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The Wingham Advance, 1920-08-19, Page 3n A- '", ')(. I b Ir e *­­­ , - *4444-0-" 0 $ 0 04 0 0; 4, 41 0 *++ ­_­_­_­______ ____ .... , I - I I . . . I Poland -'s - 11 I 0 , 11, Resources 11 I li ,tqo.#,I-oo,00,*,00.000,$.,OOOOOOI*-" .. ... 11 . I rd, ' ,09 06 new stl4te . .4 that enlarged to 6L I _0111 0 " IlkdAXIOA46400 AS 4 rOgUlt , at the . World IfOr 0=8 J 114t , I .1 WP# Poland will probabIr play Qua of' *0 most Important role$ in the POO- B ma aud 5, , -041 and ocouQmte, life 'of Eastern E1X­ Bathe the affecto4i *e. Situated An It is on the cr000'- k .0 4,, 1 -Part With Cut" V9 , 44a of trade connecting Central and ., . , Cura5oap4ndhot . I , Water. Dry , gently 440%eru, Europe, at the Very gateway . And rub on Cqti, 0, ItUA819, as Weil as of the Baltic I cul,ji Ointment. AW06 and the Black Sea, It otters a This. tre4tment Is 64044e4ddus field for American creative ustiallybestonri.a. itch) Cie ,,, I I . I Wo and retiring, 44utuii old co-operative attwt in the r"revery,par 084 90imation . VA We 1011011 t,114 and develo man ,,at Judus- i and nurserX the . P ,t " wes, wlilly 'd 4ot only Tiud a . . ." WOA;A 1 I* 1 Cuticura boap I ,. 'el e and Ointment are r"4y ma&et for their output 14 Po- lj;c .. .. I 10 at waU14% create an adv84- ., Ideal, The Soap . A b , I I .4/ to clear4q -and UA,wus position for Profitable business . I . purify, the olat. 1. 14 a vast and unexploited territory to I Meat to Soothe this put and In tile .gdjacent couiltries. r4i3t 6iii'prisy it become all Important M Ointmont 25 and 60C. Sold . moirkst ter 4merlean. goods, but it t , outthe nadiginDepoti, MAY ,* t I I PSI . ap SL. Mqutn &L I ".1a a Peak tic soon b6t 14M to export large I I .- . V" without vwz, Q*luk,111013 Of tAW PrOducts'needed' by . . , , t4 I a UuIte4 I StAtes. It has; been'004- --- ---- .##rVjiIVely 0iitinjoted that by 1921 -the , I I L . . Countloy Wlll be ju a pooltjoiL to. w(port the tributaries of the Vistula, Dnelstek 4 onfe S00,060-1ous at grain. Through and PkUt.-TO40him Pajans. in The . I t - r . hll 'biitt oV Dan;* It can orlbor the World's Ma, kets, ,published by R, G. lh4rkot for foitalcn. trade, 'being can- Dun & Co. .4 n4bt(4- by shipping lines With all Im- ' -0 .0 — portant majksts - - I&- ­ . ,The terltorlal limits of Poland ehi- ,"; .''.,."::,.: .":,.". ,f,."Y'. I ,4 ,.,... .. ".-;..:-,-1. : .. " , .'..'­_­ i ­­.. tw__ , . .. ­ .1111, . K... , . _ _ _ _ _ _ 11race 'the provivas foralo0y. belong- ,., :';c,, !: ,;.. . ..... .. .,.:... \. , z: ..'s"'...." . .1 "." -; `,.. .;,;._.,_1`1-:C ..'.." I 11 `C­tor'Russta,j Austrim-1jungary aAd 11.X-­...­:: - _- I !::. " - 0"44y, Us-- 11A'61 :bdutidariQ6, as- ':,.. ." $:,A".,_ ... ,;.I.., .;;., 10 -as -they 'Were not determined by ­ .­, . ^. . - .. ­ I $ I I .1. . I ., - I".., . . _;, .." *-t1*._, , .. ... 1111:,,. - ­V:i 11 ._.." bL6 09talaw-and Austrian "ace trea , 17.16.1­ '_;. __:.h:.::.: . ; . ' ' ,.. . , . . . !. ,',., - ...... 11, .. ; .'%.: q: . ':: l;:I' ,.'L ..."; 7:.:'k li': _ , .:., .. . j: . . .. . . tj - af6 to be subsequently determined ."'! -k...' "; '' ,*:­,x,4.-., ., ,', ":7 '; 11 I , .I.. 'i- .- ..: _4 .. ....... ... .. ;__ .. ..."r.- ­:, .".:.:1:i;_,;. _, 11 , : !i, ] ;, ,*: , 'n , , M56.:prluftal Allied and-54ssociated , -: i: i:: `!.! .: - - . .,..:,, i:, ;;.: ­ , 111:i. Y­:-;,;:. , , .1, .,ii'.'..',i ii.: i: i:: '. , . , VAW foi or by vote to be. taken 1w. each ­:!* ,41 ..i::. I..". . %.:;:.:., , , ... 1 1, _-'.-` ,: .' : ; .. L. X; .,;, 11::. , , . 1. ; ­.,... ­._ I ... . ., ., ". ibinmene. The proposed .boundaries ,.. :.,; ­ r ,.',,. .: . : `: . I - , *111 give the republic an atea. greater ..: '..,. I I d ,. : . thlin that of Italy and a populatt 1 "...... ..;;,.1:,.;._,...,.. . '..- . . oil of %%,; ;., '_.. _ , ,;:. "I ;.­.­1­:.. .;..:. , :: . :.1 .1 ""',.'L;.:,''; ,.::':''..,- : ., .",::,I _,$.. , , . . dtout,86io.00jobo. Warsaw, the Capital, , , ','-.'-::"s:,..:.,1. j. `..: .'..'. ..­ .:... _:. , .: ',. ' :: I , ,. . .." I .,! !;­ 1 .',-_'vi:. . , i:; ' - ..:: .":.: , ... , , . .,. .. t:`-,:. '::`.-. :; ' " '440 a pop "It 'of about' -1,000.000, . .­." ,]: '* . ton ::7'.'..." :i :,.".-.; ] '* . .. .1:::i: , ::-": Wid boa Tightly been termed the "Hub :; i,- ...... .: ,.;, , , 1, .. - :;' :, : ,.,,.,7, .". - g .1 :1; .. . . ,, - % - . I ... , . " O'CoUtral­344rope." Before the first ., ; . . . . . . " .. ' " . ;111. - , , ­` ` 'r, I : , Avislon of territory between Russia, * , ':1.1' ... L .41,1 .-11.14"5 : .M 1' .?,:.4 ;,. ; , ; ;:, Prussia and Austrlir- took place in '. .. i4,gf ,,,e., .5 , ,.I:,-. -, -, - - .... , 4%"'% :, 'l '72, the country Qctupled'an area of . .. .. . 11 .. I ;:, , ­- - ! , .. ­ . I I 41out - 300iQ00- -square miles. Tlio,sec- . `1 60 AlWif6h, Of territory took place In I N . - . 1103, anil the Ilogtone in 1795. In these z , I ,, . :1 - e! -, 11 ddys throe divisions Russia annexed ,. ! , : :. ,O.' , ab"'Ut 220,600'square miles, Austria - 9 114tigary 35,600, and Prussia about I..!; I I ...... L..,. . 26.00: 44tlsre miles. At that time the . "'. :.: .". , , . . ­' ;,: .. '... I ­: A. , . ::,-,`- population w4w sib .12,000,000, -while. . ' Ar: , '.. .:.. . 