on with Henry' MacRae directing, he proceeded to film "The Foreigner" the shores of Lake Louise, with iificent mountains for a "backs ¢ and, for a stage, 0 t_exquisite Spots on ear "The was that, wot only did he: pro- sprang into instant popularity Mims" have been produced and many illains have paid the penalty of their fcul déeds; many modest. ntaldens | = have yielded to ths wooing bf stron} silent men; many dauntless heroes have ALR Snced | the nameless tern » wilds, on the péace Aha "Emerald Lake "and the 4 in Between 'Banff apd Winder- nie; 3 i . Notable Pictures Scréensd. sed Amont the -most notable - pictures =. gereened entirely or in part, with the - Rackles for a background, . are "Back to God's Country," "The River's End," "The Alagkan," "Empty Hands !* "The Sky. Plot." 'Schooldays," "The Man Fo entueyi P "The Jai ley of Silent Men," "Frivolous x * "Strongheart" and The Forignr' ; 'The chances are A ote 0'gaze | yy "in:sflent adntiration: beauty of Alaska, the hills of origin or the still Sierras, are, in reality, gaz- «at something far nearer home, no rly so forbidding and infinitely |. ora. ' beautiful--the Rocy Mountains themselves. » 0 ithe United Statés may. have har] Hollywood and her monopoly of the try, but now that the value of the as a place where people may shoot the rapids, kill each other, make love, win fortunes and indulge fn the other' pleasant pastimes peculiar to moviedom, lias been realized, it is to be hovel that Canade's position in the splendid pleture, but that the. ce then scores of other "supers i rs Of the 'hiores| "innocent | | never complain and never blame any- "| one elSe is to blame for our mistakes. will 'whisper to thee of of His changeless | ocean of life, drifting anywhere. | to a "Divinity that shapes our ends, in ust low thom how vs may 'worth living. A friend ry Dr. Williams' Pink were all gond I felt improyad. | appetite was retu ke his | ing. into my dave. ti oh "visibly con taking the. EE tis my former, good hy I consider Dr: Willlams' Pink Pills a blessing to weak women, and Tope my experience will induc other sufferer do try them." t these "plils from any medicine' . Je or by mail at 50 cents a box direct, from The Dr, Williams' Medicine 'Co., P01 Bigekville, 0 Ont. When in Doubt. "What does one do when all the rest 8 com: You can 1s taken away from one, when life has grown. frivial, stunted, and narrow?" This question is asked by a character lin im s of Sin," by Lucas Malet. THe answer given is: "After.a time one Ifghts a candle called Patience and guides one's footsteps by that." Amid dreary days that is a splendid light to have, for it will shine when every other light is extinguished. It i3 our'highest wisdom to have that lamp always clean and burning. Many a "dark 'path and obscure turning will bé revealed by Patience. : 'When we are in a corner or "hemmed in by all manner-of obstacles, we need Hope as 'well as Patience. To lose 'hope when everything seems dgainst us is to be in the slough 'of despair. Patlence may become exhausted. It may be tried to its last stand; but Hope need never burn out. Sometimes it may flicker and splutter and burnlow for a moment, but Faith relights it. It {Faith failed, Cove would do 'the re righting. Look back over. _your past and you will diseover that We are always being 'helped jn this way. When strength is failing} Patience, Hope, Faith, op Love comes" alopg and woos us back to health and-.activity, «They are never far away from any of us. . However complex may be the maze, there ig a way out. The exit has to" be sonsidered, certaidly, for it is out of the maze before you realize it. {That often happens. plain if in your effort to get through way. pelgorfully, nd try again. Keep up a. heart, laugh at your impossibjli- ties, and say: "It shall be dome." That i {low 'wonderful tonic. Don't live in a fog if you can pos- | sibiy be 'out of it. Try your hardest' to seo daylight. Things have their. true proportions in the light. But one except yourself. Whilst everyone affects and influences everyone else, no When you, are doubtful what to do, Just be advised never to look down. Look up, the sky, the stars above, "love, - We are not just as specks on the We have a work to do, and we are related of the Morning, it foliqws the day, pills. never self-revealed. - It may be you are' But don't com-! come up against a barrier and' blind end. Go back | {llness, to Bournemouth, At Win- f the Canada Steamship Da The Islands, which