ause they. sill say the goes to bed early at py ole oneohold at day- - break next morning. This, however, a matter of ait for up till : years of a (ES. the child. should have at least ten hours sleep. The brain benefits from regularity of rest, no than the stomach from 2 meals. * The signs of in-| cient sleep are mainly mental, but. largely physical as well, They are _ most marked in the case of the child, and children who ao get § too ite sle x nh By ee dfowsy. and stupid. ~The. appetite is poor, _ the growth is stunted. . The face. is: pale; - the eyelids are heavy; the eyes sunken| 2 dark Hinged These children are Cp PAUL ALSO TEMPORARY TOMB OF THE APOSTLES. "on Walls of An cient Dwelling Show That' Saints Were Once Guests. - The vexing quéstion of the exact locality of the temporary tomb of the apostles Peter and Paul may soon be ttled, if the excavations under the Church of San Sebastian, 'begun. in 1914, are completed succescfully. There have been many delays, owing 'to lack of funds and, during the war, to lack of men. In the last six years 1g about one Yeats work; has been ne. "The excavations already... - have brouht to light the remains of a pila © Rai rently belonged to a' * family of wealth, turned Christian ig * Ing thé time of St. Peter. It is a first century building, and on its wallg are grafiites which prove' that Peter, and 'here and were entertained "or personal| ed; : : tive nd bubies oy jo Das! there is no reason why healthy adults and children shon 'should not do so also. Children should also be taught to] go to the lavatory at the same time each day. This arrangement if con- sistently carried out makes for health, in that it tends to prevent constipa- tion with its attendant ills arising from general lowering of tone and loss of appetite, Plenty of restful sleep, and the right kind of out-door exercise, to- sd hi Soul sets nourighi food, are "essential © active childhood." With these. supplied, tie the growing child may be e make the best progress at home and a. loop provided its general health have unearthed the most important Christian monuments, Because provide absolute proof: that St. Pe stayed and lived in Rome. This pront is offered by the many inscriptions uncovered. Heretofore first-hand evi- dence of St. Peter's stay in Rome was based on writings and manuscripts: In the last few days three tombs have been found, unique in that they probably are the only ones which re- main undésecratéd. The Christians had filled them in and covered them with plaster.. Outside the are orna- 'mented 'with 'arches: of travertine; in- Telde are' marble sarcophagi still 'con- taining the bones of the holy ones, and the ceilings a-e decorated with light stucco. Near by has been' discovered a per- tectly preserved colomrium, while to the other side is what is supposed to have been. the baptistry.of some holy shrine. It is for this reason that Pro- fessor Marucchi argues. that the tomb of the apostles St. Peter and St. Paul ¢ | must he near by. "Tradition tells us' that . Peter and Paul were mi on the same fay, n | June 18, A.D. 66 or 67. St. Peter was crucified in Néro's Circus on the. Vatican Hill, while Paul was. "behead _on the site of 'the | sent Church 'of St. Paul. Then their bodies. were taken by some holy J people, washed ' carefully, embalmed in, fine linen and buried on the Via Cornelia, close to the Circus of Nero, and the spot marked with, W, an fuserip- tion. 'Whenever, there, was , persecution or invasion the Christians hastened to the burial spot of{the| appostles: and carried 'the bodl some safe place in the eatacom to of | San Sebastian. a Hidden tor a Century. { Soon after their martyrdom the ork 3 : | ental Christians 'decided to come to NEY | Rome and carry the bodies back t the arr, the well known Visited the ex- Bast. for burial, They succeedc ing the b in it Jomovard Josruen | y story was made public. ; with equally satisfactory results. But | het fhe stoma eck ome Shore 'to build up the blood. thout rich, red bl and Dr. Williams' Pi best way to enrich th this reason these | good in' stomach . | thin blood, and in ilica was being demolished to' way for the present church 'of St. Peter, writes that the architect of the new church, Della Porta, opened a Hole in the pavement and sent for the' Pope, Clement VIIL, to view it. Pope, accompanied "by two cardi: Bellarmine and . Sfongrati, visited" old St. Peter's, and with a lowered oie saw below the church a marble cophagus with a cross of gold on | This cross evidently was that wh the Wmperor Constantine placed thes but the brass: was gone. i The Popé was so overawed that he ordered the cardinals. to cover up the hole with rubbish and rubble. -- to! architect also saw the tomb. The 8 would have been exactly where, in the present St. Peter's, is venerated the '| tomb of the Apostles. Torrigo writes that the Pope bound the cardinals to secrecy of what they had seen, but the ' oF Vieitors to the church are many and the sacristan, Frate Damiano, an ar dent archaeologist, enjoys showing every ome the new finds, It was due to his passion for digging in the cellar that many valuable inscriptions were brought to. light before the official éx- cavations were undertaken.: As he wishes to see the tomb of the Apostles 'hetore: he dies 'he is working: Taran | aid the excavations.