HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-02-06, Page 7VLiti•.•
• r'
.Ltar:.
•When 1 was a Wag Ivy, my family
'Oeeeldeeed me an awtal liar. and my
-theolder-IFfritleeri•—stated- the fact
. bath. frequently and ,warmly to the'
atI4 to. ethers Iii nee presence. But
• YOU know I thInis they miseddgedene.
I wesn't an *tut liar.. 'I was' an ex-
ceptionally ., good one,. And WhY
• wouldn't . I be. with :threeother brot11-
. ers to leern. the tecliniqueefreneT 1
. atm) learned some of the more .anbtip
prins of deneptiOn from ,ttlyHM001..er
' arid father and .heir grown up friend.
• For e'icateplA.e-teeeembee one 'day
' 'where I had "swipe" a ceieof sweet
:ehoedete an shared. ft. "with yule!.
brothers,: , Mother inquired"'about it
eecatetallYeeeN Y'ere."ctisealin, it yji
know • yeleateIeMeitiesee ' that, ...I keel.
, at (nide that I hei:Vbeen' 0.100yered.
" The,' Inquiry was madnia; Some:Stith.
round about WO as this "Beet .1.had
a. cake -Ofneveetechocolate, Which •1
. ,
:think I, put on the upilar Shejf of the
Pantry, but now it isn't there. t, Won-
der it any of you have seen IC'
, .
We had not seen it,. we had eaten
'It, and Mother :kneW ,that, and we
knew that she, knew it. If .slie really
•
hadn't known, ' her manner would have
been quite tiffeereet. We could readL
,
her as Seale as a het*. Most child,
.:ren can read their parents:, What she
Wate.10 ,give.neeleeeharite•tto
."conle Out ceurageoesly and tell the,.
,truthe'.• She,didn't evantefo accuse' es
• ..for .feat of frightening ',us int° "a 'lie,
and .see. eitlyet Want to ask a .direct
• question ehat, collie be enewered ,bY.
"yes" or no" because'"n0;" beteg
the' .shorter word, was likely ese be
.,chosen in prefeeeece to,.eYes.".• S�
she employ:0, a perfectly transparent
nue; antigra .ruse toethe keeu,
of .a , child is just the
• ,seme as a2:11e.' • , ' •
And what 'cl'ld iny' older brothere
• ;do in this crisis? Thor'. didn't. try to
-lie teet.:Of it They knee,
It wouldn't do any good..: • Bo. they
. Weed' fleet rialefely surprised;,. and
,•then nldignt1y.'aecuSingrat, me:
."'Why;.,eletlier„" said. the', "a Ote
. it, 'Reiseell,lbrought it. net .t� .us ;end
-teed-You had givert-4-t to
• The weed; of it was, i• had tate
June that -I had seidit but they. haen't
'..believ,ed it and .1knew they liaeln't
believed it and they keew that 1 knew.
e‘eite In tact the whole proceeeiegked
been..eaericatee in duplicity. '• it
a System we, hadworked1efore. and
Wept like ,thist.. My oldest beother• .
would some distance.
from the house nuewould teen say
eciemee,elless, pieieri a cake of sweet
choeulate oietheeop shelf Of -the pan-
• try, Oa ask' Wither If we can have
Teeyknew.periectly eeeile,hy ex;
• .perience,, thateI elese Ifeefith-
• out meting; Weis insering Myself' ande
hew against the possibility of refue‘l
. al, while.. they- were provided .withea
.• perfect alibi.. And as for me, 1.knektv
. Mother 'acid Father didn't believe in
whipping. . The. worst that . would
baPpen woetd bAthat they wetted ta115.,
• to me :sorrowfullY about the petit' it'
..• gave there to ,have a see who .would
lie., to them. • I knew I. was expected
. to • ery tater ..a and. thee , it
_would be all over. '
• e • Theee were *ether tiines wheu my
Mother, wolildpretend to believe me.
She would say with greet candor and
'.sincerity: "tenni say itis true, MIA
• .sell deat, I•knOw it Must be,: •Reinem-•
ber thett trust you abedutely.".. ,But
of course I knew,that she didn't be.
lieve me and didn't trust me but was
• just trying to make me •eonfess:. by
shaming Itstruck me As an
• Agreeable though' father silly method
and I ewore with 'equal candor. and
• sinceritk that I -was telling .the ibs0-.
late truth.
