Loading...
The Wingham Advance, 1921-08-18, Page 3A n, A RipplingRht1me's W61t Mwon THE COMMON LOT BIx-Ralver Bill rears up and roars; he vays he's taxed too much; his eloquence he vat aly pouri upon the stubborn, Dutch. "Tis u your gueat," I hear 41m, Bay, "I crilument tbee.z lialkii; yet, (1-canerwetter, every day the tax collector calls. From vist- tors, It Is not good that taxes are required, yet when, I cell a cord of wood the war tax makes me tired. Three Rroners on my dachshund pup, two guilders on my cat, a tax upon my mu& tache cup, and on my Sunday hat. Can Wilbielmina sit her throne and feel no deep concern, whan she must know I'm taxed a bone whichever Way I turn? I have to Pay an income tax Itht' any Collar ami knave; they tax my bacla-aw and my axe—I -have no chance to save. I paid my polltax yesterday, thiree, bucks it set me'back: and tax collectors ever stray around my humble shack. It isn't fair, It isn't just, for I�ta the country's guest, and Holland has an awful crust to. touch my treasure chest," The stolid Dutchmen make reply, "We did not ask you hero: and, If you think this, taxes high, you'll find them worse next year." O'ex fill the world the people green Ineath taxes, In despair; and Bill, the exile. front a throne, helped put the burden there. ice Main Street of Europe When the rliver steamers spread ant,9 bring gralu lit Primitive, ox -carts, their black barriers of smoke along with even the wheels kept lit place the Danube thif commerce of Central by wooden plato. The river halves Budapest and 117alrope Is thriving, This thermometer courses by busy Belgrade, where It of business conditions has been close- receives the waters of the Save, It ly watched by experts and they repo -t carrien barges on which families live the throng on the Main street of Eu- ak; they (10 0.,l canti, boats. Grim ope is gradually thlelkening. F 1188Y castle. -i. great e,.t,ttps ond tiny cot - little boats, puff busily up and down, tages stand Manng Its, bartIva. keeping out of the paths of the big Scieutifically the Danube pc�,Feisc.i ateamers. that plow their lordly way variety alitic.,it go Infirrito. Rising In a -long this business thoroughfare, the Black Forest, some of Its wat-irs The hopeful con.litions, go evi- seep through underground fissures to dencod by improvement In Danube 1 a streana of the Rhine basin. Some, trade, Is noted in a bulletin failed by times It Is pressed between hills. the U,S. National Geographle, Society.' Smaller craft appear on its waters. in Economically the Danube Is, to tile Bavaria. In Austria it splits, Into many land-lockeil nations- of Europe what arras and forins a whirlpool, lit Hull - the Mediterranean is to the countries garY plains it sprawls wide., 'receiving of Southern Europe. Once tile aorth� era frontier of the Roman Empire- many Important branches, remnant of a Inland It later the path for conquering hordes prehistoric sea, resumes a wild, torrential aspeetagain when It Of Runs, Slays. and Magyars, now the'ptercea tile Xazan defile and the Iron commercial artery of Central Europe., Gat "i. It recelveD nearly ai many the Danube may claim to be the most tributarlea, as there are days in the Important river in Europe, though It yeav and drahis an, area almost equiva- Is exceeded by the Volga In length. leat to that of Egypt. , I Human activity attains extreme$ Along the steep right bank of the along the Danube's course even more Xazan defile can be traced a road built marked than the contrast alolig bl. by TraJan early In the second century. A n, A RipplingRht1me's W61t Mwon THE COMMON LOT BIx-Ralver Bill rears up and roars; he vays he's taxed too much; his eloquence he vat aly pouri upon the stubborn, Dutch. "Tis u your gueat," I hear 41m, Bay, "I crilument tbee.z lialkii; yet, (1-canerwetter, every day the tax collector calls. From vist- tors, It Is not good that taxes are required, yet when, I cell a cord of wood the war tax makes me tired. Three Rroners on my dachshund pup, two guilders on my cat, a tax upon my mu& tache cup, and on my Sunday hat. Can Wilbielmina sit her throne and feel no deep concern, whan she must know I'm taxed a bone whichever Way I turn? I have to Pay an income tax Itht' any Collar ami knave; they tax my bacla-aw and my axe—I -have no chance to save. I paid my polltax yesterday, thiree, bucks it set me'back: and tax collectors ever stray around my humble shack. It isn't fair, It isn't just, for I�ta the country's guest, and Holland has an awful crust to. touch my treasure chest," The stolid Dutchmen make reply, "We did not ask you hero: and, If you think this, taxes high, you'll find them worse next year." O'ex fill the world the people green Ineath taxes, In despair; and Bill, the exile. front a throne, helped put the burden there. zarre Broadway, New York. Its Not until recently has the Construe- ats stove in, and the catch eolifis- .11 - pl-yeu watem, see the revels and destitution tion of a modern road made the defile cated. The matter was never report- less of blood, and 4 tube put In the SEA P10ACHRERS IN ba windpipe and connected with a bel. of Vienna and flow by flat rocks- on passable upon either bank. IN ed to the autbiaritles, and Norfolk men low$ for the pumping In of air. which Illingarian wDruell pound their Recognition of this, international lm- talk little; but by now it Is safe to It Is a remarkable fact that the Lp SHOM's assume that every fisher-bcat, Dame or heart cut out from a recently dead clOthes with.'wooden mallets and bear portance of the Danube was attested KRUTAIN'S L3 them Away In tubs on their heads. by placing it under a commission in Dutch, has heard the stom and, It is child was brought to life and made to They pass mills, beer freight and plea. 1866, and further proviln-ions regarding hoped, profited thereby. Every British beat for some (lays by circulating sure viiwels and turn the wheels of It are contained Iiigubs-equent, treaties, DUTCH., GERMANSt BRE- beat, whether they be whalers from through its blood vessels a warm exy. boat-bDrne wat . er mills to which peas-, Including that Of Versailles In 1919. TONS CHIEF CULPRITS. Aberdeen, or shrimpers from