HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1929-08-15, Page 39,5
••••
ractVisitors
; Lying Deep .at :the ,i16DAtipild of
Worn -Out Yolearios, Their
-Vivid Colors Add t� the
•.Charrn$ of Picturesue Isle
„ • ofie.Fa10X. Ditch ''7t
•d
Abletql.4a4.1^-41fe'Ve. are W1t4in. he
• Ileateh-East,Indies-maay-tegione,Alest.
• heelltY of which has been eeserib,ed
• • de glowing words by the pioneers of
western ,etvillzatlon in the govern,
Meat or, ng ontlgai @ciente: quite A
• Lumber of these, arbare,. however, 'Will
not ..acceesible to the tourist for a'
'• long time he, cerae, op account.,Orthe
alieeet '.• iesurneOuntable•, • difficulties
• ••, they present:3o. enodern teurisM.
'..itiStill -there , Are niany placeelei the,
Archipelago, I Is stated in 01tibOril0;
*00; 9,00..rtgcsi. ; out of .the, •great:
. beaten oitelt, but 'ne'yotheipsE!eas117
aecessilile, where those who are will
ing tittoregn...eem,e a to ,pleasures
and. ,emiefterte 'of the , grafinocielv
betel :will .find .• More than "Otilabelletf-
• tion in" the charm of exploring 'little
• known beauty' spots and in theepper-.
tunitY• of 'contract with natives that
• have, mot: yet exchanged' the 'procluets-
. .of their age.old,' art. for those • of -the
• imodern. factory.; , • • ,
:One of these Places to Flores, an
?Wand .of the 'Lesser -Sunda group,.
ceat•Of Java. Flores "has , not ate:'•Yet
.• attracted many tourists. As ,A rule,
most vialtori.to the arehitelago' Paste
• it ley. Yet there is .on Flores ,a read
---a;.wonderful• rail; when the
• ' neering diffleultiee surretincling its
construction . Are taken.."into consi
:eratiore-that creases the isiandthreir
..tinet, and traverses it from one end
to, the other. At one •point thee -Inca L,
is high Op in the:::.mountainti, a fit-
•
" --thtLfai.theven-•44t-drope-4.640a7IsVel.;•:
for several mite's It is hewn out of
the send' 'rock, in".aeother :it piastre
..thrOughtreacherous, s*araps. It con-
linueethrorigh fertile uplandvall
. and it, skirts :the barren foothill& ef
.the active Voleane Goenoerig Reel. It
clings precariously to a ledge high
•. above the roaring breakers, of the
open sea and it .approttches.to within
a few miles the, serene cab:ones& 'of
the Gel! Woetoe crater 7
•
( Call C41,14/90,)
7 '
-SPEED
IFILK
Yeti:740m
00,0 Time
#94,1 . Shine
• 4n .
If9w oftOn.it 'happens 4.a ',Were
. 101:11re' laaticulerlY,emaeus
lee,' turns out badly becatiSe the •
, autewase't shinrngit 1t t
• happeri to you.. Remember nine
• :per cent of picture'. failures IS dile
• tourld.4.pippsare•-4 441 0:e.vaert
film if AMP:
- The 'safest; most economical and
„, ,
satisfactory way is to. keep yeur.
. carnets loaded with Gevaert. film.
Made to Work faster than ordinary
Gevaerts .4'ch the Swiftest
incrogmep.t. Clearsparirling nega.
tiies. *wasted time or material.
'Better pictures --..sun Or no sun.
• Don't fail to try Cryaert
Mtn. SaeGevaerrai your
dealer. fit rolls or film
Olds to fit all csniero.
• - The -
wyAERT COMPANY
AMEAlcA
• Toronto
n
An , alreedy entple 'bibliograp,hy Of Mountain ..1
•
„track And field atbeifee---aPaqa with! - -:,
• their r99.141 set dee.fi lif.;autAuity-nas 1 . Mr.03.104" '1.4 held to.- lee one et 'the
been enrichedby the Inceleetion „in' levliest,plaCee 10 the whole' World,
•, theSea•,tWO autleoritative works .whieh, The .city lies At the Pellet where the
'.while • 0040.a:sting strenglY he •their ,-StO7ra Nevada puts. for its !palling!,
Presentation., stiPplernent,ea4 ether's a .bendle of rays '.ixtending toward
values to the atueleat of a very, muter the Vega. like gigentie .roete thathav
, AS .well as 114ribete-Aah4ect. . BY 'their aoeee bp 'oat at the ..gremol.., The
Own.,eperience. tile authors areparp
:!, ol,a3.vei4yo
se.tiveotir !Li e•
v
-thjoiwithecityits
es•epprasaold.
