HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-7-28, Page 7`
Uray-Hud GerinanYo rIlil HFiutiry
The world is still trying to make up
S 1111 ITS1
its mind about the actual conditions
-
in Germany. There have been two
circumstantial stories.
One, German -inspired, has run to
the general effect that Germans are
without hope or ambition, that the bur-
den of reparations is crushing and
that Germany is a mere shell, waiting
for the Red touch to crumble. ,
The other story, inspired by her
late enemies, holds that Germany iS
prosperous, is hard at work and that
she is making ready to conquer world
„markets with her exports and start
lack to "a Place in the sum" as soon
as she can wheedle the Allies or trick
them out of the reparations, in whole
,or in part..
The exact truth is as hard to 'deter-
mineas the line that divides light and
:shadow. It lies sometyliere about mid-
'way`between the two extreme repre-
sentatiOns, accorclini to a careful
analysis by Colonel Edward M. Houlse.
Germany is -neither all 'tale& nor all
white—she is gray. .
Colonel House shows that Germany
is in about the same situation as other
nations of the world---onlk more .so.
'The 'blighting aftermath, of war is
world wide. :It is a deep' blight in
Gerrhany, and deepening it are the
'ItrOubles. that dame with losing the ,gi-
,gantic gamble the Germans made on
'the war.
Germany •did not escape from war -
'hurts; she was deeply hurt. 1 -ler dead
are dead and her substance was was-
ted. The reparations are a burden,
and an outraged world intended, they
.should be.
Colonel IIouse believes that Ger-
hiany can pay the indemnity, but the
yoke of debt will be heavy. He lie-
• lieves that she needs, first,, courage
sand then a little help from the En-
tente. 1 -ler need for courage •is as
great as, if not. greater than, her need
for help. Germany can pay, but she
'cannot afford the luxury of •strikes
-ancl labor upheavals while she is about
it. •
Germany has been put in bondage
-tor her sins, but she has certain items
on the credit side that are Worth much.
'There is productive labor and plenty
ef it. She has 'overcome bolshevism,
lift still shudders about it. She has
less unemplojrment to -day than any
ether considerable nation; food is
plenty and getting cheaper, and labor
is productive and there are few strike.
On tae other hand, rehabilitation
ss -k has been exaggerated. True, She has
rio more than 400,000 unemployed,
where England and Ameriea have ten
times that numbeee But she is carry-
ing tens of thousands on rail and
other Government payrolls where they
are not needed*, lest some worse thing
Germany has -come a long way badk
since 1919., but has a longer way to go
before she reaches her status of 1914.
Her financial condition is desperate,
well-nigh as. bad as that of Russia.
Her great foreign trade has dwindled
to a quarter of its 1913 figures. Her
-Russian trade is gone; that with
France and Poland and Austro-I-Iun-
gary is hardly more than a shadow.
Germany, however, is by no means
a total loss. It is possible, even prob-
ableable that she must have 'help. It may
Pc prob-
,
the day avill come when the
Entente will see and understand this.
But Germany must first show that she
has as much of a will to work and to
- pay as she once had in her will to war.
Famous Emeralds Recovered
by India.
Clem collectors are still regretting
the fact that by an act of the Govern-
' rnent of India two famous emeralds
rich in history were not included in
the recent sale by Christie's of the'
jewel collection of the late Herbert
IVIaxwell Stuart, says a e,onden des-
patch. The emeralds. originally were
in the royal treasure at Lahore, to-
• gether with the great Koh -an -oar dia-
mond, now in the British Imperial re-
• galia, when the 'Punjab was annexed
. These emeralds, each carved from a
single stone, represented a bow ring
and a cup, and were made far 'the Em-
• peror Shah.Teha,n. The Governor-Gen-
eral at the period of annexation was
permitted to purchase these curious
stones. •
They were carfied off by Nadir Shah
after the sack of Delhi in 1739. In
1813 they were restored to India by
the fugitive Shab, Sujah, surrendering
them to Ranjit Sing at Lahore, ' They
were found there with the Koh-l-noor
on the ternaination of the second Sikh
, war in 1849 and purchased by Lord
Dalhousie, then Governor-Gen•eral. The
bow ring was used by the Great Mo-
gul to protect the joint and ball of his
left thumb when the drawn bow string
was ueed as a patch box by one of his
fair ladies.
