All OneWo It is " "s, E. turned out " m." The crew at. tt, but mun-ad the cook to maHtH-tetrtqqHttt bak- ing powder 'No boy -tieet1 to do no. He did not - nub thou: u- tng baking powder. and that. In no one on board competent to but htm; Io he depended on his own mm and banana... 3. In!“ no mama and, nut - unit. it, authored a handful of the powder on top. Happy the mun, in there days of shortage. who am I homo that in neither ugly not Mutable! And happier still is the meet!" bum-r who will conform ho-ttr to - standards for the new structure! We may sigh for the good 0†by. d cheap materials and “but It“, but the respontibiljtq In a Nent new house "r, no lain 1 than formerly. Of - Way: by com y moon why a in. I in duplicity of "no The criticisms of the duel! wen npealed to me. comma. Mr. Wood, but they cannot be Mod Ion. The old-time mush-h deopm tishttr. man was not an onion": um 1.53 was re a dyspeptic. but hold " digestion " lightly " I man may Ind naive. Yet we gather from Mr. Walter Wood's North Set Fisher- md Mb or: that there won heights. or author depths, of astronomy baton which oven his new with culled. A certain cook on one of the nturdy nailing men of tho you unwound tobotsborwhottMmtrt- from home. His mac: ennui-y mm No fewer than eighty-six of these elusters, globular in form, with s dense massing of stars toward their centres, have been observed and stud.. ied. One of them, known as "Messier 13," has a diameter of Mo litrht-years - -meaning that a toy of light would require three and I halt centuries to cross it-- and runny of its suns are undoubtedly hundreds of thousands of times as big as our own orb of to-day. It takes 365 centuries for a litiht ray to come to us from Messier 18. Astronomers are accustomed to clan- tity the stars in o rough way " “giant!†and "dwarfs." But this has reference to volume, and not to man. In proportion to their bulk, the giants are light in weight and the dwarfs heavy Muse more dense. The known approximate weights of many stars appear to indicate that, while one of them may have ten times the man of another, the biggest of them does not exceed the smallest in this respect by more than that much. When we look out beyond the con- tines of our universe, which we call the milky way, and, with the aid of a powerful telescope, behold the “our elusteri'--ishmd unlverus they have been ettlled--we realize that all of the many thousands of sun: which appear " if mused together in these clusters must be giants. been weighed. in ,nettiid hi Lal known whereby their size could be - certained. Thus, for instance, the also of Mr. tus, the dog "ar-oo. haunting. to In by renson of its extraordinary brtl.. liance, and also on account of hw- cal records concerning it, which date back to the days when the pyramids were built in Egypt-has never been definitely ascertained, though it in tte.. lieved to be at least forty times as big as our sun and more than 100 times as might. It must not be supposed, however, that Betelguese is s relatively solid mass like our sun. The giant star is m enormous ball of flaming gas, very light in proportion to its bulk. Once upon a time our sun, perhaps, was as big or bigger. But our sun is exceed- ingly old, and, " it hai grown older, It has steadily shrunk, until - it u I dwarf in size and, one might any, decrepit. One understands, of course, that all the stars are suns. Probably three- fourths of those we see with the naked eye are gaseous bodies. The gaseous stars are the powerful light-givers. Sueh giants as Canopus, AMebarah, Arcturus and Antares are conspicuous examples. Every out, it is believed, is in its youth a mass of burning gas. As it grows older it shrinks and grows steadily hotter, up to a certain point, when it begins to cool. Sirius, Phocyon and Beteltruese, as mowed from the earth, form a triangle in the night sky. But the dog star in very near to us, as stellar distances Betelsruese is a giant smirk our rm n sulax- orb were equally big, the “hole of the track which the earth pursues in its joumtyn' around that hnnvonly body would be included within the central naming mu. The earth has an average distance of 93,- 0UI).000 miles from the sun. Thus one may form a notion of the emmensity of the great star which has been new- ly measured. ro--.'"' near that a ray of light, travel- Hg 186,000 miles u lecmd,'would re- quire only twentr-tseo years to reach as thence. Beteitrueses in about eigh- teen times as far any. How the New Cook Used Baking Powder. wh; i, b". i-ls. i It was in this manner that the name of Sloane originated, on