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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1919-01-02, Page 3t 11 Ali RUSSIA Ines; from which our North Sea ba rage could have been turned. EEDE were mipoltant achieve' E�5'DE mems and contributed materially to tt� the deleai; of Getittany. I say nothing of the fact that vast portions of the earth's surface and nni]lions of people friendly t� the ;Al- 1,ies have been spared the unspeakable harem's of Bolshevik rule:" 'But- in course -of this Allied intervention, a thousands of Ruseiane have taken up arms and fought on 'the side of the Allies. blow can we, simply because our, own immediate purposes have . been, seryed, come away + and leave •'cALAM^TTY. IN WORLii LORD Mina-epee-SAYSHONORDE- FOR 2,006 -YEARS • MANDEI) AID TO, FRIENDS .German Capitalist I'redicte Emigre Allies Entercd.to 5,'tse pebeilio-Slovaks - tion, and Says Food Problem De- alai Overthrow the Powee of mends ' Immediate Action by Us. the llolsbcviki. `.` ! H' T. ;{.Kreenavhll, the London Daily In r'esponsestrong s on pectoris in the them to the tender mereies of theist •Express correspondent, has interview -press- against the secreeY' Mbintaine€1.1 and one enemas efore they 'have time ed in Iie:rlin Dr. Rathenau, head of the concerningmilitary o eiatidns ib Ru";'-andy , Y P to arm train . organize so as to Gein,en Ccnei a1 Elgetrical Company;sirs and themsisient demand b?_ liberal lie "strong enoughto defend ' diem - one of the leer'g eet ern to ors of labor izews a e1s'tha ' the Governmetet e'x' I selves? It *child' be an abominable P y P P "Ie tri nail '. Be said: ' 1 plaai'ri an'd justify the eotitinuance.bf betrayal, contrairy to • every British *aa^tleany is ruined for generations these operations; Viscount Milner, the instinct of honor and -humanity: to wane. it is the .greatest calamity Secr`e"tary el -Wait; 11V -issued a state- "You" may be quite sure that, the that has happened in any_ country for meat to the' effect that the Allies hays last -thing the Government desires is \. 2,000 ears. Weai•eAined oen:leaner, an obligation of hoiier.te' 'protect the to leave anyBritish soldiers irrRussia YP P sh sold err industrially ami"economically, '' Russians and others who have aided a cloy longer than is necessary to dis- "All our people here"' ,do not yet them against the Bolshevilci. I charge the moral obligations We have know the truth. I told the German For the Allies to scramble out :of igcurred. ,And that, 1 le1ive, is the People that they would lose the ,War, Russia now would threaten to involve guidingl principle of the Allies, Not •the whole country in barbarism, `he do'I myself think: that the time When says. I we can withdraw Without disastrous Y in hi statemen`which v ran nt. Lord 14iilife}, s ,A consequences is necessarily distant. is in the form of a letter in reply But this is a ease in'which more haste may be less speed. "1'£ the Allies were all to seraciible out of`Russia at once, the result *mild almost certainly he that the ba barism that at present reigns in a part only o£.thatcountry would spread over the whole of it; including the vast regions or northern and central Asia, whieh were included in the dominion of the Czar. The ultimate consequences of suth0 disaster cannotbe foreseen,' but they would assuredly irrvolve • a far greater strain on the resources of the British. Empire than our present com- mitments." - but everybody scoffed at me. • "We have a .population of nearly 70,000,000. Iiaif of .them can live on whale grows on our soil or is found below it. The other half live on the to a correspondent, goes over the sit - industries for which .. all material$ eaten created by the. success of the have to be bought and paid - for by, Bolsheviki in gaining control of -Rue- what they sell. sign affairs, and emphasizes ' how "Now our colonies are going, and their acts were affecting adversely the Alsace-Lorraine too, with all the ores cause of the Allies in the west and and the greater part` of the potash otherwise hampering the winning of production; There is clanget of losing the war by the Allied' nations. other parts of OUT country, the Danish •` "You asic me," says Viscount Milner and so-called Polish districts, which‘r in his letters„' what right we eyeer had in reality are German. to semi British` troops to• Russia to "Black Ruin Faces Us." meddle with the internal affairs of. "Then conies the question of indem_ that country and how long we mean pities: rills indemnities are high them ' to keep em there, now that the war, the interests and repayments will take is .over. • ' our savings and we shall have nothing Reason for Intervention. with which to expand our industries. "The question itself shows that you f - VISION OF. COWS Black ruin will face ne and there will misapprehend the facts of the case as ^ •"-'-' be a great tide of emigration, probate. well as the motives of the Govern--Txplapation of Apparent Stupidity 02 ly to South America and the Far -East . 