The emeralds were on loan exhibi-
tion at the Victoria and Albert Mu-
seum when the war broke out and
with other treasures were buried as
a safeguard against unlooked for
eventualities. After fhe war the fame
to which they belonged found it
aecessary to disose of these jewels
and arrangements were made for their
sale at Christie's, but the Indian Gov-
ernment heard about It and decided
that the jewels rightlY belonged to
that country and began to negotiate
ter their purchase.
The offer which was made was ac-
eeptable to Christie's client and be-
fore long the historic jewels will be
back In their old home, inuch to the
regret at wealthy collectors who had
had their eyes on them for some time
past.
Lineit fabrics have been found in
' tenths thousande years old.
T
Is Always Full of Life and 1
Energy—Failures Are Weak
and Bloodless.,
Some. men Seem to have all the luck,
If there are any. good thing,* g'Oing
these men s'aein to get them.' If they
are business men they are successful;
if they are workmezi they get the fare -
man's job, They have the power ot
influencing. people.
The same is: true of women. Some
have the Oharin that makes men seek
them out; ethers are neglected. But
this is not luck. It is due to a person-
al gift --vitality. Men and women of
this sort are .nevele weak, puny in-
valids. They may not be big, but they
are fall of life and energy. The whole
thing.,is a matter of good blood, good
nerves and good health. Everyone
would wiela• to be like this and tho-
qualities that ,make for vitality and
ene-rgyare purely a matter of health.
By building up the blood and nerves,
sleeplessness, want' of eoergy, weak-
ness of the back, headaches and the
ineffectual soA of presence which -real-
ly, comes from weakness can be get
rid of. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have
made many weak, tired menevigerous,
and many pale dejected girls- a-nd wo-
men, rosy and attractive, by improv-
ing -their blooii and toning up their
nerves. If you are weak, low-spirited
or unhealthy, try Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills and note their beneficial effect.
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr. Wilhelm' Medicine Coe Brockville,
Ont.
Here And There With the
Boy Scouts.
A Toronto bey, now resident in Buf-
falo, N.Y., where he is a member -of a
troop of the Boy Scouts of America.,
recently won the championship for
bugling in a Scout meet in Buffalo. He
is Bertram G. Harris, aged 12, and a
grandson of Mr. and Mes. S. L. Taube,
of Parkdale Mans -ions, well-known
citizens of Toronto.
On Do -minion Day Oshawa, Whitby
and Thornton's Corners Troops and a
few 'boys from the 1st Newcastle
Troop "rallied" at Oshawa for inspec-
tion and field day sports. Th•ey were
in,spected by Mr. R. S. McLaughlin,
who, with Col. Grierson and. Major
Alfred Hinds, the latter preeident of
the Oshawa Boy Scouts Association,
also addressed them on their appear-
ance and their work.
Exeter recently had a real Boy Scout
church service. The members of the
1st Exeter Troop occupied the choir
loft of Cavell ,Presbyterian
and Sang too. Patrol Leader Stuart
Stanburya presided at the organ and
played all the hymns, and accompanied
the soleists•. Three other Scouts, Bob
Gainbrill, Tom Kay and Kenneth Stan -
bury added the strains of violins to
the sin -ging, while Bob Gambrill played
the offertory solo., Mr. S. G-. Staubury,
President of the Troop Committee, had
charge of the service, Field Secretary
Davison of Provincial Headquarters
Staff giving the address on "Citizen-
ship as Built Up by Scouting." Scout-
master Thomas Pryde was alsa as-
sociated with Messrs-. Stanbury and
Davison ou the platform.
A garden party recently arranged by
members of the troop and its friends
netted the 3rd St. Catharines Troop
treasury a nice amount for 113 CaMP
funds. , There was an. excellent attend-
ance in spite of many counter attrac-
tions in the city on the night the party
was put on. -
An inte-resting ceremony took place
on the steps ef St. Paul's Anglican
Church, Stratford, a few evenings ago,
when the troop charter was prese-nted
to the lot Stratford Troop. Mayor
Gregory. and Lt. -Col, le L. Youngs,
M.C.rofficiated at the ceremony. Prizes
were- also presented to the Scouts who
made an excellent reoord in the Do-
minion rifle competition. The troop
Is also very proficient along many
other lines.
