\ new commandment for which the © is now ripe is "Thou shalt not !!.‘_ Seventyâ€"five per cent. of the ess in the country is the result of ‘ations of the elementary laws of| i‘th, excess of eating, drinking, lndl ‘king.â€"â€"Sir Malcolm Morris. indy is an eastern measure of wht, ~=â€"rying from 560 to 800 lbs. Still to Come. ,‘ nmy had been playing truant | » school, and had spent a long,| itiful day fishing. On his way‘ x home he met one of his young ! !e«, who accosted him with the i) question, "Catch anything?" ' t this, Tommy, in all consctousness | uilt, responded. "Ain‘t been home!| Job, I would never have taken ald the old man indignantly. ‘tire, sir? Why I worked for difather, and yer father before ame the owner of this farm. known this wasn‘t to be a perâ€" ithy had worked on the same r the last sixty years, and he y proud of bis record. ay his employer said to him: irthy, you are getting very old, ‘ink it is about time that you All the Year Round. mon 0n lc ommmmmmmece |â€"*"‘Teige an Sionnac»." From these Mosquitoes Prefer Blue. | two surnames came the r'amily or v}an « boxes lined with different| NAmes "MacSionnaighe." According cloths in a place frequented by | to sound it has hec()me :)fng"flwd tf) Po showed that by far me?the forms Sinnoch and Sinnock. Acâ€" imber of mosquitoes enteredj nc nnccpme es lined with dark blue. The | WWtamnmnameie menmn en onememmenmnmey ne n mm maced that the other boxes attractâ€"| re in this order: dark red,| scarlet, black, slate gray, olivef ight blue, ochre, white orange. | quitoes were found in the box-i with yellow. It also appeared! wrson dressed in dark clothes | rt da‘s Commercial Forest norizons flush and grow unset hues of ours. A Permanent Job. hing the Blindâ€"t;) Write use. Copies of Cireular No. e sent free upon application rector of Forestry. Sounding "The Alert." nand for something in comâ€" giving information about ommercial trees has led the Forestry Branch â€"to issue No. 14, "Commercial Forest Canada." It gives a descripâ€" © principal species and their 1 also a list of the accepted ‘ames along with the botantâ€" s so that each tree may be entified in any part of Canaâ€" 6 of the many different local use. Copies of Cireular No. at once, whereas ones flannels was unmolested. hat ren distant enemy airplanes covered through the telescope. u‘!d give warning that all must ic alert, or the whole army on be in danger; that everyâ€" :t could be done should be the World War the outlooks _ on the outposts of the batâ€" «vinded what they called "the nc classic Braill ir the blind. renchman, Valen: ed the first relie , and it was shor lat another Fr * perfected the known. iims the honor of the most inventions to permit the 1 and write, the latest beâ€" Andre Cantonnet, optha-! the Cochin Hospital. His indwriting, which has Just ed by the National Conâ€" : Blind, folows the Braillie ats in relief, but has the being readable by people blind without any special s been adopted as a comâ€" kly to prevent di nger and damage e heed to the sounding of fore it is too lateâ€"0, 3 us in life‘s battle there are inding the alert, but how »ed the warning. For in. heart, the lungs, the kidâ€" ver, and other Oorgans are ounding the alert for some ing the danger signal in <s. some urusval feeling, le the average man or woâ€" ‘ese danger signals! ar way, parents are conâ€" ding the alert, the danger ieir children; teachers are me to their puptls, but the take no nOotite, oftaen dn‘ what the danger signals e are many danger sigâ€" life toâ€"day; in our politiâ€" cnomic and religious life; it, in women‘s dress, in . in our homes, demoralâ€" which everywhere honey. e; they are seen in the of moral standards, in ‘g of life, the belittling of > fierce straining for the homeborn flowers J. G. Whittier ows the Braillie ef, but has the dable by people out any special pted as a comâ€" Braillie system Valentin Hauy, relief writing s shortly after, r P‘chhman, "Z"CS ate conâ€" irt, the danger i; teachers are PupMls, but the disaster, to e as much + Often system the in ; of the ‘ are how * inâ€" kidâ€" It came about this way. There are two noteworthy figures in Irish hisâ€" tory who were founders of clans or septs from which many bearing the foregoing names take their ancestry. One of these was "Flann," the 169th monarch of Ireland, 876 A.D., who was known as "the Fox." The other