HOW All MOTHERS CAN KEEP HEALTH THE BEAimFUL LEAFLESS TREE Cares of Home and Often Causes a Breakdown. "Winter," miye, OtXpin, "discovera upoa m« as I Jouni*y«d Uj« bewity of the nicer part of the ramlfloatitma of teattMe. u«t«. Through a dump of trees, th« little tender spray on which th«m away tn froivt of me, tbere wa« Children tJ»e hanging of the foliage anj the pe- a gHni([«t> ct tb« moon. Behind others culiar character of the tree e > miKSh I c«ught the ehlning of the .itani. The depend. I am In doubt," he adds, H«ht tranoflgured tJjem. There waa, The demanda upon a mother's "whether an old rough Interwoven oak, ot coursa, nothing rery unusual In it health are many and severe. Her own '"^'^'y •» a aingle object, ha* not a« ' ail. y<t It was for roe a vislan «plen- bealth trials and her children's wel- n«»<^'> beauty as in summer. In flum- did, that tad never been in the city's fare exact heavy tolls while hurried '"*'â- '^ **** unQueetlonaWy more ef- Sift. Ths thrill waa douMJese akin to meals, broken rest and much indoor '**''• '•"^ *" point of simple beauty and that of the wutcher ot the sky when a Bvlng tend to weaken her constitution. »•««««« I think 1 sihouid almost pre- new star swcepa into bis ken. At all It la no wonder that the woman at '*•â- '' ^ winter." events there U was, my discovery. It home Is often indisposed through ^® ***'* proceeds te s«eak of this was not merely eomething I had read weakneea, headaches, backaches and '*'«al«d character of tree spraya, about 1 had seen as ne^er before the nervousnese. Too many women have which te so precious r winter gift. The great bolee and all the deUcate tracery grown up to accept these troubles as "Pi^y <>' the oak breaks out ne^y at of the outermost sprays. Ever since a part of the lot of motherhood. But ''*^' angles and is thick and' later- then, trees have had a new Interest la many and varied as her health trou-i *'oven. Threa or four shoots will of- winter. ViaS«cra. 'Here where a sudden radiance fails On roof and walls, The pa4h« are t Ick with trafflc long and loud. The human floodtlde flows; And we may pass unconsdoua, with the crowd. Of any nob!e aim to which it goes. But here are greater things â€" Hopes that would rise with struggling wings, (Vtith that is anchored fast, and love that sings, Hearts that endure with patience, souis that pray. Eyes that can see the stars above their night; And this dim street becomes a sacred way towards the light. â€"A. L. S. "is siood tea" TEA Ov<\, 30yeaAJ 41 MZutdaid bles are the cause Is simple and re- '*'' ^iwlng from the same knot. In the lief at band. It la Hoh, red blood that '^^^ *>f the ash, the spray is more keeps a woman well; when she la m. simple. It divides, not frosn the ex- the blood Is thin and watery, and ghei '^â„¢**y <>' l^t year's shoot, but from must Uke a tonic to enrich It to r«- 1 '** *W*s *^ Jt. As both shoots rareiy new her health. The nursing mother i '^"^ ^ maturity, the ash does not more than any otlier woman In the ! ^^^ ** appearance ot formality a* it world needs rich blood and pl«ity of *^ <^**« with spruce flr. ESm and it. There is one smre way to get this l"**** 8<pra» shoot out a* acute angels, rich blood so necessary to health, and ^Pe«l*Uy the beech, and in both cases that is through thd use ot Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. Mrs. Henry Burke, Lower L'Aj^doise, N.S., teUs whet these pU^B did for her. She says:â€""! first used Dr. WiUlams' Pink Pilis five years ago. After nur baby was bom I did not regain my usual health. I fait weak,- mle«nible, and always tired, so I started taking Dr. WlUiams' Pink Pills. After taking five boxes I felt like a n»w woman. Ever since that time when I feel tired and overworked I take this treatment and always with gi^t benefit. I have proved them to be a Bipl«ndid medicine for nursing mothers, and 1 always recommend them to others." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 60 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville Out. •* Witty Wisdom. If you can't laugh Just now, smile until you can. Bad luck is often merely a i>oUte name for bad Judgment. Grumbling at your lot only helps to make it a lot worse. The best way to acquire a host of friends is to be a host yourself. Some people are so mean that the only thing they ever give ts offence. The greatest secret of popularity is to keep youT troub4ea to yours«lf. If we saw ourselves as others see us we might refuse to believe our eyes. The eyes may be the windows ot the soul, but the mouth reveals the comr pany U keeps. the sprays are alternate .ch things as the sprays, and the alternate occurrence Winter Reveals Beauty. I "Leavee, ' as Richard Joffertee says, "conceal the finish of trees. They give color, but tiiey hide the beautiful structures under them. Tbe light and most elegant penciling at the bough summits of th« b«e<^ for instance, is not seen beneath the massed' foUage of eununer. That 1» winter's gdft alone." The beauty of the (MDHOOD AHJMENT On such thtags as the angle of the 'f ^ **'!!' '^'^ ^ ""** *"**'^' " r«v» nn^ .>,f^.r„_...*^.°\*''* <• «*« mit behind or faHlag athwart leaflee ot them or otherwee, does the shape ' ^^^^„m^ of a tree depend. Winter is the time ' '°*'»<»™'^ for th>e obseervatlou of these things. We -caa watch this character then as at no other season. Thatr is one of winter's gifts. The leaves in their falling make possible .-- new enriching. In some ways one gets to know some wild creatures more intimately hi win- ter than In summer. The New'Vlsion. Not everybody has seen this beauty of the leafless tree. Sometimes, ua- leas attention has been diawn to it. It te missed. It dawned upon me quite unexpectedly in the New P\)rest. Ihe city In which I had lived for twenty years was virtually treeless. But hav- ing gone to live in the Forest, the re- velation came. That is one of the attractive things, about nature. There Is ever some new revelation la store. Nor does one ever know hi what place or at what hour the new vision may come. That winter's moonlight ulght, out alone in the Forest, there dawned strees, that makes them so I doubt If trees mre ever more beantlfol, even in aipring or suny m«r, than they are in winter tnuur- figured by sunrise or suaiset behind th^n. A chimp ot silnrer branches, for InS'tance, In a snow scape, Qieir dark trunks rising out ot the snow, and the setting sun fLUing the tree eipaoes with mystic Ught, on eivery hand the snow glistening radiant, wltSi the Ught on It and in It, how lovely a sipectatds that is. Then trees In winter, In the country, as Dixon Scott points oat, seem a peu-t of the fundamental framework of the earth. In towns', he says, trees of- ten resemble surface decorations. They took deta<diable as flowers worn for omoiment. But In the country in wtoter, reduced to their elemenits of bole and branch, they "are seen tn sustain and complete the long IIH. of the land." Winter brings out their fuodameotal strength no lefis than the beauty ot their forms. The leafless tree la not the least of winter's gifts. Can Be Quickly Banished With Baby's Own Tablets. The ailments of childhood are many ! but nine-tenths of them are due to I one cause and one cause only â€" a dls- : ordei'ed condition of the stomach and bowels. To quickly banish any of the minor ailments ot babyhood and child- hood the bowels must be made to work regttlar and the stomach must be sweetened. No other medicine for little ones has had such success as has Baby's Own TableU. They banish constipation and Indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers; correct diarrhoea and colic and promote healthful sleep by regulating the functions of the stom- ach and bowels. Conoemlng them Mrs. L. M. Brown, Walton, N.S., writes: â€" "I cannot speak too highly of Baby's Own Tablets as I have found them excellent for childhood ail- ments." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers, or by mall at 25 cts. a box from The Dr.. WUllams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Out NO NEED FOR BATTERIES I Getting Up in Winter TO OPERATE RADIO SET Two. Tales of Church. There ! â- a story of two old ladies at a Scottish church service, .