..» GOLDSMITH'S GREAT STORY Shops. easier ironing TIm labor of Gfdng your Iron â- bout a hundred and fifty limaa in th« course of an ordinary ironing ia the equivalent of raia- ing nearly half â- ton. The Hot- point Iron never needs to Im lifted at all, but woply tips back on its qMcially-constructed heel reat. This is one of the Four Feature* that make Hotpoiol Ironing "the easier way". Aak your dealer. THE oil, l^mUin lia<i tin biM slioi).s. the KilviT aud Lb'j Kulii sliuiJti, Kith with u:i tliu ti'i'u«tn<es iu lliv w4(le wo'Ad round, does Oil. tbere you'll lln i lln^ fair**! isliopK, the cliHapeKt uiiil th«* rai't-st All ai>lH/,e with eolor on the pfiirl- Kr«y srouiid! It U n algn of the wond«rful fortune no olhi>r way of putting It - tliey ar« •f The -Vicar of WaUefle'.d that the "'««» absurd. I wi:i not say li inakos _ 1 _ ^,- „.,.*.. 1,1..^ ,.» it ihttni live, for i think it s;;aioii properest oixaulons for spwukliis of It ,, , , i . ,, *^ .",,,! 'l'-"" at all. I'm leaveH them to linger continue to present themselves. Kveri- ! „„ „^ ^j,,^.„j rose leaves In a, thins has been said about it. ami sail i,(,wl. Inanimate, fragrant. Intensely | again and again, liut the hook lias long pro-enl. There is not a sina'.l droll-' B'.noe diffused an indulgence that ex- ^py a, ,i,p ^„^ (),„, ,|„pj, „„, ^,ork In- Th»y deck tlii-m.-elvrs at (hiytime with tends even t<i i-omiuentators. In the j,, ,he very tu.xlure that takes us: thai th«! colors of the Maytim«»; decree of its fortune, indeed, it «»e-ni8 p„„)af,,„e„, ^,{ ,i,g wicked seducer hy i They deck ilieinselvtMs Ht iwlliglit almost singla of its kind. Stretch tho^i,^j„g ^.^ j^j^.„ ,„ ^ ^i^gii, footman' with u Klad and lyric glet); Indulgence as we may. Goldsmith's ,i,^ perpetual food that makes Hut oji the fiisiy, frow.sy sliopts, those story still falls, somehow, on Its face. Ufjj appearance as the climax of every-! <>W marine, himchoiisy shop-; to account for its great pot-ition and!ii,i,ig. ,|,p .s„pp(,,. of two well-dressed I Ob, thcy'ie the shops that most I Its remarkable career. Reiid as one | mgi,^,^ that dissapates the glnom of tho love^ the only s'hops for me! of lUo masterpieces by a person not|,,rl3on; the deilghlful forty pounds:- Thomas Burke, in "Loudon Lamps." acquainted with our literature, it i (iistrihuU»d among the captives, and .,w might easily give an impression that | ,i,e still more delightful 'coarser pro-' thi.s literature Is not immense. It has I visions" scatteied among the popu- beeii reproduced, at all events, in a lace. thousand ediilous. and the ead Ik not | squI of Goldamlth. yet. Ml the arts ,.r book-maklng and | ,, „,^ ,^„^ ,^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ihing, this of editing, all the graces of typography j ^^^^ ,i.,ubtless. to saying that tJte IRON 8(and*d Hotpoint Iron ^5.30. Special Hotpoint Iron ^1 extra. H-17-B' A Canadian General Electric Product and of Illustration, have been lavished upon Its text. Painters, playwrights. r>ud musicians have again and again drawn upon it, and th'^re Is not a happy lurn li^lt. not a facetious llgure nor a vivid Image, that has not become familiar and famous. We point our phrases with its good things, and the fact that everybody knows them seems only to make them better. The' Tone Is Exquisle. It is the spoiled child of our litera- ture. We cling to it as to our most precious example that we, too. In prose, have achieved the last amia- bility. Thus It Is that the book con- verts everything it contains into a happy case of exemption and fascina- tion- a case of Imperturbable and in- scrutable classicism. It Is a question- of tone. The tone is exquisUe, and that's the end of It. It talies us through all the little gape and slips, through