“| before. “You've gut to put more! } thunder into it,” he said, “these pe:| ple want color and action. Tell them! about the children you saw with their| Exacting tests carried out in our blending rooms insure for Red Rose Orange Pekoe Tea a quality a 's hands cut off.” | absolutely uniform. | “But I didn't see any,” protested’ supreme tea comes to you at | the lad. | its peak of freshness and flavor because it is packed in aluminum—the only pack- age worthy ofits fine quality. 1 “Well, you heard of them—you! | might have seen them. Speed up a) ; little—lay it on thicker, or you'll nev-/ | er get recruits.” | | But again the boy told just what) =—————————_—__—— BEST-OF ALL <= he had seen—the mud-—the hardships| 7 = Teeth and Health PAINTED FIRES BY NELLIE L. McCLUNG _ | ful and so fine—so willing to die. COPYRIGHT, CANADA, 1925 | i of the trenches. There was) | no hatred, revenge or bitterness in vs | his heart, only a great bewilderment. | Y | He appealed on behalf of his com- | rades—they were so brave, so cheer- — the indescribable carnage — the Issued By The Canadian Dental = | comradeship and heroism of his com-/| Hygiene Council and Published ai he Saskatchewan Dental CHILDHOOD DISEASES AFFECT- k's hi t vith the pit: ING TEETH ane ae oly ea zy th ae | It occasionally happens that teeth of it. Worst of all was the boy's} erupt faulty in shape or with the en- | twitching hands, never slill CHAPTER XXIV. supplies for the home sjourney, ‘his success in panning. “She's gettin’ better all the time,” ‘Keith had said, “so we are gettin’ Ca to the deposits.” He had a map the country showing the exact ‘spot where the claims would be stak- "You'll have some huggets to ‘bring home to that new wife of yours her head.” a It was in September they reached ~- object of their search achieved. They _Staked their claims- and gathered back with them. Keith was exultant, and even George, the half-breed, grew garrulous with the prospect of Tiches. He was going to have three cars and a colored driver in a gray uniform! Keith had the plan for mining all arranged. He showed them where the sluices would be placed, drawing a diagram to show the angle at whicn they would be set and how the riffies __ would be put in the bottom. He would _ bring the water in a pipe-line from a ‘Coteway section of a Gum-Dipped Tire showing anecord untwisted inio IS strands, Every fisre ef esery strond is insulated with rubber. . Why Gum-Dipping Increases Tire Life A tire in use is being con- > stantly bent backwards and_ _ forwards by road action. Such | movement generates friction and heat that has a deteriorat- _ ing effect unless the tire is built _ to withstand it. * En the carcass of a Gum- Dipped tire there is less friction Dipping puts a coating of new ive rubber around each separ- ate cord that keeps it from rub- bing against the cords that lie — Mext to it. It stays cooler and’ therefore lasts longer, Your local Firestone Dealer will lly advise you on your tire problems. i him today. FSTONE TIRE & RUBEER Co, OF CANADA LIMITED Hamilton, Onterio of the war. They had floated the Nehanni River on a moose- kin barge to the Liard, and down ) Liard to the MacKenzie on a e Scow, arriving in Fort Simp- one raw November day when an ind from the North gave warn- of the freeze-up. They had brought with them a few furs, which! ¢ eorge, the half-breed guide, had got stimulus of novelty which’ had kept his trap-lines, and from the sale’ them from discouragement going in these they hoped to be able to buy | was toilsome and depressing. ‘Their +}9ay, lay through a gloomy, 4 eir summer had Leen full of ad- 5 ture. They had seen the leaves and wet. The shortening days and ie On the trees, the flowers bud, mm and fade, the leayes fall, and orable to travelling. But at length, the lowering clouds of November ragged, unkempt, unshaven and dir- riven by the cold winds; but with ty, they arrived in Fort Simpson just bags full of gold quartz to show before the freeze-up. what they had found, and their little hes ap of dust carried in chamois bags! store | glass phials, they were elated! had been full of enthusiasm! pe said, ig in, and in the washing of gold in’ befor the sand of the river he had en-| yed endless delight. To see the glint | _ of yellow gold in the black sands at e bottom of a