JI lJi_ *,_*.^_,..i!*'.;' ;:ta.<vs.p^ r.â€" jKKSZi:^.-.. :^JB3SSSBS3BEm3: WEAK AND NERVOUS A Condition Due to Watery Blood -^ Easily Corrected Through the Use of Dr. Williams' Pinit Pills. Thin, pale girls lack the power ot resiaUnce to disease that rlcli, red blood gives. Nervous 'breakdown is the reault of thin blood. So is indl- Cestlon, headacIieH, baokaclies and The Farm Among English Writers Wonder Did She BuiU It? Strange tp refl«et how many liter- ary ni«n have held decidefl opinions about farming. About its pleasures , as well as its importance in the scheir.* of things. We are all familiar with the way Cicero ar.d Horace felt. In more modern days Voltairs declare*!: "Whcever makes two blades of pra?? grow where but one grew befrre, j many other troubles. Girls suttering renders a service to his stnte."' An.ij from thin, Impure blood need just the after he had retired to his country! help Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can ^ve. p'.ace at Vemey. Voltaire was assured j For many years Dr. Villiams' Pink that the charge had been the only | Pills have been a world-famous blood- [ thing that co'Uld have brought hira builder and nerve restorer. They ac- "health and happiness." tually make new, rich, red blood which ; Jonathan Swift wrote about farm- imparts aew vigor and life to all the \ <ng in almost the precise word-s use^i organs of the body. Their first effect i by Voltaire. an<i I think we car hard- Is usually shown by an improved ap-|ly charge either one of these writer? petite; then the tpirits revive and | with plagiarizing. Wrote Swift: restlessness at night gives way to , ••â- Whoever wcuUi make two ears of health restoring sleep. For sufferers j^^m^ <;,. t^-Q blades of grass, to grow NOVEL LITTLE DOLLS' HOUSE IS MADE OF EGGS It as exhibited by the winsome maiden, Verne Jones of Pomona, at the from anaemia, nervousness, general Up^n a spot of ground where only one , Los Angeles Counlry Fair. â- weakness or physical exhaustion Dr. .pj^.^- before, â- would desene better of i â€" Williams- Pick Pills area restorative j^^ankind and do more essential ser- ' i- -.-• .- . .• . I cf the utmost value. This is proved by the experience of Miss Sarah A. McEachern, R.R. No. 3. Brule, N.S., who says: â€" "About three years aga 1 became very weak and nervous. I had pains in my side and back. I alec had frequent pains in the back cf my head and neck. I was very pale an* very weak. I had attacks of nervous irritability, and at times I â- was so nervous that life seemed hard- ly worth living. While in this condi- tion a friend strongly advised me to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I began taking these pills and used them for about two months with the result that there was such an improvement in my condition that friends would ask me what I was taking, and I was only too glad to tell them it was Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. I am now enjoying good health and am glad to give this statement for the benefit it may be to some other sufferer." You can get these pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. their The English Singers By Babette Deutsch They sang: and the wide hall charged with slow Immoderate gold, as though voices were fingers On the sluice that is west of Eden. Halt that flow. Tet riding the air like a feather, the radiance lingers. They sang again: a white-flanked is- land rose Out of the music, upborne on the tides of their singing; Girdled with masts, its greens and towers and mows. Gay with the sound of sailors home- â- ward Singing. Their melodies were mournful, being wise As a woman is, whose lover death hath taken. , As a man who looks on his work with aged eyes. Oh. and sweet as the throat of a child by laughter shttken. "God give you good-morning, my mas- ters, past three o-clocke And a fair morning," they sang, where- upon morning Put off her grey wimple, put on a rosy smock. And made brisk answer to night's sour warning. "Lanthorns and candle light, hang out mayes for all night," They sang, and their voices were as lanthorns lifted Against the coming of the unending night. And when they ceased its shadow never shitted. The English Singers are a group from the old country, singing in their concerts early ballads. and ihadrigals, bringing the breath of a life that has passed away. Canada