/ *l V. r y :t i Order hom your grocer his best tea and !ie11 usually send ''Red Rose." RED ROSE T!BlL*'Js food tea The same good tea for 30 years. Try it! Sornaines and Their Origin WE8C0TT Variation â€" Weatcott. Racial Orlsin â€" Anglo-Saxon. Source â€" A locality. The latter of these two eurnirae forms Is more indicative of their origin than the former. Just as there has been a curious growth in the meaning of place names ending In •ham." In England, the end- ing "cote" or "cotf baa come to liave J a much more Inclusive meaning than i It had originally. ' The ending "ham, " which we hav« , the 10v.'&ii;y i name. ur community of that CALDWELL. VariatiQiis â€" Calwell, Caldwell. Racial Origin â€" English. ! Source â€" A locality. One theory as to the origin of this family name ascribes It to the com- bination of the words "col," meaning the haze!, and "wold" or w<ood. mak- ing the meaning of the family nam« "Hazelwdod." It Is an explanation by ening, a little girl'a height should eon- ^in the diameter of her bead. He merely reiterated that he would not be further Interfered with. He flnlsh- ed the illustrations of Lewis Carroll'i last story; had there been yet another one the Rev. Mr. Dodgton would have had to ««cttre another lliustrator. Cloyer. Little maateri, hat in hand. Let me In your presence stand, ' . Tin y«ur silence solve forme This your threefold mystery. Tell meâ€" for I long to Ijnow â€" How in darkness there below. Was ^our fairy fabric spun. Spread and fashioned, three In one. Did your gossips, go'.d and hlue Sky and Minshlne choose for you. Ere your triple forma were seen. Suited liveries of green T Can ye â€" If ye dwelt Indeed Captives of a prison seed â€" Like the Genie, once again Oet you back Into the grain? Little masters, may I stand. In your presence, hat in hand. Waiting tni you solve for me This your three-fold myatery? â€"John B. Tabb. to-day preserved in 113 more developed „o nieans unreasonable, and in some meaning In the word "hamlet," even instances It may very well account for fhougii this is a diminutive by virtue ^ (jje existence of the name, of the "let." was originally the samo as the word "home." In very modem times we have como to regard a "cottage" as a sort of sum- mer home <.f the wealthy, but only a short time ago it had the meaning of a humble little home. And back In the ProbaWllty, however, points In an- other direction for the majority of peo- ple who bear this name. And this time. It is the obvious one, a combina- tion of the two wordfl' "cold" and "well." This Is sup.ported by the fact that in some of the old records the Anglo-Saxon days, before the English original form of the surname is found felt the uccesjity for, or thought of the ! with the "dela" ("of the") prefixed. At possibility of family names, the "cote" j the period when these words were pre- â- w^s pretty much the sajne as the vexed, the name must have been indica- "ham," or homestead, except that It tive of the locality in which the person was a more humbio dwelling. But in lived, and "cold-well" would not have the course of time, as the "ham" came been confused with "hazel-wood." to include, %vhen part of a place name, I The form of Caldwell is, of course, all the buildings which ultimately but a more modem variation in spell- grcuped around the original hoiuestead ; ing, developed at a period when spell- In the growLlj of a community, so the , ing was not so standardized as to-day, "cote" ending came to designate all but after the period when such family the buiidings and additional cottage,3 names continued to have a descriptive which were built around that one . meaning. - which was respoittible for the place i Sometimes Caldwell is a variation name. developed by the elimination of the . As a family name Wescott, or West- "I." But there is a village.^ in Wales jji6*t,'was originally significant merely ; called Caldwell, and this foi-m of the <iat ths fact that the bearer came from name has come from that source. '' . -.Hill m â- fSI.?