s Is your daughter enjoyiog life? IT ia jtut in her "teen age" that • girl should be getting the most fun out of life ! â€" Yet so often it happens that girls of sixteen -to - twenty have outgrown their strength â€"are quickly tired, pate, nervous, generally run< down and unhappy i Tlicsa are sure ligas of tnacmia, a condition that rcmlta from thin, wom-cut, under-nourished blood. Dr. Williams' Pink PitU hay* corrected thii in thoiuands of girls. Hers is the actual â- xperienes of Mrs. Ben Nirholaa of Erieau, One "My daughter was ia a run-down state. She was easily tired snd did not wish to associate with others. As this was unnatural, I began giving her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and they soon made a strong healthy girl of her. Now the is as happy a girt as one woald wish to see." Start your daughter on this proven treatment now by buying Dr. Williams' Pink Pills at your druggist's or any dealer in medicine or by mail, 30 cents, postpaid, from The Dr. 'Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, dnt. i.ji PIHRMIM "a household nami im s4 countries" "Man with 10 wives may be Insane." Jlay be?â€" Border Cities Star. SAWc it with a SIMONDS SAW Sioys sharp lon^sr The Mower ihais Guaranieedi ThemBteriabfrnnvhidt SmaitltMowCTs aiematle Athcwytheyaiemiide gnuanicc dioaUe and satisfbctoiy service. Thekttntsi cnHeryour SS^ monojrcBnbuy. Askfbr A^aStnarftMowo-bynua X^AMES SMART PIANT. tRCCKVlUa OHT. mm Extend Medical Service In North Department of the Interior Will Establish Two More Stations in Arctic Canada ReallzinR that Uie future develop meiit of Northern Can.aila depends to a large extent on the health ami gen- eral v.ellheing of the native popula- tion every effort is being put forth by the Department of the Interior to protect tl'o Ksklnios of the Far Nortli. When the Department assumed charge of Eskimo aft'airs In 1927 one of the Important steps taken was the deci- sion to increase the number of medi- cal offlcerg amonif'the natltes. Two offjpers were statlniisd In the Arctic (luring 192S. one at Pangnlrtung. Baf- fin Island, and the other at Alkavik. Mackenzie River delta. This year a third post will be established at Ches- tprfield Inlet ou the western shore of Hudson bay, and a fourth on the Arctic coast at the mouth of the Cop- permine riyer. Last pear Dr. L. D. Livingstone was sent North with the 1928 Canadian Arctic Expedition to the posts in the eastern Islands of the Arcic archipel- ago and made his hearquarters at Pnngnirtun.:; on Biffin island. Later Dr. J. A. Urquliart procoede dto the western Arctic and established him- self at Akiavik at the mouth of the Mackenzie river. When the 1929 Arctic Expedition leaves North Syd- ney, Nov .1 Scotia, about July 20 on board the S.S. Beothic. It will Include a ne wmedieal officer to relieve Dr. Livinsstcne at Panjiiirtuug. The change will be made during the south- ern leg of the patrol and Dr. Living- stone will accompany the Beothic to Chesterfield Inlet where the materials and supplies will be landed for the new medical post. It is expected Dr. Livingstone wUl continue the trip on the Beothic toVhe home port and will submit his report to the North West Territories and Yukon Branch, at Ottawa. Later, probably in January 1930, he will set out for Che'sterfleld Inlet where he will remain as Depart- mental Medical Offlcer for a year or more. Plans for th.i establishment of the medical offlcer at the mouth of the Coppermine river are being form- ulated. The Department of the Interior through its North West Territories and Yukon Branch, ia addition is co- operating with tue Department of In- dian Affiairs In maintaining medical officers at different points in the Northwest Territories. These officers, who are given the status of Medical Health Offleere, are Dr. W. A .M. Truesdell, Simpson; Dr. C. Bourget, Resolution; and Dr. A. L. McDonald. Fort Smith, all in Mackenzie District. â€" Natural Resources. YOU STAMMERO ' ^ ^'"'•*'T' *»^ Unemployment Don' eny Ipnifer. Suce«»8ful pupils •v«rywh.tL'« rccommtind our mcthadsi of tre«lm»nl. Writs for frc* s<tvicc and lit«rftturc. THE ARNOTT INSTITUTE KITCHENER. ONT.. CANADA ( I Sir Esme*s Hobby Is Bookbinding Advocates a Mumble Hobby as a Means to Hap- piness Princeton, NJ.