Margate, genated solution of those salts which will be chuckling over It, are present In the blood. les Cold Neater the Sun. Btalosphere, which offer very little re- By far the most audagiou& poachers The salts solution must contain pot- Itance, to them. The earth, on, the are the Bretons. from St. Male. The assium, the single radio -active element You would have thought that the cia They Make Many Illicit Hauls finest dabso in the, world, the deligh nearer you get to. the sun, the warmer other handi. being more, solid, cannot t Of which eaters into the composition of the temperature becomesi, wouldn't be penetrated so eas-R7, with the. re- of Valuable Fish Within the the epicure, are Caught in Torbay by the body. The place of this, element the f anious Brixham boats, which are can be taken by another radio -active you? But this is- by no means the sul"hitt we got the full effE Three-Mfie Limit. kn-:A-.vn the w4ola seas over by their case, for It is much colder closer to warmth, both aa the rays strike tile I distinctive red sails. These sails are element of proper strength, and the the alin when- the latter Is shining its earth and as they rebound from It. Officers and men of the Royal Navy stained, In Devonby a semi-secret pro- curious, conclusion is, reached that the brightest than It Is on the earth, who am attachted to fishery patrol find cess which endows Ube sails with long This Is iroved by the fact that the the -.,r work e-ceed-Ingly monotonous, fo-r lif highest niouatains,, even Diplomatic Willy. 0. A Dead Comrade. In tropical the see, poachers have reduced their The sale and dab beds In Torbay There Is a name we have not said, so court -tries, are perpetually snow-ca.p. "Didiiit you know it Is against the nefarious, occupation, to such a fine have always been, a source of envy to long ped, Were the herit there even of the law to beg for money?" said the . lady art that little or nothing can be done the Frenchmen, and the Intrepid men That In our very hearts that name Is same temperature as. that of the plains to the tramp at tb�e back door. to prevent their periodical raids. ot St. Malo are always exerciating their shy. beneath, the snow would soon disap- "I wasn't goln' t' beg for no money, "Too lute!" Is often the disgrithtleC wits in order 'to rifle the TorbaY Yet who once loved him more than pear. nia!am." cry Of the men of the fishery protec- slioal, During last summer the Brix- you or I? You know, too, that the higher an 'Irt's just as bad to beg for bread." tion cruisers as they gloomily watch a ham fleet went out in the early hours Oh, be more loyal to our love, and airman flies the more warmly cladhe "I wasn't goln' to beg for no bread, Dutch trawler scudding merrily away Cf the Morning and encountered a stron 1 invat be If lie Is not to, suffer from ma'am." with full, holde. . 9 cold. "What were you going to beg for Pull holds! of fish which, as every- rough sea. As- they ilrolipad their nets Could we not name him, laughing, the skipper of the leading boat looked of, old, The reason for this strange phenotia. then, pray?" body knows quite well, have been back with a puzzled frown between Here oil the open hills this summer en -ort Is that the rays of sunshine "Only for one of your photographs, tmwled front rich sboals well within his weather-beaten eyes. Pierce, through; the upper -layers of the mft'am�" the British limit. The only hope of day, ------- With Painted Sails. And tell again the thingis he used to ---- — --- the fishery Cruisers is tO catch the poachers red-handed; -and as tbe "I could have sworn we were but say— OW poacher spotv the cruiser's smoke long twenty tbisi morniul," lie remarked, as- Lost love too lonely laid grow sad and If Rip Van Winkle Shoidd Awake, N before it Is possible, for the naval look- he counted twenty-two red sai?13,. It cold ? outs, to find the poa-cher, the Odds are was scarcely daylight when they had Ali, It were grief Indeed if a day came Imagine the suiprize of a modern venes until it fairly bulgea into the on the raider every time. left harbor, so he assumed that he When this familiar road and friendly Rip Van Winkle who dozed off lit 1914 Adriatic. Before the- war the higgest offend- was mistaken. Drenching showers of trees 0 And'�the gay memories all entwined and yawned hirraell awake, in 192, 1 A map of the New Europe visualizes ers, were German trawlers from the spray swept over the sturdy boats, with these when the new map- of Europe Is placed some phases, of geography more clear -1 Elbe, who used to wait -outside the and this was the Poachers' undoing. Should make us only sigh! And verlest ly than many pages of explanation. limit unV1 the patrol gun-�oats were As the leading boat swept round and shame r -people, have a hull down, then sill) '�Over the live" Came closer to the next in line, the before him, Gone are the, Old bound- Obviously, a Peninsula arles ani many new names have been preferred Insurance in modern war- I and trawl the breedtug-beds In the skipper, with an oath of amazement, If we who knew such days, and such added, making virtually a new world. fare. The "freedom of the sea" seems Firth of Forth, finally adding insult to gazed- at the next ship's sails, whielb a friend, A bird's --eye view of the, made -over i to have a double entendre respectingi, injury by Ian -ding at Aberdeen and were streaked with patches, of white. Should not go proud and smiling to continent would discl-D7,3: the s -bores that reach out for its kind-! disposing there of the poached fish, As he gazed, each succeeding the end! Cleaver­��Iiapiad Czecho-Slovakla, im- ly protection, . shower of spray washed the sails wittingly eymbolioal in contour, jam- All Europe ,, a peninsula of Asia. The Penalty Is Heavy. whilter, Other ships noticed thIs How Men Propose. ruing it� western wedge far Into, Ger- Then again Western Europe is a I N'owaday.