!ay Canada M Ruins of Whalley Abbey Acâ€" quired by Two Churches !ondon.â€"Whalley Abbey, the last «f the abbeys founded in England by the Cistercians or White Monks, is beâ€" ng restored to clerical use for the &~st time since its last abbot was hanywed, drawn and quartered in 1537. A small part of its magnificent rauins ha een il(‘q'l‘:red by Roman Catholies tor conversion into a church and burâ€" *»! ground. The rest of it has been bouwht by the Church of England as a place of retreat for the new diocese of Hlackburn in Lancashire. The thouâ€" sands of tourists who roam about its «bandoned buildings and grounds every year will before long find part of it restored, inhabited and closed to N tract« sen te it insc Restoring Famous 0 in German Factory Victims of Poisoner Berlin..â€"Excitement prevailed in the incland recently over an attempt * n â€"â€" with â€" arsenic _ fifty orkmen of the firm of Theinische enwerke Gebrueder Faber, at Du en on the Rhine. W The W he Mnitoba Coâ€"operative Wholeâ€" Limited, which secured its charâ€" n Noveryber, 1917, began business \innipeg recently with 14 paldâ€"up uber ass0C!lations village of Whalley lTies seven orth of Blackburn, about five y train north of London, and ensive grounds of the ruined come down to the fringes of age. Used for residential and : purposes for a century or er Abbot John Paslew was put h in 1537, the ruins still reveal m grace and the severe fitness haracterized Cistercian disciâ€" ashire men everywhere wi‘ll be at Whalley Abbey is saved. o be assumed of course, that vd George will pursue no lov tactics with that new Henrvy Ford has promised to farm rellet a current topic, uld not overlook the woodâ€" whose rattatâ€"tat is estimated rth $20 to the farmer, through consumed. B ation in modern times has d the main lines of the It must have been very long, ower, probably low and plain, true Cistercian towers, seems tood separate from the church Excavation has also brought beneath the green lawns the of the chapter house, the parâ€" warming rooms, the infirmary the foundations of sundry the great outer gate on the e entrance gate on the north towers over the river on the y‘s site is typical of the reâ€" and desolation that the Cisâ€" used to favor. It is likely hcir day the abbey had none rees that now beautify its ut they had the Calder, as lovely a stream in that day «, but they diverted it from n their masterful way and low close beneath their walls : their own purposes. Since as been sent back to its old ut the course they made for l re seen and so can the old rse along@ which they brought n Pendle hil the immense cking coffee during a rest » men collapsed shrieking and showed every evidence rg. Analysis of the coffee ‘sch arsenic content. The the plot has not been ascerâ€" t many belleve it was the dismissed workmar. Natural Enough id you read t n#s _ Was she his wife?" she wasit‘t his wife, but staken him for her husâ€" _ toâ€"day are extremely ._ _A little more than a r Abbot Paslew‘s death, f the buildings, having to against Cromwell‘s men, rampart along the north perhaps explains why noâ€" mains of the yreat «bbey t a minute fragment of he wes* end, and why the ill and kitchen are entireâ€" brown read that account sbot a man last stone needed for RHEUMATIC PAINS DUE TO THIN BLOOD The most a rheumatic sufferer can hope for in rubbing something on the swollen, aching joints is a Httle rellef, and all the while the trouble is becomâ€" ing more firmly rooted. It is now known that rheumatism is rooted in the blood, and that as the trouble goes on the blood becomes still further thin and watery. ‘To get rid of rheumaâ€" tism, therefore, you must go to the root of the trouble in the blood. That is why Dr. Willtams‘ Pink Pills have proved #o ‘beneficial when taken for this trowble. ‘They make new, rich blood which expels the poisonous acid land the rheumatism disappears. There are thousands of former rhevâ€" matic sufferers in Canada, now well and strong, who thank Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills that they are now free from the aches and patns of this dreaded trouble. ‘One of these, Mrs. W. F. Tait, â€" McKellar, ‘Ont., who BAYB: â€" Relief{ Comes Through the Use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. "I am one of the willing ones to tell you of the great benefit 1 received from the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. After Iying in bed for seven weeks suffering untold agony with inâ€" flammatory rheumatism, relief finally came through the use of this med!