and the ' U.S. have welcomed them in many parts, this tribute appearing in The Virginia Quarterly Review (-CharlottesTiUe). â€" -* After all, the man in the street hasn't changed muchâ€" he used to »alg, and now he jumps. ^ _ Vice to the country than the whole race of pioliticians put together." .A.brahari Cowley accou::ted agri- culture "the nearest neighbor, or rather next in kindred, to phil- ofcophy,'' and another English poet. John Chalkhill. writing at about the middle of the seventeenth century. beans, which were the earliest escu- knt that the garden contri'outed to cur table. And I love to watch the successive development of each new vegetable, and mark its daily growth, which always affects me with sur- j prise. . . . One day, perchance, I Irokl â- What can at my bean-vines, and see only the i home than A LAUGHING BABY IS A GREAT JOY REDROSE is good tea Red Rose Orange Pekoe â€"Top Quality In clean, brighi Aluminum FINANCIAL NEWS Classified Advertisements fil^G YAR.M «?!• i O on i...is. TWE.NTV- e siiinties free. Stocking A L>»-p: :. OnHla. Ont. ive more Joy to the a laughing, happy baby, gins his "Coridon's Song' Oh the S'weet contentment The countryman doth find High trollollie lollie loe High trollollie lee. little one's nature .servation, I discover the tender young it is i beans, hidden among the foliage. ' happy when well. i Then, each morning I watch the Mothers, if your baby is cross, if he swelling of the pods and calculate ! cries a great deal and no amount of I how soon they will be ready to yield | attention seems to make him happy. Then after talk of horses and carts. \ their treasures. .\11 this gives a plea- 1 give him a dose of Baby's Own Tablets of r-jsset and sheepskin clothing, of \ J^ure and an ideality, hitherto un- 1 and he will soon be well and ready to tillage and of changing seasons, this thought of, to the business of provid- ' radiate that happiness through the home again. Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative. They regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and thus banish constipation and indiges- tion; break up colds and simple fevers and correct those troubles which ac- company the cuiting of teeth and in things â€" and doing them country books which I defy anyone to I well â€" they make baby happy and keep ..TT- . ,. 1J-, -J T • .. '^rn back to without getting nianv a ; him happy. The Tablets are sold by "His stronghold, ss^id Ir%-ing. -^-^'.^.^^i^ t\,^r^iror^^. I commend both medicine dealers or by mail at -5 : mg sustenance for my family. I sup- ; p<>se .A.dam felt it in Paradise; and of : merely and exclusively earthly en- joyments, there are few purer and i more harmless to be experienced.'' I Two .American Victorians whose V 1. 1 • -i Ti- 1. popularity I l«)k to see revive are we remember how ovingly ^ ashing- â- ^^^^^ g_ jj^j^j^^j, ^^^ ^^^^^^ p^^_ is the way he ends: This is not half the happiness The countrj-man enjoys; High trollollie lollie loe. High trollollie lee We know ho^w Bum« felt. Perhaps ton Irving described his typical New : York State farmer. Van Tassel "oy i name. ley Warner. Both wrote delightful . doing those which I defv ar.vone to wellâ€" they m situate<; or the banks of the Hudson, in one of thos^ green, sheltered, fer- tile nc'oks, in â- which the Dutch farm cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brockville, Ont. « Research Work Underpaid "My Farm of Edgewood"' and "My Summer in a Garden," even though , , , ^,. . ,, there is never a word in thein about ers are so fonc of nesthng. A great' •,,„„ . _ . , ,. i c j , , . , ... either tractors or radios. I find also. elm tree spread us broad branches ^ ^^^ „^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^j.^ ^^ ^ ^^^^^ oyer it; at the foot of ^-h'ch buo-' ^^^ ^^^ ^.^^^ .^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^,^ bled up a spnng of the softest ana ^^^ ^^^.^ Grayson ^^-orth while. sweetest water, m a httle well, form-; j^^^ Burrough"i hammered aw.nv at ed by a barrel; and then stole ^park- ^^^ self-appointed task of furthering hng away through the grass, to a i^^_ appreciation of the cut of door^ neighboring brooK that baboled along ^^ j ^^^ j^^ ^^ .^^y^^^.^ ^^^^ ^^ .^^ among akers and dwarf widows ! ^^^ ^.^^ ^j^^j^.^ Hard by the farmhouse «as a vast j ^^^^j^^,^ ^.^^ ^ ^ ^^^-, j_.