Ontario's two largest Boy Scout
camps are •now in full swing. 'They are
the Selkirk Camp of the Iianitlton As-
sociation down on Lake Erite.and the
Black Rapids Camp of, the Ottawe As-
,socia.tion. Approximately 100 boys a
Week will be taken care of hi tho form-
er, while the attendance at the Ot-
tawa camp is ruening.about 75 Scouts
per week. Both camps will continue
until the e•nd of August and will have
taken care of many hunelreda of boy's
betal'o thoy linn1 'eloSe down. I3e-
side's reereational \volt, 1)0111 C11111P1i
inc c a rrYieg tull yrograjll of eau-
catioaal features,
A 'training couree for Rg.iaan Cath-
olic men 4n -tending to tette up the work
of Scoutmasters le tieing colLaUCte4 at
the St. John Inclustoial ctiool, Toron-
to. The first class censisted of a adze/I:-
young members et the Cheistian
l3rotlicria.o•od,'
•-•
• --------
Tanned Truth.
,A tanned complexion makes the
kplain person good-looking, aiCil the
good-lo.olting better looking.We all
•like'to be san-burned, but not all of us
know how the tan comes.
The trail is that thousands 02 the
tiny bloodvessels beamath the skin
have'to• be rupturea before we Gan tan.
The heat rays et ,tho Still first inflame
and then rupture them. 'Pim skin can-
not then resist the heat. The cooling
shield beneath the skin has gone,' and
brovirning takes Place:
Those unfortunate folk whose com-
plexions change to a vivid red instead,
of an attraetive brown have, contrary
to the popular notion, ;tough, thick
skins. The latter resist tho rays, Mad
there is surface inflammation instead
of browning.
e Those whose noses peel have eleins
in which the perspiration ducts are
clogged. Thus there is nothing to
"oil" the skin, and it peels because it
is clry.
Finally --this• will be news to many
--only the white'races- tan, scorch, peel
or blister from the action of the sun.
A blackmail will get much hotter than
a white man, because black skins ab-
sorb the heat and pass it beneath the
skin. It has no external effect.
Freckles. are but tan in patches, due
to a varying thickness, of the skin.
CHOLERA iNFANTU
Cholera infantum is one of the fatal
ailmealts of childhood. It is a trouble
that comes on suddenly, especially
during the slimmer months, and un-
less prompt action. is taken. the little
one may soon be beyond aid. Baby's
OWIl Tablets are an ideal medicine in
warding off this trouble. They regu-
late the bowels and sweeten the stom-
ach and thus prevent all the dreaded
summer complaints. Concerning them
Mrs. Fred Rose, of South Bay, Ont.,
says: "I feel Baby's Own. Tablets
saved thenlife of our baby when. she
had choler -a infant= and I would not
Pc without them." The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers- or by mail
at 25- cents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine.Co„ Brockville, Ont.
Personal Effort.
"The best thing to give to your ene-
my ee Sargivenece; ,ta an opponent,
tolerance; to a friend, your heart; to
your child, a good example; to a fath-
er, deference; to your mother, con-
duct that will make her proud of you;
to yours -elf, respect; to all men,
charity."—Balfour.
OiVe often hear the' remark: "Thie
or that person -has a wonderful brain."
It is assumed that it is comparatively
easy for them to do big things 'in the
business world, to create marvelous
inventions for the benefit of mankind,
to make wonderful scientific discover-
ies-, and to produce works of art. that
endure through many generations.
The masses conclude that these ac-
complishments are easy for these
people because they naturally are so
gifted and talented. Knowledge and
wisdom never came to any man or
woman as a free gitt. Sometime,
somewhere, they .have given personal
effort, and in accordance with immut-
able and ever operative laws of nature
they have received their reward in per-
manent soul acquisition, and, incident-
ally, temporary, material benefits for
themselves.
No achievement is passible, no un-
foldment of the soul is possible with-
out labor, witheut effort, indeed there
would be more jus-tice ane equity in
economics if labor could be establish-
ed as the measure of all values.
Ile who has acquired knowledge,
and wisdom, and power, ia under a
personal obligation rightly to use •and
dissemMato them, These acquisitions
cannot bo us -ed for the highest good,
aad to attain sputa unfoldment.
Thus we see we cannot deplete our
stock of knowledge and 'wthdom, for
the more we give the more we receive.
