, and at th won with rush, # dang=r into a not entirely rusher. When Rush oC stixff 0 nearesgt en 3* 10 uf, butg tand wasg the ront t of * ty ioh ings er was HTâ€" O# But in« d Wwill t the Grea 7 ot whyt that ex( every I th i« n A#a Boy, he tioznal Park for Waterton Lake. Nearly seventy thousand Eastern Brook and Rainbow trout fry were reâ€" geivad from Glacter and these ware reâ€" leased in Bertha and Cameron lakes and Little Kootenay Creek, while two bnadred and fity thousand egas of the Cutthroat trom wore planed in Boundary Creek. Salmon trout wera introduced into Watorton Lake in large numbers. Stxâ€" tan cans of try were raceived from Bar® and turned loose with yery litâ€" te lo#s. Earth‘s Wahiskers. Teacher "Now, Charlie, what is grass"*" Obarlie (after a moment‘s thoughtâ€" wâ€"â€""Whiskere on the face of the earth, Reâ€"stocking Waters in Waterâ€" ton Lakes Park. ! China has 225 per#®p to sach equare mile of territory; Jafien has 376, end Australia le«s than two. Fogs usruct‘y disperse at night. : were brought into the Canadian c from Giacier and distributed in beadwaters of Cameron and Bertha s and Roundary and Little Kooteâ€" creaks, while fry were secured o the Ban# hatoberies in Banff Naâ€" Page Sherlock Holmes! le away the time, says Sir Paul, d rourd the room and stared ooks on the shelves. An ediâ€" "hackoray in a decorative bindâ€" hat looked like green morocco my attention; at one time I dabble in bookbinding. I took enry Esmond from the shelf. )ewilderment the book did not til, passing my finger acci along what I thought was the the pages, I saw the front iddenly fly out, disclosing a i my astonishment I almost the volume, and a sheet of l1 to the fleor. I picked it up and glanced at it. It was Kriegsministertum, Berlin, had man imperial arms imprinted nd was covered with minute ting in German. I had barely it back into the box and reâ€" the volums on the shelf when ig me 100 K t them. Th me on Car t up in C1 h 1 nel was in a genial mood like my collection," he said. he way is a fine edition of " I felt my heart leap. "It t luxurious binding I have und. Would you not like to with gratifying success ist season. In his report Iss{oner of Canadian Naâ€" the suparintendent states eleased are maturing rapâ€" there is every reason to him vory hard, but his sk. My immediate conâ€" at he wished to Initiate crets of the department. and took down Henry > was in exactly the it had beon in the day vuiter confusion it openâ€" ed signuen es him in book aring adjod Intern 13 3 an al R @At L tify TY interesting cholieu. I ‘ross Road toâ€" mortow *" he add tio tely above whn warily ‘ommon to nUu n ams ol c was ) W bout lon into Sixâ€" from v litâ€" n @1 NA if What the public wants regarding prohibition or any other method of dealing with the drink evil is "How does it work*" "What are its fruits?" Here is the answer from typical Onâ€" tario cities. We are indebted to the Rev. Peter Bryee, Chairman of the _ The General Secretary of the Neighâ€" borhood Workers‘ Association, Toronâ€" to, a Family Welfare Orgarization, gives the following "gures in his anâ€" nual reports:â€"In 1919, nine cases of need were due to intemperance, | amounting to 1.17% of all cases. In | 1920 the percentags was 1.27%, whereâ€" / as in 1921 and 1922 the percentage was | .08 of all cases in need. Previous to , prohibition, in 15 to 18 per cont. of | families, the cause of poverty could | be traced to intemperance. In the reâ€" ! port this statement is made, "Before ipmhlhilion came into effect, not only | was intemperance a problem in itself, : but a factor in most of the other probâ€" lems. Toâ€"day intemperance is pracâ€" |tiv:llly a negligible quantity, as a | cause of poverty." S sne . y 1914 1921 gcre?.fle o+ 9,520 580 314 82 835 30 814 creaso % 66.28% 58.05% 65.14% 55.03% 60.68% 22.172% $4.86% Arrests for Disorderliness Torouto Ottawa Woodstock _ Kingston Port Arthur 1914 2.134 114 20 29 * 67 1921 1.084 15 15 6 15 Decreaso 1,650 Pecrease © §0.35 Hamilton General, Hamiiton, Ont. .... Victoria Hospital, London, Ont. ...... Woodstock General, Woodstock, Out. . Queen Victoria, North Bay, Ont. ..... St. Joseph Hospital, Sudbury, Ont. .. (General Protestant Hospital, Ottawa, 1914 1921 Decrease Decrease % These figures are still more striking when the increase in population beâ€" tween 1914 and 1921 is considered. It EEALTH FOR WEAK DESPONDENT PEOPLE The last annual report of the Board of Licenso Commissioners for Ontario states: "Intoxicated men are rarely seen upon the streets of our cities, From End to End of Canada Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Doing Giood Work. There is not