a«F In a praiseworthy editorial with the above title the Christian Science Mont tor points out that many humane peoâ€" plo in Britain aro discarding . the hounds and the gun in favor of the camera. It goes on to say: Tho foundations of character Are laid in early life. _ Shall there be encouragement to love and . tenderâ€" ness toward all those creatures that scoem so completely at the mercy of mankimd? Or shall the child be made indifforent to the sufferings of ant mals, and the naturally sensitive disâ€" positicn be hardened by the presenta tion of scenes of canguinary eruelty ? EFarly influences are often endurâ€" Ing. and a man who, as a boy, finds pleasure in hunting and killing beaut ful wild animals is quite Hkely, in later years, to be insensible to the pathos of struggling humanity. Children of today are mflded with finely flustrated nature books,. &* woll as with nature flms of irresiattâ€" ble charm, and are encouraged in & score of different ways to look upon Hving creatures as objects worthy of intelligent styly and protection. The modern boy who tormented an an} mal would be liable to receiv> & saluâ€" tary lesson ,even at the hands ot hbis playfoliows,; . Those who strive for a moler civilization have reason, thereâ€" fore, to be confident and cheortul. > A part of the barvest of the humanâ€" I#tarian‘s labors will be a bappier life mnot only for the men and women, but also for the wild creatures of the sountryside, 3 5 ‘. of the commonest, best known, cast understood of the <North an animals is the ordinary near. _ Most of the stories told bears are untrue, for they are ; pictured as ferocious beasts, to attack man with no provocaâ€" whatever. As is usually the with "nature stories" this is abâ€" y untrue. _ One hundred and years ago black bears might been grouchy beasts, for they ‘arger then, and had not been : the lesson of the white man‘s that diecretion is the better part Hunting Up to Date . They had little to fear from ows of the red man. however, their numbers have eatly decimated ‘by :the hunâ€" y o: The outburst of racial and religious fury in Palestine startled all sections of the British press and inspired some of them to question whether the Briâ€" tish Government is administering the Palestine mandato competently or, inâ€" doeed, whether England ought ever to have accepted the mandate. It is not surprising that Jeows in all parts of the world should bitterly reproach Great Britain, remarks the London Daily Chronicle, for having failed to take adequate steps in advance to proâ€" tect the lives and property of the inâ€" habitants in the event of disorders. The authoritiee on the spot were either illâ€"informed, . this newspaper adds, or they neglected their informaâ€" tion. The conclusion the ordinary perâ€" son will draw from this tragic affair, it is further stated, is that the Palesâ€" tine Government bas been living re: cently in a fool‘s paradise. The Palesâ€" tine gendarmerio was brought to an end in 1926, it is recalled, and reâ€" placed by the mixed police force reâ€" eruited from Arabs and Jews. In reâ€" cent years the country west of the Jordan has been completely denuded of military fores, and we read: Britain‘s Troubk.e + â€"Palestine Plague Who‘s Who in Holy Land is the Hard Question to _ Decide "The ostensible reason for this sanâ€" guine policy was the alleged improved ralations between the Moslems and the Jows. But the fanatical fury and the wideâ€"spread charactor of the reâ€" cont onslaughts on the Jeows are sutâ€" ficient to prove that the hostility of the Arabs, it masked, had not abated a jot. Throughout the last year intel ligent observers have been prophesyâ€" ing trouble arising out of the disputes about the Wailing Wall." The situation in Palestine has passâ€"| ed beyond the question of assesslngf the rights and privileges of Jows andi Arabs in this debatable peace of holy | ground, declares the London Daily Nows, which believes that for some time to come British authority will be; "In all parts of the world Jews aro complaining bitterly of the British | failure to protect their brethren in Pal | estine. Wherever"there aro Arabs and | Moslems, Arabe and Moslems are arâ€"! raigning indignantly the alleged ‘proâ€"| Jewish‘ administration. Obviously | employed on the thankless task of keeping the peace in a very much wider strotch of Palestino territory, This journal also notes that. there is a certain danger of the spread of a general antiâ€"British moveâ€" ment in the Islamic