The man who is always striving to
take advantage of hia neighbor is -
never a benefactor to the race, how-
ever much he may advertise his chari-
ties.
rofit by the
experience °fathers
—which has taught thousands
that Inata.nt Postum IS better
for health than tea or coffee.
P0$71J.2•4. has a flavor
similar to coffee, but con-
tains nothinli that'ean disturb
health and Comfort,
44•
p
ere,
f71. -
Sold 1-iy' 6 ever yvv.r.ker e
tr 1LT
Ij
1 I -
t2M
AUTO' PEPAlle FARTS
a:a most makes ape mooeie or
• Your 015, broken or wovreout parts
Wrlto nrk \vivo as desgrib-
ing Nehet you v,'at)(, cfarry tile
nirst, and 1110.i,i "00ll1P,10i0 Sleek ln
and atgamottlle equisalient, N‘re fhip
cajjoxi4 f3ligi:tly usod or tietv fmrts
(5,0.1), any w here. n Val -matt. Sat 5 -
fat L'Qry Ca' L'Of Ulla ill 1`1111 our motto, tj
lay o
te
ago tied aejsply,
Deirerilla see Toronto, Oat
FROM iiitiRE
Foxy Ta I k.
"Am v,mI the-onlY girl you have ever
iov
"Oh, no. Bat niy taste has been im-
proving right along."
Which?
First Diner— 'That waiter is either
a fool or a Very eubtle humorist."
Second Diner= -"What's the matter?"
First Diner—PI ordered extract of
beef and he brought me'milk,”
A Subtle Compliment.
He—"I am rather in favor of the
English than the American mode of
spelling."
She—"Yes?"
He—"Yes,' indeed. Take 'parlour,'
for instance. Having `ut in it makes
all the difference in the world."
.When It Pours,
There are profiteers among other
ranks than capitalists, an.cl during a
certain boom a particular grade of
workman was receiving very high
wages indeed.
Bill'Hodgesk returned from work one
Saturaday night,and drew a big
bundle of notes Out of his pocket.
"How much do you want this week,
Jane?" he asked his wif.e genially.
"Good gracious', Bill, give US a
chance," the, wife remonstrated; "I
ain't hardly got Sta.rted. on last week's
yet!"
Tru ly Great.
At a certain military academy a new-
ly appointed. commandant liked young
but not when they were "fresh."
One day he chanced to overhear a
young officer refer to himself (the
commandant) • by name without any
title. -
"Hall?" the offender had said to a
group of fellow cadets. "Hall? He's
a mighty splendid fellow."
The commandant joined the, group,
amidst profound silence.
Turning to the second lieutenant, he
said sternly:
"I think, sir, when you referrel1 to
me you might have said 'General
Hall.' " •
„ „
"1 m sorry, sii.7 stammered the de-
.
liaquent, then brightened a little as he
added: "But, sir, did you ever hear
people refer to General Achilles or
'General Tulius emsar?”
The Will to Work.
It is strange to find the belief sur-
viving anywhere that those vrho sit in
the shade, twiddling their thumbsand
twaddling with their tongues, deserve
pay for it, as though they worked and
produced. •
The rule of labor is the underpin-
ning of the universe. The Creator
himself set the example. He toiled
and He rested. He is the "Master of
every trade." Man, made in I -lis
image, can hardly expect divine favor
to rest upon sloth.
On every hand, ' however, we see
people trying to crawl under or over
or around that uncomfortable prescrip-
don about earning one's bread in the
sweat of one's brow. On the dance -
floor the two-step ' and the one-step
may come and go; but- in the work-
shop the sidestep and the sidestepper
are always with us.
Young men are huntirig' for short
cuts: to wealth. The shortest cut is.
the straight line of res:poresibility and
duty and good faith with one's employ -
If your employer' happens to be your
own self, there are certain things you
owe yourself just as much as though
some -body elso hired you: You owe it
to yours•elf to report for the day's
work lit to do iti• Yo -u owe it to your-
s•eli to keep your appo-intments at the
thne set for them. You owe it to your-
self to be steadily industrious. You
cannot ia self-respect take money that
you have net earned nor demand a
fabul-ous income for a fictitious effort.
Creation's cry goes up on high
lrrom age to cheated age;
Send us the men who do the work
For which they draw the wage!
• There bee men out of employment
this morning who are the yell iras of
eeenomic mal -ease and readjuetment.