gained tame during the early days of the World War, are the subject of a long: standing and litle known controversy. | between Great Britain and Argentina, the only dispute existing between these two nations. » . The Falkland Islands are the Gibral- tar of Argentina. They lie in the southern Atlantic, about 300 miles east of Magellan Strait. They are an im. portant maritime station, for they command 'navigation-in- those waters; offer good harbors of refuge and form an invaluable lookout in that region, as was proved during the initial stage of the World War, when the naval forces of Admiral Sturdee, in Decem- ber, 1914, engaged and destroyed off Port Stanley the German division un- der on Spee, "In the year 1883, while the United provinces of the Plata River were in possession of the Falkland Islands in succession to Spain, Great Britain sent naval forces there and, claiming a pre- vious right to the dependencies, took them from the Argentines Thus England incorporated into her empire these islands that watch over the southernmost end of the continent. Argentina questions the regularity of the British tenure, and it is eaid that fixed daté, presents a protest to that effect. » But 'whether or not the matter ever will be a subject of negotiations for a settlement, the controversy has! never in the slightesteftegree affécted the relations between the two coun- tries. : PT i tg | As He Understood Ht. be allowed to go out mother became rath®r-crosy and said,' #"When 1 see fit, you shall #0, not be- fore." while his mother went hither and 'thither. about her work. In half an hour he inquired, "Mamma, have you seem him yet?" "Seen whom, child?" "Why, seen Fit" Not Going Just Now. "Why is it we never hear the "Watch in the Rhine" any oer "It's in hock." 2 Minard's Liniment for Asheg and Paina oir Richelieu, Murray Bay, Quebec, oft with a 170-yard drive. Mr. Tatt complimented W. H. Coverdale, President gies; on his" Com] the Argentine representative atthe: Court of St. James's every year, at a|: a dedication of the poem to Sir Jashua championship" Jubt prior to teeing enterprise in ~ Poems That Aren' t True. How many who have recited "The damage than a broken bowsprit? Maritime records for the year 1839 record a great storm on December 15th, when, among twenty other ves- sels, the Hesperus was driven Into Bos- days later: "News of shipwrecks. Horrible. ot! the coast. Twenty bodies washed | ing lgshed to a piece of wreck." then mentions details regarding' Hesperus, and 'concludes: write a ballad upon this." A couple of weeks later he makes this entry. "I have broken ground in a "I must the reef of Norman's Woe, in the great storm a fortnight ago. shall send it to some newspaper. I Have a great notion of working upon the people's feelings." An almost equally famous poem 18 Charles Kingsley's "Three Fishers.' The story sp graphically told was the result of a fit of low spirits on the part of a tired parson, Kingsley was very keen on social re- Socialist. escape a public protest. I about his garden. ifito the west." The story of the bov Felicia Hemans burning deck" of the French flagship | Orient and was involved in the explo- glon of its powder magazine in the Bat tle of the Nile, -is not well authenti- cated, There may have been such a boy, but seeing that he perished with his father it is difficult to say who told the story, and it is certain that the poetess draws very largely on her sen- timental imagination. One of the most flagPant cases of a poet letting imaginatien ignore facts is furnished by Oliver Goldsmith, whose "Deserted Village" is one of the most beautiful p6ems in the language. The poet anticipated' criticism in his Reynolds: "I know you will object, and indeed several of our best and wisest friends conéur in the opinion, that the depopulation it deplores is nowhere to be seen and the disorders it laments are only to be found in the Post's imagination." ~~ Stories About Ww bm Quiet Herolsm, General Sir George Higginson, who celebrated his 'niuety-ninthr birthday ré- cently," was once the hero of an aca dent, which recalls a f episode 'the life of Lord Beaconsfield, The General was taking his wite, who was just recovering from a severe' chester he called a porter and gave him some order. The man executed it, ¥ and then swung he door to: The Gen- 3 L ; {Novelists as well as prophets, it ap- no comment, though he 'must been suffering the most excrucl- But not until he had ar-' | rived i destination, and had seen' C8nan Doyle tells of th installed in in her hotel, ' Sitoredi : SL sit: ies ue i IS ! 