‘KT ’ - . Incident-w flushes- harshly- Illtlenlllallg Asoaelaaeldllon- lfilllllllliliflolllaflllfllilfilcl ' - Jilpolhssarillsdvsaeslmsilnd ramar. novarmu so. nu. ..--\».» ~ . fiiiillllflilif _ Isllrql Host ~00! DA lsnllalnn, D10 lll'l)lrntO - a. w Ii-J I Ilrlofl. I'll. dist all ll I Oil-Ila. ‘ UIIIIIIOIUIICOI, -, s1. Alvmzswar oar It was doubtlefi a Sassenaoh who remarked that wherever tws. Scots fotegather on St. Andrew's Day they form s. mutual admiration society. ‘lb this jibe the Caledonian, if he deigned making any reply, might retort: Why not? Vain-boasting is one thing; a conscientious stock- taking of one's virtues and achieve- ments is another. Borne people-to quote an old English wrlter-"sail to the port of their own praise by a, side wind; as when they dlspraise themselves, strillliini; themselves naked of what is their due, that the modesty of the beholders may clothe them with it again." That is not a Scottish failing. And the most en~ vious outsider must admit that the post-prandial loquence that is as much s part of every St. Andrew's Day banquet as the steaming haggis, is amply justified. The pages of his- tory, of poetry and folk-lore, of myth and legend, are eloquent in praise of Scottish characteristics. Nor is it possible to pick up a volume of the latest scientific discovery, of travel, of politics and economics, of law, of literature, of theology, or achievement in any of the professions and businesses of modem life, with- out encounterlng these same char- acteristics exemplified in the car- eer of some sturdy Scot. Why then expect to find in his compat- riots an inferiority complex? Truly, it speaks much for their native modesty that they should lay aside but one day of the year for the con- templation and commemoration of such matters. And it has been argued with some Justice that they do so out of humanitarian motives pure andsimple; lest the world, to its own loss, should forget! Nowhere is "the Day" more con- geniaily celebrated than at the Caledonian Club functions in Char-, lottetown. This evening's banquctj will mark the one hundred and: tenth annual celebration by the Club of Bt. Andrew's anniversary. Rev. Hugh Miller, of Trinity United Church, will speak to the toast “The Day and a’ wha honour it," and Rev. B. B. MacKenzie, of St. Dunstarra‘ University, to ‘The Land o‘ the Heather." These addresses, it i". safe to predict, will lose nothing by com- parison with any of the speeches on former occasions. The Address m the Haggis will be delivered by Clansmsn D. Edgar Shaw, K.C. The Lieutenant Governor, the Premier, ' the Mayor and other distinguished guests will be present. lt will be an occasion for mirth and iollity, but also for something much more im- pol-tent, the sentiment inspiring the proceedings being one which lies deep at the roots oi 0141' British ideals of nationhood and citizen- 011i). ‘A l v ,.. w... TONGUE 0F SCANDAL Addressing a party meeting in I-faldimand County, Ontario, a few days ago, Hon. J. c. Elliott, who was Minister of Public Works in the lite King Government, declared that if the Liberals were returned at the ‘nexl election they would turn the searchllght on the great corporations, "whic ," he added, "are not being investigated at the present time, because they are friends of the Bennett Government." Cant of this kind, says the Syd- ney Post-Record (independent) does not tend to keep the discus-- siml of public affairs up to digni- fied, intelligent standards. It is ‘ unworthy oi a man who has held theresponsible post of a Minister of the Crown in a Federal Cabinet. ~It is untrue in substance and cuts both ways in application. The Government to which Mr. ‘ Illlott belonged was in office for a 1 years, up to the time of its defeat in 1900. In that whole pwiod it never made a gesture to "turn the siarchligbt on the great corpora- , tions." The disclosures of the Beauharnois scandals were made in Parliament after the King Govern- '" aunt's defeat. Big business is not the chief but- ‘ tress of my party. 