br ot Dr Wiliams' Pink Pills, & sup- | BU of which I now always keep in the! th and I would advise other wo- men to do the same." any | Yanish amid song and service. Don't think a. lot about yoursel? and don't A braver soldier, a more daring ox- Jlorer, or more courtly gentleman dived than Walter Raleigh, _ knight and author, You all know story of his fatro- duction to the Queen Elizabeth. She was walking with her courtiers from, the royal barge, when she place so damp and muddy that she hesitated as to where to step. ! - Raleign immediately threw down his fine embroidered cloak for her or majo "ty's dainty feet to step upon, and "that time, as long as she lived, Jeon §ave Bim her help and Te os Even Armas age drs Rast Bis y. terward he sent ships | walsh yslted our. Virginian and North Ci ian shores, from which two new strange plants' 'were carried back for English use. These Were tobacco and 'potatoes. > Having Beard wondertul stories of | ~~ the gold in lands still further south, he sailed away to the far west, little gold, but a strange, rich country, "of which he wrote' most glowing des- eription on his return, The queen, who had been go firm 8 friend to him, died, and in a change of ritlers unjust suspicions were aroused. 'Bir Walter was charged with trying 10 place another person on the throne, tried and sentenced to death, but led, {ustead, to the prison where he spent twelve long yéars. "It was then he showed his brave heart as well as on the battle-fleld, and he renewed his old studies, "planning Giber, and 11 iii Sa Bn ee Hon So: sears for $id. mines Iu the "health woman XLT {who serves best. sailed from 'Quebec carrying the usual i " el oy oat 3 Sin Other © Wo become 88. pu) pets. We need | Be 67 10 cutee the wear: ness 1s unspeakable and Iam in the But, thank God, I have life h 'worse; go. jn i Bil things can never livegin "the presence. of the right. Doleful hours here goes, I will win become ed up in yourself. 'Such people make small parcels. The thing to think about is that he profits most Never pity yourself, Pity is a grand thing for everyone but oneself. It is fatal there. It takes the steam from the engine, We are not 'here to play, to dream, to drift, We have bard. work to do and loads to HfL; Shun not the struggle--face litt ~~ God's gift-- Be strong. Sometimes "Safety First" is detri- the | mental. It always is in cases of des- pondency and discouragement. In- stead of looking within, look around and up. Think what there is for you-- home, loved ones, "books, - -musie; the 'beautiful world, oy James Pmetham; tha: 'essayist and | painter, 'possessions and estate; - He claimed; BT"! the world for his own as being ene who 'iad come Into contact with the things that help. It is a fine tonic. When out of sorts get our of doors and enjoy the tonic of the big movements and spaces. Breathe the fresh air and gage upon the skies. ' You must believe that you always can if you will: Newvep admit that you tan't. 'That falls every time and can | never bo the conqueror. Some flowers grow best in the shade where the sun- shine rarely comes;.and as a rule they are the very choice ones of the garden because they spell bravery. We are flowers in the garden of the world, blooming dlways for the good of others. "80 don't bemoan your lot. If your nek is not as you would have it, put a "p"" in front and go on. There is a lot of wonder in life, but.the greatest wonder of all is that man can over come all troub 2.1 Leith in his own The preparations, 'which have been under 'way for some time in the North 1; and on that date the C.G.8. Arctic laden with Bup- Bang | tocular-and den # in the long course of the St. Lawrence g used to say that when he was| - | crumbling up With thie aftairs of life he | would go .on to the moors, or take al* Walk inthe "meadows and view his | head. "Be sure it has a comfortable J: place to lie down. "A night spent in the "| stable, reeking of ammonia from lack. "| of cleaning; utterly unfits the animal | know* the passage of the Rapids is 'wholesale use of cold water from' head It is the Lachine Rapids, most fhec- 7-of all the shallows: River. The river is beaten into 8 maze of cross currents and undercurrents, "ing with "teeth just flush with p of the stream which, here Looked .at from the 'decks ofthe Canada Steamship Lines vessels that run these rapids dally, it seems as though no ship could live for a minute in those tormented waters. Yet subtle Indian pilots have long known them to be as safe as any placid stretch of the Lake St. Louis into which the Bt Lawrence broadens and through which the ship has just pass- ed, 'Indian and French-Canadian pilots safe, but woe tothe man who should A Cross Words Puzzle. a Sunstroke and Heatstroke. So many cases of prosyration in animals come to our notice/during thet summer months that a word on this! subject may not be out of 'place. "Phere ate two types of stroke, sun« stroke, and heatstroke. Sunstroke in 'horses 1s caused by the sun's rays 'striking the back of the-head while the animal pulls a heavy load in the hot sun. It is also causéd by leaving the horse standing in the hot sun, after heavy work. It comes on suddenly, the animal collapsing and usually be- coming "unconscious. . - fe Prevention: --Keep a wet sponge on horse's head or bathe frequently with cold water. Give frequent rests in the shad, when possible. Repamier -the weather is hot and the horge feels it 88 much as you do. You lighten your 'work in the sun as much as possible in the hot weather. Do the same for your horse. Do not hurry or worry him, and help him fight the -handfcap' of hot Weather by being easy with him. Treatment: --If the horse collapses, 'send for a veterinary. .In the mean- time first aid treatment consists of to foot. Do not apply a quantity local- ly, but make it wholesale. Keep it up till horse recovers, Heatstroke may come on without / | animal having been touched by the sun. It is caused by standing' in stables, when the atmosphere is close, humid and damp. | Prevention: --Keep the horse in the yard if stable is very small and close, {only in a shady place. Give plenty of water te drink, and use cold water on 'atmosphere of a small {li-ventilated | tor work. It is better in the open. Treatment: --Same ag Sunstroke. and whirlpools and foam:laced rocks, peer-| Jeggdd | ttaing 8 speed of as high as twenty | oh 8 Do you remember the hospital When I "There was Tim a-wagging his dear old acter or future events can be' "read" from the hand need not C.8.L. "Rapids Prince" s attempt to run them without full know- ledge of their treacherous depths and shallows. But the old-time spirit of the vayageurs and discoverers is not dead to-day for in the past two months, though the river was swollen by spring freshets, two canoeists have actually TET His Friend. Paypees, paypees, latest edition, sir, Paypees, paypees, all about the mur der! I am not crying, Mickey, I've got a cold in me head; Well, 1 guess you'd be crying, too, if your best triend was dead; You didn't hear about it, you don't know about Tim? He was hit by one of those big trucks, that was the Iast of him. Paypees, paypees, (you know how bad I feel) Paypees, paypees, all about the big . steait the time that I took sick, And Tim he sneaked out after me, gee! but he was quicky Yeu heard how he trailed that ambul- hooting Lachine Raplds. dared the dangerous passage and ive succeeded, One of them was a man from New York State; the other was a native Montrealer, Both were; of course, experts, and neither would probably try it again for any amount of money. SAVE THE CHILDREN Mothers who keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in the house may feel that the lives of their little ones are reasonably safe during the hot weath- ed. Stomach troubles, cholera infan- tum and diarrhoea carry off thousands of ttle ones every summer, {in most cases because the mother does not have a safe medicine at hand to give promptly. Baby's Own Tablets wre- Heve these troubles, or if given occa- sionally to the well child they will pre- vent their coming on. The Tablets are guaranteed by a government an- alyst to be absolutely harmless even to the newborn babe. They are es- pecially good In summer because they regulate the bowels and keep the stomach sweet and pure. They are ance up to the very gate And when they wouldn't let him in, he Just lay down to wait? Paypees, paypees, (he got there just | *.# the same), .« Paypees, paypees, all -'Bbout the! . league, game! And then, how it came to happen no one could ever say, For somehow, the door was open and Tim was on his way; He made one dash to find me right to the very place, . With his dirty paws on the counter- spane,--1 can see that nurse's face! Paypees, paypees, (gee, my bed was & sight!) Paypees, paypees, all about the prize 5 fight! » Some of them thought him Bord, though most of them found him 7. sweet, Still, rules {is rules, so out he went, but he never left that street; walked down _the hospital steps after me clothed was biled, tail, I. thought he would 80 'wild. If I could get that guy I'd only wring . his neck! Paypees, "wreck! paypeees, all about the --Amy W, Eggleston. fe om + "Handy" Hints. - ~ Suybody who believes .that char- it a pro- Here are i. few at 26 cents a box from The Dr, Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Sen dlls won They'd Try to Believe. Wifle--"One should never repeat anything one doesn't believe." Hubby=-"What would you women do for gossip in that case?" S--. So Sudden. Together they had broken the wish- bone, and she held the longer. piece. "Now, what shall I wish for?" she mused. "Really, I can't think." "Oh, wish for anything," he suggest~ ed brilliantly. But still her brow wore a puckered frown. "Oh, well, If it's as hard as that I'll wish for you," he said obligingly. "Oh, John," she ¢ried happily, "yon really wish for me, dear? Then you can have me! This is so sudden!" err ---- Metal railway sleepers have to be used fn many parts of India. Wooden sleepers would be eaten by insects. One person out of every fourteen of Canada's population now owns a gold by medicine dealers or by malib The place for seeing tomato farms to b The writ d 'was amazed by what he saw. mato plants must mean. It ix "a bit of a staggerer," too, to be told that the official returns of the rail: year. their respective districts, phases. "All the earliest crop is grown in a hot-house, and 1s "forced" just like rhubarb. 'It is planted just after Christmas, and the fruit can be picked from the end of March to the end of June. The second season, that of the cember, whilst-the third or out-of] doors tomato crop, is gathered from the end of August to December. nel Islands. The bulk of-the people depend upon them In some way or other for their living. Much of the growing, too, is done by small farmers, or by working-men, in their leisure hours. Guernsey has sometimes been called "HEngland's.Glass Island," owing to the Immense quantity of glass used there in the cultivation of the tomato. Look where you will from any high ground in Guernsey, a veritable "sea of glass" {meets your eye, glistening like the | glaring sun. It has been estimated that there are at least nine hundred | miles of glass in the island, The quays are always brimming over In various parts of the United King- 70,000 boxes of fruit of various kinds | have been sent off by steamer in a single day from St. Peter Port. ---- its lh India Gave Callco Printing. Indian is generally regarded as the birthplace of calico printing. Nervous People That haggard, care-worn, depressed look will disappear and nervous, thin pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. Bast, Toronto, Ont. After Shaving Mix Minard's with 'sweet oll Wonder and apply to the face. fully soothing. motor-car. * Headache. 'Neuralgia Proved safe py millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds + Toothache: 'Neuritis™ Rheumatism Lumbago only 'Bayer' package hich conta ns proven eT er" boxes of 12 tablets es of 24 anid 100--Druggists. Monoacetio- DOWD. smooth water of a lake lit-up by the | people will gain In weight and strength when Bitro-Phosphate is taken 'for. a. short time. Price $1 per' advantage is the Chanpel Is ally Guernsey and Jerson | ad the privilege of going | Ni nd two - three of the biggest of | grawers' gardens there recently, You can easily understand this when you learn that on such a farm at Gorey | unearthed only a few years ago. 4 Were no lees than 70,000 tomato| 'his building cost such an unheard plants waiting to be transferred from of sum that the historians of the peri: the greenhouses, where they are first' od were unable to decide how much it 8gwn and grown, to the beds prepared | aid cost but the average 'for them in the open air. Just try to! proached what to-day would be equal think of the immense amount of work | | several billion dollare, in fact the such a task as setting out all these to: | | British historians declare that it cost cold-house, extends from June to De-,; with baskets; crates; and boxes bear; ing the names of dealers in fruit noted | "idont' It 1s on record that as many #s | | The archaeological world is very mie interested In the recent discov- Rome of one end of Emperor ro's Ee House." After the burn- ing of Rome Nero bullt the most ex- sive palace the world has ever 'kilown ahd it was known as "Domus { Aurea." One end of the buflding was 6s8 ap- | two billion pounds. This enormous building stretched from the Plating across "the low ways show that 8,260,000 baskets of ground to the Hsquiline, thus ltnking ripe tomatoes were exported to the and erowning two of the seven hills. {British Isles from Guernsey alome last On this building Nero allowed his fancy | to run wild and reports say that it had A large portion of these supplies one hundred thousand rooms, a tale does not go to Covent Garden, London, | easily believed when one considers the but Is sent direct to Manchester, Briss | other big things done by the Romans, tof Leeds, Glasgow, and Preston,' Scores of the rooms were papered with which are all distributing centres for gheet gold studded with gems and | hung with masterpieces of art. To de- The tomato season in the Channel fray the cost not only was Rome taxed Islands goes through three separate 'to the utmost, ut Greece and Asia were despoiled their wealth, It is sald that in time the entire walls of this wonderful building will be un- earthed, but it is known that after the palace was in ruins the gold was cart- ed away. | -- The temperature of the sea decreas- es as the depth increases. In the Pa- cific Ocean, for instance, when the Tomato growing and export are per-| tamperature at the surface was b4 haps the chief industries of the Chan-| joo F. ata depth of 2,652 feet it was 40.56 deg., a difference of 13.6 deg. URINE Keeps EYES Clear, Bright and Beautiful 'Write Mutine Co.,Chicago, for Eye Care Book PIMPLES OVER FAGE AND NECK ltched and Burned Badly. Healed by Cuticura, " My face started to itch and burn and then broke out with pimples that were hard, large and red. After a few days they festered and scaled over and were very sore. They itched and burned so badly that I used to scratch which caused them to spread all over my face and neck. My face was badly disfigured. + * I read an advertisement for Cu- ticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. After using it I purchased more and in about two weeks I was healed." (Signed) Miss Bertha Wilson, R. R.2 Foresters Falls, Ont., Oct. 3, 1524. « Daily use of Cuticura 8oap; Oint-|- ment and Talcum helps to prevent skin troubles. Saampla Each Tree by Mal - Addrews. Canadian ice, Sonp "Stenhouse, Maptreat Be P Gintment 25 and ble. "fa BEF Cuticura Shaving "Stick 28c. WORKING GIRL'S. EXPERIENCE Read How She Found Help in Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound * Arnprior, Ontario.--"I must write and 'tall you my experience with your 1 was working at the factory for three years and became so run-down that I used to take weak spells and would be at home at least one day each week. I was treated by the doctors for anemia, but it didn't seem to do me any good. 1'was told to take a rest, but was unable to, and kept on getting worse. 1 was troubled mostly with my periods. I would sometimes pass three months, and when it came it would last around two weeks, and Iwould have such aut times in my right side that I could har walk, 1am only 19 years of age weigh 118 pounds now, and before tak- ing the Yegetable Com) nd 3 only unds.: Iwas si for td un of told me Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable d, and when Thee era fost Rk Fay a Change, M Rik it for a ifterent ail ment and ae f it very sa tisfastorys 1 am will to tell friends about the | to answer letters askis Miss 11751, BERNDT, B As a oon wes envi velope you Re ui eg , rp pay