It your I FREE 311k 78438! aBankBook emtoaddto Dha- a, a. SS 50! 93.5. upsâ€"now mm MRS T. NICHOL BELL RECEIVES \\ ,. 1.. ._ ‘r m uw person who gets ‘ ,.\ o‘Xt'l't'iSP. The “bilious†, A â€Hr. as a rule. much given ,.\. VIM“. I“ munnvr 0! living that pre- , 2.. sn-mliml "biliousness" is ’m- sanm as that which pre- .. , m dismsn 0f the gall-blad- , _;H.’-tnnvs. obesity and diabetes. Popular Treatment Doubt“) s :annw has said tha when it. > b..x;.‘.. -- .JA‘A- ‘ . .. ï¬m will b . . accompanied by self-Wren“; and 3 answered only when One of th; waggs that has rec e’ terminology o m em scientiï¬c medi . , “ . . mess." It laclgs exact meaning, It - mm 18 blllous- describe functlonal disturb f \\ Mas: “I am 34 years old. - am last, three years, I have .mhu-ks of what the doctors uum' stone colic. I have had a; Hm urine and have passed ‘rHJH <tones during or follow- »H attack. Since my last at- ! htnn been in gOOd health -I no discomfort on the right ’1â€" [ had :3]! of my_pain., 93A,. “A4 ‘ -r-.rmnn of last. week when .H'IM'I‘ 0f ladies LOOK the v m can. Mrs. Harvey \I-«x Norman Kerr received ‘rx'r‘itm: “I would like to ‘ munitions about shingles. 1m for over two weeks. ann I wont to said that it. ‘ Just. 30 long to get. rid Mmfnss. Mrs. Bell wore v: dress of peach crepe. presided over by Miss was revered with ï¬let "'10! [DP (lacerations. pink 1 pink candles. Assist- ‘~Ir'~'. French, Misses Kenn. Kidney Stone Colic ,\'irhnl_ Boll received. for .‘rmn (~1an her marriage nu- Mn (jqcldes street on In HIV :ay snmntimes shows stones w-m. though not always. . - 9 gm.- ns well, varies with .\ gvnm-al average would HH pnumls. At ll years ‘.\ nlllll ho). about 105 pounds. “â€11ch increase with each * yval'. until at the age \mulcl average about 19.6 By DR. W. J. SCHOLES NUâ€; Dr. Scholes will am gm": livnl'." He or she not 4 g (on) much, as a rule. but ,- “rum: kinds 0f f00d. Th8 â€nuns tun much fat, greasy we: funds. sugar and stimu- lz' :mynnc can get. an excess a! us the person whpoxets‘ THE FAMILY NEXT DOOR Thursday, December 3, m MNHH “"10 i3 inelined to be ‘ n gnnvrally what is known v â€" ca- v FIJI II. Xâ€"ray syibw whéther I : stonfs 1n the kidney?†Shingles Reply Reply “Page about l§6 THE LOOSE NUT The paper spoke the other day about a loose nut wrecking a car. That is one trouble we have. There are too many loose nuts running around in cars. Some of them ought to he locked up. When a. loose nut gets tight, it may be worse at that. â€"â€"Los Angeles Times. Chronicle. Kay Archibald, Merna Halls, Robi- sone Richardson. Vernie Pearson and Phyllis; Petrieiâ€"Elqrja Express. ‘l_. n --r- UV 1 Mrs. Ben is a daugh‘LErâ€"or Mi~°s. James _Kerr of Varney.â€"â€"-Edit0r . vv “bu auuut [35 pounds too much for my height. I have always had a good appetite and have eaten about everything and as much as I wanted. For sevâ€" eral years,â€"â€"(I am now 52 years oldlâ€"I have not taken very much exercise. What kind of exercises should I take to reduce?†Reply It would be safer at your age to undertake the job of reducing un~ der the supervision of a physician. The amount that you eat must be reduced to something less than the fuel requirements of your body. Your body must be compelled to live on some of its fat. Starchy and fatty foods and sugar must be cut down. As for exercise. care must be taken not to do yourself more harm than good. Just what is suitable exercise for you depends upon the condition of your organs. Before you begin your campaign, have a careful medical examination. _. ‘_ It the word “bilipuspess’j '. to the Word “mmgestlo diagnosis. it is a. label w \’(‘l')’ exact meanma 11.†As a ithout any 1. Yes. '. writes: “I weigh about. 'h . “Be 3““,- Maggie; don’t Show lgnt‘ul'anco. That’s Latin for ‘ come’.†Learned Pat , An Irishman and his wife on a visit. to London. wont to a theatre. The wife noticed the word "Asbes~ tos’Lpr-inte-gi on the curtain. "inith, pm and what does ‘. beston’ _0n jibe curtam mean?†LL“ There are more crimes in the United States every year than in all the rest of North America, all of South America and all of Europe outside of Russia and the Balkans. Such was the remarkable statement made by Chief Justice Marshall of the Ohio Supreme Court recently. Court delays, technicalities, weak- ness of law enforcement ofï¬cers and persons who hold the law in con-i tempt, he said, were to blame for the conditions. He expressed the belief that most executives were elected on a basis of non-enforce- ment of law, or at least of some of the laws, and most of the failures in enforcement he charged to graft. , It is a queer state of affairs that is thus revealed. The people of the United States are supposed to rule themselves, and they do this by electing re. )resenta‘itives to make laws and tlen electing executives notto enforce them. It might be profitable for Canadians to make a special study of lawlessness in the limited States, just for the sake of finding out the systems and methods that are to be avoided.