tin esourc® #$ db POST . WAR â€" FICHTER: WHO CLUNG TO LAND. Legion of Homor is Their Reâ€" ward Upon Recommendation of Minister of Agriculture. Postwar fighters for their country «re eight women who have been reâ€" warded with the Legion of Honor for having won the battle against heavy odds, clung to their land and succeedâ€" ed in raising large families, says a Paris despatch. The red ribbon was given them upon the recommendation of the Minister of Agriculture. Spartan mothers are these recipiâ€" ents, as the bald outline of their strugâ€" gles will show. The name of Mme. Marle Amet heads the list. Twentyâ€"three children, three of whom were killed in the war, were born on her farm at Cornimont, in the department of the Vosges. Nine of the eighteen children who still live with her are actually engaged in tillâ€" ing the soil. Fifteen children were raised by the wldow Marie Bailluais, whose farm is at Andou!lle. Two of these died in the service of their country, but those reâ€" maining are waging a winning battle against the land. This fight was kept up during the war despite the fact that seven of her sons were molilized. in the dey of the eig with her ing the s« The feelings of the widow Alix De grendel may be imagined when, in 1914, one year ofter her husband had died, she saw five of her eight childâ€" ren depart for the front. Later she bad to continue her fight after receivâ€" Ing word that three of these had been killed. However, with the aid of her two daughters, who were old enough to assist her, sho managed the farm despite the fact that it was twice ocâ€" cupied by the Germans and for many months was on the edge of a bittle field. The restoration work she acâ€" complished was partly done while the farm was under intermittent bombardâ€" ment. The official citation of the widow Pauline Dordoigne states that she "is considered the model of rural virtues in bher reglon." Of her twelve childâ€" ren nine aid her in farming her land. Bhe lost one son in the war. The brusque wording of the citation of Mmo. Vieren is like the brief synâ€" opsis of a tremendous drama: "Widow Vieren, born Adrienne Morel, cultivaâ€" tor at Vieuwxâ€"Borquin (Nord). Married in 1908 and had five children at time war broke out. Her husband was killâ€" ed by the onemy. Remaining with her little family of tender age, saw her farm entirely destroyed by German troops. Escaped with difficulty with her little children. When Vieuxâ€"Bor quin was no longer occupied she reâ€" turned to the farm and worked at reâ€" storing it although it was under a} most daily bombardment. It was soo1. only & mass of ruins. Afâ€" ter the armistice Mme. Vieren was one of the first to reâ€"enter the commune and begin reconstruction work. Warnâ€" ed by the landlord that he did not inâ€" tend to invest reparation indemnity on the place and that he intended sellâ€" ing it, Mme. Vieren borrowed money with which to buy the farm, proudly defending the patrimony of her five children whose father had died for his country. _ Mme. Vieren is a type of valiant Frenchwoman worthy of every respect." "In the big drive of 1918 the Ger mans occupled the farm a second time. (On the river Jordan, close by the pool that is pointed out as the one in which John baptized Jesus, a power plant has been completed. _ Already the Jordan is turning dynamos that eupply electric light to Jerusalem, Jatâ€" ta, Halfa and Nazareth. A dam now building at the outiet of Lake Tiberias will control the flow of water in the vriver all the year round. In a course of ons hundred and forty miles the Jorâ€" dan falls more than five thousand feet, and when the necessary power plants have been completed it can easily generate electricity enough to make Palestine an important manufacturing cantre $2,800 for an Egg. Although he is nearly eightyâ€"one, Mr. Henry Stevens, the oldest auc tioneer in England, conducts a sale more awiftly and smoothly than do most members of his calling. His auc tton rooms near Covent Garden, Lonâ€" don, are an Aladdin‘s Cave for the curto collector and the worldâ€"mart for great auk‘s eggs. It ta long since the great auk gave vp laying eges or even breathing, but hogo stale eggs are as valuable as they are rare. Two boys bought a box of egge at a country sale and found at the bottom two great auk‘s eggs, which they sent to Mr. Stevens, with the result thag they got a cheque for $2,500. No ona has since bad the same lyok. Thers are only about seventy Sugar beet costs can