ticulariy fitted' tor the. tarot of
trans-
latiog the .P1'400041 alneliCation a cal, Oets
',3,leg" 'rl horizontaletreee 7.4„d-laet!71i041'tneWdeWOthe Witteeeies (aiaedaLor47godl:b;..
theory of tbe subject. D:G.,, A,, bewe...: Weep the -hills, lollowieg, tbe valley :
'President of .Cabehrldge,• 'University) allii.,rive4'eds, ' and . terminating . in
Athletic Club. 1924-25.4. las twice been ' thin llnes d
exotienerdinpgartfarof .. 1.ieto ' etilrtye
We „(34,ymple ..„,:charopion-Toyer . 3390• SWra. T
meters- .iiis fellow -author • A 'E' Por-- lea& net be.en able to make itself. •
AU, OXterd, .president 192540, had a .eomfortable.. •These ancient ipeartere'
still bear Marlea or baying boen, built .
Meteori6. career OA a aprinted: of the
. • • .•14..-.aiasaa -1i4 Bittlei.4 PrIsident.ef The. la insecure, times, When., the .pneses.
0,174:.0.71P20.0,..18 . the Poipeaser.of 2.P.ta.ag • :Or . Protect10.1 to .."4re steep;
. 'gee.. gold one "silver,. and 'oee.brenee .44untaie, •riegee.,-• There they': e.t.a
'Olympic., 00,04 , . . . ...,; • . . ... ' .staijd, a denSelY iq:Cked" mast..:1Pge ft.
•,„ 'van .Geyzel, the renowned Chiebriege .:
'Lowe. „Aed. perritt,,Jalifieil .;bY 'C',•:•:7'.''1..:0:3,Fli.ii,i'voef ...ttlirrylilt,ore6iIirniiiin;44 ,:e0,Atee„.•
• .„Iiigh-jnorper; and M.:..C..NOkes; 04...01,. fill • ceettitiee.;'„ stip. siying, .eut., the
ford, Brita,in'a.'.to'eat: o'strong .meol for •-, ene'lni..in a sortet petrified panic.
. .tnanY yeais;.-have leatried UP, te...00-.' •Steep staircase Streets leadAlirengh
dami the:. most , coin9rehetisive survey the eity, iotti .traces et Moolqab times
. of feet rating -end its.concomitants. Meeting your .eyes •everytihere.; Here
:Once' Sir ,Montague Shearman wrate A .great vaulted astern covered • with
his classic on the . 3;tb.sect.. in 1587. !lazed .tiling;,. there the ruins of . a
They: start' as, near theeeiamenee,.. little mosque or an arched .gate built
meet °Littman .activities as reeea,reh .to. break the farce of a. hostile...oil-
ean Carry Ahem ; they . .revive the ' 4- &aught; In the city wails are fra;ga.
Rest extant , recOrds; appertaining to
. . . .
the. Talitearr Games founded in .• Ire-
land about, nee by LOguid ef the
Bireog •-Arin;' they • Pies through the'
hittori.cif. the Olympic •Oatnee of And-.
'ont,Oreece to.their,latter-day counter-
part, . tenehing, .As they. go, Open the
deielopment. ef. the sport ie.. Britain,
in,the 'United States, the-Brititill' Dco.
minions, 'Europe, Asia, and. 'South
Ameriea. The reider;-itiLled• gently,
to . scholarly exposition oc how -it
Should. all' .be done,, Perhaps ..one. A white' rallieg abd.a. file of , slender
-shoulictiather-terher-the-beat--,pboi,--ey,presses-tOpPed...by-aa-OceMiloLlehis:
Ments of :stucco. •arches rasting upon :
• marble. cohnnns, and now • ane „again
• your eye 'wanders intitee still perfect
Moorish courtyare.,,
, .• •
• In some places the slop'e becomes
too sharp to',be negotiated', by .stair-
cases and the path is then obliged to •
assume A „Icing zigzag, rise. 1 • It has.
been impossible to beild, heuses ex-
•cept on the intide of the zigzag, where
they must use 'the' mountain,' for a
back. The oUter edge of the path ;is
Ple do It, since the authors have silly: As youmountthe path into an end
en tucCeSsfillly, from start to,:finish, less labyrintii•of cabins' and weather
to instruct without dogmatism beaten walls, fig :trees: peer torah
B. Channel Tunnel . Butler'si. book ie ..not, .by coroParl.' Limn the ruins: . ' •
Mich leisurelY reading. He creep -ender the broad Moorish
. . , . .
