Alberta Rich in Coal. Sixtyâ€"two billlon tons of coal, half of this amount recoverable, lis beneath the surface of Alberta soll, according to Professor J. A. Allen, provincial goologist and Fead of the Privincial University‘s department of geology, In a statement made before the Alberâ€" ta Coal Commissioe. bay up ani quarre H The situation was still highly danâ€" kerous, but after being suspended thus for a moment or two, the Intrefid shipped gontly down into the water again, not a bit the worse. Icebergs have sometimes produced bonellcent as well as harmful results. They are usually formed on land as #:2ciers, and so when they sitp down into the sea they have a large quanâ€" Uity of earth, gravel, and stones atâ€" tached to them. Whon, off Newfoundâ€" land, they encounter the warmer walcr« of the Gulf Stream, they begin to melt, and the earth which they carry | drops off and falls to the bottom. It is in this way that the banks, which ; are nmong the greatest fishing grounds 1 in the world, have probably been formâ€"| ‘ zemenmezzmma w Wise Solomon. : is a story about a composition. acher requested her pupilsâ€"all to write on a Biblical subject. ; what one boy wrote: "Solomon very wise man. One day two went to him quarreling about a One woman said: ‘This is my ind the other woman said, ‘No, it‘s mine.‘ But Solomon spoke said: ‘Now, now, ladies: don‘t . Give me my sword and PU wins of him, so you can both THE WHITE PERIL OF THE COCEAN Saved by Seamanship. wality of this ocean menace ight home very forcibly to the ers of the Cunard Hner Aurâ€" ently. The liner was bound mntreal to Liverpool, and ran In consequence the vessel ming@ dead slow, much to the of the passengers, who were ‘# about what seemed to them travel is now as safe ï¬l ‘kill and ingenuity can make there is one danger to shipâ€" ch no device of the shipbuildâ€" guard against, and which may es take even the most alert Tcer unawares. â€" This is the ril of the oceanâ€"the iceberg. year in spring and early sumâ€" : bergs come drifting down | enland and the Arctic, flghtl Climbed An Iceberg ‘ost amAzing adventures & was that which befell iring the search for Sir A gale compelled the {ast to a landâ€"floe (ice * land). Suddenly this ‘ove, and drove the ln-‘ e on to an iceberg 250 hing could avert a colâ€" ead of a crash, the Inâ€" ced up the face of the bow was thirty feet out track of the ships. The llow is two thousand miles | 1 across this belt there h; * most constant vigilance, | utious and adroit uaman-' iring the fogs, which are this season of the year, it ; o come very close to ono! ating deathâ€"traps without | safety. errible ordeal fell to ‘en men, the crew of which was crushed in inaged to escape from ey were marooned on ‘hich they had taken seven months. Durâ€" he floe drifted south Bu R @ path of the Ired to a hu ‘rom the line did fini 11D 8 on an Iceâ€"Floe 0 h cooiness Race, Newfoundland, omed up through the on m race with death. lision had been the hundred and fifty ce, and the nearest i. _ For St. John‘s, nade, but she was When, fortyâ€"eight 1 finish her night as on the point of ) aitervible experiâ€" indred passengers on with an iceberg ) can sometimes 1e night, when the was covered with e CGuion liner Ariâ€" cebery. The force so great that the p was smashed in ast. The gap thus filled with great deck, too, was litâ€" r hundred tons of n | the vessel‘s speed I the situation was lid seamanship of who was in com-‘ s were reversed, anceuvred so ably cleared, and what reat disaster was iness, courage, officers brought overed â€" n liner The f at that indred and er, and for must have vitable. â€"It Other and varied uses were found for the remaining fractions of crude ofl, chief amoug which is the propulâ€" slon of motor vehicles. A common enough article surely. but what a wealth of romance behind 1t! We find that the Romans knew the use of oil.from Persia and burned it in lamps in the Temple of Jupiter. This is the first recorded instance in history of its use for lighting purposes. After the decline of the Roman Emâ€" pire petroleum was forgotten or negâ€" lected, and it was not until centuries | had elapsed that it was again used for I this purpose. % In 1659 the first ollâ€"well wasâ€"sunk in