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The Huron Expositor, 1932-03-18, Page 2Sig 1 T lie gook All the Life Out of Me" SCHEN ,BEAT IT! � vl'�ry.;E •woman was tired of trying to �v �a) fid, something that would rid her of ti} , euntatism. But she made one more 3 I attempt. This time it was Kruselten 111G>}1 tried—and of course it did not ' her. " For two or three years I was under �1 treatment for rheumatism in my back, which took all the life out of me. 1 dways had to go to bed until the pain lied gone again. Friends told me of different things to take. till I was tired of trying, and none of them did me ^•.ro I Two of the ingredients of Kruschen any good. About two year • started with -Kruschen Salts, and 1. find they keep the bowels in splendid order, and that keeps me fine. '1 can say with all sincerity that nothing keeps me Etter than the little daily dose of your i nderful Kruschen Salts. You can sihake what use Ou like of 'this letter for the sake of fellow -sufferers." '—Mrs. W. .L. G ll f permanente .,..,Nomedv. can bring relief 'fr'Oiri rheumatism unless if' perfortit5' three separate film—limn.. These are (a) dissolution of the needle.pointed uric acid crystals which cause the pain ; (b) the expulsion of these •crystals from the system ; (e) prevention of a further ssecuiuulation of uric acid. Salts are the most effectual solvents o uric acid known to medical science. They swiftly dull the sharp edges of the painful.erystals, then convert them into ' a harmless solution. Other ingredients of these Salts have a stimulating effect upon the kidneys,, and assist then to expel the dissolved uratic needles through the natural channel. Con:- ' bin ed with these spiv ents and cliuii- nants • of, uric acid are still other salt:: which prevent food fermentation takin' place in the intestine, and therel y check the further formation of raj - ehievous uric acid. • Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all Drug Stones at 45c. and 75c. per bottle. Remicgaiwilwwvicoaxasalm —3 - _ r_t A FREE TRIAL .OFFER OF KRUSC . EN Try Cruschen now at our expense. We have distributed a. great many special "GIANT"' packages which make it easy for you to prove our claims 'for yourself. Ask your druzj 1st. Yon the new"GIANT"' 75e. package. This consists of our regular 7Sc. bottle together with a separate trial bottle-+•suificieat for about one ;reek. Oiet the trial bottle' fust. pat it to the test, and then. if not entirely convinced that Kruschen does everythingg w claim it to do. the regular bottle is still as good as new. Take it back. Your druggist is authorized to return your 75c. immediately andwithout Question. You have tried Kruschen free at our expense. what could be fairer? Maaufacturrd by E. GRIFFITHS HUGHES, Ltd., Blanchester. England. (Established 1756). -,x SUNDAY AFTERNOON (By Isabel Hamilton, Gederieh `•Ont.) When I survey the wondrous cross On which the Prince of .glory died, 'My richest gain 1 count but loss, And pour contempt on all my pride. Were the whole realm of nature mine, That were a present far too small; Love so atnazing, so. divine,. Detrands my soul, any life, my all. Isaac Watts. i PRAYER • (;rant, 0 Lord, that we may, come to know Thee through the hunger of eager love, through the thirst of heart ail¢ through the desires of an un- caenehable life. Amen. Selected. • S. S. LESSON FOR MARCH 20th Lesson Topic—Jesus Dies on the Cross. Lesson Passage --John 9:17-22, 25 - Golden Text—I Corinthians 15:3. at aSktbo Castled Scotland, the nano" master's beautiful estate„ and, lien• winters in her. New York town house. In • 1922 she sold 'Shadowbroolf, the great Carnegie :mansion near'(Lenox, aillass., the vast, 'empty house with 54 rooms, the music room which used to seat 500 guests, and the parks of 1,0'00 acres. Anson Phelps stokes built it at. a cost of $2,000,000. ' Mr. Carnegie bought it in 1916 and died tihere in 1919: Moving picture pro- ducers tried to buy it, but Mrs. Car- negie sold it to the :Society of Jesus for $250,000, much less than the film magnates had offered. airs, Carnegie was, Louise' Whit- field, of New York, and was married to Mr. Carnegie when she was 28 and he was 53. Their only child, .Maag- aret Carnegie, became Mrs. Roswell Miller. Her husband's philanthropies which totalled about $250,000,000, his projects for furthering the. League of Nations and world peace, and the Brick Presbyterian church engage her major interests. She was opposed t3 woman suffrage. important as to prevent a man from being considerate and daytiful at home. When we ask ouseNts what we are to make of these sufferings of Christ, we naturally seek aid from the Evangelist and ask what he made of them. The reference to Old Test- ament prophecy alone gives us the clue to John's thoughts about the sig,- nificance of this death. "After this, Jesus 'knowing that ,gill things were new accomplished, that'. the scripture -might be fulfilled, saith "I thirst." John considered that in this public execution, there was being fulfilled the purpose of God towards which all previous history had been tending. The cry "It is finished" was the deliberate utterance of a clear consciousness on the part. of God's appointed Revealer that now all had been done that could be done to make God known to men and to identify Him with men. Forgiveness and de- liverance from sin Were provided for men, knowledge of God's law and will that they might learn to know ant to •serve if inn --all these were secured when Jesus cried, "It is finished."'=-" Condensed from the Expositor's Bible, ,Pilate, in accordance; with the us- ual custom, painted oh a board the name and crime of the prisoner, that all wiio could understand any of the three current languages might know who this was and why He was cruci- fied. But in the case of Jesus the inscriation was merely a ghastly jest on Pilate's part. It was the coarse retaliation of a proud man who found himself helpless In the hands of peo- ple he despised and hated. A gleam of savage satisfaction for a moment lit up his gloomy face when he found that his taut had told and the chief priests came begging him to change what he had. written—"Write not, the King of the Jews; but, that He' said, I am King of the Jews." Pilate answered, "What , I have written I ha a written." Guided by the perfect taste which reverence gives, John says very little about the actual crucifixion. He shows us indeed the soldiers sitting down beside the ,little heap of clothes they ° had stripped* off -our Lord, ,parcelling them 'out. Gradually the ,crowd wearies and F•catte•rs and only here and there a little whispering group remains.. The stiiln" s of death falls upon the scene. Suddenly through this silence there sounds the words, "Woman, behold thy son; son, 'behold thy Mother" -- words which remind us that all this dreadful .scene which makes the heart of the stranger bleed has been, wit- nessed 'sy the mother of the cruci- fied. As the crowd has broken tee from around the el -asses, the little group of women whom John had brought to the spot edged their way nearer and nearer .till they were quite close to Him they loved, though•their, lips apparently were sealed by their helplessness to minister consolation. It must have been with intensest eea,g- ernes-; she heard herself once nfore addre:';ed by Him. Mary was commended to John as. the closest friend of Jesus. These two would be in fullest sympathy, both theing devoted to Him. This care for His tnother°in His last moments is ca. a piece with all the conduct of Jesus. He speaks to His mother ani cares for her as' 1e might have done had they been in the home at Naz- areth together: If while saving a world Jesus had leisure to care for His mother, there are no duties so, The best . thing you . can biz Y" f8ild®11SNil;SS' end SICK HEAD4CHES Sold everywhere in 25cand 75s.red pkgs. RS =P1U$.. Pan to Make it reseectalale in time of 'war. I'i fact, we could hardly have .a war , witheat it, which might Kaye very em'balcrassing. - • The change from hunting to agri- culture gave different values to ac- cepted morals and created a demand for new ones. Industry was Seen to be more desirable than courage and thrift than violence. The status of woman, changed for t1he better. She was more valuable as the farmer's helpmeet than as the warrior's in- spiration. She could work, and her work was more' profitable. She earned ten times more than her keep. Every child she produced was 'also • a poten- tial source of revenue in that the children could work too, when they were mere infants. Thus mother- hood .became increasingly sacred and sterility a disgrace. •Lar'g'e families were found to be acceptable in the sight of 'God. The economic change slowly evolved its new religion and its new set of morals. It is from this agricultural environment that our own accepted morals derive. Sexual morality springs directly from it. The young man . of twenty knew as much about the ordinary farm tasks as he would at forty. He was physically and -mentally matured then. He was a self-supporting as • soon as he was able to do a "man's work, and natur- ally he took a wife. In fact as Prof. Former Star Reporter ChainNewspaper Heads P P • Theodore 'Dreiser once remarked : "If I were a newripaperman looking- for ookingfor a job in New York the man Pd: try hardest to tie up with is Roy Howard," thus illustrating at once his own wisdom andclumsiness expression. Six months later the Sedipps-Howard people, of which Mr. Howard is the managing director, bought the New York World and alrialgaanated it with their New York Telegram. Harry Salpeter, a New' York journalist, quotes the remark in. The Outlook in the course of an article on Mr. Howard, whom he calk ial) JaBeing troubled with- Rheumta- cbief of the Scripps news falcons. tism ,I tried your Dodd's, Kidney Mr. $oward is still :a young man, but Pills," writes Mrs. E. 'Millross, 804 he is also an executive at the head Windsor . five., Windsor, Ont. • "After of 'one of the greatest news -gathering taking seven boxes my "rheumatism services on earth. He admits that he went and I have" not been troubled may be a. poor executive but insists since. I take great pleasure- in re - that he remains a dandy reporter. commending Dodd's Kidney Pills to my friends. I can,do so •with evlery confidence." The natural wary to treat Rheuma- tism and,.. Backaches is to treat the Kidneys, arid the natural way to, treat the Kidneys is to use Dodds Kidney Pills.' 'Rheumatism it caused by the presence of .uric$ acid in the blood. If the Kidneys are doing their duty, they will strain all the uric acid out of the blood and there can. be no more Rheumatism. Therefore, put the Kid- neysin shape to do their duty by us- ing 'Dodd's Kidney Pills. Don't delay. Delays are •danger- o•is. If you suspect your Kidneys, act at cacti. WORLD MISSIONS The '.rue Story of Sita 'Sita . was the daughter of a court official, a• Brahmin. His family gave her' in marriage when she was eleven or twelve years old, as the `fourth wife of art important official. She seas his favorite and consequently, the other wives were jealous of her. They did everything they could to make her life miserable. When her c}lild was born they called a priest to say that if she ever saw her baby it .would die, so the little boy was taken away from her imanediatels after it was born. Then the older women poisoned the mind of her hus- band, 'What a wicked woman she must have been," they said, "in some previous life, if, now, just looking at her boy would cause its death." Af- ter a time 'Sita's hu,siband banisher r her to the home of his uncle, whets he was treated like a servant. She 0: eared and after a perilous journey reached a 'village where the Isa (Jesus) people took her in. An eld orly Bible woman offered to keep her and Sita, who was then about fifteen years old,.started to learn how .to read write, sew, knit, cook and clean Sometimes she would get homesick and sad, wondering what had hap- pened to her little baby boy, but she s: awed on with, the in•issionaries. La.t or she went,to,a training school. To day she is a Bible woman, going wit the missionaries on their journey and helping to tell the story of Jesus Yet always she is praying that some day she may go back to her own people and find her little boy and tel him and all her old friends the mes sage of God's love.—From The Won Berland of India. • Carnegie Mansion Sold For Pittance Mrs. Andrew Carnegie,.gray• hair ed and slight in figure, keeps hersel quietly aloof in the afterglow of he ausband's great career. • Her partici hat.ion in the proceedings of' . the students' international union' recent ly marked one of her rare public ap pearances. ' Her summers are spep • h 5 • 1 sept the Hearst papers which prob- ably Wield far less influence. . .And the part .of the World--Telegrane that claiasts his first attention is the edi- torial page, for he says it is the most thoroughly read .page in the paper. In the course of their inter- view, Mr. 'Salpeter suggested to him that the editorial page ,in American journalism had died a tong while ago. Howard replied; "The editorial page was dead .because it itself was dead—not because newspaper a read- ers ens ever have been dead to editorial influence." - They Quickly Relieved Rheumatism Troubles SAYS ONTARIO LADY OF OODD'S KIDNEY PILLS Mrat: E. ' Miiiross Strongly Recant Mends D2odd's Kidney Pills. Windsor,' Ont., March- 17.—(IS'pec- f' r t ached by the I Forernost letittans For nourishment, del/clout; flavor and low cost, CROWN BRAND CORN SYRUP is recognized as the most healthful food by foremost dietitians. A litA1tt tread littiilred, :MON C'I tiM ', L4f$1• et retsina.* ryliss /Woe •I'atoll ilie, talrrruuiirit; It is because he was a tireless re - potter that he has risen to his pres- ent position. ale first gatheted news, then, he sold news, and now is at the head of the organization. It seems a simple journey in three steps, but few men of any generation have tak- en them so rapidly. Moreover; . he gives every sign of being ready 'to take any other progressivesteps that may be pointed out to him.. It is an old story among news• paaermen that about 27 years be- fore Ray Howard and his, assoeiate "o?re'ht the World he spent a week 'eying to get r•!ast a World office boy for an interview with an editor, to the end that he might get 'a job. He 'ailed. and though no doubt he felt -ore at the time.. he has since realizei hat the office boy did him a great kindness and perhaps made his sub- ''•^'au'nt career possible. For we doubt +hat even with Howard on the World he . could have saved it from its ulti- mate fate, while as a partner with Scripps he found the perfect oppor- tunity for the exercise of his owe special gifts. Roy Howard was. bora in Ohio 49 years ago. His father was a railroad mechanic who wanted his ton to have a better job and per- 'uaded him to study stenography in his spare hours. He became hitea chnol rrlrresponderat for the Indian- polis. News, and had so much stuff accepted at space rates that the ',cater concluded it would be cheaper 1n take him on the staff and pay aim a regular salary. The News is a very high-grade paper, so young llowsrd got his first instruction in an excellent school. Later he became sports editor of the Star and. after• wards moved to St. Louis. "" It was while he was on the' Staz :hat he spent one Summer's vaca- tion In trying vainly to get an interview with a World editor.. HI� next move was to the St. Louis Post - Dispatch, a Pulitzer paper,, for he. believed that it might be as stepping ;tone' to the World. Herehe was "efused a $3 a week raise and went to the Cincinnati Post, . one of the ^crimps -McRae chain. At' that time l there ,were six ,Scripps-lMcRae papers 'n Ohio, and Howard convinced Mr. Scripps that it would be a good idea to have a special Ne,w . York correspondent for them. So- he was -ant to New York where at that time thexe; was a ,cripps-McRae news service called the Publishers' Press. .It consisted of two desks and a telegraph instrument in a cubby- hole of an office. Howard was then receiving $50 a week, and soon he was promoted to bb managing editor of the 'Publishers Press, fn addition to his other ' duties, his combined salaries being $•85.. His business was to, sell news in competition with thAssociated Press, the Tiearst service and other great organizations, but the United Press of to -days is what the old Publishers Press has grown to. He troth sold and collected news and aid not merely supervise a staff of men engaged in these activities. As a reporter he has to his credit soma famous scoaps. He secured an inter- view with Rockefeller ' at a time alien such an interview would are worth $10 a word of any enterpris- ing editor's money. To him Lloyd George gave the famous "knock -out" interview. He scooped the world on the sinking of the Titanic, having the good luck to be a passenger on. the Olympic at the time, and being able 'to send the news" through the Qlympie's radio transmitter. He flashed to his papers the first news of the Jeffries -Johnson ,fight knock- ing Out. But perhaps, his mast speed- tacular feat *as his scoop on the armistice. Of course, it was vitiated to some extent .because of the fact that it was announced for November. 7th, whereas the war ended officially on November lith, and..pepele•,..sti1l cling to that date for its celebratical. As -the news service _Siteadened out so did the newspaper buying part of the Seripps program. Ile never withdrew bis ,profits from a paper but to invest them in dther papers. The syndicate branched out front Ohio, and bought a peper in Pittsburg for which $-5,0001000 was paid. Ther it bought the New 'ordt' Telegram from Mangey and later the World froth the palsied Piditters. Naturallyt tare 'W'orwt'etegiratn is the big shot in the chain; which has no. rivalfor combined circulation et.. D'tirant says, he litarried almost as early as Nature desired. The precepts of monogamy and continence in indissoluble marriage worked harmoniously with 'his gener- al environment. Large familiee meant that the mother would spend most of her adult life in looking after them; and • it seemed natural'•that husband slid wife should remain loyal to each Other until all the children were grown up and had established them- selves " independently. The change came when the industrial era ar- rived. Factories appeared. No hanger was the home or the farm the centre of all the family' tivities. Brothers "sad sisters scatttbd to earn heir living -elsewhere. The .struggle for existence became -more complicated. The •time at which a man could be- come -independent enough .. t'b take a wife and raise a family lengthened. The problem of sexual continence be- came more complicated than itbad been in the agricultural era. Educe - tion for the few and long apprentice - dap for the many combined with scant wages all,, contributed to this end. It 'was' the same with, women. Their usefulness . declined. A man working in a factory does not receive the same economic co- operation from his wife as the farm: er. Large families were no longer an advantage. They were a burden. e childless woman became a kind ' f parasite in comparison with what she had been se few generations ear - What Will Be next lien. The city offered every dis- couragementto marriage and at the Great Moral Change? same time provided every stimulus to sex. Co we have come to the pres- There are those who look out upon ent age, which may see the end of declareed world and le another' erwe are ate ethe end end of an era. Others valuation of moradards hither. more pessimistic says that civilization to unchallenged. What is to . b� itself• is crumbling. But what is to done? Durant Says: "We are com- follow this era or this civilization pelted, despite ourselves, to be . phil osophere-to build •for ourselves a system of life and thought that shall be consistent with itself n1 With the experience and dent ods more than middle-aked; and the old- of our time. Where shall: we find er they are the more alarmed they Ha moral code which shall accord with profess to be. We are not, that ,old, the changed conditions of our lives for we do not regard, morality as 'and yet lift us up, as the old codes part of the law of the •Medes and' •lifted men, to gentleness, decency, Persians but rather as something hu- inodes•ty, nobility, honor, chivalry man that continues to change and and love?" But we may be' sure shift 'from age • to age and will con- , that great economic changes bring tinue to do so as long as there is about moral revisions. If we dread any life in the human race or move- the re'.isions perhaps we should ment in' the human mind. A. Greek somewhat restrain our tendency for philosopher once said . that .if we :whooping up the economic changes. could make a heap of all customs: If the Hoover doctrine—on which he somewhere considered sacred and has been strangely silent of late --of moral and then withdraw from the two cars in every garage is also to heap all customs somewhere consid- be followed by two wives in every ered impious and immoral, nothing home, maybe we had better try to . would remain. Morals change with get along, with one ,car. climate and in consequence of vary- ing beliefs in the supernatural; More than all they cban gt with 'the •eeon- nobody knows. In the world of mor- als there does appear to have been an' eactracirdinary change in the mem- ory of "those now living who are not Cooks in 234 mins. after the water hails , prisal against.'the, King's enemies. It suddenly occurred to Godfrey he was here was a me 'Which that r genie well equipped • to• play. It promised more excitement and richer �.,rewariisi than peaceful trading. So he went' to"Snow Parker, a local capitalist and retired captain, and Parker said he would build him` a ship. The con- struction of The iRover began and, when she was about 'finished, Parker ' sold shares in her. They were snap- ped up by -local seafaring men' and merchants and ' by" investors from Halifax. Thq.„-Rover was a brig of 100 tons, fast and handy, and armed with 14 cannon, each of which dis- charged a ball about the size of an: orange. There was in_ 'addition a long gun mounted on a” swivel, which discharged,. iron fragments of all kinds, well calculated to slash a sail in ribbons or deal out death to hu- man beings. Her crew was made up •of x55 men and ..boys, the powder mon- key being a youngster -who was the skipper's nephew.. It •wase on King George's birthday, June 4, 1800, that The Rover sailed on her first voyage from Liverpool. ;Less than three weeks• later, when on the sea route between France and, the West 'Indies, she fell in with a French convoy consisting of. a -large. schooner, a full-rigged ship and four brigs. In men and gun powder 'the odds''were'four or five to one against 'The Rover; and the captain and 'crew debated , upon their course. Should they sheer off or attack? The decis- ion was left to Godfrey and he de- aided to attack. But, to hs as• tonishment, as he steered.The Rover toward the' convoy it separated and took to •flight, each ship -going- in•- a different direction'. The 'French cap- tain had concluded that The Rover must have much ,greater strength than was visible iit was ready to carry the fight to him. He' was' bluf- fed into flight, as later two or three of the ships were bluffed into sur- render when they were overhauled. Returning to Liverpool harbor with their prizes, the captain, crew and shareholders were richer by £10,00J fox their ..bloodless. exploit. Shortly afterward The Rover put to sea again and eventually reached that part- of the Spanish Main which is now the coast of Venezuela,' falling in eventually with a Spanish squad- ron of war, every unit of which was potentially more formidable than The Rover. But the battle was' joined. Sweeps were put out on'the little Canadian ship, and it was by their manoeuvring• that each Spanish ship, as it. advanced to the attack was suddenly swept with shot and iron fragments. Throughout the engage- ment the powder monkey stood. be- low with a lighted match, ready to throw into a powder barrel at a sig- nal, for his ankle' preferred death to rotting in a Spanish prison., The ships were within 15 yards of each other when the guns were fired. The carnage aboard the Spanish ships was terrific, and they were eventually boarded and captured. he extraord- inary fact about this engagement, which raged for an hour and a half, is that there was not a man aboard The Rover who did' not answer to ,the roll call at the end of the fight. Surely this is a naval engagement unique in our history. When The Rover sailed again it was not under Godfrey, who had retired, biit in charge of another gallant seaman,. e turned seemed to tax o however, 211 out a pirate, andi. In the end was luckye not tb •have, decorated a yard- ' r'. omic condition of mankind. This was discussed illuminatingly by WiII Durant in a magazine a few years ago. He said that there have been two profound economic trans- formations in history; the passage from hunting to agriculture and the passage from agriculture to industry. These affected the moral code, for it- was found .that what suited one condition did not suit another and it was a long and painful process to replace the old moral code with something 'strange and new and yet better fitted to the economic trans- formation. When, men lived by hunting they had much the same habits as the, wild beasts of to' -day. Not knowing when he would eat his next meal, the primeval man gorged himself when he had the food, in a manner that would be ' thought "not only dangerous but revolting to -day. Thus greediness was a virtue for by its exercise man was able to live. We see something of the same thing to -day for while we condemn hate ,as a vice in peace time we do all we Bad Attacks of Flu E. M.Ward.Finds Wonderful Pick -Me -Up til Dr. I ilial s' Pink Pills. J.\ "I have had attacks of the 'flu' frequently since 192°; and sometimes very, bad attacks, but always when on, the road to recovery, 7 take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I find them a wonderfu ' ptck=me-ug." So writes E. M. Ward, Saskatoon, Sask., who further states: "I would re- commend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to all sufferers from that rundown, listless feel- ing. I have taken the Pills on many Occasions, and they seem to tone up my blood wonderfully. 1 have been anaemic for years, and And that, when I get run-. down, after takingseveral buttes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills!thc collar comes back to my cheeks and I have „wonderful vitality." 3Yr. Williams' Pink Pills rebuild: health` by' creating neWlileodnint increasing the red blood cells which restore the Wasted tissties'.•and revitalize the exhausted-syrs tem. They remove the cabal' or rundobnn or nervous conditions Try thein. At your druggist's gilea package. i Brings .. Wonderful Vitality. Iron Hearts and Hulls Old Old Nova Scotia Through the pious labors of Col. C. H. L. Jones; O.B.E., V.D., of the Mer- sey Paper :Company, Thomas H. Rad- dall, and Thomas W. Hayhurst, there has appeared`• -under the title "Saga of the Rover," a story of privateer- ing and piracy that forms a thrilling chapter in the maritime history of Nova Scotia in particular and Can- ada in general. It is the story of a time when, as the introduction says. British natal strength in western waters was at low ebb and when "those stout hearted seamen of -Liv- erpool Bay, Nova Scotia, kept the deck in the stormy years 1775-1815." It alas a period in which Great Bri- tain was almost continually at war with some power, with most of the fighting done far• from Canadian shores. But a heroic if Maier role was played by Nova Scotia ships and sailorme(t, Of whom perhaps the most conspicuous were The Rover and her captain, lAlexander 'Godfrey. God- frey came of Puritanstock, and was born at 'Cape Cod. He was, as Mr. Hayhurst, his biographer, says, one of those stern loyalists who with stout hearts and empty pockets re- moved to Canada at the close of the,. war. His physical strength was prodigi- ous. He was a huge man:, "six feet and more of bone and muscle, shoul- ders like the main yard of a frigate; chest as round and hard as an oak water butt." Stories were told of his prowess. He had picked up the best bower- anchor of the Halifax brig and ,carried it the length of the wharf. He had carried two full wa- ter butts on various occasions. At- tacked by a young bull in a pasture he had seized it by the horns and -- broken .its.. neck with one tremendous heave. But he boasted little of this exploit, since young_bulls were vale• able creatures, especially in hard times. He was a sailor .and had sail. sd •-citlt of the Canadian Liverpool to every shore of the . Atlantic, • bait re- tired and settled , •dawn,. at Herring Cove across the harbor from Livet- pool When hey manned, But When—his little daughter died-tragicaliyr he was ready to listen again to the call of lire sea. Th 170 three private ship.•' Sailed away froth the little Bort bound; ter the t'tpattist Main, their ca thin" airnned with le ters� f tat'citie and tte'r; 1‘,. Stateil Disturbrer' Is Gandhi's Riva Major disturbances in India; wliiela include strikes ' and''lilOodshed, centre around the, rather stately.•,peY' rti�,•of' the 'Pandit . Jawaharlal Nehrat, again arrested. :Os Mahatma Gandhi pro- claims that he brings back from his mission only a renewed "belief iw 'God." -' The Pandit Nehru is an erudite Matt belligerent libertarian. At Cambridge. University- and the Inns Court of' London; where he was ediiaated,' he'. was an honor man and a facile and brilliant student of the' classics. Its returned to India to spend the.fant-- ily fortune --the is a son of the Con- servative Pandit Motilal Nehru, lead- er of the 1Swaraj party—in the cause of Indian independence. Recently he started the "no rent"- campaign w+ieh is causing all 'sorts • of turmoil. He and the Mahatma Gandhi are . said to be' rivals for. control . of the Indian national' congress. of which body he was president last year. He takes little stock in the 'Mahatna's non- violence campaign, and spent sir months in jail in 1930 on charges of inciting to riot. He is a former-• newspaper editor. ' - WIT AND WISDOM Music -store ad "'Classical and op - j eratic phonograph records . by world.' i famous artists, all two -faced." ---Bos- ton Transcript. Security rests on a moral base and. cannot be assured by a physical. force.—Nicholas Murray Butler. Public opinion is any opinion that is accepted without private •examine - tion. --Quebec Chronicle Telegraph. Great Britain will impose a ten per- cent. ercent. tariff oiirlall except a few im- ports. They call ten per cent. a tar- iff • in Great Britain!—New York. Limes. • In a new stage production a speecle more than a thousand words long has: to be, spoken by one of the characters:- It haractersIt is denied that a vacuum! cleaner salesman has been offered the part. —London Humorist. Under the kindly beaming of the tariff prosperity sun a splendiferous crop of .provincial, civic and municipal taxes is in the process of flourishing- --Winnipeg Free Press. It would be interesting reading t;v come across a list of these securing cash from the war in the East. Were - the dollar taken out of war we'd: have books rather than battles • and prosperity rather than strangling profiteering. — Exeter -Times Advo- cate. • When children developed their 'per- sonality in the old days it was re- garded as impudence --St. Catharines Standard. Now yOur • can positively identify your favorite D. L. &W. Scranton Anthracite (hard coal) beforeyou 'burn it's trademarked (tinted blue) -for your protection. NOW-- 9rdor 1 and knowr r-: tsayer., 'bliiii>r coal `Comtlfott means Tib E COLOR GUARANTEES THE QUALItY y0. B3 1' 4 1' a u