\tter, the minister had discussed all the pdAits of his S'erni-on from "firstly" to "seventhly," and just before the peroration began, one of the ladies said to the other: "Has he no din yet?" "He has finished," replied her com- panion, "but he won't stop." One further church tale. A rector and a long-winded curate were called upon to speak iu t-onnection with a cer- tain religious function. The curate spoke for aliout half an hour, ami be- -fore sitting down turned to the rector, saying: "I hope I have not encroached upon your time." "Time?" growled out the impatient rector, "you have encroached upon eternity." Rogers Canadian Invention Makes it Possible to Just Plug Into the Light Socket, ' Eliminating All "A" "B" Batteries. w hepns llie moment yott boardaSantalb train for CaUlbmia •onyomrway a sumw; scenic wonderland - FredHarvey dintsig service - snotlier ciniiisive Santa Fe Itotnie Inj oy the g Mt-o Mowrt ibis wintec* take ynv Ibmily -a '\. «v Calitaiialwidmies are retsonalilff G. <»r*Kob#rt-*n. Trav. Pasii, Xg^nt y. T. II*uJrv, O^n^rRl Afent Sanlo re Ry. 404 Tmioportatloa m-lit. ,,, l<«tn>it >llch., PhuiM Main «(«; A phrase very common among us at this season is â€" "Isn't it awful, getting up!" Undoubtedly every diiy of out lives i la the winter we begin with a conflict j^in the apparenOy simple act of getting and "P- Though not at Ephesus, you "fight with UoDs" in those dark mo- ments when the bed and the room be- come flendishly alive. For the bed ex- ; eels itself then In seductiveness. Not ' aX th'rough the nsight has It been so I warm, so soft. Tbe coldness of the ' room, the blackness, the smell of frost, I are all increa^-ed to an intensity that s?ems deliberate. ! At seven on a winter's morning, life ifi. full of s'truggle. I It makes no difference whether : other members of the family have I come through their conflict â€" are up, and a choir Invisible, are vociferating ^ to you to arise â€" or whether the house ' is ae>leep and jxju are the one whose What is admittedly the most ad- vanced step in Radio â€" and what all those interested in Radio have been looking forward to â€" (a set requiring no batteries) is now an accomplished j fact and a proven success. , To a young Canadiauâ€" Mr. "Ted" I Rogers,â€" goes the credit for perfect- ing this Batteryless Radio Set, which will operate from any electric light I socket on either 25 or 60 cycle alter- j natiug current. Canada can Justly feel proud of this latest achievement, whidi bids fair to revolutionize Radio reception. The Rogeru BatterylesB Radio Setâ€" j duty it is to be up lirst, the caller, not tor that is its name â€" Is already oper- ' the called. You are .sublimely indif- ating in thousands of homes through- \ ferent to what is going on beyond the out Canada aa-J giving satisfaction. | door, tor your soul is engaged in re- Transcoutlnental reception with bat-, sis^ting, not the enticement or com- You Said It, Pa. "Pa, what does it mean here by dip- lomatic phraseologj' ?" "My son, It.'s like thfe: If you tell a girl that time stands still while you gaze into her eyes, tliat's diplomacy; but if you tell her that her face would stop a clock, you're in for It." Ufa Help! Up the road and down the road, Whatever the way we take, We'll meet some soul with a weary load, Some heart that te torn with a<A«; We'U hear some voiiie that ha* dulled its song. Some splrtt that's lost lt> cheer â€" For roads are rugged and roctds are long. And many a track Is drear, "We can't do much aiid we can't give much â€" We're poor folk," we may say! But the little we can with a friendly touch May brighten the world's hi^way. So out with your smiles and your neighl}or-etrength. Your song and your sympathy, too! We can't do much on the Journey's length. But the little we can, we'll do! â€" Lillian Qajd. Ms. Teacherâ€" "Who can name one im- portant thing we have now that we did not have one hundred, yeari ago?" Tommy â€" "Me." Mlnard** Liniment for frost-bitaa. Kconomy and industry placed th« poor printer's boy, Franklin, at the table of kings and rendered his name iBttatrioua tliroughout the earth as the friend and patron of mankind. He who possesses either of them can never be poor; he who possesses botli must inevitably be rich and honored. m MA I iJRIN NIGHTS- ^.