was a certain "Teige," who lived about 100 years later, also known as "the Fox" Though they may not look it, Fox, Sinmnoch, Seeny, Reynard and Rayâ€" nardson are all really variations of the same name, some of them being Anglicized variations of the Irish proâ€" nunciation of the name, and some of them being Anglicized variations of the meaning. This is not the same family name as the Fox which comes from the Angloâ€" Norman source in the given name of "Fulke" or "Fulque." Reynard, Reynardson. Racial Originâ€"Irish. Sourceâ€"A nickname. FOX Variationsâ€"Sinnock, Sinnoch, Sceny, Perfect control of the pow on a nut in cracking the sh sible with the use of a nuter; appliance has a solid feltâ€" and a ratchet, or gear, art operated by a long handle, â€" the user ample leverage in the hardest shells without them in all directions, or sme kernels into little bits. You can get thes> pills medicine dealer or by m a box or six boxes for $% Dr. Williams‘ Medicine ville, Ont. nc en i can now do a good day‘s work about the house, have no more fainting spells and can go about more actively than I did before. I believe these pills just the thing for pale, weak girls and women, and if given a fair trial will do for them WBE That Raws: 1.2.â€" 4. uic ol 2 6 _ CCC Ee UE the thousands benefited by the use of this medicine is Mrs. Jos. Robinson, Oshawa, who says:â€""Some time ago I was in an anaemic condition and so weak I would faint away at times. I had â€" no appetite, could not do my housework; in fact life seemed scarceâ€" ly worth living. 1 was exceedingly pale and tried doctor‘s medicine with no good result. Then one day 1 saw Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills recommended for a similar condition, and I got a supply. 1 continued taking the pills until I had used about a dozen boxes, and they have made me a well woman. ‘ P SHs Snsce cich W Tortoises and tu'rtles Nutcracker is When the shadow of poor health falls upon you; when hope fades and life itselft seems scarcely worth living, then is the time you should remember that thousands just as hopeless as you feel, have been restored to the sunâ€" shine of health through the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, The rich red blood which these pills actually make, strengthens the whole system. The nerves â€" are strengthened, headaches ‘ vanish, the appetite improves, and‘ once again there is joy in life. Among the HRhenGands mul . ALY O [ "There‘s a Reason" In IN THE SHADOW _ OF POOR HEALTH This Condition Relief Comes Through Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Made by Canadian Postum Cereal Company, Ltd., Windsor, Ontario Easily digested and perfectly assimilated, because partially preâ€"digested by 20 hours‘ baking. Grapeâ€"Nuts with milk or cream is a complete food, containing all the nutritive and mineral elements required for making rich, red blood, and building sturdy body tissue, sound bone structure and strong, healthy nerve cells. THE union of Nature, the Farmer and Science is a partnership for life. In your golden sheaves of living wheatâ€"and in your waving, shimmering fields of barleyâ€"Nature stores the vital elements of human power and energy, which Science converts into Grapeâ€"Nutsâ€"the famous bodyâ€"building food. «Cn these pills actually make, ens the whole system. The are strengthened, headaches the appetite improves, and in there is joy in life. Among sands benefited by the use of piukce . L. j» Grapeâ€"Nuts is Powerful and Easily Controlled. s for pale, weak girls and if given a fair trial will what they have done for racking the shell is posâ€" use of a nutcracker. The a solid feltâ€"lined base , Or gear, arrangement long handle, that gives Surnames and Their Origin thes> pills through any without scatterlné the power exerted mail at 50 cents $2.50 from The ne Co., Brockâ€" Sold by Grocers Everywhere have no teeth smashing the breaking The clan was founded by a c} named "Muireadach," known as eadach Meith" ("the Fat"). A. D., in the days when the Irish still pagan, and the power of thes pire was felt in raids and inva clear down into Italy. family name in our modern sense, through many centuries of use as a clan name. It is a name which dates back considerably farther than the oldest of the English family names, or those of any other country in fact. As nearly as can be estimated from the