IRiG OF ANMCT FVICE There are two freedomsâ€"the falso where a man is free to do what he tikes; the true, where a man is free to do what he ought. â€"Kingsley. ] Best for the purpose seem to be Rartlett pears. When peeled, cut in halvos and deprived of their cores, what remains is about 96 per cent. water. Thus, as a result of drying, the product is greatly concentrated. In this form it can be utilized as a basis for very delicious confections, vartous Navors being added to the matarial. xperiments in the "dehydration" of pears has been engaging the attention ol the Oregon Agricultural Experiment station. _ Development of a satisfacâ€" tory process has been attended with some difficulties. chief among them beâ€" ing that of preserving the natural colâ€" » of the fruit, but it is believed thtt‘ that problem has been solved. a m tho th A it \ quaint ceremony is observed at ‘jy Jon, in Norfolk, England. \bout three hundred years ago the vd of the Manor bequeathed the im of £1,000, the interest from which is to be voted annually to pmvvidei wrics for four brides. Under the ~ms of the bequest, the money hasl > be divided between the youngest,| c cldest, the shortest, and the tallest| cldea married during the course of ich year in the parish church. ’ \s a result of intensive competition by British and French cross channel nes, further reduction in rates has een proposed, making the cost equal to, if not, less, than by first class boat ni train. In the Channel air traffic the British hold the supremacy, doâ€" nx about three times the business f the French firms, with the result iat lesser rates have been proposed v the French, but the British are prepared to meet them. There is every indication that beâ€" ite many weeks it will be possible to rave! from Traf.lgar square to the Placo de l‘Opera in three hours, cheaper than by boat and train and n oneâ€"third the time. In addition, ho airplane companies claim in their idvertisements a greater factor of afoty in air travel than by other neans, and back up the claim by staâ€" stics that cannot be challenged. This entails the "measuring of the, vie."" After the marriage ceremony * bride and bridegroom proceed to! e vestry to sign the register, and| e bride is then measured by the iclating minister. In order that her rroct stature may be ascertained, * is required to remove her shoes i lot down her hair. At the ond of * year the marriage records are exâ€" ined, and the dowries awarded to se qualified to receive them. A new time:table of the acrial routes has been issued by the Aerial Travel Bureau, and it is now possible for one to look up air connections with most parts of Europe and North Africa, jfllt‘ as one would decide on a train. Sucâ€" cossful service has made the time table a practical necessity. There are twentyâ€"six regular routes in operation in and out of Croydon' rdrome, cighteen of which are conâ€" lucted by Great Britain, four by France and four by Holland. Daily hore are nine services to and from ‘aris, two scheduled to Brussels and vo from Brussels and the same for Amsterdam. TT Service is TWENTYâ€"SIX LINES FROM How to Dry Fruit. AIR "TRAINS" RUSH BETWEEN CIMEs excepiing RKussia, by air. The s are not only not exorbitant, figuring on the longer time reâ€" 1 by trains, with sleepers, meals hotels, actually amount to about ame, and in many cases are actuâ€" cheaper than travel by boat and ._ The services are growing exâ€" vely, and it is believed the sumâ€" months will inaugurate a new era mmercial aviation. a result of intensive cammatitinm TY Mn Cheap me $ av. Improved and Safety is Y ‘epiing ire not suiae includes stops in Spain rocco. It is possible to fly to ke a train to Toulouse, catchâ€" i‘rplane at 9 in the morning, : at Barcelona and Alicante, ; the night in Malaga, and arâ€" 10 the nig Casabls th possible : s hotel in L. airplane at to go to an ting Russia : not only n@g on the l as gives a graphic idea of Train mc at Transport € 10 for . and the t next When the advertiser calls for reâ€" plies, he presents his receipt, and the replies are handed to him. Perhaps the origin of the term "box number" may have something to do with the A person who advertises in a newsâ€" paper may not wish to disclose his address. In such cases, when he inâ€" serts the advertisement he informs the clerk at the counter that he desires a "bok nmumber." The clerk gives hlm‘ a receipt on which is a number. It is this number that appears in the adâ€" vertisement; for instance, "Apply Box No.â€"â€"." f You? ’ While the system of "box numbers" addresses used by advertisers in newsâ€" papers has been in operation for a good many years, there are some peoâ€" ple who do not know what a "box number" really means. ‘ The "box number" came into being as a result of the great increase in the use of newspapers as a medium of advertising. It helped to save conâ€" fusion and labor. | _ The Costello clan in Ireland became a fixture there in the early days of the Angloâ€"Norman invasion. It derived its name from one Costello Fitzâ€"Gilbert, who was the son of Gilbert de Angule, one of the first of the invaders. _ As was the case with many of these Norâ€" man chieftains, they gathered around them, when they settled in either Ireâ€" land or Scotland, many native fol~low-‘ | ers together with those of their own ;rave and, falling into the Gaelic cusâ€" tom, gradually evolved +their own clans, adopting the Gaelic language and the Gaelic system of names. Thus, thoseo who would otherwise have been, known (under the Norman system) as "Fitzâ€"Costello," became instead | "O‘Costello" and finally just Costello.‘ But it has been so long since the eleventh and twelfth centuries that it is a safe bet that but little of the original Norman blood remains in the veins of the average person bearing this name toâ€"day. I But though the name and the originâ€" al blood of the Costellos was Norman, they really bave more right to call themsetveos Ilrish than any one in Canada, except the Indian, has to call himselft a Canadian. . For the Cosâ€" tellos began io be Irish long before any Caucasians, except perhaps cerâ€" tain Norsemen, began to be Canaâ€" dians. Here is a family name that is likely to puzzle you. Forgetting any particuâ€" lar knowledge you may have of it, it looks more as though it might be Italian than anything else. _ But all those of this name that you have ever met have probably been Irish. As a matter of fact, the name itself is Norâ€" man French. Do "Box Numbers" Baffie CcOsTELLO Racial Originâ€"Normanâ€"French. Sourceâ€"A given name. ’ is w ,,i’ a xA i e Blue é;(’kzlge uie nnnnwwâ€"____ _Let‘s Have Raisin Bread Tonight Had Your Iron Today? Surnames and Their Origin How long since you‘ve had delicious raisin breaaâ€"since you‘ve tasted that incomâ€" parable flavor? Serve a loaf tonight. No need to bake it. Just telephone your grocer or a bakery. Say you want "fullâ€"fruited bread â€" generously filled with luscious, seeded, Sunâ€"Maid Raisins."" The flavor of these raisins permeates the loaf. A cakeâ€"like daintiness makes every slice a treat. Serve it plain at dinner or as a tasty, fruited breakfast toast. Make delicious bread pudding with lefé. over slices. Use it all. You need not waste a crumb. Raisin bread is luscious, energizing, ironâ€" food. So it‘s both good and good for you. Serve it at least twice a week. Start this good habit in your home today. But don‘t take any but a real, fullâ€"fruired genuine raisin bread. Your dealter will supply is If wan Lic‘cs cak for Sun Make s, etc free supply it if you insist Purged and cleansed; oh, wondrous thing! Hore am I, sond meâ€"what glory! Lo, mine gyes have seen the King! â€"â€"Rdith L. Mapes, But the coai from off the aitar For mine eyes have seon the King, the Lord of hosts.â€"Isaiazh vi: 5. Unclean lips; yea, all uncleanness, I can nothing righteous bring; By this means the buyer is assured of fair play, for if the advertiser fails to carry out his part of the bargain, the buyer‘s deposit is returned. Some newspapersâ€"trade journals in particularâ€"allow _ readers to send money in payment of goods advertisâ€" ed. This "deposit" is kept by the newspaper until the buyer receives the goods, when it is sent on to the seller. J nâ€"Maid Raisin Membership 1. Dept. Nâ€"43â€" 3, Fre nâ€"Maid Seeded Raisins In the Middle Ages the "middle class," lying between the nobility and their vassals in the social and political scale, were known as "freemen," and ‘l-‘reeman has come down to us as a family name. The Norman equivalent to this word was "franchomme," or as it was spelled at various times, "franchome," _ fraunchâ€"humme" and "fraunchome." _ It came to be proâ€" nounced, after it had become a surâ€" name, "francom," whence the spell-’ Ings Francomb and Frankhom have | developed. ’ fact that usually the replies are kept in boxes, being docketed in pigeonâ€" holes. detic | spetiing of the ending is misleading ’ It is not an uncommon thing for names . of Angloâ€"Norman origin to l(-hange in this fashion, and the reason | lies in the peculiar mixture of the old ! Angloâ€"Saxon tongue and the French of lthe Normans and from which modern IEngH.sh is the outgrowth. It muit be remembered that the mixture occurred 'in a peculiar way. The Normans, for a couple of centuries after the conâ€" quest, spoke nothing but French and their tongue was but alightly changed by ihe influence of the Angloâ€"Saxon. Then came a period when, as a result of political separation from Normandy, the Normans began to adopt the Engâ€" lish, which, in radically changed form, finally again became the dominating element of speech. It was natural that when this final stage was reachod the meanings of the Norman names were quickly forgotten and there was a tendency to spell them as they were pronounced at the time. ‘oe is me, undone, umjolyâ€" _ For mine eyes have seen the King nok Here is a group of family names the meaning and origin of which you will find it dificult to guess, for in each one of the three cases the present spelling of the ending is misleaAins FRANCOMB. Variationsâ€"Francom. Frankham Racial Originâ€"Angloâ€"Norman. Sourceâ€"Descriptive. trcrous Ask your of tested Seeing the King. bread, grocer cad, pres ocer for i recipes. mt CGrowers , puddings, them. Send alif _ At Yorkton, Sask., J. A. M. Patrick, ’K.C., has established at his own exâ€" pense, and as a means of affording him pleasure, a sanctuary for wild animals. He has succeeded in obtainâ€" ing a number of specimens of our rapâ€" idly disappearing wild life, among them being antelope and whiteâ€"tailed deer. He has recently purchased four pure white deer from Grand Rapids, Mich. _ These deer are exceedingly rare, only seventeen being known to be in existence on the continent. Mr. Patrick is having the usual difficulties in protecting his sanctuary, but is con tinuing the good work,. Minard‘s Liniment R;llovu Neuraigie These pills are sold by all medicine dealers or may be had by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘® Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont. now enjoying good health. I am glad to give you my experience in the hope that some other sufferer may find the way to better health." lf Nature intended every girl and every , | woman to be happy, active and healthy. ; | Yet too many of them find their lives | saddened by auffering'â€"near!y always r' because their blood is to blame. All yl those unhappy girls and women with l)colorless cheeks, dull skins, and sunkâ€" &n lustreless eyes, are in this condiâ€" , | tion because they have not enough red [ blood in their veins to keep them well | and in the charm of health. They sufâ€" fer from depressing weariness and | periodical headaches. Dark llnel‘ | from under their eyes, their heart palâ€" pitates violently after the slightest exâ€" ertion, and they â€"are often attacked with fainting spells. These are only a few of the miseries of bloodlessness. When the blood becomes thia and watery it can be enriched through the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and the | troubles that come from poor blood disappear. In almost every neighborhood you will fird some formâ€" erly ailing woman, or pale breathless girl who has a good word to say for this medicine. Among them there is Miss Laura Monaghan, Campbeliton, P.E.I., who says:â€""Before using Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills I was in a badly yrun down condition. I was pale, thin and scarcely able to go about. The least exertion made my heart palpiâ€" ‘ tate so violently that I actually was | . afraid one of those spells might carry ] me off. Often my nights were sleepâ€" } less, and as the treatment I was tak-" ing did not help me I was almost in q despair. Finally & friend Advised the ‘ use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and in 1 the course of a few weeks after beâ€" ginning this treatment there was a,' decided improvement in my condition. c I continued using the pills, and am.|~ Can Find New Health by Enrichâ€" ing Their Blood Supply. In the early days of the last conâ€" tury, all such explosions were attriâ€" buted to escapes of gas, or to lightnâ€" ing flashes; yet as carly as 1815 Sir Humphry Davy seems to have had a suspicion of the real reason, and to} have made some investigations. ' Later, the Royal Commission of . , 1891 went into the matter more closeâ€"| ly, and their investigations pmved’ that explosions in coalâ€"mines, even! when not caused by dust, were oftenl aggravated by dust floating in the air.‘ PALE, WEAK GRLS AXD DELICATR WONEX succession Naturally, therefore, when a particle of dust is floating in the air, with oxygen all around it, there only needs the requisite degree of heat for that particle to burst into fierce flame, which of course is instantly communic-} ated to all the other atoms of dust in Wlld Aniynuvl SI.I;&UII'Y. It is not really difficult to underâ€" stand the why and wherefore of such explosions. To light a fire, you first chop up wood into small sticks or shavings, and the smaller these are the more readily they burn. The reaâ€" son is that the act of combustion is merely the combination of the carbon of the wood with the oxygen of bhe} air. In the year 1908 Paris was shaken by a most tremendous explosion, causâ€" ed by the blowing up of the great Say sugar refinery, near the Orleans Station. It is believed that a spark from a dynamo ignited the finely powâ€" dered sugar floating in the air. Fortyâ€" two workpeople were injured, and the: damage was $90,000. | The worst explosion of the‘ kind on record was that which destroyed the Washburn corn mills in Minneapolis, reputed to be the largest in the world. The result was a loss of eighteen lives and a million dollars wort‘i of prop-‘ erty. CE CeIE® CACCY UZ IGW, U UC wiari Lq tma‘* : atered: TebA EY ’ co:‘s!;e * f.nlent 1‘3;:39 is very simple in The dreadful diaster at the Tradeâ€"‘ 5; oo qpoeipenaisnie vegge‘s Ao aiorgen, + it ston flour mills at Glasgow was caused ‘ :: t; of 3n expansion chamber fitted by a spark igniting the fine flour dust! arra s e:d uo e ioe exnaust pipe, and with which the air was filled, and roâ€" { ng: i eb e way thae the wases sulted in the loss of tweive lives. The‘ 1rotl: io en pEine bre cooted immudiate: mill itself was a roaring furnace inâ€" '1’!},' e OR e bay raiâ€"hot exhaust hole, s dn five mimaey. ‘ ';'.;‘ eu i;he s:ocreg ottM engine silence. ; The worst explosion of the‘ kind on iaop t Oy Oe oranl the 0 superintendent of the Croyd flw > | e Croydon aeroâ€" record was that which destroyed the‘ grome depot. | Dust Explosions ’ The "Silent Nine." The recent explosion of a bin of oatâ€"| A silent aeroplane engine has at last meal in some London works is said been invented, says a London newsâ€" to have been due to an admixture of paper. dust and air. It is a curious and ul‘b: In a recent test the deafening roar pleasant fact that such a mixture is| of the engine and exhaust was comâ€" extremely explosive, and that some Of pletely eliminated when fitted with the most terrible accidents in indusâ€" ; the "Silent Nine," as the new invenâ€" trial history have been caused by dust‘ tion is called. floating in dry air. ’ Passengers will now be able to conâ€" Coal dust is specially danger0us, yerse with ease while in the air, and and it is in order to guard against not be forced to shout at the top of dust explosions in mines that all dry , their voices. mines have, by law, to be NG“'"'YI The "Silent Nine" is very simple in watered. Mc on se W Wasd ONTARIO The roses of pleasure seldom last long enough to adorn the brow of him who plucks them.â€"Hannah More. * M uoiA ce Order. Five Dollars costs three cents, He who plants a tree lightens the burdens of his fellowâ€"men. He who plants a tree erects to himself a living monument and makes bo!d an attempt to leave the world more beautiful than he found it. ‘ gravy." a steep waterfall, or skim just above the surface of shallows. At a narrow gorge the boat can avoid it altogether by leaving the river and cutting across land on its single rail, rattling along a cleared pathway through the jungle like a New York overhead railway. Mrs, Newlywed (on l;oTï¬rn day‘s shopping): "I want two pieces of eteak andâ€"and about half a pint of In this ingenious way the boat, in making its nonâ€"stop run to the.sea can rise out of t!