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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-12-06, Page 68 etaiteittelaineettee TAKES OFF.DANDRUFF; HAIR STOPS FALLING ;save yottr Halal Get a email bottle Of Danderine right now—Also stops Itching scalp. Thin, brittle, colorless and &raga &air ds mute evidence of a neglected, t seal ;•'; of dandruff—that awful scarf. T'iere is nothing eo destruetive to, the hair (ao dandruff. It robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life; eventually produeing a feverish - nese and itolting of the scstip, which if not remedied e4taiste the their roots, to shrinkloosen and die --then the hair falls =out fast A little Danderine to- neght—now—any surelyesave your hair. Cet a mall bottle of KnowIton'a Daudet -Inc from any drug store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a little Daa- derine. Save your hair! Try it! LEGAL. • R. S. HAYS. Banister, Solieitor,Conveyancer and Notary Public. Soliciter for the Do- minion Bartle Office in rear of the Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. J.1f. BEST. Barriiter, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND COOKR. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub.. He, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block W. Proudfoot, K.C., 3. L. rilloran, H. 3. D. Cooke. VETERINARY. F. HARBURN, V.S. ' Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- kV College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario Yoterinary College. Treats diseases of a domestic animals by the most mod - I= principles. Dentistry and Milk Fair- ies a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All or- ders left at the hotel will receive prompt attention. Night calls receiv- ed attheoffice. JOHN GRIEVE, V .8 . Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All -diseases ol domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- be/nary Dentistry a specialty. Office luid residence on Goderich street, one door east of tDr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. tefetatelePtetefetheeta..Ottetelefnfefe Charles Hapsburg Proved Better Type of Monarch - Than Majority of Teutons .CetetatassIsestoteldt.ete)ofotelotetatetetatefets+0 HEN' Charles Hapsburg succeeded Francis Joseph, the stories went forth of an amiable but far from extraordinary young man, who as archduke seemed to have chiefly at - treated attention in Vienna by the suburban habit of taking out his youngest born in a perambulator. The pertraits of the young Emperor showed, nothing of the "character" that was supposed to flare out from! the familiar countenance of the Ger- ' man war lord. To -day it is the slim and mild -faced young Austrian who stands out as much the better mall Of the two. Prom the first morctent of his acceesioir he seems earnestly to have labored for peace; out of self-interest; to be surer but yet with an intelligent foresight of events that was denied his cousin of Hohenzol- lern. When defeat as followed by the storm which is now cleansing the whole of Central. Europe, he did not run away like the owner of the fain- ' ous mailed fist, but remained in his capital ready, apparently, to take his • chances of fortune and life. He has bowed his head to the tempest which has ma.de'such a clean sweep of royal Teuton heads, and his words of abdi- had indteated hia desire for peace, however, in seeeetiee hefere :the . Beichrat L peccember, 1911, lie declared hi willingness to conelade peace With the Alifes if tlaey would' guarantee the integrity of Austria- Hungary. In October, 1918, he announced -4 plans for the federalization of Ana - trill -Hungary', and in an address to the Hungarian Diet frankly admitted tist Karolyi, leader of I his throne was ine"peril." A day or wo later, Cou the Hungarian. Republicans, aanouttics ' ed the success of a, bloodless revolu- tion in Budapest and declared Hun- gary a free and independent state. Still later the German a,nel, other provinces 'declared their purpose to become autonomous entities, and the the House of the HapsbargS, s leader of the Holy Roma,n Empire, seemed to be about to coiltpse like ; a house of cards. • ieraeleteteettiteeteteieteiteeletteiteeinteletteettlete How Liebknecht Fought Autocracy efetetedetatdaeseastaleadefeteastefet4thetahstetets E owe tothe painstaking In- dustry of Mr. Sidney Zim- and the possession in English' of all the impor- tant speeches of Liebknecht since the beginning of 1}the war. The book is just now published. In all the yoleminous literature of this war there is a passage which