ancient Irish records, the Clan O‘Mheith came into being about 350 MAY ’Variationsâ€"â€"Maye. Meith. Racial Originâ€"Irish. Sourceâ€"A sobriquet. If your name is May, and you are fat, it is quite appropriate in the hisâ€" torical sense, for if your name traces back to Ireland it is likely that you inherit a tendency toward corpulency, The Gaelic form of this family name, which is quite old. is "O‘Mheith." It had, of course, gradually become a cording to meaning it has become Reynard and Reynardson. Everybody exbécts courtesy but not so many are willing to give it. Dust is made up of particles of unâ€" burned carbon from smoke, fragments of wool, cotton and hair, living orâ€" ganisms and â€" finelyâ€"divided mineral matter. All are constantly being cast into the air and they slip through cracks of houses and settle. After bilâ€" lions of particles have fallen we say the floor is dusty. Ask for Minard‘s a'nd take no other In this way it will be seen that difâ€" ferent peoples bodies are completely renewed in different periods of time, those in hot countries, or leading a strenuous life, being completely _ reâ€" newed in the shortest time. | . . .. ._ _ "1 _ * FAFS _ As to why seven gyears nobody knows, but many people have that firm conviction. ' Actually the human body is underâ€" going change the whole time. In movâ€" ing an eyelid, even, some of the tissue or muscle is literally being burnt up, and is renewed from the blood. The very process of seeing or thinking desâ€" troys some of the brain. A boxer wil lose as much as nine pounds in weight in a single fight, which means that that much muscle has been decom-l posed. the C eomen Ignorance often develops into a beâ€" lief, and belief in turn becomes a cusâ€" tom. One of the best examples of this is the placing of the engagementâ€"ring on the third finger. Old Theories That Have Been Killed by Modern Thought. What We Call Dust. founded by a chicftain e power of their emâ€" raids and invasions re is not a shred of ief. The third finger m any of the others; , it has developed inâ€" Muir were Fox, "It was the Juke of Wellington." "Yes, and who came to his assis ance and helped him to win it?" "A feler named Upgardson Atom.‘ loo "Now, Willie," said the teacher of the juvenile history class, "you ore member who won the Battle of Water This aricle is not written to disparâ€". age the work of the singer. Rather ls! it a plea for a higher appreciation otJ the art of aecompanying. And goodâ€"‘ ness knows, with a dearth of accom-; panists as there is toâ€"day, we need to encourage the art in every possible | way. Give a thought to the accomâ€" | panist! | | Some few years ago a young lady | and gentleman sought to draw attenâ€" | tion to this anomaly by giving a "Song ; and Accompaniment" recital in Lonâ€"‘ don, England. The young man who! did the accompanying, chose the songs ; and played the whole program _ of | about twenty numbers by heart~a; feat of memory that surely is not comâ€" | monâ€"and yet not a single critic (and; there were many present) noticed it | or thought it worth recording. ’ |\__It doesn‘t take any great stretch of | the imagination to see that a song wihout an accompaniment is practicalâ€" ly useless. Indeed, oftentimes it is the accompaniment which make & song Picture, if you can, anyonse atâ€" tempting to sing Tennyson‘s "Crossâ€" ing the Bar" without the piano or orâ€" gan accompanying the soloist. And yet when the soloist finishes, the apâ€" plause and cheering is directed toâ€" ward the singer, seldom toward the ac-! companist. Sometimes an accompan-,‘ ist is not even mentioned in a concert | notice. He is taken for granted. | go to a concert and applaud loudly the singing of some soloist, but the poor pianist who often gets the lion‘s share of the work goes unnoticed. It isn‘t fair, is it? Why is it that an ziccompanlst doesn‘t share equal honors with a singer? We Should the 'Ag(;;;anist Not Share Honors With the Singer? be given to the youngest baby with perfect safety. Concerning them Mrs. Alcide Lepage, Ste. Beatrix, Que., writes:â€""Baby‘s Own Tablets were of great help to my baby. They reguâ€" lated her bowels and stomach and made her plump and weil." The Tabâ€" lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. | 99 _ The ailments of childhoodâ€"constiâ€" pation, indigestion, colic, colds, etc.