% however, the most Per- strange phenomena, and it wasn't long A methodical but nervous professor I I had fallen In love with a young we - Many, lightly tipping with its eastern secondary penln%ula, pendant from ! sistent, poachers are the Dutch, with before the, two French ships, werel man in the university town in which panhandle a much -magnified Rumania, Russia, It,, broad isthmus spanning the' an occasional Dane from the, Jutland making strenuous efforts for escape' he lived and was anxiously watching Shrunken Austria. and pared-down'eas-teirn bcuadaries, of Poland and Ru- banks. Prom Yarmouth to, Hull fish- Staining their sails, they had ridden for a chance to Propose to her. He Hungary nestling below, remnants of mania from the Black to the Baltic e.rmen will on thie slightest pretext ell. off and on outside BrIxham all night, heatd that she wat to be at a recep- bygcae splendor and objects of pre. Sea. tertain the questioner with details of and had quickly joined the Devort, fleet Fent econcrale charity, seem not,much Scandinavia, Denmark, Spain, Italy what would happen, to "them square- oa it left harbor, trusting to their dis. tion where he might see her but where larger than New Brunswick. And they and Greece, therefoip, may be des- heads" ' should they be unfortunate gulsed sails to Protect them. there was small chance that he could are mit, cribed. as third-dogree i3eninaulas. The encugh to fall into the hands of the There Is. another We of a German talk to. her long uninterrupted. He Resurrected Poland to- the north be. first three were aloof front the war; East Coast fishing fleets. Poacher which was caught soon after would have to, use what time he could get to the beat advantage, Hs. must .qpeakg,.a- reincarnation ratheir thau, a actual fighting did not penetrate far Sea law lays down that all trawlers the Armistice, the crew -of which were forget 110 argliment that would help reAle. Two free cities, Flume and Dan- Into the latter two. or surtacks found fishing in forbidden made- to singthe "HYmn of Hate" be- his cause.. SO he made a memoran- Big, give added flavor of the medieval. The eye notes obstacles, that strew waters are to be, escorted to thie near- fore being allowed to depart! dum and alas! inhis agitation- dropped R ven the shapes of the nations of Derlin's. ono-Cme, path of ambition to, Olt POTt, where the catch 1% confis- it on the floer. This IS how it read: Central Europe tell a silunificant story. Bagdad. One may trace the sea route cated, and the. nets, sails, and cordage Mention rise in salary, Mention Compare their curving contours, as If which ioland Britain gained by legiti- of the poacher are sold by auction. Social Distinctions. loneliness. Mention pleasure In her they had been. ground and rounded by mate means to her Asiatic spheres That Is, what happens when the poach- Little Eltione—I'What does your pa- society. Mention prospects, from Ceaseless war storms, with the angu- Karlsbad may be as- charming 'by er Is caught by the patrol.. A differ- pa do?" Wastern sources. Mention never hay. liar mostaic pattern, of the Western iti-, new r11.1me of Xarlovy Vary, but it ent scene is enacted, howevar, when Little Florence "He's a horse ing loved before. States of the United States. , is harder to rind. Our mythical lklar. the, raider is surprised by th:5 ordinary doctor," --I— Three tiny republics — utjtilo.nia, tian needs with his inap in Index with fle-1herinan. I Little BInore­----1'Then I gueas rd bet- Yet the Man Moved Up, Latvia, Lithuallia—rear their Aphrc 'old and new names to, learn his way A few weeks ago a trawler, manned ter not play with you; I'm afraid you Will the gentlemen Please move fez% at - 1 allcut. Patr!Utsm has made many re- with wa.rd a little?" called out the polite dite heads from the Dal -tic w ers. the famous fighbrs of Shering- don't belong to our set." Above them is suspended rilinland,! stared cities unrerognizable, without ham, ran across a smack from Am- L.Ittle, Florence—"I don't see why. conductor on the trolley car as a dozen born without the terrible birthi pangs such aid . stordam, lifting lr�rring. -Unobserved What does your papa do?" more Passengers tried to scramble I of the new lands, farther scitith. Formerly the average layman re. in tile cold grey down, boat -loads of in- Little Elnore—"He?a a veterinary "I won't!" growled one hard-facelit' The patchwork that formerly de- garded a map much as, he did a rall- Ceased but silent men of Norfolk board- surgeon." man who Clung to -a strap near the noted the Balkan States seems to have,1 read time �able. It was essential upon oil the Dutcher and taught the peaclit- door. squirmed Its queer way northward to-: rare occaBiens. To -day the well411- ers a lemon that they will never for- "Oh, I didn't ask you," said the con- vard the Baltic. As now eountrileis are frrmcd mu�t einpicy a in p t u r t Coral From Italy. a 0 ude - g e - Clubs and firebam were used ductor. -scattered freely about, Montene.-roi, of stand the great aducapionali,"value of freely, and broken headis were many. i I? rair-Rantle Much of the cc.,3tly red, white and Natural Query. memetry, has ithuppeare,,1,; Ws daily newspaper. Although they were outnumbered, pink Coral lined for ornamental pur. And familiar Turkey has all but gone. To, him who. reads a ma tile boarders fought with the concert. Customer (to proprietor of rct3&au- i) with the Poses Is obtained front the coast Ef column rant) ­"Your family has buen "tab. Ukraine tentative)y BlIc&s off a cor- care that It(,, scans the printed trated fury of Nelson's time, and ere Italy. Men go nut In -boats and drag ner of Riusla, an area comparable to the map will Impart its faschiatirg long tile Dutchman's decks were lit, the rocky bottom of streams lished here a long time, hasn't it?" that of France, with Proprieter--l'You, Mr. The, busi. terotl with tha unconselolis or nicauln wooden frames or nets, In which tile Jugo-Slavla. Is tho!,1,:t('-'y Of IIP'�cAlu Peoples, their pre - architrave fcr a pedlinert of states 'M"it-daY st;TIM1163, the constant fater- bodies of the Crew. I ness used to belong to my grand. that bear down upwi the eclar becomes talls-led, but tqa dell. tripartiteiaction of tbc human being and his Getting Our Owh Sack. Cate branches are crushed lit thti way, father." kaigilGin of the Serbs,, (IrcaN and SID-: physical environment, Cordige was slaslie(l, nets cut adrift, The finest Coral is