abou bunters; 5 ed there néeat t Vight: the w teave Of the 100,000 private houses deâ€" royed in Belgium during the war, out 95,000 have been rebuilt, while re thar 1,200 miles of ro-dwnylm The mind is a bank that pays comâ€" und interest on the knowledge you mosit in it. a weasels It t pCAâ€"le)4 ~PSoulls 14 Lungs @T A Twoâ€"Ton Carpet the H nderf 1€ me Weaseis Prove a Pest The B B _a paradize for big game 52 wild animals were killâ€" a recent year. are a pest, and instead of abbit they have destroyed e native birds. Not Fully Operated. v breathing only abou»s 10 f the lung contert is idquarters. xty men to carry this masâ€" lownstairs to the lawns. ong and 4( feet wide, it is ul carpet which took the f Agra seven years to it U pring cle: arpet wh Waterloc oom duri M ing at Wi ask. The lif n‘ in the bushes "Hikin‘ "* y Scouts at b cook your dinner to cook; scattered ‘round, u look. cout Pascport expect the rest of ipper, too it early dvu ptween two trees ight : orry you 1 lack. With _The d Garrott. dusty road up the air t pest New Zea ed weasels. Now m various centres Stayner for a big ports and activiâ€" sistant Provincial of Toronto and emin of Stayner. t« n the brush ati igh ee th othe that D â€"Boys‘ Life xt ecial dread i is beating covers the the being memâ€" n Canadian Oh, boy! Sc be made ter or the rciation to B Stayner. sion for a _ hundred ng ad M Tt highest op with n nt An t} Og Ve N abroad Wembâ€" places, R Th ch be Passâ€" to all y De O W is z_ WE WANT CHURNING n We eupply cans and jay express charges. We pay dally by express money orders, which can be cashed aenywhere without any charge. To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not less than 30 per cent Butter Fat \ For referencesâ€"Head Office, Toronto, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker, Established for over thirty years. CREAM "We‘re watching out," they said, "for to see that them motorists isn‘t exceeding the legal limit." At the time the cars were going out along the level stretch of road, few of them under forty miles an hour, and many of them much faster. Nugent, much amused, asked the sergeant what he would do if he saw a car that appeared to be exceeding the limit. "We‘d order him to disist," said t1 There duty at notebool car, you will motor along one Proâ€" vincial Highway one Sunday, and choose another point of interest the next. The end of the summer will find you happier and in better health of mind nncr body because of these outings, if you have, when away from home, taken care to se that you Drink only water that is safe, Use only milk that is safe, Eat only food that is safe, Swim only where it is cafa Blossom time has now until the snow impossible. Crescent Grindâ€" ing is an exclusive Simonds feature.Simonds Canada Saw Co. i 2 maieg. > ns > Aniiiiindits : Whether in yc';ur own The roadside picnic he city for the wee 1g Bowes Company Limited, Toronto ‘Simonds! n In tho A Liberal Speed Limit. Dr. Middleton will be glad to answer questions on Pul ters through this column. Address him at Spadina Crescent, Toronto. The same good tea for TEA is good tea‘ Order from your grocer his best tea he‘ll usually send "Red Rose." CAMPS AND HEALTH EDUCATION se byg ething time has come and from the snow fies in the fall, enjoy the great outdoors. 11ng new and there was st1.l oom on the road, Irelandâ€"If leve Sir Henry Robinson in r Memories of Irish liféâ€" idise for drivers who liked One of Sir Henry‘s memorâ€" llows : Ni sponé h rare to ce that you _ | . When planning for summer holiâ€" btre to so6 ‘That gou ldays it is well to think of these things. water that is safe, | A vacation in the most beautiful spot ilk that is safe, | will mean sorrow rather than joy od that is safe, [if it has as its aftermath a severe where it is safe. | attack of typhoid fever. | For your health‘s stake, "watch le picnic or the run to your step" when you are away from the weekâ€"end visit will home. once tw X1€ ib BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON HOLIDAYS ; come and Provincial Board of Health 11 polucemen on id each had a id wore an air ., Colonel Nuâ€" they