â€" cine. 1.could not move in bed only as they lifted me, and I could only sleep when opiates were given me. The medical treatment I was taking seemâ€" ed of mno avail. Then I was advised to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and soon T ‘began to get relief. After takâ€" ing six or eight boxes the rheumatism was banished and I had never felt betâ€" ter in my life. 1t is several years since this happened and I have had no return of the trowble since. I may add that I recommended the pills to two of my friends who were suffering with rheumatism and the pills were equal ly effective in ‘both cases." Try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, indiâ€" gestion or nervousness. Take them as a tonic !f you are not in the best physical condition and cultivate a reâ€" sistance that will keep you well and strong. You can get these pilis through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50c a bex from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockyille, Ont. She: "He calls himself a gentleman farmer." He: "Ohb, and what does he go in for?" She: "Wild oats, princiâ€" pally." Sick stomachs, sour stomachs . and indigestion usually mean excess acid. The stomach nerves are overâ€"stimuâ€" lated. Too much acid makes the stomâ€" ach and intestines sour. f Alkali kills acid instantly. The best form is Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia, beâ€" cause ore harmless, tasteless dose neutralizes many times its volume in acid. ~ Since its invention, 50 years C & s on oi a Falsehoods not only disagree with truths, but they usually quarre! among themselves.â€"Daniel Webster, Because there is a erushing British tax on engines of Ford dimensions, the tiny and lightly taxed Morrisâ€"Cowâ€" leys are bought in preference to Fords by thrifty Britons. Through minute after minute Henry Ford watched the swift, straight line of bathtub cars with a fascinated gaze. "You English," he observed at last, "are further ahead here than most Americans realize." * Formal entertainment proffered last week to the visiting Motor Man included _ a _ luncheon _ given . by David Llovyd George in the Memâ€" bers‘ Resturant of the House of Commons. "My goodness!" said Mr. Ford, later, of Mr. George, "how that man can ask questions about Amâ€" erica‘!" Lord Dewar says that "some men electrify their audiences, and others only gas them." It must be rememâ€" bered, however, that some gas bas great "lfting power. CEvees . PR ts 0 0 I ago, it has remained the with physicians every where. Henry Ford watched pensively, last week, while a line of motor cars no bigger than bathtubs moved briskly toward completion in the huge, humâ€" ming plant of Morris Motors Ltd., at Cowley, England. Red Rose Tea is guaranteed in every way.__Order a packâ€" age toâ€"day. Useany po!'tion of it, and if you are not enâ€" tirely pleased you may return the balance to your grocer and your money will be refunded. 90â€"E Bathtub Cars sour stomachs andl Take mean excess acid.‘ unhapp ves are overâ€"stimuâ€" [ in five : id makes the stomâ€" iknow v Reduce the Acid UIM | _A man that hath friends must show OCET nimself friendly; and there is a friend be that sticketh closer than a brother.â€" 9â€"4K~ |Proverbs of Solomon. ! In addition to ceremonies prepared | S e sI : ‘ Wiig» ~ 000 .2 for Waimea, the landing point; Kealâ€" | |*. »"> Wt & h:« * MA > t akekua, Hawail, the spot where Capl : t d .. # / > * tain James Cook was killed, and Honâ€"| | MA " MataP > !~ olulu, the celebration will give to the| | j ’%&- +# é%g’f | world in a series of addresses by emiâ€"| | 4 6 ',/,".;;;J&;' {?;',' nent scholars and authorities on stt . * ‘gï¬-'» [ * % political, diplomatic, commercial, geoâ€"‘ lllie... 