LIVING WITH THE ~ CHILDREN acts iying results, 1 Ideal pits M ces a er, Vtile Dearâ€"myâ€"Soul, wiry volces calling, moon is high in the misty sky honeyâ€"dew is failing." iry volces that called to us hildhcod are stil calling to iren of toâ€"day, but in the the turmoi! and the unsettled s which surround them, these About Insects. tor Poultry, spiration so that we the leaders of our e, who through exâ€" nc water, mâ€" lica, alum, ete., s all of which as the mineral is made serve en ts and teachers mosphere of unâ€" grain of A gre und with upon the life it is stunting ful rhymes He is ready with his > have her x, such poultry, y all the A . Sry ed poetry W too oftem AVve D&s 1) sDe we may into the on idrer . . Such went to e." and _ harmâ€" rh ymes n from i good ursery e, the ( the floods W room nateâ€" wel 1@ U 0 ng or 19 1t «4 wear noserings, the nose having been pierced in the same manner that is adopted to pierce the ears of civilized its value to the farm are left entirely to chance. The farmer‘s problem is to determine what parts of his land are suited to wood rather than other crops and to develop these portions for wood crops just as he would deâ€" velop larmd for other crops. ‘ woodlot, the material it contains, and In a secret conference attended only by President Wilson, Premier Lloyd George, Clemenceau, and Nitti, no secretaries or stenographers being present, it became advisable to reâ€" duce to writing certain propositions agreed to, with a copy for each conâ€" feree. The ~necessity for strictest secrecy precluded the admission of a stenographer. The Europeans were at a logs how to proceed, but Mr. Wilâ€" son rang for an attendant and said: "Get my typewriter." A protest folâ€" lowed against the admission of a supâ€" posed typist. But the President sprang a surprise by having his personal writingâ€"machine placed in front of him, and, typing out the memorandum with his own fingers, smilingly preâ€" sented a neat carBon to each associâ€" Lord Riddle, who was one cf Lloyd George‘s chief assistants at the Peace Conference, relates this anecdote reâ€" garding former President Wilson: The fastest moving starâ€"it is not really a star, but a blaze of gas which will some day become a starâ€"travels at the rate of about 730 miles a second. If it were coming toward us from the same place as the "farthest star" it would take 67,000,000,000 years to reach us. There is good reason to believe that this flock of stars is moving toward us. It is hardly necessary to say that it will take a long time coming. It is not really one star, but a great flock of stars, probably containing more than the equivalent of a quarter of a million of our suns; and it is so far away that it some unknown as tronomer could flash a lightâ€"signal at us from one of the suns or planets there, it would be nearly a quarter of a million years before that message couid reach us. But we can say which is at the farâ€" thest distance measured. This honor is at present borne by a tiny blur of light, which has no name, and a few years ago not noticed, but which is now identified in the New General Catalogue of stars as Number 7,006â€" or, more precisely, N.G.C. 7,006. Lloyd George Was Surprised. Every new invention of the astronoâ€" mer‘s observatory enlarges the disâ€" tance he can peer into space and measure its receding boundaries, so that one can never say which is the farthest star. It is what we feel for others, not how we feel in ourselves, that matters. lows. They keep their hearts for other hearts; their faces shine; they are a blessing where they stand and as they move. But they do not visit their discourâ€" agement, their sense of failure or their plague of nerves upon their felâ€" You do not hear the workers comâ€" plain of the petty things that seem to bother the idlers. The workers have no time to cultivate their pains and grievances as if these were flowers. The workers are busy "carrying on". in place of those who stop and sit down to examine the bruises and codâ€" dle themselves. , Some friends of the world are re garded as towers of strength needing no buttress and founts of sympathy. If those who depend on them but knew, these apparently glortous and limitless human beings often cry from the agony of the heart to open space for reâ€"enforcement and refreshment. They feel their weakness and emptiâ€" ness. In New Guinsa many of the women They are the people who said they were having "the time of their lives" â€"â€"which really meant they were throwing away the time of their lives â€"the previous time, which is all that any of us has to live on. It‘s