were doâ€" or a friend‘s ard of Health, Ontario. answer questions on Public Health matâ€" |actual baking process by means of an !eloctric light ‘which lights up the inâ€" |side of the oven. One hundred thousâ€" Iand rolls can be turned out every day. I In the kitchens attached to the bakâ€" ‘fery are to be found electric breatâ€"butâ€" ;ttering machines, each capable of cutâ€" ting and buttering 20,000 slices of 'bread in a day; and electric potato ‘peeling and cleaning machines, each gdealing with a ton of potatoes in an | hour. Even when you have gained a good deal of knowledge you still need to learn how to use it. Prisoners awaiting trial in French prisons are deprived of their bootâ€" laces, collars, and ties, in case they attempt to destroy themselves. | down the road, and a dark blue torâ€" ï¬ pedoâ€"shaped racer with driver and | mechanic in leather skull caps crouchâ€" ;mg low in their souts came along at about seventy miles an hourâ€"a flying blur of blue on the highway. It seemâ€" ed that here at last was a case where | the order to desist must inevitably be |given. But not a bit of it! | "Good for ye," yelled the excited iconstable at the flying car; and the ‘sergcant, making a speaking trumpet | of his hands, shrieked out encouragingâ€" [ly: "Ye‘re the besht yet!" Grand Stand Plays. When the baseball hero makes an extraordinary play and the crowd goes wild, the extra strain on the grand stand amounts to 300 pounds a square inch. sheet iron. 1 actual baking electric light tu CC The bakery has been designed to supply bread, rolls, and pastries of all kinds to the cafes and restaurants, thus obviating the troubles and worâ€" ries of transport of huge supplies to the Exhibition. Sixteen steamâ€"pipe ovens have been installed in the bakery. In a fireâ€"box PC One of the greatest wonders of Wembley this year is the neverâ€"stop bakery, which will work unceasingly day and night while the Exhibition is open to cater for the needs of visitors. At that mon down the road pedoâ€"shaped â€"ri mechanic in le: Ing low in the about seventy : blur of blue on ed that here at the order to de given. But not bring you past one or more of the several hundred camping grounds for motor tourists where you may stop and rest. Some of the camps have a small charge, while others are free; but whether you use a free or a pay camp, make sure of the purity of the drinkingâ€"water and the milk. If the children want to swim, find a place that is free from danger and where the water is free from serious conâ€" tamination. Rolls t int 0 hin fs The Neverâ€"Stop Bakery. d each pair of ovens is a small of smokeless coke. _ Along the of the ovens is a series of tubes, hermetically sealed, and in these is water which, heated by the fires, circulates and provides the sary cooking heat. Is, moulded by machinery, are ito the ovens on great trays of 30 years. Try it ovens The b: he baker process | which lis ment a roar was d, and a dark bl racer with drive pipe ovens have been bakery. In a fireâ€"box r of ovens is a small House, Spadine An W itch tubes, these y the s the heard the an inâ€" I Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the House. A bold sportsman who lived in Edg} spWlSip IOUL LIQHIIRCL, land a bundred years ago when the| "What, starting to build a house, railway was new accepted an invitaâ€" and winter only a week off!" Thus tion to go with a house party for a|the passerâ€"by hailed the young conâ€" run of five miles by rail. In a letter| tractor who was laying the sills for a written in 1829 he gives this account new building. of his experience: "The quickest mo. The workman grinned. "I sold my tion is to me frightful; it is really flyâ€" house a little while ago; too good an ing, and it is impossible to divest yourâ€" offer to refuse., Hustled right over self of the notion of instant death to here, bought this lot, had the cellar all upon the least accident‘s happenâ€"| dug and walledâ€"and now we‘re all set ing. It gave me a headache that has to get this shack up, inclosed and not left me yet." The train in which roofed before bad weather hits us. he rode "flew" at the terrific speed of Get as far as that, chimney up and twentyâ€"three miles an hour. zheater inâ€"and we can finish it, no Probably the most popular illusâ€" trated paper is the bank note. in men‘s haitreuts Heâ€""Girls." I would advise womer, particularly those on the prairie or the farm, to keep a supply of these pills always on hand. One trial will convince you| of their worth. I have recommendedl them to many of my friends and never‘ have they failed to produce good reâ€"i sults." 