• , • •
On the whole I think I deceived
' Sy Detente more. successfully than
e_they deceived me, end.. my advice to
. Parents is:. bout lie to eoer children
• any ,more than is, absolutely needs.
:.sarre because you esin't.dcielye them
anyway- and there is alWays. the
• chance that if you are truthful with'
Ahem:they; may he truthful with you.
• •It.ien't likely .that they wille but they.
• May. Children wif eo alniost tiny-
• thing to imitate their .parents.
. As forthe. way' I treat my Owe
• sou: Well; I try to be hou4t, It is
very difficult, I admit,' but lem.
upheld by the thouglit that If 1try
, leek lie to him he'll seedy seeetliro'uge
. tte-and then Whore has my prestige
. gone. to?—Russell M. Coryeli.
, •
HE nerves are fed by
th0 blood. Poor blood
means starved nerve tis-
sue, insatinia, irritability
and depression.
Pr- William' Pinli Pills:
will 'enrich .Your blood
• stream 'andatkuthl .your
over-workenerves: Miu
• Josephine M. Martin, of
Kitchener, Ontario,,testi-.
.fies'to this
suffered from a nervous
• breek4own,” she. writes. "I
had terrible' sick headaches,
dizziness; felt very weak and
. could not sleep; had ntiappe•
Site. I felt always as if some-
thing terrible were going to
happen. After taking other
treatment without success, on'
my sister's advice, I tried Lir.
•
Williams' Pink Pills,and now
all•these symptoms are gone, .
-and-rjun- strong and happy
again.
Buy Dr. Williams' Phik
. Pius now at your druggist's
or any dealer in medicine or
'
by mail, 50 'cents, postpaid,
from the:1Oct Williams Medi -
eine Co4Brockville, Ontario.
ifollNif,•,(P11,14141::
• "A NOUBNHOLN NAME
IN MAI CONNTRiEfl ,
.Better Than Gold
. •
Oid Bones May be Vrtorth,a
Fortune—a1 a Smciking '
• Fire a Pointer tol •
- Wealth.. . , . aae passing them on at night to the al nations dread the siiiineary naval
• An -American artist named „soft next safe halt were 'said be rue "The seiechez whichetbeeeequalization, of
Sale
When Are the Civilized
ernments Going to
• Stop Slavery?
By Helene•Norntantott, B.A.
"Rementber theta that.are Ifl
'beads!" The -message thrilled through
Walshhearts le (lees gone bi;•,. ad
this canary took the 'lead In a crus-
ade for elie freeteg of the...slaves, But
thlsdark beet On eivieeitionetlil per..
disteteand even fa a Chetetian cope-.
sIt le up. to' us to do, Our Peet: to:
remove it..ead, tor pier: ' "-
. philosophers' fell': Us that MOO Is
Malted'. elf . from ,the- animals by the:
elle et leughter- and the. ass' .ot. Moist
..It .mIght.be. added that anima1sh1cs.,t4
'fifti4eeaCh .other : into 'captivity, MO
, • •• ' • • •
Interesting:as:It might be to, retrace
tite past and to. ftetc.1 out bow himau
slavery �rieinated. it is natbit .ntore'' .• •.• ,
• .Hafti itinit the U.S.•1- chtsslied .A4vgril
xil.* p&T,E... ..
riw-fte---twthoffites sent to :HainefirBAYEN AiSrp- trat,;i4. --n•Wflf-*
BORG'S* gkezt work, on t4g ,11
: breermWat4assititeurrottnimtbverePravesebellet.. language ..-. --
after death and a real world: beret e
, over 40.04•usto,4estictiln4.4.3!ewipxopsmtve,9l,0;,..4,:z. it
. T4.1* we
,•:•,IW told by
certain
French
l'ATI4aANTEP—PARTileS To -Kee/4,, ,A1,
ediairs, who call Attention to the .fa,et • ' re,'
' thet In faite, thii.s . F. reticle:, • language t7.ttpias4iiii1.44anhiorleeenctosph:44,tiA,aoio;timlem,co..
