ulu*- , tratoii booklet and particulars sent tor ' 3c stamp. Tanlac Is wonderful. It has simply i . " i. V j \XT ANTEI Eats Anything Now, and TT muhr. T s* f cellars, out-1 Toronto Supply Co.. Cunutock BELTING FOB ALL KINDS OF NEW AND T8ED belting, pulleys, saws. .-aLIe.hose.paoktr.a;. etc.. shipped subject to approval at low- est price* In Canada. YORK BELTINO co . 115 YORK STREET, TORONTO. Visible Sound. One of the strangest of volcanic phenomena is the "flashing arcs" thin luminous rings which, when an eruption is in progress, are sometimes seen to rush out ar.i up from the crater and disappear in space. They have been observed on >^punt Vesu- vius and also on Mount Etna. Each successive ring follows im- mediately upon an explosion, and there seems to be no doubt 'ot the fact that these "arcs" are sound waves made visible. During the war observation was fre- quently reported of mysterious curved bands cf light and shade that swept across the sky or over the ground near places where cannon were being fired. They were described as resembling the concentric ripples produced by drop- ping a pebble into water. One ab- Diner on English Railroad Electrically Equipped. Inaugurating a new departure, the i Great Northern Railway Co., in Eng- land, has equipped the kitchen of one of its dining cars with electrical cook- : ing apparatus. Power for the ap- ' paratua is furnished by two genera- ! tore, which are belt-driven from the axles of the trucks, each having a rat- ; ing of 6 kw. In the kitchen, across ; one end, is the main cooking range and roasting oven, with a steaming . oven above it, while over the latter, a grill and a hot-water tank are locat- 1 ed. A boiling range having four hot plates, two 10-gal. boiling pans for vegetables, and a flsh fryer, are also i included in the installation, which has ' yielded such satisfactory results that the company is seriously considering similar equipment for other trains. though much has been written cf ing sometimes months en the intricate made me feel Uke a different person," totem poles, and some pictures of design* necessary. Has wcrk was said Mrs. Wm. Allen. 1515 Wellington them shown, the existence of copy- made highly difficult because he must St.. Verdun, Montreal, Quebec, right has been entirely overlooked, not in any way duplicate any carving "For five years I never knw what In fact, the meanin? cf these po'es, already in existence in the region. was to be free from stomach trouble ami the strange ceremonies at^chmg This rule was very rigidly enforced, and finally was on the verge of a break- to them, have never been, irade known marking the first workings of the down. I actually dreaded for meal- Wood May Become Important to the general reading Ablic. copyright law in North America. time TO come as I knew no matter how Herewith is given for the first time The past tense has been used caretol I was about my diet I would the story of how these primitive peo- throughout, for though an odd totem ^ = ur to suffer afterwards, pies of North America instituted a pole may still be raised among some "Tan:ac hag just changed ** copyright law along exactly the same of the very primitive tribes, the cus- EZ?J***^?2-ES2t*Sl lines as followed by the white men to- torn has practically passed, through gwn day. To be the owner of ' the natives' intercourse with the white a totem pole man. In fact the Canadian govern- was a wealth, and power. Every native erishing themselves by such cere- above the slave class aspired to raise monials, which have been commonly one some day. In the erection of the known among white men as wlti ut any br . ea " a9t D S<?t UI L mO ," * p uc j > m view of the threatened difficulty oota i nlng coa i i n tiie aear future, (he questloa ^ ^ Tahle of wood a fue) again becomes important Ac- cording to the Forest Products Labora- tone* of the Depar-ment of the In- tenor, Canada, the main considera- sign of social position, rank, ment has stopped the natives iroprov- ^g 11 '"^^ , 1 ^'3^ ^ueL^tCK) 1 ltonfl "* aeleclin * wood for fuel are * and arn able to sleep all night long up once and I get up weight and dryneas. Pouad for pound. all woods* equally dry, have about the heating value. A oonl of dry : . B*ji'.itr UAJT. *ii MIC cicvwi/i: vi uic RJIWW u A^:.. ..^ ' j^v - TT . np _ rl _ too.}' tU HT ^^f -hoH **mw iiTranii^ T^UW. d OUKU V4 u T J pole a great amount of wealth had to latches." though their significance has . _ ' hardwood, such aa birch, has approxi- ^ ,. L , .__ ^.j v_. !