BLFJISHES OF 1 1K m^ Are Praof the Blood is in a Weak and Watery Conditioa. Oue of the larMt sisna that the blood U out of order are the pimples and unaichtly eruptions that break out on the (ace or body. The aame condi- tion la Indicated by an attach of i eczema or scrofula. You canoet get ! rid of these troubles by the use of i purgative medidnes.'as so many peo- [ pie try to do. Pur^itiTes merely gal- 1 lop through the system and leave it ! still weakar. What is -needed when j the blood la shown to be out of order ; Is a tonic which will restore Its miss- '. Ing elements and leave the blood rich and red. For this pari^se there la no other tonic can «qual Dr. WHUams' Pink Pills, every dose of which helps enrich the blood, drives out impuri- ties, and brings a new feeling of health and energy. Mrs. R. E. Bishop, Hawthorne Ave., Hamilton, Ont., tella for the benefit of others what these pills did for her. She says: â€" "I was suffering terribly from scrofula. I doctored with several doctors, but without succee*. My complexion was sallow, I had ho strength, feeling very weak and languid. My neck was full of lumps called scrofula, and at times they were very painful. After trylig several so-cidled blood medicines. Or. Williams" Pink Pills were recommend- ed to me and I got half a dozen boxes. After taking them { found a decided improvement in my appearance, and to my Joy the lumps ,were disappearing from my neck. I persevered in the treatment, and finally the only sign left of the trouble was a scar on my neck where one of the swellings broke. Since that time I have been in robust health and heartily recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to any suffering from impure blood." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mall at 50 cents a box fram The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. The Alien. He ii\ta hla push-cart underneath a{ tree, And waits for children in the park j to buy; He looks into the arching dome of { sky, And stands there stU, rememberlnc | Italy. A ruined temple hidden In a vine Of ivy climbing on its portico. And yonder, where the ripening olives grow, A woman iiraylng at a broken shrine. X He stands there still, rememberlag Italy. The Woman's eyes beneath a vel» of hairâ€" The fun fades oat, the arching sky is dark. So dark, indeed, that he can hardly see That every one has gone and left him there â€" The apple vender, waiting in the park. â€" Gwen Bristow. SAVE tlffllLDREN A tea your fifrocer recommends is usually good tea RED ROSE TEA^is good tea And most grocers recommend it " J. E. Barnard, seated, who collaborated with Dr. Eye In the research which led to the discovery of the cancer virus. He is .shown with his assist- ant ^ Polishing Hurts Apples. Polishing apples interferes with their keeping qualities. The real function of tlie bloom of apples and other fruits is not definitely known, but apparently it affords some pro- tection and is associated with certain life processes. Polishing the fruit either purposely or in a more or less accidental minner interferes with these natural pfccess- es and causes earlier break down. On one occasion a volaoae of apples crated on October 11 was divid<^. One- allotment was carefully polished and the other went into storage in a na- tural way. The polished apples de- creased in quality rapidly, and by January 22, 34 per cent, of the lot showed marked breaking down. Not only did the polished fruit show more rapid deterioration and greater loss of weight, but it showed a uniformity greater loss for the period. In other words, the loss of weight by the pol- ished fruit was noticeable from the first day, and there is no indication of the heavy loss of this fruit early in the storage period being equalized by more rapid losses from the unpolished lot later. Of particular practical significance is the fact that by December 12, two months after storage, the polished apples in this particular lot had be- come so wiltsd that th?y were prac- tically unmarketable, while the un- polished portion was in grood market- able condition. ^ .ably the wiee man who said to Ben Johnson. 'I know not whether Bacon wrote Shakespeare, but if he didn't, it seems to me he mis-sed the opportunity of his life.' " The Wandering Mind. "Reggie fancies he's a great travel- ler." "Yes, his mind's always wandering.' Vanity, All is Vanity. "How do you like that new mare ot yours?" "Oh. fairly well. But 1 wish 1 had bought a horre. She's always stopping to look at herself in the puddles." « EncourasemAit. ^e (as train toots at grade cross- ing) â€" "George, you go right ahead. Don't let that big brute bully you." ._ « . An Artificial Reain. French chemists have developed an artificial resin from which panels for radio sets are to be m«de. WE WANT CHURNING CREAM We (upply cans and pay express charges. We pay dally by express money orders, which can be cashed •nywbere without any eharse. To obtain the top |>rice, Cream mast b« tree from bad flavors aad contain not loss than SO por