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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1933-02-24, Page 6�i""" ", "If""'I" "', I 1" 11 �1�i`,"" �611_1'1`1111`! �"!"�_1`1`11 . , , . . , ­ , � , . . I , . . . . A "E,Wtl iS .;�.. ,,,� ''' ` 2 -0 R_L D- - W,AR - DEB , w1v; � m !� %- I :11110 ... '. 1�3y The,Dd"e Curtis, Abelli N, .1 .- . 01 .. ... , nl.�, 1, � . " g, �.� , �� 1. .,� , I ,h the.. plossibl,ei exception of ,,, , ,t �� �, " , "', * . ,.,, time, the Allies did business with ta S OJ let us consider the present s tu . . , , I , ��,t�"Z` 0 0'rac " ; `� "I ,�'�,,'�,,�,��,.,l . __ , Y, th� � 1,% no Subject more i'i' ��- "; private citizens in this country, but the Odbts. , ,, �, , Se(r ­�, 1T,7 7. ,4441 di =Ase' 4 the., present time * %, ��, " a �4g��'��, ,@ 'V*alts! "� ' "� viliian we entered the war, our Gov- You have heard,a-lot about t1v 7debts,which * ,orld, ,. . t., � _fi� the �, ,,, , "O, " ,.� v r r deb n'', ,i,,,1",i,,--"�; ,T�p, ernment undertook to finance all of vast amount Of, ,th4& th,. , , - �',t , ,�,,,',,. there ��Av� ­a,probolem in the world .,, , 1,11 1, the purchases made by the. Allies in S cancel (L .3 United Statles ha. le - Ju - R ,! ;,' = ,f �n�. that embitters the nations, in- " k. M - 1, . � "' * "i this country. 1�ow was this done? Whe , what was cancelled? n th , ­. - I'll � . volwd in all their political, econo,mic 111"1011P,�1"I'l . .. . .. .... - ib S First, we floated our L erty Bond. or. i ed U were first extended to the Al . 10'�,' 1 i� �`­ and Anancial'relationts. to the exbent y,� -, which ,were ,bought by the citizens of lies, ourr Treasurer figured them a. , �,.,� R 1 �,";_,,, t6 this one does. I have felt that �1!.,�%,I­ 1, "I �at R -P,;' this country. *con -d,. we establish- 'money, I�Dans at 5 per cent. interest. T"i; �0, ���' T*5516ly 1 nvight render some service , , ed with this certain credits -is an extremely high rate of interes,' A I %1f 1,;t i6 that part of thel public which' lis- "' for ea,cii of the Allied nations in the for that sort of a loan. When thi � �, "�6t;: th the sal- , *­`,:� ., , telps to me by setting for United 'Sta Treasury. We did not . tes All,ies f their debts, the later , . 01 11 , , , .,� , aent facts concerning this problem send any of the money to Europe;. .,Mde,d est rate was lowered to 4% per cen-1c � - i , �,. . . I Xhe mw1d war cost *86,690,000,060- it was all kept here and i�pent here� and in some cases to 3'pe,r cent. oi , ­ ; _� � gold. This ,gigantic sum is 60 -per Third, the Allied nations ardered less, and the, Aiffe;,erice was looke( � V,., cent. more than the total cost of the r" q;j their necessary war supplies from.: upon by many Americans 2 ' xs an, can F ., nment in ,Great 'Britain for 2%, .'' 'Cover American manufacturers, sent a cellation Of indebtedness. As a mat . , 1), , centuries, ,i.e., from 1,688 to 1914. It ,.. '' staten-kent sbowing the purposes foT iter of fact the interest i,s,. still ex � I Al". , I is three times a& much as the cost . which the supplies were to be used, orbitant. Any amount of money it .... 11; � � ; � of the United States Golvernment .� to the United 'States Treasurer and advertised on the New York morke 1, , b., I . from 1701 to 1914, including the War the United States TreasVier paid, the to -day at I per cent. and less an( 11 1, I I of 1812, the 'Mexician Wiar, the Civil � ­ bills, charging the arnountt againkt there is no call for it event at tha , .1 i "'..'. -� War, the ,Indian W,ars, and the Span , the credit so established. In this WaY rate4 �Why then should we insist up � I'll . ish-Arnerican War. It is greater , we American citizens paid to our On the hiRb, rate on these secalle( . ��,� .., 'than' the eistimated wealth of Great d�vernmant the nioney, which our loans? .. I I �. . o,600,,000po) , I � fRritatin iii 1914 (about 7 Government loaned in the form of �. The report of the United State! I P111 plms the estimated wealth'of Aus- credit to the Allied nations, who used Treasurer' for the year ending Jun. � ��-, . tralia and New Zealand in 1914 the nioney tbr ' ough the United States 30, 1931 . . . . the 1a8f publislie.( . , 11, I (��t $10,009,0^000.). The at- Treasurer to. Purchase war supplie' report that I have been able to, fin( ! . . . R�; tempt to,firrance that Hell w1hich cost from gur American manufacturers. , . . . . gi,ves the total indeb�edndsi � ..�.: . 11 over $6,61DO)DW ,every 'hour during .. The money never left our country, of all foreign governments to tho , , . , 7 1 the fllfty-two montlis, a the war; left it was spent here in America; it United States Government as $11 , I'll., ,�!,!. the nations saddled with an indebt- went to pay for war materials which 5N*601,461.412. 'Me total amount o, 11 I . edness which, it is safe to say, they were sold at the very highest prices payments t havle been niade ol 1 1: � " I I will never:pay.- At the present time' at an enormous profit, Who got the the� " debtst� given in that report a. 1, � ,:. - thB net burden ,for all the nations profit? ,The Allies? Certainly not! $2,627,560,�91.72. (Of this arniouri, Ve ' d nulrnlber� is about �­ involved in roun The ,only' people who .prodited i1nanc- ai Great Britain has P �d $1,911,798, � . .�, $27,0W,W0,0100- ially were the American people who ' 298.67). We baive already noted tha . I Before the world war, the U;nit�-d sold the goods used by the Allies in our �exports to the Allies before w4 I �. . . I IStates was, a debtor nation, that is, fighting the war. Let this fact b3 enterled the war increased to, suth ai ... . , ': , ,;, . we were indebted to fore�gn coun- remembered! The people'who profit- extent that we were able to wipe ou 444;. , Wes for goods and services which ed through the -se transactions -were all our foreign dl�bts, and make. en I they' -bad rendered to us. When the the American. people. ormous pro(fits besides. But not, � '. _1 - war began in August,. 