7 MEN AND WOMEN '« 'Willams’ Pink Pills Ac- . ' {supp-1y. began rthe westward trend of our race. Then followed the rush of Scots exiles after the Jacobite Re- bellion in 1715, and anew began the interest of the Scots in the St. Law- rence. This. exodus was followed la- ter, and especially after 1745, by' many Scots to seek fresh fortunes in the \Vest. Previous to this, how- ever, and in the reign of James VI. and I. of England, Sir William Alexander secured a charter to found Nova Scot-ia, or New Scot- ifference; in some cases from d-e- landâ€"the territory to be an ap- spair. People who are pale, lan- Panage 0f “Che Kingdom, Of Scotland. guid, with palpitation of the ,heart, and be erected into two chief some difï¬culty in breathing and 3. districts, viz. :â€"(1)‘ Caledonia (now endency to be easily tired are suf-' Nova Scotla) and I (2) Alexa-Bdrm ering from thin blood. They need (now New Brunswmk). To further only the resolution to take the make it homehke for the Scot some right treatment, and Stick (to it, un- of the rivers were renamed, Tweed, til 01â€â€œ; The remedy that can be Clyde, Fort-11,. etc., but to still fur- E’elied upon is Dr. Williams! Pink the-r popularize the movement a ills for Pale People, With every new order of baronets of Nova Sco- ld-ose they make new blood, and new “3;, “"38 mstltu‘te'd' lblood means health and. strength. The“ oommenoed 8’ great mole‘ :The red checks, good appetite, in_ ment of Scots to the new Acadia, ‘creas-ing weight and strength that and ff'om tune to tune they were {follow the use of these Pills prove “mowed by Other bands Of d'eber' hei t I V . _ mined Scots, until about the years geoglefgteï¬a’erevglï¬ntgxigfglï¬loggfg 1783â€"4-5, when the clearance of the QR. Steele, Afmn Road REL Highland glens rtook place, and the bays: “ Followinfr ohildbi-i‘th I took SOOtS surged across the Atlanth to in, pain in my hgad which grew so form the wellâ€"known settlement of lbad I had to call in a doctor. He Gllengarry’ Qnmno' ilhereafber told me that my blood had turned Gimp after Ship brought Its con- to water and that I was in a serious 'bmgem 0f dia'nsmen from Old SOD b- ' llll‘l-BLOODED ‘ eed the Rich, Red Blood Dr. ,tually Make Thin-blooded people do not re- am so from choice, but from inâ€" I “Edition He. rested. me f0.“ £23: ‘sl‘éiisgiiifofliiiif 0312: imont'ha’ butt sun the Dam remain“ Donell, MacMi‘l-lan, MacDougall, :e-dn and my condition was growing Pllmble- I 109†my appetlte’ and on, M-acGilli-s, Kennedy, MacLen- {was so weak and run down that I nan, Oampbeu’ Maclnbosh, Marc- could/no more than walk across a Gillivray, MacKinnon, Macplwr. {room« 1" W86’ 35 Dale as a; 0011399, son, Fraser, M‘acPhee, MacIntyre, land the doctor told my friends he ROSS, Ohisholm, MaQGregor, Fer- MacRae, MacLeod,’ Grant,- Camer- ha’d but Mme 11301363 Of my getting guson, MacLa-ren, ' MacKenzie, better' A 9011'51“ Who Game 130 See Morrison, MacCor-mick, MacMar- If“? urgï¬z me *0 try D1‘- Williams, tin, MacK‘ay, 'MvacArthuvr, Mac- l‘Pmk P1113, “Aid I Sent and got 5‘ Lachlan, Cattanach. In 1852 they . . _ In about a: month {MERIT numbered 9,965 souls in Glengarry, flat-5111111118 $3191? 11'5"? I had much 1‘0- Ontario. Thus did the Scots win ‘11,“: and by the tlme I had taken the East, but no less had they since sax more boxes I was fully cured won the West, .anda-t the present “Ind fell as W911 11-5 ever I did in my time over a million Scots were 10- life. I. have never had a twinge of cated in and over the Great Domin- - e pain since, and feel that I owe ion of Canada, and it may be takâ€" 3' life "b0 131- Williams’ Pka 'P-ills. en for granted as a surety that very 5 they cured me‘after the doctor few homes in Scotland at the pre: ad failed.†7 sent time but had some relationship Sold by all medicine dealers or with Scots o’er the water.†' cent by mail at 50 cents a box or The lecturer went on to describe 51x boxes Jfor $2.50 by The Dr. Wilâ€" the Dominion, and its great possi- 'a.m.s’ Medicine 00., Brockvill-e, bilitics for development and settle- nt- ‘ ’- merit.