world; and this anxiety will not be removed until we have learned the attitude and intenâ€" slons of Ibn Saud, the powerful King of the Hejaz, whoso professed friendâ€" ship for Great Britain depends upon many doubtful factors. In the meanâ€" Ask Your Barberâ€"He Lnows Dr.Williams‘ PINK PILLS Pills now at your druggist‘s or any desies in medicheg or my sister‘s advice, I tried Dr. all these symptoms are gone, and 1 am strong and happy treatment without success, on "I suffered from a nervous breakdown," she writes. "I lndterribknickheod«ba. dinino.;feh»aywe.kud could not sleep; had no appeâ€" tite, l“l'b":'lnnifm thing terrible were going to happen. A‘..tflhn:-;'thef J ° â€" nerves are fed by lhc'blood.l’oocblood means starved nerve tisâ€" m’.,' som * . * l.l.‘ Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills will enrich your ‘blood stream and rebuild your m-wockede;.: n.m. M' M’. 0 i'(itcheneg, Ontario, testiâ€" ï¬â€œ.tofllia: FIR THE HAIR A HEAVY LOAD "A nousenoup NaAwit in 4 countrige * U X O ‘ "There are 750,000 Moslems in the p. country and only about 75,000 or 80,â€" ,q 000 Jews. To maintain the privileged 1@ position of this small body, mostly«reâ€" q cent immigrants from abroad, over e. the Arabs, who have been settled in g. the territory ‘for centuries. British of‘bayonets have to bo constantly in eviâ€" ag Gence or readily available, As far g1 back as March, 1923, Lord Northcliffe, ,,Ja!ter examining the conditions on the 6@ |spot, warned the British nation of the gulf that yawned before it in Southâ€" §sâ€" | western Asia. ‘Look at Palestine,‘ he bg |exclaimed. ‘Do you know that we are 6 dlon tho verge of starting a war in y \Palestine? _ With hig unerring inâ€" "y'sunct for realities, Lord Northcliffe me | °** that there could be no permanent be‘pe‘ace from the Jordan to the sea unâ€" o‘_der the artificial system we have set T Titp. time our plain duty is to do justice, without fear or favor, in Palestine, and to impose peace with the means at our command. _ "The suggestion that we should reâ€" nounce our Palestine mandate is not merely nonsense; it is dangerous nonâ€" sense."* We are committed by an exâ€" plicit and solemn pledge. However much we may dislike the job, we must go on with it, or submit to the deriâ€" sive condemnation of the civilized world." y C. Anderegg, head chef, and O. Westerlund, pastry chef, of the Chateau Lake Louise in the Canadian Rockies, with the model made entirely of sugar of the "Countess of Dufferin," first locomotive in the Canadian West, which was propared as a centre piece for the visit of E. W. Beatty, chairman and president, and othér directors and oficials of the Canadian Pacific Railway, on the!r recent tour of inspectionâ€"in the west. Candied roses are in the tender And candyâ€"floss issues from the smokeâ€"stack. The "Countless," arrived in Winnipeg in 1877 up the Réed River on a barge, and is now exhibited as a historic relic in a park in Winnipeg. She appears as a dwarf beside the new 100 foot oil burning giants of the "5900" class, the greatest in the British Empire, used by the Canadian Pacific on the main line in the Rockies sand Selkirks It is within the power of Ibn Saud, King of the Hejaz, to keep the peace or to break it, The Daily News as serts, for he exercises an immense inâ€" fluene over a wide expanse of Arab territory, He is described as a reliâ€" gious enthusiast with a magnetic perâ€" sonality, who is commonly sald to be LwelNiaposed * toward Great â€" Britain. But, we are told; ; "There are a number of acute probâ€" lems still outstanding between him and the British Governmentâ€"not least the British methods of defending the Irak frontierâ€"and the complete failâ€" ure of Sir Gilbert Clayton‘s mission last year to lMquidate these questions has never been satisfactorily explainâ€" ed. Ibn Saud was both aggrieved and alarmed at "the breakdown of tho neâ€" gotiations. _ Until a settlement has been reached we shall not regain his goodâ€"will. _ Yot it is true, that Ibn Saud remains the only indigenous eleâ€" ment of genuine stability in modern Arabia. To come to a proper underâ€" standing with Ibn Saud would be to reduce our task in Palestine and to remove a farâ€"reaching menace." But the root of the whole .trouble was planted, thinks the London Daily Mail, when the Coalition Government embarked on the "futile and perilous" policy of attempting to make Palesâ€" tine "a national home" for the Jews. Against this "stupid and mischievous enterprise" The Daily Mail