'I.' out . I , , , .z., . . ; : . . : '.. . . ! ------ Al _ — lu­ -.-"-,,--" — —, . ; .. ­ ! .­ I.,- Avio, Tau imesT avaimuie,-Tae numDer of Vale , in, ,the world was: P614g, ll - i gurbpd .. .. .. .: .. 22,669,000 Poles in th6-Vhfied States .. %600,000 Poles In other countries.. .. 423,000 1 , , . ,-:i,. , , . . i . . 26,092,000 , It has beo'n estimated that 66 per Cent. -of the population of Poland is ang,aged bi agricalture, 14 per cent. in. Industry and mining, 8 per cent... in 10 trade, And the remain - t. Identified. with other . . I . I 111bughly Spea)(10, 45 per cent. of the I 4 o ntryls entire territQry is, under 441tivatidn, . m6rd;or lese intensive, while 25 per cent. is valuable forest land. The most Intensive cultivation \IsAn the western part of the country and In the middle-, Valley of Vistlila, where 1arming lands attain, without P11isturos, 59'per cent. of the territory. Two'types of farm properXies predom- I 1060 in Polond-large estates of Above 100'acres and Small propirties fi5m 5 to 140 ..Acres. The nuniber 9.f, large tea ls Afmlnishlng stea , ",a #11y ilk large teatts arer -being yearly illreliaSed by , . . I I ov , aall holders, thus Increasing uninter- I rilptedly the part occuplia- by, . small , - Okoperties. The most important agri- cultural crops are wheai,, rye, tbarley, oits, corn, buckwheat, millet.. peas, potatoes, sugar beets and' flix.- The ` the aq eals and potatoes occupy bulk of -the acreage, the stal)le food'- of the groater portion at the 04ntry being rk6'bread and .0tatoes. To 1912 -;,there ;"re About 4 Million hOrdos,,9;mf1lIon cattle, 5 million goats aad- Aboep'and about 6 million pigs. Ddring.Qie war at*least 76 per cent. of tho Polish live st6ck was destroyed, requisitioned or stitiply stolen by the arnifet,-6f'oecu- pqtfou. . ,,, -', `Not many countries In 114ope can boost of such rich mineial -.resources as'Porand. To the majorhy, of -.persons 1 . thts wealth was formerly known only , ad, being on German, Austrian.. or Rus-, I 0an territory. Clilk amoug the 1p*ro- dtito of mining are.' 9oaloAron; zinc and lead ores, potash and'10W.salts, phosphorites, copper, sulphur,* ozoker- U4,,(mineral wax) and oil and its by- . bt,aducts. The coal fields occupy an 04 of over 2,000 -square miles, and I Sir& situated In Dombrowa-Cracow-811- 10don basin. It Is u matter of Own- z6bu. knowledge that Galician oil wells played a vital part In th,e progress of iiw war, The Galician oil fields are w6ll able to supply all & needs of a p6pulatIon numbering Jn excess of 100,000,000. Poland has -another great r4tirce ofW00th In Its t6ck Salt.'- The jbluaa are situated on tfie., norithern Slopes of the Carpathian mountains and in the northern basin of what was tbrmerly It'nown as Austrian VolAnd. .Wieliezith, near Cra;eow. is said to have t4o greatest rook salt mine in the World, Containing approximately 2i, - W,000 tons of salt. The country's water courses furbish cheap sources of ,energy, especially in Galicia, where a DafnIfttiOnt fordo of 600-000 horse -power could -easily be obtaIQ by utilizing GENERAL G. F. MILME, Commander.hi ohfef of the BrIltish forces operating against the Turks . on the Greek fi,ontler. ' - - A T0.110 FO . R. THE NERVES . It . The Only Rea. . I Nerve Tonle Is a Good Supply of ,hich, Red Blood. "It People would . only attend to their blood, Instead of worrying them- selves Ill," said an eminent nerve specialist, "we ,doctors -would not see our. consulting rooms crowdeo With nervous 'wrecks. More people suffer from worry than anything else." The sort of thing which the spec- Iallst spoke of Is the nervous run- down condition caused 11)y overwork and the many anxieties of to -day. Suf- ferers find themselves. tired, 16%v-spif- ited and unable to keep their minds on anything. Any sudden noise hurts like ablow. They are rull 6ft- round - less fears, and do not sleep well at night., Headaches and other : erve pains are part of the m1sery, and It all comes from starved nerves. Doctoring the nor , ,ves with ,poison- ous sedatives Js a terrible , mistake. The only real nerve tonic -Is a, good Supply of rich, red blood. Therefore to relieve nervousness and run-aown health Dr. Williams' Pink .Pills should be taken. These pills make new, rich blood, which strengthens the nerves, Improves the appetite, gives new . strength and spirits, and makes hith- erto despondent people ibright, and . cheerful. It you are at all Yout of sorts" you should begip, talting .Dr. Williams' Pink,Pills. - You can get thesepIlls through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a,box or six boxes for $2;50 f.fom The Dr, Williams, Medicine Co Brockville, Ont. 1 0 $ O'L I I - An Economi0al Broad Tin. ' Do you 'need a bread tin? Here's what one housekeeper did. I bought -a five-and-a-half-Dound box of er4tek- era, saving four cents a Pound on my crackers and paying 20 cents extra for the tin. The crackers' remained fresh until the last one was used I up. Then I soaked the paper off the tin and scoured it, thoroughly. I purehasm ed a tin of White enamel and I liow have a splendid bread -box that cost me only 30 cents and that looks as good as the ones We Day 10 times that much for. It holds three large or four small loaves of bread. . . 