be reduced materially threugh thorough soil preâ€" paration, which requires fall or early spring plowing, and a generous use of the cultiâ€"pasker sr the roller. ‘ of the aggs in existence, so !f you do #ud one â€"â€"â€"â€"! Restored Under Twice Occupled by Germans. Power Plant on Jordan. E HONORS _ ‘NERVES RESTORED | Surnames and Their Origin EIGHT WOMEN HEADACKE GONE _ soeer _T â€"~â€" mascom Bombardment. _ "In the summer of 1922," says Mrs. Mary Hill, of 31st Avenue West, Vanâ€" couver, B.C., "I became very anxious about my young daughter‘s health. She was attending a commercial school, and between her close study and exceptionally hot weather she beâ€" came very much run down. I noticed that she looked white and seemed conâ€" stantly tired, was depressed over her studies, and irritable and peevish about the house. I got several tonics I had heard well spoken of, but they did not seem to help her. At this stage an advertisement of Dr. Wilâ€" |liams‘ Pink Pills, telling of a similar | case, was brought to my attention, and | I decided to give this medicine a trial. | You may judge of my surprise and deâ€" light whenâ€"I noticed an improvement in her condition, almost before the first box was finished. She continued taking Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for some time, gaining in hea‘lth and strength. Her bheadaches, backaches and depression disappeared, and she ]uga!n looked well and happy. She has since, I am glad to say, kept perfectly well and passed her examinations with credi.. lu c4 i ts td i 1400c id lt cisi t ids stt A Grateful Letter From a Well Sourceâ€"An occupation. Known Vancouver Nurse. Roper is a common name in this country. But few persons, perhaps, "In the summer of 1922," says Mrs. realize that it is exactly the same Mary Hill, of 31st Avenue West, Vanâ€" name as that born by the Charlotte couver, B.C., "I became very anxious Corday of historical fame. Because tea deteriorates very rapidâ€" ly if exposed to air many tests and exâ€" periments have been made to find an lemcient means of packing it so as to | preserve the flavor. The "SALADA" x Tea Company first used lead packages but some years ago adopted aluminum | foil, alum{num being more durable and !lighter than lead, besides, of course, ‘ being absolutely sanitary and airâ€"tight. |\ This method of packing is admitted to \ be the most effective known to preâ€" | serve the flavor of tea. All "SALADA" ]ls sold in airtight aluminum packâ€" "I must have worried more than 1‘ knew over my daughter‘s health, for | though I have earned my living as a maternity nurse for the past 12 years,f even the most trying cases did not| seem to exhaust me until last fall, when I seemed to give out suddenly. I became so nervous that I had to deâ€" cline work, and I suffered from headâ€" aches and a constant feeling of deâ€" pression. I attributed my condition to the fact that I was entering a critical time of life. It was my daughter who suggested that Dr. Williams‘ Pink| Pills might do me as much good as‘ they had done her, and after a faithful | use of them for a time this proved to| be the case. My nerves regained their| steadiness, and my general health imâ€"| proved so much that I felt able to un-' dertake my nursing duties again. 1‘ have taken the pills occasionally since, | and thanks to them have been able to stand the strain of my work splendidly | and still feel as well as ever. 1 am| very grateful to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and am thankful to have found such a reliable medicine for use in my home, and I can conscientiously reâ€"| commend it to any suffering woman or| girl coming under my care or ln-l fuence." You can get these pilis from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50c a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Nothing New. "Government scientists have sucâ€" ceeded in constructing a scale that re cords oneâ€"billionth of a pound." "Old stuff. My coal dealer‘s been using one of ‘em right along." The genial Prime Minister of New Zealand, Mr. Massey, can look back upon a remarkable career, for he be gan his career as a farmer, An Ulsterman by birth, Mr. Massey started farming at the ago of fourteen in his adopted country, where he joinâ€" ed his parents, who had gone there as settlers. Mr. Massey tells the story of a man who, denouncing politics to a friend, declared that he would sooner put up for the local asylum than for the House of Commons. in." _ "Yes," sald