a nook or corner ln1 Cansda, in the cities, towns, villages and on the farms, where Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have not been used and from one end of the country to the other people sound their praise. You have only to ask your nelizhbors and they can tell you of some run down man, suffering woman, ailing youth or unâ€" happy anaemic girl who owes their present health and strength to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. The success of this medicine is du> to the fact that it acts directly upon the blood, making it rich and pure, and thus brings new strength to every organ and nervo in the body. Mr. Andrew F. Webb, Melâ€" anson, N.S., tells what Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have done for him as folâ€" lows:â€""I was in a run down condition from overwork and what the doctor called a nervous breakdown. My sisâ€" ter urged me to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis. After taking several boxes I improved wonderfully and feel like a different person. 1 steep well, eat well, and my nerves are stronger and with confidence 1 can recommend these pills to all weak, run down people." If you are suffering from any conâ€" dition due to poor, watery blood, or weak unerves, begin taking Dr. Wilâ€" llams‘ Pink Pills now, and note how your s{rength and health will improve. You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or they will be sent by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co.. Brockville, Dr. Ont of the Department pose‘to include in series the cemet situated ten mile: katchewan river . from Lioydminste tha most tragle tnc The Canadtan National Parks Branch | of the Department of the Interior proâ€" pose‘to include in their historic siwsi series the cometery at Frog Lake,.} situated ten milles north of the Sas-' katchewan river and fortyâ€"two miles i from Lioydminster, where oocun'edi the most traglc incident of the Reil Re | bellion of 1$85, the massacre of the ofâ€"| fctais of the Indian Department and | of the priests of the Roman Catbolic | mission by the Indians under the chief, | Big Bear. In 1906 the bodies of the | victims were removed from their variâ€"| ous burlal places by the ‘.\‘orthweet' Mounted Police into a small cemetery nearby where each grave was marked with an fron cross bearing the name of the victim and the date of the dis-| aster. It is now proposed to mark the : swite in more permanent fashion by some form of memorial which wml bear the standard bronze tablet of the Canadian Nat! tesatity to the durial fhoei 0 time of the NC Pust from Canadian Natlonal Historic Sites and teatify to the national care of the durial Jboo of these unfortunate vicâ€" time of the Northwest Rebeliion. Pust from volcanic eruptions has been _h::nd:o travel 500 ~miles Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere ; The Frog Lake Massacre. Fruits of Prohibition m Ontario Cities Poverty and Drink. By Dr. J. G. Shearer, Social Service Council of Canada Toronto Arrests for Drunkenness Toronto Ottawa Kings Woodâ€" Port Kitchener Peterâ€" ton stock _ Arthur boro 14,247 981 482 149 1,376 132 370 42121 411 168 67 541 _ 102 56 962 41.14% 2,015 1.053 Hospitals 14.21% 125 51.44 Arrests for Vagrancy Ottawa Woodstock _ Kingston Port Arthur 243 80 51 158 118 63 19 57 of Ont l Only one arrest was made for drunkâ€" enness at the Canadian National Exâ€" hibition, Toronto, in 1922, in an atâ€" tendance of 1,372,500 people. \ _ Previous to the Referendum, a mornâ€" | ing paper, in an editorial calling the |temperance pcople to arms, said, "An |\ Ontario in which no drunkard‘s child | shall be afraid of his father‘s homeâ€" | comings, and no drunkard‘s wife | ashamed of the man to whom she lookâ€" | ed for happiness; in which there shall ‘be no hospitals, prisons or asylums | filled with the human wreckage of the | soulâ€"destroying trafficâ€"surely that is | an end worthy of the best endeavor of every man and woman of humane inâ€" stincts." The results already obtained | in many directions Indicate that the | end of the endeavor is a practical isâ€" 42 17 98 .. 