-> MORNING KEEP YOUR EYES CL%AN CIEAR AND KHALTHV The finest thing in the world to keep your stomach in tip-top shape is 15 to 30 drops o/ Seigel's Syrco in a glass of water. Any drug store. Impi teries and even without aerial is com- mon to most owners, while many Rogers owners reported hearing the Overseas stations during the Tests, j Some far-seeing merchants have | realized that tbe Batterylesa Set is the ': raands of sum's other human, but the powerful genius ot tlie bed. The conflict of the first person up is identical witli the last. In both, it is the case of the fine, tough, hardy spirit of our racie warring with the in- ^ial Romanoffs Robes in State Film. The regal costumes which clothed the central figure of the magnificent ini<perial court, of the last of ilie Ilo- manoffs are being uiied in the produc- tion of motion pictures under the di- rection of the Soviet State. The im- perial robes of Nicholas II., and many other rich articles of his wardrobe, form a part of tlie "properfles" used In "The Niutli of Januai-y," an anti- mouarchist film which takes Its name from the date in 1005 ou which the re- volution of that year oiiened. Five thousand elaborate imperial miKitary and dress uniforms belong- ing to the late Czar, %jid several thousand ricii gowns, wedding dresses, coronation robes, Chinese coats and other articles of apparel worn by the former Czarina .\lexandra have been bought by the state motion picture monopoly for $15,000. Who Invented Cards? The playing cards we now use were Invented in the fourteenth cenfury by a French painter named Jaquee Grlngonmeur. It is said that he in- veaited them to amufie the mad King Charles VI. of France. The kings were David, Alexander, Caesar, and Charles ; the queens were Argine, Esther, Judith, and Pallas; the four knights, now called knaves, and vulgarly "Jacks," were Ogier the Dane, Lancelot, La Hire, and Hector de Garland, knigibts of old romance. The Cardmakers' Company was in- corporated In 1629, and as early ; z the reign of James I. cards were taxed. Probably the first game played In England was called "Trump." AH the most important historical events have been at one time or another depicted on playing cards, and some of the packs are very rare and valuable. Everything depends on the point of view. You couldn't convince a mouse that a black cat is luc'sy. coming Radio Set, i)ut it tliere i^ no | sidlous and uuscrupukius temptation I dealer in your community who has of the bed. There may be a trifle more ' been able to secure this valuable ' intensity in the struggle of the flrs't | agency, just write the Q. R. S. Music j up, but this Is because the first gets 1 Co., Toronto, who will be glad to send up â€" or should â€" in S'tlU greater black- 1 you full parUcula.rs. ness and coldness, not because he or i P.S.â€" For those U'Ot posseesing elec- she wages their war in silence. It is I trie current in the home. Mr. Ted : as hard to get up in the midst ot bang- 1 Rogers ha« also pi'oduced a battery ! ing and shouting as it is In the perfect set. Write for particulars to above | silence ot a sleeping world. concern. From Pirate to King. The discovery ot the Indians who speak Elizabethan English is one of the strangest travellers' stories over heard in these days. It is not, how- ever, quite unique, foi- the late Mr. Cecil Sharp found in the AUeghajiIes numerous communities ot English folk whose Isinguage, appearance, and cus- toms dated from the end of tlie seven- teenth century, aud who had pre- served a large number of English folk- songs that arc no longer to be heard in the Mother Country. Nor were private couununities of the kind set up by Benjamin Sharp and his crew altogether unique, for we pcfl<se8» records of the famous Eng- lish pirate, John Plalntain, who. hav- ing begun his career of crime In the We«t Indies, founded a State on Mada- gascar, ot which he conquered a con- slderabte part. He IntrodiK'ed English characteris- tics, such as the uee of rum, and reign- '. '"^ "' kidne.v ed for some years until .Admiral Mat- thew's squaCron. in which Clsment The disinclination to get up is nut Just that yoti want to go to sleep i again. On the whole, you prefer to . lie awake. Asleep you do not realize how com- 1 fortable you are, but lying without ! thought or movement, staring at tlie slowly-paling ceiling, and drowning in warmth, you are conscious of bliss. You could remain like this a day â€" or all winter. Every moment It becomes more imiKis»ible for j-ou to sit up and get up. The thought of sticking a limb into that icy wash ot bleicknesfi outside the bed is an agony. ()ti the oiher hand, once you are up iu I be winter I do not think .vou are BO conscious of the s4rangeuess of