'production of that most valuable drug, 7. ed upon their -great son as an inex- ell-Known Pele > 8ir David Prain, until recently director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. "The medal specially. marks Sir David's work in connection with the 'quinine; ©. By organiziiig' the Goverp: ment's cinchona plantations, which an- nually yield vast quantities ot quinine, he has brought this drug within reach of every part of the world has. thereby saved countless lives. - A Duty Performed. pears, lack honor in their own country. {At least Sir James Barrie does. In . Memories and Adventu Sir Arthur ant but unenthusiastic attitude that Bir James' ypiicable phenomenon. © They were ac- " 'I suppose you Find, Berio 1 A es, : replying to ton harbour. so it 18 difficult to account Todi for Longfellow's entry in his diary two Bee: ashore off Gloucester, one female be-| new field, namely, ballads, beglnning | with 'The Wreck of the Hesperus' on! the entire ocean, form and was regarded in his day as | | hot summer months are to small cfild- rather a dangerbus type of clerical | eM Thus, when he went to dysentery, colic and stomach troubles preach in a West-end church he great-| © rife at this time and often a pre- oy offened the Ihcumbent and did not | Clous little life is-lost after only a few He returned | hours illness. to Eversley Vicarage late that night, { Baby's Own Tablets in the house feels but instead. af golag #0. bed be paced | Safe: The next morning | | lets prevent stomach and bowel trou- A little five-year-old was pleading to he.recited to his wife Phe beautiful, P18, or if trouble comes suddenly-- to play. His lines: "Three fishers went ediling out 4s it generally does-=the Tablets will . The hoy relapsed into silence calls "Casablanca," who "stood on the '8t 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil {old peighbors at Kirtiemuitt adopted flerer -- homens Seal fo Sa iain them. nst the latter. SL v, opetily advocated the prae- for his pains, "Japanese 160k upon a "garden as & picture, beautifully designed and framéd, much as the Occidental looks upon a painting. Professor Takutna Tono, landscape architect of Wasefa University, Japai, told Seattle on' a lecture tour of the United States. "Our Japanese gardens are entirely different from gardens in any other part of the world," Mr. Tono said, "In all Western nations the garden Is con- Wreck of the Hesperus," possibly the sidered a collection of rare and beauti: best-known balled in our literature, | py; plants, flowers, shrubs' and trees, know that the famous ship, instead of | rather than the picture for which the being lost with all hands, actually re! Japanese strive. Japanese gardens are turned to port with no more serious' more naturalistic than greitgetyral. » etme Ocean Rich in Minerals. The total amount of aty-of the ele- | ments occurring in the entire ocean ls stupendous, says "Thrift Magazine." 8-in sea water only tothe extent of about two parts per million, {yet the entire ocean contains some | 60,000,000,000 tons of iodine, valued at present prices at $640,000, 000, 000,000. Bromine is also obtained in a limited He | way from the mother liquor left after the | the crystallization of salt from sea water. A gallon of sea water contains aps | proximately a quartér of a pound of salt, and since the average density of | rock salt 1s 2,24 times that of water, | Yleld approximately, four and a half Sable miles of Bo lt KEEP CHILDREN WELL 'DURING. HOT WEATHER Hvery "mother knows how fatal the Cholera infantum, « diarrhoea, The mother who keeps The occasional use of the Tab- bring the baby safely through. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail lame! Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, amar 8afe From Criticism: "I was afraid my sermon last Sunday would annoy some of my people, but it didn't," said the vicar. "What was your subject?' asked his friend. " 'The Duplicity of the Average Man,' and I spoke pretty plainly." - "You couldn't tread on any corns that way. Every man considers him- self above the average." R 4" eommam------------ Minard's Liniment for Corns and Warts stan hen 8ame Eggs. Upton Sinclair was condemning, in Los Angeles; the extortions of the mid- dleman. "In pre-war days," he said, "the middleman sold us eggs for thirty i cents a dozen. Now he makes us pay ninety cents a dozen. And