Stands out as a bright kay of light illuminating our pathway toward the duture society of nations, In.'"Under Fire" the French, common soldier, Bertrana,d, says: "There is one figure MEDICAL r DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of Goderich. Specialist in women's and childeens diseases, rheumatism, acute, Ionic and nervous disorders; eye ear, nose and throat. Consultation free. Once In the Rival Hottl, Seaforth, Tues- '01syli and Fridays, 8 aan. till 1 p.m. C. 3. W. HARN, 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and .Genito-Urin- ary- diseases of men and women.. - Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR Physician and Surgeon Office and residence. Main Street, ettone 70 Helm DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons bf Ontario;Licentiate of Medical Com- a of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 Joon east of Post Office. Phone 56, Hensel!, Ontario, DR. P. 3. BURROWS • Office and residence, Goderich street Nast of the Methodist church, Seaforth, Phone 46, Coroner for the County of Huron. *that has easel' above the war and will blaze with the beauty and strength 6f his courage." The mit/es or, Barbusse, now the elected chit ' of the great society of French war veterans, goes on to say: "1 listened, leaning on a stick toward him, drink- ing in the voice that came In the twilight silence from the lips that to rarely Spoke. He cried in a clear voice, `Liebkneelitn" . In 1870 Wilhelm Liebknecht, the father of Karl, together with Bebel and three other Socialist members of the Reichstag, voted against the war credits. They were insulted and even 'beaten by the war -mad members of the Reichstag. If it was natural for the son totfollove in the footsteps of the father, so it was also natural ifor the whole Socialist party in Germany to continue the Policies of the foun- dere of the party. In the universal disgust .with which the world viewed the treason to • trath and all sound principle which marked the conduct of the Socialist party at the begin- ning of the war, the .one mitigating fact' is, as Barbusse so eloquently indicates; Liebkneckt. In. his great speech. against the -second war budget he deelared "as a protest against the -- ware against those who are responsible for it andt -have caused it—against the violation of the neutrality of Belgium and 'Luxemburg, against anlimited rule of martial law—I vote against the war credits demanded." s The 'excus-e for the weakness of the whole German people and the: tree - sole of the Socialists, on the part of weak-kneed pacifists and Socialists. in other countries, has always been that the German people were all raisin - foamed about the war. This excuse is. Invalid. Liebkiteckt knew the truth, aboat the war bemuse he wished to knoW it. The masses of the German people, Socialists and non -Socialists alike, believed falsehoods beca,use they wished to believe them. The ' frightful horror of German war methods was perfectly a'vell Irnown inside of Germany. A numbereof i questions which Liebknecht asked of the Government in the Reichstag ses- sion in. December, 1914 indicates clearly what sort of knowledge was in the possession of those who WiStrp, ed to know the truth. When Lieb- knecht inquired as to whether the Governraent was prepared to begin ' peace negotiations, von Jegow an- swered, amid loud, laughter, that he refused to answere On this occasion Liebknecht asked .about a score of searching questions which threw light upon the whole policy and pur- pose of the Government. Later, in January, Liebknecht . again interrogated the Government. He exposed the Armenian- massacres and the fact that the German Gov- ernmer - was responsible. He tusked for "dasa concerning the situation in the territory ,occupied by Germany," and "concerning measures taken for the protection, of the people in the occupied territory: concerning the ineene of living, concerning their health. conditions, their rights, their numbers." He inquired an to the "kind and reason of the punishments decreed and reprisal measures taken against the People ha these territories by the German authorities, the num- • ber of people executed, military re- quisitions of property,' and so forth. "On Jan. 13, 1916, by a vote of sixty to twenty-five, the Socialist Central Committee expelled Liebknecht from ruembership•in the Socialist party for continuous "gross infractions of par- ty discipline," But. Liebknechtee fight did not ehd with. his expulsion from the party. Month after month he stood alone and fought his goe' light.