_l_e water and pass over engage with the line. The driving power from the engines is switched off from the screws, and drives the wheels in contact with the rail. The boat runs forward on the line, and slowly lifts clear of the water. In this way the boat travels by rail over the rapids, the hulls hanging one on either side, and so preserving the balance. Guided in by two guard rails, the boat floats up over the end of the rail; then the wheels between the two hulls Along navigable water this double boat travels in the normal way, proâ€" pelled by a screw at the stern of each hull. But over all rapids and shallow parts a single railway line has been constructed, supported on trestles, the rail rising up from the waterâ€"level at { each end of the unnavigable section. monEey oRrpERrs. Send a Dominion Exnres However, as the result of experiâ€" ments in Belgium, it is hoped this difâ€" ficulty will be overcome. The invenâ€" tion consists of twin boats bracketed side by side, with a space of three feet or so between the two hulls. But the number of waterfalls, raâ€" pids, and shalows have made this a tedious business, as the cargoes have to be unloaded many times on one journey, and carried down the bank for some distance to the next boat. Great tracts of this country are swamps, intersected by ridges of steep cliffs. In consequence, river transport is the only practical way by which goods can be carried to the sea. to improve the transport of goods through the vast Belgian Congo to the coast. The question that had worried the engineers for a long time was how When men are up against a difficulâ€" ty they are not satisfied until they have got over it. The result of one of these difficulties in overcoming Naâ€" ture has taken the form of the strangâ€" est railway in the world. in thousands of homes. Concerning them Mrs. Jos. Lunette, Immaculate Conception, Que., writes: "My baby was a great sufferer from indigestion, but the Tablets soon set her right and now I would not be without them." Baby‘s Own Tablets are sold by mediâ€" cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams® Medicine Co., Breckville, Ont. Nothing is more common in childâ€" hood than indigestion. Nothing | is more dangerous to proper growth, more weakening to the constitution or more likely to pave the way to danâ€" gerous disease. Fully nireâ€"tenths of all the minor ills of childhood have their root in indigestion. There is no medicine for little ones to equal Baby‘s Own Tablets in relieving this trouble. They have proved of benefit | The exchange of immigration and | trade between Canada and New South | Wales during the fiscal year 192021 ‘shows that both were considerably in ‘ favor of Canada. Imports of Canadian | produce, according to the New South , Wales Statistical Bulletin for Decemâ€" , ber last, amounted to $11,045,630, ’ while exports to Canada were valued at $626,210. During the first nine | months of last year 1,398 emigrants rlett New South Wales for Canada, while but 871 arrived from Canada. _ One "Silent Nine" €an be sold at a profit for less thar $50, and already there is a great demand for it. CHILDIHIOOD INADIGESTION In a recent test the deafening roar of the engine and exhaust was comâ€" pletely eliminated when fitted with the "Silent Nine," as the new invenâ€" tion is called. Passengers will now be able to conâ€" verse with ease while in the air, and not be forced to shout at the top of their voices. ‘ 188UE No. 22â€"22, Real "Boat Trains." In Canada‘s Favor. It is estimated, that 105 milliqn ****/% (ANHCB L# 4 8 a i illion o t matches are used every day in Canâ€" Hellfll as is Thi ada, or twelve to each 'peru'm railway, a four horsepower gasoline motor drawing a twelve passenger car over a track having a gauge of fifteen inches. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere MyCommnh divies e cg uol P dn caigpc i csactisiatelit 34 > se c Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada)» ofBayer Manufacture of Moneâ€" aceticacidester of Baloylicactd. Whiie it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tableis of Bavar ( »mpany will be stamped with thete genera! trade mark, the "Bavyer Crome." It is worry that deltr(i)}s_"tvlvue brain â€"worry, fear, bad feelings, and mentâ€" al idieness. So there is no need to be afraid.