America by a man named Drake, and within a comparatively .short time other wells were sunk and a ready market found for the products. Propelling Britain‘s Warships. The torch of enlightenment was soon carried into the uttermost corâ€" ners of the world, and into the homes of rich and poor alike the paraffin lamp found its way, diffusing its melâ€" low light on countless family circles. Marco Polo, the Venetian traveller, saw and described the burning springs and Persia has been known since earlâ€" iest times to contain oil. Of recent years the Persian fields have bten proved to be some of the richest in the world. ° Not a hundred years ago our ancesâ€" tors wrote their manuscripts by the fitâ€" ful light? of a candle, or by the sputterâ€" ing flare of a lamp burning animal or vegetable oil. But the march of civiliâ€" zation discovered the latent properâ€" ties in the thick viscouws substance which oozed out from certain parts of the earth‘s crust. * It As kerosone it lights our way in the Oil has been known at Baku since time immemorial. _ Baku was the Mecea of the Hindoo fire worshippers, and was annually visited by thousands of pilgrims. The Temple of Surakhant was for centuries the Seat of the Sacâ€" red Fire, and as late as the ‘eighties was still visited by priests from India. Such was the first reference to oil in the New World, which now angqualâ€" ly produces millions upon millions of barrels of this valuable and indispensâ€" able product. But for the real ancient history of oil we naturally have to come back to the Old World, though in production ,it lies far behind the Western lands. In 1632 a Franciscan missi ’ol "springs of oil" occurrin is now Alleghany County. Indians when they suffered ness used to skim it from t} of the water in the creeks an as medicine. This was in the days whe: buiffalo and flocks of wild ranged the continent from south. Now they ate gone, with the Red Indians, and or remains. But neither Price nor Ric connection whatever with o English words "nrice" ana © | PRICE ; Variations â€" Pryce, Preece, Rice, | _ Reese, Resee, Rees. | Racial Originâ€"Welish. Sourceâ€"A given name. When pronunciations change, of imunea as well as common words, it is | due to one or more of several causes. The most powerful cause of language changes, of course, is ease of pronunâ€" clation. _ The tongue unconsciously | slips into the easier pronunciation and lbas & tendency to slur and shorten words. Sometimes the spelling folâ€" (lows quickly, and sometimes it does not, according to whether the change took place at a time when literature |exerted little influence or much. \ | Another cause is the effort to proâ€" | nounce a word as it is spelled. Both :nf these causes are involved in the ex-‘ | planation of why such names as li:'l('e ?and Preece, Rice and Reese, w ich | [really are the same names, have dlf-II ferent pronunciations toâ€"day. If the| old pronunciation were followed, all cri these family names would be proâ€"| lnounccd with the "ee" sound, as in | "see," "i" and "y" are so pronounced | in the Welsh speech, and they never | bad the "eye" sound in .-\nglo-Saxon! or Nor#manâ€"French, nor even so late as ; Shakespear‘s time. | All of these family names have bcen; developed from the Weish given name | of "Rhys," which meant "warrior," b_vl affixing "ap" (‘"gon of"). In some of' them the "ap" has been dropped en-l tirely. In others only the "a" has | been dropped and the "p" has been in-" corporated in the name. ‘ in the V bad the or Noran: Shakespe TEA is good ted RED ROSE THE ROMANCE CF OIL Perhaps you are using good tea. We think 6 99 # » Red Rose" extra good. Won‘t you try it? words "price" and "rice The same good tea climes the spelling folâ€" and sometimes it does _to whether the change a time when literature influence or much. eriul cause of language 1rse, is ease of pronunâ€" tongue unconsciously asier pronunciation and Surnames and Their Onglfl olved in the exâ€" names as }i:-k-e Reese, which imes, have difâ€" toâ€"day. If the followed, all of the surfa« and drink ice has any our modern Onary told & in what T Red Jacob Gould Schurman, new United States ambaszador to Germany, sails with his wife and daughter to assume the post. He is a former Canadian. Bobby was a dear lover of honey and he could scarcely contain his joy when his father bought some bees. A few days after the purchase, he inâ€" quired anxiously, "When do the bees start to laying their honey?" For Every i!lâ€"Minarce‘s Liniment . "That suits me fine, mum," answerâ€" ed Mrs. Jones, "for I‘m a woman of few words as well. If I shakés me head, then you‘li know it means ‘Nothâ€" in‘ doin‘‘ * s Doing Away With Conversation. This is an age of democracy Qen everyone is as good as everyone elseâ€" if not a little better., It was the new charwoman‘s first morning, and her mistress had been giving her a few instructions, "Now, Mrs. Jones," she concluded, "please reâ€" member that I am a woman of few words. If I beckon with my hand, that means ‘Come.‘ " 7 The man who loves a garden Despair can never know. The man who loves a garden And helps it thfive and grow, He‘ll never lack these treasures Peace and contentment trae. The man who lived a gardenâ€" I hope that he is you! | "Ivo 1 but in family Cark places, as motor spirit it makes | our cars fly along the road easily, smoothly, and swiftly; as a lubricant| it minimizes the wear and tear of the' gigantic machines in the world‘s greutI factories; and as fuel oil it propels the ‘ warships of the Empire across every | dark place to the ma guish from given nam that of indy the mediev of such n |_The Romans, it is true, knew Engâ€" |land as Britain, or Britannia, and later | the name was revived in the form>of I'Great Britain. ° But Britain, to the | population of northern Europe in the | Middle Ages, meant only Brittany, or | Bretagne, the northwestern peninsular | section of France, peopled by a Cymrie !(‘eltlc race closely akin to the Welsh, who in earlier days wére the inhabitâ€" ants of all England, whom the Romans !knew as Britons. ANOFT Bret land It was about the twelfth and thirâ€" teenth centuries that family names had their period of most rapid formaâ€" tion and vigorous growth. This was subsequent to the Norman invasion and the establishmaent nf elaza aan. part vourceâ€"A nationality While theso fam{ily English origin, the na present is not ton. % Racial Originâ€"Engligh Sourceâ€"A nationalitv. BRITT. Variatlon:â€"Brett, Bret No nans more natural method of referring o man of alien birth, to distinâ€" from others bering the sama 1eir period of most rapid formaâ€" ind vigorous growth. This was juent to the Norman invasion he establishment of close conâ€" tween England and the adjacent of northern France. It was naâ€" hat many Bretons came to Engâ€" Many of them cama with tha from others bering the same name, could have arisen than indjcating his nationality. Thus dieval English records are full ‘h names as "Hamo le Bret," Brit," etc. Not in all cases, many, these sobriquets became names. for 30 years. Man Who Loves a Garden. orthern France. It was naâ€"| many Bretons came to Ens-] iny of them came with the! for medieval Normandy and! were adjacent provinces. 1ese family names are of gin, the nationality they reâ€" Mary Carolyn Davies Britten, Brit n Consoling Friendâ€""And she has broken O the engagement*" Dejected Oneâ€""Yes." "Did she return your diamond enâ€" gagement ring*" "Oh, yes, that came back all right; it was packed in a small box marked ‘Glass, with care.‘ " $ [ Once a mother has used Baby‘s Own ‘; Tablets for her little one she would +) use ‘nothing else. The Tablets give L:su(-h results that the mother has nothâ€" '|lng but words of praise and thankfulâ€" _ ness for them. Among the thousands l’o! mothers throughout Canada who lpraise the Tablets is Mrs. David A. | Anderson, New Glasgow, N.S., who | writes:â€"*"I bhave used Baby‘s Own Tablets for my children and from my ’experionce I would not be without | thein. I would urge every other mother | to keep a box of the Tablets in the house." The Tablets are a mild but tWrough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach ; | drive out constipation and indigestion ; ‘ | bréak up colds and simple fevers andl make tecthing easy. They are sold by | | medicine dealers, or by mail at 25c. a| | box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine‘ | Co., Brockvills, Ont. - "Well, ing man A week late..r they met again. "Say," said the first