1914, th6 9c But there is, another point that we . that for the .year 1914 to 1919 inclus .,�, I �, .. cumulation of American securities of should not forget. - When President ive, our exports exceeded our im I . foreign countries -had reached a total Wilson asked Congress to declare wa., Ports by over $15,000,000,0010. Thi . .. , I estimated at $5j500,000,000 and gave 'he said that we should pledge "oar I represents oar nati6nal ,gain on com I I 10 harge. � rise tp an arinual. interest c lives and our fort�nes, everything . . merce, as a direct resul t, of the wai ;,, ,_ . 1.� paylaf�le abroad Of about $275,000,,000. we are and ,everything we have" t.) Now add to that $15,000,,000,000 th I t11 Aaiiej.ican investments in foreign ' the prosecution, of the war. H�e didn't rilore than $2,500,0,00,WO more thx .11 � � countries, on the other hand, were M . say that we should loan nioney to the governments have .already pai . . . I "� ,about $1,500�0,0.10,000, on which we the Allies, and that it, should beW,­ back to us sinee the war, then. ad , t'. received interest amounting to $75,.� 1" paid with a high rate of interest; he the $5,500,W01;000 indebtedness w 11 . 000,000. We paid. each' yeag7, ther6- said that we should contribute overy- had 'before the war plus the $W0 t..... . fore, a net interest, off aboiiii $200,. - thing that we hAd to the one task of 0010,000 interest �rwe had to, pay eac ­ . 1 001),000. winning the war. , vear and then ask yourself if, in a', . , .''. . 'Then the war ibroke out! Immedi < 'From the -time that we d,�clared I honesty, you can see where the Allie 11 , "I, . �iely, the European nations in tire war in April, 1917, to the �end of that owe the United States' anything. RE I ,I, . war needed all sorts of war muni- ,,, . year, we made credit advVif-les. to me,mlber, friends, that according t , "', �.. tions . . . food, cotton., metals; the Allie4 for the Purchase 'of goods the printed statements. of our ow ,,, . I ch6baicals and manufactured articles from our manufacturers amounting Froverrin. e , -t nt' trhose nations wero fight . ­ .:�, of .vari*us sorts. All who ,could, or- to $S,656,129,000; during- IMS, up io - ing Our ,enemies that we extende ; �'. dered large Supplies from.the United . ......... the time of the signing of the arm- them credit in order that they migl, � 11-11:...1- 1. 1. � iStates., -1 say all.mbo could, because i . ..... ... - ,� " "' I sti , w ,vanced an additional i � ce e ad fight our battles;,, that we pledge I 1, t. -'t e. I . one of the prime ne,6essities lif h $a;&*jN0,6l00;.,ar),4, from thaz time uk ours, , to iv Aves g, e, to .% (not loar) e ,, '' to Y: , , Allied condug-t of the war was - the sig -riing of tb4e"Tea:cE, Tr(�aty on- i -ery -to the winnin -thing that we had ,7- .; '. I ,,� - A'. keep, tfie Central Powers from'gain- June 2�, 1919, we advanced $1,7,48,_ of tl;ie' w'ar;'thAt -for about .a yea I, I .. . ing access to the American source of .., 67Z,00-0. After ,the sigriling of - tf-ie 'after we declared war against G*-] .. I � i ls war materials. The American peo- Peace Treaty there was a furt�,,ar ad- many the only thing. we could co -r IK . . . .1 ple have always wanted peace and - vance of $371,568000. This' made 'a ' tribute was our war 'Materials whic .� � we have always shouted for peace, total of $9,41�6,372,0,0,0-. - In a buile- we paid for through ,our Libert .... � 1 1 but whern we, got A chance to make tin issued by the United States Loans and too our ,own America 11 . . I I money selling war materials, we di,1 "'. Treasury Department the latter part manufactui,ers. .... , ., I _'­ -;� - not let Our desires for peace inter- , of IR17, the reason, given to the A -n- There is another little matter .1, .. fere with business... From June 3,0, erican. pubbe for making'the so -call- want to call - to your attention. Aft( �'. � I 1914, to June,30, 1915, our exports 1, ed loans was that they were ­,ssert- i the war, you kmow the people ( '. . to England, France, Italy and Rus- tial to our protection in a mihta�y FuroVe w�ere starving, and big-heaT . , 1! . I sia increased -over $675,0100,010,0; they wav and for our economic protection ed America went to, the rescue wit ,� 'the I , . . increased over' $189,000,000� to, aria, welfare. Please note that. rf-a- money and supplies. That is, vi F . neutral European countries. The son carefully! - In addition to t�he extended . to the Allies more �red �� ­. I I . I following year, oiir e3eports to the rided lie credit we exte the Allies., t' - -ith which they ,bought food stuf I ��, 'Allies, increased over $1,992000,000 foreign governments are- indebted to and passed tble-in on to the starvir, 4 ,�, � and over $10,7,0100,000 to the rieutra.lt. , us in four ways: 1, Through the ' people' That Money -v�hich iwe e: � I- '. In A917 our exports over $3;ILZ.5,_ Purchase i�y the Allies of surplu., tended for charitable work. is a_pa N . � (000,,rq the Allies and $141,00-0,006 I I 17C war .supplies which our -armies le�t Of ,the, debts which we ar�. now d 1::� trals. During this same 1� t I . in Europe at the clor,e of the w-,�r; I manding that they pay'back to i - ur , period, IT exports to the Central T.,creased 2. Through the receipt of cred;ts,for with high interest. i I I - �, . 11 Powers $6815,000,,000,: " so -r elief work aTn,6n.g European .' coun- ,Has it .evtT occurred to you to col ".