440. Simple and Sure.—Dr. Thonfa's, Ee. leetrIe Oil Is so iftnple In Application that a child can understand the in- structions. Used as S, liniment the only direction Is to rub, and when used as o. dressing"to apply. The di- rections are so plain and uninistak- able that they are readily understood by young or old. ­ 4 0 6 .1 I A human, being Is not, In any great- er eonse. a human being till he is, ed- ucated,—H. Mann. I II . I I I 0110 firist titus thoIr 4ros tKII0 to .. I . . , I meet whou they 0164044 at 0404 : - f=_r ­ I ,o4 other. Vl - . I - And thou the Proldileilt of the groAt r I I., I V I ,_.1 V 1 I W011106 sent for them one *or4lng. ow, %. W . Us did not send for them At the I - I Same time, 110 Called one . luto his A ZLAWO JQDVAL private office, and then, As that One left, he called in the other one. To live AS 9411tlY AS I can; When the second Man came Out of To be, no matter where a Man; the, private Office he found the first . . ., TO take what comes ,of food or Ill `MAn wal no for him, As be closed And cling to faith nd the dolbehind him, gently their To do , my beat a S, 111; eyes Met And the friendship that they lid, let that stand, had known, the momory of danger Tau record of my brai I 4 4,44 band; places that they had fought through And then ghould, failure come to me, together, was Ill the look that passed between them. And then the first he for victory. one spoke-, To have no secret place wherein 04 0 d Cha , I p,11 he said, and his tone I Stoop Unseen to shame and sin.; was a shade husky, for he had really Tabu the same when I'M alone; wanted ' the Job, 11cQngratu1%tIo,ng! And when my every dee4 to kno . . wu;. You got the Plate, didn't you?" To live Undauuted, unafraid The second man shook his head. Of any step that I have made; "No," he said, , slrbp ly, "I , didn't." To be without pretense or sham; The first man was startled out of . Exactly what men thluk I am. his Self-possession, He Spoke before , I — he thou ht. TPE BSSEINC Q, OF UELIGION I'But,ip lbe stammered, "I recom- Jesus Continually laid tile emphasis mended You for the Plate!' on actually doing the will of God, It The second man Smiled, and one., was a gloritica , tion of the taskS, of seeing his smile, could not help feel - ' everyday life; it,was an Uncomprom- Ing that friendship might, after all, i8ing attitude toWard evil; it was be the most beautiful thing in the -,.-- ailadedness, repentance, self- world. . - control, self-forgetfulneso, Mercy, pur- "I know that you did," he sat itY, the Use of one's talents, social gently. "That's one of the reasons . democracy, righteousness, equity, why I just handed In my resign do . faith in the ultimate triumph of The place belbugs to you!41 right, self-sacrifice, love, that Jesus Friendship may be the most elastic Continually 'taught, . thing In the world. SOMS DQOPI0 40 In the account of Jesus of the last not realize the fact, but It can. It Judgment, men are Judged by their can be made to Stretch past ambi- livve, It is the fruit by which the tion, and aroumd pride, And over per- Iree is Judged. It Is not the labels sonal vanities. It can be made to but thp contents that are to be ex. lighten the darkest pathway to amined. Who then cart enter tue smooth out the roughestroad. It can Kingdom ,of HeavaA — tile churc4- I change almost unchangeable Cir - man, the evangelist , , , the orthodat; ournstances—it can. break almost un - the philanthropist? Perhaps, but breakable troubles. It can be, afte not unless they have done the will all, one of the moof'beAutiful things of the Father Who is in Heaven. . in the world. Who IS the foolish man? The man I 10 0 1 who hears and'belleves, but .does not - live according to his beliefs. Who Coughs, Colds, Js the wise man? The mail who hears, believes and lives according to I his beliefs. . t,li Tv Bronchitis . FEP It there Isdan. ailment In the throat Friendship is an elastic word, rath- or chest, it Is surely essential that the rerpedy be conveyed direct to the er. It May be stretched to almost affected Part. It's because the heal - any length. and4t tan be contracted Ing -vapor of Catarrhozone is breathed until It is unbelievably short and into the sore, Irritated. throat and small. Like any rubber band, friend- I tubes that Its balsamle ,bronchial ship can, of course, be stretched- to() fumes'kill the germs and destroy the far—stretched to the breaking,point. cause of the trouble. These are the But It's very hard to stretch the best e never A -t Sort of froludship so far. ­ failed to Cure a genuine case of, -Ca- I once knew of two boys who tr6a- tarrh, Asthma, 1 yl ouchitis Or 111firoat sured between them the unbreakablO Trouble. ,' sort of.,friendsh'ip. It began when The wonderfully -soothing vapor of they WdS-little tots, Just.out of kin- ,Catarrhozbne Instantly reaches the dergarten, And went on through the furthest recesses of the