'Animals On Being Approached. When a.cow faces an object both eyes may with ease be focused on it. When the object is at the side or rear one eyemay be focused on it, while the othei is viewing objects in quite a different direction: Evidently the aminmal may direct attention to one objeet with both eyes, or` it may inhibit one e$e and direct and concen- trate' attention with'the other toward some object of fear or fancy. • In advancing. in a car toward . cows standing in the -roadway 'it will be, notice]' that those facing the ear. usually turn to one side and let the car pas$; thosewith siae toward the ear will, if bn, say, the right side of the road, run and : attempt to cross to the left side; those with head away from the car will usually run down the roadway ahead, turning of at one,' side orthe4ather. '• The reason why the cow or chicken on the right side of the road 'turns to go over to the left, and vice versa, is,. I suggest, because the eye of the animal, which sees and appreciates the danger ' 02 the advancing car, is by instinct kept on the dangerous ob jest. To turn to the right' and escape would blind the animal during `the period of turning, and this she will not willingly do. But if she 'runs across the road in front of the car, the eye with which she first observed it will keep it clearly and continuously in view, and, she thinks, allow her to escape the :impending danger. Even when safely across, if turned around, by encountering a fence, or by chance, so as to perceive the enemy with the. other eye. I have seen -her run fo'' dear life to recross the road to the side whence she is just come. Theeinstinctive action' originally pro- tective, is thus made a source of dan- ger to the animal. The chicken, with 'Monocular vision, labors under the same hallucination; it, too, thinks that the danger may be avoided by running with all its might, lcoeping the enemy 'all the time in view with the eye that was originally turned toward it. Thus, truly, the cow cros- sed. the road because she crossed the road. went. The reason why Allied, not and certainly to Russia. It will be merely- British forces -indeed, the most dreadful and the resultrwill be Eritish' are' only a small proportion of the Balkanization of Europe. the total Allied troops -were sent to Russia, is that the Bolsheviki,'what- ever their ultimate object, were in fact assisting our enemies in every possible way. "It was diking to their action that hundreds of thousands of - German troops were let loose to hurl them- selves against our men on the western front. It was owing to their betrayal that Rumania, with all its rich„ re- sources' in, grain and oil, fell into the hands of the Germans. "It was they who handed over the Black Sea fleet to the Germans and treacherously attacked the Czecho- Slovaks when the latter only desired to get out of Russia in rider to fight for the freedom of theit- wit country in Europe. The Allies, "every one of them, were most anxious to avoid interference in Russia, but it was an obligation of honor to save the Czecho- Slovaks, and it was military necessity of the 'most urgent kind to prevent those vast portions of Russia, that were struggling to escape the tyranny of the Bolsheviki from being overrun by thein and so thrown open as a source of supply to the enemy, "I say nothing of the enormous 'quantities of military stores, the pro- perty of the Allies, which were stili lying at Archangel and Vladivostocic and were in course of being appro- priated by the' Bolsheviki and trans- ferred to the Germans until the Allied occupation put an end to the processes. Act Brings Success. . "And this intervention was success- ful. Rioting was stopped. The Czecho- y$16vaks were. saved from destruction, The resources esources of Siberia and south- eastern Russia _were denied to the enemy. :The northern ports of Euro- pean Russia were prevented from be- coming' bases for the German submar- "The disappearance of Germany from a position of importance will be. the moat? dangerous fact hi history. Sooner or later the eastern Powers will press on the western civilization." Turning to the food question, Dr. Rathenau ,aid: "Germany has been hungry for three years, but is