- ' ' that in that period we made over tries following the war; 3, Thxa-ug.1 " sider what America Owes: to Eurol ' "� I . . � . $4228,000,00-0 at the expense of the the purchase of flour held by the in this matter of war .debts9 Y( 11� �1. I I European countries. These exports United States -Grain -Corporation; 4, know that.is - the viewpoint fro �44 I werre paid for partly in .gold, partly. For credits extended Vy the United which the European nations r,-e,e tl i, � ,by the return of our eviderice.of in- States Shipping I Board. The grand � -otter. Take ,Great Britain,.for e: I . , .1 debtedness to European lenders and total of all credits extended.- by us' arn(Ole. We certainly cannot con I'll partly on credit arranged by th--, to the' -Allies exclusive of interest, ploin because of her attitude to th �. . "I American bankers. And it mu�t be .. was somethi'n_� Over $1,0,300,000,0j)0. matter. ,Shi� was the first t6 ful , , � - ., renu-mbered that ,our bankers were Now note wh -at happeried after the her,debt; she has made her -paymen, 1v . careful to take ample security for ,;; war was over The United, states and this month she came across wil , elvelry dollar we loaned with the ex- Congress 'created irl Feb,ruary, 19.12 $95,500,000 more, -l�rhicb by the wz '.. . 't, ceptloh of the Anglo�France loan of "... the WOrld 'War Foreign, Debt C ,o otal which i,,� - October, 19115, which had behind it mission and the United States Gav- mentioned as having 'been Paid, f, �t . � . u of � .. the joint and several obligatio � ernment requested. all nation.i to ,nt d c de the that amou oes not in lu r .�', ,, .. both 'Great Britain and France. whom we bad extended credits by cent payments. But over in Gre " . . - rAefi, in April, 1917, the United riean- of which they might 'be able Britain they have -figured what Ar I 11,, I I -States entered the war. Up to this to pro&nutA.� the war against our en� . er1ca Owes t"hem. and the stateme, � . ; , I � - I . 1. � - I er;Ae,> to take4the -necessary stapi to� runis as follows according to a ell I . I ,,� - wardi funding their debts! lip to ping from an7 Englisih paper whio � , 1:'. . . ��', I ROCHESTER MAN . that Liyz)f,, C;Teat Britain 71.i i 1wen in someone was kind enough to sei day. . ,,,, favor of cancelling all w9T. debls and " , rne, the other , Britain borrowi ,. ,. ,. N ,. "'; V ..".11-11-1 ... IN ritairi was a credittor Great B n,,ltion from Aimerica $4,ON,1000,000. Th , ­ - ----- - -- I __ 11 " " , . a to the extent of $4,682,900,000. VY -hen money was almost entirely pent 4 - � I.. ", I I � , I , our Government refused to ewnr-el ihe lar mur�itions, gely in America, pr ... I 1, �� , I 1, %,.:�,. I debts, Great Britain On August ji. ' �t viding work and wages to Amei :�:;�;,. . :" .... ........ 11.1 ,.-,%. , i;!��:....,!::::]:::::�:::::,.::"".......,...� '. I ii�i;�,:�::!:�::�i::l�:i:�li:i��:�:: .. �� ..... :0, -.1 I.".... I �i.,, � 1922, reluctantly asked her debtor$- cans. To America went 'back fro ,4 . X;:!�iT�� "I".. �,:,;-.... "',�:,::i::�::!��:::::�:�i�����;..i��i���i.. ,,­ :�!�:�,'.'i�ii!i�j:�_V, __ . ��.. r. MA C7.1 i:�i�A�:�:�:­- ,:`1""*.`*" -,A to take steps to fund their debts t 0, the Allies in thiis way roughly $', ,. , , . i�i���::�.,������;��;iii:;���-��,.�..�,',,.',ii��i",.i���i�",i::I .V 1� ;.:::"::::: :.": lvl� *!���!����ij���i�jij���i�.'��i�i"-.".,�".,."��."7�,,,,"'���,. � her. In doing so she laid down the 5,00,000,0100. Britain raised from b I .�.� �iii]:,?,�i . ., ­ � ". `,%�. ....I., . I , _11- V � � �".:i.,.:�!i;:;i:::i;�;�;�:::i:i:�:'� t..." .. principle that she would seek to col- ' Owtl Nationals and'spent mostly � � -, :,. , �� 1, ����::""�.,.",��,i!?�*"."?��ii�;��:iii:��"":i��i�ii . feet from her debtors Only � . such am- America 911>out $4,0100.000,000. Sin I , ..,.. ;.T.�.j.:..:.:;:: I iii.����'..;i;;:�:��.;.:.;�9�:,.,:.:.-,:.:.!,:;;:;�:;,:;,.�,,�::�i:T!������j:i:::.�* ,� I �i,�,�ii�`i��,'�'! � 1. . :.,.....4".'---;.-.-.; .. ...... ... .­'� ounts as would in their aggre-ate . the war, Britaiti has repaid to Ai . . 7 !:ii!.,�*iiii.%*,�,,�ii,�?.�!i:, equal the sum paid by her to the enca, of the original a7nount borro, "I _ �6_, . ;�:�*���.,;j:�: . "i" ".. ::�ii!:�` ., . . .wr ��",�i�i��-;.!:�,% �;�i United. States. - Great Britain was al- ed, neairly..$%0,00,000,400io. Thug tho . 11.1. ..:..��, .. . . ........ � ...... -IR �� I ��::�::,:!::,�-:::,:,;:,��..:,,,,.;:.:.::.:�- ,�;*5�:i*:;.-.:-. -So the first nation to send, a, Funding have sent to Americal ivefarly $6,0104 :���i.,,.�::;:,�,,i��i�i�,.,.�':�,���i�,��",.,;���',�� M " 'i�i��Iil - C ,ommlsaion to the United Sta,es to 000,000- Incidentally, Britain lost ,�, , I'll I . ;;;;:,i,;:%;t., "'...... V..,:t't :1. 'ij::j;::]:$:;j;;;i,i:!; ­jt'�:j;�::: , :�,:;:;'..'.. ��::�:;::::::�i;,:":���:�:��i:;I ,-,.::;:��:t:�*!, adjust her debt to us. According , 1'116 war 1,08P,919 Men while we lo ;:;;. , ,.!,.;�;.;..e , :, 'P��.�' - . .K.W., I "" I., - ;:;;,�'-!t:,.;:.�;:.10;',- ',':,�;:., . , to the agreement signed- on June 15, but 116,000. That is the, way th, 'RX . .. . ...�,V'..... "...1; ... N., ?I ,,:I ... �/, _­ ;;;;;;;;;; 1:: . . . . . . . � ;;;;,;"��::.:,.,:,::�':';:,::::::::, 1923, the amount of Great Britain', � ,see the issue in. England. Can N ­ .. , ,��', 11 1�.Yi.I.I..."' ;j;,.",:j:j�'�,:j:;. debt to tbi�s country, including prin- Iblame them for tbait point of viev ,�,�;,e , I ,f';,�.�*.Iki�,,;.,:.,; � ,,"��!.__., ciple and unpaid interest was f,,,,,,.l 'h' _*Ve _ Certainly that is th�e way we wou . 1.1:4-.'..,�� _ t, -:..:",,_'lt. ;. � . -,1­ "". at �4,604,128,695.74. S e, 9.4 us see it werre ,Wt- citi7ens ,of Great Bi 4 fg�' I � . .............. long term bonds in the amount, of tain instead of citiz,ens of th U L . . � - "!,, '. 41 ", . !. * �d I $4,600-.600^0 and paid. the balgace ed States. , -1 . 44::X� � , I �, . . in cash. -But -we arq� insisting that the defh . � 11 -I.-I".­ - T � �!:iii:iiii�:ii.'r.��i:iii;ii;ii�,,.ii�li�;��,. .,,**.,. , _ �i�!