his friend, "and you would stand a better chance of getting Who may be afflicted with pimples and biackbeads or any other facial blemish or skin trouble, are invited to write us. For 32 years we have been successfully tmgmg gun, Young Men and Women Scalp, Hair and Complexional Trouâ€" bles, including Superfluous Hair, Moles, Warts, etc. We manufacture the Princess Tollet Preparations. Booklet "K" mailed free. * HISCOTT IN8STITUTE LIMITED THE REASON FOR ALUMINUM. From Farm to Premiership 81D College St., Toronto ROPER Variationsâ€"Corder, Cordier, Corday. Raclal Originâ€"English and French. Like Cooper, Tupper and other famâ€" ily names of similar classification, it took its origin in the description of the orginal bearers‘ profession. In England of the Middle Ages the use of the termination "er," a relic of the ancient Teutonic "were," meaning "man," was much more prolifically used than it is toâ€"day. The man who made an article, or who worked with an article, was described quite regularâ€" ly by the addition of "er" to that arâ€" ticle. So, where we would speak toâ€" day of a ropemaker the medieval Engâ€" lish called him a "roper," or a "cordâ€" er" if they used the Normanâ€"French word, though sometimes he was also known as a "cordwainer." As the French language developed on the continent the tendency was to insert an "i" before this termination "er," thus giving the form "cordier." Aund, in time, as the pronunciation of the final "er" changed in French from what it remains in English toâ€"day to "ay," the name came to be pronounced "cordiay." The family name of Corâ€" day, then, is simply explained as an occasional local variation of "simpliâ€" fied" pronunciation and spelling. Goodâ€"Bye to Oxfordshire. Goodâ€"bye to Englandâ€"land of little towns And a great history,. Goodâ€"byo, sweet lanes Full of bright angel children, and old men, Ruddy and gentle; and the oaks and beeches, Elms that engulf a hamlet in the sky, Majestic, beautiful, benignly towering Over a tiny green and grassy villâ€" Thatched and depressed with ivy and the bechivesâ€" And infant shops with Lilliputian toys, Odd nothings sold for a penny with a smile, From clean bowed windows out of wonderland. These are her jJewels, these small sacred towns, Unique in the universe! These miniaâ€" tures, Initials on a mediaeval text, Brilliant as Chaucer‘s deathâ€"defying page, Enrich the map of England. Such she Is, and shall be, whatever else the fates, Conspiring in their gloomy cavern, threaten, P Or the dark skies forecast, or foes at homeâ€" Enemies, or the Avengers of the worldâ€" Wreak on her distant realms through peace or war. STOMACH MISERY, GAS, INDIGESTION "Pape‘s Diapepsin‘" is the quickest, surest relief for indigestion, gases, flatulence, heartburn, sourness or stomach distress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost immediate stomach relief. Correct your scomach and digestion now for a few cents. Druggists sell millions of packages of Pape‘s Diapepsin. Sing That Cold Away. Binging is one of the best prevenâ€" tives of a cold. The common cold, as most people are aware, is an inflammatory condiâ€" tion of the lining of the upper respriaâ€" tory passages, Though disease germs are probably always the cause, the way for these is opened by the inhalaâ€" tion of frritant particles of dust and cold air. Singing, besides giving proper conâ€" trol of the breathing, teaches us to exâ€" pand our lungs fully, thus providing valuable and healthy exercise for the whole respiratory machine. It inculâ€" cates the habit of breathing thythmiâ€" cally through the nose, and so ensures thorough warming and filtering of the air before it reaches the respiratory passages. By teaching us to breathe properly and by producing in us a sense of jJoy and wellâ€"being, singing tends to inâ€" crease our resistance against infécâ€" tions of all kinds. It promotes the diâ€" gestion and assimilation of our food, and thus builds up substantial reâ€" serves. r Singing is, above all, the language of the emotions, and is probably far older than articulate language. It thus provides us with the means of relievâ€" ing our feelings, and the consequent effect on our health is astounding. Lastly, by calling up the nobler and pleasanter emotions, it tends to drive away care and anxiety, which owing to the subtle bioâ€"chemical changes they cause in our blood, render us more likely to catch cold. Marconi, the inventor, says that be| the tender little ‘% has