claims that it bas protested for years, and also that it has shown from the outâ€" set that the undertaking was "unjust, dangerous, and dishonorable," besides imposing a superfiluous and intolerâ€" able burden upon the British taxpayâ€" er. ‘This newspaper also declares that the> "foolish mandate" runs counter to Britain‘s pledge at the close of the war to give Palestine a government based "on the free choice of the naâ€" tive population. We read then: . "The Government seems to be dealâ€" [ing energetically with the present out« 'Inirst, which must, of course, be firmly repressed. _ But when order is reâ€" stored the matter, in its larger aspect, |mast not be allowed to rest. . The Ministry is not bound by a casual deâ€" ‘claration made to a â€" very unrepre ‘sentative Jewish group by Lord Bal ‘four. We hope that Mr. MacDonald and his colleagues will waste no time |in reopening the question, and that they will go closely into the whole ‘outrageous folly of endeavoringâ€"with British backingâ€"to convert, an old ;Anb Btate into a sham Jowish ‘naâ€" .uon’ at the expense of the British taxâ€" | payer." ) Miniature cars won‘t help much. ‘Picking one out of a pedestrian will be as tedious as pulling one off.â€" 1 hate all bungling as 1 do sin, but particularly . bungling + in > politics, which leads to the misery and ruin of many thousands and millions of people. â€"Goethe, Novel Clllinlry Creation DO NOT NEGLECT __ YOUR LITILE ONES At no time of life is delay or ne glect more serious than at childhood. The ills of little ones come quickly and unless the mother is prompt in administering treatment A preclous‘ little life may be snuffed out almost before the mother realizes the baby is ill. The prudent mother always keeps something in the medicine chest as a safeguard against the sudden illness of her little ones. Thouâ€" sands, of mothers have found through experience, that there is no other medicine to equal Baby‘s Own Tablets and that is why they always keep a box of the Tablets on handâ€"why they always feel safe with the Tablets. baby was a month old and have found that they reach the spot and do more good than any other medicine 1 have ever tried. 1 always keep the Tab lets in the house and would advise all other mothers to do so." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co,, Brockvyille, Harold Armstrong in the North American â€" Review _ (New York): {(Turklfll women have not adopted European dress, nor have they abanâ€" doned the vell. "A great deal of nonâ€" lsenae has been written about the preâ€" sent position, mainly by newspaper |correspondenw). The mass of the iTurkish women were little affected by the revolution. They live again much ;the same secluded lver as they did before. Men are forced by w to wear peaked hats instead of fezzes, but the vell for the women is optional, °In Constantinople perhaps 90 per cent, of the women go unvelled; in Smyrna perhaps 60 per cent, and in Adalia perhape 40 por cent. ‘The rest, and in all the towns and villages of the inâ€" !terior, are strictly velled,. In Adana few walk about uncovered. . .. Even in Angora itselt the majority were velled, or at least wore the old cos 'tume of charchaff with the vell ‘thrown back over the head. And in the old town inside the eastle walls on the . hill above Angora, where live most of the minor Government ofâ€" {cmo, the women all wont velled, Baby‘s Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which by regulatâ€" ing the bowels and stomach banish constipation and. indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers and proâ€" mote hbealthy, natural sleep. Conâ€" cerning them, NMrs. Isaac Sonia, St. Eugene, Ont., writes:â€""I have been using Baby‘s Own Tablets ever since "It‘s wige fo pick up a pin that‘s layâ€" ingâ€"on the floor, but if it‘s a rolling pin it‘s wiser to dodgeo it." 7 Minard‘s Liniment for Neuritis. Doubtless our grandchildren will prize helrlcoms all the more if they must finish paying for them.