traveling man, "you told me old Binks was the most evenâ€"tempered man you‘d ever known. Why, when I dropped in on him he had just fired a clerk, jumped up and down on his own hat, told a customer to go chase himself and kicked the stuffing out of a filing cabinet. And he was carrying on this way fust over some mere trifie." ;« & Gooeq:_ exciaimed the first. "Tht is my first trip in this territory and | likeâ€"to get a line on prospective cus tomers." "What kind of a fellow is â€"old Bir down at Poseyville?" asked one t veling man of another. Most evenâ€"tempered man I‘ve e\ known," was the reply. "Good!" exclaitmed the first m ! Mahogany fittings, flower vases, mirâ€" |rors, shaded electric lights and | draughtâ€"proof windows all add to the i(:omfor( of passengers, while an imâ€" | proved system of heating keeps them | warm. There is also a carpeted pasâ€" ‘sagewuy up the centre of the saloon, |and shelves, containing books and !perlodicals, are within easy reach. }’I‘llose who make many journeys to llhe Continent by air%ead just as much as passengers who travel by sea or land. The novelty of flying, does not last very long. 6 noâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"§â€"â€"â€"_â€"â€"__ S Behind the pilot is a long, low ealoon which has been fitted to be in every way a counterpart of the most duxuriâ€" ous Pullman carriage on the dailways. Ample room is provided for the accomâ€" modation of fourteen passengers, and for each there is a comfortable, cuseâ€" hioned armchair. It is a far cry from the crude models of those days to the air expresses which are now opérating on the Imperâ€" jal Airways winter service between London and Paris. Not more than a dozen years ago an| heart vith meroplane was a curiosity, and people:day a frien would go miles to see one. |liams‘ Pink The expedition caught more than 15 species of fish, among them being transparent flounders, deepâ€"sea mackâ€" erel with blue and yellow lights, many kinds of jellyâ€"fish, and fish which live only on jellyâ€"fish. For the first time the scientists found the eggs of halobates, the only marine insect in the world. The eges are being *hatched in tanks. _ Vast numbers of jellyâ€"fish colored the water purple for many square miles. [ New Sea Thrills. It might be though in this age, when every ocean is charted and crossed by ships in a‘!l directions, that there was nothing new to discover, but the Arcâ€" turus scientific expedition not only found two new volcanoes in active eruption in the Pacific, but also came upon a gigantlc tideâ€"race where two great currents meet. The mass of foam caused by their violent collision extended for miles, and in this foam great numbers of whales and porpoises wallowed, atâ€" tracted by the immense supply of food. There were also great quantittes of wreckage, covered with organisms, and fish of all kinds feeding on them. â€" "Pullmazns" of the Air remarked the second travel that‘s how he always is." Always the Same A Hard Slap ve ever 1 Bink "No. Art spolls carvas and literaâ€" ture wastes realms of paper. Singing merely produces a temporary disturbâ€" ance of the atmosphbere." "Why not a gested a friend % The Lesser Evil. "I want my daughter to enjoy some kind of artistic education," said the father who had recently made his fortune. "I thirk I‘ll let her study singing." Her Doctrine. | A liitle gifl who was greatly dis-f turbed by the discovery that ber| brothers had set traps to catch birds.| Questioned as to what she had done| in the matter, she replied: "I prayed | that the traps might not catch the| birds." Anything els2"" "Yese," she| continued. "I. then prayed that God! would prevent the birds getting into | the traps, and," as if to illustrate thei doctrine of faith and works, "then 1| went cut and kicked the traps all tofl pleces." t Mrs. Multikidsâ€""I can‘t trhst him. What does a man know about how much rouge and lipstick to use on the little girls?" A Woman‘s Job. Miss Singletonâ€""Doesn‘t your husâ€" band he‘p you get‘the children ready for school?" another maite; duce the deci here have so what will the s teen months in Other advantages cl; thirteenâ€"menth year are marketâ€"days, and other would fall on the san month, and that each v come on its four fixed i1 Also, permanent dates fo Ings and other gatheri made possible, â€" Whether suaded to . : | 20 M0°, LC WHAL Beems to be love is | «* <al 8 < wo Accerk |_ _A scheme which is being put fOrW2rd | put maq infatuation. ’ ,‘ Refreshes Tired Eya bl.