Pj
resists the American, invasion more
au.cceisstully than, it dogs IR Paris.
When the 'United:States establialied .
.
order
of • the. Carlitheatt, -relates P_ R.. INATS„ONS '
'..clerabout 19
. 4 in the tutoultuotni .
TOini..; imaTT A1OD' itAzi . '
Pierre ,S.o.ulaine. iti the Parte ripe), e •
(etesiP.:tEleatereatiV'glivg111f,onese-;
the useed Bitglish in the island.. But 'wArd you tioatnaid. one pacl(dge oz':
weritor441)&r.wENarZgc4e.,1•ThitiTE. „T,043).$9,',,
aa atteMpt• was madetoprepagatc1
the blacks. mulattos,' and flatedr0Oute, •• : •.e. - - • - - •
!Otis delicious beverage. , - ., :. ,;
he rejoices', : refueed. to abatition the .rxxximmoripmfflorg.,
bippiao# of the old Creoles. . This.. ' , .
i:f';r.geirkiillew44eap:Iie• O'i:.tia...it:i.o.'"ali .:1'.14'. 'iie' irst ;:rPel-atE4r:IeY:!1.h".t.i'l.eiviaiastf.
published in rrenehie theprincipal; db something-ethat,' lifeeteeet have te.e.'„ e
ones' 'ire' the. Noitielliste, the. *tine .4:moved . and•.ae",,eleee.aeoe e.,....f4,... -
.and the Temps.; A neee.journali the' iliokeeee. not 'Merely ,Ce.cesimeati tied::
PrTe:8:424` iboais.tel:i-',iti.Lt411!:.,:slYs'f.er, nutiond,.:'4..v3rern.y.,. „!Pesseedic, but steady end. eneti Miens:, .
Pleaeure le:.aejewel :which will f.iniel., ,
-e Pendee' printing -plant at Port -au.
Cain hostile toward foreign' laegtiages. .
contain :•trientialli its ,lustre. when it is in. a Bete
of the worst pains, though the 'islands,
Prince: The. Presse does .not
A single 'weed accessible to aa,Ameri- of . work, and a vacant life 1000e...
oofclueolzidre that ' stud a crowded, Well- -
to ‘.‘rTelisiech .a.ketteenteeli'itelnonbtearinsberpthhoetogPtra7bsse: tiiinge to . iwirheichn,wYe , blpeokautba7kg wtfilihe'''
of the demonstration by students 03
•
ed Within the limits ot a,lpaCific . de- •• : • : '. 'O
'ASPIFIATION
cm_ geeateet.delight.Lecky. • .
strike. The 'striking students !veleta-
_
' EVery, trneaspiration, in the World '
tads something even higher than ' it;
Self. which it 'climbs as the vine, year;
after year; climbethe towering oak.
. . ,
.Managing Direeter.i. allaye you Met ,
, •
our • 'London. ,manager'?" Fisitor;
iirfointilly—le 'called, Men her. oacee'e, •
,
• -
initiortent to face the iteese,nt and to I3ack in, 188% wheel. tee Cauediari ,Pacific Itailway was pushing through
green the faceetbat between 'four and ibe' bash in Noetheen Ontario' °netts way .aeross the continent, this olce-time
siX mllftons ot• our fellow.humaa crea- engine did a lot et good work and it was fire‘by James T Fallen who had
. On the last day of 1929 Pailon, for
more than fifty years of .railroad ser
-
of the old locomotive, N. 222, sister
youth. ••
•
tures' are even today living Nista:teed
in thls beautiful world. • e" 1
ellehere are they? A, perplexed read-
er may Inquire. Di& not. Great Bri-
tain abolisheslavery once and for all
in'1833,? • .
- The answer is that the . vast inee
jority of olives to day are in Abys-.
sinia, China, and the Arabian area.
Great Britain did, a century ago,.malte.
•valiant efforts to stamp out the plagne
• of elavery. • In 1772, by tord Maris,
field's, celebrated judgment, it .became
illegal to hold a daze hi England. In
language which has been limeee A
the -nand times: If slave sets foot on
English soil he lieconees A freeman.