21.25% 62.174% 6 varles from 4% to 19% in vamed. j Mothers‘ Aliowance Board for the folâ€" lowing figures. The contrast is beâ€" tween 1914 and 1921 because the war years might be objected to as abnorâ€" mal and unfair. The figures were supâ€" plied by the Chief Constables and other official sources. towns and villages, and countless familiés, whose breadâ€"winners formerâ€" ly wasted their earnings on driank, are now able to live in comfort." _ Note also the number of admiited to these hospitals i In a hundred years the world has |\been transformed from illiteracy to lliteru(-y. Remember, that reading and | writing were the exclusive adornments Inf the we‘ltoâ€"do a hundred years ago. llt was not common for working men to do more than make their marks in | the early years of the nineteenth cenâ€" | tury. Today every boy and girl in | civilized nations who cares at all for the opportunity may learn, the store houses of the world‘s thought, as preâ€" served in books, have opened to rich | and poor alike. [ In music the treasure troves have | opened as never before. There exists toâ€"«lay a great library of musical books | accessable to every earvest student iand giving at a mere fraction of its | former cost, information leading to i musical success,. _ Twentyâ€"five years |ago the really worthâ€"while musical lbooks could almost have been counted upon the fingers of both hands. Conâ€" ‘certc. recitals, lectures, classes, movâ€" \ing pictures, mechanical instruments, I | to say nothing of the wonderful educaâ€" lti\'e value of the talking machines, | have thrown open the portals to everyâ€" lone who has the ambition and the inâ€" eue, po ing pictures, mec to say nothing of tive value of th have thrown open one who has the itlative to enter. "Blac Diamonds‘" Desir "You breathe out enoug! every hour in the four of cart gas to make & diamond worth «ays an exchange. What we know is how to breathe out ¢ the stuff in a week to make coal. respondence course other." The irish Mail. An American visiting Ireland aeked a man servant at a tavern, "How many maile do you have here a day*" â€" The oer:vant rcpll;i: ";‘h;de D‘nner, breakfast and supper," _ Tommy (retarning) â€"*"Yos, memma; he‘s ax asleep but his nose." f The Sleepless Member, Mother â€" ‘"FTommy, slip upstairs quietly and see if papa is asleep." 30% Push and Pull. Binksâ€""I see Spivins landed a good sition with Yankem, the dentist." Jinksâ€""Yes, he got it through pull." Cae, ‘\ o m _\ ,r. a’ï¬lï¬f / 7: EtA . Wwaak | 6g) <&. 2s M W ‘t\v-;’ i t N Futtil. ND 23 70 .31 Call of Music. Alcoholle Ad:imissions 1914 1921 0 59 64 44 ‘ Desired enough of carbon nough carbon f carbonle acid worth $15,000," at we‘d like to : out enough of 42 13.68% 101 63.92% alcoholies the cities 10 15 to of of STORMY WEATHER HARD ON BABY The stormy, blustery weather which we have during February and March is extremely hard on children. Condiâ€" tions make it necessary for the mothâ€" er to keep them in the house. They are often confined to overheated, badâ€" ly ventilated rooms and catch colds which rack their whole system. To gvard against this a box of Baby‘s Own Tablets shonld be kept in the house and an occasional dose given the baby to keep its stomach and bowels working regularly. This will not fail to break up colds and keep the health of the baty in good cond!â€" tion till the brighter days come along. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealâ€" ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘® Medicine Co., Brockâ€" vilio, Ont. Enormous quantities of flowers have to be grown in order to keep this flourâ€" ishing industry going, and Grasse is surrounded by field after field of wonâ€" derful blooms of all kinds. Of all the world‘s industries, scentâ€" making is one of the most pleasant. It is also one of the most fascinating. The greatest centre in the world for making perfumes is Grasse, on the beautiful Cote d‘Azur, in France. It is from here that the great perfumery firms of London and Paris obtain their supplies and the demand for Grasse products is continuously increasing. Every morning large lorries filled with picked blossoms rumble through the streets to the factories, where they unload and return to the fields for more. Inside the factory there is a scene of glowing color and an almost overâ€" powering perfume of many flowers. Girls and women are seated before long tables, surrounded by great heaps of blooms. The first proceeding is to take out any staiks or leaves that have been overlooked by the expert pickers who collected the flowers in the fields. The stamen is also removed from each flower as it is useless for scent. The petals and the pistil are the real providers of scent and are retained. The blooms are distilled in giant copâ€" pers with just sufficient water to cover them. When orange blossom is disâ€" tilled an essence known as "neroli" is obtained and this is used as a base for making the world{famous Eauâ€"deâ€"Colâ€" ogne. The distillation of roses yields "rose essence" and "rose water." In order to get one kilogramme of actual roseâ€" perfume, 10,000 lbe. of flowers are reâ€" quired, and this explains why this kind of scent is so