tyles in Headgear. Sea Distances, ‘ppear nuous inter, & as now® mile h ng im as the boti )Y ol 18 The machine passes the milk out of a tank through a "lethal tube," in flowâ€" ing through which the fluid is exposed to an alternating current of 4,000 voits, whereby the bacteria contained in it are killed, From the tube it is discharged, practically sterilized, into receptacles for cooling. A plant of this kind operated for the infaniâ€"welfare centres of Liver pool, with a capacity of thirty gallons an hour, has proved highly successful, ber of days. that a new process, employing elecâ€" tricity, does the work much better. It kills al disease microbes with cerâ€" tainty and all but a few of the harmâ€" less bacteria, so that the treated milk, if kept cool, will stay fresh for a numâ€" Pasteourizing, however, cannot boe counted upon always to destroy every disease germ in milk It is claimed germs of tuberculosis, of typhol;l ;); even of scarlet fever. The process called "pastenrizing" is a compromiso, its object being to use only enough heat to reduce greatly the number of bacteria in the milk and, what is specially important, to destroy any disease germs that it may contain. In "raw" milk there may be It is easy enough to kill all bacteria in milk by raising it to boiling point. Unfortunately, this brings about cerâ€" tain chemical changes, giving the fluid a "cooked" taste. pulses which made up the stream of human consciousness. Those neural paths were furrowed by the brain‘s own action, and someâ€" thing might also have been learnt of the extraâ€"physiological governance of the organ by the will power which should dominate it. Failure fills the vacancy when perâ€" Could one have observed and underâ€" stood these marvellous records whilst the brain was still working, how much might have been discovered of the sensations, ideo~, conceptions, and imâ€" an _ infinitely â€" complex ï¬::::-fl;ory wrought the change. t Pasteurizing by Electricity. Exomples of hereditary habits may be iound in the an‘mal kingdom. When a horse paws the roadway he is obeying an instinct derived from a remote ancestor, who sought for water : _ 7C° imne case o% a boy who found it simply impossible to stand for two minutes without indulging in a "two step." It was ascortained that his greatâ€"greatâ€"grandfather kaa neen a proâ€" fessional dancer, Influences derived from the m:)tlxer'I during the prenatal pericd no d-oubt, accounts for many of thase cases. Some | indeed can be clearly traced to snch’ an origin, but there are othors which | cortainly cannot be explained so readl-s ly. It is probable that remote ancestral influences are frequently indicated. I remember the case of a boy who found For all of these eccentricities there is a definite scientific reason, and it is probable that in the great majority of cases the cause did mot originate in the individual affected. Another boy had a dread clothing being touched by ; whose cleanliness might conce be in doubt. For this reason 1 & horror of crowds, and wou quently return home to spong tions of his clothing which he t} bad been in contact with some sirable person. prottit s t 8. cu0 h Bc ia well showed a repugnance for knobs of every kind. He would not touch a doorâ€"handle of the ordinary sort, but would wait unt!! someone elso opened the door. If it were necessary for him to move the position of a chair which happened to be decorated with knobs of any kind, he would tow it along by a plece of string, or a handkerchiet passed between the rails. | A companion of my boyhood would, when walking with me, suddenly moisten his fingerâ€"tip, stoop, and touch the earth in front of him, touch his owr cheek, then mineâ€"if 1 permitted him to do so, for I learnt to protect myâ€" self from the strangb salute. During his childhood, a man I know Some yeople, of course, are more unâ€" der the influence of thege strange imâ€" pulses or repugnances than others; 0Câ€"â€"ionally they are manifested in a very singular manner. Probably few Gf us are immune. We touch posts, like Dr. Johnson, or place our feet on certain stones of the paveâ€" ment, commence the ascent of stairs with a particular foot, avoid certain numbers, or constantly exhibit some other peculiarity. Has everyone some odd habit which belongs to himself, like the nose on his face, but of the meaning of which, or the manner in which he acquired it, he has no knowledge? What is