^^ .j^^^ ^f national laboratory is to be construct barn that mignr have servea for a i church: everj- window and crevice ci which seemed bursting forth â- with the j treas'jres cf the farm ; the flail was ' busily resounding within it _ fro"-- ' ers "whkh the citV and 'anifi'ciai'iif e ' All of these changes are for the bet- morninftto raght ; swallows an« mar-^^^^ ^^, ^^ ^ ^^^^ ..^^ farming, like'jter. Along with them there should twittering about th€,jjjj.^j. ^^^ loving contact with the '»« a revision in the salaries of Cana- Conservative One of the most conservatively capitalized companies to come into • \ tlie public eye for some time is the ' Gold Rock Mining Syndicate, which is capitalized at 4.000 shares of no par value. Directors include Capt. F. C. Wright, president; L. Cote, K.C., H. L. N'ichol, secretary treasurer; T. W". ) Balhurst. Dr. J. O. Robillard and l.\ Ryan. The syndicate owns claims In j the Dryden gold area, Kenora mining division. Ontario. ! Flin FIcn Mines Rushing Materials to Power Site Winnipeg. â€" "Suuplies tor the con- struction ot Island Falls power plant ot FUn Flon mines are going into the site of the plant at the rate of 100 tons a day," states John Calliuan, president ot Callinan Flin Flon Mines, 1 who is in the citj' from an inspec- tion trip In the Xorth with a party ot Xew York and Toronto financiers. 1 "The freighting in of supplies by barge and portage will shortly reach 400 tons a day. and it is expected that 5.000 tons will be at the falls before the freeze-up," Mr. Callinan stated. C.N.R. Earnings The gross earnings ot the Canadian National Railways for The week ended October 15 were $iJ.017.i>41. as com- pared wiih $5.t)7l'.T2fi for the R cmsc -avLZ^t. babbits. Ii.i.STEKEL'. FEDIUREED. jlo.OU 1«T Xia'.i- Aitii> pool table. Jacob • - * s, •â- !--:,:m.«; .-are. rA&MS WASTED. VvfR F.\RM. FP.EB Ir.ttrnat'.onal ReuUy FAASIS rOB SAI.S. .'â- .•.•i:Es >r.. •â- ;•:. imi'Leme-nts, • ijUiv gft'i: biiiiUings, nice loca- tir:;. '.Voodstoi k district. A. Edej-, 4«3 Kinp SI. E, H.imllton. FI.NE A!?S(.r-. TED ST.A.MPS FOB ;^o, !•«â- •â- r;i.k.,gH? 25c. .Trllf to.).iy. A \i, r.. :.. E. £• .veil, Roiigtrnf-n: •, .^ ICO 100 Forest Destruction Ottawa Journal (Cons.): We art burning up our forests at a rate that takes about $5 every week from every Canadian family. Asked some years age what most struck him about Can- ada, a famous European statesman replied that it was our colossal waste. And that is true. We are a careless people and we are a wasteful people. Careless and wasteful to the point where we recklessly burn up money. This carelessness and wastefulness cannot go on. Our resources, con- trary to our after-dinner orators, ars no! iuexhausiibie; and, unless ws mend our ways, the time may soon come when we shall find our estate beggared through our wanton spirit corre- of iTestructiveness. Saskatoon Siar - P'uoeuix iLib.'i; (The American Government pays its research workers twice as much as the Canadian Government!. The Fed- eral Government iniimated at the last session of Parliament that it intends His opinion on o'ur , <•> increase expenditure on research. .A. I spending period of 1927, an increase of 1*1.244.315, or 22 per cent. â- I Toronto Change Average at New I High j Industrial common stocks collec- tively on the local stock market as of Oct. 20 are selling at the highest on record. Individually there are many issues below the top for all time, but an average ot 30 listed and 13 unlisted tins skimmed -„ --, ro^ws of pigeons, seme! j, j^ w-'th one eye turned up, as jf ^'atch-j ^^^'^j,;^^ j,;^,^ ^^^^ ing the weather, some ^^ith their ^ ,^^ ^^.^j.^„^.^., htacs under their wings, or buried ini p^^ ^ ^^^^. ^,^^^^-,^. expression their bosoms, and others swelling |^f -^^-^^ j recommend turning to and cooing, f.nd bowing about their , ^j^^ ^^.^. ^^ y^^.^^, Lindsav. In dames, were e-.ijoying the sunshine on ,^i^ Proclamation-Of the Xew Vil- lage and the New Country Conmiun- ity â€" hear this : "The next generation draws out the poison. It ! "liai scientific workers which will him patience hring them up to something nearer parity -with their American confreres. the roof.'' Old Van Tassel was not proud â€" no,' not he but it i^s confessed that he ^^ ^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^-^^^^ ^.-^^ â- • piqued himself on the fact that ,j.j^^ ^^^ ^^ ^j^^ ^^^^^^ ^.jj, .