all the artless looseness of the Vicar's disasters and rescues, through his eonfp.ied amj;. upconvinc-, Vicar himself Is, and that the book has flourished through having so much of him. It is he who is the suctHJso of his story; he Is always kept true, is what we call to-duy "sustained," without be- I coming ijompous or hollow. The es- pecial beauty of this Is surely that It contains something of Iho very soul of Goldsmith, it la the most natural imagination of the unispotled that any praduction, perhaps, offers, and the ex- hibition of the man himself- by which I mean of the author -combines with his instinctive taste to make the clas- sicism lor which we praise him. These two things, the frankness of his sweet- ness and the beautiful ease of his speech, melt togetherâ€" with no otlier aid. as 1 have hinted, worth mention- ing â€" to form his style. I am afraid I canuot go further than this in the way of speculation as to how a classic Is grown. In the open air is perhaps the most we can .^ay. Goldsmith's style Is the flower of what I have called his amenity, atid his amenity the making THOUSANDS OF THANKFUL MOTHERS IlOSE "is good tea** Senteiice* Sennons. .'Ti^^QtllckeXt -Wayâ€" To endanger a-j jng captlvjiy ijuji his WondeKul acel- I of that Independence of almost, every 'frleltdship is to borrow money from, dents and recognitions." -it makes thing by which The Vicar has your friend. 'these things anuislug, makes them • triumphed. -^Henry James, In an lutro- Tq. get a promotion is, to grow too J moj^j^ human eve;i ^hen - for th«re Is ''ductlon to ''The Vicar of Wakefleld." big foi'^ybur â- present job'. ' ' â€" To split a-towfti Is to start a. con-, troversy on religion. â€"To wreck a home Is to become se- cretive...- V ^. j â- r -To '-ruin!* a -'boy ia \a give- him- -too much money he does not earn. â€" To start a reform or a degenera- tion Is to make It fashionable. â€" To kill business is to start talk about hard times. A How Crabs Change Sh^. The process by w-hlcfi^ a hardshell: crab turns into a ^oftshell crab Is one of the ii'ioat fnterestlng things knowii to (ishermen. The strangt* i>olul Is that the crab does. not cast his hard shell iu pieces. -but takes the- w-hdie tiilug off at one time and not at lixed periods, but any time when the. meaty portion has' be- come too large 'ami fat for the old coat. How he ever manages to get hia sflft mass out of a hard shell without losing most of his slender legs no one knows, probably the crab hfmself does not even wonder hoiy it all happens. A MEDICINE THAT GIVES STRENGTH New Health Comes to Those Who Build Up Their Blood by the Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a I strengthening medicine. Surely and efteotlvfely they build up the blood, In- ,*.,, , . , , . , , , ,, , vigorate the appetite, tone up the dl- When he-gets too fat for his old coat ' „„„,;„„ „•, ^ v. . u. . .^. ., ,,.;,„,..,. ,:..,., " .u _ I B'^'*,"'"'' K've brightness to the eye, color to the cheeks nnd lips, and quick- ness to the step. These pills have Would Soon Improve. Uad â€" "Look here, Dorothy, I don't Mke th-t way these youngsters are biigging youl" Dot -'•Don't you know they're scarcely more than boys, daddy? They'll soon improve." he simply feeds up a little more thaa j usual and. crawls very clos-e- to 'shore I and buries himself just under the. sand ! or mud. I Then, by a very slow process, he j squirms out of the .shell and stays I there In the sand until his thin skin has nirued into a real shell. His reason for hiding in the sand is to escape from the fishes, which even then hunt him out at high tide and, coming iUoug suddenly, take a nip at his claws or legs, and very often get av.ay with it. It is probably for this reason that In