obtained by diving, Cu8tomer—"And did this fov"I be. on to him?" RECLAR KX RME11 Heart muscle vaken from an em- 0 bryo chlelt, In the early stage of its like weedo when we give them room Incubation, can be cultivated in the and enteirtailaritent. clear liquid part of the chicken's Instead of the neyious vegetation blood, which must be renewed daily of remembrance, lot us make a fair and kept at body temperature. Such, Plantation of a different EQXL heart muscle has been kept growing One man chooses to fill his mird for several years In a laboratory, with lines of poetry, that recur fer The muscle, fibres so grown have his solace in time of stress. Another continued to contract -rhythmically. has a fund' of cheerful stories on Thereseems no end to the life of such which he draws, fow the common gjayv, muselea, so long as the culture Is kept etY—Withoutbeoomlng baresearre. Art - going, and Just as the vestal virgins other has reamed the world and attended the sacred fire In ancient brought back tales of strong men met Rome, so a laboratory and attendants and rytrange things seen that are In America have been endowed to agreeable to those who d4d, not go keep the ohick:`a, heart muscle going away. In every instance, Buch as perpetually. these, by the nakere produce of their minds, a- much more entertailning and agree -able than one who in ely University Extension. At the COXIferelice af Mtish Unt vOrsitles held in July at Oxford good deW of time and thought 71a given to the various probl'pras in volved in the extensiqla of Universit, education to those people who, fron force of circumstances, are unable tj attend a university in the regula: way. Dr. H, Darnley Naylor of th University of Adelaide, Australia spoke of the Workers, Educatdona Association; Ih-, M. E. Sadder of Leed University oudined the work bein done there in the -promotion off tutor i -al classes,- Dr. R. St. J. Pam -y, in tll� course of am address on univeraltj extension, said.: "The old coneeptioi that a university is concerned- Dal =the promotion of education all< arch wit -hill Ila own walls ha yielded to the reiterated appeal fron numbers of would-be -students wiles. Circumstances make it impossible tha. they could enter the walls of the urli versilty. 1, The University of Toronto hag gon, farther than most universities in answering this demand for adult edu cation. Without lowering its stan- dards in the least, it has so far re - Moved the extraneous obstacles that any Citizen In any part of the province can obtain an education of university grade without giving up his daily em- ployment. This new Plan is at present rather hampered, for lack of funds but, should the Report of the Royal Commission on University Finances be adopted at the next session of tile Ontario Legislature, the Provincial tindveralty ivill, be in -a position to de- veloP Its extension work so as to reach all part.% of the province with its tutorial Classes, its extension lec. tures, and Its university evening Classes. The desirability & thisdemo- oratic development is universally g& raitted. Wasted Energy. "I ilta ter keep it got.-'." Ter me says Uncle Alf. And every night lie wound the clock Upon the mantelshelf, No mater If his rlieuniatiz Was twltdhin'lil his huee. At half-pairit eight he'd mount a chair Arid fumble for the key. For idno long years lie wound it Every night, but whata, shock lie f.,(.t when 11nal!y lie found out it was all eig'at-day clock., A 133'itlb�-Ii CIL-offiter claims to he the only b1bA chartcred the world. 13 Says to us, "See how much money I have ma6," and shows us ga:rdens, a lawns and 1ountains, a bank -book and an income tax. He who each days in -scribes upon his record that which is worth his remembrance, and is worth being re- ineralbe-red of him when he is gone, is sure of a happy life no matter what e adveirsity he encounteTs. It will not be the irTefle-.tive happlileess of an infant or a simpleton, It will be the s tempered,, rational satisfaction of one who findz life good to live be=ww of the chance it conVilually brings to serve. The recollection of a 1-ife thus spent is all that will bring �Domforb at the end. y s Japan Gets Into Line. In Japan the tide has turned and is e runalng strongly towaxildisarmanient. t The militarist party, still aid powerful - theire, has failed in some of its pet ventures and cherished ambitions, The Siberian adventure lias cost 1,000,000,000 yen, and tbera have been - no dividends oil that na-ttional invest- inent. There may never be. T-okio has lust some of its zest for Siber;a, and. Japanese troops may be called hvme by the pxesciiceo� domestie affildrs. Japan is beginning to know indus- trial unrest. Labor trouble at KGbe and other points has talmn an ugAy tuxn. There are bloody rietings and. Cabinet decisions to deal drastic -ally with the noters. These and other natatters are affecting the Japanese attitude. They would affect the atti- tude of any nation., burdened with taxation and troubled with other cf war's aftermaths. The power of the nallitarist. party, in Japan, as elsewhere, opp�)sed to limitations on arms, is seepini,, away little by little in that country. It is still powerful and dorairaint, but not all-powerful as it has -been. The cp4n- ion is growing in Japan that land as well as sea forces should be limited in the Washington agreement3 that are hoped for. Better than anything else for iEs_ arnrament*s. chances, the japan2-se are losing the"T susp"cious attitude to- ward the parleys.. They are being - convinced that the Western natiens, have not called the irwetingffi to strangle Japan. Toldo's cfPcial attitti1e, in aczept- Ing "with reservations," is under fire. Even the militarists fear that the "conditional aceeptances" have pla,-ed Japan in a Lad light. The national will to disarm in Japan outruni t1w -,villingn,2-s of the Gov- ernment. In ths the Japane�-, ,itua- tion is similar to, that in the other interested nations. In all count -ries disarmament advocatc.,; are 4'­,rcei to lead their ruleros, histeq,_q cf upon the rulers. Japan is gottaing into step. The powerful interest now being taken in t1le island clallire is stil- , I another guaranty that something far-reaching and valuable will come out of the Washington parleys. To Facifit Adoption. Un6er the Provisions of the Mop - tion Act passed by the Legislature last session, the Ontario Government has Issued an Order-in�-Gouncfl ap- pointing Mr. J. J. Xelso, Provincial Officer. This mean that parties wI&h- ing to adopt A child must tipply to Mr, I(elso, for a Certificate of approval. It he is satisfied, the opheation, is then submitted to the CouritY llidgo for ratification. The machittery is not yet fully provided-, but when in. work. Ing order It is expected that over one tbousatid farailies, who have 41voady taken a chilti. will seek the benefits, of this legislation. Marvels of artif icial lKeviration Memories. That man i.9 blc!it wlio hes in his Own Toind a boult Of happy wemorlee.