'I'he"'sr¢at wr- restrain either Conservative or LibaralGovernmentsf-rmn some, ,tli_oaethinutberourhtiodoiii slielnterestofthepisinpeooleof Canada. poratimu" are generally run for profit, not for politics. Borne of them are known to be friendly to the Conservatives. and others to the .. fiber-air. But these affiliations are ’ incidental, and. despite whet ll!‘- ralidtt, an es-Minister. am. do wt idle sowip. and toconiine them- salves to authentic issues when tlwy-address the 9000b. Otherwise their imputatiolls may recoil on their own beads. A SIGNAL HONOR A unique event in medical history on this continent will take place on June 10-14 next year, when a joint meetilll of use A " Medical Association and the Canadian Medi- cal Association will be held at At- lantic City, New Jersey. One of the important committees at this con- vention will be the Public Health and Industrial Medicine Committee. The Premier of this Province, Hon. W. J. P. MacMillan, MD, has been asked to take the chairmanship of this committee. This signal honour is one which will give satisfaction and pleasure to all our citizens. It is _a tribute, not only to the high repute which Pre- mier MacMillan enjoys in his pro- fession, but to the Province as well, in which he holds the most res- , “ executive position, and of which he ls also Minister of Health and Education. TARTAN AND KILT It was the Endon Times which pointed out recently that the Scot istheonly citisenin theKingrs and kilt, while the national costumes worn them, says the Times, “so gen- erally that they can be on the music hall stage a capital joke, on the battlefield of glory, in the ballroom an envied distinction, on the moor a great convenience, and in the castle a symbol of “ nality favored by the highest in the land. The survival and success oi’ this costume may tempt the intellectually curious into profound speculations in the om- parative psychology of peoples. They may do well not to leave altogether out of count the truth that the Scottish national‘ costume is (to say nothing of its romantic associations and its convenience for certain pur- poses) a mighty becoming dress, and that the Scots have the sense to know it." EDITQRIAL NOTES This is St. Andrew's Day. It was the complete wedding ceremonial, without omission or amendment. H. B. H. the Duke of Gloucester. on his way home from the Victoria Centena- y will make offlctsl visits to the leadingBritish West Indian Islands and Bermuda, returning to mislead on March 30. ' The league of Nations has made another appeal to Washington to loin in the plan to halt the Choco War. Previous appeals were turned down on the ground that U.S.A. did not wish in get embroiled in the disputes of South American repub- lics. (m the present occasion the state department announces it will study the rnatteregain. A Montreal Alderman has been ousted by the Supreme Court and fined I400 for sitting and voting after having been disqualified for bleach of the self-denial ordinance. He was charged with having been financially interested in securing a contract of lease for a building at 3240 Allardstreet which he erect- ed, sold to his daughter for 00,600. and leased to the city of Montreal as a sub-station of the Montreal Police Department for 8136 a month for five years. and 0150 a month for the next five years. cheques for these monies being paid by the city to his daughter and then being turned over to him. Ifweweretoyudgelryaplebfs- cite on questionsspeeifically put, British public opinion is over- whelmingly internationsl-imlrlded and pacifistic, the league of Na- tions Union's popular referendum resulted as follows: (m the nnt question, "Should Great Britain re- main in the League of Nations?" the Me was: W. "M: No. 1,200. on tbs seotlld question:,“Are you in favor of a general reduction of armaments by mini-national agree- ments?" the vote was: Yea, 61.560; 11o, 2,18.