CRIPPLING PAINS 1 OF RHEUMATISM Cannot be Banished by Lini- ments Is Reached Through the Blood. Thousands of men and women suf- fer severely from rheumatism. Crip- pling pains in the ma.$cles and joints make every movement a torture. Many people think rheumatism is due to cold or wet weather and they try to banish It by rubbing the painful parts with liniment. This is a great mistake; the rheumatic poison is in the blood and liniment and rubbing cannot do more than give temporary relief. If you are a victim of rheuma- tism or lumbago the way to rid your- self of it is by making the blood rich and pure, for only in this way can the rheumatic poison be driven from the system. To enrich and purify the blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills should be taken. They act directly on the blood, making it rich and red, and In thla way the trouble disappears. Thousands of people have proved this, among them Mrs. H. King. Croydon, Ont.. who says: "I was attacked wKh rheumatism in my right arm and shoulder. It pained me so that I could not raise the arm to comb my bair or feed myself. I commenced taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and after taking three boxes I seemed all right again. About six months later, however, the trouble came on again, thla time in my left arm. Again I took Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills with the same bene- ficial results, and since then I have had no return of the trouble. Now I recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills whenever I get a chance." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Two Faced Shade*. Window shades have been patented that appear to be lace curtains from the Inside of a room and ordinary shades from the outside. - Minard'a Liniment for Distemper. Lake Louise, Alberta. The monarch* of the East their Jewels stock In hidden rcck-walled room*, aave on those daya Of ceremonial high when, flashing rays Refulgent, these their brilliant splen- dor pour Upon a moment's pageant By the shore Thy mountain guardians, stand, and, while they praise Themselves in thy pure turquoise mir- ror, gaze In awe and con thy matchless beauties o'er. When Joyfully thy mother glacier owns. While dancing shadows swiftly chace those hues Prismatic that her snowy wonders fuse In thee to make an eye-entrancing sight. Then softly o'er thine iridescent tones A featr.-'ry mie-t falls veil-like from the height. Jennie Stork Hill. Why Bread Has a Crust Why does a loaf of bread have a crust? When a mass of dcugh is baked In I the over the water in it turns to steam- I at 212 degrees Fahrenheit After this It cannot get any hotter, but the out- side of the loaf is not limited by the presence of water, and both the pan and the air In the oven get much hot- ter. This converts the starch in the out- er layer of dough Into sugar, part of which is burnt to caramel. The latter gives the outside of the loaf its crust, and makes it quite different in appear- ance and flavor from the crumb inside. The real Empire builders of Canada's colonial period were not the statesmen, the men of wealth, the great planters, but the unknown pioneers who fought single-handed and at once hot:, the primeval wilderness and the lurking savage. The hand, crooked to the plough- handle, was shaped to the trig- ger. Raining. I This- rain, which wavers to and fro In soft and dull and silent flow, Fringes the world with distant gray | And steals the autumn't glow away. I Tils sombre, still and cons-tant rain, | Wearing its fine web on the pane, i Constrains my heart, that else would roam To keep the cozy airs of home. j The world this morn was over fair, j My soul was lured to wander there; | The glory of the autumn called j From my small cabin sombre-walled. I But now the woodlands, wet and cold, j Shiver in coats of tarnished gold; I And the chill showers, kindly sent, Have made my soul with home con- tent. Edward F. Garesche. THE FALL WEATHER HARD ON LITTLE ONES loulding Says It Is His Family Medicine "Tanlac has done my wife and my- self so much good that we have made it our family medicine," says Freder- ick Moulding, 2513 17th St., South* west Calgary, Alberta. "As for myself, I had been feeling Just about half sick for some tima My appetite was very poor, nothing tasted right, and what I did eat seem- ed to do me little good. I never felt hungry and my energy and strength were slipping right away from. me. "Two or three years ago my wife was troubled somewhat the same way. She had no appetite, was all run down and very nervous. After taking a few bottles of Tanlac she was so improved that all the neighbors spoke about it. "Knowing what Tanlac did for