4 You car get these pills from your druggist, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont I THE ONE SURE WAY TO G00D HEALTH Is Keeping the Blood Pure by Using Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis. In their native home in Trinidad the ants are always to be found in the neighborhood of rose trees. They cut off parts of the petals of the roses and carry them to their nests, holding them over their heads like parasols. On reaching home «they masticate the petais thoroughly and pile up the reâ€" sulting mixture in heaps inside the nest. On the beds thus prepared grows Among the recent acquisitions at the London Zoologica!l Gardens, says a newspaper despatch, js a nest of umâ€" brelia ants that have never been seen before in the gardens. They have had a busy time, because during the jourâ€" ney the queen‘s apartments became greatly ~disarranged, but the comâ€" munity soon put them to rights again. very fond wey" ;â€" J Nx _;> 4 ~y22 BPe L\\\\\“ V * Eesz%?\. i Ad \Q\\K(s SR \\ >â€"SSmN 2 NJ "Flying" at 23 Miles Per Hour. The Newest Thing in Haircuts Ants With Pink Parasols. pecial fungus of which the ants are Well, what‘s the newest thing s t N pBiIIâ€"AI\\ ig\f:»\«:i*%\\\\ \] x N "-}\: ‘ 99 | Faith and Work are good partners. ‘They don‘t wait for each other to do | the thing that needs doing; they ! tackle it together. Faith believes that ; God will help on any good job, whether | it be building a house or saving a soul. It calls upon him confidently for coâ€" operation. And while Faith is doing | that, Work swirgs a lusty hammer, Mrs. John A. Patterson, Scotch Vilâ€" lage, N.S., says:â€""There are six childâ€" |ren in our home, and the only mediâ€" | cine they get is Baby‘s Own Tablets, [ and I have not known the Tablets to | fail when a medicine was needed. No ,mother should be without the Tablets in the house." Like Mrs. Patterson Ithouszmds of other mothers are quick |to praise Baby‘s Own Tablets for gbringlng health and comfort to their Iliule ones. The Tablets are a mild ‘but thorough laxative which regulate | the stomach and bowels, thus banishâ€" ?ing constipation and indigestion, colds | and simple fevers, and making teethâ€" ing easy. They are guaranteed to conâ€" tain no opiates and are perfectly safe for the youngest child. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 lcents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Courage. "My closing words," said Sir James Barrie to the St. Andrew‘s students, in May last, "must be of a lovely virtue. Courage is the thing. Uniless a man has that virtue he has no security for preserving any other. Courage, my children, and forget the unseen with a cheer. Fight on till the whistle blows." For Every I!!â€"Minard‘s Liniment. So then it doesn‘t matter whether you say, "Pray, but swing your hamâ€" mer," with the Spanish, or "God helps them that help themselves," with Ben Franklin, or "Faith without works is dead," with the Bible. Get the idea and use it. Look to God for help, but put all that you can into your effort The workman grinned. "I sold my house a little while ago; too good an offer to refuse, Hustled right over here, bought this lot, had the cellar dug and walledâ€"and now we‘re all set to get this shack up, inclosed and roofed before bad weather hits us. Get as far as that, chimney up and heater inâ€"and we can finish it, no matter what‘s doing outside. I‘m praying for good weather, but I‘m swinging my hammer as fast as I can at the same time." "Good luck! I won‘t stand around and hinder you," said the other, laughing. _ _When little Francois was two years old she was left a widow and destitute. \HMer