_ ,..,< t ..4,,.,i I am st!:l taking Tanlac and unproviag _ . be lavished; the more wealth lavished,, been entirely lost upon Optical the greater the owner's standing uv white man, for the most part too con- the community. , temptuons of the native to inqua-e When a native decided he wouWj closely into his doings. have a totem pole, he and his family,) So, soon the Indiana who first in- and sometimes, in the case of a great i trcouced the iaw of copyright wiH chief, th whole chin, set about gather- ' cease to need it. gy lncreases mv mately the same heating value a ton of coal, but In the ca^e of soft- woods, as oiuch is two cords would. ) WONDERFUL BRIDGES OF MODERN WORLD THE LAST WORD IN EN- GINEERING FEATS. . . Tanlac U sold by ail good druggtoU. 8om """no- necesaary to get th. same aiQ " 11 ^ ot heat. AdTt. Rubberized Paper. MONEY ORDERS. The safe way to send money by mall ta b y Dominion Express Money Ordar. in* raised straight up when a ship has , A new process has been discovered tow i for utlhzln * rubber m * e Baking of Chinese is spoken by four hundred The Runcom bridge over the Meney W"' Jt claimed ^ * e A"*; milHon people, is in the nature of a suspension ratt- uctl< way, the passengiers being 1 carried across in a remarkable cage-like con- trrs-ar.ce. of rubber into the raw material re- sults in the production of extraordin- ary toughness and strength. CHILDHOOD AILMENT The ailments of childhood constl- j patfon, indigestion, colic, colds, etc. can be quickly banished through the | use of Baby's Own Tablets. They are a mild but thorough laxative which In- stantly regulate the bowels and sweet- en the stomach. They are guaranteed to contain no harmful drugs and can be given to the youngest baby with perfect safety. Concerning them Mrs. Alcide Lepage, Ste. Beatrix. Que.. writes: "Baby's Own Tablets were of great help to my baby. They regu- lated her bowels and stomach and made her plump and well." The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25c a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville. Ont. Two Decks for Traffic on the Great Structure That Will Span the Hudson River. Nurses War Memorial Fund. Canadian nurses from coast to coaat are raising funds to erect a monument at the Capital in commemoration of Minard's Liniment Relieve! Neuralgli Many a man in the hour of his need finds that he has been so busy Canadian Nursing Sisters who their lives during the Great War. On- to make any friends. tario nurses are requested to send tfaeir contributions either individually COARSE SALT LAND SALT Balk CartotA TORONTO SALT WORK* & J. CUff . TORONTO low making money that he has forgotten -j^ Having Sick Animals . -.. U. A,.n^ SHOULD USE Electric cap-himps are now being ' or through their local association to made for the use of miners, the cur- In various parts of the world- n the proyinc^i secretary-Treasurer of ; rent being supplied from an accumu- Austraha, Canada, and the Lmced. ^ p^ Mlss Holland, 410 Sher- : i atO r strapped on the wearer's back. States plans are going ahead for the boume St Toronto. ' construction of four massive bridges I o which, when completed, will be among: When the Brakes Are of the greatest engineering feats in his-j p Importance. tory. Most wonderful of all is the etruc- 1 In th West - ^gg'.ng camps are ture to be erected over the Hudson mostly situated in the 1 ills, and the River at New York. It will be 6,660 ft Heavy loads of logs have to be hauled r-rta.n Sneedv Relief For long, or over 700 ft. longer than the out. always downhill. Often that helps Tell. Safe. Certa.n. Speedy Rehef For STOMACH TROUBLES ARE DUE TO ACIDITY Surnames and Their Origin CLAYBIRN Wacial Origin English. Source A locality. Most of the Clayburns and Clal- bornes in Canada will be inclined to I quarrel with the statement that thisj is an English family name. They maintain that it is Irish. In this tney are not exactly correct.' The truth is that most of the Clai-' bornes and Clayburns in Canada are, Irish, but their name is not, though it i has been known in Ireland since the t twelfth or thirteenth century. I This name, which is often pro- nounced in England as though it were^ spelled "Clebburn" or "Clebbern," was ivrigir.ally a place name, and the local- , ity was the seat of a lordship estab- lished in Westmoreland in Anglo-Nor-| man times. The spelling then was _ "Cliburne," and it later became "Cle-i borne," from which evolved the form C4aiborne and finally Clayburn. And rtrangely enough, this latest spelling indicates better than the others, quite ( by accident it must be believed, the original meaning of the place name,! if you remember that in this case the "burn" means a stream of water, and not that painful result of too close association with fire. "Clagg" was the Anglo-Saxon word for "sticky earth," that is to say, "clay." An Alan de Oleburne, apparently, settled in Ireland as early as 1200 A.D., and the name has flourished in that country-, as well as in England, ever since. famous Brooklyn Suspension Bridge., to make