��i� ", I haven't time to go into detail - " , ... � -il . - :$:: �;,;, ; I I j:., . concerning the funding agriaenie,uts "I ,rL1 :i L ` �ill � I . .: .. .. � . lf, .... I � .with each of the nations indebted' to ' us, nor have I time to show tb-e re- I Simple Remedy ""vi'l Ii. CoMy lation the Reparations "It, liver was all out df order . ,a,.; of Debts to 111111. Andl became'so 6o,fistipated that 11 ��;,: I I -VI -take the� War Debts. We may quot' - e in. however, that, � For Bad Sto ]m&cb ��,'�15 I I had to some kind of a "fli 11, JR, ir - - purgative nearly every night. I passing, at the signin X of the Treaty of Versailles on, June Gives Swift Relie I.:RR'.1; ,� �L iufrered with bilious headaches 28, 1919, Germany was forvA- to "I ;,:" my,appetite was poor, and every- . " 1XI agree to make reparation for all dam- No Need of Strong Medicines okh Die ,�A'C i. �� Wig I ate disagreed with xne. age done to property in the invaded 'Safe and Simple Recipe Keeps 11 "I I ..' . SiArgon Soft Mass Pills have '1� T - i , ' ' feel territory and to this. amount the Al- lies, Stomach in Fine Condition I 11 '1,(,';-. . thade, me like a new man. , � ,I 1- The -regulated me perfectly.'�— ,, 11, 6 (except the, United States) in- &isted on adding pensi*ns and allow- It you are a victim of stomac Trouble ---Gas, Son Pain rn= , ,I,'.,' I , -Myron.P. Harwood, 70 Lenox St., ":. 1,�,��. ances. The total aimount of the r I e i 13loating—you m h qulck aT "' . 1, � , ".r, , Wchekor, X., Y.-, , parations which Germany was fore ed , certain ri'll folio I -f by wI.g th simple adv co. 1'�M' I � _", , ,, Durlux the Isat Oft-thnse '. 1.1 ,,, , , , -*6fing 143,000.000 samn soft ,,,,,�, .. �,, �1,1- ..... '" . This "Pill It. h::�r to agree to pay was fixdd on April 27, 1,921, at l32jN0,000,00o gold Don't take strong meffleines, art fleJal dilrestants or pull down yo t 1� . , I llsold. !�N,',�.�:: , _ , , T" ,.i�_. I bat been ne- , f ;; . � I =1= Marks or $33,000,000,0W . . . a sys em with starvation dJets. F, within reandn most folks may ei t . befttow 8srgon Soft : �,,,,, , I *rd .1 and. fmlu� sum three times as great w3 tha co.m- what they like If they will keo tneir stomach free from sourly ,.,, ',� � � ?F#k1FlII* 40W 11 : ", "" "I � . Wki*h� otodfidt ffi the 110d of bined Allied debts to the United, . - a acids th t hindbr or paralyze tl I ) " 0 . . , �,, L, ";,� , , M*kflfd�, "Wdlatmn. Thwy a" 11"W"', 11 tftuaki, faby latievo yod U'Ve z, " "I � I course,, Germany has been unable to pay thig'and the nrid- work of digestion. And the beat and eastest way I '&," , "t , 'L �, - #**r takv', Thor at* so gentla, . " 0,�­ �' " ,% ��,�.',.'r , aid"thW6, , 0 12r their atuod that ,-;��,, I . - , ,.a I I ter. Asa bad to' be 'adjusted Mrico though it -is not satisfactorily do this Is to follow every meal wil . a teaspoonful of Blaurated Vagnes ' — a pleasant, harmlessi inexpenst, 0trt �Adwnx A � qJ".­". - . 0 tb4ut, thank to to- ... ... i �,�,'� �', . '* �2,,*otr,lbat, sft, havo 4** v ad- Sus%6d even ye&,;' and will ' -roe rrescrIptfon that promptly neutts � ., �", , .. , .", . , li , `1 ��`�"i­ ­_ , - " il .1 , 1 . � a, wedial , slid Most V40 i. - � of, I , 44 I ir 01W! I ,'thjr-41 006"s I - (I Ybu till that Germany, has more recently flat- zas ,acidity and keeps your stomw ow"bet .. Wk 1191" A W* 1,0, nf of Maturated Mal �'111 -�Aot,,A�1­(� �4,i .��,�,!",�'i;��":��"�"fL,,'�"'�,"'�",,�,, � ,��! . I ,X I 3 -1 , ��4'�1,4, � ,,, _!."T i 6*,Ot " , V I(e. 1, *��* � O!',A , tfittu�toaibfd , � �_ � "Jull V ,, �,**� 1, . 'r .11 , I ,if �N­ �� , 4 kFl " " i ", . ly mfused to pav another maric for rution. maco jind other n,,t- rop.d q, Fi rienta which any good dr guop f"kly . u 'F "t I should qu ..", .1". yc� 11 , � . I . �, t - 1, , 41", J��' � '� ' ' '.'� " 4 ' 4 � , , ,,� " ,,, '16 t' ,,­­ , Iloi,ft 41 Ak gi—I � � 44 1W ,- N - , , ", ; -*", - ,� 1. - t ,,, , ,,­ 1111711. " - tio,ft_ , it turn - sgy that if Gemlany 7 f I ,rly, tha 90 p-ar cent. of ordinary stoma4 dlottess Is sibivollitely unnecesswr , tt, , I., ),; �',­ %­­ ,,� . ,",,_ AA� V , - - I ., , I � .. ., I ­,' !. 1 "Wvf,',�,! I � '.., d&4" !lot *y them, they ca,miat pay at sure to sit Visurated wagneol ". . . ,�rj4jl,qJR �11�1 �� 4 1� ,11�t.*�'�� .1 'r "I WW, 1�51��.,, ,"", ttA, ; 16, "hWAW . , , ,�,� �, .,T,,�',' , X .� "k '41,�,,;, & " " , . M I . th,6 thiiW Statm IB6 that as. it ulay, . . . I .. .""�0 I I 1, '. L;�� , - , � " ' ' ' *r�' I I . ,.. �. , ,� 1, :�%�,' �, 1, I I . 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I ", , ,_ , 'i� � .. �i "I'll, : 1 U I .11 � t I I -�`, '1� � , - I 1 1 � I i 11, �,�" I 11�1' .1 �­` I I I �, . r , 7 . 1. i �11�pl " "i"'It tl'r�:., R -`,'�,' ,�, , , , ,r � 11 . , i , _� � " � , . r I , I . , . - �, , ,,t ",' , : rv.j , � , . �L., ' '� , ": . . . � r L , I t I ., , , ,� , , r �. . I L . � .. i , I - .. . . . . I . ; ., . I I . I . ; ,� I , .� , I . , I * . I � , , i 1. . I �. I � - , I . . I I . � I � � . , � MaFp HU . RON V4XPO$ . ff OR W . . ...". � ii-- . -1. �. I( � . - -11 .­ .- ­ 'T . . t . I � -1-1 4. .. - ­.­ - 11"', - ­? - I � --- - " IM". . W-- I 11 11 , '!-. U'e' - i --.-.,... _, - - I I . p I .. I, E .40 - � " ,.- . _, �­ , " "i ' ­ ­'. .1, 'I- ' E-- ... ­­ .­ " " I . . ...... � ... ..... �' �' . !- ,4 �!1041 ,_.�-. r ,. , . �, " i" I . . . - I ­­ I 1. .11 11 - I. . 1-1 ­ ... r . '1-1" ".­ 11 I I � � ,� �� I 1, � I ---!,_ � . . r . �, , � . , . . . , I. � � I ­,� 1. : .. � � .. - 1. � 01 . , , ." . 11� . . :1 . �". - � . . 1. � -.� .. - � � . .1, .. I ­ 11_"� '-­f­­­l%4�-­-,_1 . ~, � ,�o 6� I W,kil." i9 - - � � 1. . 1� I 1� I �.,�, , . , ­ I, � , . . 11 � I I � % . 