husband bad foolishly backed bills for friends and creditors, and at his death the burden of indebtedness ‘fell on her. â€" The farmstead and the | stock had to be sold. she took a post ‘as housekeeper, and the little boy did |his part by helping to herd turkeys. | When she had saved a little money ‘hhe returned to her pative villago of | Asnieres. There was an excellent Proâ€" { testant school there, where she w inted ‘her boy to be educated; she bad alâ€" ;ready dedicated him to the ministry. She farmed a few acres ol lwid with ,her own hands and with such help as ‘she covld occasionally afford. _ The | boy reared rabbits to pay for his Latin | books and his «choolâ€"staticnery. Yet, [ poor though they were, the little cotâ€" | tage was a centre of hospitality. |_ Amid bher poverty she kept bright | the flame of her ideal for the boy. She ;introduced him to books. _ Together | they read the life of Robert Moffat and | it became one of the. izster influences |in the boy‘s life. In circumstances heavy enough to break a woman‘s heart Mrs. Slessor cherished her ideals. It was she that first told little Mary stories of far Calaâ€" bar and of the cruelties of the natives, It was she that thus fired the girl‘s imagination and urged her to her great work for humanity. Y SX LMTTLE ONES USED BASY‘s OWX TABLETS That he might be a minister was heri great dream. But she was not thiuk-‘ ing of herseif. When the Paris NMisâ€"| sionary Society appealed to him and | he hesitcted on her account she wrote: | "I understand now that God is calling ; you. Go, I will not keep you back. I had hoped you would be the staff of my old age, but it was not for mysel{ 1 reared you. The good God will not ; forsake me." | in Dundee not long ago a memorial | was unveiled to brave Mary Slessor,| the "White Queen of Okoyong." Courâ€"! ageous as she was, her life was no more heroic than her mother‘s. | Married to a drunken husband, Mrs. Slessor had to earn the living as well as care for the children. Drink was all the father lived for: Sometimes when| his wife had gone without supper that! he might have food he would throw it into the fire in his drunken rage. ( "O mother, how sjlendid it must be to be a missionary!‘ he exclaimed one day. .« "Yes, my child," she replied; "it is finer even than to be a minister." It is sometimes said that. all great men have great mothers. That is sureâ€" ly true of the French missionary Franâ€" cois Coillard. Nothing in the son‘s brave and noble life eclipses the heroâ€" ism and devotion of his mother. All Honor to These Mothers! / Swing eeper, and the lit y helping to herd she had saved a 1i ned to her native There was an ex: hool there, where to be educated; s licated him to th Your Hammer. ... Look Younger cDEAF"% Careâ€"worn, norveâ€"exhausted w« need Bitroâ€"Phosphate, a pure or; phosphate dispensed by druggists New York and Paris physicians scribe to increase weight and stre and to revive youthful looks and ings. Price $1 per pkge. A Chemical Co., 25 Front St. . Toronto, Ont. tonic "Years ago, when meat was roas oven an open fire, sticks of hard w« to withstand the heat were put in 1 meat to keep it from falling ap when done," said Prof. Frye. * sticks were of dagger wood. This m later shortened to dog wood. Where Dogwood Got its Name The dogwood tree derivas its name from a long conmnection with butchers, and not from any canine associations, Prof. T. C. Frye, of the botany departâ€" ment of the University of Washingâ€" ton, says. are harnessed to the machines trot them nearer the water‘s edge. When the tide begins to make, the machincs are hauled back one at a time. At first the movement is conducted with dignity, but as the waves gather speed the haulers become excited. Stage by stage the machines retreat until finally the great breakers come crashing toâ€" ward the land. Then the retreat beâ€" comes a rout. The last machines to be rescued are being battered by the waves while their modest inhabittants upon occasion cry for aid from timidly opened doors. Throughout England bathers habitâ€" ually use "bathing machines," oneâ€"man houses on wheels. Within, the