- Crevmany DRS. SCOTT 8:: ACK.A.Y 3. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and I College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of Ontario. C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trine University, and gold medallist of arinity Medical College; member of the Cellege of Physicians and Surgeons Of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS. Graduate of University of Toronto Irceulty of Medicinle, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate course In Chicago- Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, iilngland, University Hospital; London, England. Office—Back of Dominion. *ink, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, N' t Calls answered from residence, Vlc- oria street, Seaford). CHARLES HAPSBURG. - . cation are more sincere than the -Us- ual language of -such dOeUMOntS. The last of the Hapsburgs make a pathe- tic. figure,- but -carr4ee with hird into. nietory little of the taint of criminal- ity which.-adoirets the late rulers and atatesraen or Central Europe.-' Emperor Charles L of Austria, Iging Of Hungary, was an u romis- ing major in an Austrian fantry d.egiment when the shot of the assas- sin who killed the Archduke 'Francis Ferdinand on June 28; 1914, made him the heir -apparent to the throne in -the !sl-fawk'S Castle" on the banks of the River Aar. . .. • Charles -I. was born.Aug. 17, 1887, the son of the late Archduke Otto of Saxony. He married the, Princess Zita of the Bourbon liciuse of Parma (Italian) in 1911. When the Nune Diroittis was sung for leis dead granduncle, the Emperor Francis Joseph, the only- achievements of Charles-, brought to public notice were that he was a keen sportsman, an excellent shot and motorist. When he acceded to, the throne on Dec. 30, 1916, Austria-Hungary, torn by four years of war. sae? the first faint gleam of possible peace. ' The course of the new ruler was regula.ted largely from Berlin,. 'and for the first six months of his reign Austria-Hungary was regarded as a more German state. Hindenburg's successes in Galicia in 1916, in Which' Charles shared as a commander in the field, gave the young monarch a prestige which enabled hirn to hold the Austrians to the Central Powers until the collapee of Bulgaria and Turkey and the final crash. Numerous peace overtures and manoeuvres characterized the diplo- macy of the dual monarchy after Francis Joseph's death, precipitated doubtless by bfead riots and other outbreaks throughout Austria. Un- able to maintain his pledge to the German Emperor to continue the war to the end," Charles made use of. the famous "Dear Sixtus" letter, an autographed misslve written in April; 1918, to Prince Sixtus de Bourbortdlor transinisSion to the Frenciv•A i vernment, in which. the inonar0 said Francets claim to Alsace-Lbrraine was • "justified." Although the letter was denoun.ced as a "forgery" in..__Vienna, the For- -(rign Office claiming- it hal been writ- i:.eit by. a T;'rench z:-,--..1--:.s7.,s!(.. ..,.-1_,0 a en lieen acting as confeetsor ..0 the Em- press Zia, subseqnent ev-,.-.rn-s proved its a.uthenticity. P. W.1.4; ' 1.-•.' iirSt. re- veIation /if the 1,rd ,:c -‘Mr.`:.r1 the (4.11Ilall • PhilPerfrr :4 ' '-; ; "'It SSai t-ing. Pretionely. '• es c ha ries • 11111 el111111111411110110111111(1111111 AUCTIONEERS. THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the minties of 'futon and Perth. Correspondece anangements for sale dates can be made by calling up Phone 97, Seaforth, or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- erate and satisfaction guaranteed. R. T. LUKER licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in all parts of the county. Seven years' ex- perience in Manitoba and SaSkatche- wan, Terms reasonable.. Phone No. 175r11, Exeter, Centralia P.O., R. R. No. 1, Orders left at The Huron Ex- positor Office, Seaforth, prornPtly at - and grown -lips. Litait's sgp4 CRACKERS e a real food value. In soup and with cheese they perfectly delicious. Always fresh, crisp, clean and aPpetizing. Packed in air tight packages. Sold by all grocers. - elfers „Of cr 4441. 