not yet starving. Everybody who sees Germany will say that she is not starving now, and that is perfectly true. But if you talk of provisions to be found in Germany you must eay truthfully that they will be exhausted in etwo months; and if you wait until then to send feel it will be too late, because 70,000,1 • ieople cannot be fed as easily as say, 1,000,- 000 Belgians. Ships are .1'•: greatest factor in feeding Germany." "If the Allies don't send food within two months, what will happen- ?" the corresuondent asked. "Riots and sickness," was the reply. Doctor Retheeau said that he bad seen the damage done in Belgium and northern France, and his estimate of. the indemnity payable for this was $6,000,000,000. THE "TRAVELLER'S TREE" A plant that is said to be like the rock which Moses smote with his rod trod caused water to, gush forth is the !'traveler's tree,". so called because when its leaves are cut a quantity of pure cold water is said to spurt out to quench the thirst of the wayfarer. Botanists say that the "traveler's tree" is not a palm at all, but is closely related to the banana plant, a member of the muss family. While the trunk in general appearance, is like that of a palm, the leaves are arranged -at the top in two rows on long stalks diverging in the form of a gigantic•fan, The leaf bases are borne on opposite sides of a genuine trunk one above the other. These sheathing' bases fit so closely together. as to preclude the evaporation of the water that runs down the channel on tho'upper or inner side of the midrib. By puncturing the midrib of any of the leaves, may be obtained a con- siderable amount of water. A feature of general interest is presented.by this tree in its peculiar at'rangement of its leaves, which are oblong in ,form, and are largeriii size them those of any other known plant. The flowers are small and numerous and arranged on a`spilce that is pro- duced from the centre of the stem, as in the banana. The clusterof leaf bases are fold- ed together lengthwise like the leaves oil the iris. These leaf bases corre- spond to petioles or leaf stalks of erdinarsy- leaves as in the oak , or, cherry, and in the case of the tra- veler's tree what -would be the upper surface of the leaf base is within. Thus, each leaf base straddles the next inner one, which is Icnown as "equttant." It is in the spaces that the water collects. •At the points the leaves clasp very close so that the. water in the spaces cannot escape.' The "traveler's tree' grows natur= ally only in Madagascan` and thrives only in the vicinity of water. The tree is now cultivated in some tropi- ' eel countries for ornamental, pur- '.;,poses. In its native habitat its leaves furnish the people with thatch and sides of',their houses; the leaves are used eIso, extensively for making, gr3gt vairat.j of mi1191'' ;leasehold articles, affil 'tile truffles' 7czaus , whichare woody and durable in contact with the soil, areused for posts and for flooring in warehouses, is sometimes painful. For. ins'taance when the doctor says one mus -E five up' the dearly. loved cup of r tea or coffee. Happiness -fol- lciws however: when one finds Out how J � delicious and health making is the, pure cereal drink 1z . itis i. NTPOSTUM Not For the"l'rincess. A good many years ago when Queen Alexandra was still Princess of Wales, she had accompanied the Prince upon a ceremonial visit to one of the great Midland cities,' where after the' main object of the day, the laying of the corner stone of a hospital, had been accomplished, there followed a round of visits to public institutions, with speeches and the presentation of bou- quets, addresses and resolutions. As the royal carriaf?e was return- ing,,a blocking of the road Ahead de- layed it in ft/: t of a school. The chil- dren had beer;;liven a recess, and wete crowded on ilio curb to see the royal- ties. It had been composition day, and a very pretty little girl in a white dross still held her composition hi her Moved bycurio hand. sat an - Y d the pressure of her comrades behind herr she stepped into the street and stood close by the royal carriage, smiling shyly up into the Princess's face. That gracious lady returned the smile and, seeing -the paper clutched in the child's hand, assumed that' it` was one more loyal address and stretched her hand out to take it. ' The surprised little author surrendered it 'silently -and just then the procession passed on. A few minutes 1�atet®Princess Alex- andra, glancing down, was struck by something unusual in the aspect of the paper 111 her lap -probably a certain scrawliness and inkiness -and opened it for a better. look, She read this astonishing title: "On the habits of, Toads." otal Resouro s Up ire 'Miilio ns in Year and 247Millions in Fitfe Year . 