"y % \f% *# Writing of beauty in placonames a Journalist declared not long. ago, \"A cluster of namew can be a» MnL( as a courtry pasy." What a happy suggestion! Why not gather such word pos‘cs and play with them just as many people like to play solitaire with cards, or just as Henry Ward Boocher used to play with his collection of unâ€" mounted precious stomes. | Some words are lovely alone and im |, their own right.. Others are lovelior; combined with othersâ€"gathered into the nosegey so to speak. Words emro-_; Iy have color as well as fregrance 8o | that it is quite right to liken them to flowers, and jfust as it is with w so with the words; some have colors‘ ks a country nAW¢" What & Hanuv| _ EY ry pasy." What a happy| ery woman approaches middle *"*"> ""!" nugwestion! _ Why not gather such §5° With constderable anxiety, because when « word pos‘ss and play with them just as | 82¢ knows this is the time of her life "iloee many people like to play solitaire with| ""D !*!Vi2l ailments may be the first Cite U cards, or just as Henry Ward Boocher signse of trials and sufferings to come. ficially used to play with his colleation of un. DRQ ft@r= the headaches, backaches, 116. 17 mounted precious stomes. ‘luolmdo and other distressing weakâ€" building Some words are lovely alone and m'ne-oe-thubudenmmootnm,wmm their own right.. Others are lovelter| ""{rCu 4t thit perlod. | youth, combined with othersâ€"gathered hlof Much of the anxiety and sufforing WhO%° the nosegey so to speak. Words mn_:that aseail women approaching middle ®YC"V ty have color as well as freg â€..-ce can be avoided. This has been 50 MOT¢ that it is quite right to liken them wim’ed by thousands of happy, virile While t! flowers, hix} fust as it is WAE fcp womep who have relied at this time YOLWg | so WHKH the wWords. gomd wow. on the healthâ€"help givemn by Dr. Wil Ambass that set our. puites â€"RSHF ooI0r8 | liams‘ Pink Pilis. To the middleaged , 8by !0 our nerves. In ‘the same. way 80M®) cappy ) the one thing necessary to| Th6 words hatertragrances like tonic wood‘m her through her years of trial | OMLOC Smeils. â€" And Again: like the fowers |is niéh, red‘ blood.: Because of their | trely 1 nome words go well together 'Nl.-,dl!'ect' gction on the blood, Dr. wu-iof oo others need to be kept far apart {""" Pink Pilis are the one remedy | {NMOT Hevexyer ow ind praised by women for women‘s needs. fronting stately Wles mm I.fllc'.os 'Ucme dxd 76 ‘Among the thousands who have found | DHTSuit oc tor ths neuss oo ‘Nont mlbonett‘fromtbhmmadthn.Allaq’NM‘ soives, even in the basket. where -n'fv“""' yermmecre ACopariir is ie “â€Ef-lm‘ o poiits se Patibest‘ m promhcu-; I was at a critical period in the liyes PO#Al rusly, somewhat aloof, how the modest | o; o : Pogenmene umm ie Md‘MQMMk violets and the Jark pansies tuck ? us mmanienms Ionnynoustyarnl tbg;t“' b"m themseives into meoks andâ€" corners,| ! e on se n . o. saqp | Wikch Woihe thes o canie flag l east exertion would cause my hhni'fldl solves in every direction with a. nonâ€" ;10 in io s Sone Pas ch wmllld‘mufl‘ chalance that is equivalent to a.chad-‘ i bacinonen mt wasrn. hea.dnche,‘e‘CitO. 1 Souee â€"â€""Pdk ho# Aeyifhere you â€" will | and backaches, and was in & depressed | which wenâ€" brile * yde ) and ohee; condition. I saw Dr. Williams‘ 'Ptnkgnfl’kmfl i rereveneplecudt .15 i siles we Pills recommended and decided to glve‘ll-tudw' youre "words "snd woreecombinut! y them a trial. It was fortunate that I univers have a "hail follow well met" un;l)tns | gi t for feprored o Sove maith ud l on‘ othore ato. formar sust .Starel a h“}’. e I was restored to good health and | Sites 11 there are intimate and y, whilo | strength and feel like a new woman. I| bonne I Sechiart moot ‘for endecring, as | never neglect an opportunity to recomâ€"| tries r ards, cottage doou\‘me.nd this remedy to those who are | iDgs. | rundown for I am very grateful rorl The that set our pulses astir Mfooche“ our nerves, In the same way some words hatertragrances like tonic wood | smeils. And again like the flowers,| Someone has said of H,. G. Wells| what the pills did for me." that he has "the knack of the plausible, For all ailments due to weak w phrase." A usefulknack