101fr* "The Buy Word for Biscuits" vcioficirzdr: 5 Ligense No.11-599 .etatewirmiug tee wane' The. insolence of her TintitittdOitOOd the °WWI elase :etas sorneththg beyond de�crfb- Ing. Tlibi 'was the very leak of his opposition. alp oolootime Socialtet comrades, meetinghint eti the street, ansulted 'him most tviciotialY. On *Manch 22, 1916, he atteropted, in a session of the ' Reichsteg, to attack the submarine poliete of the Govern- ment, but was prevented. • The final weighing in .the balance of this man's soul cease on May Day, 1916. In the preselects of a crowd of working people assembled in Berlin. in the pen air, he Ueeiel out," as it vtere, with a loud voice." Under all ordinary circumetaaces this speech Meaat • death in front of .the. firing_ squad. He knew that it could not mean revolution at, that tithe. He was coraraoa !soldier lit the -army, and had not the slightest notion that he would escape pithishenient according to law: I feel that the fief that he was imprisoned instead of executed was due entirely to the desire of the German -Government to escape criti- clone in enemy -countries. This speech will live as the utterance of a great and heroic figure in the midst of one of the most terrible rcrises that nes come upon the human .race. "By a Ile," he cried out, utAb German work- ingman was forced into the war, and by lies they expect to induce him to go on with the war." Here, again, was John Huss before the Council and Martin Luther at Worms. In the universal failure, In the unutterable collapse of all that was true and right among the Ger- man leadership and the German peo- ple, this one voice was heard---lbud and clear. If poor in its practical re- sults, this vnice, "crying in the wild- erness?" wee mighty in its prophecy of the better time to come for the world. Strangely felicitoud expressions one has,beenitecustomed to look for from hittethere Was about it an Melte eed purpose and a view SO wide as to render the old Ironies, sarcasms, and brilllant gibes impoesible. Deauncia- ' tion was there in Plenty, denuncla- tioii �f 'crimes .and barbari- ties, but, even here, -Clemeneeael, with true instinct, made 'clittnnelda tion utterly subseevient to the ler more •terrible weapon supplied him by the.timple statenient of fact. "A terrible account," he said, 'has been opened between people and people. It. will be paid, All the brother peo- ples will achieve the supreme victory of the highest humanity." ell The WI nteasiire of honest ntarket quality and value_ is pit into every genuine packet, with the salt* price on each. This is the ipkiblite safeguard 11 Wind and Heat Wind has 'no effect on a ther- . mometer. Wind is simply air in mo- tion,. and the motion of the air does not chahge its temperature. Wind, coining in contact with the human body, produces a sensation of cold- ness, not bec.ause it is colder than . the air at rest. This sensation may I be caused by the rapid contfict of 1 warm ait with the bedy as well as.bY I the rapid contact of cold air. . The use of a fan, la warm weather brings Irelief not by cooling the air, but by settliig 't 1- motion. and. bringing vapidly changing masses of itin con- tact with the human body. . But it Iwould not have that effect on an in- animate and unsensitive t1;iemometer. You can not make mercury- contract by fanning the thermometer* PRIDE OF THE TURIre (4.44.4414444++.0.44÷:4.:4+444.4.4. Clemenceaii Has ciained .... Both Dignity and Power hi Struggle With Huns 04+44 44+,:t4÷:441.1,444-:•4•0:4":444 0 NE of the Most remarkable results of the war has been . its effect upon "repute- . tions." Prior to 1914, the world had been accustomnd to. the slow emergence of its public men,into the forefront of affairs, and, on the whole, it was conservatine in the ex- treme when it canie to a question heli c anging its views in regard to / sthern, once they had emerged. A. mats who, had "made 0,- reputation" had a certain right l accorded him of i resting on his lane is, and he might continue acadernica ly famous by the simple proeees of doing nothing. In • any event, alli that the World required of him was to continae in a straight line, and, like the actor who has achieved popularity da one particular night, the 1 jublic rather resented seeing him any other. . With the onset of the great strug- ssle, however, all this• was changed, [glinted over night. New standards were set up; new demands were put forth; ruts„ were swept away in all directions, and 'the test of lea,dership came once again to be ability to blaze now trails over an almost trackletai eountry. At -first, there Was at tre- mendous effort to' cling to the old PREMIER CLEMEISTEAU. methods, but those who did to quick- ly found that. they were left talking in the rear, 'whilst the world was forging ahead far beyond them. The real leaders were those who saw the necessity of cdting aside their old, ne.ethode wherever that necessity ex- isted, no matter. -1what .,they had - brought in the paste who, cast them aside without a thought of regret, and adopted the methods which the times demanded. Such a leader undoubtedly is M. Cleraenoeau, the Prime Minister of France. M. Clemenceau is remark-. able in many ways,' and not least as a speaker, remarkable for what Bage- hot once called the gift of effective expression, and remarkable, too, for his strange powers of invective., Few • men, in the days before the war, or in the early days of the great strug- gle, could carry an attack on a poli- tical opponent or an inefficient -goy- ernmeat further than could Georges Clemenceau. When the plain ma,n thought there- was nothing left to say, M. Clemcencead was only begin- ning, and in the Cha,mber and. through his paper !itee girded at his opponents with a eersistence which was eutielle,d only by an astounding incisiveness. "But tb.e .Gerifttaels are ! still at Nevin," is phrase Whieh is remembetted Many with e Eihudder; M. Ciamenceitet, haseever, grew with tiro tinaege aad there came a; time Welt the:tertiblein with which the Allied world veas laced was, at last, really seen for what it was, not only by such m.enne M. Clemenceau, but by -an ever increasing host of his fellow -countrymen and of those far. beyond the borders on. his own coun- try. The day had clearly passed when invective, no matter how ap- parently jultified, was in place, and the day had con -ie- 'when the "fieree joy of debate" was as the crackling of thorns under a Pot. Xi. Clemen- eeau at once saw this, and for many months now has -cast .4..71ifir`. Hie recent great speech in the Fren• h Senate, when linlf Junk - assembly met for the autumn --es- sion showed a marked cin nee. it ....tie chara,cierized 'by rie • Regards All Other Races With Utter Contempt. • We must realize that the basic fact underlying the Turkish ro.entality, is its utter contempt for all other races. faierly insa,ne pride is the element_ that largely explains this. strange human species. The com- mon term applied by the Turk to the Christian is "dog," and in. his esti- maticate Wee g.,o mean,. tert Jinn; he actuallrgats OtC, 14 European neighbors as far lesB worthy of coesideration than his OWn domestic animals. "My son" an old Turk once said, "do you see that herd of swine? Some are white; some are black, soma are large, some are small—they differ from each oth.er in some respects, but they are all ewine. So it is with Christians. Be not deceived, my son. These Chris- tians may wear fine clothes, th.eir women may be very beautiful to look upon; their skins are white and splendid; many of them are very in- telligent and they build wonderful cities and create what seem to be great states. But remember that underneath all this dazzling exterior, they are all the same ---they are all swine." Practically a,l1 foreigners, in the Presence -'of a Turk, are conscious of this attitude. The Turk may be obsequiously polite, but there is in- variably an alinost unconscious feel- ing that he is mentally shrinking from his Christian friend as some- thing unclean. And this funda- mental‘conviction for centliries di- rected the Ottoman policy toward - its subject peoples. This -wild horde swept from the plains of Central Asia and, like a whirlwind, Over- astelmed the nations of Mesopotamia and Asia Minor; it conquered Egypt, Arabia, and practically all of North- ern Africa and then poured into 'Europe, crushed the Balkan nations, .occupied a large part of Hungary, :and oven established the Outposts of the Ottoman Empire in the southern :part of Russia. So far as I can dis- 'cover, the Ottoman Turks had,' onlYti one great quality, that of military genius. They bad several military The tea with every virtue that is worth consideration.. 0502 "Try It Mastery" leaders Of commanding ability, and the early conquering Turks were brave, fanatical, and tenacious fight- ers, just as their descendents are to- day. 1 think that these old Turks present the most- complete illustra- tion in history of the brigand idea in politics. They were lacking in what ewe may call the fundamentals of a civilized community_ They had no alphabet and no art of writing, no books, no poets, no art and no archi- tecture, they built no cities and they established no lasting state, They knew no law except the., rule of might, and they had. practically , agriculture and no industrial argent - satiate They were simply wild, and marauding horsemen, whose one con- ception of tribal success WaS to , pounce upon people who were more civilized than themselves and phut- ded them. • NEWEsT NOTES OF CIENCE back into the device, In a typewriter of