perfected a method by which he! bowels so nicely. ~**~_" can send radio messages as a beam,‘ It sweetens the stomach and starts the projected in any desired direction. liver and bowels acting without gripâ€" Moreover, the new form of transmls-i ing. Contains no narcotics or soothâ€" sion requires only a small part of thei ing drugs. Say "California" to your electrical energy needed to broadcast druggist and avoid counterfeits! Inâ€" throughout a circle the radius of sist upon genuine "California Fig which is the same length as the beam. | Byrup" which contains directions. â€"John Jay Chapman Varlationsâ€"MacCorkie,. Raclal Originâ€"Scottish. Sourceâ€"A given name. Here is a family name which, though purely Scottish Gaelic in its origin as such, traces back ultimately to Norse sources, and if you hear this name there is a good chance that you have a line of ancestry reaching back to the Vikings through Scotland. The name of MacCorkill or Macâ€" Corkle was borne by one of the brapct}- es or septs of the Clan Gunn, which was decidedly one of the fighting clans of the Highlands, its history vying with that of the MacGregors in records of desperate fighting. But the given name from which Macâ€" Corkill is derived is Thorketil, a relic of the old pagan Norse religion, and the meaning of which is "Thor‘s ketâ€" tle." The kettle or cauldron was an utensil which played a large part, figuratively, in the worship of the Vikings, and is found toâ€"day as an eleâ€" ment in a lot of family names, and even still in given names in the Scanâ€" dinavian countries. There is a great deal of Norse blood in Scotland, principally along the north and west coasts. At one period a considerable part of the coast was in the hands of Norwegian settlers, who retained their allegiance to the Norse kings, and who later took their places among the Celts of the Highâ€" lands in full Gaelic clan organization. New Record Set by Sun Life of Canada. Evidence of widespread prosperity is afforded by the statement published by the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada covering its transactions for the year 1923. This Company, which is international in its character, operâ€" ating in over fifty countries, reports substantial advances in all departâ€" ments. Of particular public interest is the fact that no fewer than 318,443 policyâ€" holders are assured under ordinary contracts issued by the Company, while in addition 22,781 employees of a great diversity of industries are proâ€" tected under Group Insurance policies. The business in force at December 31st last reached the tremendous total of $703,765,243, showing an increasoe for the year of $72,360,373. The new business written during the year amounted to $119,804,657, the policies actually issued and paid for being 85,â€" 975, for & total of $107,891,255. Durâ€" ing the year the payments to policyâ€" holders and their beneficiaries in reâ€" spect to Death Claims, Matured Enâ€" dowments, Profits, etc., amounted to $22,145,079, bringing the total so paid since the organization of the Company to $151,916,489. This amount exceeds the total business in force with the Company fourteen years ago, and afâ€" fords stirring testimony to the degree in which its function is being fulfilled. Profits paid or allotted to policyâ€" bolders reached the amount of $4,417,â€" 068. After setting aside $3,500,000 for unforeseen contingencies, the net Surâ€" plus over all liabilities and capital stock advanced by $3,603,447 to $17,â€" $72,868. The record is one in which the Directâ€" ors of the Campany express their own satisfactionâ€"a sentiment which will be widely shared. It is interesting to note that the Company, in order to facilitate the constant quest for new business, and to maintain the high standard of service to which they have accucstomed their policyholders, have established a number of new divisions during the past year, and have further developments of a similar character in contemplation. From the Canon‘s Mouth! One ambition of Canon Hay Aitken, Viceâ€"Dean of Norwich Cathedral, is to beat John Wesley‘s record of preachâ€" ing 27,000 sermons. But Father Time may intervene. The Canon is eightyâ€" two; and, starting when he was sevenâ€" teen, he has now delivered 22,000 serâ€" mons. He has never preached from a writâ€" ten one, and as it is stated that Wesâ€" ley made one sermon serve many times it is possible that the Canon has already delivered more original disâ€" courses than the founder of Methodâ€" ‘Twins for Both. Everything is divided equally. The rich man has his twin six and the poor man his six twins. Remember a dren‘s lunch. Mother! Give Sic‘ Child Constipated, bilâ€" 4t Jous, feverish, or $ sick, colic Babies % & and Children love 4 / > to take genuine \1)) "California _ Fig e h \% Syrup." No other 6( D in laxative regulates * V4.