that indeed, blood Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pflhm but there is much to bo said also for| found a specific.. You can get the pilis the merely pleasurable phrases as welt) from any .medicine dealer or by mail | as for pleasurable single words. ~At|at 50c a box from The Dr. Williams‘| odd moments why should we not get| Medicine Co., Brockville. Ont. ! into the habit of calling to mind lovely 4 n ecommererriroccamertieaees words and phrases! It is a mystery Did You Ever Wonder? just how they will come into your| ._Teacherâ€""What does your mothér; thought but no doubt your mood will use soap for?" . | havre something to do with it. Per-i Willteâ€""That‘s what I‘d like, to haps they will come trsoping in hap-;kn»ow." ‘ hazardly,â€"words such as dream ani} lexLerone â€"om, * erspemmmemmat calm, as serems and supple, as lull, Itit,| _ Big Ben, London‘s famous be‘ll, h’_" graen, leafy, bower; nouns and adjecâ€" fbeen cracked practicai!y: ever since it iives together and without regard tor’wu first put in the Clock Tower of | ceremony. Perhaps they wWHl come in the House of ‘Commons in 1860. ‘The patrs, "towered citiecs.". siiyer seas," b«‘l weighs about thirteen tons. "aged oak®," someiimes in linkedi prcom n & sweetnoss as "twistod egzin:ine," â€" The first picture postcard was proâ€" meadows trim," "younglng trees." i duced by a statiqner in a French proâ€" Perhaps they wi} comp in Uttle groups, vincial town in 1870. It was not till se Leigh Hunt‘s "Nests of ph.unt'lsw that picture post cards were thoughts" or Robert Herrick‘s "Gathâ€"| printed in England. er yeo rosebuds"â€"as Spenser‘s "ston?f:â€"-‘â€"?:â€"mi of vermeil roses" "In a somer season # o when softe :‘u the sonms" from Piers ww ffl’ Sick Chlldffll | Plowman, Wor h‘sâ€" "jo: & = untost mmon.flyd'wmi.’. o9 is _ 87 College 8t, Toronto 2, Ont. Almost ali of the oldâ€"time flower names are lovely in thomsefves Con aldeer a few. Rose, Miy, violet, flourâ€" delis, daisy, anomome, primrose ani ponwette, ~balsam, and lavender @n plak. What piquency about the Iast‘ Amd as further proof thet we fAnd these names goodly see how we turn to them to supply us with many of our golos terms. . Rosg, lavender, violet, through the whole catalogue of color=. So with the fruits, as plum and porc\ and pomegranate and orange. The names of trees have something halo and heartening about themâ€"elim and oak, beech and binrch and aspenâ€"â€" and the glamour is uct lessened with those that bear nuts, bazelout, butter nut, and walnut and hickory, al} these go trippingly on the tongue.~ The names of some of the wild animals stir the fancy as with lake‘s "Tiger, Tiger butrning bright." And it the bird namese were not , goodly in their own right, would our poets have boen able to make so much ‘ of them as they have done?* Skylark : und Nightingale in Rnglish poetry (to speak of no other), from the time of Bhakcepeare to that of Keats and She!â€" ‘ ley, with a geant but constant follow ing ever since, and bobolink. linnet, and fulcon, eagle, dove. Ah yese, words for their own sakes as well as for . their meanlogs are , worth pondering. â€" Donne said, "Words | are our subtiNest and4 delicatest outâ€" ward creatures, ~ composed ot' thoughts and It was a later| writer, Lafomdi® . who yowed : that he could *wee color fn words,‘ . . . . and "mmell the perfume of sy! Inbivs in blossom." = Yes, That‘s It. Siteâ€" â€""Why do men wear those unâ€" sigh«y suspenders * ; Ho â€"â€" "Whyâ€"erâ€"erâ€"just to keep their shirts from flripg off, you know." "Jo&nyï¬l{:d}l}o teacher, zoun u me . t} â€tco be &uoni and spaghetti?" “llmroa has a little more wrapped around the ho‘s thai spaphetti." ar 54 waei.,.,. ||| 4ML~INALOD: pansy and mig Much of the Suffering Women Endure Can be Avoided. to flutter so violently that I would have to sit down. I had headaches and backaches, and was in a depressed condition. I saw Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills recommended and decided to give them a trial,. It was fortunate that I did so, for under the use of this med1â€" cine I was restored to good health and strength and feel like a new woman. I never neglect an opportunity to recomâ€" mend this remedy to