600]) HEALTH * l . CAN BE YOURS v .1- If Your Blood Supply is Kept Rich and Red. It is a waste of time and money to tight merely the signs of disease; in the long run you are probably worse off than when you started. What is far more important is that you should intelligently examine the various symptoms'and trace the cause. When you remove the cause. health will be yours. For example, anaemic people often endure months of suffering while treating its symptoms, such as indigestion, shortness of breath, pal- pitation of the heart and exhaustion after any small effort. 'The apparent stomach and heart troubles are generally nothing more than the result of an insufï¬cient sup-. ply of pure blood. This anaemic state may have followed some previous ill- ness, or an attack of influenza; or it may have arisen from overwork, wor; ry or too little fresh air. To obtain good health the simple and proper course is to build up the blood, but to do ‘this you must select a. reliable remedy with a reputation such as Dr.Williams’ Pink Pills. These pills en- rich the blood which carries nourish- ment to all the organs of the body and enables them to do the weak na- ture expects of them. Thousands of men and women have proved this for themselves. One of these is Mrs. T. Flynn, R.R. No. 1, Erinsville, Ont., who says: “Last spring I got into a badly run down condition. I had no energy; work left me exhausted, and the least exertion would make my WHAT’S ITS NAME? W “The good a man does lives after him." Nowhere is this truer than on the farm. But man's memory is short and for that reason it is very im- portant that your farm have a suit-, 'ablc name. Sometimes very original combina- tions of the owner’s name are used; for example, the farm of Dean L. H. Bailey of Cornell, which he called Bailiwick. One man was so overjoy- ed at the prospect of farming his own land that he called his place Iona Farm. Names such as Barren Run should be avoided, as they may give the stranger an unfavorable imprcs< s'ion. It is also well to avoid namcsl like Woodlawn and Shady Grove. which are already in common use in many parts of the country. Facctious names such as Dow Drop Inn do very well for summer bungalows.,but do not possess the dignity which your farm name should carry. Supposingr you are a breeder of a ' famous strain of cattle: Your own re- nown and personality may be sufï¬- cient to bring buyers from all parts of the world. More often, however, the successful breeder has a distinc- tive title for his farm which he in- variany links up with his farm paperi and catalogue advertising. When you; sell out, your farm name may be worth a great deal. In business it is called good-will. The president of the world‘s largest maibprder house de- clared that his ï¬rm’s good-will was worth more than all the other assets of the hundred-million-dollar business. But just as important is the satis- faction which you and your family‘ heart palpitate violently. I had often read of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and decided to give them a la] and got a half dozen boxes. I had ot been tak- ing the pills long when I felt a decided improvement in my condition and by the time I had used the six boxes I could do‘my housework with ease. I can strongly recommend Dr. W illiams' Pink Pills to all weak people." You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail post- paid at. 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. VVil-liams’ Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont. \__._'. Success Nuggets. Opportunity brings out the great lman, but he alone is great who is 5 ready to embrace it. ‘ . . 0 ‘ r If the first rule is to obey your na- vtivo bias, to accept the‘work for which :you were inwardly formedâ€"the second Vrule is concentration, which doubles At: forceâ€"Emerson. . C C O . Smiles attract dollars, as they at- ‘traot everything that is good and ‘wlmlfloï¬le. If people would only smile more, if ‘childron were trained to smile habit- ually, what a wonderful world this would be! t t I! C We do not know anything about our own resources until we have taught ourselves to sand alone. Not until We can think for ourselves. and act for ourselves, do we become more than infants in the moral universe:â€" Angela Morgan. 