~ The present ï¬nancial er-isls ‘~ â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€""‘ experienced all over the Dominion was, he said, already being reliev- ~ ed by the goodly harvest of grain mils Cauntpy Is Most Akin“, Lam] crops, and the money thus brought . or the Heather . into the farmers coffers would no- . ' ' I turally beneï¬t the community gen- , At a lecture on Canada given in orally. éPenicuilk recently by the Rev. W. lBaircl, of Edinburgh, the chairman, {Mun IV. Lind-say, F.R.S.G.S., in- troducingthe lecturer, said that ,Canada was near and very dear to . lall Scots, for out of the many col-o- If your baby is sickly, if his little guise of the Empire it stood foremost stomach is out of order or his bow- and most akin to us. Why? Because els need regulating, no other mediâ€" ithough ï¬rst discovered by a Geno- cine will have such prompt or boneâ€" ï¬ï¬‚e trader 5mm Brim/01, and 331701“ ï¬ci-al effect as Baby’s Own Tablets. ‘W-ard'S'.WBS‘Si1111.Y “settled by the Thousands- of other mothers-"use no WOI‘maD'F‘l‘Gm-h, 1'5 Was 1104‘: “Dill other medicine for their little ones. that outstanding Scotsmanâ€"rather Concerning them Mrs, John G, {Fl‘anw‘scofr‘jJOhn Law, an Edin' Crockett, Glenberrie, N.S., writes: burg-h gelaï¬m’tih, W110 fOII-fld it 0011‘ “I have used Baby’s own Tablets venient to transfer his interests to for Stomach troubles, vomiting- and Par 15’ Where he} fo‘lmdefl 3' famous constipation, and in every instance b99kâ€"W'1'ned h1§®ttent1°n *0 0010‘ they have proved successful. I m'sm‘g OM†With Seats, that? thus would use no other medicine for my little ones.†rElie Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by 'mail at cent-s a box from The Dr. Wil- liams’ Medicine 00., Brockville, Out. Cinema AND SCOTLAND. his BABY’S nwr TABLETS Gun: 3mm nun Smell violetsâ€"- Hm: smell this w...â€" Improvc the Cattle. The best way for the dairy man to improve his herd is to replace his common cows with their daughters by pure bred sires from advanced registered dams. , The high price-s for some of the best dairy animals need not discour- age dairymen from improving their herds by the introduction of good blood, ‘for the obstacles can be over- ation in buying new sires. _ . In all localities where dairying is a well established industry there is no reason why the best bred dairy bulls should not be available to the small dairyman. What would be a big price for one man to pay for a registered sire could be made a. very small investment by joint purchas- mg. The most appealing of all perfumes Inst smell this soap. We've caught in it the real | v? GRAINS OI“ GOLD. odor of violets. It imparts to your skin an ex uis- ltely fresh fragrancc._ It diffuses tom on; hands and hair a wonderfully eating pertains. Ask your druggist for this soon. If he hasn't. it, send us 3 2c stamp for sample cake. Address the Andrew Jargon: Co. Ltd. 6 Sherbtooke St.Pexth, Ontario. do rgcns VI 0 LET 'Glycerine Soap 100 a cake. 3 calms for 25:: Got I quarter's worth. For salt by Canadian drugtistsfrom was! to mod. Wading Newfoundland The cynic is one who never sees a good quality in. a man, and never fails to see a bad- one.â€"'â€"Ward Beecher. . ' There never was a time when it was more difï¬cult than at present to believe that the powers that be are ordained of Godsâ€"Canon Cogs~ well. Do not be answerable to to-mor- row. Do not weaken and distract yourself by things you cannot see and would not understandif you saw them.â€" Kingsley. come by the neighborhood co-oper- , looking forward to. What is a sea mile is a que-stior that is often asked. The distanc’ varies in different parts rlobe. At the Equator, for in- stance, a knot would be. 6,045.95 feet; at the Poles it Would be 52107.76 feet, and in the latitude of “he occan route from Europe to New York about 6,030 feet. Nau- tical surveyors take into account these small differences, and the measured nautical mile for speed trials on the Clyde, where the Lusi- tania was built,'is,longer than the nautical mile used for the same purposes more southerly. The Bri- tish Admiralty knot is 6.030 feet, and the recognized knot of the United States Navy 6.08037 feet. A knot in very general use mea- sures 1,000 fathoms, and a fathom being 6 feet, this knot would be 6,000 feet. ‘ >1 You May llave Gatarrh ï¬nd lint Know it HEAD AND THROAT BECOME DISEASED WITH CATARRH FROM NEGLECTING COLDS AND COUGHS. Catarrh is Treacherousâ€"When Fully Developed is a Horrorâ€"Note its ‘ Symptoms. “Is your breath bad?