those who are rundown for I am vyery grateful for what the pills did for me." 8 For: all ailments due to weak wa blood Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pflhm found a specific. You can get the pilis from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50c & box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville. Ont. The first picture postcard was proâ€" duced by a statiqner in a French proâ€" vincial town in 1870. It was not till 1894 that picture post cards were printed in England. i se e old s m ee La c C Your readers, in mbaiy‘â€" with the \th> Tthildreh of the" équpï¬%\’pfl\’ihï¬% people in all other pm“}‘â€â€œ' ©98° yaszonts to be educated and brouglit ap | munities, are interested in the HO# | ;n (qovarnment schools. HiNdred® of | pital and what it is doing. Th® |;yousands of smal childrey were thie: _ksen interest in crippled childrem> ";aken away, and, altogether aparifrom | manifested by the Rotary, Kiwanis, ‘the Government‘s theory that this was Gyro;, IJons and other service clubs, |the best thing to do, he would say withâ€". throughout the province, has been ’o.,' ressrve that the amang»menu.j of grand assistance in bringi0@ iB | majo by the‘Government for the wel-‘ unfortunate °h"d“"“'-°ni“‘ m <‘fate of the children were admirable in . mote Mm to the varions every possible wat.© At that time the, where the members of the Ho f haa f * staff have attended and have | Government had little regard for the able to hold buge â€"elinics with the ; cost of things, but later they were. result that there bas been & steady | forced to consider it. ; stream of children ldnlg:td,to.t':: : A wave of economy ensued, umj the. Hospital from all over ario, ~ "gravis which hat been made for the | a long time. welfare of the childrep were no longer \ _ This is but one branch :l m forthcoming, said Major Bustard. The | thorough flï¬mm“‘g‘e::‘ :'â€-m \rosulkt wus that one met hundreds of I m.llon l& "'“ k’nd on n. conâ€" :childa’en, ragmiffins who had lost their | timent for the treatment of all child | Daronts in the famine that visited Rusâ€" | ailmerits. No Ontario ohfl'hr«mh mma years"ago, running wild in |.Ang tts services is refused ad . |Â¥he streets of Moscow. ~*." + T | and al} that modern me?w'“‘ }~ Russia, said Uhe spedker, ‘Was more | surgical «kill combined with l0ving | syâ€"an vempire than a country=its vast enre can “°°°“"“"'l{' ;â€;::R:‘ | area eudA the great differences in the | “ll°l the t:“:‘:l"':ï¬â€˜m'ér ?awu“; | peor‘e Of theâ€"various ‘parts éxplained ‘t"o?“::†those responsible. for the ~som# of the apparent contfadictions \ chH4 are in poog cirpumstances. . ienmumemd tu re»por:ts @bout it.,.. No Heary ox mlu& invotved fn thig ¢ couniry in the workd, he suld, presentâ€" in . nu > *\ ed a grertsr diffeence befweeh the edul | moreiful work,; Mr,; Rditor, â€"as <cyou"~) ed a greator diffeence be:ween the eduâ€" > 67 College §t., Toronto 2, Ont. Dear Mr. Kditor: A spirit of warm friendliness teâ€" wards the Hospital for Sick Chilidren in Toronto exists all over the province and it increases with tha years. It has been enhanced to & gonsiderable extent . by the clinics which have been conducted in sa many centres in Ontario by doctors from the Hospital who have plcked out curable cases which up to the time of the clitnic had been seemâ€": ingly hopeless â€" eventually ‘sending the littls patients home from the Hospital hsaled and fitted to be valuable assets to their municipalt+ ‘ties, instead of romaining useless ‘and pathetie burdens, " moreiful work,; M Editor,.â€" as â€"you can teallze.:* Bratnary sollrces: of ravenue, dncluding grants, v$ril to cover thea actual co# ‘@f" roafsténance sxes Childre®b does GOf shafte in the . tunds of fhe Toronto Feder@tiop,for Communify Sefvice, becauseit takes ;sagonts alH over the Rrovince.,. P1 ask youp readers to remémâ€"° b‘}- m? fo?r Bick Childrem when they afd doing their Christmasâ€" of the little patients, nnt'lgfllï¬?--l- ing thrifty management.