expensive. These fascinating factories not only make scents and perfumes but also pomades for toilet purposes. The flowers are dipped in some fatty subâ€" stance, usually grease or olive ofil. This absorbs the smell of the particular flower dipped and later is put into the bottles and boxes in which it is to be sold. The most difficult of all blooms from which to extract perfume is the honeyâ€" suckle. Some idea of the importarce of the scent industry here can be obtained from the fact that more than 5,000,000 lbs. of flowers are gathered annually. The greater part of this great total is comnosed of roses, orange blossoms, and jasmine. Salesmanship. Patronâ€""Are you sure that this paste is imported from France?" Tactful Clerkâ€""Why, madam, you surely have bheard of the French paste tree Hurry Mother! A teaspoontul of "California Fig Syrup" now will thorâ€" oughly clean the l!ttle bowels and in & tew hours you bhave a well, playful child again. Even if cross, fevcrish, billous, constipated or full of cold, children love its "fruity" taste, and mothers can rest easy because it never fails to work all the souring food and narty bile right out of the stomach and bowels without griping or upsetting the child. Tell your druggist you want only the genuine "Califormia Fig Syrup" which has directions for bables and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother, you must say "California." Refuse any jmitation. [¢ \"fâ€â€œâ€™;i; ;Ib/)) I; r ! l Aâ€" H \ 4 \ J \£ 7 MOTHER! MOVE CHILD‘S BOWELS "California Fig Syrup" is Child‘s Best Laxative +99 In a City of Scent. tillation of roges yields "rose and "rose water." In order e kilogramme of actual roseâ€" 10,000 lbs. of flowers are reâ€" El Brown, a dark impressive figure in his long, black clerical coat, .. gift of the rector of St. James‘s, had come, says a@ writer in Harper‘s, in answer to a post card of mine, asking him to whitewash my back fence. "I‘se done moved, Miss Ma‘y," he said when he had explained to me that he could not do the work that day, since noon service at St. James‘ necesâ€" sitated his presence at the organ belâ€" lows, "an I reckon I‘ll jest leave my card so you kin know whar to sen‘ for me when you wants me ag‘in." With an expression of dignified grattâ€" fcation he vafolded a scrap of a church announcement leafiet that he had pulled out of the pocket of his waistcoat and handed me a&a card with the words: "Eli Brown, E. O . B., 50 Fenchurch Street." "Why, Miss Ma‘y, all de quality in our congrogation has letters after their names. _ bDr. Price, he has D.D., Dr. Bimmons has M.D. an‘ there‘s LLD. for some of ‘em and U.S.N. for dat Yankee off‘cer, an‘ coase I naturally has ‘em, too." "But what do they mean?" I insisted. "Now, Miss Ma‘y, don‘ you know? E. O. B. â€" Episcopal organ blower. Dat‘s what I is." "What do these letters stand for?" 1 asked. Nothing is worth doing That does not eventually send a man On a higher and wider quest. All labors that narrow, All toi!s that deaden, All pursuits that enslave, Are enemies to be fought With the sword of enterprise And the arrow of adventure. Therefore, at any moment Of this eventful and uneventful life, It behoves a man to ask himself What he is doing, > And whither his work is leading him. Would Do It Herself. Lady (in broker‘s office)â€"*"I wish to buy ten shares of Steel." Brokerâ€""At the market, madam?" Ladyâ€""Oh, if you can buy them at the market, never mind. I‘m going right down there." The moment you eat a tablet of "Pape‘s Diapepsin" your indigestion is gone. No more distress from a sour, acid, upset stomach. No flatulence, heartburn, palpitation, or miseryâ€"makâ€" ing gases. Correct your digestion for a fow cents. Kach package guarantred by druggist to overcome stomach trouâ€" ble. MoNEY ORDERS. When ordering goods by mail send Dominion Express Money Order. INDIGESTION, GAS, UPSET STOMACH Instantly! "Pape‘s Diapepsin" Corrects Stomach so Meals Digest What Are You Doing? At night touch spots of dandruif and itchini with Cuticura Ointment. Next morning shampoo with a suds of Cuticura Soap and hot water. Rinse with tepid water. Keep your gca‘p clean and healthy and rour hair will be luxuriant. Seap25¢c. Ointment 25 an2§0c. Talcum25¢. Sold Thick Lustrous Hair Kept So By Cuticura Teke half a teaspoon of Minâ€" ard‘s Liniment internally in molasses. HMeat liniment and rub®well into ;flectod:flrta for external treatment. oothesâ€" penetratasâ€"provenis. The Family Medicine Chest Limited, 344 St. Paul St., W., Montresl. . uticura Soap shaves without mus. â€"Elizaboth Gibson Cheyne Cough? 