London'. Daily Mail. ,(Ind.- Certs.),.- /Alleges without preabible bate a die.; Wall, cross :'a sun-dried, parched
„
•The (stet that the constrtiction Of :a cOurse. on ,track technighe and: Ogaii- mountain, tip . and, are again: on the
tunnel . should supPly a ,great • deep 'Zenon, illuminated by a prof -600a or southern slope et the range. . The
ot Work of a utefill kind for the uu-'I photligraphs, Malik. freni. the ."slow.. steep deelivitY ie covered with Wien"
empkeyed 'Might to ' reccimmend,' the .aletion" •camera.. :' Thew etrins- repay' fig-eaOtue, which grips the digs with,
This' string of three mountain lakes
'enterprise strongly CO" the. Sotialist.."cerefel analysis... The work .ls. writ- i its bread, flat roots Below 1.1s, Ole'
' -• - .. Government; and Mr . J B. Thernas.'.teb ,by one With 'personal eriperience pathe. meander down, :like 14bbotie
- - • .
that Ile 'at. the_bottem or old vol-.:
has pulid
by-„-apPrpved the-project.'-li of the trials of a games master At a along the monntain-slope, and :over
is- caiculated • that qulte ;g4,000' men big. British , public .echeel, . and its 'them irretulat. .rows of smoking
canoe far bele*, their Only approach, .
the :ancient crater rite, . forms one of
the Most bizarie spectacles on the .would be ,lirectlY engaged; and in ad- 'value would, seemgreatest to these ,chimneye eeebe• to stiek- at right
. " ,, .
dition- there 'would be a•large amount charged With the instruction 'of boy angles to the red_ irionotain ' soil: . we
, islaxid. :Not; because 9f : the bleak,
rugged surroundings, 9r ,the .steep of Mdireet employment' in ,the", manu- athletes.'. His chaPtet on the organ- ono see the, entrances' to the eaves
a
/Or . the , fact that there is only ' facture of the • steel and the boring ization of school, athletics excels any from hers . . . ' At certain points' the
.., ; .appitenees • required. The stimulus thi-; the ,,reViewer .ha$ i previously steep, :reeky, wail changes to terraces
• lakes, rising" precipitously hem their theme that ,Britisn.. labor ;Anti 'British . When the '• authors 'Come ,to their , sofa;
,_, .. there peaelr•trees,: and almotres bloe,
at other • pointe the vialis are
thin Wall :of, reek, between two 9f the; given tte. British industry -for we as read' an this subject . ... '. ' :
• waters, but " because of. the rifysteri- material would be 4zolusively •ii/e.ei- pet., specialties they . have much of pitted. by troft .rehots, sitea, of CaVes.
lied, for .the. Ytritish, section f the i 4 t t t
0 .: n eres. o ,say, asi or .exarap e, w en .
f ' :• ' •1 , e: .- that have eollopaeda.---Marttie."Ander.:
clip phenomenon that one elethe three.
lakes .reflects :a -,deep red color, 'the '
worltwould. therefore be of great' Lowe propounds his., theory ,of the
value in t.Peried of. trade Wrestled "ecinttaiit. futile in halt -mile rue-
-Stich as the present ,the oldobjee- ning. Broadly and .briefly. put, his
-
Gone to thei undertaking need .not be argument Is that • hewever sloivly,
treated too 3er10usly in ceur day'. • In Within reason. the first quarter -mile
a,.few years everybody will be wonder-
may have been run, the time for the
, • other alight green ane the third a
'rich blue.. . ..
.Equally varied At • the •scenery
• . through Which the road, passes -are
" the people that live Along Its sides.
. At • one end are the Manggarais,
, trible, dwelling in large community
• housesthat .hold as many as 200' lit-,
, habitants., Then there nre the Bad,
lawanese in the centre and the ter-
• .ritery 0! the Raja- of Sikka the
• eastern part. Of the' island., In the
west and in the tenth of the island
• are found• the famous' giant :lizards
• species that some times reaches 13
• feet 'in ieagth. :TO prevent' its ex-
• terminatiOn; this r lizard is " new
•specially protected by the . Govern-.
went. , ' •••.