>* the tender little Am bowels so nicely. ~**~_" It sweetens the stomach and starts the liver and bowels acting without gripâ€" ing. Contains no narcotics or soothâ€" ing drugs. Say "California" to your Harmless Laxative for a Bilious, Constipated Baby ‘or Child. Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. "California rig Syrup" MacCORKILL hot dish for & §‘ '739’ )\_Q Just how cold is it at the North Pole? If the temperature is lower than 45 degrees below sero Capt. Roald Amundsen‘s postponed attempt to cross it in an airplane is likely to fail when and if he attempts it, Gerâ€" man pilots say, although that degree of cold would hardly make a Manitoba farmer bring outshis earmuffs. Fortyâ€" five degrees below zero, Fahrenbeit, veteran German pilots recall, once stopped the war in one sector when no other elements or earthly agencies could do it, and therefore it is likely to stop Amundsen. Early in 1917, they recall, the Ger-] mans were striving to regain some trenches in the vast swamps between Mitau and Riga, which had been taken by the Russians in a Christmas surâ€" prise attack. _ The operations were constaatly being slowed up by the cold until the bitterest day came on Febrâ€" uary 3. On that day, despite the inâ€" tense cold, airplanes started for an atâ€" tack, but were soon forced to land, as the oil froze in the engines. Motor cars with ammunition, tractors drawâ€" ing guns and the hydraulic recoil meâ€" chanism of the guns all were frozen golid. In the meantime the same thing happened on the Russian side, and the battle which had been planned to be an intensive one simply froze up. The pilots believe that the same fate might overtake Amundsen. Howâ€" ever, it is the general belief that in July the temperature at the North Pole is somewhat higher than 45 deâ€" grees below zero. WINTER WEATHER HARD ON LITTLE ONES Our Canadian winters are exceedingâ€" ly hard on the health of little ones. The weather is often so severe that the mother cannot take the little one out for an airing. ‘The consequence is that baby is confined to overheated, badly ventilated rooms; takes cold and becomes cross "and peevish. . Baby‘s Own Tablets.should be given to keep the little one healthy. They are a mild laxafive which regulate the stomach/and bowels and thus prevent colds. "The Tablets are sold by mediâ€" cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A clergyman,â€"introducing some new hymn books, gave the clerk a notice after the sermon. The clerk had one of his own to give with reference to baptism of infants He announced: "All those who have children they wish baptized, please send in their names at once." The clergyman, who was deaf, asâ€" suming that the clerk was giving his notice, arose and said: "And I want to say for the benefit of those who haven‘t any, that they may be obtainâ€" ed from me any day, between 2 and 4 o‘clock, the ones with the red backs at twentyâ€"fAive cents and the ordinary litâ€" tle ones at fifteen cents." Avoid loss when sending money by mailâ€"Use Dominion Express Money Ordersâ€"the safe, convenient, inexpenâ€" sive way. A canal in England is now equipped with an overhead electric trolley that furnishes power for a motorâ€"driven propeller in the stern of each barge. The result is said to be highly satisâ€" factory. The barges attain a speed of four miles an hour, and, since only one man is needed on each boat, the operating costs are greatly reduced. Colds Headache | Toothache Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism ’ Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"| only. Each unbroken package conâ€"‘ tains proven directions. Handy bores | of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drugâ€"| gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.