20;P,C. F�MNED ON STOCK Increase in ASsots, ,Itopreseizt'ed Chiefly, in Cash and Liquid Items, WithHigher. Ratios in Both. t • Growth from within supplemented by purchases • of other banks contin-' 00e to make the animal iiguree of the' Royal Bank of Canada impressive.' In the past year total'resdurcee rose to 427 millions: against 335 a, year ago, 263 two years ago and 180 five years ago. The purchase of the -Northern Crown Bank in the' twe'li a months ac- counted for about 27 millions of the past year's growth, but that left the. substantial increase of 65 millions to be assigned to progressive develop- ment from within the old organization; A. moderato increase in. profits ac- companied the large addition to the - bank's potential earning power, net profits 'before war 'tax' epresenting. 20.1 per cont, on paid -rip capital at the end of the year, or 20:9 per cent, 011 the average capital employed, against earnings at the rateof18 per cent. a year ago and 17.8 par cent, two years ago. A million dollars was added to re- serve account, half coming from the premium on shares issued to North- ern Crown ,shareholders and half out of profit and losaccount. After this provision, with pension -fund : appro- priation, increased writing off -on bank premises, larger . contributions; to various public funds' and the usual dividend, the bank carried forward substantially the same amount in profit and loss as a year ago. Profits and their distribution' in the past three years, -were: 1918,- 1917, 1916, Pr0fi0s' .88,809,840 52,327.979 52,111.901 Prev. ball 564,264. 852,346 ' 676,472 Total , .$5.374,110 $3,180,32.5 .$2,787,779 Less:— Dividends $1,614,702 $1,649,404 $1;4)7,207 Penton V. ,100,000 100,000 100,000 Premises , - 400,000 260,000 260,000 War Tax , 138,061 128,367 118,226 Patriotic, 40,000 00,000, 60.000 I-Iallfax P, 60,000 , Reserve . 5001000 528,300 Tot deduc,$2,838 863 $2,616,001$1,935.438 Balance : $836,767. $564,264 $862,846 LIQUID RATIO HIGHER The year's expansion finds reflection chiefly among assets' classified as liquid, which are 59 millions higher than a year - ago, and now represent a proportion of 56,6 per cent.' to public liabilities against 53.9 per cent. a year ago and 53,2 per cent. two years' ago. Cash., items as represented ln. coin, Dominion notes and cover for excess note issue in the Central. Gold Re- serve have increased 18n. millions, bridging the proportion, to .public lia- bilities under this head up to' 17.1 per` dent. against 16.4 per cent a year ago and 17,8 percent. two years ago. Bal- aneee due. notes and cheques of other banks, are up over 19 Millions, and there is an increase of 25 millions in' security holdings, representing chiefly purchases of Dominion treasury bills. Public deposits,'8which form the foundation for the bank's expansion, have increased 80 millions in the year, this gain following one of 52 millions in 191,7 wild one of 55 millions in 1916. A considerable increase in note cir- dulation and a moderate one in cur- rent loans and discounts are measures ' f the prosperity and activity of buss• nese in the territory served by the bank. Comparisons of leading items of thb general statements of the years ended November 30th, 1918 and 1917, follow: 1818,. 1917, Detloelte dem. $135,243,278 $g70,498,667 Do, savings 187,3'48,489 182,488,716 D0..fotab • 882,881,717 262,167,382 Circulation . . 80,880,976 28,109,351 Pubiialiab, . 397,647,102 807,703,755 Cash d • 42,124,660 34,884;276 Cent, es, Res26,000,000. 18,020,000 Balances, etc. . 81,110,479 81,686,776 Securities . 81,806,876 66^688,246 Call loans, Can 10.067,491 12,040,607 Do, abroad 24,874,191 14,574,196 Tot, liquid, . 224,938.088 166,886,706 Curr, loans , 180,748,392. 166,812,129. Tot,' assets. . 427,2 2,082 335,874,186 HYDRAULIC CARTRIDGES . Cheaper' ----, C p and More. Effective.. Than Ordinary Explosives in Mining. It is often difficult and sometimes dangerous to use ordinary explosives for mining and excavating in confined spaces, a fact that p has led to the de- velopment of the hydraulic mining cartridge;,* • The cartridge consists of a steel.cyl ,iiiaer containing' numerous smalh pis= tons that move at right angles to the axis of the cylinder and expand 'when water is injected into them' with a hand ptimp., , After drilling a'deep enough hole the workmen insert the cylinder and then set to work at the liana -pump. - The tiny pistons expand until their free extremities bear