* Old frlends and new ones are relled wpoh to kelp in po:‘lng the â€" wer&.ahad they tnclude tha â€"of ~your vraluabla paper. â€"The}loapital for giving. d new ones are relled wpoh to | lp in p?'lng the â€" lfler&esud ; :y tnclude . the.,r s cof syonr | luable paper. <Theé for c78 gxu rdrdoe'g uhx_ ip the ‘ nds of the Toronto Federation . for mmunify Sefvice, becausevit takes gonts t alH over the Rrovince... E* O ond W N0 uids 2 > 4 Soves fose d iY Faithfully yours, . OF MIDDLEâ€"AGE H. Hâ€" WILMAMS, : Chairman af‘the '!fruatocl. |88SUKE No. 61 \ _ The University City of Paris is the outcome of a very generous and enâ€" tirely praizseworthy idea. At nm/ end |of the war a great French ufacâ€" {tw. reallzing the dificulties conâ€" |fronting the young generation in the pursuit of higher study, was prompted ‘to ald them in practical manner, and :Malamemmofnmeymmedie-‘ "posal â€" of the Minister of Pubiic m-' Qytmotkm who had conceiverl the idea | of* buikling, round the University ot! ! Parts, ‘the colleges ofâ€" the nations iwlfld: In the past had enjoyed great | prestige. "It was decided to.build "La| | Cite . Universitaire® de Paris‘ for‘ | which Heinvited the variouws foreign | ‘nations to build houses where their, | students ~would receive (a flrst-flass! | untversity ~education under the most, ladvantageous living conditions. Free: | sites in the neighborhood ofâ€"the Sorâ€"| bonne were donated to foreign counâ€"| }trles requesting themâ€"for their buildâ€"| | ings. | Candda‘s place in the forefront of progressive educational affairs> was set another step forward in October when "La Maison des Etudiantsâ€" Canâ€" adiens," the Canadian house of the Cite Universitaire de Paris, was ofâ€" ficially opened, the Dominton being the‘ first foreign country ‘to have a building there in read‘upu for the reâ€" geption of its students. â€" Canadian youth, pursuing its studies overseas, whose number is steadily increasing every year, will now be enabled to do so more comfortably and economically, while the corporaite existence of these young men and women should, in an ambassadortal sense, react considerâ€" ably to Canadian benefit. The Canadian High Commissioner in France immediately took &n option on the site adjoining the French buildâ€" ings and made an appeal to his counâ€" ttymen for means to carry through the commendable object, which was to be a memorial to the heroism of those Canadian soldiers buried in France. The building was estimated to cost $500,000, and in such satiwfactory manâ€" net was the amount forthcoming by plblic subscription that Canada has been the "first mation to be able ‘to throw open its building to its students. mt 3IC ul Bd Seme o aeerien c opo io se ai oc 5. 22 10 ATG caoliiicaicctatvedhe> AECAI T( MR EOE (hirough the "pulk'S"‘ of th_g;‘%bt,m;'_};:‘ frkakiy Jnuq‘fi've';and to #pend" Ernment in its éarly da}é_, nt@kiD®) jonrs playing. "ragtime" and Yaze" )tn : (rhll_dreï¬ of the‘ count from their, E‘I,Q&h"er ‘aefvel While the Tesson re" paronts to be educated and brooght ap (>\ «* Fa‘> "et Wz P in G@overnment schools. Hiumdred® uâ€m‘wfl? thousands of small childrey werethies ; IMM‘GRAM taken away, and, altogether aparifrom | * f f the Government‘s theory that this was 4i : & t ) * » f : the best thing to do, he would say withâ€"| a + out res#rve that the arrangements, â€" With thesyear nooar its close, new made by the"Government for the ‘WLTW’T to Canada continues at a fate of the children were admirable in more gratifying rate. than has been every possible wat. At that time the.| the case at this season for some time | GoÂ¥ernment had TiÂ¥tte regard for the pesk. There is every assurance of this [ cost of things, but later they wmicw»dnu&nc . throughout the _ winter | forced to consider it. 'momhs. For the spring and ~s_u}ne- ;~ A wave of economy ensued, and the., «u@t seasons the many visits to the ‘gran(k which hAA4 been made for the : Domigpion of influential European dele» welfare of the chilirep were no longer, gations, indicative of a keen interest forthcoming, said Major Bustard. The in Canadian tmmigration and a desiré result wus that one met hundreds ot.lo"suni?!ate a movement of_ qatkmau, | children, ragmuffins who ‘had lost their | would appear to‘forecast a b@sy time. | parents in the famine that visited Rusâ€"| On* u:f the most :dgtuflflm;o(n::;t; some years"ago, ruan wild in] from ‘standpoint of a mitisk mntreers)éf Sbweow,) * Mhe. *4 ? inotaniefit" has"Been that of the‘ Farl |â€" Russia, said The spedker, ‘tas more | Of Claredor® Unde®Bacretary of State + ofâ€"an empire than a ‘country=‘its yast | for, Dominfon Affairs, who niade an |area tud the great differences in lpele;mflre ltwï¬?’l‘ébe_flm!flvnn:ï¬‚ï¬ peor‘e Of the varlous parts ¢xplained | the pert!tular s 3k P ? {som# of the apparent cunï¬fidiclionq?"