lungs, pro- years—through grammar school and duces a healing Curative effect that Is bigh school and college., They had Impossible with a tablet or liquid, differences of opin , ion, very Often-; -which goes merely to— the stomach, they had more than one squabble. and ea,ils ,entirely 'to belp the throat more than one lapse of Intimacy. But or lungs. . even during those Squabbles and . lapses they were always ready. to Catarrhozone champion each other against the whole of the outside world,, always . Just Breathe It ready to fight for each! other and to face punishment for each other., 4 ro permanently cure your winter The war tame when they had been Ills, your V,oughs, sneezir,g and (Ca - out of college for two years. It was tarrh, by all Teaus use a tried and quite as a matter of course that they proven remed3FINke Catarrhozone. But . , both enlisted in the same regiment beware of- the substitutor. Large out - and went to France upon the same fit lasts two months, costs,$1.00, sinall. ,transport. The war was an adven- size 50c,' trial size Me, at leaders turs to them— a quest, almost—and everywhere. ' It was natural that they Should seek .zl , 0.00 I the adventure, go upon the quest, to- . * . gether. N.. They came out of the Strife quite miraculously ungdathed. They had fought through the blood and powder ralst of the Vasle; they had, known the horror of the Argonne. ' They came back stronger comrades than ever—buddies. I , Together, with their discharge thevrons red upon their sleeves, they sought work And they found it, strangely, I the same office — a branch of a great business. And they worked quite happily under the same chief—Just as they had worked in. the army under the same captain, Everything would have gone quite smoothly, as It had alwaya gone, If their chief had not fallen Ill a year after their return. Everything would have adjusted itself If their chief had . . 114 411—i.d 71,1f ha , , — — . — . I I . ,. 1. didn't. . MISS LUCY MELI, His death left the two friends In Secretary of Chas. Ponzils Securities charge of.their branch of the great Exchange Company and manager of — the main o1fice In Boston -for Ponzi, . . , the wizard who to said to,have made all the way from $8,600,000 to $16,. 1 000,000 In a few months. ! . 6,6 - I I bought ahorse with a supposedlY In I il. -V curabla ringbone for $30.00. 1 treat,ed him Causes of F ilure "I" ' (By John Wanamaker, the Great with $1,00 worth of WINARDIS 1 ixi- , Merchant.) XBNT and mold him for $86.00. Profit on * The"extifts of failure may be any lAnIrrient, $64.00. 1 Ono of this dozen at little things that, . . after all, are not little things- . MOISM Dlorcoscmil 1. He forgets that his worth isMan- I 110tel X00per, St. 6Phillippe, Quo, Heat by what he produces. . , I __ 2. He finds excuses for not doing, . inst6ad of finding Ways to do what . . should be d6nt . 3. The world goes Ahead In almost I 1, every direction and he keeps on the ' business - each a logical successor humdrum turnpike, whefb somebody to 0, bigger job. - Neither one was will have to Pay the tolls. better qualified to hold It than the 4. He Is not observant, accurate or other one. And both of them wanted 'thoughtful. I It desperately - wanted It because 5. He Is galling by the*broken Comm every real man with a man's pride pass of chance. wants to Make good In his work. 6. Ile flatters himself by viewing Par the first time a feeling of dig. himself In'llig own Mirror, Instead of trust began to grow between the two measuring himself with others that friends. F or the f list time they be. have passed him in the race, gan to work furiously, each at his 7. He thinks nol;ody notices that own task - to avoid confidences. For he has fallen behind. 1. . I . - .1- I -r - r . 9. He does not love his work as .he rr I , I ­. I ­ expected when lie b4gan; and therefore I r . I I - his enthusiasm has been lost, , I 1 9. lie puts oft too many things un- . r - til to -morrow, I r 10. He is unconscious of being idle I much of his time, and lets the days . go by, ladking the results he Could have attained. 11, His lack Of thoroughness blocks 111"O 0 leadership. :0 r 12. However honorable, he falls to I . realize that big example affects others. I ,# 0 0, tlean Stomach, Clear Minde--The stomach Is the workshop of the vital I . I r functions and When it gets out of or- der the whole system clogs In'sym- po,thy. The spirits flag, the mind I - I IN . . droops and vork becomes impossible. I I I I Tho first daro should be, to ratora . -1 healthful action at the stomach and the (beat I)reparation for that purpose . in Parmoloo7o Vegota;blo Pills. Gen - oral use for yoars, has won them A, loading ,place In medicine. A trial Will attest their value. - ".., -11. ­­ - - ____ __ __ I boy IMMI " I I " A Man's own obborYation, what 'his finds good of, find what he finds hurt I I of, As the beat physic I to proorve . - . 11 hwth,--Bacon, I I I I -ftb*, m. 46 6 40 ,, . 