Press stolidly towards achievement. Let others chase fameo. The Last Resort. In answer to the returned summer visiior‘s questions as to the welfare of Mr. Padgett and his whereabouts, Mr. Dorkin replied that "Jake" was teaching at the little red schoolhouse on Harly‘s Hill "But I thoughtâ€"" "Well, he is," admitted Mr. Dorkin, understandingly, "an he gets more ‘n‘ more muddleheaded all the time. But what else could we do? We had to put him in scheolâ€"master to keep Nm‘ off the town. "We ain‘t goin‘ to pauperize a man," he added, loftily, "if we can find anyâ€" thin‘ for him to do." Uonadian chocolates are finding a ready market in the British Isles on account of superiom‘y, being larger ind retaining moisture better. Canada‘s _ confectionery industry, whilst not relatively a great o >, is mportant in so far as it is adequately moeeting Canadian domestic needs and alling in augmenting the Dominion‘s export trade. There exist opportuniâ€" ties for much development yet, which in the aggressiveness Canadian manuâ€" facturers are exhibiting will doubtâ€" less be seized. _ Sufficient advantage was never taken of the peculiar qualiâ€" ty amd flavor of Canadian chocolates, am| the maple sugar industry up to quite recently was permitted to wane boecause its delicious product was not known abroad. These maters are beâ€" ing remedied, and the industry is likeâ€" iy to become a more important one to Canada. % THE CONFECTIONERY INDUSTRY OF CANADA But There Are Still Opporâ€" tunities for Development in the Foreign Markets. The confectionery and chocolate inâ€" istry of Canada eonstitutes an imâ€" tant activity, absorbing $80,000,000 industrial capital. Las year total es of candy in Canada are reported by the Confectionery Association to ‘ave approximated $80,000,000, and it expected that the sales this season 1 amount to nearer the $100,000,000 rk. Such makes of CanaiAian .. OUR CANDY IS FAMED IN MANY LANDS. + expected that the sales this season vill amount to nearer the $100,000,000 mark. Such makes of Canadian conâ€" oction as Betty Brown, Patterson, aura Secord, Ganongs, Page & Shaw, ‘ellson, Cowan, Lowney, Willard and loir are not only familiar from coast » coast but the high quality of the roduct has extended their fame into any countries. In the manufacture ( chocolate and confectionery of all nds, Canada is in the gratifying posiâ€" n of being not only able to supply‘ v own reguirements, but engage in substantial export trade. In 1920 the chocolate and cocoa inâ€" istry of Canada was carried on in ne plants, capitalized at $5,553,571, th 1,400 employeeas receiving $1,245,â€" +3 in wages and accounting for a proâ€" iction of $8,908,277. The kinds of wiucts comprised chocolate, cocoa, coa butter, confectionery and spices, wl ich chocolate accounted for more an half the value of production. Que-l and Ontario are the centres of thei wle, there being five plants in the smer province and three in the latâ€" °. with one plant in Nova Scotia. There are four hundred individual | ints in Canada engaged in the manuâ€" | / ture of biscuits and confectionery, which 225 are located in Ontario, 49 British Columbia, 47 in Quebec, 28 Alberta, 17 in Manitoba, 13 in Sasâ€" ; ‘chewan, 10 in Nova Scotia, 9 in j w Brunswick, and 2 in Prince Edâ€" rd Is.and. The total capital lnvest-l A in these plants is $31,217,581, Onâ€" io leading with $19,253,822. They ploy 12,722 persons at salaries and &es aggrogating $10,538,291. The ‘m-ti,xjor 1920 was in value $54,â€" $33, covering buns and pastry, bisâ€"| g ts, puddings, confectionery of all € ds fce cream and other nrodnets amounting to $924,363, which d almost eqaalily between the Kingdom and the United P other products [ The Normans, by their very presâ€" ionce in England, contributed largely | to the rise oi the family name. The inâ€" | vading army, made up of soldiers gathâ€" | ered from many localities, and many of lthem bearing the same given name, j cutting their old ties behind them, and settling helterâ€"skelter m a new counâ€" ’try. found frequent use for surnames which would distinguish one Geoffrey jfrom another or one John from anâ€" other. And in the majority of cases it was customary among them to refer to the place from which a man had come, whereas within the Angloâ€"Saxon community the tendency would have The locality in question is that of Gournai, in Normandy. It is one of those family names which were originally descriptive of the locality or community from which the first bearers came, and also one of those which were brought into Engâ€" land first by the Normans. And at that you would be likely to miss it on account of the difference in spelling, even though the pronunciaâ€" tion of toâ€"day is not so very far from that of the French in the Middle Ages. Here is a family name whose origin you would probably have to wander over the map of Europe to find, if you did not first hunt for clues among the historical records of medieval England or France. Racial Originâ€"French. Sourceâ€"A locality. Une person in every fifteen of Briâ€" tain‘s population is at present receivâ€" ing benefit through the Ministry of Pensions. 