- IlYhale Tile ctise reported recelatly of a man wonderful rays glymi 4)11 by radium pnrr,� -he m,,Iy turn whose heart wrnt on. beating for hours anti illmllar eloments aro, nepossary he will. after his breathing had rtopped Ims for lKeeping the heart bc;,,tinz. Ile can r.3vQr titterly lonely whilb. puzzled many people, but act those There lz a small opot lit the heart'lle biwi thiri mental -comi-adeship, and' familiar with such curiGtw matters. just wlinro the big veiiis open into it. may,�evivlt et his plkasure the setnes; We are told that the mara breath- whr-ro tiiere, U nome curious tissue, an whieb. the ligIgit of other days is ing stopped becaus(, of D, tumour which half muscle and half nerve, Thla acts ablitil;g'. i ob structed the blood from c1rculattlis as tho "PUce-nlfthee' Qfthellearl, con- We travel a far greator njilcage in' In that part of the brain which con- trolling its rhythm, A touch Of cold m0morythan in the body. Such jojlr.� trolled his breathing, and that the doe, to this part slows the heart Immediate- noyl-iig costs nothing In the coinage t,.Prs Carried on artificial respiration, ly. A bundle of the Bame, kind of Carl- Of the maim, and yet rewQrds u#' and so kept the heart working. ous tissue branches. through the heart richly. The real impoverlohment of When all the muscle& are relaxed, and directs the beat to take place in QUV lives, is Ti9t to be deprived, of, and the bedy gets cold, very little oxy- the right vequence, so that the blood the things that,�we Of the earth eurt-hy' gen la used lip: It thua came about Is received and pumped out and seat and Of the body bodily. Wo are poor th3t there was enough OxYgen In the Circulating through the vessels. only when we cease to recall what In man's blood to keep his heart going Disease either of this. br4ghter and, biceirtiful; %hera -we otic - on for some time, even when the doc. or bundle can cause curious distrrb- climb 0 visions of what is, aordid and tors 9-170 him up as hopeless and anceis Of the heart's action, which are mean and debw-fing. St. Fraucis of ceaBed -artificial respiration. nowadays recorded electrically. Each Assisi taught that poverty in ma. Kept Seating by Rays. beat of the- heart Is accompanied by tcrial POSseosions might go hand-in� If a man, executed for lis;nglits were an electrical current set up in the hand with a spiritual affi �co. , .aen Ile cut down at once and given artificial heart, and by Putting the hands, or disliked long Sam and inellauch-oly respiration, hie heart and other or- lianda and feet, in vessels. of salt lives," says a recent biographer. gans, but not consciousness, might be water, and leading off from -those to Long faces and melarchely llvt" kept Ullve for many hours. Thus stu- a suitable electrical current -recorder, Are the result of treusuring in our dents of medicine are able to study photographs are obtained which indi. minds the things we ought to put opt, the functions of living organs, such as cate the normal or abnormal character of them - those of the heart, In onlinals, after of the heart-beat, We shall look unhappy and, c4onvey their decapitation, the blood vessels May Live for Ever, UUhappiness, as long as we bear in fix the neck ',-1- +1- + 4 mind the disar-reenbles whiela ab -,,-.A zarre Broadway, New York. Its Not until recently has the Construe- ats stove in, and the catch eolifis- .11 - pl-yeu watem, see the revels and destitution tion of a modern road made the defile cated. The matter was never report- less of blood, and 4 tube put In the SEA P10ACHRERS IN ba windpipe and connected with a bel. of Vienna and flow by flat rocks- on passable upon either bank. IN ed to the autbiaritles, and Norfolk men low$ for the pumping In of air. which Illingarian wDruell pound their Recognition of this, international lm- talk little; but by now it Is safe to It Is a remarkable fact that the Lp SHOM's assume that every fisher-bcat, Dame or heart cut out from a recently dead clOthes with.'wooden mallets and bear portance of the Danube was attested KRUTAIN'S L3 them Away In tubs on their heads. by placing it under a commission in Dutch, has heard the stom and, It is child was brought to life and made to They pass mills, beer freight and plea. 1866, and further proviln-ions regarding hoped, profited thereby. Every British beat for some (lays by circulating sure viiwels and turn the wheels of It are contained Iiigubs-equent, treaties, DUTCH., GERMANSt BRE- beat, whether they be whalers from through its blood vessels a warm exy. boat-bDrne wat . er mills to which peas-, Including that Of Versailles In 1919. TONS CHIEF CULPRITS. Aberdeen, or shrimpers from Margate, genated solution of those salts which will be chuckling over It, are present In the blood. les Cold Neater the Sun. Btalosphere, which offer very little re- By far the most audagiou& poachers The salts solution must contain pot- Itance, to them. The earth, on, the are the Bretons. from St. Male. The assium, the single radio -active element You would have thought that the cia They Make Many Illicit Hauls finest dabso in the, world, the deligh nearer you get to. the sun, the warmer other handi. being more, solid, cannot t Of which eaters into the composition of the temperature becomesi, wouldn't be penetrated so eas-R7, with the. re- of Valuable Fish Within the the epicure, are Caught in Torbay by the body. The place of this, element the f anious Brixham boats, which are can be taken by another radio -active you? But this is- by no means the sul"hitt we got the full effE Three-Mfie Limit. kn-:A-.vn the w4ola seas over by their case, for It is much colder closer to warmth, both aa the rays strike tile I distinctive red sails. These sails are element of proper strength, and the the alin when- the latter Is shining its earth and as they rebound from It. Officers and men of the Royal Navy stained, In Devonby a semi-secret pro- curious, conclusion is, reached that the brightest than It Is on the earth, who am attachted to fishery patrol find cess which endows Ube sails with long This Is iroved by the fact that the the -.,r work e-ceed-Ingly monotonous, fo-r lif highest niouatains,, even Diplomatic Willy. 