the worst it it is"-- yn Sinclair gave a grim laugh. They're the same eggs.' sare sori Semmens Buddhas In Pearl. Miniature Burrhas are inserted into oysters in China to make pearl Bud- dhas. Syl semen re Wells have now to be driven to a depth of over 220 feet under London 3 J with. the former Sqmpiatnt, to protect % being a medical man, he} | [Great Dipper. a herd of it dled up, would | out for mutual protection, with a long heard of such a thing in all my life!" Ro OLD CHUM The Tobacco of Quality 1 1 Tm Superstitions of Alaskan Eskimo. Alaskan Eskimos have establighed ideols of astronomy, says Lionel Tra: | vis, trader, who spent many years with ' the northern natives. They cull the caribou spread | single file of leaders. The triangular | stars of Cassiopeia are three stones' supporting an oil lamp. The Pleiades are teains of dogs pursuing a polar | bear, © The new moon is either wet or dry by its curves. If the curve is capable of holding - a harpoon-line wet and stormy weather {is due, so Eskimo hunters remain in the iglood. Should the curve permit the lariat to slide off, the men hurry forth to seek game. The Eskimos also maintain supersti- tions about eclipses and falling Stars, weather, ice conditions, the abundance of game or fur bearers. ge Nails Given Better Hold. Packing cases coming from Europe have been found fastemed together with tenpenny nails that have spiral flutes in the sides to afford a better grip on the wood. The grooves also decrease the likelthood of splitting the | board and help in driving the nail straight. smears It is usually the case that we are neither so happy nor so unhappy as we imagine ourselves. Old People Bitro-Phosphate feeds the nerves and old people need it to make them feel and look younger. It's the one best nerve builder for weak, nerve-ex- hausted men and women and that Is why we guarantee it. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 26 Front all of which apparently control the |. A Rejoinder. Leonard Bacon, who was one of the best-known theologians in New Eng- | land a half century ago, was attending 'a conference, and some assertions he made in his address were vehemently objected toby a member of the-opposi- tion. Why," he-expostulated, "I never | "Mr. Moderator," rejoined Bacon calmly, "I can not allow my opponen:'s , Ignorance, however vast, to offset my knowledge, however small. o "JIIURINE URINE For Your EYES Refreshes Tired Eyes Write Murine Co.,Chi€ago, for Eye Care Book FAGE WAS DISFIGURED With Pimples. Terribly lichy. Cuticura Healed. ** My trouble began with black- heads and pimples on my face. The pimples were large, hard and very red, and some of them festered. They were terribly itchy causing me to scratch and the right side of my face was disfigured, The ir- ritation kept me awake, and my face was a sight. ** I read an advertisement for Cu- ticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I purchased more and before long I saw a wonderful change. I continued the treatment and now I am healed." (Signed) Miss Louise MacDonald, Box 172, Mary St., Newcastle, N. B. Use Cuticura to clear your skin. Sample Each frat To all Addrens Canadian Price, ATHLETES Minard's is wonderful for the rub-down. Takes out the stiffness, soothes the bruises. INARD'S Es St. Bast, Toronto, Ont. n to. reach water. A century ago the pressure of underground water was! sufficient to bring water to the sur-! face wherever a boring was made. rid Headache - Neuralgia. Pain Toothache shan which con ) roved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Neuritis Lumbago Rheumatism "Bayer" package ins proven directions. "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets les of 24 and 100--Druggists. De I Svemisa™ TO Soap Cuticura vin Stick 25c. TIRED OUT ALL THE TIME Nerves Gave Little Rest Relieved by "by Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound y Harrowsmith, Ontario. -- *'I took your before my baby was born and it was a great help to me as 1 was very rly until I started wg eit. I just felt as though I was tired obs all the time and Compound, and and 1 a took a Jatic < and it helped me wondertally, 1 would recommend it to any woman. 1 am doing what I can to publish {bis good medicine. I lend little book you sent me to any one I can help. You can with the teat Ho bie my name le SR HarvEY MILLIGAN, R. R. Ne 0B, Harrowsmith, Ontario. t canvass of purchasers of ia BP Pinkham's Jogetatie Com. Com- pound over 100,000 HEPES peste taste 5 %