the hauling easy, but scrne- ar.d over 1,000 ft, longer than the times the grades are so steep that Forth car.lilever bridge in Scotland, l makes it too easy- so easy that It en- indigo ion. The great skill that will be required; tails difficulty. Indeed, in these la- in the construction of the new bridge I the l * haulin S s a mts ' may be judged from the tremendoue nomer. for that implies polling the weight it will have to carry. The ^^ ^^ lhe V** cwally con- Acid Indigestion. So-called stomach troubles, such as gas. sournese. stomach- ache and inability to retain food are la probably nine cases out of ten. simply evidence that excessive secre- tion of acid is taking place In the stomach, causing the formation of ga3 or nil throat and cheat er. Gurg-t Sprains. Bruises, ange. Spavins. Running 5or*a, Should always be In tlie stabla. KVKHYWHKRE. central span will be 34240 feet in length, and there wiM be two decks steati of D ullm * In pushing against the load tn- alu i ac u indigestion. Two and a halt distends the stomach and causes HYDE. Variations Hide, Ide, Hithereve, Hitherteve. Racial Origin English. Source A locality, also a title. None of the family names in this group have anything to do with our modern word "hide" which means a skin. They are developments of an- other old Teutonic word which was variously spelled by the Angio-Saxons and the Anglo-Normans, later, "hyde," "hythe," "hithe" and sometimes ''hide." It really had two meonlngss or If you prefer to put it that way ^here were really two separate words. One of them indicated a small farm, speci- fically a farm of the size which one man could plow in one day. The other, which was used principally, but not exclusively, in the maritime stnse, meant a haven or harbor. In addition there is a town In Cheshire, the history of which dates back to before the Norman period, called Hyxle. Here then, you have three sources of the foregoing surnames. A study of the most usual courses of develop- ment in family name formation would indicate that all of them, with the exception of Hithereve and Hithereeve came in most instances from the name of the town, and at first were used to show that an individual had come from that place or was identified with it in some way. But there is no doubt about the two forms of Hithereeve. The "hite- reeve" could only have been (Ikerally) the harbor-sheriff. We would speak of a port warden to-day. for traffic. On the upper deck 220 feet in width will be a roadway with a car on either side and outside this wiH be two footways each 17 feet broad. The lower bridge will have ten lines of railway track. , miles of specially constructed trac'k that full, oppressive, burning feeling la used at one western losing camp sometimes kr.own as heartburn. whUe the acid irritates and inflames the delicate lining of the stomach. The trouble lies entirely in the excess de- velopment or secretion of acid. To stop or prevent this souring of tie food contents of the stomach and exclusive-^ by one man. while another to neutralize the acid, and make it fox transporting heavy loads on large motor truck down a very The truck is six-wheeled, and brakes on its four rear wheels. These brake* are controlled * r * c eerin - From the standpoint of actual length the Australian bridge, which is. to be erected over Sydney Harbor be- *~" tween Dawe's Point and Milson's, Minard't Liniment for tale everywhere Point, is the next in importance. <(i Unlike that over the Hudson River, i the bridge will be a single decker with; four lines of railway, a road 35 feet wide, a motor-car road 18 feet wide, and a 15 foot pathway for pedestrian?. Simcoe County Municipal Forest. Work was begun this spriug in plant- Ing up the are>a in Vespra township. b'.and and harmless, a teospoonru'. ot Bisu rated magnesia, a good and effec- tive corrector of acid stomach, should be taken In a quarter of a glass of ho; or cold water after eating or when- ever gas. sourness or acidity is fe-lt. This sweetens the stomach anl neu- tralizes the acidity In a few moments and is a perfectly harmless and inex- pensive remedy to use. An antiacid. such a;> Bisurated Mag- The central span will be 1,600 feet in! Simcoe county. Ontario, which tte nesia. which can be obtained from any Urjrth. j county council has- acquired for a druggist In either powder or tablet form, enables the stomach to do Its work properly without the aid of TO ENJOY PERFECT HEALTH Every Woman's Wish Read Mrs. Cassady'j Experience Pad*. Ontario. "For five years I offered with pains In my back and from other troubles women often have. All of this time I was unfit for work and was taking th different medicines that I thought were good. I saw the advertisement in the papers of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and