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, On. m q)) .. "Grds buiilding up the blood. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills act directly on the blood, and have proved of the greatest benefit in a great many cases of this kind. A tendency to anaemia or bloodlessnes.s. shown by most nerâ€" vyous people, is also corrected by these tonic pills. This is shown by the case e tw e T ln'itnbility is tions of nervon wWOrge as the n, Are You can get Dr. IRRITABLE PEOPLE Grape:Nuts Usually Victims of Poor Blocd and Weak Nerves, GURNEY Surnames and Their Origin Wiiliams‘ Pink Pills one of the manifestaâ€" Simple, natural food may level that hill to a emooth path again. How smooth and level the path seemed to be when we were VY to be climbing, after the midâ€" dle years, is made out of the comâ€" mon mistakes of diet which starve tissues and nerves and slow down energies with faulty nutrition and stored up food poisons. VERY often the hill we seem to be climbing, after the midâ€" Made by Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor, Ontario When it comes to figuring out the meaning of these given names, things are not quite so clear. The last syllaâ€" ble, "hart," is one which is frequently met with in old Teutonic names, and had in a general way the meaning of "strength" and "bravery." In fact we get our modern word "hardy" from this same root. But though there are many theories to account for the "loch," there are none which are cerâ€" tain enough even to bother quoting. Both of these given names appear every once in a while in the madieval history of England and Germany, as well as of Normandy, for while the Normans spoke French, they were of Teutonic origin, and most of the noâ€" menclature was Teutonic. As a family name it appears to trace back either to the old Angloâ€"Saxon given name of "Locer" (the "e"~ has the "k" pronunciation here) or to the old German form of "Lochard." Here is a family name the origin of which looks simple. â€" But it‘s a bit more difficult to trace than you might ixlagine. for when you dig into its hisâ€" tory you find out that it has little to do either with a lock or a heart. hardt. 3. Racial Originâ€"English and German. Sourceâ€"A given name. Variations â€" Lockart, Locker, Loocâ€" been to refer to some physical peculiâ€" rity or to a man‘s parentage. hn Anfiacpinenntiie Abdiitalty. Aul? A: iirtraith lt cce As 1 give me a sense of humor and the power to laugh." The visitor was examining the class. "Can any little boy tell me what a fishnet is made of?" he inquired. "A lot of little holes tied together with strings," smiled the neverâ€"fa‘ling bright boy. weneral Sir F. H. Sykes, G.B.E., K.C.â€" B., C.M.G., who during the last part of the war was Chief of the Air Staff, tells us something of that in his book, "Aviation in Peace and War." We can no longer rely solely upon the Navy to defend us, he argues, for unless we can keep the air as we keep the seas, What is to be the future of aviation in view of all its new wonders? Majorâ€" General Sir F. H. Sykes CGRFE K _ v1Irely of steel has been tested and found almost indestructible. Inventâ€" ors in several countries have had sucâ€" cesses with helicopters, machines that require no "take off" on level ground, but can rise from the space of a tennis court straight into the air. Every month that passes sees some new improvement in aircraft. Engines have now been designed which, though they will develop 1,200 horseâ€"power, are yet so light that four men can carâ€" ry them with ease. A machine made entirely of steel has been tested and found almost Indactmentiki . y cls Since those days progress has been rapid. We have machines now whose engines develop as much power as railway locomotives. «They can carry loads up to four tons at speeds of more than 100 miles an hour, The aecroplane