†“Is your throat sore?†“Do you cough at night?" “Is your voice raspy?†“Have you nasal discharge?†“Do you spit u'p phlegm?†“Has your nose an itchy feeling?†“Have you pain across the eyes?†“Is your throat irritable, weak?†"Do you sleep with mouth open?†“Are you/subject to sneezing ï¬ts?†-“Do your ears roar and buzz?†‘ “Are you hard of hearing?" If you have any of these indications of Catarrh, cure the trouble nowâ€"- stop it before it gets into the lungs or bronchial tubesâ€"then it may be too late. The remedy is “Catarrhozone,†a direct breathable cure that places antiseptic balsams and healing medi- cation on every spot that’s tainted by catarrhal germs. - . There can be no failure with Ca- tarrhozoneâ€"for years it has success- fully cured cases that resisted other remedies. “No one can know better than I, the enormous benefit one gets from the Very first day's use of Ca- tarrhozone," writes T. T. Hopkins, of Westvale, P.Q. “I had for years a stubborn case of Bronchial Catarrh, ear nolses, headache, sore 'eyes, stop- ped-up nose and throat. It affected my appetite and gmade my , breath rank. Catarrhozone, cured quickly." Get Catarrhozone, use it, and you are sure of cureâ€"beware of imitations and substitutes. Large size Catarrh- ozone, with hard rubber inhaler, lasts two months, and is guaranteed. Price $1.00,, at all dealers, or the Catarrh- ozone 00., Buffalo, N.Y.,Iand King- ston, Ont. M Never Sinilcd Again. The clergyman, visiting a, hospi- tal, stopped at the bedside of a pale young man swatth in ban- dages. ‘ “Che-er up, young man,†he said unctuously; “keep smiling-it’s the best medicine.†~ “I’ll never smile again,†replied the young man. , “Nonsense. Yes, you will 1†“No,†sadly continued the bat~ tercd one, “no nonsense about it. I’ll never smile againâ€"at least not at another fellow’s girl!†Obvious. Miss Caustic: “Your friend, Smythe, braggs that he is a selfâ€" made man. You never hear a self- made woman boasting about i .†Mr. Critic: “No. They like every ' one to think it’s natural.†When poverty comes in at the door love makes a noise like a flyâ€" ing machlne. Send Scfor trial size i For Chapped Hands and Lips Vaseline ~Cai’nphor Ice .Soothcs and heals cracked 7 skin. Keeps it smooth, mm and healthy. Insist on VASELlNE Cnmphor he, in tubes and boxes. I5 cents. Drug md Department sores everywhere. CHESEBROUGH MFG. C0. (Consolidated) 1880 Clubol Ava. Mutual What Is in Sea Mile? of th-:. \\\'\\\\ \® .4/ Comnient on Events The Age mm“ In Polar Exploration. One line of work has lately been discov- ered in which a young man, even if he has not had the luck to get into locketcp at an early age, still has his opportunities. This work is that of polar exploration. “The younger the better" rule has been tried and found wanting. The age of 25 or so, once highly favored, has now be- epm-e the minimum. From 25 to tillâ€"«such are the limits set by Sir Ernest Shackle- ton for the personnel of his forthcoming expedition to the antarctic. ' The younger the age the greater the power of endurance. But polar explora- tion requires much more than endurance. It demands seasoned judgment. In‘ a po- lar expedition tlicre'is little margin left for mistakes. The ill-considered notion of one man may im-pcril the lives of all. What the man of 35, say, has lost in spring and'vervc he more than makes up in experience, judgment and staying power. Shackleton himself was 55 when be accomplished his great march. ' Scott was .35 when he set. out for the antarctic and 44 when he died. There is a. similar contraction at the other end of the scale. The man of mid-die age must also stand aside. Here the rule applies cs early as 40, the age at which, in this ï¬eld of work. the effects of a slightly diminished vitality begin‘ to tell. Those outside both these limits may