Your Odd Habit? might conceivably this reason ho had 8, and would freâ€" me to sponge porâ€" dread of his thought l e undeâ€"| anyone If a man is ignorant he may learn but if he knows too much there is no hope for bhim. _ _On the cccasion of the death of a person in good circumstances, gifts are made to the poor from among his or her personal effects, and money is given to the needy in the neighborâ€" hood. Three days after the funeral a large batch of "loukma"â€"a kind of doughnutâ€"is made, and plates of it are sent to friends, The poor also re-‘ celve their share of these funeral On the other hand, it is considered an act of filial duty to mourn conâ€" stantly for lost parents, and to pray unceasingly for their forgiveness and acceptance by Allabh, _ Women friends pay visits of conâ€" dolence to the harem, but the inmates, after thanking their guests for their formal expresion of sympathy and good wishes for their future freedom from bereavement, speak calmly and resignedly of the departed. If a child has died the mother and her relatives even réjoice before their friends. It is considered sinful to mourn over the death of a child. J The orthodox Turk of the Moslem religion wears no mourning, nor do the Osmanli tribes observe periods of seclusion after the death of a relative. As for the advertisements of the stores, some of them are not as attractive as many of the more general advertiseâ€" ments, but 1 just couldn‘t shop without them. You see, I am like many other women. I have a young family, and 1 cannot get out too often during the day. But 1 read the store adâ€" vertisements regularly, and by doing so know just what is beâ€" Ing sold, and 1 can always teleâ€" phone my order if 1 can‘t go out conveniently that day. That, | think, is the great value of advertisements to women in the home. They do keep one well informed. Don‘t you think When Moslems Mourn. And 1 find my friends like to talk about the wellâ€"known things that they sat or use or wearâ€"like foods, canned soups, cheese, washing machines, corâ€" sets, gloves and things like that. So there must be someâ€" thing in a name after all. The way 1 feel about it is that no business man would spend a lot of money to advertise a poor article; therefore, those things that are advertised must have superior qualities about them. And 1 have found that adverâ€" tised articles, far from costing more than unadvertised goods, can very often be bought for less. At least you know what you should pay for themâ€"the makers tell you generally in their advertisements. And when I am buying things for my toilet 1 always buy the wellâ€"known things, although salesgirls try to sell me others sometimes. 1 never let them, though. Why buy the unknown when you can be sure of the quality of the known? But, of course, the advertiseâ€" ments that interest me most are those of domestic things. Whenever 1 order groceries for instance, 1 find myseif asking for the things whose names are familiar to me through reading the advertisements in the newsâ€" papers. They may not be betâ€" ter than others, but as_l don‘t know the names of others how can | tell? Goods that are atâ€" tractively and regularly adverâ€" tised always strike me as prosâ€" perous, and prosperous things must be good, otherwise they wouldn‘t be prosperous, would they ? A Woman puts on Spectacles 1 used to have a prejudice against Life Insurance until 1 read the advertisements. 1 thought the premiums were too much for my husband to pay, but an advertisement 1 read changed my opin:on about that at once. And I got my husband to make a wiil and appoint a Trust Company as his executor because of an advertisement 1 read about it, which set me thinking. Newspaper advertisements have an irresistible fascination for me. Sometimes I know 1 shou!dn‘t take the time to read themâ€"but 1| always do. Of course, 1 don‘t mean that 1 alâ€" ways read them ALL, but I cerâ€" tainly read some every day. 1 even read the men‘s ads. There is a certain satisfaction in surâ€" prising one‘s husband with upâ€"toâ€"date information on things only men are supposed to be interested in. No Hope At All. (This was written by a woman in answer to our inquiry: "Do you read newspaper advertiseâ€" ments?") mission. It is hardly conceivable that the tourist will be out or range of some instrument, and he has but to send his call for help into the air to be certain one will hear it and