\’ ;]hfi L(’dfl«guj (;f 1.\8[10!1? that the _\‘(*;ir- ~â€"â€"â€"â€"~@â€"â€"â€"â€"â€".. Wriite Murine Co., Chicego,forEyeCare Book | sha he divided into thirteen months jiustead of, as at present, twelve, looks How “underStorm' Start. ! {like meeting with almost universa) apâ€"| _ When the sun shines warmly UpOp | ®â€"â€"wâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"*~<â€"â€"«â€"sesonsnmepemenmmmmmmmmes | proval, says an English newspaper,| fea or land it draws up moisture in | POUND f The extra month would be inserted beâ€" | the form of tiny globules too small for |tween June and July, and it is sugâ€"| the eye to see. The warmer the air At Last. A Wonderful Remedy for | gested that it should be known gglthe greater the number of these gloâ€"| Rheumatism. Just one bottle of | "Sol." | bules it is able to hold in suspension. | Piggott‘s Rheumatic Remeiy will give | If this scheme were earried Into efâ€"| !t is, of coutse, this moisture that You instant relief, One dollar postpaid. fect it would involve the addition of Causes rain, RELIABLE REMEDY Cco. an extra day, not included in any of| But before a raindrop can form it 792 YONGE 8T. > TORONTO the months, known as "Year Day." The must have a nucleus, or centre. Thi * y 4"~~ _ t Ni jextra day in Leap Year would also be i# provided by the tiny snocks of An«t T!.c w omen DAAnlA The plan would give a fixed Easter and Whitsun, and the idea is approved by Church dignitaries, leaders of comâ€" merce, hotelâ€"keepers, and railway ofâ€" ficials. At present it is very difficult for railways, hotels, and other conâ€" cerns that have to make special arâ€" rangemensts for nolidays, to run to any sort of schedule when Naster and Whitsun never occur on the same dates two vears running. additional to any month was iroubled with palpitation of the: heart vith the least exertion. OneI day a friend advised me to try Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills as they had done her | much good. I followed this advice and . took the pills for some weeks, when l‘ felt as well as ever. I have since beeni able to attend to "all my householdi duties. ‘The dizziness and palpitation | have left me and I bless the day I tried~ Dr. Williains‘ Pink Pills. They are| just the medicine for those who are| weak and runâ€"down." | You can get these pills from any dealer or by mail at 50c. a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont. y | NEARING A BREAKEOWA Many women give so much of their time to the cares of their household that they neglect their own health and 'sométimes reach the verge of a breakâ€" down before they realize that their health is shattered. Often the heart palpitates violently at slight exertion, the stomach fails to digest food and discomfort follows. The nerves beâ€" come woeak and headaches grow more frequent. The body grows weak and they are always depressed. This conâ€" dition requires immediate treatment with such a reliable tonmic as Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills, which evrich and build up the biood, carrying renewedl‘ energy to every part of the body. The value of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills in a‘ rundown condition is proved by the following statement from Mrs. Alex.! Mclinres, Bowsman River, Man., who| says:â€"*"About a year ago I bad a aerl-{ ous illness which left me very anaemic. | I was not able to get around to do my’ work; in fact I could scarcely walk. Ii was troubled with palpitation of the: A Condition That Calls for a Reliable Tonic. Changing the Calendar. art or literature?" sug opt iperstitiou i vyear? u 11 will ever be perâ€" ch a calendar is attempts to introâ€" ystem of coinage ailed. Then, too, titious say to thirâ€" wi ned for the would be | For referencesâ€"Heas OfMce. Toroaio | Bank of Montreal, or youar ioca! banker | _ Established for over thirty years CREAM To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not less than 30 per cent Butter Fat We eupply cans and say express charges. We pay daily by express money orders, which can be cashed enywhere without any charge The white races of the world outnumbered by the dark nation two to one. 1 have seen a complete change in| affairsâ€"educational, political, sochl,' and religiousâ€"during my long Iifo.! and I am glad to testify that on the| who‘e the changes have been for the‘ better.