- American Policy Stated,
13otb of the. countries had the teat
'to maintain their own railyvey guards
in their respective lines. tiering these
.negotiatiores," and fallowing them, the,
' bulletin recalls, the policy • of , the
United States was vigorously exprese-
• ed In notes from the Secretary , of
:State, upholding the principles of the
Oen dim and ,the territorial integrity,
• . of China and questioning Rusela's
.terpretation of the Chinese Eastern
• RailWay centred•.
,: 'As h consequence, of the World.
. War and the' Russian 'Revolution,"
• Abe bulletin continues, "the 'Chinese
; .Eastern railway was badly dieorgati-
Ized .and the operation ot the road
.was placed •under the supervision of
an ibter-allied• • technical board;
headed by John Stevens, at Arnett
• lean erailWay engbreer. •-
•
,The bulletin says. that, since the
•• Passing -of Chang Tsolitt. 'in lune,
•• 1925, te* Nationalist Govern-
ment in Nanking hat' •astenined .the
• dominant uolitical position. In` Mam-
oru:Ha" and that "in expelling the
'llussiari general manager of the rail -
Way and all Russian heads ef---va--
' ricers' departhlents the, ationalist,
Government is again asserting 'the
.infinenCe of China, hot only Over thee
Way itself, but ire.the Three Provinces
as well." •.
•
leg that there ever was any opposi-
tion tee it. .
•
seebrid Is practicallY, a constant. fac-
tor for each runner; and that, there-
fore, the time for the first quarter is'
Reparationa and Debts .. al -'important..' -In other words. if 57,
„ .
' seconds 18 a.ppoximately a runner's.
..
London.'Seeming Standard (Ind.
"constant" for the second ' quarter -
tons.): • The .question of reparations. mile, after a 55s.,.first quarter, no :'ad,'
cannot ,.bil ,dissociated? from that Of
inter -Allied indebtedness, and in this vantage .will accrue if the 'pace falls
below 55s. in the. Oetr1ng•"440:" On
latter. Great, bee gone as far
the :ether .hand, hp points: out, the
as lenient generosity . can go.. France
is pay hig lia digilt . . millions ions no. Pace An. the first Ian may. , he so .,hot
08
on botb capital' and „interest •accounts _ 'U) be econin
omically unsound ;
combined, agaInet an outstanding debt Ivu• "constant" or ate'll case tite, 57s, taken as: the
n exceptional athlete
of .5550,0000'00-WhIch settlement has
• would increase Perhaps to 598. -or 609,
not ref' (Oen been ratified. Italy. •
'wheat debt te' not ankh ;ess, is pay-, It is a tribute to these two •• booke
' ue OnlY four eint a• half Milliens that One can' read them both without
ing
.a year. • meanwhile ,wo are paying to a wearying tense of repetition. The
America a colossal estip annually in groun . , y : , f ' ' d deal
ireipeCt nt• molieye,which We borrow- of the, time, common' to both; but the
ed from her to lend to „France and a , . ' " 13 e wide:IY , dif-,
Italy. Mr. Chirchill's Iasi. statenient, ferent, and, whilst ..:. Comfortable arra;
' h t it b d aid chair is desirable for the 'eopiplete
on
,sincethe War Z247400,009 to our cred- enJoynient -ot "Athleties," 'Butler
• itors, while, reeeivitig onlY g34,000,000 hook calls for Close attention to,. dia-
..frbin our debtors.:- •grani-lild a nOtebook and pencil. •
The
ewer
'
SiELFzESTEEM • : CONSIDER THE, mkt) '
higher a man. is in grace tbe'
he will be in his been esteem.
.4.. U..X
. FOR 11,HE AIR
Ask 'Your ,parbeo—lie Wows
- Better' it' is; toward the right con-
duct Of life,' .to 'cOnsider whet will be
the end tit 8 ,thing than whit is the
beginning* of for what proMises
fair at „arid 'may prove' 111,, ane. What
seems at first a disadeantage may
bring the.'greatest 'and truest gain.
-Leighton.
•
"How's your wife coming along
With her driving?" "She Wel? A turn
for the worse last week,' sir." -Lite.
.• Not Free Trade•
.•
.•.
. . .