• "The •Underground Railway.": •
• In '1807 Great, Beattie, abolished the
,trade in slaves between any, of her
Dominions (including • England) and
Africa. In 1833 she completed., her
taskby emancipating all •those ewhe'
were held in slavery in any of her
Doieinions. But Great Britain' could
noteincle cannot now—control • the
whole at the reseof the world. •
Readers •of "Uncle Tom's Cabin"
will re,call Eliza's celebrated jouineY
over the iCe. Like eeery*hei fugi-
tive Amerlean slave before the Civil
War of 1865,her idea,was to eet
into Canada, wherein; as Canada was
British eceeny;•she'Vroeld automati-
• cally become a free Women.
" Those who assisted ,fitgltive slaves
ieue to freedom by sheltering there-
joined thel road tree years ipeeelously
Aver forty years an engineer, eloped
.vice. His picturcia Inset with that
to the one on will& he Worked, ai a
• Merely takes 'the more 'sepret forte of
smuggling in human tudegs.. •
.Can ,the League Help?
Many Of the° wretched ghee sold an
slaves Are detainee religi00 tigrLm
many from the Par East„ who 'lever
get free agein. AbSrssiitia—• is ,anetber
great slave=seller .to Arabia: •,
• Is there any; hope for these miser-
able and ,tertured 'beings? Yes --and
again—no.. •,
• Their hope'. lies ,tin the' League oft
Nations. Their despair !tee in 'the.
•difficulty first of. getting the League
to move strongly •enough; • .ane, sec -
once of ensuring that those natione
like, China Which have a,bieleihe'd slav-
ery on preer should abolish it in fact.
American . ptohibits the manufac-
ture, transportetimi; and sale of alco-
holic. drinhchina prohibits •seaveee.
Of the ttycepitohibitioris, the American
is probably tire more effective. :So
'there is much to be done!
, • . •
*•, e, Ours to:Take the Lead
,-"
• ,• The:great new step' whieh.micet-lie
, taken' by the Leagucis to mike sieve,.
treeing ae,internatienel crime . eke
"-piracy, which anY law-abiding .nation.,
can summarily stop. , Britain is work-
ing heed or this, but a few 'coetinent-
•travelled to the Pribyloyslands in a Underground Italie-ay." But all slave -trading to piraceewoule entail.
I
sieves. teeday .eannot ,soive their•piebe
seals''
seeling••vessel :a 'year in 'theit.nago to aaint
lem by the.,simple,method of getting
eonte pictures of allie
. B,
home, and one day noticed e -curious I onthe Soil Of the ritish Empire
although no doubt, 6mb. hundreds,. qe
bank or Beale' lyMg close Aimee •the,
shore , gain freedom' that 'Way eery 'year.
. , •
He dug into it, and found' beneath , Stolen, From Free •Herriee
the and g mass Of -hones. They were 'Myriads ef 'slaves 'are ••languishieg
seal bones--miltione of them—which under the worst conditions itt Abes-
course. ot centuries. . ••
bad been 'flung up the sea n the
• • capture from their free homes in 'Cell-
,
smia, of whom, mane are stolen by
, •Further search • has • Shotin that tral Africa, just as ie. the old.daya of
there are miles of these,. bone deposits, the Arefic ie Bled( Ivory. And 'Abys-
along lhe,ehores of the isleudse . One side., mails ,ecie; is a•Christime coune
pile .is ae mile long, halt a mite wide,
and six feet deep. ..Now, bone§ are
one of the best Ot lI fertilizers. and
the value of the find issimply gigantic
-tar greeter than that. of any gold
. •
"
Phi e brings to mind ' 0 case of
As Lefty, Simcin has sate in her
noble hook: eSlaeery....is: the .:supreme
•effence agienst ' the .Ammari
Even If there be such' a. thing as•
happy slave whicIfI doubt—that would
be . the. final. and most clinehing argu-
ment against. slavery. No one might.
,to be happy in his own cltigra.dation.::
The IMO which,gave ' la gnae Cherta
tothe thought et all the ages:, .and
which has jest' reeeiyed, the sacred
sell of Runnyinede as a perpetual gift,
'Meet 'still' lead in the noblest of DrJoheson to Joseph:We'
tolerate thisterrible evil. • cam-
p:at s. , •
try! eIt oece the deep diegrace*.of
it.Wilber-
, ... From Langton to
being the lasfierce,froni
t , Christian .coueatry.' to .