respond, be the "trouble" a puncture or serious Aside from the many busimess uses to which the autophone may be put, it will prove of great aid in procuring assistance in case of accident which has not put the batteries out of comâ€" Four parallel copper wires stretched around the top of the car sorve the purpose cf antennae, fastened to posts at the corners and connected with the automobile‘s engine. The instrument, using only a amall part of the auto battery current, works satisfactorily up to five miles. Inâ€" stalled, it costs only about $50. It is a brandâ€"new and most useful contrivance, specially adapted for the purposes of any business man who wishes to keep in touch with his ofâ€" fice. Needless to say, it may be serâ€" viceable in many other ways. Have you a wireless telephone'ln your automobile? had been run over it. In going back over the trail he noâ€" ticed places where the bear had made jumps of fifteen or twenty feet, and the ground had been cut up by his claws so that it looked as if a harrow The man gave chase, at the same time keeping up the piercing yell, and he soon noticed that the grizzly was getting further away. He continued the chase for nearly two miles, until the bear disappeared in the mountains, and he had not gained a foot. 'I_'l_)e Newest A;xtoiAT:ceuory. An Arizona sheep rancher was ridâ€" ing in the foothills â€"when he saw a big, awkward silvertip. He had a rifie, but was not certain he could kill the bear at one shot and knew that he would get into trouble if he missed. So he gave a regular cowboy yell and the bear started away in alarm. Chasing a Bear. Any one who has seen a bear walk knows how slowiy he seems to move, and his run is a shuffling, lumbering gait that is comical to witness, unless he happens to be rumning after you. But a bear moves pretty fast notwithâ€" standing appearances, and the grizzly, which looks to be clumsier than the brown or the black bear, can cover ground faster than the average horse. tragic one. _ He gave his first two songs to a friend, who made ten | thousand dollars out of them. Marryâ€" |ing in 1850, his life was very unhappy. | Eventually he went to New York, | where he became a vagabond. Foster died in a public ward at the Bellevue Hospital, New York, and is entered on the records as a laborer. ( Far, far away. | Dere‘s wha my heart is turning ebber, |_ Dere‘s wha my brudders play. ( He asked his brother Morrison for | a better name for the river: l "What Southern stream do you sugâ€" |gest instead of ‘Pedee‘?" Morrison | offered Yazoo, which Stephen thought | wouldr‘t do. "Well, let‘s consult an, | atlas," said Morrison. On a map of \ Florida they found a little river called Swanee. _ "That‘s it exactly," â€" cried Stephen, | _ Although millions of copies of Fosâ€" ter‘s songs were sold, his life was a tragic one. He gave his first twn| It was at this pericd of his life that he strayed one day into a shop and, sitting at a piano, won from the keys the wistful, pleading tune, "Come where my love lies dreaming." _ A man who was present offered him five dollars for the song, and he accepted gratefully. dred and seventy songs, including "Old Kentucky Home," "Old Black Joe," and "Old Uncle Ned." When he had written "The Old Folks At Home," he was displeased with the name of the river given in the second vorse; in the original the verse runs: Way down upon de Pedee ribber, Its author was Stephen Collins Fbs- ter, who has been called "America‘s premier balladist." He wrote one hunâ€" An interesting story is told regardâ€" ing one of the most popular songs in the world, "The Old Folks At Home." At nine o‘clock they called him in; y ‘twas surely time they said, For little boys as tirad as he to tumble into bed, And though he vowed he wasn‘t tired and begged they‘d let him stay, Outside for just an hour or so to finish up his play, They crdered him to bed at once in firm but kindly tones, Nor heeded that he filled the house with dismal howls and moans, Nor that he shouted from the stairs through all his tears and grime; "N never haveâ€"Boâ€"hoo! Boohooâ€"one‘ bit of a good time!" That summer day from early dawn, his hours in play were spent, The other fellows came at cight and ’ s all on fun were bent; They dug a cave, they built a fort, ' went rafting on the creek, Played "Indians" in the meadow lot, ' baseball &nd hide and seek, At noon they picnicked on the lawn, a luncheon fit for