that fact as you are In the summer. - ♦â€" Land in the heart ot Melbourne has been sold at i: 2.595 a foot, a record. Coughs and Coids Mean Restless Nights which sap the vitality. Danficr lurks in every hour a cold is allowed to run . A&sistn."iture tobringyour children quickly b.ick to health andstrength and avoid serious computations by the prompt -Jse ot Cray's Syrup â€" over 60 years in use. Always buy th* LBI-fla Sl«« " "^ TAYLOR- 'FORBES 1 rSC 1 6U*HAMTEEP Pruners For every purpose In the orchard, cutting limbs up to H Inches. Handles â€" 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 feet Ywr Har^irs Dealer knews dw qvaflty Our deecrtptive circular aent to any address on request, TAYLOR-FORBES COMPANY. LIMITED GUELPH, ONT. WANTED CIGAR STORE INDIAN Formerly used in front of Tobacconist Store. Must be In gvood condition. State price and where can be seen. R WATKINS 73 W. Adeljdde St. Toronto ARE YOU BUYING A HOME? The MacLean Builders' Guide aids home builders; supplies in formation not generally obtain- able except through professional sources. Fifty-two pages profusely Illustrated. Send Twenty Cents for a copy or $1.00 for two years' subscription (8 issues). Ques- tions answered. MacLean Build- ing Reports, Ltd., 344 Adelaide St West, Toronto. GOULD NOT DO HMSEWORK Woman Suffered until Relieved by Taking Lydia E. Pi&kham's Vegetable Compound St. Charles, Quebec. â€""I was mar« ried three y ears and had no children. I was always trou- m^ i *^^-;J W ^r;^ ^ ^^^ m GRIPPE ! Stop It at the start. Heat and Inhale Minard's. also bathe the feet In Minard's and hot water. GRAYS jSYRUP^ RED SPRUCE GUM M^iraul D- WATSON »'CO,V«*Xw* • l^or Pains in Etack Headache, Indigestion Dou'l npgli^ct n.itiire's gent.'.e warn- and liver ilisorilers. If j uulxet-drrt these trwiWes beconje I chronic anil I: ad to untoM suffering bled with pains in the abdomen and was not able tc do my house- work. After try- ing all other rem- edies suggested to me 1 have at last found that Lydia E. P i n k h a m ' s Vegetable C o m- pound is the best m the world for fo am well now iind able to do niy housework and care for my family. I recommend it to my fricnda as I am sure they will be satisfied. "-Mmt.'..], D. Robiciiaud, St. Charles, Co. Bellcchasse, Que. Nervous and Run-down Hamilton, Or.L â€" "I was nervous and rsn-down. and always had a tired feeling and no appetite. I jumped at every sound and was always low .spirited. My worst symptom was de- pression and I was Uiis way for sev- eral months. A friend advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I have taken it for three months and am very much bet- ter and can work around more. I feel like another woman." â€" Mrs.P.L.GfY, 98 Tuxedo Ave. No., Hamilton, Ont C l>owntng was a sailor. chas«d him off the island. He then went to jolu Kan- I hojl Anarla, the oelebrateti pirate of ; the west coa«>t of Indte. Model motor cara costini; upwards of £46 and iv'.la' houses fitted with electric ligfht supplied by a tiny dyna- mo, ar« amonK the "luxury" toys this Christmas. Minard's Liniment for Orip|»« and exi>enBO. Warner's Safe Kiilne.v anil Liver RenM>dy Is a safe and reliable remedy that has been U8«d by mil- lions Iu .all parts of the world in helplnft nature In 1-19 Important duties of elimtnntlns poisons from (toe STHieni. Do not neg- lect the kidneys and liver. Sold by all drag<l«ts. Price $1 23 l^»r bott:«. \Vam«r'8 Safe Remedies i Co , ToroaCo, Ontario. | Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART vW Accept only " Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Handv "Bavcr" boxes of 12 tRblets iOao iMUIea'of 24 and 100â€" Druggist*. AMrta t» tfce tradi nark <rptt»'*rMl '» 0»b»i1«> if B^rw M«D>if»ctnr» of Mrvirjcefte- rcMntcr of SallcrUncId ( Acet»l S«l'.cylle MeU. 'A. 8. A.'). Whllr It Is w»n kuowB «kat Atptna BMM Bvw laaoanichm-. to intiit ihe pnbllr lolnat Imltmtlom. «i« Tibl«» «( Bufw OmiMtBf «m IM atAuipM wttk tb«>r (n>«r*t tndt muk, tb* "Bvtt Oom." Soothe Itchin J Skin Wiii Cuticura Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water and follow with a gentle application of Cuticura Ointment. This treatment not only soothes but in most cases heals. D^IXK -XMikwuf t<4. HmttmL- PtW %. Omtmcrtt :* »i^d for TAirm ^bc â- r Cuti«v* Sha<ia( Stick 25r. > 1 ISSUE No. -•ze.