pan fired his imagin- tion. Keith had complimented him that will méke her eyes pop out of the piace, and Keith announced the Apme rich pieces of quartz to bring to generate heat because Gum- | eat ne Builds the Only Gum-Dipped Tires WON. UL 1733, a “ea amel pitted and stained, and you won- | ment. What horrors that boy must} der what has caused it. : have come through! His lips had} mone a very Pree CRE eee pe « 7 Date! ubdle is a genera! Sturbance from fil jets: (At the falls, up the'tiver haloes ee oes ke a child’s| comme constitutional disease associat- 3 i about to cry. “Don't leave those boys | ed with high temperatures, such as, would Beuerate the electricity to run alone; send them reinforcements. The! scarlet fever, measles, or chicken pox. a stamp mill, where the crushed rock| | 9. we can send the sooner it will/* Occasionally this disturbance is so would be reduced to powder and be over.” That was the message of | 8Teat as to totally destroy the tooth passed through a sieve, and the gold e FE i | germ, but more often it merely af- ve 5 the quivering lips, coming from aA fects the tooth structure as describ- | collected on copper plates. “You'll see heart that was clean and bra . farther up the river, and throw it ve. He) ed above, a bigger trek to this field than there could talk without apology, could Pte.| But there are two general diseases | was in ninety-eight,” he assured his Crowe, he could ask any verson to! ee fa rerecular affect tooth ne | = 2 e | ture and tooth eruption. fee cr ateners. make a sacrifice and not ask them to| O¢ these rickets is a disease of faul-| The return journey, do more than he had done. \ ty nutrition and it is worthy of note} Major Gowsett, who arranged the) that it is a disease not only of the, program, had left himself for the last. | Y°TY Poor who are denied proper and 4 _..| Sufficient food, but of the rich, who e |In the ordinary affairs of life Major | have an abundance of food but of an arren | % Gowsett believed in being first, but, | improper kind. ; country, “and the weather was cold | understanding what he would have) The characteristic affections of the called “mob-psychology,” he believed | teeth from rickets are these; the de- ciduous teeth erupt late and, in the the last speaker had the best chance. | more extreme vagee: there is a gen- He began by damning the Germans eral deformity of the skull and jaws, with great spirit, reviewing their his-| whic these teeth are iar ort ir) Whils' € permanent teeth urn | tory, military aspirations, and poe ertipt late; the result is, faulty or ¢ home life. He showed that they| mal-ocelusion, Moreover, the teeth The good-natured proprietor of the/ threatened the whole world. Major | themselves are structurally affected, | bought their furs outfitted| Gowsett had not been further Roan oae bluish, sparse and somewhat fis | . apering. them, giving them the news of the| Boulogne during the DCBenG war, but The other disease, more or less spe- war as the transactions went on. “I/one would never know it from his} ci | cifically related to tooth mal-forma- wish I was younger, and I’d be off, | speech. It reeked with the stench of | tion is tuberculosis. “I'd like to do a bit of fight-| battle, it abounded in personal inci- | AL eee fUperculgaes =e into Will erup 10 the deciduous and ‘¢ my time comes to step off.""| dents. He dragged his listeners permanent teeth early: but the root of | the deciduous tooth is not absorbed | lacking the ‘lengthening nights ,too, were unfav- “What is it all about?” Jack ask-| shell-holes, dug-outs and across ‘‘No| ed, as he tried on a pair of long boots. | Man’s Land; he specialized on the| as it should be, with the resultant! | “Well, I’m not clear on that, but | treachery of the Germans—the hate-| mal-position of the succeeeding per- | Sure it's a poor war that ain’t better | fulness of their women—the bitter | Parenat Hate fake than no war, and you see war has to’ hatred they had instilled into their Fee eee set |come once in a while to clearvout the! children. He had lived wih them, he {surplus population. We breed too! said, and he knew. It seemed that he |fast~ain't that the truth?