61 graphical and maritime sciences the ! h. results of what might be styled the | . :. >> "timely arrival" of the explorer. ‘ The revised echeme is the broader s 4 conception of the original plan to note | Youth Win Prize imerel,v the anniversary of the dlscov-' Arthur Cleland Lloyd, ninteenâ€"yearâ€" |ery of the islands by the civilized p1g Vancouver youth, who won the \ world. An invitation committee has prize of $1,000 offered by E. W. Beatâ€" been appointed composed of Bruce ty, Chairman and President of the |Cartwright, student of all things Ha@â€"| Canadian Pacific Railway, for orchesâ€" wallan; the Right Rev. Henry Bon‘ tral sulite open to all comers. This Restarick, Bishop Emeritus of IIonw"prgze is given in connection with the lulu‘s Episcopal diocese; Dr. Herbert Quebec Folk Song and Handicrafts E. Gregory, director of the Bishop Muâ€" E Festival which is to be held in Queâ€" seum, and Albert Pierce Taylor, bec May 24â€"28. keeper of the archives. Letters have; Mr. Lloyd has been under the tutorâ€" been forwarded to the British Governâ€"‘ship of Percy Grainger in Chicago, ment suggesting topics and the nflmes}ï¬nd is at the present time studying of men who might prepare addresses under Harold Bauer and Nicolal Medâ€" _on these subjects. Similar action has,nikoff in New York. He won the disâ€" been taken in regard to the Governâ€" tinction of Associate of Toronto Conâ€" ment of the United States. [ servatory of Music with full honors | â€" The subjects which it is hoped to while at the age of thirteen. Honolulu.â€"The Cook sesquicentenâ€" rizl celebration planned by residents of the Territory of Hawali for Aug. 15 to 20 to commemorate the discovery of the Sandwich Islands in 1778 by the great English navigator will not stop with a mere marking of the cryptic cycle of 150 years since the ships of the British voyager dropped a@nchor in the bay of Waimea, Kauai. The subjects which it is hoped to discuss will involve Hawaii and forâ€" eign influences in the Pacific during the last 100 years, as regards England, France, Spain, Russia and the United States. The Governments of New Zealand and Canada have been asked to participate. The commissioners have completed plans for a week‘s celebration, with the exception of the exact details. That portion at Waimea will be carâ€" ried on by residents of the island and will include the dedication of a Cook monument at the point where Cook and his men first stepped ashore. At Kealakekua the ceremonies will include a visit by commission memâ€" bers, gnuests and visitieg officials to the Captain Cook monument, a tiny patch of British soil beside the blue bay where he saw the last of his life. At the spot where Captain Cook "fell with his face in the sea" a bronze tablet will be set urder the surface, the inscription to be read through the water. At Honolulu there will be presented an elaborate masque written by James A. Wilder, Honolulu poet and artist, which is intended to portray Hawailan life at the time of the arrival of the English seaman. The special Cook coin, a 50â€"cent piece recently authorized by Congress, will be available for distribution durâ€" ing the week of the celebration. A special stamp also is to be issued. "When dumplings taste like paper pulp you can gamble they were made out of a cook book." Take a spoonful in water and your unhappy condition will probably end in five minutes. Then you will always know what to do. Crude and barmful methods will never appeal to you. Go prove this forâ€"your own sake. It may save a great many disagreeable hours. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physiâ€" clans for 50 years in correcting excess acids. Each bottle contains full diâ€" rectionsâ€"any drugstore. First Broker: What‘s companionate marriage? Second Broker: Interim security, no par, cumulative, free from stock liability, callable at any time. i To Celebrate Discovery of Islands Gabby Gertie ' Mr. Lloyd has been under the tutorâ€" ship of Percy Grainger in Chicago, :and is at the present time studying ‘under Harold Bauer and Nicolai Medâ€" |nikoff in New York. He won the disâ€" Youth Win Prize Arthur Cleland Lloyd, ninteenâ€"yearâ€" old Vancouver youth, who