0 t in ct Thoughts never die. they are im< ,‘mortal dreams that outlive their dreamers. By the Side of the Road. Let me live in a house by theside of the road, Where the race of men go by, They are good, they are bad, they are weak, they are strong, Wise, foolish; so am I. Then why should I sit in the scorner's seat Or hurl a cynic's ban? Let me live in a house by the side of the road And be a friend to man. nelit lugs made w‘lNNn‘za . I’urityQuaiiVEconomy The combination of purity- : Powder the “.i' powder ofï¬anada. :lPosittvely contains. no alum or other injurious substitutes: *‘ its use insures perfect satisfaction. “Costs no more than the ordinary kinds†‘ Made in Canada 135V. GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED will get out of an appropriate name for your farm. Mora-1e is a favorite word in military circles. An army wit-h morale is usually a victorious army. ‘ Haying a farm name to work for, and to live up to, will give you, morale to win your farm battles. It‘ gives a certain distinctive tone to a. place that otherwise is “just a farm." It implies a home, efï¬cient production: better livestock, permanency, prosper- ity, success, and contentment. ‘Look around yo 1' community at the farms: that have names and see if this is not true. I think you will find most. of the farmers who are achieving thei unusual are justly proud of their farms. They show that pride by namâ€" ing them appropriately. , It is ‘yery important that the farm name be distinctive, and that it ï¬ti the farm. There are many ways of christening a farm. Perhaps the most common 'is to select some outstanding feature as “H-illcrest,†“Valley View," “Meadow Brook," etc. Others are named for the kind of trees which sur- round the farmstead, such as “Oak Grove,†“Maple Dell," “Pine Ridge,†and so on. Another favorite form of name is derived from a combination of the old English words “burst†and “croft,†which mean homestead. This is the way such names as Applecroft and Ellenhurst are formed. If you and your family can‘t decide on a name. ask your neighbors or your county representative to help. A successful apple grower held a contest and paid a goodly sum for ,tlhe best name submitted, which he has since made widely known through his apple, advertising. You owe it to yourself, your family, and the man who buys your place to give your farm a suit- able name. l ~:oâ€"~â€"â€",â€"~. Calling in Cairo. Englishmen who do not know ('airo‘ :‘s-ometimes take houses in remote and undesirable parts of the city. In Egypt as We Knew It. Mrs. E. L. Butcher amusingly describes how hard it is to find a person who has thus‘ gone astray. Her husband. she says. wrote to a doctor for the address of’ .some friends whotn she knew he had attended. Iiere is the doctor's ans, wcr: "'l‘he Mi -â€"'s live in a house . without a number in a street without i in name next door to an Armenian butcher who. I think. has no sign. west r of Abdin l’alacei eighty-seven steps " _.;. _ Black parachutes \t'ti't- used during: the Great War for dropping. spies bc~‘ bind the enemy's lines at night. at» 'l‘he staircase hasi and economy Ma ’4: Bakin tandard TORONTO. CAN. Mou‘rntu. i augurated in 1911 for scouts who had . shop. .signulcrs. dispatch t':tl‘:‘lt'l'\. IT’S YOUR GUARANTEE MODERATE Eventualy MADE IN CANADA BY CANADIAN PEOPLE 1W IN PRIEE " FliiST ï¬ghtâ€. EN QUALETY Ask Your Loo a! Dealer. 70f 7 Blind serveWThem as Eyes. One of the most remarkable insven- tions given by the twentieth century to mankind is the “optophone,'.‘ which enables the blind to read ordinary print. It was successfully tested a short time ago at the Imperial College of Science, in London. _ The contrivan‘ce,‘ ‘which owes its creation to Dr. E. E. Fournier d'Abe. of London, is equipped with a tele- phone receiver which is adjusted to the ear of the blind person like any head phone. Musical notes in certain arrangements;respresenting the vari- ous- letters of the alphabet, are pro duced as the latter are passed'over the ingtrument in traversing a line of print. " - Up to the present time the only known means for enabling the blind to read has been the raised-letter sys- tem. to be followed by touch. This demands specially printed. costly and bulky volumes. with consequent limi- tation of the amount of literature available to sightless persons. Fur- xthermore, the requisite sensitiveness] of touch is in many instances acquired with great difliculty, especially by adults. These disadvantages are overcome by the optophone, which renders all books and newspapers available to the blind. A fair facility in the use of the instrument can be attained af« ter a few lessons. 9 H.-. ’o Sea Scouts Branch Attracts Boys. A division of the Boy Scouts moveâ€" ment. which is very popular in Eng« land. is the Sea Scouts. a branch in- completed the training courses in. scouting and camping and wanted new ï¬elds of study. The Sea Scouts branch has grown rapidly and the boys now have a ship‘ that is all their own. the S. S. North-l ampton. a former fisheries patrol ves-i sel. which has been remodelled its a training ship and anchored in the Thames. ,oi'l' the Embankment. it is fitted up \'.itl: a gymnasium. carpenter machine shop and classrooms. and here the various Stu Scout units come for instruction in knots. hitches. lights. whistle: and rules of the road. During the war the Era Scouts to operated with the t‘oust (Emmi service in watching work. ‘ with news bulletins. l't‘ilrl .sn':\ in}; as ii;»p'-t'lt\t‘» of “reckoni- and «bur-mi; t‘ l».le "l wt ut painllril .i thr- » 7: sti'2p ul lunch, \‘.'ui"..in_: in Ml ll‘ H10 in. ~ tug weath- '1 ixusantls n! l\:r_\s Eltll':ll'il‘.