her, I took it myself and it has helped me Just like it did her. I now eat three rousing meals a day and relish every bit% and have an appetite that never fails me. That tired feeling is gone and my old time strength and energy have come back to me. My wife and myself both think Tanlac is great" Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. Advt. MOTHER! Move Child's Bowels with "California Fig Syrup" D (Province HitiWi,y) near linton: Two prmc wells splendid bulldinga. food orchard jid fences Far trm and further pitrtlculara apply to : G A. P. Brtckenden & Co , taSCuiS * I-ondrn Loan Bid*- . Lcnrton. Ont. i _. =====s=saL uou-r A iiA'itoKE. fl.fc.Vi rtl _^,i Yonge Street Toronto. RefUtera* Attorneys. Send for frea booklet, BELTING FOR SALE BELTING OF ALL KINDs NEW OB used, pulleys, eawa. cable, boL etc , shipped subject to approval at low* est Prices In Canada. York Bltin Co_ 115 York St.. Toronto. Iron Soft as Lead. The action of sea water on cast iroa cannon raised in Europe aiier an im- mersion of 133 years had made them almct as soft as lead. Not So Stingy. Jamie was begging his father for a second helping of Jam. "When I was a boy," said his par- ent, "my father only allowed me to have one helping." Jamie was silent for a minute, and then asked: "Aren't you glad you live with us now, daddy?" MONEY ORDERS. Dominion Express Money Orders are on sale in rive thousand offices throughout Canada. Surnames and Their Origin GILLEN Variation* Glllon, Gillinan. Gilllon, Glennon, Gillfinan. Racial Orl(,in Irish. Source A given name. The nanrtes in this group also are often found with the prefix "Mac," which, as has been pointed out In pre- vious articles. Is the Irish and Scottish equivaleut of the English termination "son" aud tbe German "sohn," the Nor- man-French prefix "Fitz," and the Rus- sian aud Polish terminations such as "witz," "aki," "ska," etc. The olJ Gaelic form of the name is "MacGiolIa-Flnnein" or "MaeGlolla- ) flnni'in." the pronunciation of which was much more simple than would seem. "MacGillinan" conies pretty close to the way it would come off the Gaelic-speaking tongue. The clan name conies from the given name of "Glol'.aflnnean" (meaning "follower of the shield"). The clan was founded by a chieftain of this name, as nearly as can be esti- mated, a few decades before the cloee of the tenth century. This chief was ! the last priiice of Tircounel to come of ; the O'Mulroy line, and was a direct j descendant of one "Anrnlre." the 138th High King of all Ireland, who reined, 1 according to history, in the year 563 j A.D.. about the time when the Anglo- i Saxons were consolidating th fruits ! of their victories in the invasion of England. LOMBARD Variations Lombert. Lumbard. Racial Origin English. Source A given name, or a nationali- ty. There are two sources to which th family names in this group may be traced. One of them, the more obvious. Is the old province of Lombardy, between which and England there was close commercial intercourse in the Middle Ages. And in a very great number of rases you will find that the original form of the surname was "Le Lom- bard." indicating that the bearer, a merchant or craftsman, had come from that part of the world. In some instances there is no doubt ttat this family name is but a con- fused form of the name of Lambert, but not always. There was a true source of the family name in the old Teutonic given ! came which among the Anglo-Saxons took the form of "Lunbeohrt" and later, in Anglo-Norman times. "Lum- j pert." A Danish form was "Lombart." i whale the Flemings of the Middle Ages ' spelled it "Ix>mbaert." The name, philologists tell us, was a combination of the words for "poor" and "bright." There is no doubt that the faniily name was developed iu other countries than Euglaud. There are records of it among the lists of Huegenot immi- grants. Canadian fall weather is extremely hard on little ones. One day it is warm and bright and the next wet and cold. These sudden changes bring on colds, cramps and colic, and nnies* baby's little stomach is kept right the result may be serious. There is noth- ing to equal Baby's Own Tablets in keeping the little ones well. They sweeten tie stomach, regulate the bowels, break up colds and make baby thrive. The Tablets are sold by medi- cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brockville, Ont. The End. When all is over. And all the tired hearts of earth Follow tte beckoning hands of earth Waving out of the cool darkness. - ' ^^ The History of a Familiar Song. The words of the song "Annie Laurie," which has touched the hearts of millions of people, were written by William Douglaa and teJl the story of Ills love