-for free trade within tire kinvire and
'a...tiriff.....Lalleklind. 41. Vtrifl certainly 'not
.(Inci.44-16rel Bea-Verlere014,-hampalgoL--
Saint 0 • John • 'T.eIegraph•Jatirrial. i
' ...appeal to Canadian., trianiffattlirere
• , Ad . Inamitaeturers' in other parte of
• .. the EMpire. They. are diligently en-
• ' tagoil; in buildra.g tiP fitattetiOa;' it#11. •
_ Mesa thight not ITtitirilte 'tirot)dfititeti4
. ..
. itch of :English factories. .',. 'Whatever .
• ....8.,c .• fent an enlarged inter-Thiperial trees!,
„iiike, ' it iritiet- he based• noon re...
• :.-togiliffOnv iir-tire--14-artbAt 45-1-i6. 1515flibb.
.44 ( le'.,111nio"fi'e is not tri- flOurish At .the
•ex;thnee.of allather, .. ..; •
•
"
. • •
reteatlY hifiOYi4stribed as'ir
Merely 'lead,:frolase in a burry:
Man with good reliable travelling equip-
• ment for Watkins District m a nearby
locality. Must be reliable and in a.posi-
tion to devote full time. Write at once
• giving age, (must be between .21 and
5(J) "
THE J. R. WATKIhhS CO. besk 6,
-. 6...John St. EL, Hammon', Ont. •
• • son Noto,:in ."Days 'in the Sui."..
. .
SA
THE .:Ci1thRN
• •
In Summer When Chililhodd Ail-
ments Are Most Dangeroiis.
Mothers whO keep •a box of Baby's
Own Tablets 'in' thehouse may feel
that the liveof their 'little 000s are
reasonably . safe during the hot wee-,
then. Stomach troubles,. cholera 'in-.
fanttim and diarrhoea car* off thee -
sands of, fittle Oleg every summer: in
most cases, because tile Mother dims
not .liave a.sate medicine .at hand :to
give prorePtly.Baby's -Own 'Tablets
relieve 4bes.e troublesi, or if given oc-
basionally to the well Chile they 'Will
prevent_their coming on. The Tab.
,iets: are 'guaranteed to be absolutely
harmless even to the 'new-born babe.
TheY'-are espeeially gored in -senliner
because they regulate the bowels, and
keep the steniaeh • sweet ane pure.
They are seld byr medicine dealers or,
'by mail at 25 'cents a box from The
Dr. Williams' Medidne Co., •Brock-
ville, On.
. • .
Me•O•iii.•••••••
. • .
tjaieulb.'comptylmitli to- pro miild pta•pat t43430h, -C....a44-1344-4,44. av 3,r$
carlof and 13)86 en r.lcit: huyer 81i o u Id • Pave opr Oricts, Write •IvrOw •
Ago pt!ts
. .Wapfa-Illphtiatp-eat, -10. tori.8[ No -14W§Vit 40. aarm Oath. 4.f .11 ig 1,1 'p v.ii'V's iS
..s.c.u.'buy. from era. ,Write today. ,. . . '.• • •
. . • .• • eitgrOtAytO .AND. ' Oterm.Lymprto • II .
.8 it (MOSE, Ittegi,, , • • „. ' 'OW triOttlatt Itt; t1t56 Jr -Oman..
• ont !ilitittei <fitailt#-.10ettitio . a••43.1.tlefaetioa. •„ • ' eat
•
•
MacDonald and Hoover • •
•J.' Otirvin in the Lbridon Obser-
er (Ind.): PreSident •liceover by law
Lis .prevented front coming to Europe.
The More reason -X -10y 'Mr: Ramsay
, MacDonald -Should go to, America.
Both the 'resident and the ?011ie
MioiSter kiiow how to lay 11114 the
..cards on the table: • Each of them
wouie, .fied the other. ainoligst the
▪ motet Interesting_ Mee that either
can ever encounter. „Each of..them
can explain a geed deal *from. differ-
ent standpoints. .-would be a re-;
markable ad 'holm episode In ' the
cereers'of both. • The thing waited:
ts "drastic reduction" 0! navies, With
a human, !demonstration to •the whOle
world that ,the two fleets will never
lie:. used against ez,eh ..other. 4t • 1.;
' Bet covert MiSehief, Will 'work
right and left until openly we clinch
the. truth, Let us• break; down
Chinese etifuette by 'the 'first Visit
•of A British Prime Meister to Wash.
ingtort.. „_Atter that, .41 • Ordinary
detent People, in our two tountries
Would ge about their baairtesms,.teelk
leg better, • • .