occuâ€" pant changes his clothes, the machine is hauled to the edge of the water, and he steps from the door into the ocean. As the tides recede at Newquay, says a writer, the men in charge of the handsome little Cornish ponies that are harnessed to the machines trot In case of sprains, bruises and inflammation apply Minard‘s at once. . It preventsâ€" complications, soothes and heals. we feel perfectly safe in urging every deaf person without a penn3 of expense, and entirely at our risk to accept the 66 ® 3» cCOUESTICCN J. Anderson & Company 357 St. Catherine St. West Montreal Quebec Inasmuch as 500,000 users have testified as to the wonderful results obtained from the "ACOUSTICON" we feel perfectly safe in urging every deaf person without a penny A remarkable device has been perâ€" fected by the Dictograph Products Corporation by the use of which the deaf can hear as well as ewer. First Aid Adversity can prov« ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO For 10 Days‘ Free Trial No Deposit. No Expense. OLD CHUM Bathing Machines. The Tobaceo o]" Quality PER m audln}?flb o 15¢ EKCG. Vmuu’%g‘“l: TIGMT) the machincos a time., At nducted with gather speed wonderful ans pre foe D The | d A recent canvass of women vsers of the Vegetable Compound sbhows that 98 out of every 100 women taking the medicine are benefited by it. ‘They write and tell us so. Suchevidencsenâ€" titles us to call it a dependsble medicine for women. It is for sale by druggists every where, CC §* Verdun, Montreal, Quebec. â€""I am one of thousands who have taken Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound and I have great faith in it. 1 can ufel{ say it has relieved my troubles and shall never be without a bottle of it in my house. Since my last baby was born I suffered from pains and backache and would feel so tired I could not do lnythiai in my home. Since I have been ing the Vegetable Compound and Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Blood Medicize I feel so different. I recommend it lo all my friends and hope it will cure ot!.â€"r women who are suffering from the trou« bles 1 had."â€"Mre. Tnos. H. Garoner,‘ 821 Evelyn Street, Verdun, Montreal,| Quebec. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound is a dependable medicine for the new mother. 1t is prepared from roots end herbs, contains no barmful drugs and can be taken by the nursing mother. Its worth in restoring the mother to normal health and ntren;ifh is told again and again in just ‘such letters as ‘Mrs. Gardner writes. % Relieved by Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound A WOMAN‘S Britons last year consumed, in one form or another, fruit equivalent to eigchtyâ€"five apples and fiftyâ€"three oranges per head of the population. Wireless Enthusiast fool you. There isn‘t ing station Social Noviceâ€""What do when you get something en RS.V.P./2" £#7 Keeps EYES Clear, Bright and Beautiful Write Murine Co., Chicago, forEyeCre Book " I was treated without any be efit. I began using Cuticura So and Ointment and could see a gn change after the first night. I c tinued the treatment and in fo weeks I was completely bealed (Signed) Miss Margaret Danyo Egrisburg, Vermont. Daily use of Cuticura Soap, w touches of Cuticura Ointment n« and then, keeps the skin fres smooth and clear. Cuticura T: cum is also ideal for the skin. Prepac: *Btmugem Tre. Monticel ® Arice, t . Gintment 26 and 60c. Taleim 2c, W' Cuticura Shaving Stick 28¢, " Eczema broke out my face and later ay scalp. The rash scal sore eruptions formed. great deal of itc\ing : and my face was ver: trouble lasted three or GUNGURA HEALS EGZENMA ON FACE In Rash, Spre and Burned, 1SSUE No. 24+â€"25, No Such Place a broke oul in a rash nd later spread to : e rash mï¬d over & ons formed. It ep use of itching and surni se was very sore. ‘I ed three or four weel rected without any be an using Cuticura So ent and could see a gr r the first niekt. T en SUFFERING RINE using Cuticura S and could see a g e first night. I c atment and in 4 complet=ly herle ; Margaret Dany isn‘t any I to Scalp. Itch ace Yarv Sor Dor you do ling with eL end (Â¥,