0 The mo8t obstlailte. corn* anA warts - f4it to r"Ist Hollawarls. corn ca". . I . I I - Trr It, .. . - - I _-" - - - Bcst selected leaf— . Skillially tnaturacturLA—DeRclOus flavoi - Ever fruhand lasting illf-t ANC11-10p, PLUG , _1 . f , stop$ Sto-mach 688 , ProVents Forniento * . flop I ,Aid$ 01gostio , t X . . --------------- IRheamat"'. NOW ja the,tir" , " to get Vid of 10 Nature Is pulling for you - The warm %yeather's here - It fermentation at food In the stom- .."'W"7711 .. . I I I.. .­ , ', . . I ,_ t. ,-, .1. .. .. . I i. , . This Is your chanco-o I : l , IMO , : .. I Ach can P ,o prevented, YOU, 90 A AOUX '. .1, I .. .. 1 I ,. , .,.. - . , " - -, ; ", . .4k , ; grasp it-ta,ko I . . . .. I . . 0 14i.11 , .. 4% 'Way towards Stopping the most fre- . quent I' _ . t *_,,..... ,,..'_.. . ..: . . , .. 'X . - . Templeton'`lv . I . I . I I fiallmelit of the day. Doetor* ­ _:. I'll .... ­ Who 1147e KuUlea the formula of Dr, , .. ., : lRboumatio I , I I : Hamilton's Pills say It would o') 11 -If- ficult to find A remedy better vklilpteil' .: : I - f Capoules , I __ !" tl . I to stomach ailments. After ones 0 let It, out of your system tbp . . I i usin Dr. J Ianillto .3Mao)X 9 , u's Pills the at , easle4i; wayl .. is clearedof the sour, fermenting Uiat' ter that causes gas, heartburn, Judlg 8- I . ,. I., , Oold by rallal)la drugi;l0ta f0f ji. . ... I . , .. I : . . , ti011 and headaches You will be - .-I.;' ; - - I . , -_ h ; :.',. ,.'- .`,- ., :`.,. -,,. ,. . ... - I 1 - '...................., k .`::: ..: ': .;, ;`!: : ;:! . . 7 ` , 41,.',`X , ,. . -.11 , '4_.,. . ollar. 4 ASR our Agent or W a S Is, T# MV104, 1W I i,­ .. * ,. I Pleasantly Surprised smooth, . at the easy wa y In which Hamilton's Pills . ;, ... . - ,,. .. 11 ,',-.. ::.,::., .X ... .i .... , . " - ," ..: I ,.. --. . - I .. _ towoo 742 Xing . St, .VTorauto. " , I . .. I . I ­1 tone up the liver' kidneys and stom- .. ;41 ;. I... ... . . i . , .."­_-, ..,. .­.,; ,. . I.... .- . .. a 4;._ I . ­'...., 1 ,,, .A ;1 1 1 1 ow, 1, I 11 I I I I . ..I I .. . I ,.. I I 4i: . I.. '. Atli. . . I I ...... _. , , " .-. I , ..Ile: , . ...-. ,. It's Te&IIY wonderful the Improve' - ,: -,, '. 11. i '..-"_,.-.' ,: . ,:: : , .'. , ' -,. '-,, ;_ 1. - - -, :: --` `i -, _,.", , :. - 1. . , 11 .. I TAHITI i 1 , F .. , 7 :1 : ::,,', Meat In appetite, In complexion, In . I . .--. ...': ". .. 6. general well-being I L4 results directly from tha use of Dr. HamfltoWa Pills" Gen. ,Sir Hugh Trenchard, who now . ') . . A Land .J I ' They stop dizziness, fullness anii beart; the title of Marshal of the qf Indesoribable 4-OHN W. DORSEY, Swelling` of the stomach, they 0:1.,beot Air, For6eo, and Chief of the, Air* oliarm. - 11 . Costiveness, bad dreams aill blotchy Stdffln the British Ministry of the Of Winnipeo, whose method of trans - skin. . To strengthen the mu;, u,ar System , Alr ... H -i was one of the first Sol- Maurice Baring took as his motto Ip mitting power from Niagara to To* ronto under Lake Ontario Wbolnrl I I P , to bring a keen efte to th,, tu. Itito,' opg dlem In the British army to take , the writing at his "Round the World. Investigated by tbo o"Olneers,of the elasticity to,the step and brleati3t19% to, the eyes, nothing ,.-an Compare AvIth 0. up flying. .1 — 4 6 , I I -01 In Any Number of Days," the verse: The time has come, the Walrus sold, 'Hydro-Sloctrio r,ammisslon. , He is , . also the Inventor of,A metlJod of Dr. Hamilton's ,Pills, Sold everywhere - . ,.;, A PLUCKY HEN. It To think of many things; . I Of shoes and Ships and softling WAX, heating houses by electricity, In 2$e boxes, 4__ . . Of cabbages and klugs. - I I . " I FOR SUMME BArJ1q0. Fought, and Defeated, 9, Pair of . . lie speaks of Tahiti among the 'many .things as Incomparable r, e% . LLOYU HOME 4 ! ,.' I . . Hawk$. and "It ,was Simple Cakes and Simple Pu4- I dings to matob. , We usually think of roosters as pro- captivating: spring In Tahiti, . and every kind of imaginable blossom . Was flaunting its reckless and extravil- , nAr1r, 2 'MU ON 'RUSS So often Whom you tell a bousewl o Varbial fighte rs and of hens as decid- gant beauty, Everything grows wild In Tahiti. Nobody seems to bother a I - CIA I to simplify her summer cooking, to edly looking In sprit. On occasion, about gardening or Anything of that . . - . . . — . , , simple Cakes and puddings Lfor however, the hens can b6'as brave as kind. It Is not- only the lilies who do I I "., I ,bake daggers Oe will tell You that her ' .the bravest. I once witnessed, writes not toll or spin, but the gardeners al- Premier's Statemp,11t OLJOU. family got so tired of these things,' If she would take a dollar bill ,and A subscriber. an exhibition of courage so. The unaided rdsults of nature are so pi7odigious that the Imagination I , 94 ", uation to ,Commons'§. ,' I make a trip to one of thdxhd.usefur an the part of a hen that deserven to be recorded. Is staggered to think of what might be -_ 1. nishing departments and buy two (jr . . three fancy moulds, two or tht e 40- She W-as'a white topknot of eccentric done, supposing an energetic garneder wer# 1, t loose 6 In those islands, and air . %, Allied Wo OPS Not Needad If ferent shaped cooky cutters and Same (Itsposition-which is one way of Sa Y_ Ing thAt she preferred to select