kings, With chicken, berries, lemonade and cake and other things, ; And after that they went to fish and after that a swim; Then dinner came and all the boys were asked to dine with him; And after that the fun went on; ‘twas such a glorious day It seemed as though they‘d never get oneâ€"half enough of play. “De?wanee Ribber." A Boy We Know. â€"Fitz. Sylvester The prefix "van der" indicates clearâ€" ly that this form criginatel on the Holsand and Flanders coost Bogart does not lock much like Baumgarten toâ€"day. But supply an "m" after the "o," and replace the lost ending "en" and you‘ll get "Bomgarâ€" ten," which is the same as the Gorwman Baumgarten. = In Germany the name of Baumgarâ€" ten ("treegarden") developed in exâ€" actly the same manner. _ In England, at the period when famiâ€" ly names began to form, that is to say, at the period when given names ceased to be enough to identify a man as a result of rapid increase of popuâ€" lations, a man living near an orchard would be spoken of as "Will atte Orâ€" chard" ("at the Orchard"), and in the course of time the prefix "atte" being dropped, the name became Orchard. | As these family names appear in different languages there is very little of similarity in sound or spelling among them. . Yet in their meanings and the manner in which they originâ€" ated, they are exactly the same. Variations â€" Vanderbogart, Orchard, Baumgarten. Racial Originâ€"Dutch, English and German. Sourceâ€"A locality. "How is the razor, sir?"‘ asked the barber. ‘"Didn‘t know I was being shaved," said the victim. "Very glad, I‘m sure, sir," began the barber, feeling flattered. But the victim cut him short. "I thought I was being sandpapered." bernts ds cce 1c 2 ‘ly and means should always be at | hand to promptly fight them. Baby‘s Own Tablets are the ideal home remedy. They regulate the bowels ; sweeilen the stomach; banish constiâ€" pation and indigestion; break up colds and simple feversâ€"in fact they relieve all the minor ills of little ones. Conâ€" cerning them Mrs. Moise Cadotte, Maâ€" kamik, Que., writes: _ "Baby‘s Own Tablets are the best remedy in the‘ world for little ones,. My baby sufferâ€" ed terribly from indigestion and vomitâ€" ing, but the Tablets soon set her right and now she is in perfect health." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Is there a baby or young childron in your home? If there is you should not be without a box of Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets. Childhood ailments come quickâ€" IS THERE A BABY IN YOUR HOME? decay. ‘ï¬mgi than during the colder months, Seasoning proceeds more rapidly durâ€" [ ing the warmer season and may cause ; excessive checking. If rightly handlâ€" Pnsc a 2 H Pewnnth is2 Amsiintadneatalisat issc icacid ts 12 decay. Painting the ends of logs with a yellow ochre or barn paint will very matenially retard injury by end checkâ€" ing. _ Painting peeleod timbers with creozote will prevent san stain and ed, posts, poles and logs may be cut safely at any seazon. In no case should wood be «llowed to lie in direct conâ€" tact with t‘> ground. The opporâ€" tunity for insect attack and decay can be reduced by peolinz the timbers and openâ€"piling them off the ground in a shaded but dry place. This, fhowever,‘ does not retard checking of the wood. Logs are" sometimes stored under| water in the hot season to preventl blue stain, checking, insect attack, and cause freshly cut woodâ€"_i; -tl;e; like‘y to be_ attacked by insect Timber that is cut in the late spring and summer months shou‘d be handled with special care to avoid injury, beâ€" It is pointed out that these enorâ€" mous outlays would not cover all the needs, as only a part of industry and rebuilding is considered in the present estimate. Besides, large sums would be needed to restart the former stocks and chemicals and artificial manure, for textile and all sorts of goods and also for general tooling for factories and school implements, _ No approxiâ€" mate calcuiation is possible in this reâ€" spect. Evidently the problem presents itself as nearly impossible of solution. About 40,000 miles of railways to be built in ten years, 550; new locomo tives and cars, also repairs to the existing rolling stock, 350; steei cars ard street paving and bridges, 300, country roads, 150; the river embankâ€" ments, canal works, 400; harbor works 100; telegraphs and telephones, 100 ; waterworks and sanitary plants in towns and villages, 200; light and power in electric central stations, 200, school buildings, 200; agriculturâ€" al machinery and implements, 400; subventions for cattle and poultry rearing, also new stables, 400; restartâ€" ing and rebuilding coal mines and iron and steel works, 400; mechanical plant {or producing agricultural and electrical machinery, 100. biirintifiafivtictcrsmencdes... 3 for Reconstruction. According to a recent study made by Professor Goldstein, of the Moscow University, Russia requires $3,650,â€" 000,000 to be set going again in a norâ€" mal way. The acccunt in millions is made up as follows: | Russia Needs Three Billions Timber Cut in Summer. A Rough Shave. BOGART prevent sap stain and Surnames and Their Origin | In the course of t ‘ names began <> form | &3 such, indicating | | the person spoken of. utd a 9 en SER" ed in favor of the French of the Norâ€" mans, though many of the Saxon names were lost during this period, toâ€" gether with the language, but, unlike the language, not to be revived as the Norman element of the population gradually melted into the numericaliy euperior Saxons. m Wilard was one of the given names which did survive, like Wiliam, Wilâ€" fred, Edmuzd, Edylrd and others. and A fair proportion of the Saxon given names survived the period following the Norman conquest, during which the Angloâ€"Saxon tongue was suppressâ€" C Wipraaiihes Bs ststalssins Gsaca id The ancient Teutons were quite fond of names indicating strong and sturdy character, as is evidenced by the great number of their given names in which "wil" appears. This word was also the source of our modern English noun "will." Willard meant‘ "sturdy will." The family name of Willard is alâ€" most a straight development from an ancient Teutonic given name which was not at all uncommon among the Angloâ€"Saxons of ancient England, Variationâ€"Wilter. Racial Originâ€"English. Sourceâ€"A given name. A book to the wise is sufficiont. Never criticise a book until you come to it. By their books ye shall know them. A book in the hand is worth two on the shelf. One good book deserves another. It is never too late to lend. Men may come and men may go, but books go on forever. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere Never look a gift bock in the bindâ€" ing. Let‘s quit saying, "The hottom is in sight." Talk the new language of the topmost round! _ Sing it, morning, noon and night! Whistle it everyâ€" where you go, and be sure no bardâ€"luck stories dim your sight! The top! It is a grand place to be! And there is this wonderful thing about it. No man ever reaches the top and stops there. Up and still up leads the way, and the higher we get the happier we are and the more good we can do in the world. Is the bottom in sight? So is the top, and the going is always fine that way. The road toward the bottom is rough and stony and the landing hard. One who !llps been that way knows how soreâ€"his shins have been afterâ€" ward. _ Good for that man! He is bound to win the best there is. No truer sayâ€" ing ever was expressed than that we get what we are looking for in this world. _ Look for hard luck, and no horseshoe over the door can keep it away. Keep the eyes open for the good, and no rainy #ew moon ever dawns upon one. The neighbor who was listening was not slow in responding. "But I‘m not looking for the bottom, Sam. What I want to see is the top." "The bottom is in sight." So one man said, and from the look on his face you would think he had already struck bottom and struck it hard. You can get Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ° .i 6t. Vitus dance is a disease of the ‘nerves brought on by a morbid conâ€" | dition of the blood. It is common with | children, and attacks girls more freâ€" â€"| quently than boys. Irritability is freâ€" | quently one of the first signs noted. The child frets, is quarrelsome and | does not sleep well. The jerky moveâ€" | ments that characterize the disease j come a little later. The limbs and | sometimes the whole body jerks spasâ€" modically, and . in severe cases the power of speech is affected. Such a child should not be allowed to study, but should be kept quiet, given a nutriâ€" tious diet, remain out of doors as much as possible. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills will help the blood restore thel shattered nerves. The value of these pills in cases of this kind is shown by the following statement from Mrs. Frank Reynolds, Windsor, N.S., who says: "When a young girl I sufféred very severely from St. Vitus dance. li could not keep still for a moment. If I tried to handle dishes I broke them, and could not safely attempt to hold a thing in my hands. No matter what was done for me I could not control’ the twitching in my face and body. My parents gave me several remedies, but they did not help me. Then one day my father brought home a half dozen boxes of Dr. Williams‘ Pink | Pills. After two boxes had been taken there was an improvement in my conâ€"|| dition. By the time the last box was gone, to my own great joy and relief to our family, my condition was norâ€" mal, and I have since enjoyed good 1 health. I never lose an opportunity to | j say a good word for Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills." The Muscles of the Hands, Face and Body Affected. ALMOST HELPLESS FROM ST. VITUS DANCE Looking for the Bottom. Literary Proverbs. WILLARD of time, as _t;;'fly , it came into use the parertage of ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Mr. Joseph LeBlanc, Secretary of the Athletic Association, who were the Champions for 1920 of the South Shore League and Western Nova Scotia Base Ball, states that during the summer the boys used MINARD‘S LINIMENT with very beneficial results, for sore muscles, bruises and sprains. It is considered by the players the best white liniment on the market. Every team should be supplied wit) this celeâ€" brated remedy. An Australian inventor has given a pieno a slightly curved keyboard so with equal effort. In two minuteés he came back once more, leaned confidentially and peniâ€" tently over the table, and said: "We had a bad accident this mornâ€" in‘, sir, an‘ the Himinator got busted off, right at the handle. Will you take them fried, same as this gentleman?" (Signed) JOSEPH L. LeBLAN the tiny kitchen _ "George, you may bring me two fried eggs, some ham, a pot of coffee, and some rolls," said a man to the waiter. * "Yes, sir." His companion said, "You may bring me the same. No, wait a minute; just eliminate the eggs.‘ ‘ "Yes, sir." In a moment the waiter returned. "Excuse me, sir, but what did you say about them eggst" ‘ "Thieving, is it he was after, then, | the blackguard?" said one of the drain | diggers. "Sure, we would have stopâ€" fped him if we had known. We | thought he was only after having a | shot at somebody." * The Villain. ' An Irishman, hotly chased by anâ€" | other, ran across a field where several ' persons were at work digging a drain. | They took no notice. MOoNEY ORDERs. The safe way to send money by mail is by Dominion Express Money Order. As the hunted man shot out of the field, the man in pursuit cried out to the others: "Why didn‘t you stop him? He has been after my chickens, the thief." "I }neredy told you to eliminate "Ye ken, chaplain" he said, "ma faither is a very releegious man, and I‘m inclined that way maself, Noo, I‘d like to ha‘e a bit of argument wi‘ ye on predestination." The chaplain was much interested. "Hadn‘t you better wait until you are sober, Jock?" hbe inquired. "Hoot, mon," returned ‘the Scot, "I don‘t care about predestination when I‘m sober." & Must Be in the Mood. A British army chaplain, meeting a Scot afflicted with a "drop too much," escorted the young fellow to the barâ€" racks. "Are you the caretaker?" asked the bellâ€"puller. "Yes. What do you want?" "I saw the notice, so I rang the bell, and now I want to know why you can‘t ring it yourself." in a few moments an angry man ap peared at the door. He walked up and gave the bell such a pull that it nearly came out by the roots. new life. "But I‘m so glad I tried Tanlac, beâ€" "Fair," he answered. cause my suffering is all over now, I "Have you called on your neighbors | Just feel splendid, eat whatever 1 wish yet?" said L 'nnd never have a touch of indigestion. "No," said he, "but I‘m going to it My nerves are steady and I am free I miss any more of my wood." from headaches. 1 sleep perfectly e sound and just feel so much stronger Was He Told? that the housework seems casier than A man who had had one drink too| °Y°" My daughter has taken Tanlae many saw a sign, "Please ring the| since it restored my health and it has beil for the caretaker." ! helped her just like it did me. Tanlac He walked up and gave the bell such | "** cf:rtuiuly been a blessing in our s oull that it nearly cama aut he ims | home." P NC C RIvtIPHMD, WHY ISRAL FOUFL |%o wreck my whole s_v'atem. All brother Robert at the party, too?" through the winter I was down in bed Eluleâ€"“Plo:%'::. Bobby‘s been a |half the time and instead of getting good boy all k and mother said he | better, I seemed to get worse. My needn‘t comg" stomach was so badly upset that 1 had ‘ ns« to live entirely on bread and milk. Jf One Way of Getting Acquainted. I ventured to eat anything else at all Talking about American village life, I would simply suffer agony. Mr, Booth Tarkington, the novelist,| "I would have terrible pains in my once said, "I‘m afraid our American | Stomach and would bloat up so bad villages don‘t practice the social | that I often felt as if I was suffocatâ€" amenities to any great extent. I know | ing. My nerves were worn to a frazâ€" a shortâ€"story writer who moved re.’llï¬ anl I had frequenrt headaches. 1 cently into a quaint Vermont village. | went to bed tired, got up feeling tired I met him the other day in a magazine @nd all through the day hardly had office and asked him how he liked his | the strength to do a thing. new life. "But I‘m so glad I tried Tanlac, beâ€" "Fair," he answered. cause my suffering is all over now, I "Have you called on your neighbors | Just feel splendid, eat whatever 1 wish Mrs, Boram-“Elï¬ie, why isn‘t your brgt})er Robert at the party, too?" Really Well Off. "Married yet, old man?" "No, but I‘m engaged, and that‘s as good as married." "It‘s better, if you only knew it." Yarmouth, N.S., March 24, 1921 Heâ€""I know that, but we could be married in an airplane, couldn‘t we?" She (rejoecting him)â€"*"I‘ve always told you I wouldn‘t marry the best man on earth." ."_And he hurried away to Had An Accident. Needn‘t Break Her Word. Robert‘s Reward. t cried out to| _ The prosent heir to the throne is you stop him? | the first Prince of Wales to go abroad chickens, the;on active service since the Gays of m maneeneremenenmmiitn sn inigneigessmmonce of Salicylicacid _ Warning! Take no chances with sibstitutes for genuine "Bayer Tabâ€" lets of Aspirin." Unless you see the name "Bayer‘ on package or on tabâ€" lets you are not getting Aspirin at all. In every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheuâ€" matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumâ€" bago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester for all toilet purposes. Soap to OnChest,Face,Arms.Burned Badly, Cuticura Heals. cleanse, Ointment to heal. * Ever since I can remember, chest, hee.nndumnmuhdv:g dry, red pimples. ‘They were scatâ€" tered all over me, and itched terribly at times, and I scratched them, causâ€" ing them to fester and get sore. Sometimes they would dry away and form scales which burned badly. * Then I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I had used them two or three times when I felt better and I was healed with one box of Cuticura Ointment together with the Cuticura Soap."" (Signed) Miss Berthe Kass, Russell, Manitoba, February 19, 1919. Use Cuticura Soap and Ointment the Blocl Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia uriant grows Wild grape, that no intruding sun allows. It beckons, this alluring, moassy vay, That in such quietude and fragrance waits, With promise of the dreams of yesâ€" terday, As if Arcadia opened wide her gates Just for a space, to let some mortal scan Old romance haunted by the pipes of Pan. Only ‘"Bayer"‘ is Genuine It leads, beneath green, overarching boughs, Down to a merry, rippling little brook, Thst runs, half hidden, through a woodsy nook Where lazy birds amid the stillness drowse, And golden coated bumbles drone and browse Upon the petals of a wilding rose, While, hung from tree to tree, luxâ€" RED PIMPLES TCHED TERRIBL Y Tanlac is sold by leading druggists every where. Adv, wiheeepii m metilly aerercorery o A Bypath. "I think it is enough to make anyâ€" one happy to enjoy the splendid health I do now," said Mrs. John Doyle, 123 John Street North, Hamilton, Ont. "Last winter I had the ‘fu‘ and, as I had been in a badly runâ€"down conâ€" dition for several years, it just seemed CANNOW EAT ANYTHING SINCE TAKING TANLAC. Hamiltoa Woman Says It Not Only Restored Her Health But Also Helped Her MRS. DOYLE LIVED ON MILK Ai) BREAD 18§VUE No. 27â€"‘21. ASPIRIN $t. Paul St., â€"â€"Charlotte Becker years, it just seemed whole system. All