‘ Oaths tbhd qlestion, “Are you in favor of the general v home dominions who has a national Hitler wish that this were dress. He has clung to his tartan Today. the representative of the fisidtinsrr." The Ileotrle Boat , gu- a-ll of its affiliation with the vast Vickers enterprises, and for all of its "---- “ with that master-in- i-risuer. Sir Batu Zaharoff, seems to have spent much of its time and a great deal more of its hardlcash ' in buying non-existen influence. It paid large sums to supposed sharp- era on the strength o1 the assurance that they could land a Turkish contract that failed to matgrfgljgg, It Ill “Pllyed for s sucker" by WWW-sis. spies. and sundry other sentry; Of course, the munitions industry has "rocked" many na- tions (6nd their i’ xpayerg) Bu}; 1g is interesting, even though not important. to note that it, in fits tlrrn, has also been "rocked" quite thoroughly-Hamilton Herald. The mere number of‘ yearn lived dom not matter. It's what you do with the years that counts. Had Methuselah had a taste for liter- ature, and written the pmpmm. ate number of books that Wells has, for the number of years lived, he would hiive written sufficient books i0 hi" Dsved a 800d sized city. Michael Fairless wrote only three books, and her most famous one, "The Rcadmender," was n01; pub- lished until after her death at the 88o of 32. Yet that little book al- ready has been sold to over half l. million people and is mole beloved with W11 W81‘. The rich years are the ones in which we help other people to be happier and help to make the world a. better 011g k1 which to live. The greatest things that any of us can leave behind us is-a rich influence! Until the French w-ar budget gets through the Chamber. nervous peo- Ple will be well advised ilot to pay too much attention to sensational reports broadcast from that partic- ular Bounding board. The other day, we were told that Gennany was beticr prepared to invade prance today than she was in 1914. Doesn't true? Finance Committee told the Cham- ber solemnly that "R/ussia has of other British races have become wedged that her mud we“ equip mere outworn symbols. And he has pad mmy W111 nW-cyfwnh m m case France is attacked." This was a little too rich for French ofIl- cialdom, though it dearly wants to see the budget passed; and it promptly dubbed the downright boost of the Finance Committee's spokesman as "exaggerated" and intimated that it would take ten years to bring the Franco-Russian entente to such a. pitch. In his speech at the o Irlng of the Winter Help Campaigli, Herr Hitler- came to closer grips than usual with realities. In view of the economic situation developing in Germany he had little choice in the matter, but the language he found it necessary to use must arouse even in the most subservient Ger- man breasts some question as to whether the Nazi regime has confer- red on the country nothing but undiluted blessings. The aim of the Government, of course, is to attrib- ute Germany's hardships to iobeLgn malignlty. in particular in what is called "the devilish lmemetlonnl boycott clique." But there was no boycott of Germany till Hltlerism appeared and Jew-baiting began, and the mehrer has no one but himself and his Nazi colleagues to thank if sympathies which might in other circumstances have taken alienated today-The Landon. Conference recently in and cut ing off circulation... sassinatio nof King Alexander tion. The others held are and police believe directly aided Blago Georgeff, the assassin. graves ents of the Empire; the nature of the threat to action. The problem is r the more difficult by the fact ths western fsmueristogivehisattm various poltical moyements of sac tions! c‘ “ sarathergnldsililll-eapressingre flit that "a farming maamtoba i . F%oteslEyT7heVVh3r practical form remain oompletelyflzo retaliate-The Australasian. Spectator There is no ds-oge of the human gray matter supply not being equal to the demand. "Nature endowed man with enough brain to develop mentally for a million years." said Dr. Temple Fay, Professor of Neuro- Surgery at Temple University, Phil- adelphia, to an audience of fellow- physlcians at a Five State Clinical Oklahomh City. He added that the “splitting headaches" some persons aresub- ject to is caused by the collection of fluid on the brain pressing down More than seventy persons are held in jails in different lparts of Europe in connection with the as- of Yugoslavia. These include three of the assassins alleged confederates, who were apprehended in France and are now imprisoned in Mar- seilles, and two alleged