•Bittler, thentessage calls 'vibrantly as'
.
cif yore : e'Remetrilter them that' are
The cruel ceravan' still Wends its '
' .
Weary way' acrose torrid wastes. the in bones!,"
weak and suffering:leaving' it at their "
'Mitioei of Slaved .Stili.
shame of alavety . still clis-
peril to die of hunger :and -thirst by
elle wandering prospector who, years'
the wayside, the strong Whipped. on
ago, While crossing a desert in WYnni-
e
lug, came acrose the 'body ot a horse by the cruel lash, pst as of yore. \l
lages go, up in einoke, families are
which, though it must have died' long
ago, was still fresh and sweet The
rent asunder.. little Maids ai7e sold In-
-
body was overed with a layer of to eoncubinage, i3xaetle is the Bible
• e
depicts- happening .. to' the ancient
flee :dust; which the .prospector re -1
cognized as borax. Hesaw the value Israelites. When ,they were exiled into
-
01 the dtsoovere end sold It to a large captivity
peeking firm ffl Chicago, who kept • RAHN; British Territory •.
the secret for st king ,time: • To-daY To quote than Lady Simon's recent
the: uses of borax' aro hinumereble, authoritative book: •'
and range from the preservation 'ot "The Completeness of destructiee
nfoodaloWn e inflamed es'
to' clressiegs fof tried feet by Abyssinian slave iaiders is the
ad ketonfor'ey.
Riches in the Desert'
Eyeryone has heard Of Carrara
Marble. In 1925 a party of Eeglist
tourists exploring the mountains, of
Carrara Maid a dirty block 61 marble
Avhich had evldentle fallen from a
cliff ,overhead.. One of .the visitant
who kad,sonie knowledge of geology,
noticed (het this stone had a pink
tint which was unusual. TO sant-
pie was taken to -England, where it
was found to be a ne* :varletY. A
large quarry has already been opened there is no commissariat department, been set free in Tanganyike;'.215,000
.
sine is prOting very proetable. and these Whoin Sierra Leone: 7500in Burma
carry no supplies dan •
wo,women; Mrs. Wilson .and blies hope only few a merciful spear, since Surely," continues' The Christia,n Cen.-
Spencer, 'were croising thoMoiave the alternative isdeath by thirstor turY,•`'with the facts thus known, the
. w
Desert, Southere 'California, look- :by the teeth and talons of wild beasts 1 pubric ejeintonof the world ifl sup -
Ing. for ow_ They Zero not sue'c68--g" 1.1Tuttdreds .of Fiquate 'Miles of tore!. port the LeageeIn whatever efforts
fel, and one night, Wellag verr-dis,
laht iresiiges of Inman bondege."
tory atti utterly' depopulated bYeAbese it may inaugurate to Wipe out the
couraged„ ennted en the bank of a Anhui raids. Most et this' territor
within the C01,111109 of -the Abye-
siolin,Emplre but part pf it is with-
in -the Brit's; Empire. '
On itaed the Wagtired "Abyssinian raids !nee the country their betide, beettuee we to knoW
or cook , , wo-
, graces the, world. •
• A commission of the League of Na-
tions reports that there: are "no
feeier then 4,000,000 slaves in the
world to -day; probably tae numeer
is nearer 6,000,000—people who are
not persolle, people who haVe not the
right to own property, to exercise
their consciences, to direct their owe
• dears, or to retain, wife and children.