â€" can be quickly banished through the use of Baby‘s Own Tablets. They are & mild but thorough laxative which inâ€" stantly regulate the bowels and sweetâ€" en the stomach. They are guaranteed to contain no rharmfu'l a};lgs and CHILDKOOD AILMENT3 _svoining," said Mrs. Garker, with a groan, "only I‘ve been calling him ‘Marshal‘ every time I‘ve met him for months and months!" "Why, certainly. I‘ve always known that. What is theroe mortifying about Em it?" "Well, I just learned toâ€"day that ‘Marshall‘ is not his title at all. Mar shall is his first name." far in the background. She lost no time in beginning her explanation. "Edward," she said to her husband, "I am so mortified. 1 don‘t know what to do!" "What‘s the matter, Jane "I‘ve just been calling Peters. You know her hus shall?" rs. Garker came Lome from a call one day in such a disturbed condition that it was evident that tears were not es u.. uk 1 - "Nothing," said Mrs A Belated Discovery. Get You, Willie know ber hï¬sband, Ma;' I C ittnbiisaifiisiiest se asias d ind d LNE assistâ€"| canons, and the mandarins were conâ€" fsidered superior in point of musical tom." | knowledge. Interesting dates are mmeme® | given showing bhow early the Chinese | had developed a science of music. In 2277 B.C., for example, there were 22 °_ | writers on the dance and music, 23 on ancient music, and 25 on the construcâ€" 'tion of the scales. These facts imply , many years of previous deveropment _before the time when works treating of the science of music would be preâ€" pared. gn TORONTO of in India. The plans call for the use of the most modern improvements and laborâ€"saving devices. Tron ore of high quality, suitable fluxes, and excellent cooking coal occur close together, and in large quantities. This condition, in connection with the lowâ€"priced labor available in India, should contribute to the production of steel at a remarkâ€" ably low figure. Huge Stee! Making Plant in India. Plans are already well under way for the erection of a largecapacity iron and steel works and rolling mill From far off Sudan comes one o(i our most useful commodities. The adhesive gum that sticks our swmpsf to our letters and which is used for so | many other purposes, can be traced | from our desk straight back to the ‘ bank of the crocodile infested .\'fle,’ with its overhanging palm trees and | its myriad hordes of chattering mon-: keys. Big tawny came!s and brownâ€" | gray donkeys heavy laden with gum from Kordofan, make their way to Durim. above Khartum, where it isi unloaded by halfâ€"naked natives. The | precious cargo is then placed upon' vartous kinds of crafts for shinmcntl to Omdurman. From this city it is sped by rail to uses which the nalivet' never heard of. | | _ Music is a great force in civilizatton. "Every period of intellectual activity, | social or political, reacted upon music. |To illustrate, we need but refer to the ‘;tormal character of the music of the |period preceding the French revoluâ€" tion and the freedom and vigor imâ€" parted by the spirit of Romanticism which followed in the wake of that | great political movement, a difference | strikingly illustrated in the music of Haydn and Beethoven, Clement! and Sorumann. The science of music had |a high place in Chinese philosophy, | the sages alone comprehended â€" the | _ It has been said by a great musician | that the music of the brass band is the l'most perfect expression of a nation‘s | feelings, of its joys and sorrows, its hopes and aspirations. To no other appeal will the masses of people, men, | women and children, rise so quickly. | The music of the brass band fires amâ€" | bition in the laggard. Many a soldier !was inspired to bravery in battle by | its music. It gives them an indefinite sense of exhilaration, it makes their hearts beat faster, it smoothes the disâ€" cords of nature into harmony, it arouses the finest enthusiasm and it puts bravery in the heart that is | timid. I Send a Dominioh EB;i)'r-e'ss Order. They are payable eve; ~nRt you wish is a reel of cotton." . Thereupon she produced, joy be, my coveted spool of thread! ©Certainly, ma‘am; this is thread" "Help!" I almost cried. Then 1 patiently explained: "What I want is â€"is something with which to mend, to sew a shirt waist." "Shirt waist? Shirt waist?" The girl pondered. I pointed desperately to the shirt waist that I was wearing "Oh, blouse!" she cried. ‘"Perhaps