the rise to prominence of one "Biollat1," son of "Eoghan Caoch." The given name of "‘Sioilan" means in Irish "the skinny ‘one" or “the thin one," and it won lprcbably given,“ a result of charac- 1 wristlce displayed in the new-born in- ‘tant. The clan name was formed by the "ieomttinattoet ot this name, infect. ed in the pémaive case, with the word Na" in "hi," signifying du- cemiante on followers. This word later come to be designated eimply by "0." Thus, the lrieh form ot the clen or {only name is "0’&ollen." alone. ot comm, is but the Attgli- clzed union of it, which tn the com-u ot trunnion from one tom to the other, In: lost on of the syllable: and it was, like virtually all lrlsh clan or family names: derived from a given name by the addition ot a word desig- nating "descendants of' or followers ct." Such names were commonly formed at any time when a chieftain achieved a trtttheittt following and re- spect to give him the proper power in that peculiar social organization ot the ancient Colts in which blood-ties were the chief bonds. Sloan In one ot the most ancient family names in the world, dating, an it does, to a period shortly after the time of St. Patrick in Ireland; some six or seven centuries before there was any real tendency toward the for- mation ot family names in England, and,indeed, some thr or fire centuries before many of the Irish clan names Came into existence. Variatlort--8loan. . Racial origlrt--lrlsh. 8ouretr--A given name. The Bor Scout programme is the mlll in the stream of boyhood. It pro- vides something useful for every boy to do every minute. Knot tying, firgt aid and bouncing, 'bitrmtllWg, trailing and tracking, tire:buiWi.and ex. tiutprVsh!ag, camp cookingg swimming, earning and saving money, hiking, map making and map reading, practi- cai study ot Bowers, plants Nut trees, earth and sky, are included in the Scout‘s programme for the year. At- ter these a much broader field is open- ed, including foundation work in all the principal trades and profusion. A boy’s first idle moment I: the starting point ot whatever troubla he makes in the world. It is also the his opportunity ot the man who is wise These things we know; yet we too often permit youthful enars)‘. our moat valu'able asset, to run riot. We even attempt to dam it and then complain because tt a1opa over and does dam. age. We put a wind-mill in the path of the wind and it draw: water as tor ously as it upsets the chairs on the verandah and whisk: the 1amin wash from the line. We put a water-wheel in the stream and it grinds the grain with the energy which it could other. wise dissipate in washing out its banks and rooting out the treeo. The trouble comes when parents, teachers and others Who are respons- ible for the rourtgtsttrr's development tail to ttll his time with useful activity. The forces of nature must opisrate. We cannot atop them while we take our afternoon nap. 'The wind must blow, the water mus-t tlow, and the boy's brain and muscles must work. There are no but! boys. We nuke this statement contidentlr, knowing that n wax be exhumed by educator- and all who have spent their lives in working on the boy problem. We will defend it in spite of " the broken windows, otolen apples Ind canned dogs in Christendom. There are Weak boys, boys who lack reremreetuhneesas, boys whose ideas ot right and wrong are distorted, but there never was a boy who did not na- turaur--iouts1y or ttoeortaeiouslr --do things that he believed to be right. The Bad Boy Proposition. [135mm The Saving in Health -r Surnames" rm ind Their Origin along with the saving in cost. attracts many a tea or cog ee drinker to SLOANE -- ___..,-_ - wâ€"â€" -_.'---.. .v Vuywlu, as well as the forms “lo Cupperé" and "lo Cowper" and “lo Coupon. are to be found in the tax and census records which have come down to :1. ttmn medleval times in England. Entries of such names as “Adam 10 Kuppemf'_an{l “Rich!!! lo Cuppere,†Our modern word "eup" is, so to speak. the tirgt ccualn ot the modern word "eooper," and really ig a more direct descendant of the medieval word. They made them for an pur- poses and in all sizes, and out of I great many dinerent materials. though tor the most part out ot wood, though sometimes out of metal. Chau. cer has a passage which explalns that wood was a. material they often work- ed in because it was easily turned. It does not follow that the original Coopers, Cowper: and Comm. how- ever, were all barrel-makers. In fact, the original Coopers did not ply their trade at all in the same manner as the modern cooper. They