won the prize of $1,000 offered by E. W. Beatâ€" ty, Chairman and President of the Canadilan Pacific Railway, for orchesâ€" tral sulte open to all comers. This prize is given in connection with the Quebec Folk Song and Handicrafts Festival which is to be held in Queâ€" bec May 24â€"28. In Florida they have a delicious way of adding cocoanut to stewed chicken. Prepare the chicken as for any stew and boil gently in water to cover until tender, about three hours. Have ready a pint of young spinach, measâ€" ured after cooking. Grate a mediumâ€" sized cocoanut or take its equivalent in the fresh canned, pour over it a pint and a half of milk and let it stand _ twenty minutes, then put through a sieve. Add the spinach to the chicken, let boil five minutes, then add the cocoanut milk and boil up once. Remove from the fire and add pepper and salt to taste, the latter last, to prevent any danger of curdling. Sprinkle some of the drained cocoaâ€" nut over the top and serve. Spring chickens are still too high priced to serve frequently, but don‘t have the older ones always plain stewâ€" ed. Try some of these unusual ways of eooking. Another splendid chicken dish is made by boiling a large chicken in just enough water to cover it until it is tender. Remove it from the fire and add to the water in which it was cooked two minced onions, one tableâ€" spoon of chopped red pepper, half a can of tomatoes and salt and pepper to taste. Cook this down until thick. Stuff the chicken with mashed potaâ€" toes, moistened with gravy and two tablespoons of raisins mixed with the potato. Have you ever tried a Yankee pot roasted chicken with cranberries? Prepare a threeâ€"pound chicken as for roasting, brown it first in three tableâ€" spoons of hot fat. Remove from the pan and add three cups of water, stir until boiling, then add two cups of cranberry sauce made less sweet than usual. (Canned sauce is available the year around.) Replace the chicker in the pan with this gravyâ€"sauce, cover and proceed in the ordinary way, addâ€" ing salt and pepper to taste when cooking is half finished. Fricassee chicken with asparagus sauce is especially delightful. Boil the fowl until tender, adding a bit of chopped celery while cooking. Cut in neat pleces for boiling, discarding all bones, and put into a double boiler to keep hot. For the sauce blend two tablespoons of butter and two of flour, add one pint of chicken stock, a slice of onion, a small slice of carrot, one bay leaf, a tiny bit of mace, a sprig of parsley and salt and pepper to taste. Heat slowly, stirring. When heated to boiling set back and simmer twenty minutes. Put the tender green heads from a bunch of asparagus in a cup of boiling water with half a teaspoon of salt and half a teaspoon of lemon juice. Cover, boil twelve minutes, drain, rub through sieve, combine with the other part of the sauce and heat to boiling point and serve over the fowl. Canned asparagus tips may be used. The following preciously preserved extract from a love leiter written home to his wife by a soldier on acâ€" tive service will evoke tender memâ€" ories in thousands of our former serâ€" vice men: "Don‘t send me no more nagging letters, Lettie. They don‘t do no good. I‘m three thousand miles away from home, and I want to enjoy this war in peace." Minard‘s Liniment for insect bites. Old Chicken Dishes Londonâ€"The Prince of Wales is understood to be planning . to visit Africa, He may leave on such a trip some time toward. the end of the year, and the Duke of York many accompany him, No definite programâ€"has been arrangâ€" ed. But the Colonial Office in the meantime will communicate with the African authorities regarding the most favorable conditions for the visit. * Travels Again Every little while the great men ‘ who religiously refuse to comply with requests for their autographs get what we in New England call their comeâ€"uppance, says ‘"The Boston ‘ Transcript." It seems that recently J a line of buses was put on the road ‘ that passes in front of the residence of Rudyard Kipling. This was unâ€" pleasant enough, but Kipling is a pubâ€" lMeâ€"spirited citizen and made no comâ€" plaint. But one day an autoâ€"bus ‘ smashed off a branch from one of Mr. Kipling‘s trees. Then he wrote a letâ€" ter of protest to the proprietor of the ‘ bus line. No response. Soon afterâ€" 11 ward ‘another branch was broken off. | Another letter from the author of, * “‘M:ndnlay." No response. Mr. Kipâ€" “ ling wrote again. And somebody "put| lhlm wise." The bus proprietor is an eager autograph collector. ' London.â€"Faces of living men are ;carved in stone on the new millionâ€" ; pound building of the Imperial Chemitâ€" |cal Industries nearing completion at | Westminster. Collector Ignores Letters From Kipling to Get More Many mothers give their children solid foods at too early an age and say proudly that their babies "eat everyâ€" thing that grown up people do." Such a course is almost certain to bring on indigestion and lay the foundation of much illâ€"health for the httle one. Other mothers administer hareh, nauseating purgatives which in reality irritate and injure the delicate stomâ€" ach and bowels and at the same time cause the children to dread all mediâ€" cine. MISTAKES MOTEERS MAKE IN CAR® OF LITILE ONB$ Absolutely no meat should be given to a child until it reaches the age of 18 months, and then only if approved by the doctor. For medicine, all strong, disagreeable oils and powders should be abandoned and Baby‘s Own Tablets given instead. Baby‘s Own Tablets are especially made for little ones. They are pleasâ€" ant to take and can be given with absolute safety to even the newâ€"born bave. They quickly banish constipaâ€" tion and indigestion, break up colds and simple fevers and make the cutâ€" ting of teeth easy. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams# Medicine Co., Brockyville, Ont. Just a word of caution. Look for the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher on the packeage so you‘ll be sure to get the genuine. The forty cent bottles â€"contain thirtvâ€"five doses. One of the faces is that of the head of the concern, Sir Alfred Mond. All the other carvings are said to be exâ€" cellent likenesses of many men proâ€" minent in the chemical world. The caddieâ€"master overheard one of his youthful charges using lurid lanâ€" guage. ":: My lad," he said severely, "do you know what happens to kids who swear?" "Yes," replied the boy pertly, "they grow up and join the club." Baby &pecialists agree nowadays, that during the first six months, babies must have three ounces of fluid per pound of body weight daily. An »ight pound baby, for instance, needs twonâ€" tyâ€"four ounces of fluid. Later on the rule is two ounces of fluid per pound of body weight. The amount * fluid absorbed by a breast fed baby is best determined by weighing him before and after feeding for the whole day; and it is easily calculated for the botâ€" tle fed one. Then make up any de ficiency with water. Giving baby sufficient water often relieves his feverish, crying, upset and restless spells. If it doesn‘t, give him a few drops of Fletcher‘s Castoria. For these and other ills of babies and children â€" such as â€" colic, cholera, diarrhea, gas on stomach and bowels, eonstipation, sour stomach, loss of sleep, â€" underweight, etc., _ leading physicians say there‘s nothing so efâ€" fective. It is purely vegetableâ€"the recipe is on the wrapperâ€"and millions of mothers have depended on it in over thirty years of ever increasing use. It regulates baby‘s bowels, makes him sleep and eat right, enables him to get full nourishment from his food. so he increases in weight as be he should. With each package you get a book on Motherhood worth its weight in gold. ort Faces of Living Men Carved On British Chemical Building Parisâ€"A â€" "mechanical _ violinist," which operates like a player piano by a perforated roll of paper, is the work of a French invencor that has just been displayed here, A Famous Authority‘s Rule I By Ruth Brittain 4e aNn e 2Â¥\ it ?' y ‘"oal ." &,1':4'\\\ | v‘ \ Je â€" V ie / / k t © eMIBâ€""‘ ‘ [3 m t , 3#3,,j TVirestone v C Tread is sX m Scientifically How Much Water Should Baby Get? Machine Plays Violin Wilkins Plane Murray Bay, P.Q.â€"The fiight acrose the top of th world by Captain George H. Wilkins, which was achieved with phenomenal success recently brings to the attention of persons interested in aviation a plane about which little is known. The Lockheed ship which the Ausâ€" tralian explorer selected for his venâ€" ture was designed and developed on the Pacific Coast. Planes of this deâ€" sign have attracted much attention in California and Colonel Charles A, Lindbergi, during his recent visit on the coast, flew one of them. Marked By Efficiency The plane is characterized by its extreme â€" lightness in " design, its sturdiness and the efMciency with which the general trim of the ship has been marked. The Lockheed Vega has a remarkable high cruising speed, which accounts for the record time made by Captain Wilkins in fiying from Point Barrow to Spitzbergen. Minard‘s Liniment for Toothache General: "Confoand you, #ir, why don‘t you be careful?‘ Army Clerk: "What do you mean, sir?" General: "Why, instead of addressing this let ter to the Intelligence Officer, you have addressed it to the Intelligent Officer. You should know there is no such person in the Army.‘ awlways lags behind our ambitions The world would be a much : place in which to live if there 1 some way to provide switches gingleâ€"track minds There is no conce‘vable limit buman consumption, and product @wlways lags behind our ambitions, The world would be a much n place in which to live if there w TEA is good tea Red Rose Orange Pekoe is Your nearest Firestone Desler will gladly supply your needs and give you the better service that goes with these better tires. The Firestone tread was not deâ€" signed with large, massive projecâ€" tions for appearance or to make plausible urel argument. On the contrary, the projections of the crossâ€"andâ€"square tread are small and the rider strips narrow, permitâ€" ting the tread to yield to irregulariâ€" ties and cling to the road, giving the greatest nonâ€"skid surface. _ This tough, pliable tread has the wearâ€" resisting qualities that give thouâ€" sands of exgtra miles of service and save you money. ~ y Firestone Builds the Only Gumâ€"Dipped Tires When Firestone engineers were developing the Balloon Tire they found it necessary to design a tread altogether different from that reâ€" quired by High Pressure Tires. Firestone Scientifically Designed FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER CO OF CANADA LIMITED Hamilton, Ontario MOST MILES PER DOLLAR Was Ideal for Job See _ "The Canadian Bgluty" and other designs at your dealers or write us for Illustrated list. NEW MODELS FOR 1928 GUMâ€" ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO the best tea you can buy In clean, bright Aluminum TIRES ie . ©CHWEGLERS HATCHENY,â€"â€" «omnue ies Canada. Hill the Mover To a Friend In common interchange of work and play You are the coin time cannot wear away, The Gold that keeps its value to the end And makes me rich in having you a friend! Most Everyone NOW â€" in the Springâ€"most people meed a tonic. Men and women of all ages are beneâ€" fitted by taking TRUâ€"BLOOD, a satfe and proven tonic for the blood. First successfully used as a doctor‘s preâ€" scription, TRUâ€"BLOOD is wonderfully effective in bringing back hbealth to all whose ailments are caused by impoverâ€" ished or impure blood. And while correctâ€" MENT Buckley OINT After Shaving Vanessa, Ont.â€"*"I think Lydia E. Finkham‘s Vegetable Compound is growcmmomsmmemememey; 1| O7]\!| . 1 h2VO "*PINKHAM‘S from it. I urge my imends to take it as 7 s sure they will receive the same help I did."â€"Mrs. Miurc MurLex, Vanessa, Ontario, ISSUE No. 15â€" 28 Classified Advertisements Read This Letter from a ] ~_â€" Grateful Woman Needs This True Blood Tos:sic COMPOUND 1$ WONDERFULY TM ENT BLOOD. | Mix Minard‘s with swe and rub the face. S« burns of a dragging ras MOVING AND STORAGE. tortures quickly .OOD. Besides h softens and heau products today . of A any 1 vercon Arthur Wallace Peach njunct hea‘ing aut fhies , tb the of uch dish I boils a BLOOD softness skin dise u~i_ng B â€" with B W hlb | ch dis wonderf CH!CK 3Go%, s B ic 04. N disease impover > correct ishp urin I N h ey‘s the ves Ew l Cw