her 'owed to try experiments. - ' " Poles Well Le ,.,.k muffin pans that Are different it iKould be well Worth the time 'a%d own nests; She chose t'he-sPare-root bed foi, that purpose, and had accum- "The people say that if you once drink of the water at Tahiti you will' .d- . _. , : .. ' ____ o Plain sugar and molasses cookies taste .ulated some eggs before she was dig- covero4 And lfnominiously sh be bound to go there again, and I do not wonder at this. It is certainly the fascinating, I - London, A u ?,'. , - Premier Lloyd George made his promised so much better when out wltl% the leaf cutter for A change or with at the window. Highly indignant, most and most beauti- ful spot I have ever seen, Its fascina- spee4h on the Polish situation in the Rouse the little sunbonnet girl cutter. They she disappeared under the barn, whence .,she omerg,qd - several weeks tion lies, not so much in the profus- of Commons yei-,terday. . assume Quite' a "partiffed" air. SO do the simplest of puddings In the later with, eleven chicks, . ton and wealth at gaudy vegetation and exotic coloring, as In its subtle . a Alstin, . ,fancy moulds. One very versatile mo- Beyond Introducing the eleven into the kitchen one day when the door and Indescribable charm, you do 'Culshed strangers Leo.uld Xrassin aml 'the ther makes a PIAIb_ cornstarch blanc had inadvertently been left open, not feel as if, you were In a hothouse, 'Leo K41u0nCff. Soviet einiSsarif., mange with lao7eggs seem like the dish Madam White displayed no more ec- You feel as It you were In a most de- licious country, , I 'to London. listened unmoved by tlj 'Prebiler's most gala by adding fruit juice to color It pink and moulding It in the centricity than any other hen. Bat one day there arose EL Mighty uproar "Never, have- I seen anything so ciptivating Tahiti, frequent jibes at the, Rup.- slan 00veriliment. They stared blank - ly angel cake Pan. She had a little glass bottle which just fits into the in the yard. Cackling, squawking and peeping surely par- as as those long. shady wamp, tligsd great, green trees, when he Quoted train Bertrand 'Russell, the British publicist and stu. mould and this is filled with stedti' , tendl d dire calamity. We rushed I to that prodigal, untutored glorylof blos. dent, to the effect that the Soviet peas and the ,pudding Ih turned...out onto a pink plb,te and served Into'thq the -door just In time to) see a hawk ' getting the surprise of his life. H Sam and foliage, those fruits, those flowers, and the hird-like talk of the form of Government is 4 system oe minority rule. They were equ Ily Un- - a best sherbet cups. The ready-ma(le had" evidently swooped down to a carpless natives, who wreathe them- selves perturbed when Lenine was referred gelatime desserts in fan ey-moulds with fruits moulded In them are de-' of the chickens, and Madam its, - Vith beak and claws and wl as with garlands, and are happy without working, and who put I to as an aristocrat and Trotzky as a journalist. liclous and one never tires of th' em on hot days. , giving him a drubbi that scarlet petals behind their ears to signify that they to 0 1 'Outlining the action the Al1loo'bad I . decided Plain gIngerbrehd baked In little ntly \to sable him. - ere going enjoy themselves, to have a good time, to to take if n eces Saty, the Pre - mier said no actiozi would be 'takea scalloped tins -while' moth9r, Is. clear- , Suddenly 0, dark shape swept down paint the town red. "_ I except to support the struggle for Po - Ing -up after breakfast before It gets too hot, Is every bit as good ai th to. the ground, ,there was.a.plereing peep, and Madam White tu . rned to BABY'S GOP o - L . DANGER.... land's existence and independence, No Allied troops Would be sent to richest cake. Sometimes It can beo. sie'the hawk's mate in the act of selz- Poland. he declared. It Would not baked In layer pans and .,put together NvIth-an uncooked chocolate Acitig, Ing one of 'her brood. Quick as thought she flew, to the rege 0 u up .. - DURING,.HOT .. . . I I Ki - I 08 ­ , be necessary -he s4ld, It the Poll'oli, resources were thoroughly organiz- sometimes It can be baken in it big int othe air went the hawk, an4 with ed and well directed. I pan with white icing -and four pea It went Madam White. The hawk , , The next action. Continued the Pre- I nuti on each square, Try VaTying the dishes served as to tried its best to shake her off, but the hen hung on, fighting desperate- i More little ones die dhWl the hot mier. would be td lipt, economic pres- . sure upon'Soviet Itit . ssla either by.na- shape and size instead of Ingredlumts ly, until the hnWk-was forced to*drop weather than at any other me r,f the year. Diarrhoea, dyseat.'