for the beautiful daughter of Sir Robert Laurie, first baronet of Maxwelton. Its htetory dates back to the end of the sevententh century. Douglas, so tradition says, wrote and sung the song when he was a soldier m Flanders. He Is touchrngly pictured as resting on the breast of a fellow soldier when dying from a bullet wound. He holds aloft a lock of Annie Laurie's hair and repeats the word*: "And for bonnle Annie Laurie I'd lay me doon and dee." Whether this is truth or fancy, at any rate William Douglas's grand- daughter, who was consulted on the tamily history, says that her Grand- father Douglas was certainly in love with Annie Laurie-, "but." she added, 'he did not get her after all." The original song contained but two verses. A third equally charming was added by an unknown hand. The music a<; we know it to-day was com- posed by Alice Anne Spottiswoode, who in 1838 became Lady John Scott. H is modern in comparison with the words, but the flavor of its melody is old-fashioned and sweet. The ancestral home of Annie Laurie, who later married a certain Mr. Fer- guson, still tiis high above the braes of Maxwelton. Above the entrance door of the tower is the quaint old "marriage stone" of Anne's father and mother, with the initial*, date and the family coat of arms. William Douglas often gazen oa this inscription and' hoped to see his own and Annie's] there, but fate decreed otherwise. Beauty alone shall roam beneath the sky And not the huge and prowling dino- eaurs. There shall be wild, strange music for- evermore And sails of woven moonlight Wow ing by Along a misty twilight, .- And there shall pour Down th rough, blue space a golden rain of stars. . . . Oscar Williams. Even a sick child loves the "fruity" taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the little tongue is coated, or if your child is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold, or has colic, a teaspoonful will never fail to open the bowels. In a few hours you can see for yourself how thoroughly it works all the constipation poison, sour bile and waste from the tender little bowels and gives you a well, playful child again. Millions of mothers keep "California Fig Syrup" handy. They know a tea- spoonful to-day saves a sick child to- morrow. Ask your druggist for genu- ine "California Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California" or you may get an Imitation fig syrup. >^eX ? Relieves i Dyspepsia M. D. advises : "Person* who suffer from severe indigestion and constipation siioulcUake after each meal and at bedtime, Sheen to thirty drops of the Extract of Roots known to the Drug Trade as "Mother Scigel's Curative Syrae." Get the Genuine. 50c.and51.00 bottle*. In spite of ail tidtferences :r. rank and education, one honest man is very like another. Mlnard's Liniment for Garget in Cows. STOMACH MISERY, GAS, INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepsin" Corrects Sour, Upset Stomachs at Once Those who are weil-to-<!o have been hard to do. "Cascarets" lOc For Sluggish Liver or Constipated Bowels COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlots TO(V3NTO SALT WORKS C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO Clean your jewels: Feel fine! When you fee! sick, dizzy, upset, when your head is dull or aching, or your stomach is sour or gassy. Just take one or two Cascarets to rehtve constipation. Xo griping nicest laxa- tive-cathartic on earth for growp-ups ' and children. lOc a jox. Taste like candy. . Taking Ways. Father's umbrella was not to be found anywhere. So he asked the members of his family if they had seen it. "I tfcink Mr. Ben*tm took it last! night." said Johnny. "What makes you think that, my son?" " 'Cause when 1 was In the hall last night i heard bis say to sister: 'Well. I'll have to steal one.' " Book oa DOG DISEASES aad Bow to Fnd MUd Pr to any \i- i!r t>y th AiLSor. a. '.lay Qlavw 00,133. '-.3 W M t 24th 8U-e*t Kw Tor*. TJ.ax The biggest things in life depend on the smallest things. Minard's Liniment Co.. Limited. Sirs, I have used your Minard's Liniment for the past 25 years and whilst I have occasionally used other liniments I can safely say that I hare never used any to equal yours If rubbed between tbe hards and inhaled frequently, it will never fail to relieve cold in the head in 24 hours. It is also i .e best for bruises, sprains. | etc. Yours truly. Dartmouth. j. Q. Leslie. jor health's sake void the use of mealtime beverages which cause Disturb- ance to nerves and digestion, often resulting in sleeplessness, headache and serious organic troubles. When tea or coffee disagrees, try Instant Postum. the healthful, wholesome drink of tried and proven merit; no