what you wish is a reel of cotton " I found the haberdasher‘s shop, which was merely a notion store. Sure otmygroumiwtlas(,laskedarosy English girl for a spool of white thread. _ She fetched a ladder and climbed to the highest shelf, where after some rummaging she found a ball of cord! The Place of Music in Our Civilization. "But isn‘t a haberdasher a person who deals in men‘s furnishings ?" "Not in the least, madam. It is a shop of pins, needles, buttons, thread and the like. There is on a bit of a Thanking him, I went on and enterâ€" ed the draper‘s shop, which at first glance appeared for all the world like & dryâ€"goods store. I asked for a spool of white thread. "Thread? Very sorry, ma‘am, but this is a draper‘., and thread can be had only at a haberhasher »." "Oh, cloth! You would be wanting a draper‘s shop Turn to your right at yon comner, and there‘ll be a draper‘s." "Why, cloth, of course, and things of that kind. Goods, you know." ‘*Shop, I mean," I said, correcting my mistake hastily. "Dryâ€"goodée shop." "Dry goods? What would dryâ€"goods be, ma‘am ?" Nearing the business district, I stopâ€" ped a brightfaced boy and asked him where I would find the nearest dryâ€" goods store. "Dryâ€"goods store? Store, ma‘am? What now would you wish to store?" Needed, an Interpreter. All that I wanted, writes a contribuâ€" tor to the Youth‘s Companion, was a spool of white thread. So, although it was my first morning in old Oxford, I set forth on my quest. A person should have no dificulty in a pface‘ where his own language is spoken. | Certainly not! ‘ ‘Oh, no," I protested; "I ISSUE No. 38â€"22, Gum of Sudan. money orpErs s. These facts imply | previous deveropment | when works treating | [ music would be preâ€" | minion Express Money are payable everywhere. C Pn o0 mmemme P PUPTe hdaed e ostroone ~fâ€" / JMIPSC«â€"L eel that I should' be doing a i.W"Unch "‘ lf neglected to wrllte you. I + » have had our tumors growing on m * this is thread 'hcad for years. 1 had them cut off by i _ cried. _ Then l)!urgeon about fifteen years ago but they "What I want is |€"6W again till about three months ago I had one as large and shaped like a which to mend, to lady‘s thimble, on the very place where myt hair shoulg] be p’uru«J, undult v;;ns f is |getting so embarrassing in public that irt waist? The |it was a constant worry to me. About 1lt|hlipe months ugt;‘l got a bouledof your niment for another purpose and saw on tely to the shirt| the Inbel good for tumore." Wwelil ? irfad ring it and kept it for exactly two months, be with the result that it has entirely reâ€" cried. ‘"Perhaps moved all trace of the tumor, and were eel of cotton,." it not that they :l(ld be;cén b:m flftee? ears ago, no mark wou seen. duced, joy be, my I{uve not been asked for this testimonial ad! and you can use it as you see fit. berals (Signed) FRED C. ROBINSON. P. S.â€"1 am a farmer and intend using RDERS. Minard‘s uu-ud t on ha ‘mnr; for a strained tendon, and am hoping for some Express Money | PEofiy FRED C. R. ahin ovemrate.c. § TERuTS _ wanted "I was troubled with eczema for about a year. It broks out in pim» S al:o on my face and in a @ d-ys! ::tuld blister, : At night dly slept a “@" wink on account of the terrible itching, and when ~ I scratched my face it { l'l'::rlgd burn. ll was disâ€" terribly, "I saw an advertisement for Cuâ€" ticura Soap and Ointment _and sent for a free sample. I bought more, and after using two cakes of Soap and one box of Ointment ! was healsd." (Signed) Mrs. David Betz, 4159 Fox St., Denver, Colo. Rely on Cuticura Sozp, Ointment and Talcum to care for your skin. nparsge fams s s . n ¢. ci €. DBF Cuticura Sn.m shaves without mug. physicians Guring 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbhago Pain, Pain Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 t bletsâ€"Also bottles of 24 and 100 â€"Drugpi=ts, Aspirin is the trade mark (registorcd in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Moneâ€" mcetioncidester of Ealicvlicacid, | While it is well known the\ Aspirin meaps Haver nanufacture, to sskist the public ngainat imitations, the Tablets of Aryer Company will be stamped with Lheir genural trade mark, the "Bayer Crozf." e VJ 40 _ UHUIdRCH «PaCKaS¢e of ‘"‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millinns far Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Ba, NP