0 1 , , , , I ,,, - I - _' ­­ - ' - -_1-",-_- _4-1-1"- ­­­.' �p L' 1��F ';g, , F - ' " , il�1:11 1-- . � I I., . I � I I I j,,�'4'11i,r, .1, ..11 � I ! * I �, I =. . - U, _td QUEY 1r, , 0 F , E _ T -Ton EN. , CRIX� . . . . . . . JF � .., V . 't '' T I I �/ 11. :_f 4 �' , " It - k. V -400T .- ,r,: � . EVA J11. �11 ... .. . IP X1 (By Larry Lawson, in the Toronto Star, Weekly) 11 I �." ..,I _ 1 4 'VIKI �.. �, i I ­� ' I � I .X h. . � A I- __ __ - __ 0.--47­� US . rr 'To � . 0 . I. ql� . . SERIO , � I ,t ollr-' dite Amerlea"s Quem of Crime I I e holga ia, All of these enter into her 0 1 . - I � . \ gra , p1d 6', qP - y -haired old lady vvhol4 Tietly, for ,her tamily did gtl= S a i Aus. iting, she attended inquests, This'Condition With . S10% ' I a charming -old-fashioned, house on of hew wift rrevent T I ,J��.%e I v6p . - ,one of, Buffalo's sidp streets. I rt-, . " Kellogg's ALL -BRAN - , 'tem at the lm(orgue and, hwmitea con .,;\A SIIS 'A V -%%O . ., A lifetime of a��son, kidnapping rooms to study ,oxprossions on fat" I I I � ou 0ee ,,,,,S and murder -has netted an income r,uf- ,of the accused. The fruit Of all bier I 00 0A, ficleitb for her to lime comfortably, if obsertvation went #ifbD 'her hook. The first question your doctor I f I . 11 not luxuriously. She belUwes that And then one morning she ottirtled asks is whetheryou are constipated . W . crime pays. !She has never done time he'r father by appearing atthe break- or not. He known that this condi- I q I .. 1. and never 'been arrested. . Police havie fa* table with a greO Pile Of "y tion way cause. headachelt, loss of I I never thrown out their well-worn beld together vkh a shawl strap � �il "dragneV' for her. I "Father, I have written a nlo�el, � appetite and energy, sleeplessuem . .0, Her naine is Anna Katfiarine, and I want you to go to a publisher It is -often the starting point of .. I . I $1 I -Green, and at the turn of thfe cera- with ni%" she'said. serious disease. I.. ',�, # tury her popularity in America as a �G. P. PUtnam, founder of the home You �ean prevent, and relieve cont- I I � I iter of -detective stories was rilval- of 1G. P. Putna=�s Sons tedls In his mon constipation so easily. JU4 - t led only by) that of ,the Englishman,, memoirs of the visO & paid to��his eat a delicious cereal once a daY. � I .1 _____� I Conark DloyIe. - Even to-d(ay her office,, ,She left -the manuscript, "a Laboratory tests show that Kel- � I V — books are in demand at p' -U-16116 lib- most untidy ,pile.", A few 4kyks let- - lugg's ALL-BRAx provides "bulV"' , 1. 'rari,ea, and publishers ,ilemember her 6r he took a ",handful" of it home to' to exercise the intestines, and vita- I ' � with gratitude as the olrigipator of read. The next day he finished the . I - be paid in fall with interlost. Now the modern murder mystery . . story. lRe realfteo-at once that a nun B to further aid'regulair habits. I . I � can that be dome? IML'rnati'Mal , On a sticky summer'day more than new type of novel had been" �ubmitted ALL -BRAN is also a rich source ,of debts are not so easily settled as sixty years ago, Miss Green sat at a even ,if it did ,-show manly marks of blood -building iron. . - I J -debts within a nation. The Allied desk beside kin open windbw and thp amiat&i. � I I . The "bulk" in Aia,Rff" is mueb . I � VvernMents, to Pay these debt-% ca" gnawed the ond of a ipenbolder. She "Thv6 `ri�sult was that I got my like that found in leafy vegetables. I I ,only pay in American dollars or in could ,see 4handsome eabs" whizzo at story back with instructions to cut it Within the body, it forms a Solt I goods. Ne. have not allowed them five miles an houri up and down low- down," Uss Green told The Star, "I mass. Gently, it clears out the in- , to Pay In goods, beelausel to do so er BroadiwayAn New YQ�rk city. With 9itqught every word ,,was precions. I . would throew more of our PeOPla-011D a damg- hand she pushed back a mass L I'hib 'order was nothing less than testinal wastes. . .­ . . of employment. We -demand cashin- of'hair arranged on. her forehead in sa�erilege to me. But I did it, and it isn't this "cereal way" safer and I stead. In order to get Arnericaut dol- a fashion just made popular by the was. the hardest job I ever tackled. far more pleasant than taking pat- I I lars with which to pay their debts. Empress Eugenlie, and frowned. I had my reward when the book, ent nkedicines_--so, often harmful? . they must have not only'a budget in t. 'It was a serious. moment, for she fresh from the press, was put into . Two tablespoonfuls of ALL -BB" I I which th.6 rfe1venues exceed the ex- had determined to write a novel. At my hands.11 daily are usually sufficient. With -penditurels by the amount of the pay- ,her elbow was *a shoe fbox full of 'qI 'had two reasoils for writing "ThO each meal in serious cases. If 'not . ments due, but also a foreign,trade mianWer1,p1$-­dhildTen11s stories, 1poe-4 Leavenworth Case.' 0ne was to saa relieved this way, see your doctor. in which the ,p,xports exceed, the im- try, college theMes. She looked -at my nanip in prInt, 'Me. other was to, ' � I . Ports by an amount corresponding to them for the tenth time, for courage. get enough money'to publish a book Enjoy ALL -BRAN -as a cereal, or I the payments due. The govern.: Then, dippingher pep in the inkwell of poems." , - uge in cooking-. 