•
• CAN'T'S, •
413:3 .".50114S” 14 yobr Mind.* IT
Mor40a 41 fatal thought, na•Afe
ideasr:and. reveries of I can! You
shall acroinplisti anything 'you ".• "Or-
•slater:lily set ?o'er ,f01'co5 up.ort. ' Yon
. 0,60 t•Y •fOr at-
tray- clirOotion•a .10-5t-,t0.10t.1
*4
prow
eitildre
,
e
ATC41 the health of "
TV your growing ghildredl
See that they have the health
and energy .neceseark .for,
• ' their khoel work and Play.
For.growing children -par.
titulatly rich supply
of •red -blood :is easeotial.''
Languor, nervonsnesa,;,dif,
preision„ 544 appetite Or
• • pallor indicate anaemia. •
134 'Williams! Pink -Pins
enrich the. 1400.4.1 PreVitte
artaeitiia nand ',hit healthy
, bone and.tissall. gr.1101214.004 •••
of Mothers hail*. prayed this. '
twaYe4kat.old'
. writes Mrs. Robert Deyittsf
Vr,Clogjul* Ontario ...."became
pale, so 4.4 "nomads
• dun we had to take her Out Of
school: I tried Di. Williams'
Pink Pills Or •her and
• she gained' in, weight and
strength. She is now the pic-
• ture of health!'"
:Buy a box of Dr;Williatias'
Pink Pills at all draggisis and
• dealers in medicine Tifaioen:
• paid, by inail at 50: cents a
• ',bog from Ilte Dr. Williains
Medicine' Co., Brockville; ,
'Ontario: '.-
S.21
• !En mix
PINK °P1 JILL S
wousitueii.p Name
I 54. pptt NTfttEd.•
n e
Class
13. ABU c4;(1 ,
A filrfzilile-iiS; ."4:40'40:0111;"-
In 490413 12-, f3ipwn T.,..oghorils
priVaaat:se:dsel bot:hr i;:g.9an
1; .t7: *;islt.c4i4du:rt1913; to:v.:::igantusementstrIlindto:•IiiiPloeclinil‘C4-tq4';:47;:txqeP•fLetgs"tL114;k14141s o. till°t- e••4i
111146"111e.. 'S413 turn
ed any , iverbetor.e.be4einaetsesd.or mioeelieejzirarimo -faint fit
the and lreatiarYwralitiPer77-radsoin4tral"gAs rtsehro.shre b:13e8:inift-.1/76.°Td. n'aticsnaE171:6::::: 6P43"::::°7
ec4giliZetr • n
their pieturee andshe would made her
putlry-ter-i-r-r affectiortate: sound over
theni and turn her lead coquettishly
from side: to side as 'it mipectiog them
te respond. She showed. far more le -1
telligence ' in • rebognizing •
Pictures
and keeping .a.'inagazine right side up
than _the majority of African' natives,
Orie of her- Caristinai presents ' was
140gnifying glass, and she Would go
abo.ut ,exaniiiiing Objects and people,• '
Adjusting the.glase td•nilit her vision
,
in •Surprisingly,- human'Way ,' •
J. „to tee ,sinail objecta
▪ as well as her ;delicate- sense of tubeh
Wai,•.shrove io•the care with which she
Would fine .Utitches:"kenr•
...Soinetaintes--:-wireen-4 was. epwieg or
trileitetg';t4.:4;10.ulidd':.;i:et.'*hearjlt-4;1461dk7Ig4allj-r-;
ment. She vieeld; then :sit iptietiY, on
my• Ian by the heur and ladistrious- ,
• ly rip out the Stitches without tearing
the 'fabric... ... . She uteed A. needle -win
•thread 'exactly ' like a child- who it-
• tempt& to sew for thefirst time, often
when I Was 'called away to 'attend to
swine household duty 'I would returd.
to find my sewing drawn into puckers
by her efforts. te imitate ,
desire to assist me glee would sit on
• my lap when was sewing a„nd with
her-clainty' thumb pull. the • needle,
through the cloth; dtsepping.it inimedk
-lately to',drdw the thread .'tight.....
