i. " I ri DEUCATEGDU^ NEED NEW BLOOD Whkh Can b« Had Through the Use of Dr. Williams' Pinic Pilk. N*tur« inten4«<l every girl to b« bappy, active and healtby. Yet too many of them Bnd their llve« «addea*d by kuSerlns â€" nearly always becaii«e their blood la to blamo. All those wttb colorleai cheeki, dull skins and iuatar- les!) eyes are in this condition because they have not enoiLgh red blood In their veins to keep them well and In the charm of health. They suffer from depressing weariness and periodical headaches. Dark lines form under their eyes, their heart palpitates vio- lently att*r the slightest exertion, and they are often attacked with fainting spells. These are only a few of tbe miseries of bloodlessncss. When the blood becomes thin and watery It can be enriched through the use of Dr. WUllama' Pink Pills and the troubles that come from poor blood disappear. In almost every neighborhood you will find some formerly ailing girl who has a good word to say for tbis medlcin*. Among them there is Mlas Ida M. Wlthrow, Hardwood L<and8, N.S., who says:â€" "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills did more for me than all the other medi- cine I took, and I cannot praise them too highly. When I began the use of these pills I was In a terribly run down condition, very thin and very pale. My appetite was gone, and I had a tired, worn out feeling all the time. Doctor's medicine did not seem to improve my condition and I was getting greatly discouraged when a friend advised me 7I0 give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a trial. After some urging I decided to do so. After taking six boxes I felt like a new person. I gained weight, had a good color, and an improved appetite, and the constantly tired feeling that had made me so miserable wa.s gone. I took a few boxes more before I stop- ped, and by that time I had never felt so well In my life. 1 shall always feel very grateful to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and strongly recommend them to those who are ruu down." You can get these pills from your druggist, or by mail at 50 tents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. To B« Happy. How far we seek it, and bow near Is happiness; Krom one kind thought, from one kind deed It springe to bless. Yet restless over the world men go. And everywhere. Burning themselves out seeking It, Now here, now there. Happiness is within men's hearts. It's not afar At the end of a shining rainbow or On some bright star. Men would try even miracles For this great boonâ€" j Stop this old world aturnlng around, ;0r chain the moon : To gain a bit of happiness. I They will not see That it is seldom to be bought, , Its' given freely I To all who pattern after Him, , Through gain or loss. The shining One who died upon !a wooden cross. â€" George Klllston. PEARLS AND BELIS OF THE HEtokt,; L%OY The Hubi-ew women of high rank, In : the flnurlcblng period of their state, i wore necklaces, oompmed of multiple . rows of pearls. The thrwid on which ; the pearls were sprung was of tlax or woollen, and sometimes colored. . . to strike agaiii«t dippers flxei Into the inelali:- b"ll-. The pl«3s'int llnk'« of the golJ^ii bells la coMi:il(;n. tiie chains rattling, itnd the meljllous I'himv of lltll-,' •^â- ilve.r ank'e bells, keep- ing ti.oie with the moticiui uf the foot, made an acconvpanimeut so agr^'e able Jointsâ€" beef, mutton, pork and Plant â€" art pe: fccted by the tang of Mustard. wa/^ Ir^^'S'* should be cold to give the best affcet ^W€M.i^%^l and the Mas* ard should Wing*. Now would' I were yon chltterlng spar- row Tbat flits along the qtiay, I would be flying on the great ship ly- ing, That sipeaks of home to me. Or might I be the guM that follows So close beeide the mast; No wave should &tay me, nor wind de- liay me To reach my land at last Then would 1 Join the loud lark rlsiag Above hie fragrant nest; By wood, by tillage, by stream and village Till wing and heart might rest. â€" Douglas Hum. But the Hcbuew necklaces were not to female vanity that the stalely always computed of pearls, or of pearls daugliters of Jenisalem. with their only; sometimes it w:i« the cufclom to t;we-plng trains nowlng after them, ap- interchang*- the pearls «iih Uitl« gold- pear to have adopted a sort ui mea- ; en bulbs nt berries: soraetimis tliey f ured .treail, \)y way of Impressing a' were blended with the preilous