. eholela i tIonal Action or international action, I Substantial and you wIll. find that It answers the the chicken and beat a retreat, , Intantuin And Stomata troubles stores.' he said, Were ' purpose every bit as well with much, less work for the housewife. I Madam White earns to earth with a thud and a flop, gatherea her flock cOJA0 without warning, and when .,t mediblie available in that c1trirter of the ,World 1 Nvhreh the Allies would feel obliged - 0 411V1"_POWER.11 411. I "i. about her, and retired to the shelter at the currant" bushes, where ' she Is n,t at haid to give promptly the shoit delay too frequently means that I to send to Poland." I Reii.i,ving to fnterjection as it) - * talked abouf the occurrence In guttur the child has passed.b.eyond aid, Baby'% Own Tablets shBuId 0ways be kept in ,an I whal MP " -' Iola " of the United Our Strength Compared' With' als for some time. Neither of the captured chickens, Sustained qA)r seri- the house where there,are young chll- 'An Stat( ...,a. Ir. Lloyd George I zai4 ., ' *at of the Lower Animab. Ous injury, aifd the old grenadier dren. octosional,dose of the T -Ah- lets will proAnt stomach and bowel I 14VVe certainly are going to appeal I ". brought the entire brood to maturity. troubles, or if the trouble comes to the United States. There Is, of rse, the difficulty there that up A man rowing does one-third as much work as an ox ploughing. Miller's Worm - Powders were de- donly the prompt use of the, Tablets I will relf-i'e the baby. TheTableisare 3,i to the present We has not ratified 'the An ox, ploughing does a little more vised to promptly relieve children who suffer from the ravages at ,sold by medl jne dealers or by -mail at troaty and that the treaty Is h (, C U t , subje t of conflict betwee the than half the work of an average worms. it is a simple preparation 25 cents a box.from The'Dr. Williams! Medicine Cc t. . On , two great parties. ' It is not iXL' our , cart -horse hauling a ton of coals. warranted to destroy stomachic and . .,,Brodlkville, I ­ - power, to say -what' view the - 'United A camel carrying five hundred intestinal worms, without shock or . WMther W Are Ylying. States executive would take. I ani 11 pounds on its back Is nearly eqal o e'most sensitive system. ..' way iticiging from the attitude of the . two average horses. , i They act thoroughly and painlessly, The point .In, space toN ard which the United. States at 'the peace confer- . An elephant, which will beara load , and though in some Cases they may sun with its PIgnets is voyaging at - ence, She was a strong protagonist of half a ton or lifft a log of teak of cause vomiting, ,that Is an Indication . the rate of a million miles a day now ; Of Polish ,lidependence, NO, man the same weight, is worth Inmusculai I of their powerf ul _ action and not Of I 11es directly overlidad early fir the evening. The, I P,offld h4ve taken a'more determined , I zealous' 'Part In setting Po power rather more than three good any nauseating property. exact location of this and up camels. . I ............ 0.++_ - 'point has notbeen, finally determined, I lish. independOn . to than President W11 - The lion," - lisuallY known as the , Inerease of English. but it Iles somewhere In the neighbor- Son. i,n4 I ,am of opinion th-at what - King of Beasts, Is by no means the hood of the .brilliant stlar Vega, Do ever differenceq of Opinion there mav i strongest. Its strength Is estimated ' in the year 1600 there were stout YOU feel that'You are shooting up- . 1-n J- Illp TTrff d F4qtf- ­Jfb rp"qril , I at that of six men. only, while that gix,million persms who. srDoke, English ward, head flrgl,. about twenty-five , ,to the League of- Nations there' of a full-grown Indian tiger Is a third - -a much smaller num , lier than spoke times as fast as A cannonball? . would be no difference of oi.inion . I greater. I I Neither of those animals is equaJ French, Garmani Italian iDr Spiiiish. ' To -day English-speaking people uum- . 40 i a. - All mothers Can "Put away anxiety In their general attitude towards I Polish independence." 1. ' In muscular powor'to tha bear tribeJ bar about one hu dred and twent V mll regarding their suffering children - The Prenileir declared that up to of whiCh the Polar and the grizzly . lions, or about, doubla,*6 aggitegate of, , when they have Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator,to give'reliet. Its ef- . the present Great Drltaln was tak- are the strongest. A grizzly weigh.; -those Ing about one thousand pounds had w.ho, speak French, Ital Ian or Spanish and halt as many again as fects are sur6 and lasting, . , !ng, no steps. to asilst In any attack - on Soviet', Russia Inside her," own ' been'sien to Carry a steer ,weighing speak German air Rfusian. . - ob 0. Got It Printed, ' territory,. since the British Gdvern- eight hundred pounds up a steep . —9 08i menVs changed policy was', an- mountain-slde for over halt a ndle,' .Its strength is lat least twice that of Relief from Asthma. Who can de- scribo the complete relief krom.RutfOr' 1150, you got your poem printed?" "Yes," replied the.author. "I sent the bounced, . The Pre'iliier declared that it the . a lion. ,. . A gorilla, four -feet -six in height Ing Which tollOws the use of Dr. J. D XellOgg's Asthma Remedy? Who can first stiliza to the editor of the COr- respondence Column With the inquiry, negotiations with Soviet Russia had broken down because of the Bolshe- and weighing 155 pounds has the strength of four strong men. It Can exPress, t1161eelfng of Joy that comes when its soft and gentle influence re- 'Can any Ono give me the rest of this poemT Then I sent In the complete vik attitude and the allies had cut Russia off train the outside world, bend double a pair at tWelVe-bore . 