18§5UE No. 9â€"23, Liniment cessecroscessebe s 66 TORONTO essosrrrecssccrrs J Aspirm Declares He Spent Hundreds But Wife Continued to Sufâ€" fer Until Tanlac Ended Stomach Trouble. "For years she had suffered from inâ€" digestion and was so weak and runâ€" down I often thought she would fall in ber tracks. Nearly everything she ate disagreed with her and at iimes she was simply in agony, Her nerves were so unstrung the least little thing would worry and upset her for hours and she could scarcely get any sleep. "I never saw such a change as Tanâ€" lac has made in my wife and she says she is feeling like a girl of sixteen now," declared Howard Wiliiame, a wellâ€"known shoemaker of %8 Cornwall St., Toronto, Ont., recently. ‘"Well, after spending hundreds of dollars on different medicines, I didn‘t have much hope that Tanlac would help her, but, it‘s a fact, when she finished the treatment, every ailment was gone and she was eating, sleeping and feeling fine. That was several months ago and since then her health has been splendid. Hereafter we will always pin our faith to Tanlac." Tanlac is for sale by all good drugâ€" gists. Over 35 million bottles sold. in height. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. "Treezone" on an aching corn, instant ly that corn stops hurting, then short ly you lift it right of with fAngers Truly! Your druggist selis a tiny bottle of | "Freezcne" for a few cents, sufficient | to remove every bard corn, soft corn, | or cortf between the toes, and tha cab | luses, without soseness or irritation. / Lift Off with Fingers Only one man in 203 is over 6 feet Amerioa‘s Ploncer Dog Remedios UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tableis, you are not getting 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 Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"Also bottles of 24 and 100 ~Dn:g¢xm. > P0 enet o l l Mn e ce Ob m aiitcintivne taf Whmnit» Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Can®oa» 0° aceticacidester of Salicylioneld White it 12 well know menufacture, to assict the P‘“’â€â€˜" ageinst imitetions, t1 wiil be starcped with their genera) trkde imark, the OF WASTED CASH Made in Canada Chest coldsâ€"broken! Sloan‘s Liniment CORNS Inflamed membranes. congestion, oppressive pain. Apply Sloan‘s to chest and throat.It scatters congestion â€"your cold is gone! DOCG DISEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Adâ€" drees by the Author, dress ba the Author, .A Q‘g‘y lover Co. Inc. 120 est 24th Atreet New York, U.B.A Book on â€"kills pain] circulare. Bend 10¢ for tion, ete. _ An Broadway, N. Y. Of the 25,000,000 more women than men in Europe, Russia has the greatâ€" est surplus. Clean your bowels! Feel fAno! When you feel sick, dizzy, upset, when your head is dull or aching, or your stomach is sour or gasey, just take one or two Cascarets to relleve constipation. No gripingâ€"anilcest laxaâ€" tiveâ€"cathartic on earth for grownâ€"ups and childrea. 10c a box. ‘Taste like candy. Mother Tells How Her Daughter Suffered and Was Made Well by Lydia E. l’_inklnn’s-Vegehble YOUNG DAUGHTER MADE WELL Vancouver, B.C.â€"** My daughterisa young girl who has been having severe pains and weak and dizzy feelings for some time and had lost her appetite. Through an older daughter who had heard of a woman who was taking it for the same trouble, we were told of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" })ound. !:ly dlu&tcr has E«n taking it ‘or several months and is quite all right now. It has done all it was represented to do and we have told a number of friends about it. Iam never without a bottle of it in the house, for 1 myself take it for that weak, tired, wornâ€"out feeling vhich sometimes comes to us all. I find it is building me up and I strongly recommend it to women who are sufler» ing as I and my daughter have."‘â€"Mre. J. McDoxarn, 2947 26th Ave. East, Vancouver, B.C. _ _ d From the age of twelve a girl needsall the care a thoughtful mother can wive. Many a woman has suffered years of nnin and miseryâ€"the victim of thoughtâ€" ssness or ignorance of the mother who ghould have guided her during this time. 1f she complains of headaches, 1pnins in the back and lower limbs, or it you notice a slowness of thought, nervousâ€" ness or jrritability on the part of your daughter, make life easier for her. _ Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound is especially adapted for such conditions. 6 ARN $20 WEEKLY, 8P at home, addressing, ma "Cascarets" 10c UBAM CLOVER, THE PEMALB MELP WANTED. For Sluggish Liver or Constipated Bowels a) of Bavyer Manufacture of :th \ known tho* Awpirin means Haver one, the Teolers of Baver Company k. the "Bever Looss." PAIRsS, CRBSECOL