â€"Cedar Falls (Ia.) Record. Réform In Turkey Gabby Gertle B U. 6. PAT. OFP. ONTARIO ~_ _‘ BOOTLEG BLUES % Down in the mouth of the alley ° An. elephant fell asleep; * The ‘wildcats moaned in the parior; The lions murmured peep peep. The coal scuttle ran through the ballâ€" way ; Chased by the cuckoo clock; A centipedée played the plano While a.dinosaur chewed on my Four hundred. thousand cooties Played leapâ€"frog over a chair; A‘ baldâ€"headed ape in a corner sat Complacently combing his hbair. From out of the depths of the pantry . Came a hippo‘s well known scream ; And a little grey mouse with sixteen J®gn; * :; Chased the tomcat away from bis cream. As I took my bath in the coal bin, ,I saw a trolley <ar born, And 1 vowed by the left hand of Pluto I‘d stay sober and quit drinking Wifeâ€"1 noticed that you cut an article on "How to Live to Be a Hunâ€" dred" out of the magazine. ~ Why did you do that?" ~Hubâ€""I was afraid your mother might read it" * * Chauncy Depew once told of meetâ€" ing a Union veteran who had been wounded in the face, and asked him in what battle he had been injured. "In the last battle cf Bull Run," re plied the veteran. ‘:B-ui_floii could you get hbit in the face at Bull Run?" "Well, sir, after I had run a uol or two 1 got careless andâ€"looked back â€"'R;z;tiéz-"Yeé ma‘am, but they ain‘t cowlets. They‘s bullet®." at those pretty cowlets <CIOQ ARCHIVES TORONTO We call her Maxigold because that‘s what she‘s trying to do‘ Any day now we expect to see the advent of a combination hipâ€"flask and a cigarette lighterâ€"the can be used for both. Gladys: "Bob‘s been drunk every night since 1 retusqd to marry him." }lele-n-j ;'Why don‘t you tell him to stop celebrating?" Tomâ€""‘Well, as 1 have experienced it, it‘s first the water‘s too hot; then it‘s too cold; then you‘re short of & towel; then you step on the soap, and fnally the telephone rings." , You have to give it to the #ong writers. _ How‘s this, for instance? "I‘d rather be blue when thinking of you, than to be happy with someâ€" body else." Frank (looking up from his newsâ€" paper)â€""1 say, Tom, what . is the Order of the Bath?" Ladyâ€"1 should think you would be ashamed to beg in this qelghbprhood. ‘Trampâ€"Don‘t apologize . for it, ma‘am. _ I‘ve seen worse, Toronto, Ont.â€"The province of Onâ€" tario, one of the world‘s richest areas in mineral deposits, has o far been without a coal supply of her own. Recent announcement was made of the locatjon of important bede of lsgâ€" mite goal in the northern part of the province. _ Explorations which have been continued by the Department of Mines reveal that the deposits cover an area at least four times as large as was at first e€timated, and that the coal is of better quality than expectâ€" ed. _A bed occupying an area of two square miles with an average thickâ€" ness of twenty feet has been located. The coal will be of great value to the pulp and paper manufacturers and the mining industries of Nortbern Onâ€" tario, For Sprainsâ€"Use Mlnï¬'ï¬ Liniment. e t P PE CC Reprove yourself liberally, but oth ere #paringly. 4 . q Just a tasteless" dose of Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia in water. That is an alkal}, effective,; yot harmless, . It has been the standard antacid for 50 yearse among physicians everywhere. QGne apoonful will neutralize at once many times its yolume in acid,. â€" It is the right way, the quick, pleasant and eficient way to kill the excess acid. The stomach becomes sweot, the pain SIX AGES OF MAN Bossed by mother. Bossed by nurse. Bossed by sister, Bossed by wife. Bossed by daughter. Bossed by granddaughter. Sweet Young Thing: "Jurt look Coal Fields in Ontario corn , Owl Laffs same ligquid A bundred yeare ago there was hand “‘mma in "Blackwood‘s Magazine" a drinking poem, entitled ‘"The BoatSong of the Canadian Highlanders." Because it is, perbaps, more truge than any other cut an known c?mposmon to the atmosphere i a Hun: of the Highlands and the sentiment of ~ Why Highland people, it has secured a reâ€" a markable place in the affections of * Bothet Highlanders. _ The song indeed has : been more widely quoted than posâ€" sibly any verse of the kind, particularâ€" of méetâ€" ly. the second stanza, which the late rad © been Lord Rosebery held to be "one of the cked him most exquisite that hae ever been injured. written about the Scottish Exile":â€" Rup," reâ€" From the lone shieling of the misty: ; island it in the| Mount.:ins divide us and a waste of seasâ€" n a mile|Yet still the blood fs strong, the heart ed back." 4e Highland, And we in dreams bebold the Heâ€" Jurt Jook brides. . It is remarkable that after the lapse they ain‘t Of a century no one bas been able to name the author with any degree of ’erlaimy It has been ascribed to at use that‘a|least balfâ€"aâ€"dozen writers. Sour Stomach The Canadian ' If we accept the views of Gaclic |scholan and experte on Highland life and culture, including Dr. No#l Munro, the novelist, the one thing certain about "The Canadian Boat