ringleadera of a Croatian terrorist organiza- mainly Central European political refugees terrorist suspects. The police are still searching for Maria Wond- raoek and several others who the‘ the ravages of th The protection o. Australian and New Zealond shipping against the unfair competition of foreign sub- sidies is a matter of first import- ance to the governments of both big-man countries. It. is, indeed, a question causing anxiety to the collective and the Iiiippiilo of the Empire points rather to collective than individual meets with the approval ‘,6: 1o» Western Producer of Saskatoon, a paper devoted to the interest afilie grain grower and of the agricultural community generally. The decision is described as an important one. which it is if it means that the, tifli to the land and not t0 tbd which heretofore be his been induced to support. Inn the western Producer, while lllfilliiil ‘of the decisim to abs-Mm tbapolitlnalfieldasswiseolimdoas 00011110011 whose individual problems are ai- most identical cannot ma. fairly unanimous ccploloaions on the adopted fodeai with '1... r lint! _ .¢;_ We ‘Ulnar nauomsmuo n; pro-g y“ so». ear-rams wnuinssa. nrsssss T '1“ Physicians who graduated WwWWi-hiflylosrs ago itisrnost 3119191116 to sea the wsy research “nd-ilmim-W Physicians are now Bill! 00 Wm formerly “lngm-gblg" disease and w maintain life m: mull-Wars in those who formerly died in a few months or within two W 1111M years at moat. Thus Perm‘;- 10118 anaemia has been conquered b E;€fih£t&fi$%:%""* . . . . an and Best. '~ , m“ It would seem that despite the in. number of deaths from heart disease, research and practising phy- sicians are not lmly getting m know more about the causes of heart dis- ease but also its prevention and cure. ‘Emily 1'68?! I80 interest in heart disease was as‘ to the particular valve affected whereas to-day, while the aifectionpf some valves is more serious than others. interest lies X11089? in estimating the ability of the heart to do work. How much work can the patient! hem do safely is the question the physician asks himself. By careful examination, by testing the rate at which the heart beats after‘ a cer- tain am of exercise, by record- ing the length of time it takes the beat of the heart to get back to its normal rate after this certain amount of exercfse, by" testing the lepgth of time the breath can be held when the air has been breath- ed out of the l and also how long it can be he after a deep breath, by the use of the electro- cardiograph and other tests. the physician can now advise the pat- ient just how much work he can do safely. Thus one individual may be ad- vised to go about his regular work but to avoid excitement and over- eating, another may be advised to rest 4 hours daily besides 8 hours at night, another may be advised m re- main in bed for one two or three months, another may be allowed to be about his regular work but must take digitalis daily. When the cause is known-rheu- matism, high blood pressure, hard- ening of the arteries-these condi- tions are treated. It would seem then that just as patients with those formerly incur- able allments-pernicicus anaemia and diabetes-are now enabled to live the normal span of life, patients with heart disease may look forward to at least s. longer life than was for- merly thougbt possible. the principle of subsidlsing ship- ‘ping is un-econornlc. Shipping has declined because trade has declin- ed; and trade is not created by subsidies which come out of the pocket of the taxpaver- An equit- able solution would be a division of available trade on the basis of existing ionnages; but foreign countries would not consent to a "plan giving any advantage to Great Britain. Thus the Empire is forced l Poetic Justice (Sydney Poet Record) Hon. Mitchell F. Hepburn. nation of the But it leaves an an premier is night changes. A few weeks ago along the l Roosevelt. Bennett print of new paper mom?! 0° _ e dqrreeem. l Whatever other contributions may be made to the Province of 0n- tar-lo by its newly arrived Pannier, stable public poiicyisnotoneofthebles- ings it has received from its recent change of Government. Even before his Cabinet was formed, Mr. Hep- burnvehenlentl demandedtheresik- Ideuienant- Governorontbe glmrixitbathewss a useless funct wry and his offici- shoirld be abollahed- That than 5 months also. and nothing has been heard of it since. Not that sw- onewLlhestohear-anvrnoreofit. kind of orl that Ontario's new subject to radical over- Mr. Heybirrn be- game the public sponsor of a acimme for the coding of Ontario indimtt! inee followed by President and declared Premier $300,M0.000 abate the the opening ‘o! i2 E125. 2E __ ‘a fisii. aria? Eel prinritive panplpe and the bag- ppe. . . . " There are four kinds of bag- pipes, the Highland, a war bagpipe, the Lowland, the Northumbrian. and the n-uu The last three, I regrethseem to be-passing away.‘ There has been much controversy as to the origin of the Highland bagpipe Some ascribe its introduc- tion to thelwmans, others to the Norse, while others make out a strong case for its Irish introduc- tion. It seems to be just as strong s question as the origin of Scottish songs and melodies. The earliest mention of the bagpipes as being. Scottish. is made by Quintillian. As he never visited “ ‘, presum- ably he would see it in one of the victory processions in Home. . King James I is reputed to have been a bagplpe player. In Peebles to the Play, there is this reference: Gif I sail dance have done, lat see Blaw W the bagplpe than. and in Christ's Kirk on the Green- The ‘liridegroom boilght a pint of a e And bade the piper drink it. 1 A i... $13.50 szfiifiri ... sis. n. $16.00 at. $11.50 m $17. The piper has s. good p. for receiving his unreshlnent from the chairman.‘ There was a King's Piper. as in the Exchequer Rolls of King David H, authority was given for a payment to him in i862. George Buchanan tells us that the bagpipe was the great war pipe of thdliighlander. In 1466. Edinburgh had a pipe band of three. Any citizen who declined to billet them was fined ninepence. In 1510. the, 5t. Andrew's Kirk Session adn ' ” ’ D1991’! to keep the Sabbath day holy, to attend sermon on Wednesday, andi tdabatain from playing on the streets after supper or during the night. BIEPipes were in use in church‘ service as late as 1586. in Edinburgh It is recorded that Macklin, a nephew of the great Irish actor, was dismissed from hlscuraey for having played out his congregation with a baspipe selection, but we findthat James VI attended a church service at Dalkelth. preceded b two pipers, presumabl a royal tive. In the Register House in Edin- burgh is the warrant, dated April 24, 1683, authorising the raising of 1,300 men, predecessors of the Royal Boots. The bagpipe came into the army at the date of the origin of our standing army, 35th April, 1633. It is known that Rep- burn's Regiment of Scots had the bagpipes, but it is less known in January, i665, at Landau, in Ger- many. “As the relieving force alp- proaohed.~ deafening shouts were raised. the Scottish march was played, and the sole surviving Diner, lam, of the thirty-six who had gone to Gustavus with Mac- kay's Highlanders, skilled a wel- come on the great war-piper of the North." In 1600, the standard pipe was the two-drone pipe. During the eighteenth century the third drone was added. Burgh pipers about spring time and harvest time were in the habit of making s toar of their districts, their music plying for their board. ‘They also received a livery and a small salary as well as a piece of land, called the "Piper's Croft." In 1600 the magistrates of Aberdeen dj * ‘ the piper of going through the town at night or morning, in time. coming with his plpes-"it being an uncivil form to be used within sic’ a fam- ous burgh, and being often found fault with, as well by‘ of the continued to play his bagpipes "with his face to the foe." A stone is still pointed out as the Piper's stone; something like the Dar-gal t has i! léigregfi .5 incident. The last burgh piper was that of the Village of Iiaglesham Renfrewshlre. In 1772, the Earl ' of Ilgllntown agreed “a: keep a and evening." ti‘? it? piper, , ' clothed thproper bagpipes mlbe use oftba inhsbi-. Jiwmiuuhuwplsyuumh the “h” morning N! tions that Bonnie Prince Charlie was a tolerable performer on the bagpipes, but he certainly possess- ed several handaome sets In 1650, when the Argyle and Sutherland Highlanders landed at Dover, Major-General Brown or- dered the pipers to be disbanded. Needless to say, they were immed- iately reinstat “. In i006, when the Third Battalion of the Scots Guards was disbanded, the massed pipers played “Lord Levews Ls- men." While the 01st Regllnent was serving in South Africa, D Company was mounted, so on New Year's Day, 1685, a mounted piper met the commanding officer and played him to mess. The 11th In- dian Cavalry, “Bengal Lancers." have a mounted band of eight pipes and one drummer. There is, however, no tartan decoration on their pipes. In closing. I would add, that as a popular instrument, the English bagpipe passed away during the reign of George II. The Highland bagplpe has an honorable and very ancient history. and it is greatly to be desired that an historian will come forward with an authentic history of the instrument. Pipes of the misty moorland, Voice of the glens and hills, The droning of the torrents, The treble of the rills. ' How Scotland Wakened To Need f I "11... h............»- Week s...l.1sp.;¢i.l. in 13.50, $15.00, 10.00, A ' $17.50 we can give you a very special Brown and Navy ‘Melton Overcoats. Splendldly tailored and latest model. An Overcoat you’ll be proud wear. we can also give you your choice of about 20 Overcoats. Just one or two of a kind and selected from regular from $16.50 to $22.00. Week-end special at $13.50. we ofler you a very heavy Blue MeItoIrOvercoat. Regu- lar worth $18.00. A coat that has been a great seller with us. Week end special sale price $15.00 we can show you a very smart line of Silvertone Over- eoats in Navy, Brown and Grey. These Overcoats am very special value at $18.50. Week end special at .. . . .. . .. . . . . .. .. Men's Navy, Brown and Dark Gray Elysian Overcoais. Half Belt, A very smartly. designed overcoat worth at least $22.00. Week end special price $17.50 Men's Suits in line Worsted Stripes. We have selected 35 Suits from regular stock, one. or two only of a kind regularly worth $20 to $25. If your size and pattern is in the lot the price is SPECIAL WEEK END SALE 0F WORK SHIRTS-Silo SOLE AGENT FOR DACKS SHOES Henderson & Cudmore -.....-..-.--....~- MEN’S WEAR Does hereby earnstly Recommend it to such of the Presbyteries of the Church as have not received. any oi’ the Books sent for that end f from England to contribute for a' Library at each Presbyterie sea-t. It does not appear that this Act of Assembly of i100 had any suc- cess. Taking the region that we all know best, the North-lust of Scot- land, we find no evidence of the very modest deal 0d.’ i700 being retrieved, even in the end of the eghteenth century. Dr. William Alexander, of “Johnny Gibb," who knew the country districts so well, gave most interesting glimpses in his “Notes and Sketches of Northern Rural Life," in the eighteenth century of the occupations and recreations of rural folk, but says-never a word, so_far as I, remember. as tothe use of books in general or libraries. In- deed, he tells that up to the end of that century the only reading books in the parish schools were the Bible and the Shorter Catechism, and the inrpiicatlorl- in that these consti- tuted the only reading available. But we have more definite evi- dence from another and a still bet- ter source. One of the notable. but practi- call unknown publication of a cen ury 88o (1630) is an cant little book published by George Kins. St. Nicholas Street, Aberdeen .