'Get the red -and- � I . ments can,of coua-se, raise money for she began. to write: , . tShe obtained both desires. "The green package at your groeer's. I Idamostie affairs much more ,easily "I had been a junior partner in the Defencle of the Bride?' appeared in Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. than they can raise it for foreign firm, of Velley, Carr and. Raxmond—" 11882, ,,and afber that many more I I debts bemuse of the necestsity of pay- The novel was "The Leavenworth novels rolled from under 1her busy . . . ' . ing the latter in a particular kind of 'Cas,q," published in OctObler, 1878, Pen.,, .. .... . . , I roof Of the general post 'offilce. q&r.0 : . currency. This demands' world trade. four yews after she,began it. More 9My pet story is 'The J-kmd and experiments were demanded and duly � ' World trade under -the vresent world than 200,0100 qpJpjqs have:been sold * the M -n,-,, which I wrote by instal- took, place on ,� Salisbuty Plain. Soon , I I conditions is impossible. There you Stanley Baldwin, ex-pr'rme mina'ster' -ments during 1885 for Frank LeslW,­aftqr,,�t wiveless message *as flashed . � bave the difficulty. Our insistence a Great Britain, has called it the Illustrated Newspapeir,?' she wenton. across the 13HRb-ol--Cha-imel from Plen� . . I upon the meeting ,of thes(e debt -pay- "best. mystery story I have ever ,"I s1d1d the story before it was -finish- arth to Bream Down. ' I I , i ments this month has caused the -read." � ed, and every week I had to send, Many instances ,of the Ifirst suc- _%� ! English pound 'Sterling to drop tot Anna.Katharine ,Green's last novel, -5,000 words to the printer. It was cessels could, be cited, but one of the . I 11 an unprecedented, low rate, This in "The)SM-ep On theStair," appeared in a race against, time." most thrilling -vK" in -March, 11899, , turn has caused, still further* defla- IW2. Between that -and her first "I (was on pins tand needles until it when A steamer ran into and holed . . l titon and has thus retarded still more work she packed more than a half Was finished. I neoer "ew from the iSouth Foreland ligMsMp. The I -the recovery from our economic de- century of living. - She married one week tQ another if I would. make, lightship carried wireless, apparatus I piwsio,n, to say nothing of the hard- Charles Pvohlfs, raised three children, the ,edition,. 'It was -all very exciting and transmitted the first distress' call ship it has �Vorked upon Great Bri- dramatized "The Leavenworth Case" but I did make the deadline every ever sent out over the sea. The Iffe- I tain and the nations dependent upon land wrote 30 other full-length rhys- week until Ale last instalment. With boat put out, the crew of the light- . her. . 1 tery stories. N6iw she sits back, this ,that I was a day 1,,vt*." sthip wiss savied. . I Why then de we insist upon thetse-, dealetr in death, this- expert in crime, Betweten Anna Katharine Green's 'But Marconi was far from satisfied � debts being ,Paid * if indeed a serene ,old, lafty, and takes her firsit and last novel d word changed. with what bad been, achieved. He . V we can call them, dt�bts�' at all? Only eave. She will write no more, sho Telephones, aelroplanes or automlo- dreamed of a systeni of wireless com- . s bt to makie_ Says, becau66 the interest she used biltes are not niention� in, "The'Leav- mianicationz that should girdle the ( 0 ,and to Tneet, and we think it will .to have in arranging her plots, has e,nwoTth Case'! for, he good reason earth. ' ' �- I . I . , slave our taxpayers a lot of money if gone from her. � that they had not been invented. ,, Thirty-one years ago he'applied for . I . . we can'glet Vie Europe -an nations to "Please make it plain that I do Pefter's illustrations toy the first edi- and wa§ gTan I ted ta:'alew ,patent, the . ' . f pay lback these amounts which w -P not consider Tnly boaks, 'literature' at tion, 1878, show her womea charlac- famous Patent 7777, as important in I . -extendled --to-, them in credits. But all," she asked, The- Star. "They are ltiT to be -tall, willowy,creatures who the story of ,wireless -as the Battle I . -_ . we May . as we�if' fa�e the dbviousL� -'ju,st--l�t�xi,es.,".,..,-,�.''.. I could hardly lbie expected, to, act in, a of 111hstlings io history. !Patent 7777 . f we ,are noot going to : collect those � IlDut. publishers, irilhaml . of - -orre- 'of-,buman fashio., - They swoon and are made possible tune& or',syntonic tele- . # amounts. !Sentiment is altogetber too' �the mlost lucrative departments of j 9, iidul'or imWrioius by turm. graphy, and usherect- -in, the - em- of ., _ , � .... _j. � gre-at against it in the, other nations their -business, rise up and. call her li, The 'Ste�p on the Stair" was pub- long-distarilee wir,eliass telegraphy. and the continued world depression bles'sect, for ,her ",!��eslr ,sta4tl;ecV shed in 1922., In the -fust para- ,Afarconi began. work Inimediately. 01 . is making it more and more an im- the modern'craoe for mystery fiction. graph there is a reference t�o a tele- His, first; long distaDC4e Station WaS r Possibility for them to meet these 'Buffalo Bill and Diaimond.Dick were ,phone, in the neoqt a taxi. Anna set up at Poldbu, in Cornwall. The - bills. There,remain, then, two things i n their ' infancy when Anna Kath.ar- Xatharioe,Green�s, -heroine keeps stop station was completed and ,in 1901 �,. I I .. for us to de. We can either cut down Ine Green'started to w-1,ite. .,She oweg, with the t'imes also, -4'Orpha'l talkA :Marconi sailed for Newfoundland. . - the cost of Our own government, or nothing to them. If you ask her in a manner which would ,have made The experts'dWriot beliere that � a .1' A we can increa:se our owri,taxataon to 'how she. ,developed her mystery nov- the "Mary" or "Eleanore" �f her wirele%s message could be sent acroax . a -point necestary to meet the bud- �ls�, which were a brand new depar- Arst work go into one of the4r comas. the Atlantic, .because Of the earth's . I get. 