?&@ï¬g mem;.}‘ma atâ€" ienmumeï¬d ta reports about it. ho‘%wfwwmmï¬ | country In the workd, he gald, pregent.* out ‘through the, cooperation ofiths There Is a certain appropriaténess in this since there‘ls ‘a steady official movement‘* of +~Canadian students . to France." At the coffclusion ‘of the. wat the Dominion sousht assewrance of the watintenance of the‘sympathetic bonds between it and the RepubMc by mak ing arrangements for Camad#fan youth to study in the Republic after gragduatâ€" ing in Canada. Simultaneous action was taken by the various provincial legislatures as a result of which a porâ€" manent annual appropriation of $6,000 was provided to cover five yearly scholarships. The course <covered a wide variety 6 ï¬hjects, including agâ€" rleu‘ture and forestry, <so that Doâ€" minion industries stand to benefit greatly from the constant presence of Canradians at the great French untâ€" vorsity? 87 "% onl â€"6f~an empire than a country=its "a.t‘.fgr,,x_)om!ngm; Affairs, who madean P area tu1 the great differences in the | exhaustiye tour, of tbe,})émmvn with‘ t peop‘e Of theâ€"varlous paris éxplained | the perti¢ular. object of personsliy im; | C ~som# of the apparent contradictions ! Yixtig@tiig the, stihoess‘ wï¬â€˜lph, has atâ€"| C | encoumteréd u_ reports abogt it., No'Wl“’ 3000 family #cheme carried | I | country in the workd,‘he ‘gald, pregentâ€"] out through the,;";x_»‘op,&gm' ofithé ; ) od a groater diffeence beween the edab zglvws’wï¬qu mcuo:'or‘nm*. gated : #n# the nonâ€"eAfttited Classes, ; hed4s chairman, @nd the Oanadiap Govâ€"| f | and h4 coutd not imagine sty country | ermmeut. At; the« conclusion of -Ms-% 1 | which was so illâ€"sulted to the experi.ptour he tharacterized. the sgheme as | ment in Commmnism that had heen | one of vtM'M_ï¬ï¬‚cwm‘ Ktga ! 1 imado there. The reason â€" was that| ever attempiegd, . About ,5Q..of the | 1 | when thoso responsible medt the exâ€" 3,000 tamilies 3,!?’8‘9!‘!'04}" ecitied | periment, with the idea th&t all peoâ€" | Canada and the balante are expected e would: be equal, they â€"started of|to be W e ‘by % with the initlal disadvantage fhat inÂ¥ visited nearly two hundred fan wo country. were.the people #o unqual.tpn farms, and. :tma mm‘;a%l 1 V "The great bulk of the people in fied with their uniform sucteses. On ; ! Parentless Children Run Wild in Moscow Streets. \Maj. Fifink Busfard, speaking before the~ Manchester. (Eng.Y* Geographical Society.on ; ‘The . New Russia," baged upon his personal ‘experiences thére, both before and since the war, refot red to what he described qs "the apâ€" palliny problem" which, Taces the Sagiet Republic with regard to the welfarte of destitute childrem. °. ~* The situation, he said, "Had arisen Russiaâ€"<probably. no lees. than 85 per cent. of the populaiionâ€"are einployed in agriculture," he gaid. "They are & .people slow to:move and elow to think, but 4t ts the agricuitural=@Anmunity which will finally prevan." > yer Minard‘s Liniment for Distemper. in France ‘_ It may be of passing interest to mote here that the ancient Irish nation ran & course far longer thin has been the tot of other nations, anclient or mod» | arn, with the exception perhaps of the | Jows and the Egyptians, The historiâ€" ans of the "High Kings"> who, held sway over all} the clans 0f,the nation, are recorded in an unbroken.lineâ€"from the jotnt reign of the brothers Heber Land Heremon, inâ€"1700 B.C., down to the death of Roderick Q‘Conmor, the last and 183rd of the "High Kings," | at which timo, in the latter part of the | twelfth century A.D., the Irish national 'st.ruv:.wm began to crumble under the onslaughts of the Angloâ€"Normans. ’,or this name, as nearly es‘ it can be , rendered,; is "wervant of motion." It ‘is a compound‘ of the ‘GaeMc words | ‘Iludah" ~(motfon) and "maol" (serâ€" |vant, follower or devotee). _ > A PERFECT MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES * ._MuULLOY 3 Varlationsâ€"Mailloy, O‘Mulloy. > Racial Originâ€"trish. s Sourceâ€"A given name. ‘ Here is an Irish Can or family name of real antiquity, for it traces back to about the period of "Nialt of the Nine Hostages," who was the "High King" ot Ireland in the latter part of the fourth century. .‘ In fact, the clen traces its origin‘to a chleftain who was a descendant of this Monarch. The Ifish form of the name Muboy is "O‘Moaltmmaith," from the given rame of "Maoluadb." The meaning The ‘clan seat was in the ancient territory of "Ferceal," in Meath, the anclent ‘"federal‘ territory, now the territory about Fecall, ° Bailoycowen and Ballyboy in King‘sâ€"connty. The perfect medicine for little ones is found in Baby‘s Own.Tablets,. They are a gentle . but Athorough laxative which regulate the bowels, , sweeteh the. stomach; dzive.out: constipation and indigestion ;. drive out copstipation Baby‘s Own Tablets Should be in Every Home Where There Are Thildren. simple : feyers ,and »prompote . healthiful refreshing sleep. It is lmpoa'ï¬}ma‘,m' Baby‘s Own Tablets to harm evefh the newâ€"born babé; as they are absolutely guaranteed free from opiates, or any other injurions drug. (oncerning the Tablets, Mrs. Alexs J. Perry, Z}tfl-t.lc. N.S., . writes : * always keep Baby‘s, Own, Tablets in thé house for the childrep, &s I hasg found them &A perfect ‘medicine. for little ones." â€" ; P M Baby‘s Owi Tablets‘ are sold;.by medicine dealers or. by mall at, 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine ('/6.‘ Brockville, Ont: +, ‘What is "the averege â€",Canadian, Uver the surge 0| i"7e Seas, home doing to raise the stamdard of| * COme#â€"like an echoed chime music? â€"In the homes of the well:to.| The voice of all passiong that. play do, in homes of wealth, in fact in‘ail, hn the dim heart oft â€"man alway, _,, walks of fife, we Oftcn find {hat the} Withâ€"the rush ofâ€"a rodling: rhyme, purity of the home is considered in /\ The lit:of a duiling rirymee, . * everything _ but music. .. Planos are 4 > ‘To the end of daty. y littered with all kinds of musigal trash â€"G. A. Greene. For the dRinst Anmniver both vocal and instrumental, Mothers |~ sary.o0f the. Rbymers‘ Club. :( whovexercise â€"great care. that their| _« _ Sm dheciiggon El ied wl $ 8 5 0) . , chilkiren ‘ pead . no undersirable bookk | ‘Don‘t Tet I@igestion after melis, ‘bfiiousness, will â€"allow them to sing songs of "the| hbartburn, ordyspepsia take themep out of you. vaudévilie threatres, many of which |afakeSeige!‘s Syrup. Any doug storé, .. ate fraukly suggesiive and to Apénd / 4t n n t 1 C P .m _..., %u playing. "ragtime" and "Jazz"| _ Wellâ€" balanced speeches.&re usua‘lly and other deivel ithile t}gg:l_vsson-. re--‘Atbe Multflfw'ei'}dntmry word. 4 1¢% iz mk ced 0t ind 44 at iÂ¥ Lxycil Ag> motmiecs s Adboiet s 4 is oc ied Fewain + : en mar h t t t Cranire e i E more gratifying rate. then has been|depot at the BHtish Government in: the case at this season for some time | wrnctiofial centre / at â€" AVeéting) Hall, past,.. There is every assurance of this | Brandon," Norfolk 4 "A S+w nonths ago continuing ., throughout . the wimerithe first ‘group 6f ‘trainces from the monthe. PFor the spring and subse, farm, afterâ€"six monthe‘ tratning in quent seagons the many visits “"V‘h’i.‘!‘!iï¬ï¬â€˜,’ «farm. Copditions, , under a Domipion of influential European dele» | Canadian ttor, were moved out gations, indicative of a keen interest | fo 1 la ‘agd placed upon ‘specially in Canadian tmmigration and a desi chad! gatms . "in" Manitoba. â€" This to suninlate a movement of nationals, | PbC ‘ools.in#erit Has given an excellent would appedr to‘forecast a Wisy time. | acoount wn and the dpitial and Pma W the most «lenfficantof v®its |‘expertmenti? phash of‘the scheme is COnBe en t +s OE OE P 9 00 Cw CAAbanh Cl AU00 M cance & is felt, sttacles to ‘che,visit _ AIMMIGRATION: TO CANADK® *:= Ekvaftiné Music.. e t $ a n B o o c se WWe cï¬ o P * s ï¬ t aie s \‘*% ... <pire‘ ki U c . onl l Theflame is one prominent in litgr Irish history as the result, of a Tewele #ou led against the .British in 1608 by Bir Cah{r.O‘Dougherty, who for a nugmâ€" |.b°"-°‘ yearsy achieved qwdï¬x& whilitary : sucoess againgt .them 3 ster. * Finelly, however, he was kil }tn' an engagement with them, and the power of the clan was broken, the Briâ€" tish Goyernment depriving them Of their land. s wl Racilal Originâ€"Igish and Scottish. _‘ * 1 Sourceâ€"A given name, also a locality, The O‘Dougherty clan in:Iireland i# am offshoot of considerableâ€"antiquity, from the O‘Done‘s of Tirconnel. ~The Irish form .of the nome is "Oâ€" Dochartaigh," which is derived from *the given name of "Dochartach," in turn derived from the Gaeolic word for "harm" or "damage.", ° â€"~ Variations â€" | _ Scoffs ‘at an art sublime? â€" *â€"Who Is it jeers atcour song? > ;W«,whp know â€"right. from wrom \"Worship the godHke pbyme. 18!36 on the worldâ€"wide breozo, ‘Over the surge of the seas, The original seat of the can ap pears to have been near Innishowen, bit as early as 1440 there was another divigion established in Donegal. Al of the variations given at the heading â€" of thig, article are deflg from this clan name, with the excef tion of Bochart.. Though one might welk: be ‘pardoned for assuming that. this also is a. variatioy of the. Irish aame, it should not, strictly speaking, beâ€"classed, with it.. The similarity is in gqund and spelling.only. <_ . Dochart is a Scottish name, strange ly emough, bore by a sect of one of the broken clans of that country, the Macâ€" Gregors. The Dochants, of Bublane, however, took their name from Lake Dochart, having been compelled to drop that of their clan when it way Ol“*l’ed. % : mains untouched. Why make the pMano in your homte a sort of social ornament or somethmg for the grindâ€" ing out of spinelegs jingles:, The songs of childhood ane always remembered, and the Aufluence â€"of a song may be felt throughout a lifeâ€" time. .What do you want your child toâ€" rememberâ€"that . which uplifts, or that wirich degrades"* In the musical life,, as in the spiritual life, there is no stauding #tH1.., Which way are you going!s. i 1 % | to, and tour of, the Dominton By Major |H. F. Hail, madager.of the traiming Here do ’ws: meéet bgain, _ _ ."** \&aflr a M'xeuy's time: . * Hm-.? ye meet -"am’: k-"n : Meet Withâ€"our ofd refrain, * /* . +« Praige of the regal thyme. a Songsmiths Hke them who‘of old «*‘ Fashioned the‘r speech of gold : In a far; forgotten <clime, We ltx‘llbfl?}!m Are _.., ; 4 With our yowng iflgn'hn:ih suspire, Who is it‘jéers at our kong*? And dbammer the goidem thyme, «. Hammer the ringing rHysit f ~A TiX the Gcthobe tire. 6+ Song of tliavsonésmidu. ol ‘9a" ~ 3A /. hn emegy Rhruirmint. * are e en is * CA %o .. â€" W o) n _.Tom‘s fliness left a very small balâ€" "ance 1h.the radio accotaif and @Be Tom on his right side. They called at the doctor‘s office. ‘"You say you are going to buy a radto?" asked the docâ€" tor, "Well, this boy has appendicitis, and from what heâ€"tells me, I don‘t wonder. You can‘t have appendicitis without constipation, and he has been ::m tfrom copstipation ever since cold weather came in. With nothâ€" ing but an outgbor closet.at home and atâ€"wchool!, he has not been regular in his habits, with the resultâ€"constipeâ€" tion beading to appendicitis." s very glk but.health fingt." wic in Bo they went to the plumber‘s and arranged for a. chemical closet, quite inexpenstve and costing very lMttle for wpkeep, which was installed . in, the basement the following week. * When mothat and father drove into town a week before Christmas to choose it, they were somewhat worried about ‘the pain which seized young . The father said they had hoped to ingtafi: an indodrâ€"closet i~ "the house this fall, but hag.â€" put it off. "For the radio?" asked the dootor. *‘That‘s aU busy with ground wires and the aerial; the radio is now in place, patd for from this summer‘s camping. And we say with the doctor, "A radio is @all right= but health first." family‘s Christmas . present Bad â€"to The spiritual effect of musico is the accepted iden .@mong all> people. . It uplifts the listenerâ€"it ereates a mood ofâ€"joyâ€"or sorrow or anxiety or anger. ~But . the intellectual effectâ€"here in where we come to the big idea, Music makes tdeas and communicates, them from musician to listener.. Instead of using wordsâ€"notes and combinations of notes are employed, These notes are capable of making,any story, play or picture, and where the great comâ€" posers are understood it is seen that they are also novelists, story wriiters, dramaetists and even motion picture makens. 9 * There is nothing mysterions about this idea; nothing‘to worry you ‘or Make you annbyed that you canmot understand it. Ask auy yviofinist to Wiitate the crying ‘of a baby 4t is the eagickt thing in the World. " Ask nim to ‘play ‘@ laugh, a sigh, a moan, | a fretting sound. Ask the pianiet to reâ€" present for you the‘playitig of chimes, the shriek of an engine, the rumble of ‘thunder. Ask the harpist to play the somid of a breese"rustling the trees, the sound ‘6f a mountkin brook, the whisper of fairies. Ask the clarinet ‘player‘ to ‘repreSent® as@heptrerd call, the ioh ing‘of Catitlé, the sob ofam ol man. | So you Will Andérstand that in music instead~Of,desgcribing iteas and action, asowith word@, theâ€"thing itself is â€" actuaily .reprodufed**> in «ymbols. ‘Thus when you hear a certain comâ€" position, and this ffea has ul&od"np ;ou you, wilk you distover that you are actually: Seeing the story, ‘the play, tflle description. place then it the Koran. One.stip is drawn out, and the name written (,‘h(_;qslug h name for a new baby is | always "a matter of anxjoug,.consideraâ€" i tion ; but ,_g'p;_c_ei‘lniu !npds the anxigty bas "mnrhfll“mlz'r:l .._by the Lying | down of rulés to guide fhe choice,. , } ‘The MohammeJans, for, exampley Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. thereou .is. bestoared pupon the baby. +#teâ€" vih the EgtBUatio. (ree 2 !ï¬mg ine Monammesing, _._I9L, e_m,mvï¬v 1 ou real write Tive pawes on slips.of paper and~+â€"»fornia th candieszare taken and‘ mimei â€" 6 name_always being of BibMoof t hnÂ¥ ChBE girl bables ane. concidered not" worh naming, and are simply numbered in orger of birth. Xhinese boys aresnamed until they‘are twentf, when. they receixt fresh names/upe ciqut etaney oy se madey. .. .. on a raft.â€"Lord Grawferd o ciehe <s, * conducted in e . with ihe VegUiaQiumSs In@UOU Ey “.’Zf&am..« of um 7 Aap ‘‘THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL iNsTRUGTiON .. hCy4 ":“"‘ Inâ€"various‘ trades. ‘The uchools and classes ‘are nder the â€" EOMMERCHLE® SUBJECTS»~ MANUAL: TRAINING, HOUuSEnOLD SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE AND HORTICULTURE are previded tor in the Courses of Study in Public, Separate, Continuation and Migh *~ *‘ INDUSTRIAL, TEChNICAL AND .. 1 .. PV TKiMe JECBNIG can s us o awurl (nMM“ d the Ministér of Edudation. ~ barâ€"ANd SEvENiInc: clLassEes «C / 3 j . «.. may‘ e. conducted in aecerdance with the regulutions issued by * ‘"Â¥e givéh in~vatiou F u.‘h“"\'“ AN ; .. Moods in Music. week, however, the boys were Naming the Baby. *High School Boards and Boards of Education the sof AN ADVJ8SORY .COMMITTEGE, a for attendanceshou‘¢ be made to the Principai® 0f the ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Are duthorized by law To establish echiool. * " i T IT ,,,.,.,, SILVE.E.FOX’:&’lnm * _ fully, state price. R. Inglerighy Beaverton, Mich., U.S.A. _,_ The originial minceâ€"pie was made of mutton, and baked in the shaps of g?s. automutic. Value $95.00 fo® .Mgzanwed. Pokmson, 840 Mount Royal Eact, MautresL. â€" 4 * FAarRM wAaAnNrEDâ€" DE8CRIBR Pullw chata nwiaa P Inolariodhi â€" Inspector Join Jones, Caeln Wales, who is retiriig atter 46 railway service, has never mi day‘s duty. cen turies. * .aiu.Onlva business , r s m the four “ f m + y ‘N service sets Xe _omdaz in the | .. gradsportation world. the out.ofâ€"doors this ke yeur family, | ornia hotel rates are 4 We. & see , * ‘y'un‘ our pitture folders? t * & _ | d *T T. Whiinicr se womt | . {Biante Fe Réliway _ T ICTROLA STYUE, FULL OAB INET, plays all records, 48 aglec» ." Extending Our Lives, The average length of ie bes in eased forty years in the last fou# Never Lost a Day in 56 Years. #tornia the mement you step aboardoneofthe fivefamous Santa Fe cross»continent You really enter sunnyCaliâ€" %f?flw Chiefâ€"extra fareâ€" tne Chief “.“\rr..’p‘:';.';, Bulldtme Petrofl, Mich, _ _ Phone: BHancolph #74# in cluding #9Yâ€"