WE11 SATISFIED WITH BABY'S OWN TABLETS Once a mother has used Baby's Own Tablets for her little ones she will use nothing else. Experience teaches her that the Tablets are the very best medicine she can give her baby. They are a gentle laxative; mild but thor- j ough in action and never fail to banish constipation, colic, colds or any other ; of the many minor ailments of child- hood. Concerning them Mrs. J. Bte. Charest, St. Leon, Que., writes: "My j baby cried continually and nothing , seemed to help her till I began using I Baby's Own Tablets. These Tablets ! soon set her right and now I would not i be without them." The Tablets are Bold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Bible City Found. i What is regarded by many scholars RS the most valuable discovery which ' has yet been made by the archcEolo- To Cure Blindness by Engrafting Dogs' Eyes Dr. Koppanyi, of Vienna, who has successfully cured blindness in animals by transplanting eyes, believes that it is possible to restore human sight in the same manner. He believes that by en- grafting the eye of an ani- mal, preferably a dog, sight may be restored to blinded humans. He declares that the transplanted eye will rapidly take on the appear- ance of a human eye and will function normally in all respects. He is asking for volunteers. GOOD HEALTH AND GOOD SPIRITS Depend Upon the Condition of the Blood Keep it Rich, Red and Pure. gist in Palestine is the locution of the ite at the city of Capernaum. Among j. its ruins have been found the remains A Quick Turf. A new method of making turf for golf courses with almost miraculous quickness consists in stripping off When a doctor tells you that you i are anaemic, he simply means, in" plain English, that your blood is weak and | watery. But this condition is one that i may easily pass into a hopeless de- cline if prompt steps are not taken to ' enrich the blood. Poor blood, weak, I watery blood is the cause of headaches ' and backache, loss of appetite, poor digestion, rheumatism, neuralgia, ner- vous irritability and many other troubles. To poor blood is due the pimples and blotches, the muddy com- plexion that disfigures so many faces. To have good health, a good complex- '. table. "She's so little," said Marjory, ion and a cheerful manner, the blood ! "her know-better ha.sn't growed yet." must be kept rich, red and pure. This War Talk. "Shall I go over the top?" asked the talkative barber, poising his scissors. "Yes, as soon as your gas attack is over," answered the weary customer. good scd to a depth of an inch and a running it through a feed- Wisdom Defined. Teacher "Now, Edgar, cau you tell ma what wisdom is?" Small Edgar "Yes, ma'am. It's in- formation on the brain." Our Wise Tots. Novel and yet very reasonable was Marjory's excuse for her baby sister who had pulled seme books off the is easily done through the use of a blood enriching tonic like Dr. Wil- i-. ' cutter, so arranged as to slit the sod of a synagogue believed to be the very ||Uo riljbons _ 5 The , atter are then one wherein our Savious preached. For over nineteen hundred years the very site of such an important Bible city as Capernaum has been in. dianute. It was thought that it stood at the northern end of the Sea of Galilee at a place called Tell Hum, where there are extensive ruins. A systematic examination of these, and the discovery of ancient docu- ments, now make it clear that this. In- deed, was ancient Capernaum. The ruins of a Jewish synagogue shredded by hand, leaving a mass of grass roots, which are sown broadcast over grcund previously prepared by plowing and harrowing. This ac- complished, the ground is rolled, and within three or four weeks the golf course is covered with a line, thick carpet of grass, without waiting for seed to grow. 9. Qualified. Oswald "My love for you is like the Hams' Pink Pills. The whole mission i bank, Tommy? of this medicine is to help enrich the j Tommy "Oh, blood which reaches every nerve and ] laV e fallen off Tight Money. Neighbor "Got much money in your have been brought to light. Explorers j (lee P- blue sea -" say this temple stood there in the | Clarissa (for such was her name) days of Christ, and is the very build- j " And r take ic witn tne corresponding Ing referred to in the Gospels. The position of the stones would indicate that it was destroyed by an earth- every organ in the body, bringing with it health, strength and new activity. That is why people who occasionally use Dr. Williams' Pink Pills always feel bright, active and strong. Mrs. E. E. Cook, Simcoe, Out., gives strong testimony to the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pins when the blood is in an anaemic condition. She says: "I have been a sufferer for some years from a run down condition of the sys- tem. I suffered from pains in the back, twitching of the nerves and muscles, my appetite was poor, I had amount of salt." quake. It Is the belief of the excava- tors -that tb^e, whole edifice can be re- constructed. Ask for Mlnard's and take no othar. In some French rural districts eighty per cent, of the inhabitants own their own houses. no. The depositors since sister got en- gaged." indigestion after eating. An Obstinate Child. There was a dear lit;!e baby on the train, and an elderly man stopped to peep-bo at it. "A fine youngster," he said to its de- mure mother. "I hope you