'In 1926, -Frederick W. Peabody tu-r6 firom the accepted, �style of novel Anna Kathirine 'Green hag publish- curvature.' B�t Marconi, who had al- A . . . le 01 I in writing on this subject called at- in helff day,- ,she will tell you that d her laSt'b'6k- All her thirty vol- ready . sent signals 200 .miles, was , . � . I I I tention to the relative burden of tax- she read ,Poe and Gaboriau. She urnes are on thle shelves of her lib. ' iiii,disma�-d. '- . ation in thelvarious nations'. At that discardied :Poe's faritasy and, rhetoric, rary. ,Sometimes ,she takes ' thein, - It had been arranged that after a I tilmle, a,qcording to his fikiAres, an ,and elaborated on. Gaboriau',s stark down and glances through them, but certaam date the Cornigh station was ' . inoomeof $5,000 in, Belgliirrn was tax- narrative. They wrote short stories, she write,% no ]VOM. ' to send out continuously a sucom of I 0: . ed $M.; in Raly, $I.,Oe5 and in tbo she,wrote full-Ilength, novels. 'Passing years have dealt as kind- S�k. Ina driving.gale Sweep . ing frlOM . I United "iStates an income of %15,000 She arranged her problem around ly.with her -as they have with her the'Atlantic over ,Signal 'Hill., New- " was taxied $37.50. Are we, such-pik- a domestic situation, easily'recogniz- work, but the eare of. bier home is .her foundland, Marconi -sent up the bal- 1 . . ers that we laini because -we ed 'by -bier readers. She '5humanimd" first i.nterest now. -Recently she and lool that was to serve as aerii! for- ' I have to pay Z"75p, while 'people in :crinle, fiction, ,and" worked oat thd her busband paida, iv�sift to New York ibis receivd,rig aT ' pairutus. The- Ifue . #. A! .X and the balllc6tn vanished- , Europe hajvle,to pay from, $620 to Pattern whi h , ary Rolyei;ts Rine- city where they both of them were isnappe�d ­ I . I V 6 - - $1,025? Isn% it about time that� we ,hart, Van no, Earl Derr -Biggers b,orri. . Gotham 'had changed gteatly kites ,were, substituted� and With an ' ice was ei inar I wipeil the slate clean. and, began a and -other American thriller, writers s4T it th, . r home. Ord' Y telephone earplece and co- , new record? were to follo*. I I . ""We vilere glad to get back," sh herer dffWetor, the ig,rela�4 inventor ( In* the words of Walter Lippman, Iln England Edgar Wallace, A;ga- said to'Thie,Star. ,'And. whe,= we die waited for ,the three clicks. I . d . speaking of the payments due thi3 tha 'Christie and before them Ai- 'I realized for the first time that we The threfe-clicks duly camel. --faint, �, , Y2,ar, "From the way the politicians thur -Conan boyle, followed her ex-� might be (getting old." . but unmistakable. Marconi bad 4 . ' talk one' would suppose they thought arrApIle. It is a coincidence that ' . ­. I I ,iihrowri a message woss� the wagtes that the whole ,problem was whether Doyle's first published work, "The �&- I of the Atlantic, with&ult tangiblei em- T foreilgrreAs leould b1W the country 'Mystery of -the Sassassa," was " fnectilm, . out of $125,000,,000. Perhaps som,e 11shed in the, same year as -9P1Tuh&e The Story Behind No modern, invention ,has swept I Of thern do really think that. But i.f Leavenworth Case.- I I forward vntb the iniposing iswieep I they do, they do not begin to -under- Nine Years later, when "A Study I Patent No. 7777 that has brought wireless froTft its . Istand the wo-eld. Ithey live in and in S�arlee' apopea,ded, Doyle aban- Thirty years -ago, on the 2 1. st O -f infant stage to technical perfection 0 � - � presume to gove,m . In a �doned the practice ,of medicine, and Januarly, 1.903, the first Atlantic all less than, forty years. . at even * ' the progress, in ,flying, wonderful as I world which is bleeding with its ecame aprofessional writer. By that wireless telegraph was officially in - wounds, -in a- world threatened on all time'Anna Katharine Green had had augurated when King Edward sent �that .triuriPh of man is, strikes the � .. its flanks by war and revolution they thrlee mystery novels and a book of a message to President Roosevelt. imagination with such awe as the � cry out for a policy to divide, to poetry published, in America. Marconi's triumph ,then has been f6l- sound of a buman voicesingimg from. I di-sunite to ,disorganize the cornnfon II -ler first book gilvles her real im- ]OWed' by n*nlj others, the latest be- the other.,end of the world. , . . action Of the strongest and fmosst ad- Portance, as the precursor of the pres- img his remo�rkabfe 'success with (It '9 sometim,es sugglasted that . vanced natio-ne . . '. For a little ent m7steTy writing school of fiction. m3cro-waves, by whdch wireless' mes- Marconi did not invent wireless tel- . � 0 heap of gold tblose man who profess "The Leavenworth l0ase" set the ,sages can be tranSTnitted ,on a wave- egraip,by. 11n so far as ,every in*ien- .1 to defend Our interests choose,' to Style- It had. humor, -a domestic set. length of � one metro -or less, tf I bus tion owes much to the pioneer work I risk in a frivolous gamble the hard- ting, terror, suspense and a problelm. helping to solve the problem of the of many brillihmlt minds, this is true. . I won achievements Of revival and . A person who has written thirty jamming of the ether by Iong-wave But it is true no further. 1. I . hope They cannot realize what they -such books knows the trade. This transfillission. jln"ntive glendun, pluis a superb ink_ . I are doing. They cannot know the is the way shegoes about it: Behind fthe great isci,entific irlven� agifnati-vie sweep, m,%de wireless a I hazards they are inviting. For other- "I nitust have good situations tA) tions og the world there is always comrnlercial proposition Insteod of a # , wise 4�ilen the timid aniong them build my Plots,", she told The Star, the human .4tory, writes George God- scientific curriosity. And nobody to- , would take codrage and the brgs'i "M 'The Leavenworth Case" I started win in Tit -Bits Pro-ble the story of day denies the c-redit ,of this stuqxm- I ' would ,become silent, mer6ly Out of by having the murdinw announce the the turibrine and you come upon the daus triumph to Guglielmo Marconi, I . pity for the plight of men." crime. Tbgb old starid-iby of ,mystery romance of Hem, the st . hereditary Warqui.s. of Italy, Nobel I WT I eaTfi en 9 lae, Prize 6 ex, and Wasi*r of the e - iters. mistaken ideltity, played a aij-6 y6u find 'the b-�oo,ing ]ad winn . 