THE COLBORNE EXPRESS. COLBORNE, ONT., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1927 7 this great tonic renews strength Simply Because it Enriches and Builds Up the Blood. In no trouble is delay or neglect more dangerous than in anaemia, which means poverty of the blood. It ts very common in young girls and in persons who are overworked or confined within doors. It makes its approach In so stealthy a manner that It is often well developed before Its presence is recognized. . But taken in time there is a tonic that so enriches and purifies the blood that good health and strength soon comes to the former weak, anaemic sufferer. This tonic is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which for years have been the most successful blood-builder known, and has credit for restoring to good health thousands and thousands of people who have fered from some of the many ailments that come through weak, watery blood. The correction of anaemic conditions by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is as certain as anything can be. As proof of this Miss Margaret A. Smith, Bur-goyne, Ont., says:--"After having a severe attack of jaundice I was left In a very weak and run-down condition. I was pale and my nerves on edge. I could not sleep at night and would toss and turn for hours at a time. I finally decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and soon began to feel better, and after taking a few more boxes of the pills I felt as strong »s ever, and could thoroughly enjoy my rest at night. Now, I always recommend these pills to any friends who, may be ailing." Better sleep, steady nerves, improved appetite, increased vigor--all lhe?e can be yours by taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Begin them to-day. Bold by all medicine dealers, or by mail post paid at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williahis' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Simple Way to Make Grape Juice Europe's Hords Are Bound to Come Scottish Professor Says Canada and Other British Dominions Have not Reached Stage Where They Can Set Up Barriers Against Pioneering People at Their Doors Geneva.--Canada, Australia, New, No ring-fence can long protect an Zealand, and, perhaps, South Africa, I ^M^B^ed ^ from its overcrowded will become the dumping ground of i "fzed that mi° immigrants from Eastern and South-' stopped from a "Our men pick up little 'fishing parties,' which have absent-mindedly left their tackle at home." Americans Visiting Scotland Break All Previous Records lerally recog- Edinburgh.--The American invasion of Scotland has surpassed all previous records this season. At Abbotsford, Sir Walter Scott's shrine, more Americans have been no more be seen than ever before, while through-ded poverty out the Scott country valleys, Tweed, Europe in the future, and will ■ stricken area to one where the same ( Ettrick and Yarrow, and the border thereby develop their waste spaces as j race enjoys more prosperous condi- j valleys, Melrose, Dryburgh, Kelso well as relieve the over-population of j tions than water can be prevented and Jedburgh, there is a continual the prolific parts of the Old World, \ from flowing from a higher to a lower stream of American visitors, according to Prof. J. W. Gregory, of, level on an open slope." j Thousands of Americans gathered " University of Edinburgh, In an ' CANADA MUST TAKE WARNING, in and around Edinburgh to ' address delivered before the World Population Conference at Geneva, Prof. Gregory enunciated viewpoints which met with both scientific approval and political denunciation. ECONOMIST'S VIEW. "No nation has made the land it occupies, nor has the right to prevent its adequate use," declared Prof. Gregory. "No nation in our fast-filling earth has a right to a dog-in-the-manger policy regarding land. While may be right ically th*3 pr-.f,^F0" recent unveiling of the Scottish-Am-s in Canada have seen!eriman War Memorial in- Princes unabsolved1 European ' Street by American Ambassador immigration may be. The United. Houghton. _ ^ir^rs/^r^pno mothers of the future may prove the professor 1 vl* »iv 1IIJUIUJ VI correct, we should bend every effort to make the way easy for the British immigrant in the meantime and so add to our already firm foundation of Anglo-Saxon stock. Modern Adventure on Border Patrols American Papers Give Credit to Border Guardsmen of Enduring Many Dangers young children Mothers are quick to praise anything which brings health and comfort to their little ones--any medicine guard against the entry of undesir- that wiI1 make the baby well and keep able aliens who