inb AdudP uie s M 220081 The Minard‘s Liniment People wil. Psn e 4 Oy The Milan Cathedral is decorated with over 2,000 statues rising hunâ€" dreds of fect above the streets. : C e Oee" dR atet E:' on my face and in a &AÂ¥ ym m se A might y elept a "@" wink on account of the terrible itching, and when ~ I scratched my face it hA would burn. I was disâ€" UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tableis, you are not getting Aspirin at all Health and the alphibé>;e“all that a youth needs in this country, in order to make himself felt in the world. A Canadian youth who bas learned the alphabet has the key to the trea: sureâ€"houses of the earth, good books, and what a treasure that is. The youth who can read needs no outside help, either to make himself a highly educated man or a successful man, EGZEMA ON FACE [TCHED TERRBBLY "My digestion got so bad I would bloat all up and I suffered from conâ€" stipation and biliousness, splitting headaches and dizzy spells I had rheumatism in my joints and often jJust ached all over. I never have an ache or pain of any kind since taking Tanlac and neve: felt better 11 my life." Badly digested food fills the whole system with poisons. PRheumatism and many other complaints not generâ€" ally recognized as having their origin in the stomach quickly respond to the right treatment. Get a bottle of Tanâ€" lac toâ€"day at any good druggist. Advt. | In Pimples For About A Year, Hardly Slept. Cuticura Heals. __Victims of stomach trouble and rheumatism often find that when their stomach is set in omder, the rheumaâ€" tism disappears. Thousands of people everywhere bave testified that Tanlac has freed them of both troubles simulâ€" taneously. T. G. Maitland, 147 Adeâ€" laide St., London, Ont., says : Rural Route No Bulk Carlots TORONTO sALT woORrks 6. 4. CLIFF + TORONTO COARSE SALT LAND SALT lek Rheumatism And Dyspopsia Are Soon Ended Aspian: The Poor Boy‘s Keys feel that 1 should be doir I neglected to write you four tumors growing on 1, Mascouche If your family physician fails to help you and the same old troubles persist, why isn ‘t it reasonable to try Lydia E, Pmilum’s Vegetable Compound ? There is one fact women should conâ€" gider and that is this. Women suffer from irregularitiesand various forms of weakâ€" ness. They try this and that doctor, as well as different medicines, Finally m;ly take Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Compound, and Mrs. Sherman‘s experience is simply another case showing the merit of L{;il wellâ€"known medicine. 7 72. (#"7 * ZImy case, so J decided i # Es3 totry LydiaE. Pinkâ€" # y3 lumn Vegetable 1‘ J e 'h†[Compound. "After I | ""All[[ffhad taken the first | i . »H’H’ 1 could see 3 I that I was ï¬ettin » better. I too scverï¬ bottles of the Veielable Compound and nused Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Sanative Wash and I am entirely cured of my ailments. You ma& publish this letter if you wish."â€"Mrs, Mary SHERMAN, Route 2, Lake, Mich, nes JUBSBAUT](TTT] 0: e ae * . 2. «3 fee e A our & < § |fand .. §lBJJ cou ##. «P Jimy # ; id to t *~<& S omlithan | m«lte Con ' ', had D bott oo that " hats Lake, Michigan. â€"*"About one year I suffered withirregularities nndy. we.J:3 HER AILMENTS ALL CONE NOW Ceylon has always been the chief locality for pearl fishing. Pike are said to reach an age of 250 years, by some authorities. Minard‘s Liniment for Distemper Bt., Toronto, Ont There are few occupations quite so futile as comparing the past with the presentâ€"t» the disadvantage of either.â€"Sir Philip Burneâ€"Jones, The Famous Painter. rlmuésm:n BELTS A _ TION hose, new a» eubject to approval at lowest * ubjec 0 approval at lowest » Canada. _ York Belting Co. 11 irs. Sherman Helped by Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegâ€" "HOLE oR PART TIME To SELL A\ o:r mlr:npleh ;lne of electric Axâ€" ures and appliances rom our e u.l:‘ Ll‘hv:ul von?mlnlon w op En:l. w but_ ic w 1 1Dâ€"YOUNG DIRS wire “000‘ Education Q. m:“: Nurses, Wellandra Mospital, St. Cath. grln-l. Ont. BELTINC FOR SALE ... 0 e WEEKXLY NEWSPAPERB WwANTED. nan s _ 00 " o ~BPAPEBR Â¥ etable Compound Bayer Crogh." E HAVE ANTEDâ€"YOUNG LADimg o Wl 2 es AGENTs waÂ¥TED. Adelaide St. our family physician and he ï¬nlï¬h{aidhe eould not unLnund (ness andat times was obliged tostay off my feet. 1 doctored with used, shipped AND â€" suveo. 43 Â¥<