-—so it’s’ and Lord Roberts knew the war was either pestilence, war, or famine, and coming, but England had not Sal war's a lot more fun than the other| to them. ) two!” | Jack looked at him affect tooth structure as they do, when you remember that the teeth! | nature. (To Be Continued.) BABY’S OWN TABLETS THE HOME DOCTOR) indignantly, “How many children have you?” he| jasked: He had noticed several little, ‘half-breeds around the store, mocca- | sin-footed, noiseless, beady-eyed, | looking inquiringly at the strangers. | . 4 be The storekeeper did not resent the! Baby’s Own Tablets meet ali the! paign there have to be injected un- |meed that exists in every home where = = . question at all. “I think there are/ there are young children, They, are a, W@!Tanted attacks upon Great Eri-| six boys big enough to go,” he said. laxative, but do not gripe. They are| tain. Here is what Senator Reed, in Three of them are out on the trap- soothing, but do not contain one par-| an address before the Daughters of lines and haven't heard about it yet,|‘icle of opiate or other ingredient the American Revolution, had to say: | but the other three are going out. that can in any way do the pipatest “England has been given 66 years in| ° a harm to the most delicate child. z Their mother is cuttin’ up a little,| Baby's Own Tablets reduce fever,) Which to pay her debt ; but she'll calm down; No Cause For Worry : Great Britain Still In a Position To! Pay Her Debts }ed States presidential election cam- » the stomach and allay the irritation Payee ley Esed en eUce gorse ee that accompanies the cutting of teeth.| © : | to see the world. | They quiet the nerves and promote; Wonders, that the Reeds are in ths} The war did not'relate itself in uny | health-giving sleep and repose. In| midst of a political campaign give -riveq fact they are as good as a doctor in! pays te seer Doran unit ke arrived | the home, and once a mother has used | at Peace River. He had one consum- | readily disposed of for a very lerge | past, is now rendered perfectly safe. pipes are laid from it into the room understand | just as though a hot air furnace were why these diseases should injuriously | in operation in the basement. are in the formative stage through | Construction pees ae ene by many, early childhood, and hence are read-| days, as the painters and decorators ily liable to influences of a disturbing | can get busy much earlier. buffalo will Canadian National wright to the big reserve north of the Peace River. It is regrettable that into the Unit-| the W; | Necessary. Do not make the mistake of waitin for asthmi, to wear away by itself. While you are waiting the disease is| business surely gathering a stronger foothold! she’s a good relieve colic, banish constipation and God knows if she will be there that | Kellogg's | woman. We have eight others comin’ indigestion. check diarrhoea, swecten long.” An Outstanding Invention | Two Ontario Men Have Plans For Quick-Firing Machine Gun The attention and interest of the world’s war departments, especially | the highest ordnance officers, are | focussed on London, Ont., at the pres- | ent time because in this city plans | have recently been completed for a | new machine gun that is undoubtedly | the most outstanding quick-firing in- | vention yet perfected. Otto P. Rindlehardt, superinten- | dent of the Carling Brewery, assisted | by H. Koenig, of Germany, now of London, is the inventor of this | weapon which may have an important | effect on the armaments of the world. | Defects of both cooling and recoil | systems prevalent in the niachine | guns of a nations in the world war | have been entirely done away with in | the new London gun, that is the re- | Sult of seven years’ tests and prov- | ing. | Probably the greatest advance | made in the new quick-frer is the | long-sought feature of non-explosive | liquid air cooling—a goal sought by. | the war research laboratories of all nations. This invention alone can be sum, as the liquid air, which has been extremely dangerous to handle in the At last a machine gun that will not overheat, and necessarily have to cease action to cool off, has been built. 