0. A Dead Comrade. In tropical the see, poachers have reduced their The sale and dab beds In Torbay There Is a name we have not said, so court -tries, are perpetually snow-ca.p. "Didiiit you know it Is against the nefarious, occupation, to such a fine have always been, a source of envy to long ped, Were the herit there even of the law to beg for money?" said the . lady art that little or nothing can be done the Frenchmen, and the Intrepid men That In our very hearts that name Is same temperature as. that of the plains to the tramp at tb�e back door. to prevent their periodical raids. ot St. Malo are always exerciating their shy. beneath, the snow would soon disap- "I wasn't goln' t' beg for no money, "Too lute!" Is often the disgrithtleC wits in order 'to rifle the TorbaY Yet who once loved him more than pear. nia!am." cry Of the men of the fishery protec- slioal, During last summer the Brix- you or I? You know, too, that the higher an 'Irt's just as bad to beg for bread." tion cruisers as they gloomily watch a ham fleet went out in the early hours Oh, be more loyal to our love, and airman flies the more warmly cladhe "I wasn't goln' to beg for no bread, Dutch trawler scudding merrily away Cf the Morning and encountered a stron 1 invat be If lie Is not to, suffer from ma'am." with full, holde. . 9 cold. "What were you going to beg for Pull holds! of fish which, as every- rough sea. As- they ilrolipad their nets Could we not name him, laughing, the skipper of the leading boat looked of, old, The reason for this strange phenotia. then, pray?" body knows quite well, have been back with a puzzled frown between Here oil the open hills this summer en -ort Is that the rays of sunshine "Only for one of your photographs, tmwled front rich sboals well within his weather-beaten eyes. Pierce, through; the upper -layers of the mft'am�" the British limit. The only hope of day, ------- With Painted Sails. And tell again the thingis he used to ---- — --- the fishery Cruisers is tO catch the poachers red-handed; -and as tbe "I could have sworn we were but say— OW poacher spotv the cruiser's smoke long twenty tbisi morniul," lie remarked, as- Lost love too lonely laid grow sad and If Rip Van Winkle Shoidd Awake, N before it Is possible, for the naval look- he counted twenty-two red sai?13,. It cold ? outs, to find the poa-cher, the Odds are was scarcely daylight when they had Ali, It were grief Indeed if a day came Imagine the suiprize of a modern venes until it fairly bulgea into the on the raider every time. left harbor, so he assumed that he When this familiar road and friendly Rip Van Winkle who dozed off lit 1914 Adriatic. Before the- war the higgest offend- was mistaken. Drenching showers of trees 0 And'�the gay memories all entwined and yawned hirraell awake, in 192, 1 A map of the New Europe visualizes ers, were German trawlers from the spray swept over the sturdy boats, with these when the new map- of Europe Is placed some phases, of geography more clear -1 Elbe, who used to wait -outside the and this was the Poachers' undoing. Should make us only sigh! And verlest ly than many pages of explanation. limit unV1 the patrol gun-�oats were As the leading boat swept round and shame r -people, have a hull down, then sill) '�Over the live" Came closer to the next in line, the before him, Gone are the, Old bound- Obviously, a Peninsula arles ani many new names have been preferred Insurance in modern war- I and trawl the breedtug-beds In the skipper, with an oath of amazement, If we who knew such days, and such added, making virtually a new world. fare. The "freedom of the sea" seems Firth of Forth, finally adding insult to gazed- at the next ship's sails, whielb a friend, A bird's --eye view of the, made -over i to have a double entendre respectingi, injury by Ian -ding at Aberdeen and were streaked with patches, of white. Should not go proud and smiling to continent would discl-D7,3: the s -bores that reach out for its kind-! disposing there of the poached fish, As he gazed, each succeeding the end! Cleaver­��Iiapiad Czecho-Slovakla, im- ly protection, . shower of spray washed the sails wittingly eymbolioal in contour, jam- All Europe ,, a peninsula of Asia. The Penalty Is Heavy. whilter, Other ships noticed thIs How Men Propose. ruing it� western wedge far Into, Ger- Then again Western Europe is a I N'owaday.% however, the most Per- strange phenomena, and it wasn't long A methodical but nervous professor I I had fallen In love with a young we - Many, lightly tipping with its eastern secondary penln%ula, pendant from ! sistent, poachers are the Dutch, with before the, two French ships, werel man in the university town in which panhandle a much -magnified Rumania, Russia, It,, broad isthmus spanning the' an occasional Dane from the, Jutland making strenuous efforts for escape' he lived and was anxiously watching Shrunken Austria. and pared-down'eas-teirn bcuadaries, of Poland and Ru- banks. Prom Yarmouth to, Hull fish- Staining their sails, they had ridden for a chance to Propose to her. He Hungary nestling below, remnants of mania from the Black to the Baltic e.rmen will on thie slightest pretext ell. off and on outside BrIxham all night, heatd that she wat to be at a recep- bygcae splendor and objects of pre. Sea. tertain the questioner with details of and had quickly