easy to decry decency and re gularity as stupid. But there‘s a reason. The people who complain that their own nerves torment them and that life is hard and fate is cruel are not the people who have worked hard, lived soberly and obeyed the rules. It‘s very easy to poke fun at the conventions and kick over the traces of sleep, and temperance, and three meals a day at regular hours. % Just as mischief in a schoolroom or lassitude in an audience may be due to bad air, so mental depression may be the result of a regimen of life that is awry. If we call the halt and take the time to do so, any of us can think of all sorte of dismal things that are really or supposedly the matter with us. But what‘s the use? What good does it do? Half the time, when we tell a hardâ€"luck story, we are telling It to some one who has ten times as good a reason to complain. It‘s not interesting or flattering to realize when we‘re low in our minds that it may be because we ate imâ€" prudently,. or slept too little, or let trifles light as air frot us, or broke some one of Nature‘s wise and wellâ€" established ordainments. ly known as Flocks of Suns. (On Feeling Blue. These family names come in the first place from the unchanged name David, giving us, by the various proâ€" cesses of adding "son," cutting it down to a mere "s" and the elision of the final "d" in some cases, Davis, David, Davidson, Davison, Davie, Davies, Davers, etc. But a most widespread variation of the given name in the Middlo Ages From the foregoing list of variations it looks almost as it every family name beginning with "D" belongs to the Davis group. As a matter of fact David has given rise to an exceptinnâ€" ally large number of family names, beâ€" cause it was a far more popular given name in the Middle Ages than it is toâ€" day. * Variationsâ€"David, â€" Davidson, Daviâ€" son, Davie, Davies, Davey, Davers, Davye, Dayson, Days, Day, Dawson, Dawkins, Dawkinson, Dakins, Davâ€" idge, Dow, MacDavid, MacDaid, Macâ€" Dade, Kay, Dodd, Dodson. Racial Originâ€"English and Celtic. Sourceâ€"A given name. Mr. Bennett goes on to say that the Immigration Commission found the fact to be that 98 per cent. of the imâ€" migrants in a general way, and someâ€" times very specifically, know what employment they are going into beâ€" fore they leave their homes, their wives and other dependents. The reason why the immigrant goes to the cities, Mr. Bennett explains, is that he has a better chance to earn a little ready money and that there are also opporâ€" tunities for him, if he is of a foreign tongue, to talk to men of his own pression that the only immigrants Canada needs, are those going directâ€" ly on the farms. That is true, but will the immigrant coming to Canada go directly to the farm?t Mr. W. 8. Bennett, member of the United States Immigration Commisszion, who worked two and a half yoars investigating the question of immigration abroad, chalâ€" lenges any statement that the cities are the wrong place for the immiâ€" grant, so far as the immigrant is conâ€" cerned. of age, the average is about three skilled laborers, ton unskilled workers, and the other seven of professional and miscellaneous occupations. What would Canada have done in preâ€"war years without immigration? ‘Where will Canada be if the resolution now before the Ottawa House "that all imâ€" migration be suspended until a normal condition of affairs is established," is considered. There is a general imâ€" to the fact that the public stopped buying goods made dear by too high a cost of production, in which labor figures largely. ‘There is abundance of work in Canada and there will be plenty for everybody to doâ€"imm!{â€" grans and allâ€"for years to come. The present difficulty is that capital will not gamble on the presgnt high cost of production. ‘Therefore it is not the scarcity of work that is causing the trouble but the scarcity of capital, _ The propaganda that Labor leaders have been spreading in the Labor Press is of an entirely selfish and class distinction. Tho phase of the immigration question considered by them, is how will immigration affect Labor supply, or to be more concrete, how will 1t affect wages? Liabor lead-} ers speak of possible immigration agâ€" grogates that will likely flood Canada, but they never eliminate the 30 to 40 per cent,. of women, school children, and under, included in immigration totals, that do not enter the labor marâ€" ket. Statistics show that of every twenty male immigrants over 21 years __Labor leaders and the Labor Press want immigration stopped. Lobbyists have been busy at Ottawa for some time picturing before members the fearful results in unemployment that would likely follow if Canada does not bar the door to immigration. The unâ€" employment situation is not a new problem. Winnipeg and Canada have been dealing with it annually for the past twenty years. Any excess in unâ€" employment at the present time is due Is Canada to Bar the Door? $ez Sas. h'*’ r«th iï¬w&bor K ¢. um at low "““gï¬m mmm‘ -'tlu w&t!; W\ 4 m:. & ‘ ?