against the mass of rock with, constantly . increasing force and the rock le gradually frac- turedlinder tremendous pressure. The operation, it is said; is not only cheap- er than the ordinary blast, but itis -- integrates a,larger area of rock. ro` Tlie LP,tes.t. ,• `11a 1'Y r These bits of serge and satin elaitri1 ed a strong attraction for each other and were artfully combined in this smart creation. McCall Pattern No. 8625, hadies'ptDress,,,, , Ip 6 sizes, 84 oto 44 bust, Pr ce25 cents'e. tl1 Ecclesiastical in inspiration, still quite. daring in smartness, this design takes its place as one of the leaders in the panorama of advance styles. McCall Pattern No. 8685, Ladies' Dress, In 6 sizes, 34 to 44 bust. Price, 25 cents. These patterns may be obtained from your local Maca11 "dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond Ste Toronto, Dept. W. -o-o--o-o - r„-o--o-o With the Fingers! Says Corns Lift Out Without Any Pain 0..0. 0 0 0 0-0 0 0; 0 0 0 0 Sore corns,, hard corns, soft corns or any kind of 'a corn can shortly be lifted right out with the fingers if,you will apply directly upon the corn a few drops of freezone,,says a Cincinnati authority. It is claimed, that at small cost one can get a quarter of an ounce of free - zone at any drug store, which is mall - Went to rid one's feet of every corn or'callus without painor soreness or the danger of infection. This new drug is an ether compound, and while sticky, dries the moment it is applied and does not inflame or even irritate the surrounding tissue, This announcement will interest many women here, for it is said that, the present high -heel footwear is put- ting corns on • practically every woman's feet. A splendid story of the airis told in a London journal. The scion of a noble Scottish house was acting as flying -instructor to; American airmen, A . new type of machine was being tested; Three nien went up, crashed, and were killed. Without a moment's hesitation the young instructor went into a fourth machine, flew, and came back safely. "I just wanted to find out what was wrong,'" he said, "so I found out what it was and put it right in the air." Minta'.. Liniment Cares Dietempor. The true home - of the orange is India, 'Thence it migrated to Per- sia, and so to Europe. The Persian word for it was nareng, and the Ara- bian narang; but the color of this fruit, and the notion of or, annum (gold), gave the French word orange its form by dropping the n, which, however, is retained in some Italian dialects, ."When ,thou wishest to delight thyeelf, think of the virtues of those who lite with thee; for instance; the activity of one, and the industry of another, and the,1lberality'of a third, and some other 'good' quality 'of a fourth." -Marcus Aurelius. a . ISSUE No. 1—'19 14:747.. 0300•tv'ocrri^.A' fts. Plays C records °CORRE07 LY Through an error the advertisement foceiitly „publis red in: this ,paper contained tbevirong address. our correct address is as foliows: ti he fftlisical ffle;rchandise Sales Co. Sole "Canadian Distributors EXCbLSIOR LIFE BLDG. - TQRON'rd ee Write for address of your'neaiest:dafler FUEL FRorrrilt s -g! . One Way of Fighting the Coal Short - r age,in, Britain. Stand on the °edge of the cliff any day within.ana1otir 03' tare; of su)adPWn :and you' will oboerve that the beach below is, dotted. with stray figures, awshotsriesme`o.oItleiera`sre inmusur'dt#lhee, 'rase ae English writer. The pigh price of coal and its scar- city has -'driven :the thrifty fisherfoik who'imhatiit this bleal2 trip of Coast to the expedient of foraging for fuel; and, not unnaturally, their happy hunt- ing -ground le the, seashore. Driftwood nialres excellent fuel, and little of et escapes the -eves of the foragers, Old men, whose bent backs would seem to flt them for their, task, child- ren, whose energy is the result of promises, and more often threats, made to them ' at home by a stern parent; and womenfolk, whose aprons bulge with `Yining," are scattered up and down tile` foreshore; harvesting' the fruits of storms. - - Soinetlrnes; as happened but alt evening or two ago, there are big prizes in store for the- gleaners'. Away out on the smooth sea a dark `object was "spotted" a couple of hours before dark. Its progress shoreward was painfully slow. Just as dusk was falling, however, the object bumped on the shingle, and an eager watcher, wading out, pronounced it to be a dere- lict raft. • The raft -a massive, well-built af- fair, -weighing well Oyer a ton -was dragged al -ell h and dry on the beach, and then came the important question of its disposal. Down at the