joined the Devort, fleet Fent econcrale charity, seem not,much Scandinavia, Denmark, Spain, Italy what would happen, to "them square- oa it left harbor, trusting to their dis. tion where he might see her but where larger than New Brunswick. And they and Greece, therefoip, may be des- heads" ' should they be unfortunate gulsed sails to Protect them. there was small chance that he could are mit, cribed. as third-dogree i3eninaulas. The encugh to fall into the hands of the There Is. another We of a German talk to. her long uninterrupted. He Resurrected Poland to- the north be. first three were aloof front the war; East Coast fishing fleets. Poacher which was caught soon after would have to, use what time he could get to the beat advantage, Hs. must .qpeakg,.a- reincarnation ratheir thau, a actual fighting did not penetrate far Sea law lays down that all trawlers the Armistice, the crew -of which were forget 110 argliment that would help reAle. Two free cities, Flume and Dan- Into the latter two. or surtacks found fishing in forbidden made- to singthe "HYmn of Hate" be- his cause.. SO he made a memoran- Big, give added flavor of the medieval. The eye notes obstacles, that strew waters are to be, escorted to thie near- fore being allowed to depart! dum and alas! inhis agitation- dropped R ven the shapes of the nations of Derlin's. ono-Cme, path of ambition to, Olt POTt, where the catch 1% confis- it on the floer. This IS how it read: Central Europe tell a silunificant story. Bagdad. One may trace the sea route cated, and the. nets, sails, and cordage Mention rise in salary, Mention Compare their curving contours, as If which ioland Britain gained by legiti- of the poacher are sold by auction. Social Distinctions. loneliness. Mention pleasure In her they had been. ground and rounded by mate means to her Asiatic spheres That Is, what happens when the poach- Little Eltione—I'What does your pa- society. Mention prospects, from Ceaseless war storms, with the angu- Karlsbad may be as- charming 'by er Is caught by the patrol.. A differ- pa do?" Wastern sources. Mention never hay. liar mostaic pattern, of the Western iti-, new r11.1me of Xarlovy Vary, but it ent scene is enacted, howevar, when Little Florence "He's a horse ing loved before. States of the United States. , is harder to rind. Our mythical lklar. the, raider is surprised by th:5 ordinary doctor," --I— Three tiny republics — utjtilo.nia, tian needs with his inap in Index with fle-1herinan. I Little BInore­----1'Then I gueas rd bet- Yet the Man Moved Up, Latvia, Lithuallia—rear their Aphrc 'old and new names to, learn his way A few weeks ago a trawler, manned ter not play with you; I'm afraid you Will the gentlemen Please move fez% at - 1 allcut. Patr!Utsm has made many re- with wa.rd a little?" called out the polite dite heads from the Dal -tic w ers. the famous fighbrs of Shering- don't belong to our set." Above them is suspended rilinland,! stared cities unrerognizable, without ham, ran across a smack from Am- L.Ittle, Florence—"I don't see why. conductor on the trolley car as a dozen born without the terrible birthi pangs such aid . stordam, lifting lr�rring. -Unobserved What does your papa do?" more Passengers tried to scramble I of the new lands, farther scitith. Formerly the average layman re. in tile cold grey down, boat -loads of in- Little Elnore—"He?a a veterinary "I won't!" growled one hard-facelit' The patchwork that formerly de- garded a map much as, he did a rall- Ceased but silent men of Norfolk board- surgeon." man who Clung to -a strap near the noted the Balkan States seems to have,1 read time �able. It was essential upon oil the Dutcher and taught the peaclit- door. squirmed Its queer way northward to-: rare occaBiens. To -day the well411- ers a lemon that they will never for- "Oh, I didn't ask you," said the con- vard the Baltic. As now eountrileis are frrmcd mu�t einpicy a in p t u r t Coral From Italy. a 0 ude - g e - Clubs and firebam were used ductor. -scattered freely about, Montene.-roi, of stand the great aducapionali,"value of freely, and broken headis were many. i I? rair-Rantle Much of the cc.,3tly red, white and Natural Query. memetry, has ithuppeare,,1,; Ws daily newspaper. Although they were outnumbered, pink Coral lined for ornamental pur. And familiar Turkey has all but gone. To, him who. reads a ma tile boarders fought with the concert. Customer (to proprietor of rct3&au- i) with the Poses Is obtained front the coast Ef column rant) ­"Your family has buen "tab. Ukraine tentative)y BlIc&s off a cor- care that It(,, scans the printed trated fury of Nelson's time, and ere Italy. Men go nut In -boats and drag ner of Riusla, an area comparable to the map will Impart its faschiatirg long tile Dutchman's decks were lit, the rocky bottom of streams lished here a long time, hasn't it?" that of France, with Proprieter--l'You, Mr. The, busi. terotl with tha unconselolis or nicauln wooden frames or nets, In which tile Jugo-Slavla. Is tho!,1,:t('-'y Of IIP'�cAlu Peoples, their pre - architrave fcr a pedlinert of states 'M"it-daY st;TIM1163, the constant fater- bodies of the Crew. I ness used to belong to my grand. that bear down upwi the eclar becomes talls-led, but tqa dell. tripartiteiaction of tbc human being and his Getting Our Owh Sack. Cate branches are crushed lit thti way, father." kaigilGin of the Serbs,, (IrcaN and SID-: physical environment, Cordige was slaslie(l, nets cut adrift, The finest Coral is obtained by diving, Cu8tomer—"And did this fov"I be. on to him?" RECLAR KX RME11 Heart muscle vaken from an em- 0 bryo chlelt, In the early stage of its like weedo when we give them room Incubation, can be cultivated in the and enteirtailaritent. clear liquid part of the chicken's Instead of the neyious vegetation blood, which must be renewed daily of remembrance, lot us make a fair and kept at body temperature. Such, Plantation of a different EQXL heart muscle has been kept growing One man chooses to fill his mird for several years In a laboratory, with lines of poetry, that recur fer The muscle, fibres so grown have his solace in time of stress. Another continued to contract -rhythmically. has