cost Batter Fat BowM Con^Miijr limited, Toronto for roferencoBâ€" Head OIRce. Toronto, Bonk ot Montreal, or yoor local bsnkor. BbUikod tw orsr tklrty ystrt. Stories About WeO-Known People A Barrie Yarn. r Really Overt Sir James Barrie, the dramatist, in! That great head master, Dr. Aling- whlmfical mood at a luncheon recently ton, who rules the destinies of scholars given in his honor, chatted gayly about at Eton, has a great dislike of all Sir Francis Bacon and other writers games so a friend of his told the and gave w Barriesque contribution to , writer, the perennial Bacon-Sh kejpears con- Once when Dr. Alington was escort- troversy. * ing the father and moth^ of one of the "It often has been said that Shake- school eleven to see the son play he speare was like a cuckoo, the bird thati dawdled so long that they became ir- la\-s its eggs in other birds' nests," rltated. On reaching the ground his said Sir James. He then referred to ; face lit up with pleasure when an the ghost of Stationers' Hall, saying, j umpire called out "Over!" "The gho€t. I understand, is a &cr»i> "I'm very glad it is," said Alington, Mothers who keep a Lox of Baby's Own Tablets in the house may feel that the lives of their little ones are reasonably safe during the hot weath- er. Stomach troubles, cholera infan- tum and diarrhoea carry off thousands of little ones every summer, in most cases because the mother does not have a safe mfidicloe at hand to give promptly. Baby's Own Tableu relieve these troubles, or if given occasionally to the well child they will prevent their coming on. The Tablets are guaranteed by a government analyst to be absolutely harmless even to the newborn babe. " They are especially good in summer because they regulate the bowels and ke?p the stomach sweet and pure. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 23 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brockville, Out. of paper which proves econclusively | that Bacon did not write Shakespeare's plays. "This document. I am told, and soon and promptly returned to his study!" Pciiicess as Chambermaid. A few days ago, at a well-known Lon- I will know for certain, is signed by i don hotel, I stumbled on a remarkable Shakespeare and is in these words: | real-life romance, though a sad one. 'Received from Lady Bacon for fathec^^ i discovered a princess working as a tag her play ot "Haml«t" the sum of i chajnbermald, and thankful for the op- flve pounds sterling.' " ( portunity. She is Princess Alia Mest- Then Barrie went on in even a light- j chersky, although not one in a hun- er strain, much to the delight of his , dred ot the people on whom she waits listeners, declaring: "After aH_that ] realizes her Identity, famous old liveryman ot the Worship- j Telling her story, the Princess re- ful Company of Stationers was prob- vealed that she had lost her all in the The Vial of Perfume. There they lay. ready to be packed, some carefully selected gifts for the missionary far away on the other side of the world. The lady who was send- ing them reached across her desk, and suddenly the room was fiUed with a strangely cweet perfume. 1: was as if a gentle breeze had stolen in at the window acrobo a garden of roses â€" yet it was winter, and outside the ground was covered with snow In stretching her hand the lady had overturned a vial of delicious perfume, a little of which poured cut upon the gifts that were to be sent oir their mission. In far-away China a tired llltie mis- sionary opened a package from .Ameri- ca, and a strange sweet fragrance greeted her like a breath from a rose garden at home. It brought her an ailtled joy that the gifts alone could not have glveir. We are alwa.vs giving; sometimes because we delight in giving, some- times because we see the need and fee! a sense of duty; but all the time close beside our gifts stands an un- opened vial, and when we pour out scne of its contents upon our gifts It increases the value tenfold. Oh, the vials of love and cheerful- ness unopened in our hearts! Let us keep rhem sealed no longer, but pour out their contents upon our gifts, whether they are for loved one or the stranger. How wonderfully the pres- ence of a loving spirit enriches even the noblest of giftf! 9 â€" _ â€" . CiMsified AdyertisemenU INCOMPARABLE SILVER FOXES LOU-KST PBIl-ES. HiliHEST QLAUTT. Eaculr* about our Fonun* Fouadrrm. d hjx- aiui Fur Fmrr^ SuaxutnlAe. PrlAc* Edwkfd tm*»rtA WIreleaa in Ireland. A Scotsman declared that telegraphy was known in Scotland at the dawn ot time. "We've dug up the wires.' he said. To which an Irishman replied, "We had wireless telegraphy thousands of years ago." "How can you prove that " "Sure, we've not been able to foiod any woires." â- it yaa caa Proaaft f CyfVUae Murine Ere Ecmedy tl **J "Niaht and Momins.'* MV^caCIcaB. Clear aad â- eattfey. Write tor Free Eye Care Book. , fiklat Cxs4ss«<i Cs.9 Cast aiiiaS<iMl,aisaB/ To Gain Weight We guarantee Bitro-Phosphate to re- build shattered nerves; to replace weakness with strength; to add body weight to thin folks an<.' rekindle am- bition in tired-out people. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. East. Toronto. Ont. "Just Baldwin." A striking instance ot the British Prims MiniiS'ter's utter lack ot affeo- tatiou came to the writer's notice at a reception given in Whitehall the other night. An overseas visitor was announced. Hearing the name, the Premier turned and extended his hand in greeting. "How do you do, Mr. â€" â€" ," he said, quietly. "My name's Baldwin," Rusjsian revolution. But the hardships she has sufTered here are almost as great as those of which she was a victim in her ow^n country. At one • period she spent her nights in a hos- I tcl for "down-and-outs." Then she got j.a post as a nursery governess, but ill- health cheated her of it. She has been a general servant, too. Prolific I Seeing four of their plays miming in London at once is a pleasure allowed to few authors. But Mr. Noel Coward has recently been enoying the experi- ence, for he is the author ot "On With the Dance," "Fallen .\ngels," "Hay Fever," and "The- Vortex." The last has come to the end of its long run. but it is said that Mr. Conrad is soon to turn out another play, entitled "Easy Virtue." Don't Worry. Doctors have been gathering statis- tics on nervous diseases and their tendency to shorten life, and have is- sued a remarkable bulletin against worrying. "So far as is known," the bulletin says, "no bird ever tried to. build more nests than its neighbor; no fox ever fretted becai:.=e he had only one hole in which to hide; no squirrel ever died ot anxiety lest he should not lay by enough nuts for two winters instead of one; and no dog ever lost any sleep over the fact that he did not have enough bones laid aside for his declin- ing years." ' Get acquainted with great men. Finding out how insigrnificant they are So possibly he will again have four . will encourage you to greater effort. plays running at the same time. And ' â€" â€" â€" he is only twenty-flVe! | MInard's Liniment for Coma and Warts Surnames and Their Origin MORLEY. Variation â€" Martay, Marley, Mahrle, Mehrle, Merle, Merley, Marly, Var- ley. Racial Origin â€" triah. Source â€" A given name. Few ot the variations in this grroup of family names would be popularly regarded as Irteh. Yet they are. If persons bearing thiso family names to-day were to spell them In the true Gaelic fashion, it would be "Mac- Mearlaoigh," but the pronunciation wouldn't be materially different, barr- ing those cectain twists to thO/Vowels and the tain guttural which you some- times hear In the speech of the Irish- man and the Highlander and term variously a "brogue" or a "burr." The form of Marley comes a little closer to this pronunciation than Marloy, though th£ latter of the two .\ngllclze:l forme is the more common spelling. This clan took tt« name about 1150 A.D, from a chieftain named "Mear- tawch." The meaning of this given name io "qulck-warrlor." The form Varley, not often met with Ik this country, is a Tsri-tion embody- ing a Qaellc twist, tor In certain com- binatlOQC tlie Oselic lotter "m" takea the sound of "v." The letter "v," though not the aound. Is ab se nt fron the Irish lsac«ace. BALDWIN. Racial Origin â€" English. Source â€" A given name. If you're given to poetic flights of fancy you may And much symbolism in the tact that it is the family name of Baldwin which the locomotive has made famoua from one end of the world to the other, provided, of course, you know what the name of Baldwin means. It means "swift conqueror." It was, of course, in the llrst place, a given name. It was of Teutonic origin, and was brought into England by the Normun conquerors, who were Teutonic in blood and who. for the most part, retained their Teutonic nomenclature, even after they had adopted aS' their own language the Cel- tic-influenced Latin spoken by the na- tives of Northern France In the days when they flrst settled in Normandy; which was, roughly, the same period in which the Saxons invaded Britain. The counterpart of the given name, however, existed among the Saxons of England at the time when the Nor- mans arrived there. "Bald-win." Is a simple combination ot ancient Teutonic words which are to be traced in so many of our given names to-day. "B&M' meant "swift" or "speedy," and "win" meant conqueror. Out own moderti word 'winner" and the verb "to win'* come from the »ame rooti Old Stuff. Wifieâ€" This menagerie manager ad- vertises a complete collection of tho world's animals â€" the first ever made." Hubby â€" "Old stuff -Noah beat him to it before the flcoii." Raw Foods Would Make Us Giants. By eating uncooked food we may "evolute" into a race ot giants, accord- ing to the theory of W. T. .\nJerson. editor of tho Macon Telegraph, and frequently mentioned in Qeorgia as a probable aad formidablle candidate for governor a.t the next Georgia Demo- cratic primaries. "l\Ien are dwindling to the stature of pigmies since the custom of cooking food has become the acoejUed standard of civilization." declared K'iitor Ander- son in a recent addrtv«s. "It is high time we returned to raw food. Men were giants before cookstoves were used." : ' Japan to Extend Drills. ; Military training ut nil students In' Japan, which Is embodied in the pro- ' posed national military traii4ng s.vs- ' tern, was commenced recently in the normal schcols of the empire. It is> planned to extend the system to stu- ' dents ot middle and other schools of higher grade next year. Estimated cost of inaugurating the program in tiie lower and higher grades has been estimated at 6,000.000 yen. It is hoped, the new system will be in operation in 1928 Militar>- authorities will be asked to supply 300.000 rifles to tho different schools and young men's as«>ociation8. ♦- To be ignorant of what happened in the world before you were born Is to be all vour life a child. Borrowing Again. It was the day of the school concert, and the audience consisted mainly of mothers, proud or envious, according to the parts that their children were pla.ving. One* small boy came 'on to the plat- form. Striking a bold attitude, he be- gan: â€" "Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears." Whereupon on of the mothers turn- ed to her companion. "There, that's the Joneses' boy," she â- ! said, tartly. "He wouldn't b'? his moth- . er's son if he weren't ti^'ing to borrow something. " : Minard's Liniment for Aches and Palna A Csndid Little Thing. Children, even when well bred and poiits. often speak wilh disconcerting frankness. As for example: A fashionab.le lady was calling on the small girl's mother. "--Vnd how are you. luy dear?" she inquired. "Very well, thank you." answered the child. '^ "Now. my de;:r." went on the visitor, "you should csk u;e how 1 ;im." "But 1 don't \va:!t to know." came the candid but unexpected answer. For Warts .A.pply Minard's freely and oTta i and watch them disappear. Parrots Menaced. Slagnilicen: panuts tejuliar to cer- tain of the Lej-.:er .\ntilles are threat- ened with extinction. r-wt-Easy-Ca«in^ SAWS saows OHiiM s*ir ca va, - ••*â- """'^ "â- ".. TOIK.NTO "•ONTREAL VAjiccjvm St. johu. n.s. Cord Wood Saw Users Write Simoiulo Oannda S.iw Co.. Limited. 1550 Dundas St West. Toronto. Ontario, for prices on Slmonds Special Circular Cord Wood Saw ALL OVER FUCE For About Three Years. Healed by Cuticara. " I had trouble with pimples and blackheads for about three years. The pimples were scattered all over my face and were hard and red. They itched and bumed a lot caus- ing me to scratch and the scratch- ing caused eruptions. My face looked so badly that I was ashamed to go out. â- ' I began using Cuticma Soap and Ointment ar'' they helped me. I continued the Weatment and in two months I was completelv healed." (Sign«l) Miss Helen Budnik, R. 1, Box n, Necedah. Wis.. Sept. 27, 192>». Rely on Cutictira Soap.Oinrment and Tal, â€" m to keep your skin clear. Dnxrt; SUahKm. tti. UoBtnml- Pnc». Solp »c. Olntmtnt :3 utd 50c. raioim 3<r. W Citticm Sh«Tin« Stick 2Se. FULL OF ACHES AND PAINS Toronto Mother Found Relief by T2tking Lydia £.Pinkhani's Vegetable Compound Proved safe by millions ;ind prescribed by physicians tor Headache Neuralgia Colds Lumbago Toothache Neuritis Rheuniiitism Pain Sc^ .\ccept only "Bayer" pack;tge which contaii-.s proven directions. Raodv "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablcU .\l3r> Wttif^ of 24 and nO â€" Pni^SMot*. Aarlrtn •» »*• 'r»d» oar* in«l»t*i«« In OtnxHi of «•.»<» »l»i>n*»«»p» of ^''T'^Tl!'" •cMntrr •f AaiierlleaoM (Antyl KailcTiic .\cW. -A. 9. A "' '^^"f 'f " "" \J^'' tlif Amlrln mnii* Il*7*r â- Mnafarnm. to awtst »!>« jmbU* •fuliMt imltatlww. th» ;»•*â- » tt IW«r Ooapuj wlU t» itimm witk Ibetx fuel trade aark, tb« -B«/«r Omt. • •Toronto, Ontario. â€" *' I have found Lydia E. Pitikham's Vegetable Com- pound a splendid medicine to take before and after confinement. A small book, was put in my door one da^ advertising Lydia E. Pwisham's medicmes, and as I did not feel at all well at the time I went and got a bottie of Vegetable Compound right away. I soon began to notice x ditferenco in my general health. I was full of aches and pains at tho time and thought I had every complaint going, but 1 can truthfully say your medicine certainly aid me good. I can and will speak highly of it, and I know it will do other women good who are sick anri ailing if they will only â- .;ive it a fair trial. Lydia E. Pinkharti's Liver Pills are splendid for constipation. You are welcome to i:se my letter it you think tt will help any one. "â€"Mrs, Harry â- Wbstwood. 543 Quebec Street, ToronUv Ontario. The expectant mother is wise if she considers Carefully this statement of Mrs. Westwood. if. is but one of a flfreat manv, all tilling the same storyâ€" bene- fikia? results. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- piuri'l is especially adapten for use dur- ing this period. The experience of other wonien who have found this medicine a M-wine is proof of its preat merit. Woy not try it now yourMlf? â- •«UE No. 34 ~ Mw