congratu- late themselves that few men are required' for work at the poles and that, before many years pass, none at all will be needed. They might. even go so far -â€" in view of the fact that standards tend to survive beyond the needs of the cases es- tablishing themâ€"as to hope that such nar- row bounds may not centinue to exert an deavor calling them into being shall be a. thing of the past. Race and Color Distlnction. A gentleman of color who had sent a messenger to purchase a ticket in the or- chestra seats 01‘ a Calgary theatre, on appearing at. that theatre in person was refused admission to his seat, and was in- formed that he could have his ticket ex- changed for a seat in the balcony. Being a British subject and a citizen of Calgary, he resented the insult and sought legal advice as to his rights in the matter, the sequel being that a writ for damages has been entered in the courts. This is a free country, and whether a man be black or white. a British subject or an alien, no one has the right to draw the color or any other line to subject him either in indig- nity or inconvenience. Gambling on Ocean Liners. The latest eastward trip of one of the big Atlantic liners was notable for the scale on which gambling was conductedâ€" unusually large proï¬ts for the fleecera and unusually shrill squeals from the flocced. Everybody knew that a gang of ingly, could give them the goby. The snake lay coiled in the smoking-room and the dazed rabbits came up to be swallow- on the day's run. The ship was to heave to for repairs and somebody knew it in advanceâ€"our old friend, “inside informa- tion.†The wise “deep sea ï¬shermen†bought the low end of the pool and made heavy sldo bets in addition. The win- nings, commonly a few hundred dollars. rooe to ï¬ve thousand. Is an Atlantic trip, despite all amelioraticns through wireless, newspapers and facilities of cvory kind for entertainment. still so drear a thing that men must piece out its few days by gamb- ling? Is the aver-ago paseenger still so self-conï¬dent and simple-minded as to suppose that he can hold his own against the seasoned professional? Or is the smoking-room wager a consecrated phase of sea. travel which every new tourist thinks he must indulge in if the savor of his ï¬rst trip is to be complete? Be all this as it may. warningshave been many, the ship authorities have/sometimes shown themselves reluctant to 'act, and the cau- tious frequentcr off/tho smokingLroom will do well to keep’his‘ spare change out of pools and gumcs‘of chance. He can use it in tips after landing. ' Should be Printed in School Text Books. It is mortifying to the newspapers that ' in spite of all the publicity they give, the man who rocks the boat, and tlievboy who didn’t know it was loaded. and the woman who hides her money in the cook stove or under the parlor grate, keep on doing it. We are surprised that none of the innu- merable critics of the public schools ur- J‘uign our system of education because it doesn't, teach that those things must. not. be done. Neither education nor the pros-s accomplishes the task of the fool killer. Labor Troubles In New Zealand. For years it has been maintained that New Zealand was a veritable paradise on earth, so far as the relations of labor and capital were concerned. Arbitration was established by laws, and it. was held that by the operation of these laws all occa- sion for disputes between employers and employed were eliminated. Strikes were classed as among the impossibililim. But the facts of the situation in New Zealund are vastly different. Strikes have been general for several months and have been accompanied by violent. rioting. So serious is the situation that at latest accounts farmers were arming themselves and joining the authorities to preserve properly and to restore order. v And now it appears that the great trouble in New Zealuml is that the law's are not. effective and do not apply equally to both sides. According to the testimony of those who have been on the ground, the laws for insuring arbitration between cm- ployers and employed do not apply to the organizations of the latter unless they form-ally agree, in advance, to swept them. Thus, in the absence of informal ' acceptance. they became useless. It is evident that much will have to be learned before the relations between cm. ployens and employed may be ‘mndo mutually satisfactory and Easily and o!