aretry ing to crash him well will aiways receive hearty the gates and to pick up the instiga-1 recommendation from the mother, tors of the plots to get them past the!That is why Baby's Own Tablets are authorities. |B0 popular. Thousands of mothers, Just a few months ago, the Border;throughout the country, not only use Patrol Station at El Paso received them for their own little ones but are word to watch out for three women'always delighted to be able to recom-and two men, suspicious characters, 'mend them to other mothers. Thous-who had boarded a certain train on ands of mothers have proved Baby's the border bound for Kansas City. j Own Tablets to be without an equal Many bloodVand-thunder stories are The message was late in reaching the "fn relieving their little ones of any of tame in comparison with the exploits i patrolmen, but they hurried' officers the many minor ailments which of the men of the United States Im-j ahead to catch the train further upjout of a derangement of the stomach migration Border Patrol. Not long the line. As had been expected1, they and bowels. Baby's Own Tablets ago word was passed along to the stations on the Mexican border Now packed in Aluminum, the same as years ago. s RED ROSE TEA**""1"' RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. that a Mexican wa into the country ove tain trail. The tip Mexican who bringing liquor i certain mounts furnished by l the pay of the ugglers, but the Americans did not know that. A border patrolman, taking the tip in good faith, set out for the mountain pass to catch the smug-In due time picked up four Armenians and one j the ideal laxative--easy to take but Mexican who could not show the , thorough in action. They banish proper visas for entry into- the coun- jstipation and indigestion; break up try. The Mexican said that he had!colds and simple fevers; expel worms no connection with the Armenians, but and make the teething period easy, had merely consented to purchase jTne Tablets are sold by medicine their tickets for them in the railway j dealers or by mail at station because they were unable to from Tne Dr- Williams' Medicine Co., Grape juice is a most refreshing ~affie &] with a ]oad cf ,. drink. Many housewives fill their burro obvious>1 he was unarmed, .helves with a supply made m their |b he did t want to own kitchens; and many others would rfgk of being snot> for he knew that orders are that no patrolman shall ', fire upon a smuggler unless the smug-■ gler fires first. '/hen the office] stopped the decoy he was shot by smuggler in ambush. A FATAL PLOT. it not for the laborious process which they have always seen used, j Those who like this wholesome' drink will be glad to learn of a greatly simplified method by which it can be made with no lessening of the quality of the juice. Into a quart fruit The officer knew he was fatally jar put one heaping cupful of stem- wounded and, realized that the plot med grapes; add one cupful of granu- had been COTC0<;ted for the purpose bated sugar; fill to overflowing withLf «getting» him. But he also real-actively boiling water, then seal. ized that the orily way he had o£ By using this method one may put having evidence as to who had shot up a quart or two of grapes at a time, him was to km the decoy) as he had as they are at hand Moreover, when I chance at all of killing the murder. the juice is drained off for drinking, | er go hie shot the decoy and the the grapes themselves will be found burro and then turned his horse. to_ ward a ranch house a mile and a half speak English. His identity and guilt as an old offender were soon proved, decoy smuggler however, and when the last reports on the case came through to Washington, the patrolmen were also closing in on the characters in Kansas City who had been co-operating with the smugglers in Mexico. cooked and plumped and, with the addition of a little sugar, make very acceptable sauce. Certainly when ths method is once tried be welcomed as a great relief from the boiling, straining, bottling fcealing cf the old way. We are so sure you will appreciate perfect tea in perfect condition that we make this offer.