‘c" †A ~_ T :/ GrapeNuts iz _ Surnames and Their Origin It‘s Really Amazing the amount of nourishment ~ youll find in a small dish of * DAVIS The family name of Davidge is simply a variation in spelling and proâ€" nunciation of Davids. The given name of David also had a strong hold in Scotland of the Midâ€" dle Ages, and was borne by a number of the Scottish kings, where it is to be found, principally among branches of the Clan Chattan Confederacy, in the Celtic forms of "MacDhais," "Clann . Daibhaidh" and â€" "Cuann Da‘idh," whence the Anglicized forms of MacDavid, MacDaid, Macdade and Kay. The English forms of Davie, Davis, Dawson, Dow also are found as septs of this clan, known toâ€"day as Davidson. was "Daw," derived from the pronunâ€" ciation of the name with the broad "a" (like Dawâ€"vid). The long "a," as in "day" is a development of modern English. This variation gave rise to the family names of Dawson, Dawkinâ€" son ("little Daw‘s son") and Dawkins. The broad "a" pronunciation also sometimes led to Dodd and Dodson, though these names are more comâ€" monly ascribed to the old Angloâ€"Saxon given name of "Doda" or "Dodd." In face of the above, is there any wonder why the people of Great Briâ€" tain,â€" of France, and of Belgium, sons. The population of the German Empire in Europe in 1911, was 60,100,â€" 000, or a population of 311 to the square mile. The population per square mile for Great Britain and Iroland is 374. The population of France taken by the census of 1913, gave 40,412,220, or a population of 193 persons to the square mile. In 1912 the population of Belgium was 7,510,418, and the popuâ€" lation per square mile was 658 perâ€" Canada is not the congested counâ€" try that Labor leaders would have people think, Canada covers an area of 8,603,910 square miles. Now let us deduct oneâ€"third, or say 1,200,000 square miles of what might be classed at present, as undesirable or unproâ€" ductive areas, ‘This leaves a basis of approximatelyâ€"two and a half million square miles, Canada could absorb the entire population of the British Isles (England, Scotland and Ireland) and then have 850 less people to the squaro mile than now exists in the Old Land. Placing our present popuâ€" lation at 10,000,000, that means an average of 4 people per square mile in Canada. Canada needs new people, needs them badly, on the farms and in all lines of industrial activity where it is now almost impossible to get men to do the great amount of necessary rough labor to keep industry moving. Certainly, there are people who should not be permitted to come into the country, becauso in the very naâ€" ture of things their admittance means confiict and radical social disturbance in our midst. Canada already bhas its share of this class. Mr. Bennett asks the question should anyone blame the newly arâ€" rived immigraut for going to the place where he finds compatriots, a place of worshin, and helpful surroundings for him to get the right start in a new ‘land. If he caunot speak English, he has an opportunity in the first few months to gain a wider knowledge of Canadian conditions from people of his own birth who are always to be found in the cities and towns. If when the immigrant first Jlands he is not trained or even equipped to go cut on the prairies to settle down and get a living from the soil, what is the use of sending him out there to beâ€" come a disgruntled and dissatisfied citizen? Immigration is a problem of great consequence to the people of Canada today. Immigration has a great influence on industry and on our prosperity which is the basis of reâ€" venue for the government. The pubâ€" lic generally, should seriously protest against any governmental action which would prevent the entry of deâ€" sirable immigration into Canada. A constructive policy of selective imâ€" migration is needed and it is up to Canada to establish a constructive policy based on a careful examination of conditions here and abroad to the end that it may safeguard our inâ€" terests and promote the general welâ€" fare, regardless of any one class. people, who speak his language, which. is most essenttal during the time that he is learning the Engliish language and the local situation. "If the opporâ€" tunities on the farm are greater than those offered in the city, the immiâ€" grant will soon find it out and act acâ€" cordingiy," says Mr. Bennett. _The law_‘imprinted on the hearts of all men is to love the members of soâ€" ciety as themseives.