have taken It faith- fully. I am now in that a nursery to grvw part which Is especially prepared for tho Longer Than Quebec Bridge. | municipal forest. It will take several While not to be compared with >' ears lo P lant u '' th(? wht)le area ot artificial digestents. Magnesia comes either of these structures, the bridge eig]it hundjvd acres but the work will , n seve raJ forms, so be certain to a*k to be erected over the Detroit River P roceeJ y* ar b >' - vear ti!1 !t is don * u for and take only Bleurated Magnesia, between Detroit and Windwr wSt be te PslMe that a nursery to gtvw pan none the less remarkable. It will have of tae P^ting stock required wU be t bore F urpos two decks. The upper deck wii. have startetl on *** s two 28 foot roadways, two 7 foot side- walks, and a double trolley line; while the lower deck will be devoted to four About 3.703 feet in length, with a' main suspended span of 1.893 feet, the bridge wiH be over 400 feet honger than the Quebec bridge, the famous structure, the hoisting of whose ceu- The monument for Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary is a hug stone sphere on which the continents of the earth are outlined. At the N'orth Poie is set a bronze star, symbol both of his discovery and. as some one ha? s-uggested. cf "the star of uiu-or- quere-J wiH." His epitaph is his own Book on DOG DISEASES and How to F*ed Vi!;J Fret to any Ad- dress by t& Author. . Clay QloTr Co., Tn*v U9 West tth 3tr: Nw Tork. U.3.A. good health and do all my own work. I recommend it to others and give you permission to publish this letter in your little books and in the news- papers as a testimonial." Mas. D. CASSADT, Box 461, Paris, Ontario. This medicine which helped Mr?. Cassady so much Is worthy of your confidence. If you are troubled with, such ailments as displacements. In- flammation, irregularities, or other forms of female weakness you should give It a trial now. Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text- Book upon "Aliments Peculiar to Women" will be sent to you free upon request. Write to The Lydia E. Plnlcham Medicine Co.. Lynn, Mass. This book contain* valuable Infor- mation. Feed the body well Right food for the body is more important than right fuel for the engine. Grape s Nuts is a scientific food.contaimng all the nutriment of wheat and malt- ed barley. Grape'NutS digests easily and quickly, builds toward health and strength and is delightful in flavor and crispness "There's A Reason '&r Grapc>Nuts tral span was u^vntpanied by tvi-o favorlto 'luvtation f -om the Latin- dtisasters involving a total loss of I "-' ^ a way 01- maKe one. eighty-eight lives. Last, but no least, 13 the new susp- pension bruige to be built across the Delaware River. It wifcl connect the cities of Philadelphia and Camden. It is to cost more than twenty-five mil- lion dollars, and will have a central span of 1,750 feet. Roadways, tram- ways, and pathways are to be in- eluded. A total of 33.000 tons of metal will be required, whereas a cantilever brkige would have neede.I 47,000 tons. When these bridges are erected and that at Philadvlphiu v.i'l take five years to complete, or eiirh! VL'ars less than the famous Brooklyn structure Britain wit! be outclassed iit thj matter of great bridge-building feats, says an English writer. It is hoped, however, that the armament firms de- , prived of work unvler the disarma- ment scheme will tuni their attention to tlie matter, and proposals have al- ! ready been put forward for various bridgro one over the Tay; another at Ber\vick-on- Tweed ; twi over the Thames, one between Barnes and Ke\v and one at Richmond; and one over the Severn. As for remarkable bridges, the' United States still leads the way \v:;h the one at Chicago. This w-.rks ex- actly like a lift, the central span be-! Have Good Hair and Glean Scalp Free from dandruff and itch- ing. It's easy. On retiriug rub spots. n dandruff and itebingwith Cuti-.-'.ira Ointment, gettingOint- luent well on scalp. Noxtmorniug shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Rinse with tepid water. SM25c. OiBtatDl25udSOc. T*kn2S. Sold throughout theHominion. Canadian Depot: Itaiy. Unitt, 344 St. Pol St.. W., Mialrcil. METCuticura Soap chn without mug. ISSUE No. 21 '22. spirm WARNING! Say "B;iyer" when you buy Aspirin. Unless vou see the name "3a>er" on tabtets. you are not get- Vspirin at & Accept only an -unbrown packag. -Saver Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dos, vcrkcd out bv plivs-eians during 22 years and proved sate by millions for Colds Toothache Earache Hamly "Bayer" boxes ctlccldetr of **' Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism Neuritis Pain, Pain of 12 tablets- Also bottle* of 24 anJ lOO-Druggists. . the Tbl, of B th. "U^r Cr,.