^ If you buy Red Rose Tea in the new aluminum package and you are not thoroughly satisfied, we have authorized your grocer to return your money on receipt cf the container, no matter how much of the tea you havo used. 4T Better Times. "When I was your age," said the Irate father to his six-year-old son, "I pas glad to get dry bread to eat." "You're much better off now you're living with us, aren't you, daddie?" replied the son. Reason Enough. "When I have drunk too much my lead aches next day." "I ache all over." "All over? How?" "Because of the reception I get from aiy wife." distant. Some distance from the house he came to a wire fence and had to dismount and crawl through the fence. Then he was unable to stand again, so he crawled the rest of the way to the house. He found nobody at home and died before • any one arrived. When the ranchman found the body he back-tracked on the trail and found the dead Mexican and the burro and from the evidence obtained, the associates of the patrolman were able to learn who had killed their buddy. Considering it useless to take such matters up with the Mexican authorities, they are waiting for the murderer to cross the border again. They say he will come when he thinks the memory of the incident has gone from their minds. There is romance and adventure in the lives of these men of the Immigration Border Patrol. This little handful of men, 781 to be exact, are keeping watch over the 3,989 miles of Canadian border and the 1,744 miles, along the Mexican side. Within the past week or two the number of patrolmen operating between 'Buffalo /existence" only" about" three" years-- and Lake Huron has been doubled. I just since the passage of the Immi. While they are not charged with j gratk>n Quota law m 1924_during the responsibility of enforcing prohi- the lagt figcal year ended Ju]y ^ 1927> bition, they pick up the rum and dope more than 12fiw smugglgd aIieng smugglers and the gun runners. I werg captured> as aga;.n,Et about 3,000 Their chief purpose, however, is to f&r the precoding. year_ In add,itiorij the patrol caught SIGNAL LIGHTS USED. Lights along the Rio Grande and the Great Lakes convey messages smugglers. Brazenly they sit and watch for their signals and then push off into the darkness secure in i*eeli|ntg ithat thefir confederates the American side are advising them wisely. Sometimes they wade across the Rio Grande where the water 4s_ low, sometimes they come in boats, in wagons, their rum, their dope their aliens hidden Kunder loads of grain. They hide in baggage and box cars and they sneak ove border where the line is an imaginary one and the trail a waste of sand, sagebrush and cactus. They are the worst types of border outlaws, and since the American trolmen are under orders not to shoot except in self-defence, the outlaw has the best of the break, with the result that many patrolmen have lost their lives. Most of the officers are ex-service men and the tactics they learned fighting in France are often called into service in their work border. Usually, out on the desert, one officer follows a trail, while anoth: watches ahead for an enemy in ar bush, or for a glimpse of the persons being pursued. The work of the following of a trail through the rocky country along the Arizona border very difficult, as smugglers use every possible ruse to disguise their tracks and those of their mounts. It is fre-quensly necessary for the officers to dismount and follow trails on foot, id even then a trail is easy to lose. THOUSANDS IN THE NET. Although this arm of the protective of the country has been ordinary flours, it is perieu: iui «■ j is necessary, j PURITY FLOUR FLl e th; smugglers of aliens and patroled 4,-500,000 miles by motor, rail, horse, boat, airplane, sled and on foot. They covered nearly 400,000 miles on foot Brockville, Ont. Etheron is Tiniest Thing in Universe Scientist Believes it is Real Cause of Gravitation Mare Island, Sal.--The smallest thing in the universe, the etheron, represents the real force that causes the mightiest of material structures to topple once they are swung off their centre of calance, Capt. T. J. J. See, U.S.N., noted mathematician and astronomer, explained in a state-r _;s tment at his Mare Island laboratory, i, of no infinitesimal is the etheron, Capt. See explained, that it "has corpuscles a thousand million times smaller than the electron, which is 1,760 times smaller than a hydrogen atom." To clarify this explanation Capt. see said that if atoms of common gas such as hydrogen, nitrogen or oxygen "be imagined the size of lemons, oranges or grapefruit, then, on this same scale, the electron is like a coarse grain of sand, and the etheron, or particle of ether, is like a fine particle of smoke from a cigar." This explanation of Capt. See's (theory leads to his contention that the incessant traveling of ether waves moving at a velocity of 294,000 miles a second, or 57 per cent, faster than light, is the real cause of gravitation. e are those particles of the ether that they freely penetrate through the earth, sun or planets, the scientist declared. Capt. See's wave theory, expounded in this, his ninth mathematical memoir dealing with the cause of gravitation, was proclaimed the final and complete triumph of his extensive researches on the cause of gravitation. --Minard's Liniment. Pricked Pimple Fatal Ingersoll.