® | -- heii A SMILE IN EVERY: DOSE OF BABY'S OWN TABLETS Baby's Own Tablets are a regular joy giver to the little ones--they never; fall to make 'the yeross baby happy. 'When baby is orése and fret- ful the mother may be sure something is the matter for it is not baby's na: ture to be cross unless he is ailing? Mothers, if' your baby is cross; if he cries & great deal and needs your cox- stant "attention'day and night, Sve him a dose of Baby's Own Tablets. They are a mild but thorough laxative whjch will quickly regulate the 'bowels and! stomach and thus relieve constipa~ tion: and indigestion, colds; and slmplé fevers and 'make baby happy--there' surely 18 a smile in eve Tablets, Baby's Own Tal lets" are sold] by medicine dealem or by mail af 25° seals a box f Ther it idm Medfcitie Co Bite, 0 1 Jeg Fi much fer politieh, Or questions big and great, i or, a place 'to dig. his bait. e doesn't think of sickness, © Ah! hé never could bell * When he feels the line a-tuggin' With that joyous sort of thrill! The place to lay aside your cares, : Yer yearnin' and yer ishin', Is x a beneath 'the sky; Ad, * there a-fishin', x I thought that beauty wos forever a dead < ! . | Pills. , dose of the] When his mind is on thé minny pat] dyspepsia. Proof of the Williams' Pink Pills in cases of indi- my heartfelt sympathy, as I was once myself a bond slave fo it. - Bating at all became a trial, and as time went on I became a mers 'skeleton of my 'former self. I took all sorts of re- commended medicines, doctors' and | advertised, but to no avail. Then a friend said to try Dr. Williams Pia I got a box and I thought be-' fore they were done I could feel a change. Then 1 got six boxes more, and by the time they were used I was eating my meals with regularity and enjoyment. My general health is now good, and it is no wonder that I am an enthusiastic advocate of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." You can procure Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or they will be sent you by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by '| writing direct to The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ------as. What the Boy Scouts Are Doing. Has Walkerton got the "Scoutiest" family in Ontario? Mr. Fred B. James, County Engineer, is a former Scout- master and a member of the Troop Committee of the present 1st Walker ton Troop. His son, Treve James, is Scoutmaster, and three younger sons are members of the Troop. A daughter is Captain of the local com- pany of Girl Guides and the youngest in thé family, a 1fftle girl, is a mem- ber of the "Brownies"--the junior branch of the Girl Guides. -. - -. The 61st Toronto Troop has a Wo- men's Auxiliary with Mrs. William Kay, mother of thé Troop Leader, as president. The auxiliary is arranging for a garden fete. for the Troop to. be held on the grounds of Beech Avenue Methodist Church on June 18th. * * * * Boy Scouts throughout the province have been busy recently assisting. lo- cal committees having the Red Cross and National Banftarium Association Campaigns in charge. 'roronto Scouts alone distributed : contribution enyel opes to 75,000 homes and a few days later returned to gather them up again. * . * Carleton Place Scouts have a_base- ball team whichis the talk of, the whole county. «On Victoria Day" they journeyed to Lanark and defeated the 'Lanark crack junior team to the tune fof 8 to 6. A . soe 1 'Most Ontario troops were on. the trek on Victoria Day and a great many Scouts held a fleld day with Fenelon Falls at the latter place. ; The Ist .| Whitby and the 8rd Oshawa Troops hiked together to Quigley' Woods for cises. The two Belleville Troops jour- neyed to Foxboro to help the Foxboro Troop with their sports, and the West- #| port Troop spent the day with their : brother scouts of Brockville,* Ag the "| Scout Movement spreads throughout | the province similar get-togethers will no doubt be much more Jrequent, * * The only part of the Ra's Birth- {day programme carried through at | Lindsay was a demonstration by the : a .'|Boy Scouts of Lindsay, Fenelon Falls Ask for Minard's and take no other. and Canningtol, the other events be- ing cancelled because of bad weather. To Scouts there is no "bad" weather. There are just a whole lot of different }Xinds of 800d. Weather. * During the achlh of May new troops old troops reorganized Bloor and SI e Sts, | ohe EEGEEE P. fod mo it is possible to so tone up the digess| also on the King's Birthday. Lindsyd 3 (games, camp cooking and other exer-|. Haro "What's in a phrase?" Margaret--*Well, before you mar used to say, 'How wo- henever 1did anything; now fies, "Thar Tn like a 'woman!*® So How He » Wanted It. "Any special way you want your | hair ir asked the barber. |. "Yes, with the scissors," replied the crusty patron. "If 1 wanted it trim- 'med with passementerie and a bird's wing I'd have gone to a milliner," Not Possible. "When a lady who was "burning up the road" on the boulevard was over- taken by a traffic officer and motioned to stop, she indignantly asked: "What do you want with me?" Yuyou running forty miles "an hour," answered the officer. "Forty miles an hour? Why, officer, I haven't been out an hour," said the lady. "Go ahead, " said the officer. "Thats a new one on me," Wrong House. The book agent rang the bell, "Have you a Charles Dickens your house?' ' '"No, we haven't," said the woman who answered the ring. "Or a Nathaniel Hawthorne?" "Nos I guess;«mister, you got our house mixed up with the boardin' house two doors further along. Try there. And she shut the door. in Not His Sisters. "1 say," he asked, as he stood in the streets of Paris for the first time and watched two Sisters of Mercy pass, "what kind of winimen i§ them I seen go along, all in black, with a white thing round their face and neck?" "Oh," replied the man addressed, "they're Sisters of St. John the Bap- tist." "@et out!" ' was the. sneering an- swer. "You can't fool me, Why, John the Baptist has beén dead for cen- turies." They Was Walls. After a block of new houses had been partly finished, the builder and his foreman went on a tour of inspec- tion. The former left his assistant in one house and went into the adjoining one, when the following conversation ensued: "Can you 'ear me, James?" "Yes," "Can you see me?" "NG. 'The builder rejoined the foreman, and remarked, with a self- satisfied air: walls!" mania Work, the Solution.' I am the foundation of all business. I am the source of all prosperity." I am the parent of genius. I am the salt that gives life savor. E I have laid the foundation of every fortune. I can do more to advance youth than his own parents be they ever so wealthy. 1 must be loved "before I can 'bestow my greatest blessings, and achieve my greatest ends. Loved, I make life: sweet, purpose- ful'and fruitful,' I am represented inthe humblest its All progress springs from rie. Who am 1? <I am WORK. 3 : ; » i J... MONEY ORDERS, - 13 Send a Dominion Express' ' Money Order. They are payable everywhere. The distinctive. sojentific fact.in the recent great earthquake in China' is that it literally} nfatle' the wholesworld tremble. Most earthquakes are local. They usually originate in the ocean near an island or a continent and radi- ate i d. The crust of the earth, which 1s estimated to be from fifty to one hundred miles in thickness, must from time to time undergo readjust- to other internal 8, but a quake that is felt and recorded the whole world over %s unusual. Women who play golf number more than 50,000 in England and Wales alone. To a lover there are but two places in the world--one where his sweet- aa {s and the other where she isn't. i Royte NoiL.) L Mageouche, Quebec. Sir ge tent. that 1 ty "Now, them's what you can call { sayings, in the highest stack of bonds. |. ment to changes in internal heat and |. "Tanlac has relieved me of fering and I just can't p 5 enough," said Mrs. Margaret Beverage, 305 Hughson St. North, Hamilton, Ont. "For two years my appetite was very poor and I suffered a grea from formation of gas on my sto) I was also troubled with freques tacks of dizziness and was ach afrald to go out or even get away from something to hold on to. One of these dizzy spells came on while I was calling on one of my gra id ren oné day and I just fell right ¢ on the lawn. Last spring, "hon 1 I started taking Tanlac, I had been ~con- fined to my bed for a month and was 80 weald I could not walk. "Tanlac helped me from the very start, as I have not had a weak spell since I started taking -it and I feel so good I can hardly realize that I'm the same woman. The dizzy spells are gone, my appetite is fine and every- thing I eat agrees with me perfectly. I have recommended Tanla¢ to any number of my friends and, I am glad to say, it has 'benefitted them all. I Just wish I could tell everybody who suffers as I did what Tanlac dad for me." Tanlac fs sold by leading druggists everywhere. Adv, eee lf erereins Glassmaking in Belgium. Glassmaking is one of the great na- tional industries of Belgium. Even before the war it was a source of large wealth, and to-day it is playing an im- portant part in rehabilitating the coun- try. Belgium has been famous for its glassmaking for many centuries,.and at the present time glass holds first rank among the general exports from Belgium to all other countries. 'There is scarcely a civilized nation in the world that is not more or less depend- ant upon Belgium for window glass, mirrors and table glass. mses Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia i Lucky the boy who lives in the land of trout streams! To push through the tall ferns, crawling foot by foot to within reach of the deep, quiet pool just under the bank; there to steeple a cast over the willow bush and have the fly light neatly on the glassy sur- face; then to feel it spin away at the strike of some lusty patriarch' of the river--that is for boyish delight and for lasting memories in pinces 4 remote from brooks. Doc DISEASES d How ie led Ade x diay b the. Al . oni ASPIRIN "Bayer" #5 only Gengine ing! Unless you see the "Bayer" on package or on table are not getting genuine Aspirin for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, ; /matigin) Earache, Toothache, Lum} and for Pain. Handy tin' boxe twelve tablets cost few cents. : glsts also sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade ark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Manu- facture of Monoaceticacidester of Sall- eylicacid. 3.