- !C-ctlvely applicable to the adjustment of recent Powder as being the best, purest and most healthful baking pow- der that it is possible to produce. CONTAINS INO ALUM ' All ingredients are plainly printed influence after the particular line of on- \range to be blackened, as it will gamblers was aboard. but nobody, seem- . ed. There was formed the customary pool dilly\Gul Starving on Poorly ,/% / ./ g (f W l ‘ We unhesitatingly recommend Magic Bakm‘ g ll on the label. \ \i'l l ‘ all differences through statute laws. It was long argued -that.the problem had been solved in New Zealand. Now it is an open question there. as elsewhere. _____.>I<_....__._ Hints for the Iloinc. If a pan in which milk is cooked ifs rinsed out in cold water the milk will not be so apt to stick. Blankets, after being washed and dried thoroughly, should be well beaten with a carpet beater. . C-ut glass will be clear and spark- ling if a little bluing is add-ed to the soapsuds in which it is washed. . If-you burn the food in a new white enamel dish, put into the dish a tabl-espoonful of sal soda, ï¬ll with water and boil. If new enamel-ed saucepans are placed in a pan of warm water, al- lowed to come to a boil, and then cooled, they will be found to last much longer before either cracking or burning. Paint spattered window glass can be cleaned by melting soda in very hot water and washing the glass with it. ’ - . ’ Lacquered brass. can be cleaned by washing it in hot water. and a little soap may be added if neces- sary. Do not allow the hearth of the soil your aprons or dresses. Wring‘ a housecloth out of warm water and wipe the hearth clean every morn- ing. Blacking it will not be neces- sary. A good way to strengthen the worn places in undergarments is to stitch them with the sewing machine back and forth in parallel lines, and then turn the goods and run stitches at right angles“ to those already taken, ' '_ If turpentine is put on a burn immediately, it will [stop the burn- ing and there will be no pain. ,Sat- u-rate a piece of bandage with tur- pentine, then wrap the burn care- fully and saturate again and again, keeping the bandage wet for some time. A good scouring for boards and tables is this: Work into a paste half a pound of‘sand, half a pound of soft soap and a quarter of a pound of lime. Put it on the scrub- hing brush instead of soap, then wash the wood- with plenty of clean water. Munâ€"w... AFRAID TO EAT Selected Food. “Several yean ago I was actual- ly starving,†writes a girl, “yet dared not eat for fear of the con- sequences. , “I had suffered «indigestion from overwork, irregular meals and im- proper food, until at last my"sto- mach became so weak I could eat without great distress. “Many kinds of food were tried. all with the same discouraging cf- fccts. I steadily lost health and strength until I was but a wreck of my former self. ' “‘Having heard of Grape-Nuts and its great merits, I purchased a package, but with little hope that it would help lllQ-â€"I 'was so discourâ€" aged. " ' “I found it not only appetizing but that I could cut it as I liked and that it satisï¬ed the craving for lfood without causing distress, and if I may use the expression. ‘it ï¬ll- ed the bill.’ “For rmmt-hs GrapmNuls was my ’principul article of diet. I felt from the very ï¬rst that I had found the right way to health and happiness, and my anticipations.’ were fully realized. ‘ I ' “With its continued use I regain- ed my usual health and strength. To-day I am well and can out any- thing I like, yet Clrapruls fund forms a part of my bi l of lore.†i Name given "by Canadiu n l’oslnm lCo., Windsor. Ont. lead “The Road to \Vcllvillr‘,†in pkgs. “There‘s a Boas-on.†Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from .tlme to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. l \scarcely» any food