has barely nineteen years, s writer. It was in 1903 : made by . the Wright driven by an engine |( power rose into the air passenger, Add this to your prayers: "O Lord Aviation is one of the ycungest of the sciences. â€"It is only 141 years since the first weirdâ€"looking balloon designâ€" ed by Montgolfier rose into the air beâ€" fore the astonished eyes of King Louis XVL, carrying wit\ it a cock, a duck, and a sheep, A Peep at the Fuhl;éflritahl’s Aviag â€"THE BODY BUILDER LOCKHART )plane has been with us teen years, says an English was in 1903 that a machine the Wright Brothers and an engine of eight horseâ€" Fair Enough. Maybe that hill is not there, after allâ€" "There‘s a Reason" with a human Begin today with a dish oi Grapeâ€"Nuts with cream or milk (fresh or preserved fruit, too, if you like) for breakfast or lunch. Keep up this crisp, delicious, strengthening food in place of heavy, illâ€"assorted, starchy breakâ€" fasts and lunchesâ€"and sge if the oldâ€"time zest and speed on the oldâ€"time level path doesn‘t come back again. Suppose you try it! Bachelors and spinsters make up the larger part of those who in their old age are obliged to depend on the town or province for support. Figures show that of men who have a trade only one in a hundred thousand has to go to the poorhouse, and that of men with a college education the proportion is smaller still. ‘ "A little stranger with a free pass to the heart‘s best affections." "A thing we are expected to kiss and look as if we enjoyed it." A native of all countries, who speaks the language of none." "A few inches of coo and wiggle, writhe and scream, fitted with suction and testing apparatus for milk, and automatic alarm to regulate supply." "The latest edition of humanity, of which every couple think they posâ€" sess the finest copy." "The morning caller, noonday crawlâ€" er, and,midnight bawler," "j’f only precious possession that nevef excites envy." Some definitions of a baby: "The bachelor‘s horror, the mother‘s treasure, and the despotic tyrant of the household." To live for God and from God all the timeâ€" This man is indeed most blest, He is guided and guarded, urged on and retarded, He has entered the life of rest! To live for God, yet from self all the timeâ€" This man is lacking in power! He works and he worries, he plans and he hurries, To live for self and from self all the time, This man has not found the way! He sees not, he hears not, he cares not, he fears rot, His life is a game of play! Steamers and trains have reached their highest possible speed, it is to the air that we must look for the traâ€" vel of the future. For the price of a battleship an air route to Australia could be organized, the value of which would be beyond contemplation. But though we muét-l;i;“pmpared against air attacks, civil aviation is equally important. Aircraft can now drop poison gas upon towns beneath, It may be conâ€" tained in bombs, or it may simply be sprayed from the skies, falling by its own weight and dealing death to all whom it reaches. In recent tests aeroâ€" planes using a new gas more potent than anything previously devised desâ€" troyed every living thing on the ground over which they passed. i Huge bombing machines will asâ€" semble, he believes, as soon as war is imminent, and once it has begun they will make ~straight for important towns, mobilization centres, arsenals, harbors, and railways. A few swift blows might so paralyze an enemy that he could not put up a fight at all. Sir â€"F. H. Sykes believes that the warfare of the future will begin with air attacks. "Whereas in 1914 it was twenty days between the declaration of war and the exchange of the first shots," he writes, "in the next war the air battle may be joined within as many dours, and an air attack lauachâ€" ed almost simultaneously with the deâ€" claration of war." He sighs through each passing hour The giant ‘planes of toâ€"day.can carâ€" ry six or eight huge bombs each weighâ€" ing halfâ€"a ton, and can drop them acâ€" curately upon skip, camp, or town. we are at the mercy of any foreign foe with great fleets of afrcraft. What is a Baby ? Three Lives. Believed to be the highest water fall in the world is one in British Gu ana, where the water descends 822 feot, having a clear drop of 741 feet before it is broken by rocks. It‘s pitiful, too, to see povertyâ€" stricken souls trying to buy real riches with money.