They have been caught betwixt grind-
ing mills•tones• of circierictance, They
do -serve sympathy and a hearing and
an opportunity. , That opportunity ie
like•ly to, come, eoon. and suddenly, if
they hold me
But there are others who deserve no
sympathy. They deliberately elected
to be idle. They defied Clod's law—
they condemned likewise all concilia-
tion and considea.ation that were not
of their own selfish and greedy clic-
talrorklhq);
Cerlaialy the chaneo tooarn a liy-
alg_aelet.9'fi tq Nee rea'test,e,tgie bleSS-
63g thai, Y044eh9Aied
to go to those who 'have' the will to
Work and not the desire to stir up in.
discontent and make
trouble in the 'peace:toeing,' law-abitis
Ing ranks 'Of the induStrious, who
"knew of toil fled tho end of Loh; (env
'Mott? COWS late is '
T..M `aleok V't.i NS Xi, Tit 'TM
Ir
L Li .1 I to ll ofi11l.. Li
BY DR, J. J, MiDPLETON
torcv.Inc14) Gpard of Health., Oritsrla'
WORK
MM, HE SAYS
A Or altddlefon will be glad to ensevor queations oa Public Health na0
ters througb thia column. irldf•eza him et tee Pule:meat Blass. 0
Toroeto,
ta cza za.‘ I.= Nva we, uz,.. va vim I= 1
foocd.a-oe:saslii:.ii:c.iidarepriropneeleicyl ptlheentychiol: ditNic.ont oonflythdeoeechiaithh-eent, n:baeuatl a :he:lino:el
good 'nourishing food. To have (his improve 1.110 health arid physical con-
•
is thereby given to teach them to eat
liould Paencitaitusgisitoirtfeagcahlgrivielonuras 'rfe°s1t' buttoand se put no ever -
pronerl t bolt their food down
between. meals. Continuous eating of'
work on the stomach in trying to pe
r-
lit.thh
ealdiets, proetece.--8, s esin iint
erf eirl ,apiaLibeai
ethefl000pdpfooirtullityf
digestion. ortherphe
There will
v
Yliangt and yet the average 'child, If to demonstrate to the -p•upile the ad -
not trained, will eat almost anything vantage o.f Cleanliness in the cooking,
he '(-tah get 41°16 of in the 'why of preparing and serving of food and
LE RIS ENT1-11j$1lASTIC
eRMSE OF TANILAC.
Feels Full of Energy All the
Th77-- NOW Says Hamilton
?mem.
"Well. I don't know what it is, but
therea °at
ceriaiuly clop' h gse e work," ald A. t.teth
I ris, 14 Queen St. North, Hamilton, Out.
lefr. Loteie is a well-known printer and
h..
fax- . iibionoeu ywe .th e Grimes Printing Go.
"Yee sir, I tan recommeild TanIae,
for it has straightened me out twice
, and 1 believe it will help anyone else
who tries it. Two years ago I took
the medicine and it fixed me tip in fine
wshbaipi: bazicielk wI hfeenitI geo oo ma naeant ei d atolitteete
l
rundown. I got to where I just had
to drive myself at my work and, as
,iny appetite was gone, I seemed to go
down hill all the time instead of get-
ting better.
"Well, 2 got me some Tarilac and it
wasn't long until nay appetite had a
new start. I ha-ve just finished my
second bottle now and I can eat any-
thing at any time without it.s hurting
me. That tired feeling le gone and
I feel full of energy aII the time. Tan -
lac is all that is elairtied for it and
it certainly fa the medicine for me."
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere.
Advt.
Appearances Deceitful.
sweetmeats.
When the child is at school there is
less likelihood of it getting toe Much
to eat. In fact, through the school
day the tendency is in the other direc-
tion. Sometimes breakfast is rather
hastily eaten in 'dhe morning's, espe-
cially if the child lives in the country
a.nirhas, some distance to go to school.
There is not enough time at the noon
recess to let the child go home for
dinner, so its lunch is sent with it,
and eaten at the school building. This
is not a good plan, for several reasons.
In the first place there is seldom a
suitable place provided in country
schools for the children to oat their
lunches, and the surroundings are
often not hygienit. I have just read
a recommendation from the Medical
Officer of Health of a rural district
for hand -basins, soap, towels, etc., for
the use af the pupils during, the mid-
day recess. The M.O.H. states that as
nearly every one of the pupils bring
their lunch to school, these facilities
for washing are badly needed. It is
not entirely, however, because there is
a lack of facilities for eating that the
mid-day cold lunch is o•bjectionabie.