‘.it‘li; ct» iii thi~ work. There a?» l",‘.\' var ‘Tiywm S‘J Swi~ ::. 7"“ ‘-'.«Z"l.- I I >1 “Pleasure ittWtirlt ls Their rm " †To delight in one's daily occupation and to render it fine and poetic by the manner in which it is carried on is an admirable achievement. lation there may be mentioned the case of the colchonero. or mattress beater of Spain, who performs his task. not less than once a month for every self-respecting Spanish house- wife, in the open air outside the house, with two sticks and a knife for i implements. In a moment he deftly cuts the stitches of the. malress and lays bare the wool. which he never touches with his hands. The longer stick in his right hand describes great circles in the air anti descends with the Whistle of a sword upon the wool. of which it picks up a small handful. Then the shorter stick comes into play. picks the wool from the longer. throws it into the air, beats it this way and that, tosses it and catches it until every ï¬bre is clear, when the fluffy mass is deftly cast aside. , All the while. through the beating of the wool. the two sticks beaten against each other play a distinct air. and each mattress beater has his own, handed down from his forefathers, ending with a whole chromatic scale as the shorter stick swoops up the length of the longer one to sweep away the lingering wool. Thus the whole mattress is transferred front a soddeii heap to a high and fluffy moutr tain of wool. all baked by the heat of ,‘ihe sun. The man has a hundred attitudes. full of grace. He has complete con‘ up with them a single strand of wool or half a mattress. aside a pin that lurks in a ball of wool or kill a fly that settles on his Work l without staining the snowy mass. And i all the while. from the moment that' . . i the mattress is open till the heap is; complete. the two sticks never cease playing their thin and woody air. so Modern Fairy Tale. .\ boy (lashed into a broker's ofllce As he turned to lento a lllclllbcl‘ of the firm called out: "llere. you seem to have som~ pep. (jrt lllt' a box of cigars in the li-bhy‘ n and her p the change. The low} hesitated. although a $5 bunk note was thrust into his hands: l-"nally he Hammered: "I would like on other to as. In this re- He can throw‘ - that any one within hearing may knov that the colchoncro is at work. A farmer in one of the Middle W'esl: ern States bought material for a ho’ust and then discovered that for lack of means he could not go on with it. The stulf lay on the 'ground when one day came into the mind of a. contracting builder. He called his men round him and asked for volunteers to build the farmer's cottage, telling them he would undertake to do it within one day if they would contribute their » work. Twenty-six carpenters, masons and painters agreed. on the condition that the farmer would furnish a chick- en dinner, and a. time was ï¬xed for all to report at the site of the proposed building. Every man appeared on time and all went at once to work. Each worker was assigned to a particular part and the house began to go up with .1 rush. When noon came the framework was all up and the chimney was started. Then came dinner. The wife of the farmer had fried two dozen chickens. There were ten loaves of bread, four dozen ears of corn and nearly a. bushel of mashed potatoes The dessert con- sisted of cherry cobbler and various \kinds of pie. The contractor had to call off his men for fear they would eat so much they would not be able to finish the job. The hurry began again. Before the iroof was on the plasterer-s were at I work. and at exactly 6 o'clock the cot« tage was finished, all but the second coat of paint and the skim plaster, ,neitber of which could be put on be- rtrol over his two thin sticks. can pick 3 fore the ï¬rst coat dried. Everything {else even to putting on the locks and hinges. was done before the men were i called off, and done well. The contractor complimented his men when the job was complete. He said that, although he had done “hur- ry" work before he had never'known a house to be begun and completed in i a day. g boys, and I have a big route to cover. 1 ill come back when I deliver the bul- letins." With that he left the office. i "Are you going to wait until he re- ‘ turns ?" asked a customer “You bet I am," replied the broker. ."ln these days it is a pleasure to meet a boy who works for his boss first. ‘Furthermore. I am going to put him on the payroll." you '1‘ng you 4‘:Â¥lil‘:.‘lllll we are short of And he did. Your grocer will tell frankly that he makes less ‘prot‘it‘on Red ï¬ose Tea than The only has in recommendn ‘Ti it is to see that you get a a (55: quality possible. -_ for months, . a generous thought. .Mï¬u