stones: regular cadence iip<in the mii.dc of and at other tinMs the pearls were their fi-et. The chains of g<jH were Strung two and two, and Uielr beautiful exfUanged, as luxury advanced, for whitenes* relieved by the interi;osltlon airings of pearls and Jewe-.s. which of red coral. â- g.wept in sn-aky folds about the feet NexT came the bracelets, of gold or und unkles. | ivory, and fitted up at the open side! This, like many other peculiarities ' with a buckle or enameUed clasp of in the Hebrew dress, had its orlpin In elaborate workmanship. These brace- a circumstance of their early i.cmadlc leu were also occaelonally composed life. It Is U8^lal with the Be;iouins to of gold or silver thrend; ami !t was ' lead the camel, when dleposed to bo not unus^ial for a series of them to restive, by a r«pe. or a bek fastened to ' ascend from the wrist to the elbow, one of the forefeet, someiimes to boUi; Prom the clasp, or other fastening of and it Is aleo a familiar practice to the bracelet, depended a delliSite chain- soothe and to i hoer the . . . Always be mixed 10 minutae bafen the meaL Sunlight After Storm. It bad been wild weaLlier when I left Rome, and all across the Campag- na the clouds were sweeping in sul- phuruus blue, with a clap of thunder or two, and breaking gleams of sun along the Slaudian aqueduct, lighting I QetJT Shining AftMr Rain. And now the sun with more •fteotsal beams Had cliear'd the face of Earth, sad dry'd the wet From drooping plant, or dcopplog trse| the birds up the infinity of its arches like the ' Who aM things now behold more fresh My Faith. My faith is as a victory; Together we put out to sea, Nor storm nor sun can separate Me from my ever valiant male,. He who has faith in victory. He who has faith is free, is free Of dark and pain and earthly sorrow. He lives to-day In Goil's to-morrow. â€" George Blliston. Sea Longing. I am inland born, .A.nd yet. That the sea sings somewhere 1 cannot forget. Stldom have I known Salt air. Yet the memory of It Is a lovely snare. In Uie night I dreiim Of sails White in dripping storms, Hurricanes and gales Old Seafaring lore Has lure That through all my days . Mu«t 1 know, endure. I am inland born. Ami yet, I cannot forge-t That ihe sea sings somewhere. â€" George Eillston. To a Sapphire Vase. Oh, how did you capture that bit of sky So wondrousiy tinged with blue? ' A fairy bubble to crystal chained 1 And tipped with a frosty dew. jlt grew quite tail in its .stem-like grace j .As a fairy bubble grows. And made of lts> sapphire loveliness A homo for a pali^ pink rose. - A. Lewis Colwell. work or netting of gohl, and in some animal with the sound of littio bells. : ^"***.°' 'â- "^,"*, "" /"* I <;'l=i>''ed the Jn»Unce8 miniature festoons of pearh. attached either to the neck or to one ' ^^^ ^""^ ° ., n \ ^ I Sometimes the gold chain-work was of he fore-legs. Girls are commonly . f ''"â- "' f 7^"' /•""'/If °°«'"' »°f exchanged for little silver belle. . , . ! employed to lead th« .â- ameis to water; ^"^ "^"^ ""'""^ "^ '^^ '^""'''^ *" ^^ This bijouterie Tor the arms natural- 1 and It naturally happened that, with ly reminded the Hebrew lady of the ; their lively fancies, some Hebrew or ankle bells, and other similar oma- Arabian girl should be prompted to re- ! menite. . . These ornaments con- ; peat, on her own person, what had so j Bisted partly in golden belts, or rings, often been connected with an agree- which. descending from above the able ImpresMon In her mute compani- : ankle, compreeeed the foot in various ona to the well.â€" From "Toilette of the parts, and partly in shells and little ' Hebrew Lady Jingling chains, which depended so as cev. by Thomas De Quin- SIXTEEi^ YEARS ISE OF BIBY'S OWX TABLETS Has Shown One Mother There is Nothing to Equal Them. A constant use of Baby's Own Tab- lets for their children has proven to thousands of mothers that they are without an equal for babyhood and childhood ailments. One mother, Mrs. C. W. Jackson, R.R.I. ^Gilford, Ont., writes: "We have used Baby's Own Tablets ever since our first baby was bom sixteen years ago. We have seven healthy children and the Tab- lets is the only medicine they re- ceived in their early years. Our baby Is one and a half years oid. is walking and talking and weighs 25 pounds. Baby's Own Tablets is the only medi- cine he has ever had. ' All He Wanted. bano. and graceful darkness of its ilex rose against