*;'' THE ONE SURE WAY Tp GOOD HEALTH Is Keeping the Blood Pure by Using Dr. Williams' Pinli Pills. How "Alice" Was lUustratecl. herself, had refused in disgust to at- ! tempt the task, saying that he abso- The recent dea.th of Harry Fumlss j lutely could not stand "that conceited of Punch has recalled to mind the old don" any longer, amusing account that he once gave of whether or not conceited was the his experiences with Lewis Carroll of j proper adjective to apply, it Is quite Alice in Wonderland fame, one of certain that the Rev. C. L. Dodgson In Impure, weak blood is the cause of most of the troubles that afflict peo- ple. This is the cause of the wretched fee'.ing of langour and faintness, pafos In the back and side, headaches and breattilessness, that afflict women and make her dally life a torture. To get new health and strength the blood must be enriched. What Dr. Williams" Pink Pills do in cases of this kind Is told by Mrs. Augusta Emery „ Wood- ford Station, Alta., who says:â€" "Liv- ing on the prairie, and knowing that there are thousands of women like myself miles away from a doctor, I want to tell them what Dr. Wiillama' Pink Pills have done for me. After A Jester Who Was Too Funny. Joseph Sadler was one of the most picturesque rogurs of the seventeenth century â€" a lime whem confpelltlon in , the rogue businpE.'i M-as Iceeu. He was . neither couragtroi'.;* uor daring, <ar j from it. In fact, and yet th<?re was a I style about him that made lilm an iu- I dividual. For example, he once stole I the beaver bat of a gentitman who i was praying in the Temple i'hurrh and In extenuation pleaded that we are cn- 1 joined "to watch as wtll as pray." Sadler's crowning acfiievem«nt. sarj's a writer in Discovery, was his theft of ; the purse and mace of the Lord High Chancellor of England. How he dis- covered in what strong room they were 8ecure<l is pot known, but he not only took the baubles from their lurking place but mvrched with them publicly displayed through Lincoln's Inn Fields. A confederate bore the purse before him, another the mace, and Sadler brought up the rear, hat cocked and arms akimbo, with an Insolent and Etrutting grandeur. The little daughter of Sadler's land- lord discovered the theft. While she was playing in his apartment during the great housebreaker's absence she found a peari and a piece of tinsel up- on the carpet. Anxious to know wheth- er there were more of the pretty play- things concealed about the room, she s-ucceeded in opening the cupboard door. "Mother! Mother! Come up here!" cried the child excitedly. "The gentle- man has His Majesty's crown!" What she beheld in point of fact, was. the coronet of the mace detached from its stock. The landlady warned ! the watch, and an ambush was laid. | Loud was the laughter when the ' facts become known and Sadler con- fessed to having ligured as the Lord High Commissioner in that extraordin- ; ary harlequinade In Lincoln's Inn | Fields. Loud was tlie laughter, hut ' poor Sadler was condemned to death | In sober earnest. It is hard for a je-iter; to be taken quite so baricusly. 1 15< PER PKO. VACUUM (AIR-TIGMT) TINS OLDCH The Tobacco of Quality Pure Milk â€" No Sick Babies. Its Drawback. Housewife- "We're going to get aa . Now that the hot days of summer | electric wa.sher. and so we won't need e with us, mothers should give i you any more I • 1 ^L "i^ V • " i Laundress â€" ".â- VII right, lady, but an ••â- T ,««' â- â- m.n< .1 A.-.^r. . ..,.,!> special attention to procuring pure' , , , , ^ •. ' MY SIX LITTLE OliKS LSEOUi:^ for their children and the house- : J^''-''^ ^--^'^ <*- ^ ^.ve ,>ut no gos- l>li>V>Ci A'irV TIOI ITttl''**'*^- M»"« is one o' our most nour- i ^ KAbl O Wuf.l 1 AllLrj Id isking and cheapest foods, but unfor- 1 In order to perform a;i op?i-a:!ort Uunaiiely it may also be a very danger- <>" »" Italian princess, a famous Am^ Mrs. John A. Patterson, Scotch Vil- ous food because of f certain bacteria i "ican surgeon recently travelled .