'there are at least 2,000,000 in Chine,
500.000 to 700,000 in Arabia:, A con-
siderable number in ' the hinterland
-of Liberia, and a few thoueand in
coMpleteness of the locust, but more
cruel... It is knOnett that ma f these
rattle have ravaged bey d the Keil-
ya-Abyesinia and the ,Sii4an.ssinia
border. The xavages. Of 'the slave
traders on both sides -of thee° herders
are well .knowli t� British officials
Major Barley, tells us of the following
'incident . connected with �no slave
este.. On thei trail, he 'said, he count-
ed the, dead and, dying bodies of more
than ,fiftY captives who had dropped
by•the roaaide. For on such journeys
other differed parts of the world"
Ana, according to ,The CiaristtanCen-
tury (UndenoMinaticetal) from 'which
.We cptote these egeresie "01.1(1410es of
slavery vary from the 'open; and tor-
turing slavery ot Abyssinia te the
disgeised system in thine, where
girls who are really householdesleves
are treated, according to a• legal fi.c-
tion, tes adopted- family.mezehers. tee
dor he inmetue provided by.the
League, 185,000 slaves have recently
smell creek and lit a fire , to cook
their supper. -The fire began to
throw out dark, ill -smelling srabke; so
that it Was tinpoesible to go near It
• BELIkF'S •
We ought not to judge people by
eouthivest qt the Dolma plateau tri the 'how they have been broUght.abentt;
British. Sudan 'are einratatit, iUnl with- bet eve may 'justly apply tire -cranial
in the laitt sit months there hatte.been test to our Cali views and.honor Or
eetteraVealdis into the Itenya Colour dishonor them- accordiagly.
irtie; depepplation:ot the border atld , •
the ablee ffeadeetyste, police torcee• SUPERFLUitiES
tenni!' "Ifte Abyssintanii advanco„ r' 'utir suljelluittits-0:01lik1Wgifv,(01
fatihet, ,fitithatt, and; on ea_ .up for the eolivehienft of eilterei; our
• Mititit• inallt they Oro' fieliattitited'eonvontone00-'hh001A1 giveseeittea be the
nine* into 116e4041" nt nf"?"°1 1116' "611 'Or
mon were forest:I to ,collect more fuel
and light a freSh fire. Ift the nitddie
Freeiiman—"Sie; mark my words— of the: night ilet. •WIlsen• sprang up
suddenly.
Professoe---"I have marked keel? fp8116 Cri0a. •
• . IM11-18 ftlift 1itid tlta,t you flees eweee on &idol .are you eatking
About'?" demanded the other woman
spelled torte per cent. of them,- YOU
' „must improve a great alai,. Mark In/ • •"A§phalt," • With Ue eniAr; and
verds!! " tvha was leg* That 1114 1404
• •'iNVittElLE FLOWERS
lunch rn070 valuable than a 64.11110.
. children are flowers of the invisible
Vorld; • iiniestenctible ,self-prepetnat-
. lug flowers, With each a multittide of
Angels.
and evil spirits underneath its
leaves toiling and wrestling for do•tn-,
,thioh Prer it.—.1) Neat
•
•
"And 'ow , is your 'itsband gettluf
• on?" • ;Ecan't complain," "My, is
'e that bad?"
THE RESPON$IBILITY
OF A FOND MOTHER
-
Her „child i'S ta, never-ending source
,
Of Joy and a, never-faillugereepoest-
bility to .the ,..forld. Mother. It net in-
frequently happens 'feet eminor ail-
ments, of .tbe child disteest and viz,
. ,
ile her 04 'does not knew.juse what:
to do, yet. feel.e.them not serious 'en-
ough te call a doctor. At just such
times as these it Is that , paby's, On
Tablets :are found. • to be. • mother's.
greateetekelp and friend. . , '• •
Most childhood: ailments Arlie frnm.
e• derangem et of , the 'itentecli or
f
beivete„ B byO
'e •.wn 'Tablets . will
• immedietely .badeli. them by cleans-
inge the tio elS and,sweeteuing the
stotriacit. Th eY :relieve colic -;cor-
-
rect. the Cegeetion, banish constipa-
,tione and make eeetheig.:....paleee:cles.ap,
pear: . : • .
. :Baby's Own Tablets are guaranteed
to be free/ from injtiriouS drugs eecle
t '
opiates and naecolies and may be
' given teethe trewboen 'Abe with Per-
fect : safety little heneficial reeWts.