â€"Dr. Frank Crane. It‘s terrible to be poor, poor in ali that makes life rich and strong and They stand like shivering souls lookâ€" ing in through the window at the warmth of life; hungry souls begging of every passerâ€"by the bread of praise which they cannot digest. They are poor in beauty, having never learned to see it, let alone feed upon it. They are poor in work, having never found their task, without which no soul can be happy. They are poor in thouglits. As Robert Louis Stevenson said, they do not have so much as two ideas to rub against each other while waiting for a train. They are poor in friends, and to their calamity is added loneliness. They are poor in enthusiasms, and when their one little interest is gone they have no other. They are poor in discipline, and their own selves fall upon them and devour them. They are poor in selfâ€"mastery, and their environment overcomes them. When they are bereaved they have no tides of Faith to support them. When their money is gone they have no inner riches. When sorrow comes the poor in re sources have no wells of inner happi ness from which to draw. For the only poverty that grinds deadens, and kills is poverty of re sources. Are You Poor? Heaven help the poor! I do not mean the poor in money. I mean those who are poor in resources. "Not at all. But perbaps I could gell him the ring at a bargain." "O Rachel! And what is the name of this other one?" ‘"Wretch! You would do him harm No Need to Waste It. ‘ "I give you your freedom, Solomon.f Here is the ring you gave me. I canâ€"! not marry you, for I love another." _ | Minard‘s Linimemt Relieves Neuraigis No season of the year is so dangerâ€" ous to the life of little ones as is the summer. ‘The excessive heat throws the little stomach out of order so quickly that unless prompt aid is at hand the baby may be beyond all huâ€" man help before the mother realizes he is ill. Summer is the season when diarrhoea, cholera infantum, dysentery and colic are most prevalent. Any of | these troubles may prove deadly if not promptly treated. During the summer‘ mother‘s best friend is Baby‘s Own Tablets. _ They regulate the bowels.! sweeten the stomach and keep baby | healthy. The Tablets are sold by mediâ€". cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a | box from The Dr. Willliams‘ Medicine‘ Co., Brockville, Ont. | SUMMER HEAT Sometimes among the w;oné}'- A bluebird‘s wing, a cricket‘s call A hand to touch at evenfall Give me a little anger; A salt of grief and wrong; To walk sometimes in lonely ways Sometimes a taste of sweet; Enough of work, enough of play; A pipe to smoke at dusk of day To make the day complete. Give me a litle hunger, A little bread and meat; Sometlmes a breath of bitterness "On one‘s beam ends," "low ebb," and "at loggerheads" are common exâ€" pressions which have the tang of the salt sea in them,. We use them withâ€" out thinking of their origin. If a man feels that he 48 losing ground he tries to "make up leeway," "Leeway is the distance lost by a ship when sailing to windward, through ner hull slipping out of the wind‘s track to leeward. Such distance must be made up by skilful manoeuvring. When a person wants to know anâ€" other‘s thoughts, he " sounds" him. That is just what a vessel does if she wants to know where she isâ€"she sounds with a line and lead. Often we talk of a man "hailing from" such and such a country. This is a term used at sea when vessels "speak" to one another by means of flags. A man in difficulties is des ‘cribed as "out of his depth," or as "having lost his bearings." Both terms are understood at sea to mean that a vessel is prevented by someâ€" thing from keeping on a safe course. Describing a man‘s conduct in busd ne~‘s, a judge said, it was cbvious that the man in question was fond of "sailâ€" ing too close to the wind." The judge used a nautical term pure and simple. When a vessel sails too close to the wind. her progress is stopped, she drifts away from her course, and trouâ€" bie is bound to follow. To make the days a song an Highest Water Fall. ISSUE No. 34â€"â€"‘22, Language of the Sea. HARD ON BABY Request. â€"Victor Starbuck Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"Also bot Aspirin ia the trade mark (registored in Canada) Aceticacidester of SalicyBeracid. While it is well 1 manufactyre, to @sstet the pullic ascinat Imitation manufactire, to @ssiet the pullic assinat imitations, the ‘Tablets of B will i Aamped with their genoral Lrude mark, the "Bayer Crow 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 Colds ~‘‘ Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Handy "Baycr‘ boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"Also botlles of 24 and 100â€"Druprists. UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at all ONTARIO ARCHIVES ToRronto ‘The first thing to do when you have an injury is to apply Minard‘s famous Lintâ€" ment. It is antiseptic, soothing, healing and gives quick relief. i7 ui aitsiiseiitts Brtelisitrnis iss tsclsiad I Toronto, Ont. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal» cum promote and maintain skin puâ€" rity, skin comfort and skin health. The Soaptocleancse, purify and beauâ€" tify, the Ointment tosoften, soothe and heal and the Talcum to powder and perfume. l'“.:, Ii.llg;:? ;;Elbgt...#‘% %:;d o’r?-‘r!;..' where. intment â€" um 5e. -c-&... Soap shaves without mug, 1 The Admiralty flag is never lowered not even upon the death of a Sover eign. throughout Canada Smithâ€""I woke up last night with a horrible suspicion that my new gold watch was gone. So strong was the impression that I got up to look." Brownâ€""Well, was it gone?" "‘No, but it was going." @ .. ] tions. My face looked **/ so badly that I did not want to go anywhere. I saw an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointâ€" mentand I bought them. After using one and a bï¬l boxes of Cuticura Ointment, with the Cuticura Soap, I was completely healed." (Signed) "I will never be able to express my gratitude to Tanlac for restoring me to the splendid health I now enjoy. I never felt better in my life and can hardly realize that a short time ago I was in such a wretched condition." Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. Advt. take to my bed "I had chronic indigestion for fourâ€" teen months and for four months of the time was under constant treatâ€" ment. I couldn‘t even drink milk withâ€" out suffering afterwards and I almost starved myself. _ My nerves finally gave way and I had to rive un and *"I had a breaking out of pimples on my face which irritated so much £~""% at nightthat I began to ,:% scratch and they broke /) @j out in deep, sore erupâ€" TORONTO SALT works C 4 CLIFF . ToRronto Mrs. Geo. Warman Tells How Cuticura _ Healed Pimples £~""% at nig 13 ;fl\" omti 2 j out i C 1.._,‘ tions *"/ so be want saw a IT SAVED HER LIFE STATES QUE. CRL money orpers. Dominion Express Money Orders are _ sale m five thousand offices Originally, all men were black COARSE SALT L A N DF8 ALT NOTHING TO EQUAL For Sptiins and Bruises. Aspiem . Warman, 13 Duchess St., and I had to give up and Close Call. tations, the Tablets of Bayer Qteupany nhric gha *Havar l".-cm-aJ Â¥ The letters we publish ought to conâ€" vince you; ask some of your women friends or neighbors â€" they know its fair trial, If you are suffering from troubles that sometimes follow childâ€"birth bear in mind that Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vege« table Compound is a woman‘s medicine, It is especially adapted to correct such troubles. & ""Â¥" IAfiffas she had taken so w ‘pgi Ifmuch of it and when . 1 hatr.i ltrouble 1;ft0r in t my baby was borm oE < "*> l she Ya\'e it to me. yofk .A w x f Jt helped me so much . jj, _ hfffIf more than nnyrh:nf % ] ‘ else had done that «o l advise all wiomen _ eAE UIf with female trouble mminnnsenmine to give it a fair trial and I am sure they will feel as J do about it.â€"Mrs. Frep, P. Hansen, 56Z Symmonds St., Kenosha, Wisconsin. A medicine that has been in use nearly ï¬f&y years and that receives the praise and commendation of mothers and grandmothers is worth your considera= [ll!llflllcl IJ en s s l ‘!ll f Her Mother‘s Faith in Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound Led Her To Try It Kenosha, Wisconsin.â€"*"I cannot say enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Immmreeses V o retable Comâ€" ) of Bayer Manufacture of Moneâ€" known that Aspirin meame Bayer YOUNG MOTHER NOW STRONG The first iron railroad was laid im England in 1767. When 1 the sunshine of thy bloom beâ€" hold, And pluck and bear thee home with fond caress, I am richer for thy lavishness. Thy Midas touch hath turned the land to gold For me to have and hold Minard‘s Liniment for eals everywhers THRI:ASHIRI BELTs AnND suo b!rcltoa val at 1 t nr.lh o # owes Sanade i york Ecce Con 129 Work 6t., ‘Toronto, Ont. Amerioa‘s Pioneer Dog MRemedics ENS WaANTEp 13 1e se .mm; ‘est, Toronto, ndag BELTINC FOR SALE You will, too, if you give it a Early Goldenrod. â€"â€"Abbie Frances Judd Roureet dern in i ¢¢ «* +4 a»