pure streaks of alternate blue and amber; the upper sky grad- ually flushing through the last frag- ments of rain-cloud in deep palpitating azure, half aether and half dew. The nnonday sun came slanting down tiie rocky slopes of La Riccia, and its masses of entangled and tall foliage. whose autumnal tints were mixed with the wet verdure of a thousand ever- greens, were penetrated with it as with rain. I cannot call it color, it was conflagration. Purple, and crim- son, and scarlet, like the curtains of God's tabernacle, the rejoicing trees sank Into the valley in showers of light, every separate leaf quivering as it turned to reflect or to transmit the sunbeam, first a torch and then an emerald. Far up into the recesses of the valiey, the green vistas arched like the hollows of mighty waves of some crystalline .'••^a, with the arbutus flowers dasihed along their tianks for foam, and silver Hakes of orange spray tossed into the air around them, breaking over the gtay walls of rock into a thousand *ei>arate stars, fading and kindling alternately as the weak mind Ufte 1 and let them fall. Every blade of grass burned like the golden floor of heaven, opening in sudden pleams as the foiiage broke and closed above it, as sheet-lightning and green. After a night of storm so ruinous, Clear'd up theJr cholceet notes in bush and spray To gratulate the sweet return of mom. â€" Milton. Carries Eggs in Mouth. Possibly not one flshennan In a thoa. sand knows what happens to the eggs of the ordinary caiflsh. What does happen is quite a common thing amonf fishes of the species% The male takes the eggs into his mouth and carires them, around very carefully until they hatch and be lets the little fellows out In life. BICYCLE BARGAINS N.W ind nightly UMd, SIO uDwarda. Traniptrtation pnpald. Writ* for Prtn Lilt. PEERLESS BICYCLE WORKS m DundM StrMt Wra<, Tofonto Ther* is often jrreat strain 011 the buttons of a woollen coat, resulting in a hole in the knitting:. This can be avoided if, when the pearl buttons are put on, a linen une of a similar size is sewn on the back, the .-same thread \mr.g used for the two. „ , , , „ , ' opens in a cloud at sunset ; the motion Baby s Own Tablets are guaranteed , ,^g ^^^^^^^ ^f Mrs. Wetmore- â€" ".My husband didn't 'o be ab.solutely safe for even the new- tell me he was to brinx a guest to din- ^""^ babe. They are free from opiates ner so voull have to take pot luck with and narcotics f act as a gentle laxa- "»â- •' ' :';^^ °°'^^ stomach and bowels and , ^^^^^ them filling its marble hollow The Guestâ€" "That'll be all right,, thus relieve constipation and Indiges- j .jyj,jj ,,,jjg ^^j^.; Mrs. Wetmore. 11 I came for was a Hon; breakup colds and simple fevers hooker of your hu.sbuiid's pre-war | -^nd make baby healthy and stronp. masses of dark rock - dark j though flushed with scarlet lichen. casting their quiet shadows across Its I restless radiance, the fouutain under Stiff Joints and sore muscles are quickly rolleveU by a few applications of Minard's. ifiHtf-^'^^MJI sSoofrSJI i I Scotch." The Violet. ruT KSTROYS Flies,Mosqiiitoes Roadies f The Stony Stare. He â€" "Maud has a perfect face â€" looks as if cut from marble." : Heâ€" Then that must be why she al- ways gives me the stouv &tare." I â- <^ Correct Valance for Curtain. Tile correct depth of a valance of a curtain is oue-S'ixih of the overall height of the window from the tlcor to the top of the trim. For example, if rhe window is uiue feet high, tlie val- ance slMiuld be about eighteen Inches deep. Down in a green and shady bed, A modest violet grew. Its s-talk was bent. U hung its head, As if to hide from view, I I ! And yet it was a lovely llow'r, I Its colors bright and fair; : It might have gruc'd a rosy bow'r, - i Instead of hiding tiierp. i I Yet there II wa.s Cdutent to bloom, i In modest tints urray'd; ' And thea-e diffus'd its sweet perfume. Within the silent shade. rhen let me to the valley go. This pretty flow'r to Kee; That I may also learn to grow • In sweet humility. Jane Taylor. ^ ou can get Baby's Own 'i"ab>,.3 from your druggist or direct by mall at 2r> cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co.. Brockville, Ont. Dreamers of the Desert. No people on earth are so poetical In their speech as the Arabs of the desert. I Whenever they have anything to say [ I they wrap the .story with fancy words. 