116vG% the tightened, chokin.% air tubes! It has made asthmatic affllc- poem over another name!" . '.* 41 - there would be all end to any -trade gunbairrels in Its hands. . The African buffalo and the Indian tion a thing of.the past -for thousands. Milly-Why, do You think women negotiations. "If they want Peace," he said. gaur-or wild ox -are the two largest the buffalo, it never falls. ,Good druggists every- ,Where have sold it for years. & are more wasteful than men? Bllly_ _ Just Sep t1le y g they kiss each other. "they call get It, and the London and mast powerful of , I ' ' , ....... - conference proposal Was Intended to tribe, It Is doubtful If twelve Man .. ...0-,=, . 10 - ­ establish Deace." could hold a gaUr, which stands as . L . . .1 . . I . Replying to the contention of the much as six feet high, and Is Over . I . I . - . : . - . Labor deputation that the Soviet eight feet In length. . a . . . . .1 . i Vloverninent Was' being attacked The only other wild Animal which a it nierely because It was a revolution - are .stronger than the gaur-always 9P 0 i ary government, the Premier point - excepting the wild eleptant-are the I 0 ed out that the first three Govern - rhinoceros and the hippopotamus. The ; - . I., -1 - . -1 -,iients following the downfall of the Ig,tter when apeared has successfully I , : 0 1 -,A _-_ Imperial reglille had been rocognized had broken resisted the -combined efforts .x)f : 0, . I " and that the, allies only twenty-two natives to pull It out of a . I . 0 w4h the Moscow (loverninient beeause the water on to drY land, by far the I , I 0 I I ; 0 it violated the allied bond by mak-- 'Ing a. zeparate peace, The largest And strong- , - J. -P tires, like good est of warm-blooded creatures In the whale, A right whale of the estimat. I a I f I I "ads, Alward PAY for themselves many times - 4 *.* __ v SHELL19y RBL -105 " ed *eight Of sixty tons has towbd I 0 0 11 over. .. .4*** ­44, P, - - fors,wholodaY t -steamer ofoho hundred and twentf horse -power. ,a 0 P/ 0. . Partridge 'tires haV6 Found in Dust Bin in Old with the full force of Its engined working Against it. Its Strength 10 . I . I . a Supreme hand -built dependabilitsr which I English Rome, therefore at least equal to a reglMont a 0 . I . .. Makes theta SIVON Oi 'it dollars, fline and i - , - one thousand Strong. . - , - a , convenience. TheY dA Ltndcn, Augl - ­PrI0eIeq3 S110110Y - . unsilihily Warts Removed , , . -1 a I I Aad ta Quality frora tre tho, inside of the casitij. k , relic.,) %v(. -re I-ecovered fr64n the dud j)lll, when at Sotheby'tj was diecoverekI The operation IS simple and Palfilego I . Is I . . I Manticeript and fragnient, tff noteg Of tile Poet among old volumes f-bulid 'eutualn's wart a coM -jugt apply L gd .W1, , ! .." I - - - - I In the. I'lumbLIr room" Of 8lr Percy pxtractor, For 11fty years It IMS been : Will ture too, . 4*.:2 . -."e, e .%;W or . r -1,; librar - sllpll, s y, of wli.'e the nue Curing Watt$ and you Try Patuam's Extractor# 960. at 411 ,:, , - 411 - Of . , oe . J* z . . W - CuueeNq are (ILposing. ()ne w.jg a popy of the lettera r,f 4 dealop- j , _164-1 ...1-1- <, *oo / - . . Vharltiq I., printed at The Hague in ,'Anally belonging 'f, Persian Cookory. I . C04 10 I , 1. IF41t1k -e , . ,' ' , I,C.rj4,, abd or, to thtl, 111yet. It hPar-4 evidelive of 1114 vlo,'ie Cookery Among the W61140-dO 6100il * . I ,-,tudy W11c,li preparing "The Tragedy ea in Persia in extravagmt-partly ba- , ' ' . - '- - - L '" " 11,11, . I - ­ - , - I ­­ , ,- I ­ . I I .1 -.--- I I of Vharleq t1w 10INt," Whiell W&4.1, neV- cause they ate I'LLVIShly hOODItAblOt -1 I ___ __ - .__- : r 'boa' SSoveral page,a of t1te if finiq Partly because all house servants, Aro , AW 111111111111111116 . ilottii were Searched Another relic*, fed from the liavings, of the Mastat'll 1,1 A eopv or llhirlpideis' tragodies boar. ta;bla. Tiny chickens, quallft, P10000it . I it I 1 1G E , all tile fly leaf a drart or the poell, Ill,? doves and youlig Partridges Are h"4- ,; A I -To Autumn," and anothor unpUblIsh- ad hot, on the sPit, to each O,nf- . * 01 fraguirnt, beginning, "Tho arelipt, d.­_,_1.14 6 ­ -0. I a , Itoc(l upon the -Tower of linbel.'s A11T= THE WAU . T IR I IC S . r.awam ­T—,tmXro`,C1;*, & , ­r0tumel Vet- me hos ratumod tft& "W14" With her forlaw huaboLl, . I * ­ I : .( &Wds Iftlepiwifto I Oran, wasi Icillod, ar.Ld Howard Dickson i;utferetl a brokot "list Ittid pp yev­ "011t 10 I : W 00 brulso", WbCn 9 ('411A411M Pacitic Rail. - =$Ouft 4U"U1-r-4MK* At, -..___-___1 ­ ­­., - - .­­­ ----.1-- 11.1 11-1.1-- --- ,. 1 . ­­- : wgy pas,;enger train stratIt wk antomn- . MWL __ -,-, ,--"-,.,- -.--."...--- ,-.-----.----...-,.---- -.--"- ---"I bilo truck In W'hft:h thOy W#ft rldia& . _. . .-t-W.-I. .-;, ,,__.#_,*,,__ - I ._ ______. . -, - . ­­ ­ at a vrmilnX '460W 144401abo, Alta.