â- »?<>. 1 XI o .,,..•. • I.-,, liu â- c • u J-; â„¢ ciallv from New York to Rome, a di»- lage, N.S., says: â€" There are six child- that gei in from careiess hand.ing. • , , ,.„„ , ren in our home, and the only medi-;Th«'sc germs cause typhoid fevc.-, ' " 1| ^ my first baby was born I seemed to cine they get is Baby's Own Tablets, ' scarlet fever, diphtheria, tuberculosis ^ have little energy. I felt weary and and I have not known the Tablets to â- „d summer complaint of infancy. , fall when a medicine W.S needed No I ^^^^^ j j ^^ !i mother should te without the TableU ; f » ^ » whose later stories, Sylvie and Bruno^ he had undertaken to illustrate. He liad been asked to do &o only after Sir John Tenniel, also of Punch's staff, the pictorial creator of the immortal Alice Crcannt Ground S thaii teeth are of ^ cTtn thickne* throughout thee length of the saw, thut^ muiagbtndinginthekerf^ impouible. CreicentGrind- ing ia ei» cxcluiive SiiDonds^ feature.Sieieftds Caeaila Saw Ce. I (â- »0 DUNCAS ST- W.. TOMONTQ VJIMOOUVEH MONTREAL BT. JOHN. N.C WE WANT CHURNING CREAM We supply cans and :iay express charges. We pay daily by exprssa money orders, which can b« cashad tnywbere without any charge. To obtain the top price. Cream must be free from bnd flavors and contain not leas than SO per cent Butter Fat Bowes Company Limited. â€" - .- Toronto ror referen?««;-Uead Office, Toronto^ Bank of Montreal; or year local banker. EsUbliahed for over tUirty yean. run-down and unable to do even the ordinary household duties. I felt I needed a tonic and as I had long seen Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised I decided to try them. I got a supply and carefully followed the directions and before very long the result was wonderful. Day by day I regained was chores on the farm I would advise womec Teasing Mother. keep a supply of these pills always ] Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ! on hand. One trial will convince you I of their worth. I have recommended ' them to many of my friends and never have they failed to produce good re- sults." You cat get these pills from your druggist, or by mall at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. â- ' â- o â€" fact was as difficult to get along with as Lewis Carroll In fiction was de- lightful. He had no understanding of art; in criticizing it the man of fancy vanished and the mathematician came to the fore in a manner as exasperat- ing to an artist as it was absurd. "He subjected every illustration when finished to a minute examination under a magnifying glrss." said Mr. BMrniss. "He would take a square â- Inch of the drawing, count the lines 1 1 had made in that ispace and compare ; their number with those made on a \ square inch of Illustration for Alice by \ Tenniel. In due course I would re- : ceive a long essa>- on the subject from ' Dodgson, the mathematician." I It was too much! Mr. Fumlss stood ' it for a while and then declared that : if it were to continue he must throw i up the Job. Mr. Dodgson was shocked 'â- and surprised ; he wrote that it was a , cruel di8a,ppointment to him to receive ! such a declaration "on account of a ' single square Inch of a picture as to which we disagree" ; and he suggested j â€"of all things! â€" that they should set-' tie their differences in print. j "You shall have your say first, and , my paper will come out as an answer ! to yours," he ottered, evidently intend- . ing to be scrupulously fair; and he : added : "I am sure you will not object : to my giving a few mathematical sta- j tlstics, which my readers can easily j verify, and pointing out that by actual j measurementâ€" I have just done it care- ! jju^gr fully--th6 height of Sylvie, with the; ..