Customs House there was a mysterious official called the Receiver of Wreck, to whom any article given up by the sea should also in turn be given up. With com- mendable honesty the fuel -gatherers agreed that the Receive} of Wreck should be informed of the find the next morning. But the next morning there was no raft, and only a few splinters and a suspicion of sawdust remained to show that there had ever been one. With the falling of night, then, the. driftwood -seekers gather up their loads, and with dragging steps climb the cliff -path to their cottage homes. sa:inard'a Liniment Cines ()olds, Over a million dollars has been paid out for sugar beets grown in Ontario this year. .. Some two and a half million acres of new breaking will be . available for seeding in Alberta next spring:1 Spanish Flu Claims Many 'victims in Canada and should be guarded .against, Minard's s Lrndant Xs a Great Preventative, being one at the oldest remedies used. Minard's. Lini- ment thousands. ofcases of Grimm, Bronchitis, Sore Throat. Asthma andsimilar diseases. It Is an' Enemy to GBrms. Thousands of bottles being used every day, for sate by all druggists and generale dealers. MINARD'S LINIMENT CO„ Ltd. Yarmouth,N.S, Spruce for Aeroplanes. There are 300 men logging at Cum- shewa Inlet, ore dharlotte Islands, British Columbia, and since April, when operations commenced, more than 12,000,000 feet of spruce for aeroplanes have been cut. The Gov- ernotent scaler recently scaled one tree which had three logs in it with a"total of 40,000 feet of No. 1 spruce The smallest log in this tree was 80 inches at the top, while the butt of the largest log measured 11 feet 4 inches. Some people are like rusty needles; the best way to clean and brighten themus with work, Minard's. Liniment Cnroa Games in Cows: To keep apple sauce from turning dark, add the beaten white of an egg. Misinterpre'tation , y " Not every man who finds himself in court, fares , as well as the Italien organ gri2nder'who recently escaped a fine by . a mistake; at iiiee 'fortunate and' inopportune: He had been playing before the house of an irascible old gentleman, who furiously and with wild gestieula- tions ordered' him to move on, ' The Italian stolidly stood'his ground and played on, and at last was arrested for causing a disturbance. At the court the magistrate asked him why he did not leave when he was requested to-do so. "Me no anderstan' mooch Ingleese," was the reply. "Well, but you must have known by his motions he wanted you to go." "No, no!" said the organ grinder with perfect seriousness. "Itink he come to dance." MONEY.ORDERS.. A Doininion Express Money Order, for Ave dollars costs three cents. Sweden, with nearly 48 per cent of its area under forest, is the most d'ensely wooded country in Europe and Portugal has the least timber, only about 33 acres in each 100. bltpard's Liniment Carew Diphtheria._ row Atiral lifUrBLi, EQUIPPED `NEWSPAPnit ►'i andob minting"' plant in Eastern, Ontario, Insurance carried 61,500, Will ppe for 81,500- on onion sale. Boz 61. Wl!eon Publishing Co., rltd.. Termite. UEENut NEWSPAPER Kon SALE In New Ontario. Owner going to rrors. R tit *Al 22 089. Worth double 10,.1 ftmn t 4npir .1. R,. elot9It,sm Pelt{tsltine t e . I l•rife t, Toronto.. ' 37SSCT,i,L3`7£OV'A' 1(1 �A Ci 5t 9'I:A402t8 5,tJ +ifs-: Era„ I internry�) epd' extarnati,.pp.ured, with- fur rsln.l,Y oinl..000si' treatifibnt'" Writ. 1 Cco,LY lmtted, Coli ei *oo "tjul. rdedlcd SATISFYING RELIEF FROM LUMBAGO Sloan's Liniment has the punch that relieves ' . rheumatic twinges 1`his' warmth -giving, congestion - scattering, circulation-stmrulatingrem- edy penetrates without Tabbing right to the aching spot and brings quick relief, surely, cleanly. A wonderful help, for external pains, sprains; bruscraims, stiffness, headache, luinhago, ses, Get your bottle today -costs little, means much. Ask" your druggist for it b3.,nant0. Keep it handy for the whole family. lFade ut Canada, :Che Lig hrttle is ecoitgfoy. 20c„ 6Oc„ $1.80, Scft White HaItds ll'ollow need auticuia soap and oint- ment. At night bathe them with the Soap and hot water. Dry and rub in the Ointment, Wearoldglovosduriagnlght. Sample Each Frac jar Meil. Address post- card: "Cutieurs. DeptaO, Booton, U, S.A?' Sold by dealers throughout the world. Hotcl Dei Coronado Coronado Beach, California Where the Halmyet invi orati climate makes Y 8 ng li, possible the enjoyment of outdoor sports, through. 'ou't the Witter inontlis. POLO, GOLF,- TENNIS, MOTORING, FISBINQd,BAY AND SURF BATHING Write for Whiter Folder and Golf Program; JOHN J. HERNAN, ! Manager