'In conclusion, I would give, it as Watt. I . . my sober judgment that inasmuch as part. I had the hiaro overhear a con- So, 1vith the coming Of the m+racLe or Ether- . I I we, in spite of our boasting 6T our versatiot and, attribute. ri,maTka to, wirc'Hss. , , ' I -go- 0. . d love for peace, sold all the war suo- the'wrong party. But the greatest Some' seventy Y,ear-, ago an Itaiian , . # ; plies we could to the Allies at thet factor in the booMs popularity, .1 lan(ed PrOPri-etOr, GIJ�*Ppe Marconi, This is the most exciting time, in -", f I to;p prices at an exorbitant profit to think, was havink two bearitiful wo- met and fell it, love %A,ith a beautith)l hist6ry for women but for a nilan, us; inasmuch as we en"beted.the war men as -heroines, each under suspicion Irish girl, the daug-T,tar of An(trew life must be as &11 as spinach.— I filially ,with the avowed dietermina- of,baviric wmymitrbedi the crimet Jain -son, Of Daphne Castle, County Fannie Hurst. ( . I tion to give everythffig that vCre had Anna Katherine Green Kinilled as .Womford. The sjee.-,no son of tb�is I ' . 1 ' I . . for the prosecution of the war; Lnag- she spoke of her work. She rnust Anglo-Itali,an inarria,re was named Modern -girls 'have something in # " much as we depended upon the Al- have enjoyed Puzzling her reade,rs, �11r'lielmo. they l�oVe spinning wheels. — Ottaws, 0 liles, to do our fighting for us for although she ad'mits it was not easy Y(,ung Guglielmo Preferred e�ectri- Journal. I over a full year after we entered the at first. It took her two years to �al "gadgets" to gALr:(,,, and books ,in. ' I �_' I ,f war dqiring which'time we were not write bier first book. ,phy,,cs to fiction. No 'you I I . rig eptburs- (It looks as though the Chibese I 0 able to put men int6 the field; � ;Her hei�� was n lawyer -because iast (an read the texf_!,Oolcg or, elee- owe Japan an apology for, building , much as we charged- a 'nas her father was one. She asked him ,.ricity without eming under tho,, in-, that wall in the,first placm--phila- f �rakle of interest n exorbitant innumerable questions about ' wills, fluerijee of the great ',Cl,errk Maxwp.11 delphia Inquirer. . , for credits which we . I ( should have extended without any marriage contracts an�- leg -al forms.. and 'his followed, Heinriclh Hertz. I I . - - hope, of rerturn if we were sincere in � , I , 'For Marconi Relrtzian waves form- — I f pledging our,berslb efforts t6 win the ' ed a s*n-Post pointing the unknown . . war; inasmuch as the Allies havlet al- . road to ociemtific nAraclee. M sent to . reay paid back in monle,y e�etually I work to produce them. Thirt;,V�Six 1 - # GV�t in thie country and in, pay- ,.� For Cm 0 0 S , ve'ars ago, in the scented gardi� of I 'I I I m4nits on the so-talle# loans. an 111 always use BABY'S OWN TAB- -his ftthees country house 'at Pon- . � ! a arilount for in eateess of the credits LETS to break up my baby's col&;' tedebio, near Bologna, young Mar- I A I ,I 4 4 which we extended to them; ftia�, d0ni set UP his crude - and inefficient, I writes Mrs. Wilbert Cqlquhoun, Stur- apparatus. . much as the world in in a d4lorable geon Falls, Ont. I I I W _. . 1 -hs fimt success w1as the tranarms- . I State of econclnAe chajos at the pTes- "When I see a cold coming on, it is to Sion of a wiMess signal the length I i I 0 ent time iind therol is no relief in BABY'S OWN TA13LETS that I 1 . . i . sight; imsmuch aq thlat debts are turn," writes Mrs. Robert Greenhorn, Of that ,gardlen. And, befor th I d ea, ! a eanlhtant source OT frietion, resent- PbZpsvflle, Ont. Year was out, after many ia'�'11*' P_ - . n1ent, misundbrstanding and nation- the -had increased the distance, to a . al prejudice 11 Mothers everywhere report in like vein mi�e amd, more. . . 4 ; and hissmIneh as we , of the safe, sure results that follow the I 4 haV49 taken a proaftent ipmt In all use of,nABY!S OWN TAOLtTS in Whe fimt wireless patert in the I it a tniolvielment9 looldng %ward ihfma- children's": iolds,' teethinj world was taken ' oftt by MArconi , . *ondl p, . a" -g I ,=, sittl0le tevert, disordered When he went to Londan 1,n 189& The I ... . , and 'uh&rAmdin t .1 . -thi-filk we shoulA dMare all. Ome, stomath, colic, constipation. 21� cebts. Post Offied ,%ftat-d tho fature possibili- . I . I ,� - 0 dellAis eanceilled so -far as wtv ar* eon- tits of, this reftl,, ,&Mary 10 I ''Of � I � I d ot. W11111ame, . , . � I eern-od .and Zall t"rk alt other GOV- . .1 .. "I "tel-gmPliv, I I VIC"emi VV ; .. 00 -ft I . . 1. I - 0%to -ove a demonsiwidn. n. . a . 1� 61-ittooft to uV a liko position to- I BABY'S N TABLETS t* i we . W&A theiT dd��s, , I .= "Oftim"to'.4lerb ftiiod da; 6* �,- , I t� � I ., A I . .01 A - -_i__4 - �1 "r I I 1, � . 11 I I � 1. , 1, , il, � J I . 11; A . .fj - �T 7�� ,V JIL&I 6 ,;. . , 'I, , , � P� "'., r - - �<� , I . I . I . . I � . I I I . I I I , f, � I . . . . ; I . . . � I 1� . � � . I I I I . . I . I . . I . . 1 4 . I ? I I I I . . I - , - I . I I I ,. I . ,, , � , ,, . I I I . I . :, 7" . . , ,, ., I ". �, . .�, , , , � I I :��,�; I '� , , I. � k.l �� ', ., , I , i,4��', . I �,., � 1� I . . I I . " 11 � I . , , , ,. 'R " , VA ..... . , . I , . "" � , , ." , ,4 ! 1� , , . � i , . I " I �, ; , , � , � . I I I � � .;,, � 'J . ! �, , � 11� �, � ,,� I . I ,: , . " " , W ','-g�;�' ,�� -, F ,� , ,, " i�6 I . , . � . 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