--Thomas Graydon, 20, ied from blood poisoning as a result of opening a pimple on his lip with pin. Timely. "Your doctor prescribed a change of iimate for you. Aren't you going abroad?" 'No: I'm just stopping in Toronto." 'Why?" 'Because the climate change - -- alone, or more than 50'0 miles per tere than anywh( officer. In addition, they turned back 1,447 aliens not included among those captured, and handed over to 'mmigration authorities more than Six and Half-a-Dozen. The bride was asked what she .thought of married life. "Oh, there's 17,000 persons for investigation. ^ dlfference„ she rep'Ue„ iused to wait up half the night for Tom to go, and now I wait up half the night for him to come home." Liner Carries Floral Tributes Thousands of Pieces to Be Strewn on Pacific in Memory of Fliers San Francisco.--Laden with thousands of floral pieces to be strewn upon the sea, the Mason liner, Maui, sailed out through the Golden Gate for Hawaii recently to pay tribute to the memory of the seven fliers lost in the Pacific as a result of the Dole aerial derby which started August 26. The flowers, blessed during interdenominational services at the pier, will be cast on the Pacific 700 miles from shore. A floral piece was given by school children of Cairo, Mich., who were aught by Miss Mildred Doran, a native of Eganville, Ont., who perished with six men in an attempt to blaze a trail over the Pacific through the air. It was made of straw flowers in the shape of a Bible. It has a cork base and is expected to float indefinitely. This floral piece was three feet wide and four feet long. Classified Advertisements AOENTS WANTED. VILLAGE IN Pleasant and profitable occupation. Apply by letter. BIBLE PRAYER ASSOCIATION OF CANADA, 018 ON- MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. LTLTRAPHONIC GRAMOPHONE, 38 ) selections $165.00 for $56.01'. Guaranteed. Poisson, 340 Mount-Royal East, :ocker and feede iTTL E--WE CAN steers8of all weights. X $2.00 Given ^ At this time of the year, as father continues his vocation, and the children resume their education, many a mother will feel as though she has just begun her vacation. PATENTS rList 273 Ban} AN OPERATION Mrs. Dayman Gives Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable * Compound the Credit ? Try the New CutictiFa Shaving Stick Freely Lathering a\ Medicinal and Emollient In the Woods Hunters find Minard's an excf lent remedy for sprains, cuts at wounds. Pack a bottle in yo Colborne, Ontario. -- "When I was ' first married I was very thin and weak. The doctor be able to have a child, but I did, and from the time my baby came > I suffered all the time and doctored ■ and took medi-ine. Life became burden, and doc- . tors said an oper- _lation could help me, but my husband was opposed to that. I had seen Lydia E. Pinkham's medicine advertised, so I told my hus-band that I thought I would try it, ' that I might get some relief. I had not taken one bottle when I could feel it helping me. I took five bottles and had better health. Now I have three girls and a boy and ► have done my work up to confine- ' ment. I am now at the Change of Life and owe my good health to Lydia ' E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I take a bottle when 1 think I need it." * --Mrs. Susan Dayman, R. R. No. 5, Colborne, Ontario. v. Sold by druggists everywhere. It is interesting to note that of the smuggled aliens captured during this last year were Mexicans," said George J. Harris, the Assistant Commissioner General of Immigra-I tion, who after more than twenty ( years of service on the Mexican border, has come to Washington to superintend the operations of the border patrol. "There is no quota restrictions cn Mexicans, and all they are required to pay is $10 for a visa and $8 head tax, and that is frequently ■ too much mcney. I "The P'rcblems along the Canadian ! borc'or are very much like those cn j the Mexican border, except that long j stretches cf wooded mountains, lakes j and streams bitterly cold in winter I take tho place of stretches cf pand d desert waste," Mr. Harris added. Babij's Own Soap Bes+ lor You and Baby too ,1 - Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for f WARNING! Beware cf Ceus Colds Pain Headache Neuralgia Neuritis Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism lent for Lumbago. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART