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The Huron Expositor, 1919-05-23, Page 6I 4 OPOINEMNIMINMIMUMINEMIMAIONY 411.1111.111111111.0110111111.11.014WAT %SIM GLOW HAM MEE /PROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try RI Hair gets soft, fluffy' and beautiful—Get * small bottle of Danderine. If you care for heavy liair that glite tens with beauty and is radiant with life; he.s an incomparable softness and is fluffy and buitrous, try Danderine. Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it imme- diately dissolves every particle of itleimituff. You tan not have nice heevy. healthy- heir if you have dandruff. Thd destructive scurf robs the hair of ite lustre, its streogth and its very life, and if not overcome it produce& a fever- ishnese and itching of the scalp; the Mir roots famish, loosen and die; thee the beer falls out fast. Surely get c mall bottle of Knowiton's Daaderine from any drug store and just try it. DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. Late Assistant New York Oplithal- mei and Aural Institute, Moorefield's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, Eng. At the Queen's Hotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday in each .month from 10 a m. to 2 p.m. 83 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford. Phone 267 Stratford. • LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. J. M. BEST Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND.. COOICE Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K.C., J. Killoran, H. J. D. Cooke. VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member, of the Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of all domestic animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. Office apposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All orders left at the hotel will re- eeive prompt attention. Night calls teeeived at the office JOHN GRIEVE, V. 8. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scottie office, Sea - forth. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of Goderichd SPecialist in Women's and Children's iiiseases, reheamatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye, ear, hose and throat. Consulation free. Office above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Stredt, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- ary diseases of men and women. DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56. Hensall, Ontario. . Dr. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege a Physicians and Surgeons, of Ontario. C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH`ROSS. Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of 'Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; RoyalOphthalmic Hospital Leadon, Eileen% University Hospital, London England. Office—Back of Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- toria Street. Seaforth. B. R. HIGGINS Box 127, Clinton — Phone 100 Agent for The Huron and Erie Mortgage Corpor- ation. and the Canada Trust Company. Commissioner II. C. J. Conveyancer, Fire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public, Government and Municipal Bonds bought and sold. Several good 'farms for sale. Wednesday of each week at Brucefieldi AUCTIONEERS. GARFIELD MeMICHAEL Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales conducted in any part of the county. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. Address Sea - forth, R. R. No. 2, or phone 18 on 236, Seaforth. 2653-tf - THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the eounties of Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements 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 Liceneed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in all parts of the county. Seveh years' ex- perience in Manitoba and Saskatche- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. xn r11, Exeter, Centralia P. 0. R. R. No. 1. Orders left at The Huron Expositor Office, Seaforth, promptly at- tended. - 6.41.444444.44.44,4404400..... Sir Thomas Lipton Tells ; Facts About yacht Racing As Affecte4 by the War ttdedete.dddeetdtetet'dddddiaddadtddoteadettd IR THOMAS LIPTON, the Well baronet and yachts- , man— and _merchant — has had his,,own share af wor- ries about the i 'labor situation, He , predicts it would be irapossible to . revive yachting In , Great Britain on any extensive ,scale until things be- come normal, because the expert sail- ors for yachts are mostly fishermen, and fishermen nowadays, with a run of luck, are able in many instances . to elear $150 or more a week. When • the British army_demobilization has proceeded as far as it is going, Sir • Thomas thinks that yactiting will not only revive but that it will be on a larger scale, as regards small boats, than ever before. While the British ,,diave ever been a, seafaring people, they halm been made more so by the demands of the enormous number of men to operate not only the ordinary fighting ships but the prodigious fleets of lesser craft which did scout- • ing, patrolling, mine -laying and similar jobs and inured their crews to the sea in all sorts of weather. Sir Thomas Lipton is one of the oddest mixtures of brains and blarney that ever came prominently before the public. He is a survivor of that school of' extraordinarily shrewd Irish -bred merchants who at one time were the backbone of the commercial world. - Noawdays, when an Irish name on a great mercantile establishment is almost a curiosity, the public is prone to forget that originally the Irish were omnipres- ent traders, from push -part peddlers to founders of huge department stores. To Canadians Sir Thomas Lipton is known as a perennial and irrepres- sible challenger for the America Cup, the historic prize in inter- national yachting. In all English- ' ett Atter' -Tas- .tattet SIR THOMAS LIPTON. •• • 24: - • •, , 13,Si 71011111 4:ibtommINIMENINE.ormEE7P.,. Eorkalmoi _ENSIIIII1111.1111.1.1111991.0191111911. speaking countries he 'is also known, as probably the largest , food dealer in the world. And he is a self-made man, who was in his youth a boy employed in the mines of the United States, although he was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on May 10, 1950, of Irish parentage. • He returned to Great Britain and by a rare combination of brains, Irish blarney and 'Scotch shrewdness, built up his chain of stores that stretch around the globe. Sir Thomas has a head for think- ing. He gives the impression that his second -'rthoughts are • best, and his head iindicates that, There is a bulge to his! forehead, Well, above the eye- brows!, and there is a' development of the Muscles of the forehead, which are tekens that while his Irish par- entage may make him impulsive, his mental processes tend to keep the irepulsiveness 1 cheek and eause him to weigh a problem carefully if given sufficient tiine. His experience in. challenging for the America Cup this year exactly justifies that conclusion, and he told the story himself. Said. he: "When the armistice became an assured thing and it seemed that the world would settle down to peace, I thought the occasion ripe to revive the challenge for the America Cup. The official challenge was already over here, having been delivered be- fore the war in 1914. There would have been eight or nine months or more before the race was held, and I thought that would be time enough for peace conditions to return. "The American yachtsmen did not think that a race in 1919 was desir- able. Since discussing the matter with them I accept their views en- tirely and am convinced that they were entirely right and that 11 was too precipitates The negotiations for a definite peace have been indefinitely prolonged, the economic readj ustment has been a slew and difficult process and the return of the soldiers and placing them in employment will oc- cupy the public mind, for many months. I am now glad that the race has been postponed for at least an- other year." Brains are required to make a man open to conviction. Sir Thomas has brains. 'glvery interviewer whc, - has met dr Thomas Lipton lately has noted that he has affected to a profound degree by the horrors of the war. It is iniposstble to talk with iiim more than a 'few minutes without the conversation switching around to the sight throughout Great Britain of men who have lost limbs or eyes or both, or have otherwise been. maimed and handicapped or incapaci- tated by -the-war. It Is deeply to be regretted that the people of the United States who are prone to dis- cuss the peace proposals as mere eatedeinic questions, because they. CASTOR IA Pi Infants and Children. The lasi You ilan Always Beare tha SglafttUre Of .. . ' know eacithing of the actual herrots , tit war, as evidenced in Great Britain and France, do not all have ant op- portunity to talk to Sir Thomas and be pulled off their pitiful perches. Speaking of the effect of thee war upon spOrts generally, Sir Thomas said: ' "The heavy income and other taxes upon the large fortunes Which formerly supported -seagoing yachts will naturally tend do decrease that ,form of sport, to say nothing about the tremendous 4ncrease in wages, the price of coal and other fantors In the upkeep of boats. - [ "Another sport which I presume will 'be hard hit will be hunting. Keeping a pack of hounds and con- ducting hunts was an expensive nusi- , ness before the war. Meny men were employed, damages done to farmers had to be paid, for, :and so on. Now every one of' the items will be doubled in 'cost.: . 1 "Popular sports, aeuch aS football, boxing and cricket dhould experience a boom, 13111.Ce the whole British Bin- Pire has heeome largely an outdoor empireebut the swifts which necessi- tate large indivdual contributions for their maintenance will necessarilY•be curtailed." In this connection it is interesting to note that ,the high cost of sport is beginning to touch the pockets of - the masses as well as of the yachts- men and huntsmen: One of the most prominent of the British professional football clubs has already raised the price of general admission from six- pence to a shilling, or will do so in the near future. PADERBWSKI'S 'HAIR. Flowing Locks' Made Him Victim of • Hysteria. • Long hair has its own associations In the popular mind, and people per- sist in holding this preconceived view. It first made Paderewaki victim of hysteria, now it causes sur- prise that he could be anything else than a pianist. When he first came to the *United States, says the New York Sun, had he "patronized the hotel barber on his arrival, and sub- sequently kept his hair short in the fashion affected by most Americans, we should not hear now so many ex- clamations of surprise over his de- velopment in statesmanehip." The case is analyzed, but Me people will hardly profit: "The fact that he was • an unaps proachable master of the pianoforte would uot have dislocated the popu- lar bpinp of understanding; that a musician may be versed in politics is not hidden even from the low- brows, But Pa.derewski's naming halo In the world. It is said that she marked him for exploitation, not as must have stolen a million dollars in a musical genies, but as -a man her time. Her career is remarkable bizarre merely in his personal ap- in that as a girl she was admired pearance. He was easy to caricature, and respected. She was comfortably easy to make the butt of good- married and had a pretty daughter: natured If frequently pointless witti- when she committed her first re- cisms. So he became- known to mil- corded crime. This was a swindle of lions as a strange, rather freakish individaal first, as a pianist after - warts; and the enthusiasm his per- formances aroused added to his un- welcome fame. Paderewski was 1114417 - bed; women. stormed the stage at his recitals; a glimpse of him on his way from the hall was accounted a high _ - ' , AY 1914 notertoue waste.. eve . Nov York Sun, Ssr . ai diem made ' _ nail is cut. "Diying yeller hands is a simple matter. Take the towel by one -mid, roll it round yoer handle then MOW! your fingers ailment and it le done. "Writing a telegram on ''a SUPPerY desk comes (Iowa to a matter of ing your little finger as an anchor and being able to use your, thumb and firgt linger itepaxitely. - "Mast games present, no ditilcul- a thing was possible is Alonzo J. ties Take billiards. Until you have Whitman. He was *ell educated, had become practiced enough to play ott a- fine, even a striking, appearance ._ tehmeciceurtsthiborni:eit.hout using a rest, an and a ma,gnetic manner. He worked; ordinary hairbrush suppliea quite fin at forgery for twenty years. Now at pa el ikpeZitihngtheearitiesni=a1. tHboadeart the age of stxty, without a dollar to In an Ohio prison. He was born of out with the thumb. Arranging your respectable parents, his father _being' , hand is only a matter of separating his name, he is serving a sentence rated a millionaire shortly before: : your hand into two packs, holding Alonzo began his career of crime. I one between second and third lin- net the young ma.n was well quall- gers, the other between third a.nd . fled mentally is indicated by the. fact I fourth, putting the cards top and that at one time he was a state sena bottom of their respective packa ter in Minnesota. He ran for Corte with the thumb and first finger. . To gress and was defeated. He moved i play the hand, hold the card requir- to Chicago and*speculated in wheat.' I draw it •from your handothen put it ed to be played with the lips and until he was wiped out. Then he l 9netpheenntaisb,leCricket and soccer are became a bookmaker, and for a short only a matter of practice. Rugger In a year he was cleaned agalie midi as a forward. floors. you, althou.gh if your side•is a time cut a considerable swath on bothi western and, eastern tracks. With -• Man short you can be of some use i without money or credit, he conclud-: "Driving h car is as easy as with ed that forgery was a likely business. two bands. It you have lost' your His first known venture was a fall- , right hand all that you have to watch ure, for he was sent to prion for it., is that you have room to pass your He had better luck afterward, • •hand between your knees and wheel. and though hounded by the-. polite, While you are changing gears there 1 tremendoes Nsf ithont excep- tion they are doe— '•1•1 out. At the end of their ca.roors they have less to show for their dangerous labors ,than a man who has been .a laborer,. or a woman who has taken in wash- ing, to say nething of tite, humilia- tions they hade. brought, upon them- selves and ethers, and the stern pvnishments they have had to un- dergo. . A striking exattiple of a criminal who ought to have prospered if such between the kneel:, end Kees; the he, often. had enough money -to fight! them off. In the end he found him -e self friendless, penniless, a M9.11 tof whom ant- policeman was entitled tot apply his boot on sight. ' Thomasi Courtney began cracking safes in thel early nineties, often ma,king $20,000; at a haul, and was regarded as onei of the aristocrats of the underworld., Not long ago he finished a prison., term, his health shattered, not a dol- lar hidden away. He had to apply fOr a hack license. He is new as lito tle to be feared as a snake whoent 1 fangs have been drawn. In thirtr Matte pistol with butt is best, sight - years of criminal - practice Jimmy: ed up to 1,000 metres. Farrell is estimated to have madel "Now in conclusion, until the $200,000. A fevr days ago- he was ! three movement artificial arm has seen begging in a New York street, each individual movement controlled. shortly after being discharged from' by the brain, it cannot be;of as much. penitentiary. His few remaining' service as an ordinary socket pad years will probably be spent in cadg- which holds a hook with a loop On. lug, for he is a member of the down- the other side. Through the loop and -out club. you can put a pen and write. With The most notorious of American, hook you can lift and carry many women crooks is probably Wien' articles. By screwing an eye into Peck, who at the age of 90 is with- many tools you, can guide them. With. out a dollar or a home., ,For fifty a hook you can dig; how, and car - years she conducted swindling opera.- penter, and man,y other things. A talons, and was a member of some; firm has got two -armed men photo - of the most desperate bande of crooks' graphed making every motion while working a tool or machine. They then cut out one arm and from that make graphs. Thus they find out what he canaot do easily with one hand. They then give him a tool designed so that he can carry out the remainder, to attach. to his stump. - is no trouble in steadying your wheel *ith your knee. "On the range there is no trouble shooting ovet a sandbag. A one- armed than right-handed can get off tWenty rounds, left-handed 15. If you .are shooting with a shotgun you will find it a convenience to have a. handle attached to the small at & convenient distance behind the trig- ger guard. Should you go to war of course you will arm yourself 'with the most convenient weapon for a. °lin possibly the long Boche auto - the. sort she continued to specialize! 'When people stop trussing the in. She persuaded a soap enanufac-i one-armed man up with -useless con - timer that she could reccsver! for him'. traptions, wheu they stop- telling him $200,000 which had been stolen byi that he can't do anything with one one of his employes. She worked l arm, when they stop sympathizing $19,000 out of the manufacturer be-: because they think him helpless, fore she was exposed, but escaped then he will becom.e a useful mem- diatinctiOn; his devotees lined his imprisonment by Plea of insanityo ber of society.. There are two ways of doing . everything. Let the one - path, intercepted him in his harried Her 'felt vietint Was a Jeweier, wbni was the Pooriir 120,000 'through i armed man and his way and be Preen liteeferewlio, - nappy."' A. Brave Old Woman. A Belgian. woman 88 years old, .exit. Tales of overwrought raaids and matrons elides:6"ring to kiss him —and sometimes succeeding—were _not wanting. "A.11 of this was distasteful to Paderewski— the man who is now guiding Poland in its rehabilitation is not different from the man we knew of a quarter of a century ago back yard to provide his family with as a pianist. Then, as now, he was food. From various other persons, a genius of industry, a, level-headed she wheedled tens of thousands of b sine s man, a patriot longing for dollars by Pretending that she wait! her- acquaia organized it" the time of War, was swin and so clean d d she pick his bones the Widow Tack, has been decorated that at one time he was driven. to thei with the Leopold Order by King Al - necessity of shooting sparroets in hisi best for her courage in retnaining r Mime near ng for and lunteer regiment at e Spanish-Aniericen; led out of $100,000, U S L for tle Poles.. The extrava- an intimate friend of Jay Gould and • gances of his rditors aroused- could give them stock market in-: formation. • him no feeling 4 conceit or grati- tude. Father they repelled him and wounded him. That hysterics should' be the tribute paid to his perform- ances was far from his purpose a.nd repugnant to him, "Had not the war come, and with it Poland's opportunity, the real Paderewski might for all time haire been unknown save to a cornpaxa- tively few. The Mythical genius would have had first place in the popular 'mind. But when the oppor- tunity was opened to Paderewski to show himself in another character, he .was ready for the task that lay before him." ttentetateateeeedegetetetteesteteeteteeteeve. Y.. Small Dividends Paid by Crime 0.1%. .:444:44444404 . ONK EASTMAN, ate of the; most formidable of modern; thugs, was muetered out of the 'United States army the other day, a full sergeant, with al fine military record and a decoration. He enlisted under an assumed name, of course, and will either retain. this; nettle or another when he makes -Mal great efforteto "come back" and work for a liding as he announced his in- . tendon of doing. How many prison; convictions Monk had against him it would be dificult to say, but muck -easier than to compute the number 1 or 'assaults and killings that consti- Ennui. • "Wot's dis here ennui, Bill?" 'It's when a feller gets so lazy he !meta dat loafin's blamed hard vrark." Oeed:.#.441%•:•4'4.44.0,`•48..:-1-44•4•d: ; The Man With One Arm tateetteeteitettate, ei;teateatietteeeeteteatede444 OW one arm and efficiency can cOmbine forces is strik- in,gly described by a writer in the National Review. who commences his Article by the tute his record. He was the leader oil • ! the mpst dangerous gang of gunraeni that New York has known for years, , men like the band that worked foe Police Lieut. Becker and made away I with Herman Rosenthal for a reward' or to ingratiate themselves with 1 some higher up, would kill for fun, for revenge, or for a set price. They nothing; they would shoot anybody would shOot their own enemies for, else's enemies for a reasonable sum. For twenty years Monk Made his liv- ing this way. Returning home he says: "There is nothing in crime. There is nothing in being a thug. A gang leader, never gets anywhere. The pity of it Is that there are a lot of Young fools' growing up who try to make a repu- tation by being slicki If they could only know in advance, as I know, how little there is in it beyond dis- graee and privation, they'd quit now. They'd get Jots and stick to theta. They'd let booze alone and stay away from gangs. I am now 44• years old and the rest of my life is going to be spent, honestly, at hard work, and not in being a rotten out- cast." Monk' e estimate of tie divi- dends crime will pay is eonfirmed by a glance at the csee T3 of 2ever al statement that "In the army diction- . ary you will not findethe word can't," One -limbed people, he affirms, "won't have the word can't in their voeaba- lary," and one can well believe it on a perusal of the following hints to the one-armed person. To strike a match, for instance, Without any outside assistance: "Take the box between the third and fourth angers, the match between the thumb and first finger. Then strike the match across the box instead of along." "Tieing a 'boot lace when laced straight is to put a knot at ene and pull it through the bottom eye of the boot till the knot stem the lace going through. Lace the boot up. Carrying the remaining end round the remaining end round the ankle until it comes back 'to the lacing. Then fasten it with a half-hitch to the beginning of the lace going round the ankle. When laced criss-cross, cross the two ends, place one foot On the loose end and pull tight wtth the other. Then make a loop and place your second finger on it. Secondly, take the remaining loose end and make another loop with your thumb and first finger, pase it over and under the original loop. Trans- fer your second finger to the end of the first loop and press. Take the second loop between your thumb and first finger and pull your bow com- plete. "Tieing a white bow tie. Put the tie round your neck, cross the ends. Take one end in your mouth and pull as tight as you can. Notice this is above- the collar. Drop the end you have in your mouth, pass it under and over the other end. Then tie an ordinary knot, pull it tight by put- ting the other end in. your mouth. Pass ea.ch loose end through the knot from opposite sides. Now ease the tie and the collar, which will pull the bow tight, "Cutting your nails. Place the nail required .to be cut between the blade -of the Scissors. Hold the seise sors in position with the thumb. Place the other end of the sets:son throughout the war in h the tiring line and ca, heartening the soldier RIGRINHAND MAN 0 Lumisrs. Radek fs the Arch -Conspirator of Bolsliever. No attraction of opposites could be more striking than that between hTicolai Lenine and Kari Radek; the Damon and Pythias ot 13olshevism. In their devotion to the replibtle of the Soviets they are one. In ailt else, according to the Petit Parisian., they are as the poles asunder. for Lenine inclineg to moderation and Radek is the most fantreal of Spartacides, Lenine, we learn from. our French contemaerarY, ef godly size phy- sically. Radek to a pale, slim youth -when not in One 'of his countless d18 - guises. Lenine is quietly dressed, his linen always white and starched. Radek is true to Bolshevism in tie Piet:Pre/WOWS of his madlyesynthes sized atUre, 'the collar rolling,. the' httir a tof the sktill, the LEMONS WHITEN AND 34 BEAUTIFY THE SKIN coat looking as if it had been slept . in, Lenine evidently has a bour- geois tailor,. but Radek looks as if he had attired himself out of the stock of a theatrical costumer who' epecialised in the period of the Robespierre terror. Lenine is bald. .Radek has almost as much hair as Trotzka unless we are to assume that the real Radek is never seen through .hia perfect disguises. Some journal- ists accuse him of running regularly across to Paria in false wig.. and whiskers, equipped with_ forged papa - ports that bear the most suspicious scruttny. Lenine looks hungry and ans.dated. Radek has lots of neck. but his huge head neutralize,s that accident. One would deem Lenine a country doctor. Radek looks like a, metropolitan actor. Lenine has spece taeles, a notebook and lead geneti that he chews nervously. No one ever saw Radek with such a professional apparatus, even when disguised. Lennie is mild and smiling. Radek looks violent even in repose, and when in. action his gestures *take him look like a windmill. Lenine is satisfied and confident t Radek is nervous of speech, declamatory, ar- gumentative, shouting proletariafl Ideas with a wave of a Substantial, fist. Lenine is no Jew, despite malty statements that he is; but Radek is a Jew to the finger-tips. Leann., again, is a true native Russian, whereas Radek is a Galician Pole who, has been Germanized, but Ger- manized romantieally, _even poeticel- ly. Radek's occupation is that of trav- eling man tor Bolshevism, its agent in the field, and thus he shows, Markedly the difference between his temperament and that of the con- templative Lenine. All conspiracies must be hatched by the people's • "commissars" at headquarters, but Radek is the only man with authority to actualize, realize, dramatize them in the name and with the authority of the Soviet republic. Radek will undertake *to overthrow any 'bour- geois government anywhere, but he Is true to Bolshevism and will never set to work until Lennie givelit the order. Whether he is* leading his bands through the Thiergarten. at • ,Berlin or blowing up the royal palace at Bucharest, Radek, the man of ac- tion, knows neither fear nor defeat, and he shouts his hatred of the bour- geoisie with a fury that makes Len- nie seem. tame. Radek in public is a master of invective. This remarkable pair have been friends, according to the Paris press, for a long time, although there'is a decided difference in their ages, Ra- dek being much Lenine's junior. The •intimacy began when, Radek, thten known as Sobeisohn, was having his troubles with the Socialists of War- saw. Sobelsohn, dr Radek, spent his early manhood 13± tit* Jewish quarter of Warsaw, theLondon Post says. north in the summer, preparing a, me- Scheide Was Barred to Belgium. cular nest in the santi by removing The broad river Schelde teluds its all the twigs, Plants and debris front way through western Belgium and a sunny spot aboot as large as one* finally empties into the North Sea head. Then byswaying her batty as a dtvide estuary studded with the female fish removes the and and islands, writes Lothrop Stoddard lit gravel to a depth of from three to the World's Work. Some distance he- four inches. Exactly how is this dig - land above this estuary, but with ging done? Is some of the sand and • Water deep enough to float the ,largo gravel takenm the i'4iehlet mouth? est ocean steamships, lies the great Here is a problem for our good. Boy port of Antwerp. Antwerp is:marked Scouts to solve.: It is intereating to, out by nature as the sea -gate to the 'note What eozY places these nests Whole Belgian area, end lourished occupy.. Such !pots are solnetimes during the Middle Age*. • But in the like miniature- houses ati the aquatic sixteenth century came the revolt of Plants are so close together at the the Dutch agatn.st Spain, who then top that one may, well imagine them owned both Belgium and Holland. to form windows for sun parlors. The inhabitants of the lower Schelde When the young are hatched, the estuary, who had always felt them- sunfish, like the bullhead, guards selves to he part of the Dutch region. the nest against all ,in.truders." t th rth ether than the Belgian region to the east and south, joined the revolt and freed from Spanish rule not merely the islands but also the mainland fringe along the south- ern bank of the lower Schelde—the district known as Dutch Flanders. After nearly a century of war, Rol- land forced Slain to recognize her independence in 1648, and, by one of the clauses of the treaty, Spain recognized' Holland's right to close , the Schelde to navigation, thus mak- ing Antwerp an inland town. The V1011719, Congressof 1815 laid down the principle that navigable riders . which flowed through more than one country should be free for the mer- chant shipping a- the inland nations, hotting of Use air etteestiskt thorara- 1,4aticin. at like eiSeekill Wee 'Make. tills beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and, hand,. • At the cost of a mall jar of ordinary cold eream one tan prepare a full quar- ter pint of the most wonderful lemoa. skim Softener and Somplexion beautifier, by speezing the juice of two 'nth lem- ons into aebottle containing three ounces ofeorchard white. Care should- be taken to strain the juice trough a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo- tion will keep fresh for menthe. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to blotch and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is -the ideel skin softener whitener and. beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragr,ant lemon lotion and Malaga it daily into the face, neck, arms int hands. It is marveloUs to smoothen' rough, red hands. • 01•111, Tribute to Australia. Marshal Foeh's splendid tribute to • the Australian army will be warmly applauded by Canadians. Along with our own troops, the men from Atm - trate had a prominent part in the great "victory campaign" beginning last July and ending on November 11. • Marsal Foch. says that from. "start to .finish they distinguished them- selves by their qualities of endurance and boldness. By 1 their initiative, their fighting spirit, their magnifieent ardor they proved themselees to be sheck troops of ithe first order. 'the grave hours bf 1918, with their British, American and French cone- rades, they barred the enemy rush. : They stopped it, broke it, and at the appointed hour drove it far back." ; Perhaps a summary ef the Austra- lian troops' accomplishinents last 1 year will give Canadians a better idea, of why Marshal Foeb. is SG en- dinsiastic in° his Praise. As woad piled by the Australian Minister a Defence, from March, 1918, to Octo- ber '5, the Australians—who never numbered more than 100,000—took 28,865 prisoners, 33 guns, thousands of machine-guns, vehicles, and mil- lions of rounds of ammunition. They captured 116 towns and villages apart from fortified farms, mills and woods, and released 251 squa e miles of French soil. Nest of 02, eunfisb. "Sunfish. .venture close to the shore to lay their eggs and guard them," says Dr. E. F. Bigelow in "On Nature's Trail," in Boys' Lite. 'This 1 is a stra,nge fact. They begin in the 1 southern part of our country in April, and may be found farther 0 e no r • Hot Blast' of Volcanoes: Writing in the Monthly_ Weather Review, George N. Cole sets forth detailed Arguments to prove tmt obi hot blast which -swept over the city of St. Pierre during the eruption of Mont Pelee, as well as similar blasts in connection With, the eruption of Vesuvius that destroyed Pompeii and Herculaneum, the eruption a Taal, Sakurajima, etCa derived its heat from the sudden compression of the air surrounding the volcano, and not from conditions in the'volcano In other words, it was not, accord- ing to this hypothesis, an outpour- ing of hot Cri41971 gases that cause* the destruct; bet the derosuoile 7 h s eli Ida Io th fox the oft As lain! apt no - fro bue lewi , ---11 Prel the thel , age or J uo met wer! N had seet T bele tot of t tak( flooi hold 40116 into sten ws.t( else men hark gd the of t the the ' 3110 ship of t ing eirch head sendi shori sinid, done dam patel The 1 roar blast able' thouj ran j1 fro afis wif, iug leapl fouri held- old Vet,: to Mi. on. sito. thin of far Mi rill' for ord that, guill mani who whel ed for ,I -, cowl i and s'paid iCiit and . the A and ban lea E• He a she sud Co 03 bent fre he losi the ste ing, ed, tha fo the insi the ing Sh eas e0