A warm meal freshly cooked is much
more nourishing and sustaining to a
little schoolboy or girl than a cold
lunch could be. -Children need a hot
meal at mid-day, because they -assimi-
late food quicker than grown-ups, and
must be fed oftener. It‘is too long a
time between breakfast and the after-
noon meal when the school children
get home. .
In some schools in the province hot
mid-day meals are prepared for the
children, but to make the scheme a
decided success the teachers who
undertake the coo -king should have a
certificate showing that they • have
taken a course in dietetics. Assis-
tance could be given by some of the
senior pupils. This arrangement is
excellent, for it not only provides ad-
ditional help in attending to the serv-
aing of the., food, but also teaches, the
bigger girls how to cook and prepare
many kinds of dishes. Thus they are
fortified with actual first-hand exper-
ience in one of the most important
features of housekeeping, before they
leave school at all.
In many rural sections, however,
there are no such mid-day meals pro-
vided by the ,school staff for the chil-
dren, and it is to encourage the school
trustees and people .in every rural
district to urge the necessity for this
much-needed feature in school life,
that this article is written.
general hygienic •surroundings. Food
Should be shown protected from flies,
• and why it should be 'so protected;
children' should alsd be told the most
important food produets, and why one
kind of food is more valuable than
another from a standpoint of nour-
ishment. Little facts, can be brouglit
home to children much more easily
end readily than to adults—for the
young brain is receptive, and has net
yet developed any of those prejudices
that often are unreasonably formed
late in life.
At the inid-d.ay school meal also, a
word or two could be told' the children
about vitamines, those essential but
very small elements in natural foods
that keeP people of all ages well.
These vitamines are contained in fresh
foods such as fresh milk, fruits, etc.
It is easy to see what good results
could be expected -from such a mid-
day meal and little talks to the chil-
dren at the finish. This feature should
Pc as ranch a necessity in rural schools
as the blackboard and chalk, and no
school however far back in the coun-
try should be without it.
Too often the question of what to
eat, and how to eat, is neglected in
the home eircle. Many a family there
is in the country where the mother
not only has to attend: to the children
and the housework but she also cooks
food for the live stock, feeds and
ten -ds the chickens and many of the
other small but necessary jobs that
have to be done at a farm.
The child -ren must obviously be neg-
lected when such a state of affairs ex-
ists, a.nd it often exists because the
work has to be done andethere is no-
body but the mother to de it. Every
father of a familY in the country'
should be urged to provide leisure for
his wife to attend to the proper caok-I
ing and choice of meals for the chil-
dren'. These meals are often prepared
hurriedly, a.rid with- no thought as to
their nutritional value; 21 10 purely a
question of expediency, so much other
drudgery has to be done. This con-
dition of things -should not be. Every
attention should 'oe given to the chil-
dren's feeeding up till they are five
years of age, and read § to start school.
A mother should regard the feeding
of her children as one of, if not the
most important tasks in her daily
round of work, and nothing else should
she allow to interfere with it.
The way to child is fed in the first
five years of life has a large bearing
on its physical condition in years to
come.
Some Best Things.
The Best Law—
The Golden Rule.
The Best Education—
Self-Knowleclge,
The Best Philosophy ---
A contended raind.
The Best Medicine—
Cheerfulness and temperance.
The Best War—
The fight against one's own weak-
ness.
The best Music—
The laughter of a child.
ThepaBibetsiltigAart—smile
upon the brow of a
child.
The Best Science --
Extracting sunshine from a elo•udy
The- Best Telegraphy --
Flashing a ray of sunshine into a
gloomy heart,
The Best Biography --
The life that writes- charity in the
largest letters.
The Best Mathematics—
Multiplying the joys and dividing
the sorrows of others-,
A Little Wisdom.
Anger ages and worry wears.
Fret over the past ansi you'll fail in
the future.
Be Clow enough, and quick enough,
to be sure.
1 -le who swells in. prosperity will
sleei'nk in adversity.
Strong langaage is often the prop
for a tvetik cause.