â€"Roman. that men should do to you do ye even so to them.â€"Holy Bible. Let none of you‘treat his brother in a way he himself would dislike to be '!‘homwmotllfehumuud do by the of others as they do by their own.â€"Hindu. He sought for others the good he deâ€" sired for himself. Let him paes on.â€" One should seek for others the hapâ€" piness one desires for one‘s self.â€" Buddhist. Do not that to a neighbor which you would take ill from him.â€"Grectan. What you would not wish done to yourself, do not do unto others.â€" Our everyâ€"day life brings so many trowbles and disappointments that we are foolish to look on the dark side of things and court many a rap that might otherwise be avoided. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills can be obâ€" tained through any medicine dealer, or by mail, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Pr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Miss Joyce herself says: "It gives me pleasure to confirm the stateâ€" ments made by my mother. Since using Dr, Williams‘ Pink Pills I have gained in weight, and from a sickly girl, suffering from headaches, dizziâ€" ness and a languid feeling, I am now as well as other giris of my age, and I owe it all to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills." Minard‘s Linimsnt for Oandru®. Anaemia is not a disease that corâ€" rects itself, and if unchecked it proâ€" gresses steadily,. But it can be comâ€" batied by good fuod, fresh air and a proper tonic for the blood. As the blood becomes rich and red under this treatment, the symptoms disapâ€" pear as in the case of Miss Evelyeen Joyce, Westville, N.S., whose mother ‘says: "Almost from infancy my daughter was very delicate, and was often under the doctor‘s care. As her father had died Of consumption my friends feared she would fall a vicâ€" tim to that dread disease. As the years went by and she was merging into womanhood I began to fear that I would lose her. Then I decided to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and I could soon see a change for the betâ€" ter. For the next three years, at inâ€" tervals, she took the pills, alwayc! with the best of results. Now at the age of sixteen she is a fine healthy girl, and I never tire of teliing those who see the wonderful change in her condition that she owes it to Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills." the Blood Becomes Thin. Anaemia is the medical torm for thin, watery blood. The sufferer loses strength, becomes short of breath and complains of palpitation of the heart after the slightest exertion, such as walking up stairs. ‘The lightest task becomes a burden. There is a loss of ambition, the victim loses weight and as the disease progresses the apâ€" petite is affected, color fades from cheeks and â€"lips and fainting spelis may occur. Loss of Strength Follows When NEW STRENGTH FOR VICTIMS OF ANAEMIA country such as Canada where the possibilities for the future are so great? Is there any reason why as a part of the Great British Empire, we should close our gates to the people of Great Britain especially, or to the people of France, Belgium or the Unite%) States, from whence so many desirable ciizens have come to us. In the interests of the country, we should have a constractive and not a restricâ€" tive policy of immigration.â€"Employâ€" ers‘ Association of Manitoba, should not be turmhg their eyes to: Do as you would be done byâ€" HAROLD ROBB _A Toronto boy who won the 2 1/% mile Ward Eight School Boys‘ Runâ€" ning Road Race, held on March 30, 1921. He is 16 years of age and lives at 201 Kingswood Road. He is the Patrol Leader of the 5ist Toronto Troop Boy Scouts. Variations of the Golden fFisherman‘s Friend. hig name?" was an admiral. At one time he led the world‘s combined fleet." The Venetian stopped and the manâ€" o‘â€"war drew to within a quarter of a mile of her and launched a boat which, despite the heavy sea, reached the steamship, and a doctor from the Queen Elizabeth boarded her. He was able to save the life of the infant. The mother said she would change the baby‘s name to that of the manâ€"o‘ war, but when she was informed that the ship was the Queen Elizabeth she said that the child‘s name would re main unchanged. Ancient History. Lady( to her partner)â€""Have you any