European inven- An adjustable attachment for a . tion each letter is pointed out by a baby's chair to hold a nursing bottle lever with the left hand, then printed . has been patented. Edinburgh has made the production and distribution of electricity a mun- icipal monopoly. A magazine has been patented for carrying an extra load of tobacco along the• stem of a pipe. An agricultural school on an exten- sive scale will be established by the French city of Lyons. - - Official statistics have palced the The desk clock and eleetric light available water power of Spain at Ilene been combined in a new space - f about 5,000,000 horsepower, of which saving office convenience. only about 300,000 is utilized. A British railroad is experimenting A South Dakota mine surgeon is with fuel briquettes made of waste . the ineventor of a new litter on which coal with a tar binder. an injured man can be strapped and. Harness has been patented to Sus- then safely moved in any position, pend hand baggage from a man's Electrical signs to be carried on the shotildere and leave liis hands free. ;pas of taxicabs to tell whether Qr A peculiarly clear, tongh and dur- not the vehicles have beenetaoinefa able celluloid has been invented in not the vehicles are occupied have been England for automobile' Wind shields. patented by an Englishman. „ An Illinois inventor has patented a To enable a. photographer to get in - milking stool that has a revolving seat to a group picture that he is taking and a projection to hold a pail. a pneumatic attachment to operate a. To judge horse races a Frenchman- camera shutter has been invented has invented a camera that is operated To permit its rays being turned in by a winning horse breaking a thread. different dierctions the lamp, lens and An extremely accurate device has reflector of a pocket flashlight invent - been invented for measuring the dis- line. , ed in Europe move in unision. For women's wear a bathing suit has been invented with a high neck Holland has just begun to develop and long sleeves made of a material extensive deposits of. rock salt, the which, though light, will prevent sun- • feoxtisyteenacres• of which has been, known burn. Brazil is equipping one of its ina- Operated by steam or electric power porant railroads with oil burning loco - a machine has been invented to label motives and aims eventually to dis- tin cans at •a rate up to 70,000 an hour. 1 - pense with coral for such , purposes. The Uruguayan government is plan- ning .the construction of a dry-dock Ashes can be sifted as they are taken from a stove by- a shovel that large enough to hold the greatest has a soreen bottonmeger which a plate ocean liners. of metel can be placed to handle coal. There are about 10,000 electric A tiny electric oven to be placed in trucks and wagons in service in the the platform of a microscope to heat United States, operating in 124 lines of trade. or dry objects being examined is the invention of a European scientist. New Zealand supports and regulates A. revolving base for typewriters the beekeeping industry and fre-an's has been invented to facilitate clean - students at it government experimen- ing and oiling or t to permit two per- talAapspiarir4 reel holder has been in- 50110touse the same machine at OM vented for key chains to Oviate car- What are known as black opals, rying several inches of loose ,ehain in among the most costly of jewels,- fM tt pocket found in but olie place in the *OK a Ceylon as openeda sugar refinery inwhichboth sugar and alcohol will Wales.* small tract of land in New Sottth 'be obtained from the sap of the 1%1- 1 i A ruetless metal cone supplier the myth paha. , 1 moisture of new- envelope saUng A new sectional rowboat is made in machine so that there are no 'Acts to. three parts that ean be nested together :become gummed nor rubber hands to 'and carried on an' automobile rill"' decay. _..., by keys used by the right hand* One of the most widely used Jap- anese patent medicines iS sold in. boxes that automatically relase three pills each time a box is opened. Cleaning between the keys of type- writers and adding, machines is the purpose of a new brush that is nar- row and has extremely long bristles, twice automobile wheels may be out of DECEMBEll we • • • wr • • • 10411111111111111140111ASIMPAISMIIIMIllardetiril The RI tee neeeta, zees (Continued from our is: It was a heavily laden ea on, and its driver clung obi the middle of the road ur came up behind. They • uphill; the car could not as sharp rise in the ground an on the right nor for the