â€" Sir Esme Howard, British Ambassador at Washin.qtou, on his retirement from the diplomatic service next year, plans U) dinou? much of his time to bookbinding, be paid in a speoch recently to tlie litoi- ary and political societies of Prince- ton Univ ;rsity. "You young people of America, and also our young people in England, can add much to your own happiness and also the happiness of the world genei-- ally, if you will learn not only to ap- preciate beautiful things but also to create tliem witiiin the measure of your capacity. "There is nothln.g â€" apart from the ever-Important cultivation of the spiritual values â€" which your country and my country need so much as the cultivation of the aesthetic values. "Unfortunately for myself, I may say that I never learned any handi- craft, and that source of creative hap- piness is at present denied me. But I hope to make good this defect when I retire from diplomatic life next year, and to become perhaps an en- thusiastic if belated bookbinder. I should like to think I had persuaded one or two of yon here present to try your hand at such humble work, and 80 assure to yourselves many happy hours." • The time hiia oouie whuu a Mhil.-iti'v , of Kniplo.Tmeut should be added to the UepartmentB nf Government. Ouiy so can all the knowledge of the ca^r8</s 1 of unemployment and all the nieiliod:; ' of a.levialiiig ii b« Ralliered lOKeihev under a singls roof and H-'lentlllcallv : and contiuuou.'^ly sifted and c.-)!iated. I When half a dozs'n diifer<!nt hureaui-. , tonnnirtees and departnienti :uii ' spasmodicaily euRagt^il on the same I problem, t:>at problem is firmly I auaiantnert against any real solution. j Hur make It the central task of a I single Ministry, with powers to take ! over the scattered inquiries and en- terprises of all the otiier State or- ganizations that are worldng o!«it. and a big advance towards order, co- hesion and sustained analysis and re- search ia registered at once, BABY'S OWfTtABLETS WIN GREAT PR.4ISE The Red Rose Tea guarantee means what it says. If not satisfied return the unused-part in the package an4 the grocer will refund your money. c £!^'m deed tea RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE isestragooa Under Arctic Seas Many Mothers Always Keep Them in the House. Thousands of mothers state that they know of no other medicine for little ones to equal Baby's Own Tab- letsâ€"that they always keep the Tab- lets ia the home as a preventive of childhood ailments, or If sickness does suddenly grip their little ones they feel safe with such a remedy at band. Concerning the use of the Tablets Mrs. Danot Ploudre, Tingwlck, Que., writes:â€" "I have nothiug but praise for Baby's Own Tablets. They are the only medicine I have ever given my two little ones, and I am glad to state that the Tablets have always kept them In perfect health. I feel so safe with the Tablets that I al- ways keep a box hi the house." Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative. They regu- late the bowels, sweeten the stom- acii a.ud thus banish constipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fever and make the cutting of testh painless. The Tablets are absolutely safe, being guaranteed free from all injurious drugs. They are sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 25s a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Out. Sovereignty in the Antarctic Manchester. Guardian (Lib.): Ifi the airplane justifies itself in survey j work thero is every reason to hope j t^^at much more than the 4.000 miles at present known of a coast-line that i iR put at some 10.000 may be charted. | .\ud with a continent rapidly appear- 1 ins, a^ it were ,out of the mist, after | aeons of oblivion, it has occurred to some of the more Ingenious minds in; the press fo America to start a dis- [ cussion on the question of annexing it. Does the fact of reaching and naming hitherto unhnown iand at- tach It to the nation to wl;I;h the explorer belongs? And If so, must be set painful, and often tragic, foot upon it as did Amundsen, Scott and ShacklGton. or will it suffice to adopt the easier methods of Kyrd and the moderns and hag and name fresh mountain peaks from the air with the assurance that this game of "I spy" will secure sovereign possession'.' The spirit of man grows too mighfy for the prison-house of suspicion and fear in which he has imprisoned him- self. IIo cannot raise himself to the hcighe of his stature while h;s limbs are crampeti in the annour of hatred; he suffocates in the atmosphere of continual suspicion.- â€" Maude Royden. Pf.-Iuo;.--!. Wliiie. Bro-.T. ana Cuff L^^lkoras DcritJ and *>VbiM Hoc!... R. I. Red*. Ancona,, Bb<U Minon-M. \Bu(T 0(t.ingi„n., Whiw WyuMlottc IZe .,rJ up. UVr. liv< .Idi.t., etisranictiL Ltc (cjav lor FREE CHICK &00:C By Submarine to the North Pole â€" It Sounds Like Jules V'eme, But Sir Hubert Wilkins Means to Make It Actual Fact Some wonderful voyages have beea accomplished by submarine, but even the greatest of t'aem seems a very matter-of-fact affair compared with the exploit which Sir Hubert Wilkins. the famous airman and explorer, is planning for next summer. He in- tends to cross the Torth Pole by sub- marluc, sailing under the Arctic Ice for 2.U00 miles from Spitzbergen to the Dehring Sea. At first mention the project seems wildly impossible. But the Polar Sea is between 5,000 and IJ.OOO feet deep, and the average thickness of the ice is from 10 ft. to 13 It. Sir Hubert does not think that it is tbick- er than 120 ft. anywhere, and Dr. Stefansson agrees that a submarine cruising at a depth of 150 ft. should have n,.'thius to fear from ice. There is a snag, however, which make the enterprise a dangerous one. A submarine can only travel about 200 miles when submerged. After it has travelled this distance it has to come to the surface. Breaking Through the Ice This might seem to disp.,«e of the submarine Idea at once ,but only to those who don't know the Arctic. The Polar Sea Is not completely ice- I bound; on an average, tlie submarine should come (o a patch of open sea ; once in every twenty-five miles or so. I Practically at the Pole itself explorers have found channels in the Ice. Even if these channels are not en- countered, it will be possible to break through the Ice by means of blasting, if the submarine retreats f.>r about half a mile after laying the cliarge. This, at any rate. Is the calculation, but the risks that will be taken by an expedition of this kind are obviou.s. It l3 said, however, that this is the best way in which to obtain iufornia- , . .i i tion regarding the depth of the Arctic ' P're in preference to any other assoc Ocean ;uid the behaviour of its cur- National Development La Presse (Ind.) : In past years the best efforts to bring French and Knglish together in tlhe Dominion were of little avail.) But a new spirit Is abroad today. It is now better understood that our young country needs concerted action, and ; the frank and energetic co-operation I of the different nationalities of the ' Dominion, to carry out the consider- able and difficult task of our develop- ment. Far from wishing to put into the same mould all the racial ele- ments which go to make up the na- tion, it Is now our object to put them Into the best possible place for then- full expansion, and for tlieir more fertile growth. MInard's Liniment for cuts and bruises Old Dan'l Out of his cottage to the sun Bent double comes old Dan'l, His chest all over cotton wool, His back all over flannel. "Vrinter will finish him," they've said Each winter now for ten: But come the first warm day of spring Old Dan'l out again. â€" D. A. G. Strong. in the London Spectator. .,_'; Unseen Eye The day before the battle of the Do.!;ger Bank the Admiralty were in posse.ssion of the whole of the plans ' of the German Navy, and. during the i battle they were intercepting and solv- 1 ing orders in code. Similarly the bat- tle of Jutland was watched by the un- seen eye of the Admiralty. Zeppelins on their way back from bombing raids were very loquacious, and submarines used to wil-eless home their "bag." It was Room 40 which decoded the message from the "U20," giving full details of the sink Ing of the "Lusitania." Classified Advertisements BABY CBICZS S1.S-(.;H3 r(,M!3 WUITIQ I.ECllOU.'