caffeine, no tannin, no harmful ingredient whatsoever. Fragrant delicious satisfying. At your Grocer's in sealed, air-tight tins. Pat's Safety Sprint. Pat ami Mike w*re working on the lio. A freight train appeared lines- peotedly rouml a curve. Mike jumped from the track, but Pat dropped his sbovei and took to his be*ls in front of the train. Th engine-di^ver whistlwi, but Pat kept running, a-nd finally roiled off the rails Just aa the train was about to run him down. "Why dklu't ye git off the track, ye fool?" demanded Mike. "Well, ye> see." panted Pat. it was better runnm' ou the track." * { : A 3 CE Itched and Burned, Lost Sieep._CuticuraHeals. "I had pimples- and blackheads mil ovw my face. The pimples were hard and quite large, and the itching and burning were so severe that I could not help scratching them. I wms very restless and lost many eights' sleep " I tried different rem- edies without success. Secies- an advertisement for Cuticurm Sop and Ointment I sent for a free sample which I used with success. I pur- chased more and after vsinjr three cakes of Soap and two boxes of Oint- ment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Sadie Dolce. 363 Admiral St., Prov- idence, R. I.. Aug. II. 192f. Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes. aw. - . Ointment 3 and We iiticar Saap hT without ao "Pape's Diapepsin" is the quickest, surest relief for indigestion, gajes, flatulence, heartburn, sourness, fer- mentation or stomach distress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost Immediate s-tomach relief. Correct your stomach and digestion now for a few cents. Druggists sell millions of packages. WOMAfTTAKES" EVERY CHANCE To Recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound for It Helped Her So Much Fr*derlcton. N. B. "I was wstk and had some troubles women often: have, and usually 1 was unflt for my work. I saw your advertisement* and decided to try Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compo'und. I am very much pleased with the result and recommend your Vegetable Com- pound whenever' I have a chance. You may use this letter for the bene- fit of others." MB*. WA.NDLCSS, 360 Cburch St., Fredericton, N. B. Mrs. Wandless. like many, many other women who have found relief by taking Lydia E. Plukham's Vege- table Compound, is anxious to let other women know of this splendid meuicine. So by word of mouth and by letter, one woman to another. Its virtues are made known. Women suffering from female ail- ments, indicated by such symptoms as backache, nervous troubles, hot i flashes, pain in the side and a gen- eral run-down condition of the whole system, should take Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Com round. For nearly fifty years it has been helping: women. Let it help you. Lydia B. Pinkham's Text-Book- upoa "Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sent, you free upon request. Writ* to Lydia E. Plakham Medicine Co* Lynn. Mass. A New Use for Poplar. A method has been discovered by the Forest Products Laboratories of Cana- da, whereby Canadian poplar can be used In the manufacture of cigar toxea Instead of the cedrela from Cubtfrj which generally cover up imported j ASPIRIN UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at all . A gnrou ?n Mta tin of nt Potum it. pot- jwiJ.terclnitajp. Wtit: Instant Postum "There's a Reason" I X few I Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., 45 Front St., E.. Toronto. Factory: Windsor. Ontario. havanaa, and ha be*4i regarded as the eign manual of a food cigar. Sereral CHiiadiun cigar manufacturers have al- ready started making boxes from pop- lar. - Man sometimes learns more by failure than by success, and i' ls> bet- ter to ami high ami fail than to suc- ceed in paltry scheming. The whit*>M teeth in the world a- naid to be found among t he men worfc* iitg* on sutrar plantations, who are at- ways chewing sugar-cane ^ Wood is heavier than water. It ra th air trapped in the many cefo that makes ii appear lighter When wood lias fcee-n in water for tome time liiis air eacapes. tbe wood to and vuK not float. ISSUE No. 44 22. Accept only *ii 'unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," whfch contains dfrtion$ ftnd dose worked out by physicians during 22 years arid proved sate by millions foe Colds Toothache Earache Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism Neuritis Pain. Pain barer" boxes of 12 tablets Alao bottle* o* M aad * - I* the . mark UMburxl la OM>ad) of Barer Manufacture tt Mon*- coiii cM'-rM- of s* Icvllcai-il While It la w*H known Itiit Aapirm mcani Bayrr mnufctui, to amlat th puMIc agalVtt lAttnlotw, the Tablet* of Ha; r CMDVMW "> ' B}r Crga.' f 4