gt • ed by thin woods on -the sounded his horn again and til the driver with a guf bore away slowly to the ri • road. Even before he had Durant throttled hipa gavt the impulse which would < • to shoot by on the left. , The clutch caught. The sharply. And then -as then a his field of vision, thet it another car—not a rod was a gray car and in its , driving it madly, sat a you/ Only one thing could pi eollieion. Durant turned sharply to the left. There-% as it leaped down into t gully, a nerve racking sl leaped up the further pan was a clump of scattered With a quick shift of tin managed to steer betwee two. He shot to the left a • between the next two. in every direction, lay t trees:. Between no two, mind, hands and legs worls as they Aim* in a last shut off the power; he jam brake; and then, he leapedl' 1 hing board. • The plan whichSwiteerland now is e eisetrifiestion of rnplates an annual ,000,000 for thiety ew ironing board tha„,t serves as a rest for flatirons to ena e them to be pushed on or off work without lifting. Most of the carpets in India are made by boys; who are told by sten watching them how many ki *. of each color to tie to the warp„ it single row at a time. A • London taxicab seems to luxe been made proof against ovdatuirnittg. no matter how sharply it is sterd to the side, by the insertion of .a tWd wheel under 'the frt. Government scientists have begun an initestigation of the harm orillnir to oysters by a worm which coati the growth of a coral like form* on their shells. Danish inventors have found considerin r for t its railways con years. expenditure of $ In one end- of is a series of ro that an edible oil capable of being used in margarine can be obtained from sun -flower seeds, A toy which also is a practical lung tester consists of a balloon sur- rounded by a tape to show the amount of air blown into It. Porto Ricans made a fairly perm- anent yellow dye for textiles from the roots . of tumeric, which grows wild over much of tlie island. New apparatus for telephoning be- tween moving trains and stationary Points uses the wheels and axles of cars and the reguiat. rails. That he has obtained an oil equal to cocoanut oil from low organisms that live in stagnant water is the claim of a, Munich chemist, Water flows at such an angle from 'a new bubbling drinking fountain for public places that none of it can fall f°6"1111•••••••, VII . All me may be divide classes. There are nien wake first, who move rest] morning •before opening and there are men of a di who neither move tier muscle until their eyes ha them of their surrounding Durant opened his eyes lv there came into them a • of understanding. The over him drew away. dosed them and kept the tile she bent back. Then, heed to her questions, he his lids and covertly ga eyes soft, tender, and e blue with the strange,_ ness of one reluctant a pleasant dream. For he continued to ignore tions, gated ion on at lux h_ he ea pose the -Lion in s ok and eta did he speak. And he spirit of banter which so aged with int at 41dt "It was the only way e to meet you. I hope it murmured. knows that Comfort Soap will save her time, money and labor. It has been doing this good work for 25 years. It saves time. Comfort Soap quickly dissolves dirt and grease which can then be rinsed away in a few minutas. It saves labor. Cleanses clothe,s with lIttle rubbing-- Corrifort saves the clothes. didn't tse y to n ed.Thlook ae0 danyone could," he u She laughed. 'Pleas 4rP_ but." "No.' He smiled witI : cillerorattirmstitutosswk"W alie anvfitmstiitred.: your syrn ue tbeevheolmaumesr,eleriesyouesca ratuserdund bus con4rnitarandhinuitg chstriokinougalyi question!' Durant raise "Please—see—if you a gan to feel of his elbows for father," suddenly bri 'Tripes, this seems t Durant sat bolt uprig behind. A heavy -jowled, kat ster, one of those wi their sodden faces stood And Leather -face was grin, ou might at lea, you leave learned the w ed Durant good nature "Wa-al, Win/ as I a minister or a justice can't see what you want wered Leather -face, sh ing no intention of le just that interesting s "Wait a meilEj took command, only th totelyr,e0daplet lgeau.egahtlyinllshee "'Hadn't you better se —in any other way?" s stifled laugh. Durant rose to his to try his arms and others watched. "Well, be dod scratch, and I expec sweep you tip in a leas Leather -face with d' It saves morley. The Bigger Comfort Bar gives you more soap for the money --true way fizzle thrift. Ask for it at your grocer's,. Pugsley, Dingman & Co., Limited, Toronto Ch4 dre FR FLET CAST •••`,, '