-who supplied so much matter, through colporteurs, and otherwise, for the country districts. Public Library, in the Aberdeen Journal) of a remark by Sir James Jeans at the Jubilee Luncheon Aberdeen Public Library, aom ters appeared in the Journal" relative to Parish Libr ries in the ‘ , districts Scotland prior to the of Public Libraries under Libraries (Scotland) Act of 1653. knowledge of institutions in _, try districts. It was clear, some confusion existed ly constitutes a "Pilblic Library. First of all. let it the term "Public Library" in a. loose way in former days place of business at a library. T110 . d, the owners of .5 !i 1E gift? H; ,.. i .1 For More Books Not very long ago, as the result "Press and n- last century. In his letters embodied in this outlined a. the Public scheme for an Aberdeenahire As- sociation for social and religious of It was clear from the correspon- dence that individual writers had individual parlsha libraries, but no clear idea of such ‘ in the coun- also, that minds of writers as to what precise- ‘ cover any sort of library that pro- vided books for the public on any conditions. Booksellers in Aberdeen, ionally publish an interest for example, often advertised their Wyn _eld, call their shop the "Aberdeen Oir- Library lnd Aleksnder ii it. This mean-locking booklet was a memoir oi’ William Brown, an itin- \ Richard Penman. drick Street (ihapel. President oi’ the British Association, looking as it is, this is the best con- of the temporary record we possess e let- rural conditions in the north of vantages of soc Scotland in the beginning of the find such a pub publlcat‘ Brown uplift m.’ um point was-"Get t. be noted that pounds and institute such a library, was used and lend out the books at rprlce tary to that would provide a fair return? Public Library of IAnd he saw the advantages of a iammbertson ‘little publicity, for he says: “Occas iilg piee ‘of intelligence in the Jo the establishment of libraries “I know." he wrote in due of 14. religious libraries in lar plans. All tins, took place in a where previously “the his 0460005! Dlfilh -, o v.3 llliliil WQNFT reading . Cabrach, erant preacher in the district from library and a (G. M. Fraser, Librarian, Aberdeen i600, latterly settled as minister at Inverurie. rt was written by Rev. of the Pred- Aberdeen. Brown's devoted friend. But mean- 1810. By ofthe, ous country 1°? . Pi man to become a bookseller." An- publi other main point wae-"Erldeavour to get Libraries, consisting chiefly meat of ‘M of history. travels. voyBses. estab- in the lished for the benefit of the young.” Might not a few individuals, he Glasgow. (says, subscribe each two or three fine time, the country for adults, and of the same the number of juvenile lll are about’? be established on limi- region 1min country ran with balls/dc." Through were Iii up ei I-mpiiuun. Olunr. 8pm- ray. Rintore, Newmachsr, Iluntly and Prasebls-gb. Ghats iii! 1 $16.00 $17.50 ‘J FROM “IONICA" The aspen grows on the maiden‘l bank, Down sweeps the breeze on lbs M11611. Quick rose the gust, and suddenly- sank Li-ke wrath on my sweetheart/s brow, The tree is caught. the boat dreads nought, Sheltered and safe below; Thebsnk ishigh,and the wind runs by, Giving us leave to row. The bank was dipping lower and lower, Showing the glowing West. - The oar wen slower, for eitha rower The river was heaving her breast. That sunset seemed to my diiiiiiii" less steeper The lifting and breaking of dayi That flush on the wave to me Wll dearer ‘Than shade on a windless way- —W. Cory. were in Bkeiifl. t established. . “My d village. and‘ Gannon Monouhitter. The Antiburgher oonrreceiimil at Craigdam. Whliehills. Bei- helvie. and Clola, had each a reading society. end- generaliy. there were teen juvenile libraries with Sabbath evening schools. v This was the situation in the Yfle that time the conscience o! Scotland was bems awaken“ l" tical_as well as mental ad~ lal reedins. and W lication as the “Elk inburgh Review" urgins the“? W‘: odical publications as a 111N118 1m and literary education‘ the dscientbu _ of e pu c. o! ma period w“ ll over til! it: Other writariun Wing CS8 B o! ‘ no greater falcili o leading. In the larger towns the movement led w the “will!” echanic; Irlllstltutcs. d cc a ' n§‘.‘°.a“§'.;§h°°§. the institute d. originated in 10M. with a ultimately ewe became, half a w!" nan of the present l. o n Nicol w mflmaua ally fine, which ago, tho nu Mechanics‘ Hill‘!!! "Aberdeen ln-nal" :Thus it will find its way ice’ linto the houses of every farmer and in the Narrow ‘proitietor throughout the country," Arlgusfl ‘Brown. one is happy to say, saw some of the faults of his labors in Institution Lib"?! library he ever know. =_ m“ u relief a around‘: 35:11:. 0""- Chills, Li: i"