They Mei' 'sold be Medicine dealer's or
bY mete at .25. cents a bole from the
tir.. Williams', . Medicine Co., Brock-
tille, On't:. ,
AeSesti.tiels -give way to the ektrerni.
for a, thick de:petit 230hitli cover terrttOTY"
'ei mat*r aeres and: trutde the tortnlieS Slare-Owning is still legal It the t-4438 of the pent.—John }toward,
of Melte otheFti _besides' ite Mawr- Arabian _Peninsula, where etiliets „
Ore'ra. , • ' • ' • '• • - are Opettlk, field Or PIE nate (2't 'Slittioti " VOVIt ilAtit .NEEE)S
, ...,.......„_,.......„0„.,...... , and the Gcoterithiedt reCei.ves clue.,ell
Neighbor (eetilsitig OVet garden . titi itidiVidlitti sales '.- ..„ The ,ICittit ore
, tente): 'nal' ' )'"niii best tiaaci . wlill Reiss and •Neld haa'*iikreed:- te c -e.
this' ye -fir,. o /4. tvrtivnt- "Viteii.: .rnierateliriffr4leerGeltie slii, Geivernineert
they haven't glejeti leech iitelley, but. to ettptiresia the glare . teede,; but so
thee've eteng me inetiter-itt-daW loi•ig as sitiefeowning is permitted, the
t wipe," • • ,',. (eado- never rpally ii 311,001'03*de It
'
"Your therMometer is wildly in-
correct. it registers' 10 degrees is
than the„ actual temperature." •
e "That's why I like it... I dread
these ' fearfuly candid friends." •
Minerd's Is Rest for Grippe.
. -.HUMAN "HAPPINESS
• Well-being and. happiness are not
enherittince of which weetake pos-
e ssion from the hour of Our birth,
and..whicli we Tare destined to enjoy
at our eate; they ,are tobe searched
after With unweaeled essiduity.
meestration designed as a -protest
, against- the minimum 'Salaries pail
their proteseors in eomparison to the
magnificent cempensation received.
by' American teachers sent to Haiti."
• But in other parts of the island, we
Are then advised, the demonstrations
• Were marked by bloodshed. ' AS this
Vrenetjournalist points out, in the
tropics', rifles and eevalvers are even •
:Mere .darigercia8 to 1,hand.1e4141 .elso- COuLDNI welt
FoR
nhere ; and he, goes 'One: - • :
• "The approach . of the . presidential •
election excites the • einotions • and
dierpees, the interest Of the tiaitians,
• `they claim, as aigainst the 'intervene.
tion. Oc.the Marines, an independence
of..which they have never 'made eery
• good use since„the days 'of Toussaint
,Louxertere et Dessalines. • Their'
• Parliament has heen'seppressedi and• ,
they are weak eitough to regret it.
• The Government is • directed' ety an
•executive. body , :composed of, .the
•presideut and of Misters: Weeny
-.chosen the' United" Mate§ "
; ,•• ' • •
• . • " - •
Check Fallaig Hair, with Miri.are'se
• . ;
reeaorn Waiitd
Arabs Ask Repeal Of .Nlanclate
As Aid t • B
Friendehip •
Jerusaleet—eeile.dA tet 'Date' .Eng-
land,. :but , we. do not love the' mate
date," .aegiied the' Arab paper.-"Ja'mel
El Arenie" the Mufti's organ, in the
last issue -before 'it was suppressed
indefinitely for. Publishing the :story.
about.' the • alleged Jewish .cOnsairecy
against .the Mufti's Wee. in, answer :to
tbe Pelestie's coetention thee the
.aralle see kthe reeeattif 'the Balfour
declaration. antlencit pf the mandate.
"Why concentrate our war- againtt
the Balfour. declaration when the
mandate is more dangerous. •tai :the
Pan -Arab Union than. Zionism?" asks
"El .Arabia." '• "Arab heiettlity to the
trusteeship ...means a struggle . for
complete independence 'aed,net toler-
ating •foreign tele of any shide. The
repeal of the %mandate .will strength-
en 'Anglo -Arab. frieedship.. • Britain
does not edger& aseenemies the Egye-
etinacees..who. are fighting for independ,
'• Thus the 'leading •Mostem organ
would seem to confirm Harry Seeher's
evidsithe before the Inquiry:, Commis-
sion that the Arab it are using Zionism
as a;lightnieg conductor, whtie they,
enter into lite destitute of everything are really fighting' the mandate.
but simple esxistencr,. Al. that we ea -
joy in our ,passage thrOugh life are
acquisitions they are.: the result and
'genet end tare Of others.—Cogan.
the rewards of our own (1911g -once and '
care, or CoMniunleated by the dile.'