1 almost in poetry. , Here Is an example of a very old â- one. of an Arab writing of his pipe: "The .\poslrophe of K! Din .Attar to His IMpe "O, wife of the soul, thou art wiser than any «ho abide in the harem. .\ maker of peace thou art and a builder I of prudence between temptation and j the hour of decision. 1 and fliful sound: and '. over all. the multitudinous bars of ain- ' ber and rose, the sacred clouds that I have no darkness, and only exist to illumine, were seen In fathomless In- -â- tervals belwetn the solemn auj orl)ed I repose of the stone pines. p:issing to I lose themselves in the last, white, bind- i ing lustre of the measureless line where the Campagna melted into the blaze of the sea. JoUn Ruskin, in "Modern Painters. " Grades. i "I thought jou knew the Bobbins. Don't you live in the same square?" "Yes. but not in the same circle." Judges in Russia. Of 2. COO Judge.s ou the bench of soviet Russia. 1.416 are peasants and 882 arf workmen. gnat in the smoke of the tent-flre? Lo, wine Is but wine for the simple, and a pipe but a pli>e for the foolish, and what is a song to the dumb, or a rose to the eye that is blind'.' "A bud of tile rose flcdeth June on the breast of the dark-eyed: a song thread down to 2-1000 of an Inch and I nmst b<i sung by the heart of the hear- eounts and clas.sities under eleven | pr. And these are the pipe and the heads any unevenness and other de ! gmoKer. Also of II the kings hath no Machine Beats Man. A machine so delicate that It de tects the slightest unevenness ia silk Minard's Liniment for Burns. Mystery Islands. The recent i)li.gh! of t!ie .\rgenline hunter wi:<) unwittingly set his tent on a moving is '.and and was floated to a ; marshy tract during the night again , illiistnites the danger of these "no- madi<' " forests to the unv,ary. 1 Lak'e Orion, in the State of Michigan. ' SICK ABED EIGHT MONTHS After Taking Lydia E. Pinkhatn't Vegetable Compoond Could Oo All Her Work and Gained in Weight "Can anger abide with the pipe, or a ! oâ„¢""*- Perhaps, the most mysterious i feet* in the thread Is now in use. more joy than the beggar, saitli El Din WE BUY FLEECE WOOL Harris Abattoir Co., Limited Strarhan .Vvc, Toronto Do You Want To Get Ahead? COME TO THE O.A.C. and LEARN THE BUSINESS OF UP-TO-DATE FARMING Up-to-Dat« FarminB Is a real businessâ€" « profession. It requires know- ledge. It needs training, but It pays. Come to the O.A.C. and join the Freshnwn class In September. We will send you the College Calendar containing full particulars If you say so. Write to-day. ONTARIO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE Guelph - Ontario <l. B. Reynolds, M.A.. A. M. Porter, B.S.A. L. Stevsnson. M.S.. President. Reglstrsr. Extension It performs work so minute that it;..\ttar escapes the human hand completely | The Arab women also write. Here and is visib'e to the eye only under ^ ig a sample of woman speaking of wo- powerfui microscopes. The machine ; man: is Introducing an unp recede nle<l pre- 1 "Tliese women. How many a rich cisioii Into the testing of Fllk ship- j man have they not paupered. how ments from Japan. â- many a powerful man have they not Estwiitlaily It It a machine for wind- I pn^slrated. aud how many a superior ing silk from bobbins Into skeins by man have they not enslaved! Indeed, passing the thread tbrough a grove tu I they rednce the sage aud send the a gauge. The groove is adjusted until | saint to shame and bring the we.illhy a feeler. .002 of an Inch thick, fits j to want, and plunge the fortunefa- clase enough to Just support a sped fled weight. .^.s leu threads jkiss tlirough ten separate grooves the least variation In any thread is detected aud Immediate- ly the machine stops. ^ Farming Up-tc-Oatc. The swivt young thing gazed pen- ' sively at the peaceful rural scene. "Why are you running that steam- . roller thing over that Held?" sho aekeii | at last. I "I'm raising mashed potatoes this year." replied the farmer. ' vor«>d Into penury. Yet for all this • the wise 1 iit redouble in affection of : Iheni aud honor; nor do they cor.iit '• this oppression cr dishonor. Mow j many a man hath offended his maker j and called down oii hlmsvlf the wratli I of his father and mother Si'! al Mas- ; halikh the lt?ariied woman." j -« Minard's Liniment for all pains. It is better to be able to look back ' to a day well lived than ahoi^d to month of promises. â€" The Lamp. A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN Earn ^•nevâ€" jntf t«t It twrry mftk, S«ll tn» <ntf f««rar^«n«. OalSt f«rni;littf. Old. rcta^JiiA. td Urm )!