• Coninuni-seireciTtiliatienee antr WM;
Pathy are the:qualitieir needed Per the.
study 'of , animals. Equipped with
these ,and a desire to dahortest work;
One. cannot help! learnieg ;semethieg
[climb •creatures. --From
The Biography of Ei 11 African Monkey!'
by pelia Akeley. •
The PredOminance of. America
Norman. • Angell it the Spec ator
(L9ndon):' Alike. • in , .Europe •.and
America; v/s, have slipped Into • the'
habit assuming 'hot merely 'that
America,is aow "the great noise," in-
,dubitahly . the most powerfel single
*national unit in pie world, having
captured an eConmnic predominance
which . Yesterday was Britain's,' but
that this paedominanee is bound WI
be permanent be,eanse, inherent in the
'nature' of things, in 'American' Super-
IoritY of natural restiiireis, more
fortunate situationsitel advan-
tages denied to Europe. . Tbe un-
doubted superiority -of ArneriCk and
its economic preponderance to -day Is
not tobe explained by superiority of
nateral resources; but by a,-politicaL
fact (Which ,gives :rise,_ be it noted,
to an economic one) The: States have
polltical unity; Europe bait not. It
the &Quin et historical 'development
in North America has been Mere like
'that of South • America, 'so' that peg-
lish-speaking ,America had been as
much divided as is .Spanish-speaking
America; if, in What is now, the tTni-
ted States, theta existed5 not one •nre.
tion but a dozen rival natieng-as
'south of the 'Mexican border there are
more than a dozen different nations
should not now be talking about
American 'Newer and -.1,te predomin-
ance -in the ivorlel. North AMerlea;
would figure for/ Very little More in
suth terma than does South -America.
iifititM. Vt4i'M ItT tilt proof of ohilitY 1
s
tti achieve: Doubt neither yeerseitl
1 net any. . ono , elqt. •,ida Gathing'Pent'
1
Minaret's LiniMerat for Suirimer Coldt
President and • Prime. Minister
Phiiadelphia, teegerr In the United
States there had been no disposition
to question the, intpertance or Pee
proprlety of the. meeting between
President aod Prime Minister; though
a few years. ago a furore of suspicion'
would have been 'aroused by 'any „ pro-
posal of the lieaCof a, British Govern-
ment t� establish tared persprial sone
tact with President Harditig or Presi-
dent Coolidge. The. gentlemen who
iike to ask rhetoricall, "What, have
we to do with abroad?" will doubtless
shortly be heard from: But they are
likely to find ..that their rhetoric is
much less powerful than it was be-
fore the present. fortueate conjunc•
Con "of men and circumstances.
,•Mr."Dawes .• Stays Dry. •
New' York World: Mr Charles G.
Dawes, our Ambasaador ,to Great -Bri-
tain, has let it be known that no
lie.uer will be served ati the Embassy
SO long .as heocennies it. "I never
made it a praetice to serve liquor in
3nY.home In ;the ,States," he said, "and
see, eo reason to change nOW.", And
while it may be doubted whether. his
Motive is ',quite sosinipleas that, h�.
certainly deserves no triticism.
raises no tecliMie point .ot y,et
places hilT5elf, in'az excellent,post-
• tien with regard, to a question that be-,
ea:Mies, irem a• international'point of
ccintinually more difficult.
4. •
Mittarcrs, Liniment for 'Neuralgia.
. • Alcock and &Own
• Detroit News: (Bruce Geuld, in his
bre* "Sky Larking,' predicts that 100
years' hence Captain John Alcock and
Arthur •E. Brown will be horn:Hired
above all other pathfinders of the al.)
•Tire acclaim that should, Italie been
theirs was -denied them. , It may be,
as Mr. Gould suggests, that all Coun-
tries were too neer • the dangerout,
days', of the war period in 1919 to
Properly' appreciate Brown and "Al-
cock. • The world was tired of heroes,
in fact there were'more of them than
there were jobs, and in the news of
the monumental proceedings at. Ver-
.
sallies which were thee' being pushed
to a cohclesion, Alcock and Brooli
were quickly forgotten.
• The inferiority cOmplex' would be
a fine thing 1? the right people had it.
—ie.—
LONG SLEEP.