â€"Mrs. Haldane. | "When we came back to England we brought a bottle of Minard‘s with us, but since then we can‘t get any liniment to come up to it Will you please write and let us know how much it would cost to have 100 bottles sent over." MRS. R. ADAMS, Old Town, Hastings, Eng land. We receive dozens of letters from far away countries asking for Minard‘s. _ For sprains, bruises, burns, colds, infaemmation, etc., it has no equai. chargedâ€"that bave what we whe But ele own level ing on, ev Ing As «i |__Moisture rising in warm air reaches !colder layers, and becomes visible as iclouds. A cloud may be likened to a damp sponge that must be squeezed before water comes out of it. The jsquoezmg is done by cold, either a cold hilltop or a current of cold air.. So \raindrops are formed and at once beâ€" gin to fall. But in falling they may reach.fresh upâ€"draughts of air, and so be pushed or drawn upwards again. If pushed up to a great height the drops may be frozen into lumps of ide and finally fall in the shape of hbail. ‘Water is a liquid of only moderate density, so the rize of each drop is limited. No drop can be more than one fAfth of an inch in density. If it grows ‘ bigger it splits. In splitting it releases . negative electricity, and itself gains a | positive charge. i But before a raindrop can form it 793 YONGE $T must have a nucleus, or centre. Thi c .. is provided by the tiny specks of dust | Th'n that float in the atmogphere. So tiny | are these specks that each is no more Thin, nervous than one fortyâ€"thousandth of an inch ; take on healthy in diameter, and a cubic foot of saturâ€"| and ambitious . ated air may contain a thousand mil-!u guaranteed b lion of them. teur. cctaner * ies Bowes Company Limited, Toronto WE WANT CHURNING they been in love. So there it is. As between love and infatuation the test is: Do sight an‘d sense still function ? If not, then what seems to be love is but mad infatuation. What is the difference* The kindâ€" 'eat thing that can be said about inâ€" fatuation is that it is a freak sort of |love, fierce while it lasts, but short !llved; capable, too, of causing a good | deal of trouble. It is obvious that it |affords no foundation whatever for a lbappy marriage, | | _ "Infatuation" marriages, however,| | do take place, and that because, until | ;unity returns, infatuation is taken to | | be love, with a great, big capital L. | ll.?,‘vldently what is wanted is a test as ’between the two. | j O TTOT TTE TOZ OoL sne €X9600R 4t Again, true love maintains its indeâ€"| bther toâ€"morrow." pendence. An infatuated girl is clay a. in the hands of the object of her inâ€" Planter. fatuation. She surrenders ber will and "And what did bu§H:â€" her jeg@gment. His lightest wish ll' n ':,," mou Kar your Ler law., 'ne.ss was?" asked th_e. young lady. The same, of course, applies to a | “;‘:'un :o;(:rxx:.rmi) ‘O8® plant th man infatuated with a woman. Men | Y E Cs#8. 0 y D 6 The same, of course, applies to a man infatuated with a woman. Men have ruined themselyse, etolen, emâ€" bezzled, when _ infatuated. They wouldn‘t have been so reckless had Well, despite the proverb, let it be stated that love is not blind. Infatuaâ€" tion is. Love sees the little faults and flaws; infatuation sees nothing but perfection. A youth of twenty may be madly infatuated with a woman of forty. To him she seems an angel. If he were in love with a girl of twenty he might adore her, but the keen eyes of true love would not only see all that was good and beautiful, but her little faults as well. A crash of teacups drowned t.he reâ€" ply, but the question bad set me thinkâ€" ing. "And what is the difference? How can one tell?" This scrap of teashop conversation drifted to me from two girls: "Pout, my dear! You‘re not in love with him. You‘re merely infatuated!" on, every le aAs «ilent i the tensic WNINARD‘S LINIMENT Can‘t Do Without MINARD‘S cloud Don‘t Call it Love! 1C1 Thi ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO y, like water, finds its s process is always goâ€" af and grass blade actâ€" onductors. It is only n becomes too greatâ€" is overwhelmingly ghtning flashes and we all a thunderstorm. «; NERVES AND â€" FAINTING SPELLS Men Sarnia, Ontario.