The only way to keep a secret is to
•
say nothing,
-Don't let the only spur toyour work
be your employer'S eyes,
Beware of too puffed up a sense of
your o-wn worth ancl consequence,
,moNEy ORDERS
.A. Domitilen Express- ilieney .Ordee
for five dellars 054tft three cents
lian •10-9 666. - I f
.More t , pound s o snails
a,re eaten every day by the residents
af Pari.
;
There are a millien and a half Jewe
in Now 'Yorlc, as Many as in alll the
rest of the United f3tatee, 'and a tenth
ol: all the Java in the world.
,l'ateadla Un:inont nolleves Nural1j 1.i
Absence from church was a punish-
able offence in the seventeenth cen-
tury.
Dollls used tia display styles in dress
6ao years- ago.
'memo.
°COARSE SALT
LAND SIALT
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
CUFF TORONTO
Soo -n after leaving port one passen-
ger approached anathier en board the
liner, saying:
"We are getting up a tug-of-war be-
tween a teem of married men .and a
team of single men. You are ma -tried,
aren't you?"
"No," the other answm-e-P. "I'm
seasick, that's -what makes me look
like this."
M inard's Liniment for sate everyvvhere
London has adapted Verdun, as well
as several vill-ages in the Meuse Val-
ley.
One-quarter of tlie income tax of
the United Kingdom is collected in
London.
America's Pioneer Dog iternedies
Book on
060 DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad-
dress b,-vtits Autber.
Mt. Clay alocmr Co., Tait.
ilS West Slot Strmet
Naw York. 111.8.A.
Let Cufieths-at real Your Slit'
In the treatment of all skin '
troubles bathe freely with Cuti-
cura Soap and 'hot water, dry
gently, and apply Cuticura
Ointment to the affected parLs.
Do not fail to include the
Cuticura Talcum in your toilet
preparations. '
Scap25c. Oiatment7.5an5S0c. 2!k- Sold
throughouttbeDoininion. CattadianDepott
Limited, 544 St. Nal 51., W.. itiketnr_L
,..:-Corticoro Soap shaves WiihoE%11205.
YARMOUTH, b.S,
The Original and Only Genuine
Beware of Imitations sold on the
merits of
MIN.ARD'S LINIMENT
ASPIRIN
'Bayer" only is Genuine
IKEL1
Tells Remarkable Story
Sickness and Recovery.
Toronto, Ont. --4.'1' suffered greatly
from weakness seemed to be tired all
the tune,'anti had no
ambition' to .do any-
thingorgoatyplace,
My nerves were in
bad hape, 1 eopld
not swap at night,
and thoT) came 4
rtialtdown, I read
oT Lydia E, Pink,
harn'o -Vegetable
COMp011nd 14, 019
totpftPerS 444 Pelf*
4 Of IIIY-' triels.9
ady, lied me to
,#-, 1 x ,,,,Nktr.v.;y- 'Putt' Wirrel Trivijm-it, 1.1 v y:
0,Pri
111 Vat) Ole to 9 al III:$7 own wpr
ncl I would Streng a vista ever s,
ering woinan to 1yQ
31 .
ham's 'Vegeta 10 _o»sp1 a td1...--,
,
il,..ICPM. (ibTif/149
(8t. Oroacit vri .
? - .,.
Trliq makorp 41 Oa p, pinkbfmk, '
' Vegetable) C4M01,In ho tboas.00
ueh letters pa that g ,91Z4/s-ItleYta
rutll, e ,
ise they, .60,1 nOt,liVe 14 ek,t1
-alned for loye'orIpeney: 'irhisrOCO
is no Stranger—# bag' gtead the teat 0.
'Imre than forty y4070,
If there are any compltraations'yOU
not Understand write to J.,yrlia LP
bans Medicine Co. (conlIdeattal)o
Mass. ' ., '
V:laniihig I Take no chances wi th
substitutes fqy ageoelno "payer Tab-
:r.;.'e&Siii.rift.,Ir 'Unless 70.ti Pee the
xiainei1.3a.yer'1 an package or on tab-
lets yee 110 not getting Aspirin at all,
in every Br paclsage aee arections
for Colds, Headkelie, oprn1a,Rheu-
Matiam, Elarache, Toothache, Lum-
bago and for pa,in, Handy tin boxes
oil twelve leibtels Cost few centeo
i:nooggists also sell larger packages.
Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade
mark (registeroti in, Canada); of Bayer
TiTsxiula attire of Monoaceldcaaldester
et Salicylicecid.
ISSUEi NO4X1-410.