| While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer Manufacture, to assist : the public against imitations, the Tabâ€" lets of Bayer Company will be stampâ€" ed with their general trade mark, the Cross" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Asâ€" pirin proved safe by millions and pro scribed by physicians over twentyâ€" three years for Beware of Imitations! qpse Extreme Cold Might End Polar Flight. Unless you see the name "Bayor ASPIRIN A Clergyman‘s Ditemma. More lonesome than a lonesome #hip at sea, The sailing moon rides beautifully by. Blown from such purple harbors ae In unimagined corners of the sky, She is not careless where she gazes down On sleepy streets the silver silence fills, But thoughtful ever of & little town And foolishfond of little, wooded Beafolk are given so to telling tales, I think the moon, when she puts in at last, May spin a story where she reefs her salls; And there her talk of shortlands that she passed, Is all of glimmering meadows, ghostly Money has wings ; but, alas, it is not a homing pigeon! Pure organic phosphate, known to most druggists as Bitroâ€"Phosphate, is what nerveâ€"exhausted, tiredâ€"out people must have to regain nerve force and energy. That‘s why it‘s guaranteed. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 26 Front St. East, Toronto, Ont. Strong Nerves A sleepy town little hill. CAE KX Si ~~â€" jsseue No 10 B% , M.D.. advises: "Persons who suffer from severe indigestion and constipation should take afâ€" ter each meal and at bedtime, fifâ€" teen to thirty drops of the Exâ€" tract of Roots known to the Drug ‘Trade as "Mother Seigel‘s Curaâ€" tive Syrup." Get the Genuine at your druggist. KSEX ERLEXERALIAR Relieves ï¬ @asesymptoms when their weal trouble is lack of trom in the blood. It is the iron in your blood that enables you to get the nourishment out of your food. Without fron you:r food me;le"l.y passes through you = eut doing you any good; you NUXATED IRON wunâ€"down conditions, it has helped thousands of ethers. It should help ‘ you. Ask for it at any OLD CHUN le suffer from athes, peins and sls Harbor Talk. an eminent physician‘s at bloo'd‘zrucrlpflol, andardi It is recomâ€" Sealed Packa ge ( which keep:.» the tobaag , _ in its original condition ean cure all ail« ments of the hu» man body, but an immense mumber of peoâ€" wle suffer from Dyspepsia OoNTARIO ARC TORONTO |§o in '/z“). tins â€"â€"David Morton Smoke lonesome I"v"()bmhow:us, YOUR OWN | wool manufactured or exchang» ed for yarn or blunkets, . Woolien Mills, Georgetown, Ontario. | nmonmicenmacet xfURiNE8 | For Your ~3y * | §27 EYESE* Try every day to consider a master» pieceâ€"a picture, a musical composi« tion, a poem or some bit of good prose literature. Constant association with masterpieces makes for intellectual elevation and leaves little room for cheapness either of thought or of speech. Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the houss, Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham‘s V eg« etable Compound Relieved Her of Inflammation and Great Weakness West St. John, N. B.â€" "I was in ï¬eul runâ€"down condition followi birth of my twin boys. I had a pe':.} deal of inflammation, with pains an weakness. Finallf; mmoctor recomâ€" mended Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable w“lpo«nâ€m He said that your medicine dbethoonlythinftobuild me UJm I am sure he is right, for I am feeling much better and am gaining in weight, m Yono down to ninetyâ€"three was in bed for over amonth, There are many women who find their h‘bouehold duties :lmoot undmebeu.ble ow â€" to some weakness or de ment. Tbcehu'oublq may be slight, yet cause such annoying symptoms as dn‘fin. pains, ve-inunndnnm-do'l feeling. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Veghble Come pound is a Igl‘e-ndid medicine for such conditions. It ‘l)n many cases tbl-:lieved those ptoms by removi cause of th:n{m Mre. RLchie'n :x‘perhnce in but one of many. You might be interested in reading Imï¬nkï¬'l Private Textâ€"Book uporn N. n c Hree in aoiieg tas Iiviie a 4 Etl’hkbam le:Ycim Co,, coba’;r Ontario. s' MOTHER OF but am up again now. I have recom« mended ‘t.lgo Vegeuhle Compound to my friends and give you permiasion to use y letter."â€"Mrs. ELm®R A. Rirom®, Rodney St., West St. John, N. B. 4" EYESEZ) Wholesome cieansine Refreshing CA l lhmfl::t.. 2 4 were large a I†tered, and itc 4 so M‘ll(hm es N Tem," _ **My trouble started with pimples breaking out all over my face and shoulders. ‘The pimples were large and red and fesâ€" tered, and itched and burned * so badly that I could not Classihed Advertisements And Shoulders. Burned Badly. Cuticura Heals. ITGHY PIMPLES ALL OVER FACE Boap 26¢. Ointment % and 60c sleep. ‘They were very sore and my clothing aggravated , 15¢ FOR SALE TWIN BOYS