^ ^^ within the boundaries of his farm and longer dazzled and destroyed by the fires of the metropolis. He will travel. "everything was snug, happy. well-condiUoned." ^^^ ^^j ^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^ring back. Emerson, like all good Concordians,;j^gj ^^ j^jg ^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^.^y. (Kd some cultivating of the ground across the continent for good com. or â- .vhtn the bull movement was rampant. The average price ot 30 listed on Oct. 15 was 79.20 at the end of January ,ind for 13 unlisted stocks it is 50.23, com- pared with January's mark of 4S.69. •â- THE WORST PEST" The Scot was i.ha;;ing to an Aussi* on a visit to the Granite City. "I'll tell ye what I observed when I was over in Melbourne and ither towns in ye n'untry. wherever I went I found Scotsmen occupying all the high poseeiions â€" heids o' business, heids o' departments, managing banks, the biggest sheep stations, ces in the m tellin' ye, here in Aus- tralia. "That's so. maybe." replied the Aus- f,w. "But our worst pest is the rab- bi;." -c- Snange how radio engineers can â- " n' Februarys reaction saw a loss of near- lime ~ the introduction of improved ly eight points in the listed stock and models to fit your last instalment on over five in the unlisted. The low for the ijd ome. â€" Washington Post, the year by both groups was touched ^_ UNDESIRABLE GOOD HEALTH with his own hands. But Enierson "^^ ^ ^ ^^^-'-'-y ^-;];; ^Y^"'^^^^^^ Doctor: Good health causes me a found the occupation so supcrabsorb- ^ ^ uansplanting and «^!?; "^"^^'^f ^'"^V^"' ... ing that he was obliged to give it up^ /^^... .^j^ -^^ ^, ,^^, He will J^'^^^- ^^f^' ^^^^ Ji heaUh °^"t ""^'s were active in the market as inconsistent with his literary l<i-:^,„u- if known for it* ootterv or i»s ^ ^^"^"^ ^""^ '""'"^ ^^""^ ^""'^ ^**"'' . . . . tors. Nonetheless his essays are full i J^^Llnrrt^ phiK^ophT^r its pJa! 1 '^o- -",^»«^ ^ -"^^ ^" "->â- ^ 'of references to the satisfactions as „„,„ ;, ..„;.,„, ;*„„„.„„„ ;♦. „„i I yo«r work I tor listed and 42.75 for the unlisted. I August indicated a slight improve- ment with a more pronounced advance in September and a new high mark set in the first half ot October. The average ot 60 stocks, including indus- trials, banks and utilities, however. is still beloTi- the peak of 110.23 touched in April. To-day the average stands at 109.71 and the greatest por- tion of the decrease is accounted for ' by the bank stocks. In .ipril invest- ' The child Wordsworth. is father of the man.â€" CANCER FREE BOOK Sent on Request Teils cause cf cancer and what to do for pain, bleeding, odor, etc. Wrlta for it to-day, mentioning this paper. Address Indianapolis Cancer Hospital, Indianapolis, Ind. What is more satisfying; after the bridge game than a cup or two of Red Rosa Tea? Millions of Canadians pre- fer it to anjr other because of finer flavor, remarkable strength and dustless {>ur- ity. |*ut up in aliimiiiuni â€" the only material which com- pletely protects good tea. 17EW cocks, its music or its sx^-ans, its gol- ., . X i? ^L • 1^ COCKS, ICS music or its swans, !«â- goi- i _, c? t i~ u.,- -„. i,- .,»- ';*,^\^l*'''f"T.'^'*'ft''''f."'\"r den r^fs or it8 great unio^^^^ P*"^'"^^ So do-but not In my al life. 'The land." wrote he "us the ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^here ar* a thousand P^"*"'^' â- ">â- ''''""^ appointed remedy for whatever 's^j^^Uaneous a.-hievement5 within false and fantastic in our culture." Today with our urban civilzation the scope of the great-hearted village. tending to grow more and more fan- ., The foreman of the roadmenders had been taken ill suddenly, and his will bring "â- the"sei'-»*'»tl>«°'^ °»«"- F«t"ck OCasey, was I have ta.ked to th^ boys. I «1"'>- Promoted to the post temporar:l>. On the foreman s subsequent return he was surprised to find i^atrick the only man working on the stretch ot unmetalled road, and Inquired as to the absence of the others. "Where's all the boys. Pat?" "Oi socked Ivery man o' them." replied the Irishman, with a grin. "It's not often Ol have a chance of showing my authority: Our agricultural land today holds the , . , 1 plough-bovs who tastic. such a remedy seems more ; L^_ .c.-, needed than ever ; j ^^^^i them. T have seen their gleam- Hawthonie had little goo<l to say : ,jj .pg.._5, jj ,„ christian Science about his laborious days at the Brook ^jonijor Farm, but when it came to working ' ^ with his hands about his own home - f J ' place his mood chunged. -Said he, in; Japanese rindS â- the nii^ of delights, "The .\meric4ll ! \- , Way of Dis8<^ving Not^ Books.- ^ ,u i " Lacquer in Water "The natural taste of man for the ^ original .\dam's occupation is fast de- 1 Tokyo.â€" The discovery of a process ' ^m bedad. Oi made the most of my veloping itself in me. I find that I ; tor dissolving lacquer in water, the j opportunity yisterday, to be sure." am a goo<l deal interested in our gar- ! resultant composition forming a valu- tten, although it was i^lanteiL before; able waterproof and .dyestulf tor all we came hero. I do not feel the same textiles. Is announced by Dr. Keijl affection for the plants that I should Odi^-a-professior at the Kyushu Im- if the seed had been sown by my own'perl^t' University. The discovery hands. It is something like nujsligj cories after â- man)' fears or>xperimeu- and educating another pereon's chil- j tatiou. till, it was a very pleasant mo- k Lacquer has hitherto been consid- and carried the average for the bank Issues up over 19 points to 32S.62, compared with 314.75. as ot October 15. Vtilities are also lower at 116.69. contrasted with a high of 121.33 at the end of May. Veterlnaries use Mlnsrd's Liniment. It is a wonderful fact to reflect upon that every human creature is consti- tuted to be a profound secret and mystery to every other. â€" Charles Dickens. Rheumatism .\ little Minartl's rubbed into parts sffecled relieves rh«u- matic pain. Also good for bruises and sprains. ".American chewing-gum has gained a foothold in Japan." says an ex- change. Its faculty for gaining a foothold is its most unpopular feature in this country. â€" Boston Transcript. ment w^hep I. gathered tha first string- 1 ered indissoluble iu water. Dr. Oda ' , claims that he has accomplished this. Make Your Winter Holiday Pay Dividends Own a 20-Acre Farm In Georflia. Grow Tobacco, Early Vegetable* and Frulti. Cne Crop Oft«n Payt for the Farm. Stnd for Particular*. Write: W. E. FRENCH Manager. Industrial D«pt. Georgia & Florida Hallway. VALDOSTA. Ga. or ROBINS LIMITED Michigan Theatre, Building. Detroit, Mich. and that the application ot the solu- tion thus obtained to silk, yaira and other textiles i.s an efflcieut water- proof and dye. The rubber solution at present used for waterproofing ganneius has three drawiiAcks, he says. He defines these as not permitting air to pass through. as easily deteriorating and as making It dlflflcnlt to fold garments which have been treated with a rubber so- lution. A London Bclentlst's theory that motor cars eventually will depnvB the human race of the use ot its legs takes no notice whatever of the lncrea'<lng agility ot the pedestrian. Minard't Liniment for aching Joints. ^$>^' aue to AcM MCADACHS 5. our Stomach HELPED DURING MIDDLE AGE Woman Praises Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Just a tasteless dose ot Phillips' parts. You are happy again in five Milk ot Magnesia In water. This Is an minutes, alkali, effectire. yet harmless. It has Don't depend on crude methods. I Emplov the best way yet evolved in been the standard antacid for 50 years ' ^„ ^^^ y^^^s of searching. That Is among physicians everywhere. One npoontul will neutralize at once many times its Tolume In acid. It is the right way. the quick, pleasant and effi- cient way to kill the escess acid. The •tomacli becomes sweot. th« pain do- 1 Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi- cian's for BO years In correcting excess acids. E:ach bottle contains full di- rections â€" any drugstore. Samia. Ont.â€" "I am willing to answer letters trom other women, to tell them the won- derful good Ljdia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound did me. I cannot be thankful enough for the beneiits I re- ceived during the Change of Life. I do housework and my troubles made me unlit to work. A friend advised me to try the Ve^ etable Compound. 1 felt great relief at once, began to regain my appetite, and I ray nervee got tetter. 1 will recom- mend your medicine to all with trou- bles like I had. "â€"Mrs. John Benson* ' 16'^ N. Chrietina St., Sarnia, Ontario. j ISSUE Nor43â€" '28 "