^^ ^^ ^^ dead hare, is Just under six diameters p,^.,^^ „p ^y ^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ j,^^^^^ of her own head. Mr. Fiirniss did not accept the idea of settlement by public dispute ; neith- er did he try to correct Mr. Dodgson's j men meet. estimate of how many times, allowing . for proper perspective and foreshort- Keep Minard'e Liniment In the Houee. in the house." Like Mrs. Patterson I "^^^ '''• ^ ''^^'•^' """'^^ P'""' ^"'^ '^'^j thousands of other mothers are quick I "o*^ thrive in the milk to any extent ; to praise Baby's Own Tablets for I if the milk is kept coid--as cold as; bringing health and comfort to their deep well water. It should be chilled j little ones. The Tablets are a mild j immediately after milking, and should j but thorough laxative wjich regulate ' only be delivered to vou in bottles thatj the stomach and bowels, thus banish- ; j,ave been thoroughly washed andi tite and I gained in weight and soon I -"h Bim^re fevers and makine teeth- ^ ^^t^'V'J^i .^^3*" '* ivaches you. do j .i,i„ T, . â„¢. f.s ,i„ â„¢,r .„„,.i,. Simple levers, ana maK.ng ceeia- ^^^ j^^ ,j. gt^nd m a warm place, but able not only to do my work , i^g ^asy. They are guaranteed to con-, keep it chilled. Some people used to i my former strength and energy. The' pills seemed to give me a keen appe-hng constipation and Tndigestion. colds' about the house but to help with many t^in ^q opiates and are perfecUy safe 'say that thunder would roup the milk. ..u .u. , For this reason tor the youngest child ^ ~ I . _ They are sold , Don't blame the thunder â€" it has no-' particularly ; ^y medicine dealers or by mail at 25 i thing to do wit'n it â€" it is -the warm I those on the prairie or the farm, to ! (.g^ts a box from The Dr. Williams' weather that accompanie.'; it and the • fact that the milk is not kept cold. Wliat can we do to prevent disease l)eing transmitted through milk? Let us find out all we can p.bout how the milk we drink is produced. Pay a I Mrs. Clemens wa^ always a faithful 'visit to your dairy and satisfy your- I critic of her distinguished husband's self that the cows, the utensils, and ; writing, and ilark Twain in his auto- ; dairymen are scrupulously cle.-jn. I biography and elsewhere gives grate- ^ .^o," '-•?;"' "^ ""'i' Pasteurized or ' ful testimony to the value of her 8«g- Pt^'^^'l, "^'"^ ,«« '"'f'!" ''th. ^JL".? , , . ,.,,,. best safeguard aeam.sc the spread of gestions In Improvmg hia literary , ^j^^^^ ^,f,.„^gh milk. ! taste. But he could not help having j^ ;, j^j^g ^^fy gf parent.? to save the a little fun with her. j ijy^g „£ many children this summer The children, he says, always helped' by grivinjr them good, pure, safe milk. I their mother to edit my books in manu- 'â- ; ' script. She would sit on the porch at I the farm arid read aloud, with her pen- • ^ cil in her hand, and the children would It keep an alert and suspicious eye upon her right along, for the belief was well I grounded in them that whenever she Well, Great Hike. did you girle enjoy yotix- - we had walked two milee." • A telling moment i? when two wo- came across a particularly satisfactory I pasage &he would strike it out. Their; suspicions were well founded. The â- passages that were so satisfactory to them always had an element of ! strength In them, which sorely needed j modification or expurgation and was : always sure to get it at their mother's | hand. ' For my own entertainment and to ; enjoy the protests of the cbildTen ij often abused my editor's innocent con- 1 fldence. I often Interlarded remarks of a studied and felicitously atrocious ' character purposely to achieve the I children's delight and see the pencil \ do Its fatal work. I often Joined my ! mipplications to the children's for , ^ mercy and strung the argument out ! i and pretended to be in earnest. It was \ .