the course of ages the crab has made direct action on the blood, making 1( u health-bearing stream; thus no part of the tjody can escape their beneHcial action. Weak men and women, boys and girls And new health and strength through the use of this world-renown- ed blood builder. Mr. N. H. Langville, O.N.R. agent at New Germany. N.S.. says:-;"In November, 1924. I had a severe lllnees which left me in a very run-down condition. I got a supply of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and derived great benefit from them. .My appetite j>i..,„ -f 1,1 , , ,1 improved, and a gam In weight which himse.f able to grow a new claw or lee . , . ,, , , ^, , , "' '*^* , Is now normal 1 owe to the use nf If he happen.s to lose one that he ,ho„o these pills. I can therefore recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a fine tonic." Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for neuralgia, ner- j vousneM. Take them as a tonic If I .vou are not In the best physical con- I dition and cultivate a resistance that I will keep you well and strong. Get a I box from the nearest drug store or by i mail at '50 cents a box from The Dr. j Williams' Medicine Co., Brockvillo, »see % summer V needs. Not only that, but the crab is a wonder in another way. If his claw, for inctauoe, gets, mush- ed -or .severely Injured, the crab has | anaemia, rheumatism the power to cast the maimed claw en- tirely away from his body and grow a new claw. This new claw will repro- duce only from the second joint from the body. If an accident takes his arm off at that point, well and good, he soon grows a new one. But If the accident ' onT severs hia arm further away from the ' body, he will, within two mlniites, give a Mttle twist to his body and off will oom« the claw all the way to that won- derful second joint. Many fishermen occasionally become brutal enough to hack a crab's claw with a knife ami \it a sudden stioke cut the claw In twain. They do this merely to watcJi the chab cast off the w hole thing all the way tip to the Joint near the shoitlder. Sometimes a crab will do this cast- ing In a few seconds, sometimes In the course of a couple of minutes, but he always does It sooner or later. Ties That Bind. Because a maji in Austra'lla remem- bers the home of his boyhood, a .cur- few bell In Blandford. Dorsetshire, England, which has rung every even- ing for 800 years, will not now he silenced, according to cable dlspalchee. .•\nother tangible result of the "In- tangible" ties which bind together the members of the British Commonwealth of Nations! -^»- New Apparel. Now wintry winds are banished from â- the sky. Gay laughs the blushing face of flow^ ery spring; , _, _ - 1 >-â- <'« lays the laaid her dn>kler raiment Via the Santa Fe to tike ; by est. for nusMHis When you Bet tnat tired, lay-nie-dowii-iiiiddic feelinK talce 15 to .^0 dropa of S« â- las9 of wata ~ f«! like now ^ ., iael's Syrup III a las9 of water. Do«« th« trick and safely. You'll •Ceaic regions of the Far West. I And dons her grajss-green V GaUfovaia â€" GolMratf* New Mcfldosâ€" AriaMM n««klM* Oraad ۥâ- • jroa National Farkt ToMmt* aa4 tiM Big Trees and atlicr Na- tloaal Parks. MoU Ihu ccm^on lo nw O. n Rulif-rtson. T. P. A. F. T. Hi-iidry, 15. A. Santa Pe Ky. 404 Transportation Bulldlas Petrolt. Mich. 49 Or S'^e Local Agent ...........» â€" . â€" â€" •I Would like iDfo-natloa retardlae«uiaa»er trtp ' » j llMrc will b* pccaona in dw party. â- Alap mail deacriptlva travel lohkra, | N.- ' ! signal why A Waterproof Bag. -A bag made of brightly-colored cre- tonne, lined with waterproof material. In which to carry one's toilet neces- saries when going to and from the hath on board ship or on a train, can be made easily and cheaply from a yard of cretonne, cut In two circles, with a strip let In at both sides to give Strongly Recommend Baby's Own Tablets to Their Friends. Once a mother has used Baby's Own Tablets for her Utile ones she would use 11(11 liing else. The Tablets give such results that the mother has noth- ing but w(irds of iiraise for them. Among the thousands of mothers throughout Canada who praise the Tablets Is Mrs. David A. Anderson, New Glasgow. .\.S.. who writes:â€" "1 have used Baby's Own Tablets for my chlldri'n. and from my experience 1 would not be without them. I would urge every other mother of young children to keep a box of the JTableta in the house." Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach; drive out constipation and Indigestion; iirer.k up colds and simple fevers and make teething easy. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mall at 25 cents a bo.K from The Dr. Williams .Medicine Co.. Broekville, Ont. The Heaven's Own Blue. The forget-me-nots at the foot of the garden, under the low wall, are just I coming Into bloom. They are oija of j Spring's loveliest gifts, whose coming ' we eagerly anticipate. All the miracle , of Spring hi In those slender green sterna and those minute turquoise-col- ored flowers. On one of our walls hangs a copy of Leighton's 'Return of Persephone. " the lovely maJd. support- ed hy Mercury., ascending out of the dark underworld, being met by lier mother. Ceres. But those few forget- me-nots under the low wall are greater than Leighton's picture. They are not a representailon. they ai-« the authen- tic happening itself. Kvery one of those blooms is a Pei^sephone, beauty born out of the barren eartli. The-re is no scamiyed work in their m1mit« exquisiteine-sa. What wonder of adaptation, what ingenuity, what activity, there Is behind one forget- me-not bloom! Woril.sworth tells how he gathered mciinluin waifs and .^trays for his lit- tle garden at Grasniere. Its Howeon ] were friends he liaxl met along many a ' solitary way. That Is singly one of the besit ways of inaking a garden, a: garden of meniuries ns well as of flow- ers. .-V day ofl' had been taken to ex- ^ plose a wild:, unspoiled bit of river i valley In the neighborhood -the home use MInard's Llnlrnent In the (tibie*. of the dipper and the kinglisher. Walk- v ing up Htreatn a desolation was found Ivory Bracelete. lliat had evidently once been a gai^len. |v„rv hiaceleip. cxtreiiielv thick luid Someone had had a home there and a ,„•„ ,„. three inches wide, are « new garden down by the river's brlnn. The ; fancy among fasbionHir.e womwii In home had disappeared, the walls were ixmdiui. all broken down and the garde.n on -• -<â-º-. which much care hail once been sTient (ireaf* stains on a stove should be had returned to a natural wildnee*. wiped off immediate'.y with iiew.'ipaper. Thre w-ere goosebf-rry bushes and rasp- ; Before c'.eauinj!: tile stove, rub the berry canes all untrained and wlM box stain with a cloth dipped in t.uriien- trees al.so. with, of cour.s*. neltels and tine. grass and dock everywhere and Ivy â€" covering the old walls It was ill that wild garden that the forget-me-nots were gathered. They recalled a vIbIou of other forget-me- nots, treasured possersslons of iiiein- ory. Passing through the garden of an old Soolltsh hail, we cam© lo the gardener's rubbish heap, which was tipped over one of the steeply hiittree- sed sides of the gai>d«n. Nattire her- self had l)e(x>me gardener to some of i these i-.nstawa.vs. Nothing in the whole j garden exceeded the careless beauty of those clustered forget-ine-nois. For | their own sake and for memory'."