â€"*‘ After my girlie was born I was a wreck. My nerves were too terrible for words and I simâ€" ply could not stand or walk without pains. I suffered with fainting spells until I was no longer any good for my household duties and had to take to my bed. ‘The doctor said I should have an operation, but i was not in a fit condition at that time. _ My neighbor said, ‘Why don‘t you try Lydia®E. Pinicham‘s Vegâ€" etable Compound? â€" I am sure it will gn ou good and will save those doctor‘s lflls. So 1 was advised by my husband to try it after I told him about it. I am very thankful to say that I was soon able to take a few boarders for a while as rooms were scarce at that time. My baby is 17 months old now and I have not dyet had anoperation, thanks to your zxe icin‘:‘. C<l> have dâ€mmtmended th} egetable Compound to a few people know and have told them the food it has done me. 1 know I feel and look a difâ€" ferent woman these last few months and I certainly would not be without & bottle of your medicine in the house. You can use this letter as you see fit, as I should be only too glag for those suffering as ! have to know what it has done for me."~â€"Mrs. Rorert G. Macâ€" GREGOR, R. R. No. 2, Sarnia, Ontario. A recent canvass of women users of the Vegetable Compound report 98 out of 100 received heneficial rosults. This is a remarkable proof of it» merit. C â€" Thin People Sent Woman to Bed. Great Change After Taking Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Thin, nervou«, underweight people take on healthy flesh and grow sturdy and ambitious when Bitroâ€"Phosphate as guaranteed by us is taken a fow weeks. _ Price $1 per pkgo. Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. Rast, Toronto, Ont. dear little foxes?" "What on earth gasped the visitor "Yes, indeed. Your daughter has had eleven of her brothers here this term to take her out. She expects an other toâ€"morrow." Brotherly Love. "You ought to be proud to be the father of such a splendid family," sald the head mistress to her visitor. "What on earthâ€"* Large family*"* _ "Father," she cried, "I‘ve been waitâ€" ing to see you for a long time when mother‘s not near." = "Why?" asked father. ‘"Well, father, replied Alice, "please don‘t tell mother, because ghe‘s a dear, but 1 don‘t think she knows much about bringing up children." "What makes you think that?" "‘Well," replied Alice, "she makes me go to bed when I am wide awake, and she makes me get up when ] am awfully sleepy." Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the House. A Hint to Mothers. Father had come home early from the office while mother was still out shopping, and little Alice ran to meet him. Sample Each Free b[ Mail. Address Cani Dapot: "Etenhoure, Jtd, Montrcal" Price, Sbe_Ointment 25 and 60¢. Talsum 2e. BB Cuticura Shaving Stick 25e ARGE _ FLAVORING _ EXrRAC)Y â€" Housg, L welling direct to homes, wutts bright energetie man or woman as sales organizer in «each county, Right party can easily make $50 a week. Cralg Bros., Desk B., Niagara Falls, Ont. for a free sample. After using it ) got relief so purchased more and i: two weeks I was completely healed ." (Signed) Miss Murie! jollymore, Lower Wentworth, Nova Evotia. Clear the pores of impurities by daily use of Cuticura Soap with touches of Cuticura Ointment as needed to soothe and heel. Cuticura Talcum is fragrant and refreshing. _ _ 07 face and arms were coven« with pimples and blackheads. ‘I pimples were hard and red ar scaled over. They itched or burned ail the time, and J could n« sleep at nigpht. My face looked s bedly Face and Arms Covered Could Not Sleep at Night Cuticura Heals. PIMPLES ITCHED ALL THE TIME Vegetable Compound Classified Advertisements 18§VE No. 26â€" Sagas) es y n e in ie e c s NP n s 0 8 1 an advertisement for Cuâ€" ap and Ointment and sent sample. Afier using it J ORGANIZER Address Canadin WANYED 1% £4 .