^ I three against one and most unfair. ! But it was very delightful, and I could i not resist the temptation. Now and I then we gained the victory, and there DEAF 9 =^ A remarkable device has been per- fected by the Dictograph Products Corporation by the use of which the deaf can hear as well as ever. Inasmuch as 600,000 users have testified as to the wonderful re&ults obtained from the ".VCOUSTICON" we feel perfectly safe In urging every deaf person without a penny of expense, and entirely at our risk, to accept the "AGOUSTICON II For 10 Days' Free Trial No Deposit. No Expense. J. Anderson & Company SB7 St. Catherine St. West Montreal Quebec ^J CUIICURA HEALS ECZEti FACE In Rash, Spread to Sc?lp. Itched and Burneii: Face Very Sore. " Ecieraa broiit ci'.t in n rash on my face anl Ister Kcroad to my scalp. Tiie rash scaled over an:! sore erm'ticr.s fonr.cd. it caused a great deai of itc>!ing and bnrnir.g and mv fsce tta3 vtr}' Bore. The trouble laatej tlirss or four weeks. " I was t:cc-.eJ without any ben- efit. I bifsaji .isiig Cuticura Seep and Ointment a::'! cnuM seeagresl change alter the firnt n!j;hl. I con- tinued the tieatniect snd In fcur weeks I was completely healed." .(Signed) M)BS Marr-arst Dajjyow, Ferrisbar^, 'Vermcnt. Dailv use of Cuticura Soap, with touches of Cuticur-j Oii.tment now and then, keeps the skin fresh, smooth and clear. Cuticura Tal- cum is also ideal for the skin. S«mpl» Sach Frw hr Mihil. Ad;lr<>«s CanedUn Depot: -Btfojioaa^ I.td., MjictnaL" Prica, Sot.i> ate, oin tment 56 and £oc. Talcum 3e. BiV^ Cuticura ShaTins Stick 25c. A WOMAN'S SUFFERING Relieved by Lydia E._Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound First Aid sprains. I was much rejoicing. Then I privately 1 struck the passage out myself. It had j served its purpose. It had fumKshed j tlMfee of us with goo<l entertainment, j I end In being removed from the book by me It was only suffering the fate j I originally Intended for it. In case of sprains, bruises and inflammation apply Mlnard's at once. It prevents contpUcationB. soothed and heals Where Dogwood Got Hs Name The dogwoo<l tree derlvaa Its name from a long connection with butchers, and iKft from any canine aaeoclatlone. Prof. T. C. Frye. of the botany depart- ment of the Unlverelty of Washing- ton, say*. "Years ago, when meat was roasted oven an open (Ire. sticks of hard wood to wlthMand the heat were put in the meat to keep It from tailing apart when done," said Prof. PVjrw. "The sticks were of dagger wood. This waa later shortened to dogwood* I i For Every III â€" Minard'e Llntmenb r Verdun, Montreal, Quebec. â€" " I am one of thousands who have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I have great faiui in it. I can safely say it has relieved my troubles and I shall never be without a bottle of it in my house. Since my last baby was born I suffered from pains and backache and would feel so tired I could no>'. do anything in my home. Sines I have- been' taking the Vegetable Compoun'.i and Lydia EI Pinkha.Ti's Blood Medicin'j 1 feel so different. I recommend it lu alt my friends and hope it will cure other women whu are suffering froni the trou- bles 1 had."- Mrs. Tnos. H. Gardner,! 821 Evelyn Street, Verdun, Montreal,! Quebec. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound is a dependable medicine for the' new mother. It is prepared from roots and herbs, contains no harmful drug* and can be taken by the nursing; mother. Its worth in restoring the riother to normal health and strength is ';oId again and again in just [such letters aa Mrs. .^ Qardner writes. Care-worn. n«.-ve exhausted women | \ recent canvass of women users of iwe^l Bltro-Phosphat*, a pure organic the Vegetable Compound shows that phorphato dlapeneed by druggipts that 98 out of every IW women taking Uie New York and ParU ^yeloian* pre- medidne are benefited by Jt. Thay write and tel! <lt so. Such evidence en- titles US to cal'. :t a dependable medicine for women. It ia for sal(> by dru«;(ista ^yarywbere. i j Look Younger aorlt>« to looreaM w«l<lit and etrength and to revlTe rvttltitai looks and fee'- ^p^. Frto* U per pkr*. Arrow Cbamtaal do« M ttotU St. Bast, Toraito, Oat. I8SUB No. 24â€" 'I V