* Puby Cliicks. bieil :'or hiprli pioiiuc- rion for 2<i y<-ais. Prlcea for SIliv 1»c, June IJc. July and Aiigiist }0c. Dela- mere PouUry rami. Suatfovd. Ont;irio. j'-;fitalj. I'jUo. B.\UY CHICKS. WIS II.XTCB _ four varieilea, price an up. A rite lor ftH'P <Mtalog'ja. A. li. Swit/.fir. :!"ar!t*^n. n.-irnri-i A-1 €1 i;.v Tisâ€" u-iTTLii; r eillipr KP\-) mailetl In plain eiivcl. â- i>t'. Paris Specialty '.if'iitroal, Qu*-. FUlJi.ND TO I plain ( Co., easier 2^3, LflK.S W.V.NTKU TO DO Pr..Al.N i J-i and ligrlit sKwins at home. wUnlu or I ^[iii-e time. Good pa.v. Wurk sent any 'jist.im?, charges paid. Sond st.inip for I ijarti.iilai-rt. National ilanul'aciuring I 'o., Mnntreal. Perhaps the most spectacular thing '/ i -^-N'\I->I-\-N' M.\(i.\/.l.\i.: ukqiihes enmnHoliorl hM TJr,/,m .in moo n,o Ho. ! V^ '^"'i*' aBeni.s who are ninliiti.iun supiilieil accomplished by Room 40 was the de coding of the now notorious "Zimmer- man" message which brought the United States into the war. The mes- sage was the offer to Mexico by Ger- many of an alliance against the United States. When the messa.ge was received it was conveyed secretly to Lord Balfour and sent to President Wilson, who had it published in the American Press. That message turned the scales and the United States entered the war on the side of the Allies. When I talked to Sir Alfred Ewing in the hook-lined library of his house In Edinburgh it was impossible to a.s- soclate this silver-haired, old, quiet- mannered scholar with a soft Scots accent with the activities of feverish days and nights in Room 40 durin.r; the war. i-nornus 0(tinnii..isif»n. 347 .\.!.-l:ii.!.. .St. W,-«t. Lists Torn;);., m^w^jhimti^. Lirn upw.ifds ol *:5 wpfkly jiro\.\!rit; Mi'^roomi lor us, in cellar or other wasit? space. Deliver to our nearfjr I branch. Lifitit pleasant n-crii for either aex. liliivtrated bi^koklei seat acywhkT?, for ttamp. HOW BABY SPECIALISTS TREAT CONST IPATION Constipation in babies aud children is the cause of colic, bloating, skin disorders, etc. It weakens them, just as it does grown folks; makes them cross, feverish and fretful. Bat don't use grown folks' medicine with them, baby specialists advise. Xinety per cent, of them recommend just one preparation for constipation, colds and j other ills of babies aud children They j say Fletcher's Castoria. Millions of mothers have proved its merit during thirty years of use. Castoria is pure- ly-vegetable, harmless and pleasant- tasting. Genuine Castoria always bears the Fletcher signature. Avoid imitations. mu FARM*'"' STOCK ACCOUNT BOOKS This valaa!)ln book was rom* piled to aJvertUe CARHAETT OVER.\LL3 â€" the best farmer's overalla in the world. Ono ,'armer wrote that he would not take ten dollars for his book. Write for yours to-i!ay. Hamilton Carhartt Cotton Milli Ltd., Toronto (Ji'tr Twenty Thuiiiand Ar/ennea Britain and the Empire I London Evening Standard (Ind. Icons.): Mr. liaklwin will do well to â- let it be known that the foreign policy ! of Great Britain is to be conducted j with a single view to British inter- ! ests and to a consolidation of the Em- rents. ation of interests that can be imag- ined. We were inevitably drawn into It would probably he possible to get : the vortex of European affairs but ' our main effort now must be, so tnr powerful Ice-breaker, and "breakiugj "" '"= " " ..-^.....- it, not to j'c, .s..rihniiiiitiin ISilff'll.i N V BSIDaCSOKO. ORT., CAN J*!k tbeTbu^hefti Tire in the .WORLD Tune in "The Voice cf Firestone" Every Monday Ni«5bt, 8 p.tn. Ewitem Time NBC Ntt» orit X OUGHNESS â€" durabilityâ€" long-mUeagt^â€" safety! That is what you ^ant in tires. And you find them all in Kire- Btoncs. The best non-skid tread ever put on a tire «rip» the slippery roads you travel at this season. Firestone tires give the greatest mileage, the ere«te8t safety at the lowest cost per milc» See the Firestone Dealer today. FIRESTONE TME & RUBBER CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED HAMILTON - ONTARIO Choose rather to punish your ap- petites than to be punishoil by them. â€" Maxim. the same information by employing a, ice-breaker, and "breaking |«« "-^ -^^an, to escape from through" to the Pole. In f.ie search ! S" t,u-X\x,'v m. for Amundsen and the men lo?t with th3 Italia ,the Ice-breaking Krassin attained the most northerly point over reached by a ship sailing freely, and couid have gone still farther north. Her commander believes I'.iat a more powerful ice-breaker couUl un- doubtedly reach the Pole. Up to the present three methods of .