a fund' of cheerful stories on Thereseems no end to the life of such which he draws, fow the common gjayv, muselea, so long as the culture Is kept etY—Withoutbeoomlng baresearre. Art - going, and Just as the vestal virgins other has reamed the world and attended the sacred fire In ancient brought back tales of strong men met Rome, so a laboratory and attendants and rytrange things seen that are In America have been endowed to agreeable to those who d4d, not go keep the ohick:`a, heart muscle going away. In every instance, Buch as perpetually. these, by the nakere produce of their minds, a- much more entertailning and agree -able than one who in ely University Extension. At the COXIferelice af Mtish Unt vOrsitles held in July at Oxford good deW of time and thought 71a given to the various probl'pras in volved in the extensiqla of Universit, education to those people who, fron force of circumstances, are unable tj attend a university in the regula: way. Dr. H, Darnley Naylor of th University of Adelaide, Australia spoke of the Workers, Educatdona Association; Ih-, M. E. Sadder of Leed University oudined the work bein done there in the -promotion off tutor i -al classes,- Dr. R. St. J. Pam -y, in tll� course of am address on univeraltj extension, said.: "The old coneeptioi that a university is concerned- Dal =the promotion of education all< arch wit -hill Ila own walls ha yielded to the reiterated appeal fron numbers of would-be -students wiles. Circumstances make it impossible tha. they could enter the walls of the urli versilty. 1, The University of Toronto hag gon, farther than most universities in answering this demand for adult edu cation. Without lowering its stan- dards in the least, it has so far re - Moved the extraneous obstacles that any Citizen In any part of the province can obtain an education of university grade without giving up his daily em- ployment. This new Plan is at present rather hampered, for lack of funds but, should the Report of the Royal Commission on University Finances be adopted at the next session of tile Ontario Legislature, the Provincial tindveralty ivill, be in -a position to de- veloP Its extension work so as to reach all part.% of the province with its tutorial Classes, its extension lec. tures, and Its university evening Classes. The desirability & thisdemo- oratic development is universally g& raitted. Wasted Energy. "I ilta ter keep it got.-'." Ter me says Uncle Alf. And every night lie wound the clock Upon the mantelshelf, No mater If his rlieuniatiz Was twltdhin'lil his huee. At half-pairit eight he'd mount a chair Arid fumble for the key. For idno long years lie wound it Every night, but whata, shock lie f.,(.t when 11nal!y lie found out it was all eig'at-day clock., A 133'itlb�-Ii CIL-offiter claims to he the only b1bA chartcred the world. 13 Says to us, "See how much money I have ma6," and shows us ga:rdens, a lawns and 1ountains, a bank -book and an income tax. He who each days in -scribes upon his record that which is worth his remembrance, and is worth being re- ineralbe-red of him when he is gone, is sure of a happy life no matter what e adveirsity he encounteTs. It will not be the irTefle-.tive happlileess of an infant or a simpleton, It will be the s tempered,, rational satisfaction of one who findz life good to live be=ww of the chance it conVilually brings to serve. The recollection of a 1-ife thus spent is all that will bring �Domforb at the end. y s Japan Gets Into Line. In Japan the tide has turned and is e runalng strongly towaxildisarmanient. t The militarist party, still aid powerful - theire, has failed in some of its pet ventures and cherished ambitions, The Siberian adventure lias cost 1,000,000,000 yen, and tbera have been - no dividends oil that na-ttional invest- inent. There may never be. T-okio has lust some of its zest for Siber;a, and. Japanese troops may be called hvme by the pxesciiceo� domestie affildrs. Japan is beginning to know indus- trial unrest. Labor trouble at KGbe and other points has talmn an ugAy tuxn. There are bloody rietings and. Cabinet decisions to deal drastic -ally with the noters. These and other natatters are affecting the Japanese attitude. They would affect the atti- tude of any nation., burdened with taxation and troubled with other cf war's aftermaths. The power of the nallitarist. party, in Japan, as elsewhere, opp�)sed to limitations on arms, is seepini,, away little by little in that country. It is still powerful and dorairaint, but not all-powerful as it has -been. The cp4n- ion is growing in Japan that land as well as sea forces should be limited in the Washington agreement3 that are hoped for. Better than anything else for iEs_ arnrament*s. chances, the japan2-se are losing the"T susp"cious attitude to- ward the parleys.. They are being - convinced that the Western natiens, have not called the irwetingffi to strangle Japan. Toldo's cfPcial attitti1e, in aczept- Ing "with reservations," is under fire. Even the militarists fear that the "conditional aceeptances" have pla,-ed Japan in a Lad light. The national will to disarm in Japan outruni t1w -,villingn,2-s of the Gov- ernment. In ths the Japane�-, ,itua- tion is similar to, that in the other interested nations. In all count -ries disarmament advocatc.,; are 4'­,rcei to lead their ruleros, histeq,_q cf upon the rulers. Japan is gottaing into step. The powerful interest now being taken in t1le island clallire is stil- , I another guaranty that something far-reaching and valuable will come out of the Washington parleys. To Facifit Adoption. Un6er the Provisions of the Mop - tion Act passed by the Legislature last session, the Ontario Government has Issued an Order-in�-Gouncfl ap- pointing Mr. J. J. Xelso, Provincial Officer. This mean that parties wI&h- ing to adopt A child must tipply to Mr, I(elso, for a Certificate of approval. It he is satisfied, the opheation, is then submitted to the CouritY llidgo for ratification. The machittery is not yet fully provided-, but when in. work. Ing order It is expected that over one tbousatid farailies, who have 41voady taken a chilti. will seek the benefits, of this legislation.