Song" is â€" that it is a translation from the Gaeâ€" Mic, but English in ite thought and |origin. The poem was first pubMshed in "Blackwood‘s Magazine" in Septemâ€" ber, 1829, included in No. 46 of the "Noctes Ambrosianae" series . contriâ€" buted by "Christopher North" (Proâ€" feersor Wilson). The particular article fwns written not by the Professor, but, aw it happened, by John Gibson Lockâ€" ‘bart, who described the versos as & translation â€" just received . from a friend in Upper Canada of a boatâ€" man‘s song in Gaelic which be bad heard on the St. Lawrence. The first suggestion that the poem bad another origin wase made in 1849 Iwhen in an article in Tait‘s "Edinâ€" burgh Magazine" on the prosai â€"enough subject of "Enmployment or Emigraâ€" tion," the writer, Donald Campbell, atâ€" tributed the authorehip of the poem to the twelfth Rarl of Eglinton, who had a high opinion of the Joyalty and bravery o fthe Canadian Highlanders, and had left a "translation of one of their boatâ€"songs among his papers, #et to music by his own hand." The Rev. Dr. Norman Macleod, who, perhaps, did most to popularize the poem, although, lke Robert Louls Stevenson in "The Silvergdo Squatâ€" ters" and Mr. Joseph Chamberlain in his famous Inverness #peech, he badly misquoted â€"it, attributed the authorâ€" ship to Profesor Wilson. Authorship bas also been attributed to John Gibâ€" son Lockbart; John Galt, the Ayrehire novelist and author of "Annals of the Parish;" James Hog, the "Ettrick Sbepherd;" and even Sir Waiter Scott. 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That ie Phillips® Milk of Magnesia, Be sure to get the genuino Phillipe‘ Milk of Magnesia préscribed by physiâ€" clans for 50 years in correcting oxâ€" rass mcids. _ Bach bottle contain® full directionsâ€"any drugsetore,. Eggs in Three Days MORI MEN WANTEID MN M1eTh NCOT pay. easy work. Rarn while learn= ing barber trade und®r famous Moler American plan. â€"world‘s most reliable barber school system _ Write or call immediately for free catalogue, Moler Barber College, 121 Queen West, Toronto, K4 foxes, $400.00 a pair Bates, Ridgetown, Ont. se e w EB CAN :PPPLY BEAUTIFUL , wtock in Silver Black Foxes. Rogâ€" istered in Canadian National Live Etock Records. Free from lung worm or other discases, . Litters nveu(led four this year, Order early. J. M. Briscoe & Son, Northcote, Ont and wrong Fall Colds Cuticura Toilet l’repgyalions Classifhed Advertisements Could not Eat or Sleep after Hushand‘s Death Her busband‘s death Jeft her very rum down in health, unable to cat or «leep much. Now shess brighterin spints and cats ;.Ilil-le('ï¬:;'" â€" What caused the difference ? her answer in her ow E;arp!y distinguish between right * J think Kruschen Salts are a «plendid tonic. After my husband‘s death im December last 1 became very run down in health,. Mad terrible fits of depresâ€" dnomdwuumbkmeatmdrex much, 1 was also troubled wit sheumatism. _1 decided to take Krus« then Saits and have now taken the little dnily dose for nearly two months, d'-::g which time mx health has improved, The rheumatisi» has Taihiis O aéhus mio both « y« in spirite eat sleep well." When life begins m";r( you down," when you begin to the results of modernp artificial . conditionsâ€"error« of diet, worry , overwork, hack of ¢xencasc« then you should tum to Kruschen Salts. They possess a wonderful powel of .flha:' life and vitality to the poun‘ millions of cells of which the human body is composed, The way to keep is to take ln-ehc.l: Saite every ï¬nâ€"h‘ # youp fArst morning cup of .:':. toa. Beware the cold tha the fall and hangs on Uere Minard‘s internally pally to drive it away. EGISTERED PEDIGREED meememageme _ 1 SR am ORE MEN WANTED QUICK, BiQ Delightfolly fragrant, Lfllly doeverop®" toilet nccessorics â€"a most #t lable method of ¢leausing and besutifying the skin and hair 25¢. euch everywhere â€" Sumples free of "Cuticure," Box 2616, Montreal, Canada, Women are saying: "Finkha Compound keeps me fit to do work." ""I was nervous and all down, Now I cat better and «1 betterâ€"", "It helped my thirt year old daughter."â€""I took it fore and aiter my baby was bhor =â€"â€""I am gaining every day." 90 Filth Ave A TENTS SITUATIONS YACAFNT A. O. LEONARD, Inc _ i y > NECHEEE FOX RANCH. ISSUE No. 42â€"‘29 List of ‘"Wanted Inventions"* and Full Information Rent Free on Request. THE AAMSAY CO., Dept. W. 273 Bank St., Ottewa, Ont. New York Clty hly developed .‘.ï¬u.h ..-:'J of EED SILVER delivered. W winter ecp cen Â¥3