â€"â€"Stratfi_)rd Beacon-Herald. . ,___- -- vvvvvv Vukfyl 11-160 . An egg, aq least, a day Is a mac“- cal necessnty. Two 01' more are better. Eggs are the brgaukfast food of the na-Ewn and have great food value. . “ “recipes or varlous uses to whneh eggs can be gmt. It also. contams interesting one to ensure their purity, pargicplarsjof the different. â€"-J novuuvllVluUl' mum. 11300311126 th'eyalue of the grading of eggs. While in bygone times, a certain percentage of every dozen bought tor fannly consumption would pro- bably be a bit tainted or stale, the housewnfe of today can know ex- actly what she is buying whether Specials, extras, ï¬rsts or seconds. An eight-page pamphlet just issued by the Dominion Department of Ag- riculture that can be had freely forl asking from the Publications Branch, Qttawa, goes into the value A~~_ 701- a}; gar/flaking Br: to value of th Vhile in bygo annnlnm- -n Semi 30t for the 180 page Purity Flour C005 Book. Sm! pattpaid. WESTERN CANADA FLOUR MILLS 90‘ W‘TED 11--.: Am- _-_ - - SEND FOR THE PURITY FLOUR COOKBOOK 'your “Wel- , __ A W Head Otflccâ€"TORO Branches from coast to coast NTO ; JUUL [Lao My uncle, Hiram Stevens, after whom I was named, captured a small cub and brought it up as a pet. It would eat almost anything and about as much of it as a pig. so it soon attained considerable size and had very peculiar ways of showing its ‘all‘ection. At that time my uncle was paying his respects to the young lady who afterward became his wife, and she objected very strongly to the. hear. The next Sunday night.‘ therefm'e, my uncle locked the bear securely in the woodshed, but he had no been very long with his ladylove when the front door was burst in and the bear rushed in and landed in his lap. That brought matters to a crisis; the young lady delivered her ultimatumâ€"he must either break off the engagement or kill the l),,.ar.â€"â€"and so the interesting pet was sacriï¬ced on the altar of Cupid the next day. Read the Classiï¬ed Ads. on Page w-V rvw. f you step on a dog‘s foot, the dog has brains enough to know that it is an accident and actually ex- pects you to pet and pity him for your blunder, which no doubt you will do. But if you step on a bcar’s foot, the bear will not stOp to reason. He will retaliate by tak- ing about a pound of steak out of tho_call‘ of your log. y If . Bears, 'says Sir Hiram S. Maxim 1'1) My Info, (10 not make 5an pets. cvnn. ~l‘Aâ€"r vv 1]. axlquIUl 5 As a reward for which the camel mother promptly knocks down her Senseless offspring, spits at it and then bites it on the head. probably knowing, in her motherly way, that there is less sensitivencss there than anywhere else! UNL" UDIU DU‘ mand? It does not. Frantically, and with an added bawling, it goes to every other member of the camel herd before it_ fl‘nds its own mother! .vvu v. ayu 'UIUUO While this is going on, the mother is hawling also for her prize numb- skull to come again to her side, and the concert continues for an hour or so before the child finally under- stands that somebody who feeds it desires its company at home. But does the poor idiot obey, the com-- m-.. ,In or standing in amazement, waiting for the wall to move! When it isn't doing something like that, it is getâ€" ting in the way of the horses, the men, the elephants or anything else that happens to come along, not be- cause it is obstinate, but Simply be- cause it doesn’t know enough to get out of the way. The only other thing it. does is to stand and bawl. It will bawl for hours at a time, appar- ently taking delight in the unusual flatness of its voice. 1 .As for the baby camelâ€"here, la- dies-sâ€"s-s an’ gents, is the prize fool of the whole animal kingdom. When Nature devised the camel, some- y carried away the brains, leav- ing the ï¬nished article, ' in babyhood, the most dunce-like cat that ever' struggled about on four legs. For instance, in the course of its wanderings, the baby camel may walk up to a brick wall. It doesn’t know enough to go round it; itdn‘lerely stands therel kl‘l“:nr~n :1â€" A considerable eXperience with animals, big and little, has convinced Mr. Courtney Ryley (lower, author of Lions ’n’ Tigers ’n’ Everything, that there is a smaller prOportion of brains in the camel than in any other creature .of anything like the THE LADY OR THE BEAR THE WORLD'S PRIZE POOL ___ _ vvuu uu lullll 13133611. “To my chauffeur, I leave my cars. He almost ruined them. and I want him to have the satisfaction of ï¬nishing the job. “To my partner, I leave the sun- __' vâ€"UV“ 0' ‘ "“5. j “To my. son I leave the pleasure of earning a living. For thirty-ï¬ve years he has thought that the pleasure was all mine. He was mistaken. “To my daughter, I leave $100,000. She wil need it. The only good piece of business her husband ever did was to marry her. “To my valet, I leave the clothes that he has been stealing from mo regularly for the Fast ten years. Also my fur coat t lat he wore last winter when I was at Palm Beach. mm W... AIM-Jr ' ‘ Deliver Rebuke: The following is an excerpt from the will of a Wall Street man which was probated in the New York courts: “To my wife I leave her lover and the knowledge that I wasn’t them fool she th_01_13ht I was. um Witch you bu? ‘doliclbuo sug- â€" “v“. \ï¬. Durham is an attractive and healthy town, and good accommoda- tion can be obtained at reasonable rates. . J. A. M. ROBB, B. A., Principal. JOHN MORRISON, Chairman. _- v v- wv UV WU; DUE may â€a obtainedâ€"“from the Principal. The School has a creditable record m the past which it hopes to main- tagp it} the future. to take up the following courses: (1) Junior Matriculation. (2) Entrance to Normal School. Each member of the Staff is a Uni- versity Graduate and experienced Teacher. gestion that he take some other clever man in with him at. once if he expects to do any business. DURHAM HIGH SCHOOL PAC. 8.