did not make their products from stave: and hoops. Ott the contrary, they worked mostly with the medieval ancestor ot the modern turnhotHathe, thus narrowly escaping bestowing the name of Turner upon their particular 'poaterities, as did others of their co-workers. The family name of Cooper is really the same as our modern word cooper, used to designate a barrel maker, and the family names of Cowper and Cop- per are but varlations ot it. Variations-Co-r, Copper, Turner. Racial origitt-ertttllsh. "UROE--An occupation. changed In spelling considerably, though the iiitremmee in pronunciation is not so rant as might be imagined. I To every woman belongs the right to enjoy a healthy, active life; yet nine 'out ot ten suiler from some form ot P1oodleaattysa. That is why one sees P? every side pale, thin cheeks, dull ‘eyes and drooping tigurea---atins signs lit, headaches, weak books. :1ch limbs and uncertain health. All week ‘women should win the right to be wen thy refreshing their weary bod-lee with the new, rich, red blood that promptly transform them into healthy, attrac- tive women. This new, red blood is supplied by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which reaches every organ and every nerve in the body. Through the tin ot these pills thousands of women have found benefit when suturing from anaemia, indigestion. generel weakness and those ailments from which women alone gutter. Among the many women who tell of the good Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done them is Mrs. L. Hicks, Round Hill, N.S., who says: N became very much run down in health; my blood seemed weak and watery, my strength failed, and I was so easily tired that my work was a burden. I had often read about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and decided to try them, and I can truly say that after using three boxes I found mr self gaining. and undo: a further use ot the pills all my old-time snergy and vitality was restored. Out ot my own experience I can strongly recommend' this medicine." i The teak, which supplies one of the strongest timbers known, grows slow- ly, attaining a height of only 160 feet in over a century. You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at tro cents a box or six boxes tor $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Oo., Brockviiio, Ont. Minard's Llniment Relieves Distemper h WOMAN'S" mam T0 coon HEALTH Moat Troubles AMtetintt Women Are Due to Poor Blood. Japan has 20 women journalists. COOPER "Well, mates," Le began. “I never did any fsesh-water fishimr, so I ex- poet you are telling the truth. But I remember on one amnion. having nothing better to do, we cast a line at no and united results. Soon we rrtettite,ttrttfrtrtuyif.euoe could not 1mm in 'E catch. Then, " ids attack Ill. oi {gunned the line to-‘tho ,ringta.i .06 Wed to Wigwam the boat Me's hush, than!» hike, and the mm- H" At a convivial gathering in connec- tion with an â€fling club a tailor listened stun" 1y while the mem- ber: told of .. , big fish they might have huded tmd not their lines give-p WAY at the critical moment. The manner in which they recounted their “plat: would have brought turn to the eyes of the rest hardened story. teller. But I sailor newr knows when he I: beaten. _ "Ltstntntt.t" said the Tommy. "t know whrrer all: It hat. Rainbows 3 thin“ that comes out after the M’s over, ain’t they?" Bend a. Dominion Express Money Order. rm Dollar: coats three cents. After tie Storm. One ot the soldier: ot the Rainbow Division, United States, ind been beam to a British Tommy about Ita glories. The stormy. blustery weather which we have during February and March is extremely hard on children. Cop. ditions make it necessary for the mother to keep them in the house. They are often Coafitged to overheated, badly ventilated rooms and catch colds which rack their whole system. To guard against this a box of Babru Own Tablets should be kept in the house and " occasional dose given the baby to keep " stomach and bowels working regularly. This will not an to break up colds and keep the health of the baby in good condi- tion till the brighter days come along. The Tablets are sold " medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. STORMY WEATHER HARD 0N BABY To plant a 100-foot vow of vege- tables in the garden, buy seeds " follows: Beans, one pint; beets, two ounces; cabbage, one packet; carrots, one ounce; eauliftower, one packet; celery, one-fourth ounce; Swiss chard, two ouncel; sweet corn, one pint; cu- cumbers, one ounce; egg-plant, one- half ounce; kohl-rabi, one