0 : we aS MOST people know this absolute antidote for pain, but are you careful to say Bayer when you buy it? And do you always give a glance to see Bayer on the box—and the word genuine printed in red? It isn’t the genuine Aspirin without it! A drug- store always has Bayer, with the proven directions tucked in every box: la the trade mark 7 registered ee ata ops ft te rin Soo rane Aetna SER Aa trade mark. s Cross" Speed Up Construction German Contractors Use Furnace On Little Helps For This Week Wheels To Dry Walls “Homes and apartments are so scarce in Berlin, Germany, that archi- tects and constructors think up every conceivable device for hastening the process, % Their latest quick service help con- sists of a furnace on wheels which | is calculated to hasten the drying process in buildings under constrtc- tion. It is placed outside the house or apartment building, and furnace qd to be dried. The heat is conducted In this way, it is estimated, con- is Next month another 1,100 head of be shipped from the Park at Wain- Overstocking of ainwright Park renders this} t™ ————“~ Asthma Doesn't Wear Off Alone. “Cast thy bread upon the waters; for thou shalt find it after niany_ jays.”—Eccl. xi, 1 Oh, if the selfish knew how much they lost! What would they not endeavor, not endure, To imitate, as far as in them lay, Him who His wisdom and His pow- ers employ In making others happy? —William Cowper. The most delicate and the most sensible of all pleasures consists in promoting the pleasures of others. —tLa Bruyere. Happiness is not perfected until it shared.—Jane Porter. Worms are entouraged by morbid conditions of the stomach and bowels, and so subsist. Miller's Worm Pow- ders will alter these conditions almost {immediately and will | Worms away. No destructive parasite | can live in contact with this medi- cine, which is not only a worm des- Sweep the oyer, but a health-givine medicine most beneficial to the young cousti- tution. i Demand For Rental Farms Swift Current reports a record being done in automobiles, Zh | and farm tractors. Money seems fair- and you live in danger of stronger f to us, ana| 2nd yet stronger attacks. Dr. J. D.|ly plentiful as a large proportion of $ | taken | the orders placed are on a cush basis. | early, will prevent incipient condition Horse sal |from becoming chronic Does the fact, the Halifax Herald| hours of awful suffering: Asthma Remedy and saves ment have es and sale of farm equip- improved greatly over last year, according to the dealers. The Arabs were the first to dis-|There is also a big demand for rental them warrant for such unmitigatea|Cve® the art of, refining sugar, with| farms and quite a movement in pur- = Se i the Egyptians a close second. chase lands. |them for her little ones she will use| MORE ELSS, Perhaps it pies Bue whee ing thought in his mind now, andj nothing else. Thousands of mothers| they have calmed down, may they only one, and that was to get to Hagle| bear testimony as to this. Among} run across this contemporary utter- Mines as soon as he could, and fo tern is hae Apply Pine Falls, Mau.,| ance by Winston Churchill, British Helmi. He went at once to the tele: | REO aN Shes ie ee ry | Chancellor of the Exchequer: “Ing- } y's wn ablets by a friend who ali a ZI Sh till bh th graph office and sent her a wire— jhad used them for all her little ones | 1@nd is not done yet, She still has the “Mrs. Jack Doran, Eagle Mines: —| and said she could not do without | power to help a friend or ‘pay a Back safe, expect me in a week, | them, mes Berea aes ped nea baby | debt.” | ” vith 2) =} Stet: say} Tove, Jack | tainly think they are the finest medi- | mae creat Brie Props OLE sya Feace River was alive with excite-| cine in the world for little ones.” jenjoy that power for many) years to ment. Homesteaders walked the! Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all! come, when the Senator Keeds will streets waiting for the train to take | Medicine deniers or by mail at 25 \ have been lost in oblivion and when them to Edmoriton. Therer was some|SoDtS @ box from aRS Dr. Williams’ | much that passes for “one hundred | Medicine Co., Broc‘xville, Ont, | ERE yh 3 delay, owing to trouble on the Judah| per cent. Americanism” will look silly Hill, A six-weeks-old calf was nibbling! i retrospect—Regina Daily Post. Jack, Keith and George got aj at the grass in‘the yard and was | ae eres Canada To Establish makes 3 Always Keep Cuticura Preparations On Hand The Soap, because of its absolute purity and emollient properties, is unsurpassed for every-day use. Assisted by Cuticura Ointment it does much to keep the skin and scalp healthy. Cuticura Shaving Stick Cuticura Talcum is the ideal tnilet powder. Kauple Each Free “@tenbouse, Ltd, ment 25 wnd 660. Taleum as shaving easy for tender-faced men. By, Mall, Address Canadian Depot: fontreal.'’ Price, Soap 2%¢. Oint- Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. the grime of travel washed away, and | by the city girl. “Tell me,” she said, | Went to the dining-room for supper. | turning quickly to her hostess, “does Men in uniform sat at a table, eating | it really pay you to Keep such a small} Action Of Government noisily and drinking. The room Was cow as that?” full of excited talk. There was a meeting in the hall that night, advertised by a huge red poster in the stores. It said that Ma- jor Gowsett and Pts. George Crowe would address the meeting. Pte. Crowe had been wounded at Mons and been invalided to Canada. There were flags in the dining-room, and on the way in that day they had no- ticed flags flying from the houses and Storgs, fluttering bravely in the cold wind. To the hail they went at eight o'clock, and were met at the door by women selling red roses for the Red room at “The Peace," and soon had! viewed in silence for some minutes) Bureau Of Standards Will Acceptable To Provinces The Government proposes shortly |to set up a Bureau of Standards > | which will operate under the Nation- The man who tries to prove too} al Research Council, according to much very often proves nothing. |Hon. James Malcolm, Minister of é |'Trade and Commerce. When the new *S’ Bureau of Standards is established. yer espewnbroker's counter. | he said, Canada will not have to ac- a CS aaa ae cept her standards from Chicago. A | The Experience of | Bureau of Standards would be ac- | Mrs. Roy Brown is Well | ceptable to all the provinces of Can- Worth Reading jade as well as to the electric power Dieter torn nea Tora tor a nitaer: | companies throughout the Dominion, | able state of health, my nerves gave way | the Minister claimed, completely, I could not sleep, had back- Be Minard’s Lipiment for Toothache. One way to put in your time —<_—___- Good Price For Prize Steer - a i aches and was com- Annie Turner, 11-year-old girl who ee A band sel was Playing } pletely exhausted— cleaned up with her steer at the | It's a Long, Long Way to Tippe- | s0 weak and sleepy | i 3 rary.” To Jack it seemed as though | and tired that I was | Kamloops, B.C. bull sale and then he had come back to a new world, a} nervouse, panicky, high-strung world, | abounding in new phrases, new emo-| tions. Fresh from the solitudes of the North, he could not at once grasp the meaning of it all. Pte. Crowe, a pale lad, standing compelled to give u | proceeded to do the same at Calgary, é mod tale. xe ay bed. | afterwards led the animal into the} fey DLP ae Fabow, | ring at Edmonton, where it fetched | seule J Prescription, as noth- | 56 cents a pound liveweight, the pur- baile ei ing Thad used helped | chasers being the Hudson's Bay me. By the time I had taken one bottle Company. The sale netted $600, in| | I was able to be up and around, I kept | aati teawhteh ie ‘ on taking it and was completely re- | 2ddition which prizes averaging stored cihealgh, I cannot say enough in , with a crutch, spoke first, and spoke simply and well. His superior officer | had chided him for the mildness of | his address at Spirit Liver the night | Praise of the ‘Favorite Prescription’ for | the wonderful help it gave me.”—Mrs, | Roy Brown, 222 King St. | All druggists. Tablets or liquid. | $150 were won at each of the three shows. ee | Neuralgia succumbs to Minard’s Lint- | ment, PERMANENT BUILDING PAPER CUT IT-It doesn’t tear easily There’s no denying that the most carefyl carpenter doesn’t handle his tools with the dainty movements of a dentist. Consequently he will appreci- ate a building p aper which al- lows him to throw careful hand- lling to the winds and work rapidly without fear of tearing. Hercules Permanent Building \\ \uid is easy to use. Paper is -tough. cracking in using Tearing or is unheard of, ‘\ Carpenters prefer it because it Hercules—in three grades, x light, xx medium, heavy, is wind pr: proof. Send now for prices. and xxx ‘oof and damp samples and Gpploford Papor, Products HAMILTON, CANADA