will bring him up to be an upright, conscientious man." "Yes," smiled the young mother, "but I'm afraid it will be a bit diffi- cult." "Pshaw!" said he. " 'As the twig and would get drowsy ! . My hands and feet were \ ls **nt so u the tree inclined.' "I know it, agreed the mother, "but almost always cold, and though I was j constantly doctoring, the medicine I took did not help me. I had practical- ly given up hope of good health, until a friend from Hamilton came to visit me, and urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.. the trouble Is, being a girl." this twig is bent on )., It took somo persuasion, Americans own about one-half of but finally I consented to try them. all the diamonds in the world. Surnames and Their Origin LESTER Variations Leicester. Racial Origin English. Source A locality. In virtually every country, with the fix the Norman "de" ("of") or equialent Anglo-Saxon expression. I have reason to be grateful that I did. for after using seven boxes I felt like a new person. I have gained in weight, have a better color and my work is now a pleasure. For this con- dition my thanks are due to Dr. Wil- tne i Hams' Pink Pills, and I cannot praise them too highly." You can get Dr. \Vili jams' Pink Pills GROVER Variations Groves, Graves. Greaves. exception of Ireland, a very large pro- j Racial Origin Anglo-Saxon, portion of the family names have been' Source Descriptive, geographically, developed from the names of places, j Grover is one of those family names the descent of which can be traced The Reason Why. Charlie "But I asked you. dearest, to keep our engagement a secret for the present." Claire "I couldn't help it. That hateful Ella Sharpe said the reason I wasn't married was because no fool had proposed to me, so I told her you had." Father Knew Better. "Well, dad, here we are." said the young man who had persuaded his through any dealer in medicine, o. by 'father to attend a boxing match. "I'll mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes | warrant you'll get more excitement for for $2.r.O from The Dr. Williams' Medi- ; your $2 than you ever got in your life cine Co., Brockville, Ont. O Sometimes these were the names of the places over which the family ruled, but more often, for the bulk of the population naturally fell within the classification of the ruled rather than the rulera, the names were straight to Anglo-Saxon sources, and one of those of which the origin is plain to the modern eye. It falls within that large classiflca- A Combing Mill Needed. The woollen industry of Canada is a basic industry and should be a domi- nant factor In the production of wealth for our Canadian people. Sheep rais- merely to indicate the locality from | Iowed back to wor <ls denoting topo- hich the persons bearing them had i sraphy or character of the country In come. Such names, too. it should be noted, were used only when the persons bear which the original bearers of the names presumably lived. In modern English the word grove Wcitr uacu i/uij w ut-ii me IJT-I^I^IIT" IM;UI- , tag them actually had left the locali- j " as com . e tO l " ke , oa th , e Caning, as , >,, .,., commonly used, of a clump of trees. : ties and had settled or were travel- 1 Jug in other parts. It would constitute no differentiation to give a man the clump or a park studded with trees, by the Anglo-Saxons, however, before." "Huh: I doubt that." grunted the | old man. "Two dollars was all I paid for my marriage license." o His Hearing Restored. The invisible ear drum invented by A. O. Leonard, which is a miniature one of the most profitable departments meg aphone, fitting inside the ear en- of our agricultural life. The bulk of tirely out of glght( ls restorlng tne wool produced in Canada during the hearing of hundreds of people in New past has, through lack of a combing York city Mr Le onard invented this mill, been exported to foreign coun- drum to relieve himself of deafness tries where, after being combed, it has I and head nojse8i and it ()oea this 8O been shipped back to our worsted From Helpless Invalid to Com- plete Restoration of Health, Strength and Happiness Is Wonderful Change Mrs. Root Experienced in Three Weeks Statement One of Most Remarkable On Re- cord. "Just a week before I started taking '. Tanlac I was down in be 1 so crippled up with rheumatism I could not move without pain. My son had taken Tan- lac, and it had done him a world of good, so one day he brought home a bcttle and said, "Mother. I v.aut you to take tlii.s." \Vh :: ' had finished that bottle. I felt like a different wo- man, and by the time I had finished my .second bott:.-. I x i out in the gar- j deu hoeing. "Tanlac has simply done wonders for me: it almost seems like a mira- cle." This is the remarkable state- ment made recently by Mrs. Jennie Root, residing at 14"'. Powers St., Portland, Oregon, aud is only one of tens of thousands from '.veil-known men and women who arc daily Jesti- fying to, the powers of T;'.i:'...<-. Continuing her wonderful jtate- ment. Mrs. Root =aid. "For years I suffered terribly with rheumatism, and would often be down in bed for day; at a time. In the last live years there was not a time that I didn't feel those rheumatic pains all through my bcdy. About two months ago I get very much worse and my arm.- legs were so bad I was alnio.st less and couldn't even hold a pen to sign my name. I was so weak I couKl not do any housework. I couldn't even sleep, and had no rest day or night. Even to walk a few steps would tire me out completely. When I tried to walk a little way and sat down I could not get up without some one helping me. 1 had no appetite and hardly ate enough to keep me alive. I could not stoop over far enough to get my shoes on. "I never knew what a night's sleep was. and would lie awake for hours. At times I would get very cold and would have to get up and .sit by the fire all huddled up. and my daughters would put hot water bottles all around me. I was treated by four doctors. MRS. JENNIE ROOT ' and took all kinds o' -.iK-diciue. ^' ir.g ever did me any good. I am just Mke a different person now. All those terrible aches and paics havu left me, and onJy the other 'lay I was able to w il'.i up four flights of stairs in an , office building when the elevator was I out of order. "My appetite la just splendid now, ( and just to-day for the flrst time in years, I felt so hungry that 1 had to ' go and eat a piece of pie between meals. In tact, I can't remember the time that I have felt as well as I do now. I have not only regained my i health and strength, but I have gained 1 fourteen pounds in weight. To tell ' you the truth, I wouldn't exchange , the benefit I have received from Tan- lac for the best ranch iu Oregon, and I will praise it as long as I live." Tanlac is sold by leading druggiata everywhere. Adr. , ' mills at a greatly Increased value. Something like twenty-four million successfully that no one could tell he is a deaf man. It Is effective when deafness is caused by '-atarrh or by name of u place in which he was still living, together with hundreds, probably thousands, of others. The form Leicester gives a better Idea of the source of this family name than Lester, though the latter is by far the more common name. The meant a road thrown t'he woods and (24.000.000) poumU nf wool waa grown I |)( , rfonUe(1 , or whoUy de>troyed natur . 1 I In Canada last year. Th.s quantity i., f ul drums A request for inform . uion later it naturally took on the meaning of an avenue lined with trees. Canned Salmon. Thrifty housewives on the Pacific Coast nowadays buy salmon when they are plentiful and cheap, and put them up in jars or cans for winter use. They find it as easy as the canning of vegetables or fruits. The salmon, dressed and the back- bone removed, are cut in crosswise pieces of a size to fit the jar or can. i Salt is added, and the process, which includes cooking for three hours in the cans, is the same as for vegetables. [ Little Vies. Teacher (to class) "Which Is the largest river in Africa?" Small Boy "The Nile, air." Teacher "And what are its tribu- taries called?" Boy ''Juveniles, air." The namets Grover, Graves and Greaves all come from this source sufficient to provide for something like , tu A Leonard Suite 437 70 Flm , eight millioi. (8,000,000) suits of clothes, which would sell for in the neighborhood of Four hundred Million Dollars ($400.000.0001. If the various i processes of manufacture were com- place, however, is still known as Lei-j by their neighbors fcyJJLTSJSl ! " letei1 '" Cnnada th ' S lar * e sum WOul<l tester. It is a borough in England. | "at th grove" and the like which is The Anglo-Saxons, upon their invasion j the reason tl it surname* of thf* - distinguished at a Angle end setlement of England, found the the reason that surnames of this char- be set circulating in Canada through j thousands of people employed in the spnn n g r th wool, the place known simply M 'Castrun,." ^1^^^^^^^^^^ ' ^ ^ ""> the lM * It had been, a century or two before,; Avenue, New York City, will be given a prompt reply. advt. That Man Is Happy \Vho values honor and a good name above riches. Who can enjoy the landscape with- *< "" " dUCt Roman camp. To distinguish it As the sou lived in the same place "as" from other places of similar name, the father, he naturally acquired the they called it "Leagceuster." or sme descriptive name without any "mewdowcamp." In the early use as conscious attempt at the establish- a family name the custom was to pre- ment of a regular family name. The establishment in Canada of a out owning the laud. Who can face poverty and mister- : time with cheerfulness and courage. Who has a hearty appreciation of iu nature. Who lias a contented mind liberally *. The Man Who Said: The proof of the pudding is in the eating" , was only half through He started a good pudding- proof, but he didn't finish it. There's a lot ci trouble in the world from puddings that taste good but don't do good. They ' eat" well, but ends the recommendation. that Sanitariums are full of pud- ding-eaters who stopped thetest at tasteand forgot to inquire whether their food gave the body what it needed until the body rebelled. Grape- Nuts is u food that tastes good and does good. The proof of Grape-Nuts begins in the eating and goes on through the splendid service which Grape- Nuts renders as a real food. Grape-Nuts is the perfected good- ness of wheat and malted barley delicious to taste, easy to di- gest, and exceptionally rich in nourishment for body and brain. "There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts wool combing mill would prove a tre- the beautiful in human life as well as mendous benefit to the country as a whole and would undoubtedly receive the whole-hearted support of the Do- j stored with the knowledge that makes minion and Provincial governments, ! life interesting. Who has a harmonious happy home. Who has learned how to neutralize \ MONEY ORDERS. Pay your out-of-town accounts by Dominion Express Money Order. Five Dollars cost* three cents. Sweet Solitude. Mr Yotinghub "Did you b.ike this bread. darU""-?" Mr*. Vciinchub "Tes. d-*>ar" Mr. Ycunghub "Well, please dun't do anything like that again. You are net strong enough for such he:;vy work." M mard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend The apple yieM of the Aima"!U Valley this yer is estimated at 2,- 000,000 barrels, or the largest in :!:e Wsiorv of that famous section. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Balk Carlo U TORONTO SALT WORKS TORONTO Tho most nourishing meat is mut- ton. textile manufacturers and breeders of sheep. Do* R>ino<Uai Book on CCC DISEASES and How to ;'] Mailed Free to anv -.v dr0a by the Author. K. <3y Mover Co., Ivx 118 Wait - - ; T-ii Trk. n.9.j_ The Proper Course. Mrs. Mclntyre was culling upon Mrs. Cassidy. whose husband was in af- fluent circumstances and whos-e daugh- ter had, therefore, been sent away to i college. "By the way." s:iid Mrs. Mclntyre. ] when the two had been gossiping for ] a while, "where is Clam? 1 haven't seen her for an age." "Clara Is a' college," proudly re- sponded the fond m< llier. and then added: "And I am so worried about her. I haven't had a letter from her i for nearly two weeks." "There is where you made a mis- 1 take." was the prompt rejoinder of j Mrs. Mlntyre. 'Instead of letting her i go to collejce. why didn't you send her to one of those correspondence schools?" fear thoughts and worry thoughts by their antidotes. Abbreviated Verse. A woman of 12 at. 8 ozs. Wears dear little bells on her flozs: Most sweet Is the sound As she waltzes around; Hut what must it be when she bozs! Of Algeria's 7,500,000 acres of for- ests 1,112,000 are covered with cork trees. ASPIRIN Only "Bayer" is Genuine The Original and Only Genuine YARMOUTH. N. S. Pertinent Inquiry. The newest member of Miss Jones' j Sunday-school class was a lad whose 1 frankness v/us equal to his curiosity in j many matters. On one occasion Miss Jones made a I few remarks touching untrutlifiilness I and earnestly endeavored to impress her charges with the necessity of be- ing truthful at all times and uuder all circumstances. Now the new pupil appeared to be intensely interested in Mis-s Jones' re- marks, and. after due reflection, put this querry to her: "What I'd like to know, ma'am." he said. "Is it a lie nobody ever knows?" Scotland's 882,157. population is now !,- Warning! Take no chances with sub- stitutes for genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting Aspirin at all. In every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headache. Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache. Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tab- lets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Made iu Cana- da. Aspirin is the trade mark, (regis- [ tered in Canada), ot Bayer Manufac- Men with grey or blu eyes make ture of Monoaceticacidester o Salt- th bosl marksmeu. jcylicacid. When 4 Days Old, Cross and Cried, Cuticura Heals, "My baby brother had eczema which began when he was about four days old. It came in little pimples and then a rash, and he was cov- ered. He was so cross that he could not sleep, S 1 " and he cried. "This lasted about two months before we used Cuticura. It helped him, so we bought more, and he was all healed aft:r wa had used two cak?s of Soap an j t\/a boxes of Oir.;m*nt." (Signed) Mira Almeda Williams, Youngs Cove, N. B., May 22, 1910. Use Cuticura Soap. Oinnr.ent ar.d Talcum for all toilet purposes. Soap 2Sc, Ointment 25 UK) 50e. Sold througboutthe Dominion. CanadianDeput: Ly-nn, Limited, St. Paul St.. Montr<kl. urt Soap thaves without num. PAINS SO BAD STAYED IN BED Young Mrs. Beecroft Had Miserable Time Until She Took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Hamilton, Ont. " I have suffered for three years from a female trouble and consequent weakness, pain and irregu- larity which kept me in bed four or hve days each month. I nearly went crazy with pains in my back, and for about a week at a time I could not do my work. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advertised in the Hamilton Spectator and I took it. Now I hav3 no pain and am quite regular unless I over- work or slay on my feet from early morning until late at night. I !:cep house and do all my own work without any trouble. I have recommended Uia Compound to several friends." A ; r<. EMILY BEECROFT, 2tj'.)VU:tori*-A>.*eviJ : .^-- Hamilton, Ontario. For forty years women have been telling how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound has restored their health when suffering with female ills. This accounts for ihe enormous demand for it from coast to coast. If you aro troubled with any ailment peculiar to women why don't you try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? It is made from native roots and herbs and contains no narcotics or harmful drugs. For special advice women are asked to write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, IVIass. The result of forty years experience is at your service. No. 42 '21.