• The usual gloonty crowds was'slttIng
mune a dentist's room tbe other day,
when One old boy` looked up trom the,
pe,per' he had found on the table and
said cheerfully, "I see there's, been a
.big battle:Off the coast .of Jutland." •
hildren
fOr
FAT
But lost her.: flabbiness
in two weeks
She was crippled by faL but reduced
in two Weeks MIS easy Way. That. It
plain truth—her husband says set '
She weighed nearly 2,00 lbs. and had
to stay at home. Read. this lettere-e ' ••
"My wife has • been suffering •with
• &welled _legs and feet . and eigked_ee
196 Ibe. 4 oz.—vett seldone.able to go
• nut walking., After taking Krtisehen
Salts fop- two weeks, her flabbiness'
has gone, rep and feet, feel eas4...."
Excess fat le caused by the elven
kidneys andbciivele, the "scavenging"
.Organs of the body=failing to do their
Work Peoperly. They do eot threw oft "
that waite material --the -product :et.
digestion: This •accionalates,' and—.
before you realize it—you are growing
,hideoitsly fat. : The "little daily dna"
of-leruseketi SaltS--tones_lip tbpettitt
ating organs • to perforie their work
properly. • • Slovily Jilt • surely theeun- •
gainly •masses of fat disappear and
%Intl 'you lose hieweiget you gain In
• unboitheed health and vitality. The
years :drop off as the fat melts away .
leaving• you energetic„, youthful sled
eigoretts. '
V,
loczaSiiimmyaaut Yee44,
Wour OVrisy. &ttagifale'
--Mack terraria wines about
ized Yeast. Thousands 'tuttl*S
to 15 As. 3 weeks. Coaz"
'clears like magic. Nerves, con
non vanish overnight. GO
Yeast tablets frown drandiC
DONT
00 '
1101$
fne
•t•
IWO 04 MACK ,
,OF0A05.•06001
in tionests •
'Bait 0
U.25 Squids Oesaistin fella is tts
A. a LEONARD, Inc.
70 Mtn Ave.. Nagy Yogi( Citti
Grippe• ,
Nip it in. the bud with Mina's&
Rub on throat and chest. Bathe • ,
the' feet in Minard's and bat
• .Water. •-••
DreventatiVe.
tazrzate
CASTORIA
A miry REMEDY
APPROVED BY DOCTORS
Ma COI* 07NSTIPA1104.01ARRHEA
„4,001./e•
AS*
FOCetkOttbil
HicArtAcst
due tiihket .
tiones-fingsir.A
szai et:Roles!
.94oittennOn
HetAntatirot
POWS—
• 1
What -1114t 'PeOrie -callAndigestioli;: Ale taatet,Ys,s, fiticifiVni Water' 114t1
Is usually excess acid in the stomach.
The feed has soured, '" The instant
emedy Is an Alkali which neutreliee3
traliges .theny tintee vOlnine in
add:, The resultS are iniettediete, yytuA 'ft•••• * *
With no bad after effects. Onel you , ui-a„
nutcna
'tetra tees fact. yell .Will never deal
A FriendloWomen
• adds.*. 11 ut don't use &tide hereeerte 'with :excess field in the erinle tvaee.
V. hat doctor would tideise." Do learii—eloW---WWY(his method is
The aloe heep fl Phillips' Milk of stipreme. ' , •
*ghee& FOr the 56 geitte. settee it e Ile sate to get the gehuine Phillips'',
invenaott if ' rcnratupd standrird k of; Magnesia prcs cr !tied; by phyel•
Will find With- Ciansgot 50 years in eorrecting ee'•
nt.
In its effect, • se. cess -leech bottle cohtetine bit
'Otreeelote—ane. drueetere. ' ••
TO AGtV, 104E4T14\0 Lts.TRE. ttgeis
with phyeit I. Y
SK V lk Et A R ittE, uick
Vegetaole Compoun
LvOrA PrilgfiAMMtbreikt
Lystr, Matc,
an4 Cobourg, °ay.: eabada.
No.
A