«• *» ftttra«t<«« pr*M:l1l«n for mxn tr Ikoma'i cf foM ttai*4lni and tMrtetfe. t. D. SMITH 4 SONS. IIHITCO. WIMxa. Ont«f« Making Her Say It. The prettiest girl sighed. .-Vll through the foMn)t her partner had been relat- ing "curious facts' to her ab\iut every- thing under the sun. from pigs to par- I liament. till she was hore<i almost to tears. Now he was on the subjei-t of heredii.*. "Its a curious fact," he re- marked, "hut ray brother, w'uo was born on ihe same ilay of the year as I was. but who's three years older, i-i my exact opposite in every re*pect. Do yoii know ui\ brother?" ".No." niurniurml the girl, "but I'd like to.' as well as the most celebrated of these geographical enigmas. It bas long per- plexed scientists how this island ap- pears floating on the surface during one period of the year and then dis- appears to rest at the bottom of the lake for the rest of the year. i It appears on the surface regularly at the middle of .Xugust. and remains uu Island til! February 15th each year. when it is engulfed and sinks to the 1 bottom. Many efforts have been made to probe tiie mystery, but every at- tempt to control Its appearance and ' disappearance has ended in failure. As the Island Is quite an unwauted one. attempts were made at one time ' to end its career by loading it with tons of stones. The island disappeared as usual at Us proper time. l)nt the 15th of the following .\ugust found It drying on the surface again. ' Another Island with a spirit for ad- venture is the flimfiug island in Henry's 1-ake. situated In ;i depression of the Rocky .Mountains, called I'ai' gee's Pass. The lake has an area of forty square miles, and this tloaMug tslaiKl keep." sailing aroujid it at an average rale of about five miles a day. .-VdventtireTS who have hinded <in 'the iijlaud witlTnut knowle'lge of its roving propetisity have awakened in the moru'ng iti fin I ll<e:ii9elves ma- rooned ani their small boat fioiitlns miles away Meifort. Sii-katchewan. â€" "I liad inward troubles, heaJachesand severe pains in my back and sides. 1 was so sick generally that I could not sit up arid 1 was in bed moat of the time for eight months. An aunt came to visit and help me as I was unable, to attend to my baby and could not do my work. She told me to tr>' Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound, and after taking two bottles 1 could get up and dress my- self. I also took Lydia E. Pinkham's BltHjd Mtdi:ine. When I first took the medicine I only weighed seventy- eiji^ht pounds. Now 1 weij^h twice Ls mucii. If I get out of sorts or weary and can't sleep I always take another bottle of the Vegetable Compound. I find it wonderftilly (food for fe- male troubles, and have recom- mended it to my neighbors. I will be only too glad to answer any letters I receive a.<<kinK about it." â€" Mrs. William Ritchii?. Box 486, Meifort, Saskatchewan. c Nev. single cylinder Har!ey-r>av;d!«'n Motorcycle'-, bas Just won a World's Re- cord for t~n luraiice Less than one cent ner mile to operate, and ovtr IfO â€" â€" â€" 4> j miles per gal'on of gss. $07 cash. ha. The first dtg.ee of folly is to th^nk ""^'^ *'" P^"" month. Trice »29S Face Badly Broken Out With Pimples Cuticura Healed " My face was bo badly broken out with pimples that it was actually disfigured. They first started with a few blackheads on the sides of my face, and festered. The pixnpies spread to my forehead, cliin and neck. They Uched and burned so IDs; I could hardl; rest. They looked so badly that 1 was ashamed to be seen in public. The txcul-!e lasted about three years. "I rrad an advcTtirement for C'Jiicu .1 Soap ar.d Ointinent so purchased some. I used about two boxes c<i Cuticura Ointment and four cakes of Soap and was bealed." (Signed Mr9 John Kellv. Rt. 3. Bay Cuy. Mich.. Nov. 5. 1925. Nothing so insures a healthy, clear complexion, soft, smooth hands and gU-ssy luxuriant bait as Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuti- cura Ointment when necessary. bapir :>cli Trâ€" »t M»U. h.l&rrt* Car«,l >n n.r"! St#ttbAmr tl4. MMtml' Pr--v, ?<Mr flg^^ Cvticura Sharina StKk 7.S^, orteself wise; the t>ext, to te 1 others so; the third, to despise all counficL . â- ^^ WALTER ANDf^EWS, Yonge St. Ltd, Toronto j ISSUE Nc. 27- 'iswassft.:-- -. ^m0mm !_ ^Bfc ih II