BABY HAPPY AGAIN
"Our .baby kePt. ivaking'..;.ra several
times. a night, until -we started giving.
him a little 'astoria :after 'bit last
nursing," says another., "He
slept 'soundly from the first•night and
It , niado'..him 'Iocifi• and 'feel world's
better," Baby specialists endorse
Fletcher's Castoria; •arid of
brothers know how thispfirely-vege-
table, harmless preparatiee 1,101P8
babies 'and children, with colic, collo;
Stipation, colds, diarrhea,. etc. The
Fletcher signature is •always on the
wrapper 6f genuine. Castorld. Avoid
imitations.
04,TiotNi.
-dote to Aotd..
ForPtl1LL111!
STOMAtti'
GASEO.POUSEP/
•
•
,Xuny peopie,Pvo •Yort.,_win al= otolfiedi
•ing, suffer indigestion aa they can it.1 when .yott lurthv 'this' Metier:method.
It is lignalfY excess ftI erreet gii3f you valttritltqe guritt titthirne.tvtr--;
with an atkaU .The. best ray, the
,atttt efficient way,' 'is
P1liMilkfistagalsla.:
renuoried Mr 50' years the stainiare• oe :sore to get the gertrime Phillips I
*011 1111Srateilma• One a.1166atal laMilk ef• Mail
gne
rnium5 in h sia prescribed by „pYst. I
'
7111E3 r-Sifirtptoin s disaPirear fisie intre-
wafer ?tiny- Mims Its
SoWould We
Ottawa Journal (Ccms.) Stbeke: 04
the NeW York Stook EXchaege halm
deelinee by -$.0:40,0-,460,000. What
would like to know As where hi-. Mg, -
8fi,fiofi,000,00d. • .
• .
• By radoetng the. legal eize of texi-•,
cabe in New, Yerit,.Ctty leie, been
estimated that the pedestrian Will
in a position to ,be.neenacee by three'„
taxis in the ianie ape* in whiehlee
pow, •d00,05 '0017
,
elioney
rinou MUst, Do 'Your. Bit
• the 'warty/shit the -fly, carrier
• of geniis and breeder of 'disease?,
is proven that AEROXON is aim •
of the mon convenient sad mon
efficient,meape of oiniboting•thia.
rfly,evd. It it cOnvetsient,becoese
, 'of the. puth.pul, It ie hygienic
flies never get away, when once
• eaught., EsCh opirel give; thieo
• .iweehe Paled service. .
' .
@SWAM OF IMITATIONS
dnig, grocery' on#Aardwo' re.t.'itorea
"
La
Ge 4earst
steciapeolcciva,
Sp* AUNTS
er
Distributor for. ontarto
• NEWTON 'A., HILL
50 Front St. E. Toronto
•Send forAmazing
•FewtsAbout the
acid wheu you prove ,citit' Oaqy
feltet ininae• thatt-tE ,Y0Pr,
fitxtoa1r0-‘,not
neutzafzes e clans for 50 years:ill torrectiikg
tete. • ' •
•
1
• 1 •
• •
"K. • •
RosItMely
lelft. loeedi'eovetlfv-
nocel
• wein't wind op on lower
ra"linkereMenin;,Preart :uarlinbinlagdienaroilbaIl bearing, near-
nem:Aeolian eptalades• make the GEFIL the world
tglitestrunningandcleane,st cutting cutter,eajiable of
• Onetaig slog throwing Green Corn
45 feet high at only 500
Othentreccize Maker Wisconsin ellairymen ap•
Predate the safe•34;bie capacity. durability aMa icj
Ipoweicontsof theGEHL,bence'40%ofallantern
.oldintbatntatearcGEHLS.Wtiledorcataiog.
G4E5H1.5 MFC. C. CO. •
, Nest Bend, Wis.
LArtizi_
E 1.1.L
• LOW SPEED.
. 81 G CA PA
Sunburn_ ,
Tool' sleep in comfort if yeti
apply Minard's. , "
- Felt Tired
and Miserable
fq took Lydia E. Pitildiam'S
Vegetable Compound for mis-
erable and tired feelings and
it gave me strength to do my
worltAsAYnerves ate better and
I feel well and strong and have
a good appetite. sleep well
•
and ant in pretty -good Spirits
nd able -to work--every--da+
ticINY. 1 lecorarnend the Vege-
table Comptputra and you
may -Ilse letterwca. Testi-
wat.
late, Union, Street, Nottit Devesa,
,13runsti iek:
nig -trettig. )..;krelt tiottie OntOtis -
derectinng'-- li11 drnasiotet •
tamookaananrin
ISSUt No. 3Ii9.
,
•