| The more you think, study, or plan, | the better it is for you, because you | are training your mental powers. You cannot overwork the brain as long as you keep it healthy with outdoor exâ€" ercise whenever possible. Then it will} recuperate of its own account. ‘ Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getâ€" ling Aspirin at all. Accept only an "unbroken package" of ‘‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for Ai, 1J t +% t WARNING! â€" Say "In ail my practice as a physician dealing with nervous and mental disâ€" eases, I can say without hesitation that I have not met a single case of nervous or mental trouble caused by too much thinking or overstudy. What produces‘ mental trouble is worry, emotional excitement, or lack of interâ€" est in one‘s work." Another wellâ€"known doctor said re cently : "The more the mind does," says a prominent medical authority, "the more it can do." Don‘t be afraid of overworking the brain; you can‘t do it. _ You can‘t think too much. On Face and Arms. Lost Sleep. Cuticura Heals. "Tanlac helped me just like it had been made especially for my case. My food now all agrees with me and my nerves and kidneys never bother me any more. 1 owe my good heaith enâ€" tirely to Tanlac." Tanlac is sold hy all mand Annahanas iriiinbdiistnints itc ie attthsice is diisiistc css ) :but since taking Tanlac I am so well |lnd strong my housework is like a pastime," said Mrs. 8. Chapleau, 325 Mount Royal East, Montreal. _ "For three years"I suffered constantly from rheumatism., My appetite was also very poor and what little I ate caused . me no end of trouple from indigestion. I became so thin and weak I almost lost all hope,. My nervos and kidneys bothered me a great deal and I always had a pain across the back that kept me miserable. England has the ROUBLED WIH ECZEMA 2 YEARS ‘SAYS RHEUMATISM _ |~ IS ENTIRELY CONE "It used to be the most painfu)! efâ€" fort {or me to move about the house, MRS. CHAPLEAU COULD GET ABOUT ONLY BY PAINFUL EFFORT. Three Years of Suffering Endâ€" ed and Stomach Trouble â€" Overworking the Brain. Toothache sold by all good druggists Advt boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"Also bottles of 24 and 100 world‘s smallest 64 Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Lumbago Headache ! Marmion, Ontario.â€""Before using Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" | pound I was & total wreck. 1 had | terrible pains in my sides and was | not regular. Finally I got so weak | I could not go up stairs without stopâ€" | ping to rest halfâ€"way up. I saw your | medicine advertised in the newsâ€" | papers and gave it a trial, I took four bottles of the Vegetable Comâ€" !pound and was restored to health. | I am married, am the mother of two children and do all my housework, milk eight cows and do a hired man‘s work and enjoy the best of health. I also found the Vegetable Compound & great help for my weak back beâ€" fore m{ babies were born. 1 recomâ€" mend it to all my friends."â€"Mus. Hexar Jaxge, Marmion, Ontario. Letters which you read in the newsâ€" mrl recommending Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ‘s Vegetable Compound are genâ€" uine expressions from women who have been helped by this splendi®# medicine. They are anxious for other women, who may be suffering as they did, to know of the great merit of this medicine. Each one, with her reputation, stands behind it, to point out to sick women the way to health. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Private Text»â€" Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sent you free upor request. Write Lydia E. Pinkhamp Medicine Co., Lyon, Mass. "I would say that I do not know of a medicine that has stood the test of time like MINARD‘S LINIMENT. it has been an unfailing remedy in our househoid ever since I can remember, and has outlived dozens of would e competitors and imitators." WHAT IS The publisher of the best Far paper in the Maritime Province writing to us states: Fish that fAush crimson with exciteâ€" ment when given food are fourd in India. "That?" said his Irish guide. "Why, that‘s the River Liffey. _ Didn‘t ye know, man, that the smell 0‘ the Lifey was one 0‘ the sights o0‘ Dublin*?" In Dublin, one warm afternoon, he suddenly put his handkerchief over his nose and said, in a choked voice: "What the deuce is that *" first time Haws aal. " 202° P Uonid belting, pulleys, BA w , cublo.hon.mklu. etc., shipped subject to .g&mvu at lowâ€" est prices in Canada. Y( K BERLTING CO., 1156 YORK STRERT, ToRONTO. sensea The publisher . (op. .. , Narpener 25 centa Company, '5. Church, P HWgneae ALL KINDS OoF NXEW nisle RIND§ COARSE SALT LA ND :SALT America‘s Plonser Dog Remedics TORONTO sALT works _J. CLIFF . Toromnto .. winners _ angd fe Sharpener 25 GBNTS3 Womenâ€"Read It Times It‘s a Guide to Neuritis Pain, Pain BELTiNGo From sals AGENTS wanTEDp was visiting Ireland for the A LETTER PARTICULAR®S samplea, best Farmers‘ t®. Agency Saies Toronto.