\rctic exploration have been success- fully employed. Peary put his trust in dogs; Dr. Nansen employed ships and sledges in combination; .Amund- sen showed what aircra.'t could do. A voyage to the Pole either by ice- breaker or submarine would add a new chapter to t'.^o history of adven- ture and enterprise in the Frozen North. <. Character A soo<l and honorable charar.cr is a safe provision for every event and every turn of fortune. â€" Schiller. Those Languid Eyes They quickly reflect your health and physical condition â€" restless eye^ indicate the temperament of the stomach. Watch the eyes . . . see that the whites are clear with a healthy bluish tinge. " The minute a yel- low tinge appears it betrays con- stipation, sluggish hver or bil- iousness, you need a laxative. Bring back your I Vigotir, Vim, Vitality with Bcecham's Pills â€" the sure way to constant, joyous, bounding a health, _T, Try a reeuldr daily I course for a short â- ^ V«*v*..t/.. period. YoureytswiH •« yegftable tell the story. Product Head about Character from the Eyes pi jutiae Bucham .idvertiscmtnts. Sales Agents: Harold F. Ritchie fiC Co., Limited. Toronto ^za ' ^^^lMi'l^p PAINSIN a«ir- STOMACH TROUBtt i-ivcr disurat-ra quickiy rciifved f»y "lit-i-iriiett C.^psIl]^.*a'' and ail Bynipfoms bnnished surh aa bowel trouUe, painaia side or back, indJRca'iou, Ki*3. jaunflice, dysprpsia, heartt>iirn. I'lasy to tuki?, C^iirk rHief. Hf-nd lo-dny for free bo&Llet and many tt'.etimoniuls of ihia reliable remedy. Box 20.3 ANDERSONS CO. ^^L'SiS- HATKMI Women are saying: "Pinkham's Compound keeps me fit to do my work." "I was nervous and all run down. Now I eat better and sleep betterâ€"". "It helped my thirteen year old daughter."â€" "I took it be- fore and after my baby w-as born." â€" "I am gaining every day." Vegetable Compoiitt^: Splitting Headaclie Minard's will drive it av.'ay. Kalhe the forehead. Also isuiiidsii -^^^ji^-iâ€" ij^i^^,^--. umisngiM ! ^S :PKIILIPSS f^ Troubles due to Acid ACIO STOMACH HIEARTBURM HEADACHE GASES NAUSEA iji QUP Stomach Courting In automobile.'S is danger- ous .says a police offlcer. Why speci- fy automobiles? , Opportunity knocks but once. Evi- dently U Isn't motor-driven.â€" Dallas News. Just a Wasteless dose of Phillips' Milk of Magnesia In water. That is an alkali, effective, yet harmless. It has been the standard antacid tor 50 years among physicians everywhere. Ono spoonful will naturalize at once many times its volume In acid. It Is departs. You are hiippy again in live minutes. Don't depend on crude methods. Employ the best -way yet evolved in all the years of searching. That Is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. Be sure to get the genjlne Pliilllps" Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physl- the right way, t'ae quick, pleasant andi clans f*r 60 years in correcting excess >>â€" â€" â€" efficient way to kill tlie excess add. 'acld.s. Each bottle contains full dlrec- Minard's Liniment â€" B*od for tired ftet The stomach becomes sweet, the pain I tlonsâ€" any drugstore, j r^OCTORS quite approve the *^ quick comfort of Aspirin. For, these perfectly harmless tablets will ease an aching head witliout penalty. Their increasing use yean after year is proof that they do helfl and can't harm. Take them for any, ache ; to avoid the pain peculiar to women; many have found tlietn marvelous at such times. Th« proven directions found in every package of Aspirin tell how to treat colds, sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis, etc. All druggists. SPIRIN AaplrlD 1* a TndcKUk Bcftatcnd Id Cutda ' ISSUE No. 2 1â€"* 29