prominent men in your family, Mr, The great battleship Queen Elizaâ€" beth, Admiral Beatty‘s flagship of the Grand Fleet, saved the life of a tiny babe of the same name in the Bay of Biscay recently by answering a call from the steamship Venetian, which was bound homeward. A mother sat rocking her baby, who was ill, the woman having been up constantly without sleep for a week, when the gray outline of the warship was sightâ€" ed. The child‘s life was ebbing rapidâ€" ly when the warship was signalled for help. "Then what are you for?" A Logical Inquiry. An eager looking urchin approached a man hurrying toward the railway station. "Carry your bag, sir?"" he asked. "No," snapped the man. "I‘ll carry it all the way for a dime," said the boy. "I tell you I don‘t want it carried!" snarled the man. "Don‘t you?" "No! No!" Whereupon the lad broke into a quick trot to keep up with his victim‘s hasty strides, as he asked, in innocent curiosity : "Paul, darling, mother wishes you to enter dad‘s factory, ‘That would overâ€" come his unwillingness to our marâ€" "But, my love," protested Paul, "I am a poet!" "All the better, dearie. You can write verses for our soap ads." "You doubtless mean above the clock," his wife retorted demurely. "If we were to hang it over the clock we couldn‘t tell the time. I wish you would be more careful with your rheâ€" toric, my dear; your mistakes are A Place for Paul. The daughter of a soap manufacâ€" turer recently conceived a fondness for a young man whose only asset apâ€" peared to be a knack of versifying. The girl summoned him and addressed him thus: "You doubtless mean a pitcher of fresh water," her husband corrected her. "I wish you would pay more atâ€" tention to your rhetoric; your misâ€" takes are curious." Ten minutes later the professor said, "That picture would show to betâ€" ter advantage if you were to hang it over the clock." Sauce for the Gander. I‘ll ring for Nora to bring a fresh pitcher of water,‘ said the professor‘s wife. "Cheapness" of Nature. Mrs. Newrich «in store)â€""My Iittle boy was disappointed in not getting a magnet among is Christmas preâ€" sents. Have you any?" Clerkâ€""Here‘s one at fifty cents." Mrs. Newrich (bhaughtily) â€"â€" "We don‘t have to buy such cheapâ€"looking steel things,. Show me something in silver." Mr. D.â€""Yes, one of my forefathers W Flagship of Britain Saves a Dying Child. The Original and Only Gennine ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO it Warning! ‘Take no6 c%2*%®* with substitutes for genuine "Bayor Tablets Of Aspirin." Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting Aspirin at all. In every On one occasion a noise as of panâ€" demonium attracted me. . Down the torchâ€"lighted street came a procession accompanied with music, the yells of men, the braying of donkeys and the barking of dogs. In the midst of the seething mob was a large box, borne on the back of a donkey. The bride was in the box. After they had taken her round the town they would leave Only ‘"Bayer‘‘ is Genuine Clad in white, she glided down the street like a spectre. As I approached her, she quickly covered her face and shrank into the shadow of the wall. Then I saw other women. Seated on the ground amid indescribable filth, they sold bread, tomatoes and green stuffs while myriads of insects buzzed round them. Innumerable donkeys were driven by them down the streots. No driver cared if the animal trampâ€" led upon a woman. Less than three hours‘ journey from Gibraltar, says an English journalist, our civilization is scorned and derided. In Tangiers the thin European veneer disappears finally. The _ dazzling whiteness of the houses, the blue, blue sky, the Moorish arches, the curiâ€" ous arches, the curious odors, the prostrate figures in every corner, the faces noble and mean, the faces black, yellow, brown and whiteâ€"all attractâ€" ed and interested me, but no impresâ€" sion was so deep as that which I reâ€" celved when I first saw one of the women. Women in Morocco. Chivairy toward women plays little part in the lives of the men of Morocâ€" co. In their opinion woman is a deâ€" graded creature the sole reason for whose existence is to please man. whom it was invaluabe, | Not Our idea of Beauty. Evaery country has its special decoraâ€" | ‘Tho most noticeable â€" pecullarity gou "l’:{ these adventurous men. One : about the Ainu women of Japan, ao ioviee) American republic SWams & / cording to the New York Tribune, is * ‘“’u;‘° aggor, inscribed with word8 | that they have tattooed upon their up l' milar to those on the King‘s Watch. por and jJower lips what resembles a ftcuminudffiyrcmate ‘ moustache. The tattooing begins when Norm To E ‘~ | the girl is a child. ‘The artist does it lxndullly, a little each year, until the ‘ | mark extends partly across the cheak. BABY’S OWN TABIETS ‘The material that he uses is the soot from burning birch bary. First the SFourtzrrougs luttooer cuts his lines into the face Mrs. Georges Lefebvre, St. Zenom,; and then rubs the black in. _ Afterâ€" Que., writes: "I do not think there is | wards he washes the place with a soluâ€" any other medicine to equal Baby‘s tion of ashâ€"bark liquor to fix the color. Own Tablets for littlo ones. . I have| Without that decoration no Rinu used them for my baby and would ulog would think a woman attractive, and nothing else." What Mrs. Lefebyre ' it would not be easy for an untattoo says thousands of other mothers say. ‘ ed woman to got a husband. They have found by trial that the Tabâ€"| ... ty ramruauantiffce mm lets always do just what is claimed ; Minard‘s Liniment Relioves Distemper M ho vegh Terbuive worth vee mild Dil| _ There are 3,000 British cometerios roug! which regulate the ;, p & C bowels and sweeten the stomach and | Frence and Fielâ€"gm_m wube thus banish indigestion, constipation,‘ qy ppoken d fences help to colds, colic, etc. They are sold by | um:; the e:‘:s :’w.r)\e fence _h;:en :edlclno dealers or by mail at 25,' Heifers that are constantly jumping nts a box from The Dr. Williams‘| ,, j 4 4 Msdictns Co.,; Brockvilie, n lmefmmmmyphcesgredflï¬cuh ne Co.. Brockville, {mt. to break in later fife and nothing is somommmmmmmnnifffrmcicememene us r x o more wasteful of time und patiens Women in Morocco. ldun constantly chasing your cattle Chivairy toward women plays little: out of your neighbor‘s crops or yvour Every country has its special decoraâ€" tion for these adventurous men. One Central American republic awards a tiny gold dagger, inscribed with words similar to those on the King‘s Watch. About tweive of thesa decorations were won during the war. The ser vices rendered by one of the brave re cipieatsâ€"â€"a naval oficerâ€"will serve to illustrate that the King‘s Watch is a hardâ€"earsed honor. _ The officer in question, an excellent German linquist, spent eighteen months mixing with enemy sailors at the German naval buases of Kle! and Wilheimshaven. He transmitted the information he obâ€" tained to the British Government, to whom it was invaluable. This decoration, regarded as one of the greatest honors the King can beâ€" siow, is awarded to Secret Service men ouly, The deceration consists of a gold hunter watch of exquisite workmanâ€" thip. Inside the case is inscribed the words, "Por Services Rendered.â€" George." Recent revelations of the adventarâ€" ous lives led by members of the Briâ€" tish Becret Service raise the quesâ€" tlon, ‘"How many people have heard of the King‘s Watch*" ASPIRIN The King‘s Watch. equipment for the dairyman and poor fencing is a constant risk. Drop a little "Freezone" on an achâ€" ing worn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers,. Jt doesn‘t hurt a bit Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, suficient to remove every hard corn, soft cora, or corn between the toes, and the calâ€" luses, without a particle of pain. Sloanys ure, You‘ll soon find warmth and reâ€" lief in Sloan‘s, the liniment that peneâ€" mmmm Clean, econome ical. Threesi S¢c, 70c, $1.40 onâ€"sciatica, lumbago, sore muscles, backache, stiff joints, neuralgia, the pains and aches resulting from ure. You‘ll soon find warmth unfl reâ€" Don‘t do it a ;inâ€"Tt a bottle toâ€" day and keep it iandy or possible use tonight! A sudden attack may come "®F I only had some Sloan‘s Lini{â€" In\elltl" How often you‘ve said that!l And then when the rhew» matic twinge subsidedâ€"after hours of sufferingâ€"you forgot it!l ____ _ _ i in tA n n As the evening sun threw broad shadows across the square the volce of the muezzin called the faithful to prayer. What were the women prayâ€" ing for? MONEY ORDERsS. Buy your out<ofâ€"town supplies with Dominion Express Money Orders. Five Dollars costs three cents. You can just tell by Its healthy,; stimulating odor, that it is going to do you good "Me has two wives already," sald my guide. USE SLOANS T0 WARD OFF PAIN UseCuticura Talcum To Powder and Perfume fades Uonraniont ind wopoame ed.ltflzn:flmdc&t-s her at the house of her husband, whom she had never seen. America‘s Ploneer Dog Remedics 18SUCE No. 18â€"#4. and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Adâ€" dreas ba the Author. |_ a cu‘ lover Co., Ims, 118 West 3ist Street BCC DisEASES New York U.BA. "i f