? sake ' »ome roots were transplanted. They â- flow now at the foot of the garden, uii- deir the low wall, bringing a bit of heaven's own blue info our little gaj^ i den. I SancEy Cove: We wanted to go down the river, first thing, iu ii little power-lMiat, and cross St. .Mary's Bay to see what was on that stretch <if coast beyond us. Villages were i-uddled on the other side, we knew by glancing at the map; and some one had said In Yarmouth that it was a pretty region over there. Yet when we got closer, and express- ed our desire to a native down on the bridge, he smiled tolerantly and want- ed to know why we were so anxious to see a town like Sandy Covc<. ".\ dull Utile place" was the way he put it. "N<jtliiu' doln' at all." It would have been folly to explain to him that that was the very reason we wanted to get there. Despite Its saintlike name, St. Mary's Bay can cut up cajyer.-'. It Is a saucy, choppy, naughty little stretch of blue water; but as we puffed across we llke<l It better and better. The town behind us looked enchanting in the morning sunlight. . Over the lovely light greea hills we could see a <'biirc'h spire, graceful and Immaculately white: and. below It. great blocks of granite came deflanlly doj\'n to the very water's «»dge, with tre«s overhanging thetn. White sea- gtills soared above our heads and on our left a curving stretch of sandy beach Invited us to bathe. Appi-oach- Ing nearer, I shall never forget my first vision of that village. .snug and (piiet, as if it had purposely folded itself away In those hills, aloof from the clamor of the world. The little town of Sandy Cove tucks itself away Between the w.irni Canadian lilllii be- yond St. Mary's Bay : And there It dreams i)ir<nigh lazy hours the whole long summer dn.v. The little town of Sandy Cove is beautiful and white. No railroad tlumders at its heart: no windows flame too bright; No movies flash their garish signs. "A thrilling show to-uiglit! " But qiiieUy the little town sleeps and nods and smiles. It let* the noisy world go by with all its ways and wiles. * j ("oiilent lo watcli frniu Ita high liills | the distant Happy Isles. I i Would 1 might dw-ell In Sandy Cove In peace and calm and s*iy. "(io<Kl-by, fond, f(M)liBh. claiuoring town! Good-by for many a day!" And nestle In those sheltering arms lieside St. Marys Ba.v. From ".-Vmbllng Through Aoadia, " by Charles Hanson Towne. Ckuified Advertisements. M icmio MOTOM BODaHT AND. 80IJX .Koa, Pr«der1eA St.. Toromto. WA.Vf TO lIKAIl rHOM OWNTJI OF UOOIH f«rm rcr itlr. Kwart MMIllMnea. eotf Kuurllj WM. MoOM J», Sttk. Success. Sâ€" taunch frleudshlp» etiHt along our way U- -nBelflsh love that n-aver knowe die- may. C - ourage for tho trials on every sid«, Câ€" onso.ienoe acting as our daily giiid4». E~ameHt effort for our every task. 3 â€" trength to "carry -on" ie all we assk. Sâ€" -ucc«s8 means more t^an FV)Ptun<*'8 mask. â€"Maude L. Morrison. v-~ 1.1 Use ^lilMONDS SAWS ^>'\ BECAUSE cuaranteed to cut 10* t- more timber hi same time, with less labor than aiiy other saw, SIMOfrlD?^ r*NAO^ fiA'.V CO. L.TD. VANC01JVF.H. bl, ICHN, N.B., Self- Poisoning Increasingly * Common j Modem Living Mabits Pro- j mote Self • Poisoning • Thousands are Victims The average man or woman does not enjoy consistent good health. Loss of appetite, headaclies, biliousness and a lack of enthusiasm for either worlc or play are constant complaints. Scientists haveasrertained that such a condition is usually caused by self- poisoning resulting fron-j constipation. Due to modern living habits, the natural secretion wliich promotes regu- lar elimination by softening the ixjwel contents, ia often deficient â€" e5pt<-ially among middle-aRed people. The poison from waste matter remaining in the syslcinsof people thus affected is the insidious enemy of good health. .Such people need Nujol, liecause Nujol softens the waste matter and permits thorough iind regular bowel elimination without overtaxing the intestinal muscles. It helps Nature help you. Ask your druggist for Nujol to-day â€" and remember, iooic for the name "Nujol" in red on both bottle label and package. CARRIED ~ ' WIFEIO BED Suffered So She Could Not Walk. Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Minesing, Ontario.â€" "I am a prae- tical luirse and i recommenil Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound to Buffering women. For three months 1 was almoBt heljiless and could not. sit at the table long enough to drink a cup of tea. Many a time my Iiub- bana carried me to bed, I would be BO wealt. Then he read in the paper of a woman .suffering as I din who got better after talting the Vegetable Compound, so he went and got it for me. When 1 had taken three bottl-?* I was just like a nevf woman and have had splendid health ever since. When I feel any bearing-down pain.^ I always take it; sometimes a half bottle or whatever 1 need. It is my only medicine audi have told many a one about it. Any one wanting to know moi-f- about I.ydia E. Pinkham'a Ve)<etablo t "tmipound. I will gladly write to her. I do all 1 can to rec- ommend it for I feel I owe my Ufa and ntrength to it." - Mrs. Ne.^l. Bow.sEit. R.K. 1, Minesing, Ontario. Do you feel broken-iiown, nervous, and weak sometimes'.' Do you have this horrid feelinguf fear which sonie- times comes to women -when they are not well? Lydia K. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound in excellent to take at such a time. It alway.s helps, and tf taken regularly and peraistentiy will relieve this condition. C The Saxon name for March was the "lenet inonalh" -the "leiisih month," signifyiiiK the lonRthinintj; "i tho day<. Young plants may choose themselves ^P""^"- "^^^ Interior should be made of apparelling. - -Meleager, In "The Greek .\nthoiogy. I If you are a .slave, you may write your own emancipation proclamation. Freedom from bad habits beats any j »"»"«•"'>' covered^ other kind of freedom. â€" Howe's Monthly. mackintosh, with bands of the same material attached. The whole Is fas- tened to two thin pieces of pine board covered with either cretonne or gold l»ra!d. The handles are two rings- Minard's Liniment King of Pa;n. Cky MidSuw- WE BUY FLEECE WOOL Harris Abattoir Co., Limited Strachan Ave., Toronto Defeat new-forges the chosen am- ong men: it sorts out the people: it winnows out those who are purest and stronfcest, and maken them purer and stronger. But it hastens the down- fall of the rest, or outs short their flight. In that way it separates the ma.is of the people, who slumber or fall by the way, from the chosen few who go marching on.-^ Romain Roland. TORONTO OFFERS BEST MARKET FOR Poultry, Butter, Eggs We Offer- Toronto's Best Prices. LINES. LIIVIITED St. Lawrence Market Toronto 2 SPRAINS. .•\liply MInard's at once. It draws out Inflaiiunatiou, Foolhes the niUKcles and ligamer.t?. iJfSilULSiisM lawmgraai Can Ton Solve This f DIERFLAG The above >et:c7« when properly amngcd fonn th« iu,me ol a Ui« Frmdcnt. Everyone lending in the con«ct •olutioo will b* (warded a buuUhil lot. sia 20 X 100 leeu FREE and clear oi all cDcumbniice*. located in one ol our sub diviakina beiwevTi New York nnd Atitolic City. Tkii aUcr cspvci Jtly 15, 192S. Masin DeTeIoi>iBCBt CoCBv * 'O 40th 3t.. Dept 1200 New York City Cudcura Talcum Is Cooling And Comforting Daily use ol this pur?', Irauir-nt. antiseptic Talniin Poifc lier helpr to overcome heavy perspit»'.iur. «nd i«i soothing andn-firsiiing loihe;liin. fltnfl* EA'.h Yrrt ferr yAtl. A«1'1r«>.« Cadi.t'nn '. 1^ lun tmrnl .t Jl^a('>. l«!(-t>m 3tf WItf* Cuttcu^A Sha-'inv SvtcIc 2Sc. ISSUE Mr. 22-