packet; let- tuce or mustard, one-half ounce; muekmelons, okra or onion seeds, one ounce; onion sets, one quart; pulley, one packet; pmnip, one ounce; peas, one to two pints; peppers, one Met; potatoes, six to seven pounds; pump- kins, radishes, salsify, spinach or squash, one ounce; tom-toes, two packets; turnips, one-half ounce; watcrmelons, one ounce. l Let the men who has to make his fortune in life remember this maxim: Dare, and the world alwaye yields. If it beau you sometimes, dare it again and it will succumb. If you lack eoiifidenee in your own judgment, you ean't blame other peo- plo_1f they share the feeling. The mah who wins is the-man who holds on until he can hold on no 1oryrer--rand thtdoyn't give up. When a man hasn't a good reason for doing a thing, he has one good rayon for letting it alone. Prefer diligence before idleness, unless you esteem rust before bright- no». Education is life's apprenticeship; its chief aim is to teach us how to think. " Success is a thing that some are content to envy in others-and some achieve for themselves. The thunder of business often MUN the milk of human kindness. Yesterday has triki,GGGrow may negat- _eornerdo it to-day. The greatest of faults is to be con- scious of none. . I was alone, yet I was not alone, For some mysterious spirit called to me Out of the night in on exalted tone The: was as rapture blunt with melody, ' “Wait for a time when to thee shall ' be shown What Ieémeth sorrow meaneth ecstasy!†bu of tlsreornrranr, with biting mun, mutated that it must in" wuu ,rf, (m. Story. Was r VN‘ delight, s silent Wisp: ot-Wisdom. MONEY bRDERS. new. " is " eremite on God in his austere Good for "h throat and cheat dilmel. Distemper. nut. Sprung. Brunei. Cone. Mnnze. Bpavim. Running Bores, em. etc. Should shun b. in the stable. SOLD EVERYWHERE. The large farms in South Lincoln- shire, England, are so perfect that they are more like fttetories than lam. I never new so 'many fields yellow with mustard on I did last summer. One thing is sure, we can not buy need at random and expect all timothy or clover. A careful analysis is the only thing that will settle the question of mustard and other foul seeds or good grass need. We have only to put I. big Ipoonful in an envelope, address it to the Dominion Experimental, Farm, and back will come the correct analysis. Then it u our fault if wel have fields of mustard after that. I a so . "-_-_" Ihose "tgittts' til',, J mum. Sandmlwood its the moat {armou- of all seemed woodm. Its uae for per- tumery and incense dates back thou» ands of years. The later Greek con- sidered it one of the greatest Nannies. and no festivities were complete with- out it. Sandalwood tttrurm monument- tr in religious ceremonies and but-h! rites In China and other Orental coun- "Pape', Diapepun" to the quickest. Intact relief for Indigeeuon. Gases. P1txtu1trttes, Heutburn. Bourneu, Per. mentation or Stomach Distress caused by ecldlty. A few tablets give almost Immediate stomach rolls: and shortly the eunuch I. corrected BO you can est {avenue food: without tau. Lute use cost: only no can“ " drug Mora. Absolutely harmless and pleasant. Sandalwood in the production prin- cipally of the native state ot Mysore. India. and the district at Coors, in both of which place: the industry 1. almosta. monopoly of the government forest reserves Due to the develop. ment of the sandalwood oil extracting industry, the exportation- ot the wood has steadily declim d, while that at the oil has increased. ' triem umnx staunch Corrector' itt warli- “Papa’s Diapepoin" for to "epme into our stores. You will meet with " overwhelming welcome. Our assistants are " amiable as I father who is trying to many of his daughters without giving them any dowry. You will always be greeted as cordially " s spell of sunshine coming toward the clone of s pouring wet day. their war.s. h Tokio etetloner an- nouncee that "the paper I sell is u Iolid " the hide of an elephant." A thrhmontrer promises to deliver all orders at etistomera' houses w.ith the rapidity of 3 shot fired from a rifle. “My extra special vinegar," a grocer declines, "ia"ag sour as the tongue of the most shrewish mother-in-law." A large multiple shop begs the publi: Judging from some specimens quoted not long ago in the Journal des Debate, the Japanese employ a wealth of metaphor when advertising Jam Are Fond of Malia; a,.' Stops Hair Coming Out.. TNckeps, Beautifies. munc- Ploneor no. Model "f)Ji8lfttfflt Sandalwood. drug b‘ tho Author. I. N low;- tter.. no. "I "d tistAtryet m DISEASES and Pa to Food Mytied " cg to gm! Ad- TORONTO Warning! Unless you see 1E nuns "Bayer" on package or on tablets you no not getting Aspirin at I“. Take Aspirin only no told in the Buyer pub on tor Colds, Headache. Narnia“. Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache. Lumbaeo.tutd tor Pain. Then you will be [allowing the directions and dosage worked out by physician: during twenty-one your: and proved sale by millions. Rudy tin boer ot twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few can“. Danish also sell larger pock- uu. mo. in Canada. Aspirin in the ind. mark (registered in Canada), of Boyer Mnnttftuttttre of Mononcetic- “Mentor ot BMierlieaeid, You are not capable of correct Judgment, of min: good sense, when all! {I fear or doubt or deapondeney in your mind. Sound judgment comes from u perfectly workimr brain. The ideal mil toi a peach-orchard is a warm, gnvelly hillside. Even sandy soil. are excellent for peaehurrov:ine if the and in not too ttne and the drains“ bad. Heavy, cold clsy soil is unsuited to the peach. Plum tree: are naturally adapted to stiffer toils than the pouch. “I - know what to an thee. luck. [has greatly fen-ed that my heart was an errin. one. I hue tried to bestow my love on tu'.. but I have sometimes thought. perhaps. that thee was man; rather more thin thy For Constipation ' Just think! A pleasant. harmless Cunt works while you sleep and be. your liver leave, head clear, slam- mch sweet Ind bowels moving a: re war " a clock by morning. No grip. lng or inconvenience. 10, 25 or M) cent boxes. Children love um candy cathodic too. "Why, Jack." she unawered. with . downcut look of her eyea. we are oom- mmded to love one another. are we not?" "Ar, Agnes. but dost the. return no with the feeling the work! can- have?†“Comets" -toairht Had An InkIInu. “Agnes. dost than love met" naked I Quaker youth ot one at whose shrine " heart's holiest feeling» had been etched up: "Must be 'cme ear," ventured Jack Driver. "Catt't feel it, can't smell it, can't hear it, can't use it'. How do you know it is there.'" "Greet!" replied Mr. Mode Hoax. “It runs go smoothly you can't feel it, Not a bit of noise; you ttatt't hear it. Perfect Ignition; you etut't smell a thing. And speed-why, it whines! You can't see it" Only "Bayer" is Genuine on. PM On. Fault. _ “How do you like your new car?†ked Jack Driver. ',i,tll'?,"f,f?!,t tit,.!,? 't'iiifA4itat 1% FEE)“ fif.lif “HERE A BAUMIE'. BENGUE ‘1... a In“. "It Mmttte ma an. “I. MONTIIAL Aqua [or Dr. Jun- â€It hasimmeduteaiet. Mtmrttrgtqtttttrm ASPIRIN RELIEVE PAIN For cold in the Head and Cheat Emtreqtder, In Wu. The [shad of “out almost Ive. on m embroldarbl. More an]: (0,000 no aux-(ed In thits work. Ninety per cent. ot the embroidery. mouth; in 919 to a value ot $1,780,799, goes to the Unlted sum Drop 3 Huh â€hmone" on an Ich- ing corn, instantly that corn “on. hurting. than wordy you m tt right of with ttngem. tt doesn't hurt . Mt. The tfret muons! com: of Japan was taken last month. Your drums: eclln I tiny bottle at “Mon.†tor A few ttqetta, student to remove every herd corn. soft dom, or corn between the toes. and (heml- luu. without e particle of pan. “California Syrup of Figs" Child's Best Laxative THE TORONTO FREE HOSPITAL. near Woolen, Ontarlu. In .mmuo-l with Bellevue and Allied Huwnllnll. Nev York, offer. to young woman dulrou- of becoming annulled nut-es a "tro- s-onr tour-w or general tnlnlnl: utm- UV. residence; .ittRlo rooms. For - ttttd nth-r lnfm-znuluu I ply Ladv lup- eritttettdrnt. Toronto WJ. Randal. “'we!nn. Ono-\rln The inner “do of every cloud " bright and shining. I therefore turn my clouds about. And C‘le. wear them mid. out To show the lining. A COINS Lift Right Off without Pain Mlmrd‘u Unhent for Daner. in Itâ€. b autumnal. of large Tat (In of 'A'Ll'dl'd'1'/ Cook Books, tttttl'.- Books. om. which are turn!“ to mull tree, of oBrtrtrrs. The “Hurdle. nu Bold at ' ttt'iee Ihht allow:- nfonu a double than monuy. Write Acme 0. Bliss Home.“ "o, In St. Paul It “I. Mammal. Mention ttttn nun-r. IhlrAItinol'hastirt ti'iifi' iiiGraTrV," "duiGir.d . . _. '?dhtut1., f, GririikiiaiferVkii."" -'-" -. his» madam-we, we fiiii G.TiiWid -id, i“ in}! {Wild-.31. So. Ila-vo- “out Inn; BELIEVE DEAFNESS and MOPS HEAD NOISES. Simply Rub It Bark of the Em and hath Nontriln. Proolofunc- 0. tll P, .frr _by f*, (rut-L mm: ’m cannon" ' um. was on. was mm. um. I I.le~v¢.luc,,lm..10 Eli he. I. t, my Mic inning with Clp.iyuris TIL thiiaira Hem MOTHER! EAR DID Wise Men Sty: “fl 1tiiiFiiririiaL i. In r â€in“. A "egrt r l Fr " i, mm 2nd fungi-f; l LEONARD u: