of Lurope ica Head Listâ€" ia an Excep tion Birth Rates rply Declining dvertising Fa urope and klan lo mi y h ))0b ast 1M £i% t3 i in @ h® M Mb lent it 8 U ® ha ho ho at A KEY I play a flute beneath a bell; the bell is still and silent. Again I try, and as my lips press out a newer hote, straight the ponderous . bell thrills in sympathy through all its being, breathing forth in lJow sweet tones its established harmony. The tong hath reacheq its heart. It is the key by which its treasures are unlocked. _ I; is the "open sesame" to all, its wondrous chambers, and awakes to life and music that which heretofore slept. _ And so sympathy wpelle life, activity, communion, acâ€" }*n and reaction, an interchange of all the electric currents of life, For #ympathy is nothing if not active, and we es Nould bt sympathetic, must Tuis o0r heart s{rings to Another‘s, And enter into his soul‘s communion. â€"â€"W,. A. Ridgway. #1z® 0t the pulbs. Rest, repose, reflection, contemplaâ€" tlion are in themselves a form of reâ€" creation and ought never to be crowdâ€" ed out by more active play.â€"National Recreation Association. About one year in every ten of a man‘s life is spent in eating. It is of fundamental importance that this oneâ€" tenth of a man‘s life shall be so lit up by play of mind upon mind that #ating shall not be a hurried chore but an opportunity for comradeship and for growth for the whole man. Most men should know at least a few songs with good music so. that they may sing when they feel like it. Man thrives best in the sunlight. Every man should be helped to form habit« of being active, of breathing deeply in the sunlit outdoor air. Since living and not business is the end of life our cities should be planâ€" ned from the point of view of living aa; well as of business and industry, Sunâ€" tight, air, open spaces, parks, playâ€" grounds, in abundant measure are esâ€" sentials to any living that is to give permanent joy and satisfaction, Every man should be helped to form the habit of finding pleasure in reading. Culling the flowers of plants grown om bulbs, such as the narcissus MA tulip, reduces the weight and Every man needs to know well a certain limited number of games which he himself likes to use indoors and outdoors so that there will never be an occasion when he cannot think of anything to do. Every man should have certain forms of recreation which require litâ€" tle space and which can be fitted into amall fragments of time. By this rotation of yards and the using of the growing chickens as one year in a four year crop rotation, it is felt that the safeguarding of the health of our flocks by the prevention of worm infestation may be satisfacâ€" torily accomplished. â€" Experimental Farm Note. By these methods it is anticipated that the pullets will come into winter quarters worm free and will be conâ€" fAned to the houses until the following apring before they are allowed out into the yards which had been preâ€" pared for them by resting and growâ€" Ing a crop of clover all the preceding Heason. & To assure the chicks coming into winter quarters worm free or practiâ€" cally so, the chick rearing ground is entirely removed from connection with the plant where the old fowls ie kept The chicks go immediately from the incubator cellar (which is elosed to those working with the old »tock) and are brooded and reared on forage covered land over which no‘ fowl bas ranged for at least two seaâ€" #0 NS | the sane method of control is by' prevention rather than by an attempt| to clean up infection" after it has bo-l come established. To this end all poultry houses at the Central Experiâ€"‘ mental Farm, Ottawa, are uupplled! with double yards, one at the front of the house and one at the back. While‘ the front yards are being used the‘ yards at the back aro ploughed, thorâ€" oughly cultivated and seeded to a good cover crop of clover and alfalfa, which is allowed to sweeten the land tor a full season. The following «pring the flocks are put on the cleanâ€" ¢ed, crop covered yards at the back; the front yards are then cultivated and seeded so as to be ready for nnl the following season. ‘The mortality figures emphasize even more strongly the importance of having worm free stock. Pen A durâ€" Ing the period of the test had a death rate of 53 per cent. while pen B lost only 8.3 per cent. An experiment conducted at the Cenâ€" tral Experimental Farm and published in the 1925 report of the Poultry Diâ€" vision shows that of two pens of 30 pullets; one, pen A, reared under orâ€" dinary infected soil conditions and the other, pen B, reared free from polluâ€" tion, the latter gave eggs at current market prices to the value $6.53 per bird for the eight months commencâ€" ing November 1, and the former gave exzs to the value of $3.32 for the same period. ( Successful poultry keeping depends wore and more on the health control of the flock, and of first importance in this is the fight to control internal parasites, Worm Infestation { Of Poultry, I have been tempted many times to annex Schopenhauer‘s maxim: "Do People Do Not Think Mental cowardice or sluggishness makes sheep of most people. Indeed the world lives on phrases which it goes on repeating till some thinker makes a breach in the solid and stolid wall of conformity. Such passivity cannot be too early counteracted. Children ought to be put through reguâ€" lar thinking exercises at school. The Montessori system arranges for interâ€" vals during which the children veil their little faces and think. { By Ernest Dimmet, a French abbe, the author of "The Art of Thinking." If we are bored by any' topic above those which give food to our small disâ€" likes or even smaller likes, we do not think. If, the moment a book or a newspaper raises a question demandâ€" ing some supplementary information or reflection, we yawn, fidget, or hurâ€" riedly do something else, we abhor thinking. If, when trying to reflect, we at once feel a weariness, a drowsiâ€" ness or a tendency to repeat mere words, we do not know what thought‘ is. Suppose, however, B, at trick two, makes the proper discard of,the jack of clubs. At trick three, Y should Solution: Z should lead the king of diamonds and Y should discard the six of clubs. At trick number two, Z should lead the six of diaâ€" monds and Y should trump with the jJack of spades, B should play the jack of clubs but, if he wants to make a fancy play, he can discard the eight of spades. Y should then lead the eight of clubs for Z to trump, and the last four tricks are then taken by the queen of diamâ€" onds king of hearts, seven of spades and ace of spades. Heartsâ€"K, 6, 5 Clubsâ€"none Diamonds«â€"K, Q, 6 Spadesâ€"10 If spades are trumps and Z is in the| lead t lead, how can Y Z win all of thel’““'d tricks against any defense? f.l.“} .‘.‘ Heartsâ€"9, 8 Clubsâ€"4 Diamondsâ€"10, 9, 8 Spadesâ€"none Recently the wirter kept a record of the overâ€"bidding of one player during one evening‘s play. Out of fifteen of his bids that failed to make good, twelve were doubled. On ten of the hands, the player could have defeated his opponent‘s bid and on the other five he could have saved game. He was ons of those players who consder it a personal affront to be overbid and his opponents knew he would :',or.tinuel to bid. Such a player is under a great handicap and yet cannot seem to realize what is the trouble with his game. He complains of his hard luck and of the big rubbers he loses, but hasn‘t the good judgment to realize that it is his temperament, rather than 4200 2 FUIZE l _ Why is it that some players invariâ€" _ ably lose the big rubbers and win the | little ones? How and why do the big ; ' losses occur? Generally speaking, it‘s | impossible to suffer big losses at Aucâ€" | tion or Contract unless you are holdâ€" | ing good cards. When you are holdâ€" , Ing worthless cards, there is no tempâ€" , tation to overbid and hence no big | penalties. It‘s when you are holding good cards that are not quite good _ enough, or when you are suffering | from bad "breaks" that you are apt to | lose heavily. ‘The good cards, instead of winning for you, are a source of , loss. _ Why is this? | There must be some reason for it , and the answer is really very simple. A player just cannot remain quiet | with good cards. He must bid and 'keep on bidding. The good cards inâ€" | toxicate one and you become blind to | the many signs that the odds are | against you. You fail to notice that , your partner is passing and that hath "ands than it has when used for ofâ€" fensive purposes. It‘s an axiom of the game that one good hand against two has one hundred per cent. better chance to save a game than to make game. In nearly halft of such hands, it would have been possible to have saved game and in the other half to have defeated the opponent‘s bid. Moral: Don‘t overbid good hands. Remember, a good hand has a better defensive value against two good hands than it has when used for ofâ€" fensive purposes. It‘s an axiom of the game that one good hand arainst t+wa What Is Thought? " 7 TVeny signs that the odds are against you. You fail to notice that your partner is passing and that both of your opponents are bidding. What can one good had do against two? If players â€" would only ask themselves that question, many a big penalty would be avoided. P Solution to Last Week‘s Problem Heartsâ€"4 Clubsâ€"8, 7, 6 Diamondsâ€"none Spadesâ€"A, J, 7 How to play Bridge 7;* AUCTION ; w~// , CONTRACT * _ _ byWyune Ferguson ARTICLE No. 31 Facts are only the material for thought. Thoughts themselves, that is to say, the illumination produced in our mind by the presence of rich facts, should be preserved even more carefully, Certainly it is difficult and sometimes it may be dangerousâ€"for it stops the working of the mindâ€"to interrupt an intellectual reaction unâ€" Educated men look for relations beâ€" tween ideas or between facts and never see a thing without visualizing another beside it, or behind it. What is that, if it is not thought, and yet, it is within the possibility of innumerâ€" able people. Let them keep away from trivialities, and, instead, stock their minds with knowledge worth while; let them range freely through this mass of data, and thought will be actively produced. On the whole the object of reflection is invariably the discovery of something satisfying to the mind which was not there at the beginning of the search. Obviously we must make a distineâ€" tion between what we read for our inâ€" formation and what we read for our formation, between what we want for our use and what we need for our deâ€" velopment. But whatever we read we must first comprehend and, when we have comprehended, criticize. We must develop the capacity to have our own opinion about an idea, a poem, a doctrine or a work of art, and to see it clearly enough to give it forcible expression,. Comprehension is critiâ€" cism, and criticism or judgment is a mere synonym for thought. not read, think!" or to transform it into: Never read, always study. A harsh saying? Not if we realize that we should study nothing that does not interest us, and that studying only apâ€" plies to the most enjoyable way of exâ€" tracting from that, what will interest us the most. Whatever we read from intense curiosity gives us the model of how we should always read. *PRACTICAL AUucrIioOn saipos® case, at trick three, Y should lead the four of hearts, which Z should win with the king and lead back the five of hearts. This trick Y should trump with the ace of spades and lead back the seven of spades. Z must win this trick with the ten of spades, and now has the good six of hearts and queen of diamonds for the last two tricks. It is a clever little problem worthy of the closest study. lead the seven of clubs, which Z should trump with the ten of spades and follow with the king of hearts and five of hearts, Y should trump the Jatter with the seven of spades and lead the ace of spades.. Y‘s club is now good for the last trick. At trick two, suppose B had disâ€" carded the ten of hearts. In that The following hand looks easy but, unless the proper lead is made, the game is lost: Heartsâ€"Q, J, 8 Clubsâ€"7, 4, 2 Diamondsâ€"K, 10, 7, 4, 2 Spadesâ€"J, 4 The dealer bid one spade and all passed. What is the correct opening lead with the above hand? The corâ€" rect lead is the queen of hearts. Any other lead with this land would haveJ lost game. The player who held it opened the four of diamonds, a very bad lead. Never open a suit containâ€" ing the king against a suit bid, if there is any other possible lead. It is nearly always a trick loser. Is it more difficult to play the dumâ€" my hand against two opponents or for the two opponents to play against the declarer? That question has been the cause of much discussici, but to the writer there seems only one answer. It is much more difficult for the opâ€" ponents of the declarer. The latter can see his twentyâ€"six cards and should know the best way of combinâ€" ing them to the best advantage. Hs is ..ot in the dz‘ like his opponents, for they must guess as to the other‘s holding and they are just as apt to guess wrong as right. Also in the opening lead, the opponents of the‘ declarer are at a disadvantage. If partner has not bid, what should be the opening lead? This is a question that puzzles the experts at times, but the average player can greatly overâ€" come this difficulty by ‘the careful study of a good table of leads. In playing against the declarer, try to convey as much information as posâ€" sible to your partner by use of conâ€" ventional leads and discards. Watch your partner‘s play and that of the declarer very closely. Not only try to make every play of your own conâ€" vey information to your partner, but also try to learn something from every play of your partner and of the deâ€" clarer. his bad cards that is making him lose. Take these remarks to heart and, if in the class specified, look for the result of hands in which you fail to nake your bid. If you could nave saved game or defeated your opponent‘s bid, your logs is not justifiable. Heartsâ€"Q, J, 10 Clubsâ€"Q, J Diamondsâ€"3 Spadesâ€"8 and We think in & straigh; line, and cannot attend to a new idea until we dismiss the old one; but; it is not impossible to conceive of a divine Mind which can entertain an unlimâ€" ited number of concerpts at the same time. Axiom: Very busy people always find time for everything. Conversely, people with immense leisure find time for nothing. Nothing can be truer and more enâ€" couraging to men equally gifted with a human desire for|action and a human indulgence of laziness than the Greek sentence: The beginning is half the thing. Learn to attack things frontally but according to the most scientific methâ€" ods. Be the Lindbergh of whatever litâ€" tle ocean you have to cross. Our life should consist of a thousand brief dramas, complete in themselves, swift as a game of poker, Some busienss men hbave given me a truly artistic pleasure by the infallibility of their dictation. Each letter meant a rapid weighing of pros and cons, a decision, and the thing done at once. What do you do in trains, cars or taxis? If you do nothing in perfect contentment, well and good, but if you feel restless you are to blame. Manâ€" kind might be divided between the multitude who hate to be kept waitâ€" ing because they get bored and the happy few who rather like it because it gives them time for thought. Mrs. M. E. Conron, Brantford, Ont. "Best of all children‘s remedies for sumâ€" mer complaint", writes Mrs. Geo. "Baby‘s Own Tablets are excellent for children‘s summer complaints", writes ) _ You have no time, you say. _ Are 'you sincere, or are you just repeating !what everybody else is saying? No ‘time? Examine your conscience and answer, Is there no time you can reâ€" _claim, not from your work, not from your exercise, not from your family or friends, but from pleasure that really does not give you much pleasure, l’rom‘ empty talk at the Club, from inrerlor‘ plays, from doubtfully enjoyable week‘ ends or not very profitable trips? Do you know how to gather up !ragments‘ of time lest they perish? Do you realâ€" ize the value of minutes? One of the| Lamoignons had a wife who always kept him waitng a few minutes before dinner. After a time it occurred to him that eight or ten lines could be written during this interval, and hbe had paper and ink laid in 2 convenient place for that purpose. In timeâ€"for years are short but minutes are long â€"several volumes of spiritual medi-l tations were the result. | Sick fom Heat BABY‘S OWN TABLETS The principle which has never failâ€" ed to confer superiority on a man‘s thinking acitvity is the well worn preâ€" cept: Do not read good booksâ€"life is too short for thatâ€"only read the best. And of those only read what gives you the greatest pleasure. Great books, great men, great problems and‘ great doctrines, great facts and their‘ lessons cannot but result in high thought. The busier we are, the more severe our selection should be, Many men absorbed in business show such a rare quality of culture that we are surprised at it. The reason invariably is partly because hard work and even the weariness it leaves carrty a nobilâ€"! ity with them, but also because there; is no room in such lives for inferior} mental occupation. | impart health and vitality. Get a supâ€" ply at your druggist‘s; in the new glass containerâ€"50c. der pretence of noting it. But to keep no track of what one learns or thinks is as foolish as to till and seed one‘s land with great pains, and when the harvest is ripe turn one‘s back upon it and think of it no more. Don‘t allow yourself or your daughâ€" ter to be rabbed of health and vigour. Take Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. They banish rundown or nervous conditions by creating new red blood cells, which Mrs. Ament adds: "My daughter was also rundown. Every one thought she was going into a decline. I gave her Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and I could see success immediately," â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€") "Being rundown, I was not able to do l.' l’g;:ent my work; I had no ambition, and could Quickly not sleep at night," writes Mrs. Reuben Ament, Grafton, Ont. "I saw an adâ€" vertisement for Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Trying two boxes, I got relief right away, so I kept on taking the Pills, and now I am able to do my work with pleagure, and I have no ailâ€" ments whatever." I Tired All Day Long Praise Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills For Restoring Vigour ISSUE. No. 29â€"‘32 NEW IDEALS io‘ STANDING ALONE I honour any man, anywhere, who, in the conscientious discharge of what ha believes to be his duty, dares to stand alone,. The world, with ignorant and intolerant judgâ€" ment, may condemn, the countenâ€" ances of companions may be averted, the hearts of friends may grow cold, but the consciousness of duty done, shall be sweeter than the applause of the world, than the countenance of companion or the heart of friend. â€"Charles Summer. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Ade‘aide St., Toronto. Plain crepe.in navy blue or black with white trim will make a nice dressier scheme for the beavier woâ€" man. Style No. 2873 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, :4, 46 and 48 inches Lust. Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39â€"inch material witk 1 yard of 35â€" inch contrasting. A navy blue and white dotted crepe silk with plain blue trim made the original. Inverted plaits at the centreâ€"front and the centreâ€"back aids slimness, creâ€" ating height to the figure. You see the .evers disagree as to size and length, which has a tendency to diminish bulk. Here‘s something charming and chic for youâ€"and kindly too if you‘re inâ€" clined to overweight. Ulustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur nished With Every Pattern The steeple clock chimed eight, and into the fharket strode a policeman, ringing a clamorous handbell. In the interim between the first ding and the answering dong came a mighty burst of sound, as if an orchestra concealed in a pit had begun fortissimo a bold presto movement. And so it hadâ€"an orchestra of dogs. For beneath each _ It was market hour of a sunny Augâ€" ust morning as we approached the | Bourse in Brussels. The steps of this | stately exchange were brilliant with ’tler upon tier ~f vegetables, looking from a distance like a carpet spread | for the royal progress of all the kings of finance. There were masses of reds land purples, of greens and golds, lglowing warm against the chill gray of classic columns. On the steps and | in the streets that flanked the Bourse shoppers argued volubly with fullâ€" skirted, woodenâ€"shod garden wives ‘and blueâ€"smocked men who displayed cartloads of colorful waresâ€"pyramids of red cabbages beside silverâ€"green Ones, the Yorks and Lancashirians of fuls of colorâ€"pansyâ€"purple eggplants, yellow summer squashes, blanched celery stalks with feathery tops of green, roseâ€"red tomatoes. Color again in the flower stalls whither we were being lured â€" by ‘eager women who beckoned with nosegays. Then someâ€" thing happened which put color quite out of our minds, and replaced it with sound. the cabbage kingdom, bunches of silâ€" very onions and of crisp red radishes, borders of lacy parsley and of waterâ€" cress, At the rear of the Bourse, cartâ€" fuls of colorâ€"nansv.nurnlia apenlants A writer in Th@ Christian Sclence Monitor gives the reader a glimpse of a Belgian m'ot day with its accomâ€" paniment of carts drawn by every known size and color of dog. We What New York | _ Owl Laffs Is Wearing s sn n acWkeer stkes. A Canine Symphony If People Would: Whistle more and whine less, Hustle more and holler less, Work more and worry less, Boost more and beef less, Géve more and grab less, Dare more and not depressâ€" At that Job got off pretty easily. If it had happened toâ€"day they would have yanked his teeth, appendix and tonsils and left him only his ashes. Patientâ€""Oh, yes, but nevertheless he‘s pretty good at painting, etching and sculpturing." "Doctorâ€""But of course hbe does some one particular thing better than anything else?" Patientâ€"Yes, I‘m a model and the artist I pose for does painting, et.ch- ing and sculpturing." Husband â€"â€" "Get up ‘stares? TW agree." Wifeâ€"*"Women can get upstairs easily in the kind of dresses they wear now." Fatherâ€""I don‘t remember, son Ask your mother." for eczema, beard evil, piles, burning, all bruises and skin discascs. A needfill family remedy. By mail, 65 cts. tube. ROUSSILLON Balsamic Products BOX 275 Smail Boyâ€""Pa, what did prehisâ€" toriec monsters look like?" The ideal marriage is when a man finds a beautiful girl and a good housewife, says a philosopher. We thought that was bigamy. Henniferâ€""Well, you keep those mighty busy." Jennings â€" "I‘m a man of few words." Business would be a sight better A young married couple started out with the baby to buy a baby carriage. They purchased one, put the baby in it and started home. _ Everybody smiled. ‘They wondered why. Finally they noticed that the clerk had omitâ€" ted to remove the sign from the carâ€" riage. It read: "Our own make." \ Cub (to his fellow reporters, sighâ€" ing)â€""Oh, why was I ever brought up to be a writer?" We lingered as the market broke up, fascinated by the individualism of dogkind. What might not Browning ’have done in the listing of those dogs, he who could be eloquent over the Pied Piper‘s rats! There were big dogs and little ones, longâ€"haired and short, blacks, browns, tans and white and all combinations thereof; there were dapper ones and seedy, gay ones and disconsolate. They were an apâ€" pealing lot, and we longed to" be friendly; but the day‘s work was too serious a business for them to be wasting wags and barks on trifiing tourists. So the symphony went onâ€" lente movements of anticipation. Then came a gradual diminuendo â€" dogs were trotting oif home. And we were left standing in a prosaic street, where, alert, hurrying business men jostled past us on their way to the Bourse. | In explaining how you learn to play golf, a friend put it this way: "Of course the first six months you play pretty rotten golf. Then you keep on playing worse and worse." A party at the Zoological dardens stood puzzled before a bird. The Firstâ€""It‘s a heagle." The Secondâ€"*"It‘s not. It‘s a how!." Bystanderâ€"*"You are both wrong. It‘s an awk." one of those hundreds of market carts came a lusty barkâ€"bass viol barks issuing from the mouths of great masâ€" tiffâ€"looking curs, squeak; piccolo yaps from puny puppies that #eemed scarce stout enough to draw a doll cart, saxoâ€" phone wails from canines of houndish extraction, and tubo tones, bassoon notes, and drum snarls from beneath we knew not which of the ranks of dogcarts. It was a mad modern symâ€" phony in an Old World setting. In orchestration it was like a dog show at feeding time, but in motif how difâ€" ferent! ‘These were no hunger cries, but the overtones and undertones of Heimwebh. That beil was the signal for clearing away the market, and in half an hour all good and faithful dogs would be trotting off home, drawing their carts behind them. What visions of approving pats from the mnsters.' of glad hugs of welcome from their own little Jeans and Maries, may have’ danced in their doggish anticipations? | City Editorâ€"*"You weren‘t." Just a Mite of Difference This new generation Is famed for its hustle, While the one that has passed Was known forâ€"its bustle. Caroâ€"Cure ONTARIO ARCHIYVEsS AMOS, P.Q. GEN‘US Genius, like the lark, is apt to de spise its nest upon the earth, and waste its time in fluttering _ and quavering among the clouds; but commonâ€"sense is the bhumbler fow!l, which picks up the barleyâ€"corn and crows and fattens at leisure.â€"Anon. FOR CoNnstTtipPaTiorn RICH it DSON DOUBLB TABIN , cruiser, about thirty feet, in use altogether on!~ four or Ave months m two seasons; complete equipment includ. ing carpets, bed and table linen, china, glassware and silver as well as all marâ€" !a equipment and many extras. ‘This eruise:r with its two cabins and its well equipped galley is an unusually comfortâ€" able boat for weekâ€"ends or longer cruises for four to six people. It is exâ€" ceptionally seaworthy and has cruised al. over the Gregt Lakes. it has a nign class and very economica} 60 horsepow er, sixâ€"cylinder power plant with complete ‘ electric lighting throughout and speed ; of 12 to 14 miles per hour. it is a 1peâ€" | clal paint job and very attractive in apâ€" pearance. Owner will sacrifice zor nalf its original cost. H. Watkins, 73 W.| Adelaide St., Toronto. ) furnished. _ Mode} Ont. forward, Absolutely Free, ten days‘ trial treatment. 1 have helped busdreds of women, MRS. M. SUMMERS ¢/o Vanderheo! & Ce. R2s Box 25 WINDEAR . marr n SAVE §2 PER HUNDRED, LR8Gâ€" HORNS, 6 cents; Rocks White, Rocks Red, 9 cents; delivered any time. Month olds, 18¢. Pullets, all ages, prices !\urnllhod. Model Hatchery, <itchener, m# Gets the fly every time Now 1 can help you. Simply send me ?Arhmhn' about you&n:]t, and I will forward, Absolutely Free, ten dave‘ trial SALBHIN WANTED To F SENT _ the "Old Reliable 1 ANurseries." â€" Exclusive territory, commissions, New Specialties. Wellington, ‘Toronto 2. & C ol R (\ g;::e)éou I Iuvee:.x. ï¬o\p,‘\w ckaches, constipa nervous at. tacks pieoPlenene®s, Eepersence and me "°_:{'_'.=£:"_°39_m Simply send me ELCC ERt 7 PRSm WHT 1G lease for a term with purchase in '37.'-. Send particulars to Box 12, Wilson Pub« lishing Co., Ltd., Toronto. Boyd Brothers, Warm weather and changes of food and water bring frequent summor upsets unless healthy elimination is assured. You will find Feenâ€"aâ€"mint effective in milder doses and espeâ€" cially eo'lvenlent and pleasant for SummerUpscts , For sale by leading druggiste M_LOOKING POR WEEKLY NEwWsâ€" PAPER in Ontario which 1 could EAUTIFUL AND CHARMING Classified Advertising MOTOR BOAT FOR SALE. Jr sito® $