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The Exeter Times, 1921-2-17, Page 6LON as ICING WI ELESS. VICE A FACT IN NEAR ETTORE Cham o Stations .Being Established by Chinese Government to Link Peking With Kashgar, VVhich is Within Reach of India, mid so With Countries Farther Afield—Scheme Opens Irmnense Prospec ts for British Trade Re- lations With China's 400,000,000 Inhabitants, despatch from London saydt Marconi Wireless Telegraph Core- lesre soon be possible to send a wire- less 'message from tonalea to Peldng, *Wing to efforts -being made by the Chinese Government, according to Hem. Barnes, the Shanghai corress pendent of The DeilY Mail. pany to the order of the Chinese Goveranfeet, One great high power station. has been equipped at Urge, in the Province o,e Kaneu, 800 miles from F'eking, and these two places are already in. corsammication. Urge is also in touch with Shanghai and There is a fine spirit of enterprise Han.kow and messages can be receiv- arid a touch of romance in what is ed from the long distance stations in being done. A chain of wireless eta; America. lions is being established which NVill Another 'similar station is being es - link Peking, the seat of the central tablished a thousand miles farther on, ,Government, with Kashgar, 3,000 at Uromaclii, and, all being well, it las away, in Chinese Turkestan, be will be in operation in about three says, Kashgar will then be within months' time. Subsequently the ter - reach of the wireless stations in India mined station of the series will be and so with countriesfarther afield. erected at Kashgar. The wireless chs.in may be eald to Thus a stride foe -ward is being follow- the line of a great trade route made in the opening up of China. *Merl was ancient before the Romans Modern methods of comnnication landed in Britain, For thousands of will assuredly be extended In other years this track has been a highway directione: It is permieeible to hope from the uplands of Central Asia into „that railways will be developed on China, and has been trodden by count- a big scale in the near future, and less races and tribes of 'men both in therein lies unlimited scope for Brit - peace and in war. isle enterprise and the advaneernent The seheme, -which is boldly plan- of British trade relations with the reed, is being carried out by the 400,000,000 of inhabitants of Chino. NO PRIVILEGES FOR THE MENNONITES New Colonization Scheme Be- ing Carefully Weighed. Dusting Trees Better Than Spraying A despatch from Boston says: —Dusting trees is .better than spraving-them as a preventative A despatch from Herbert, Sask.) of pests, the Massachusetts says:—Should the Mennonites of Sas- Frellt Growers' Association was katehewan and Manitoba decide to told by F. H. Dudley, State Hor- settle in Mississippi and Alabama, ac- . tieuituralist for Maine. Dusting cording -to plans which have been has been proven by tests in under way for some time, they need ee. , . e quicker not look for any sp.ecial territorial or i Amine to b . and -more ef- religious privileges, according to the feCtiVe than sprawmg, he said. statement of H. A. Emerson of Yellow A crew can dust 300 trees in Pine, Alabama, who addressed a large fifty --four minutes. The material audience at Ilerboxt recently. used is arsenate of lead, sulphur. Mr. Emers.on, who has a controll- and tobacco dust. Dist will de - SEEMS TO BE SOME The Lading Markets Toronto ...Manitoba wheat—No. 1 Northern, $1.89%; No. 2 Northern, $1.86%; No. 3 Northern, $1.82%; No. 4 wheat, $1.74%. Manitoba oats—No. 2 CW, 48%e; No. 8 CW, 44%-c; extra No, 1 feed, 44%-c; No. 1 feed, 42%c; No. 2 feed, 387,4c. • , Manitoba barley—No. 3 CW, 83cn No. 4 OW, 69e; rejected., 581/2c; Teed, 58%c., All above in store,.Fort -William. Ontario wheat—F.o.b. shipping points, according to freights outside, No. 2 spring, $L75 to $1.80; No. 2 winter, $1.85 to $1.90; Noe 2 goose wheat, $1.70 to $1.80. American corn—Prompt shipment, No. 2 yellow; track, Toronto, 90c. Ontario oats—No. 3 white, 47 to 50c, according to freights outside. Barley --Malting, 80 to 85e. actor& ing to freights outside. • Ontario flour—Winter, in jute bags, ing interest in more thee half a mil- pend on the roportions of the prompt shipment, straight_ run bulk, D lion acres of fertile agricultural lands •eeaboard, $8.50. Inlxture. in Alabama and Mississippi, has been Peas --No. 2, $1.50 to $1.60, outside. transportation'still -was suspended on SLAHT. DBLAN't watered, $15 to $15.25, do, weighed off cars, $15.25 to $15.50; do,f.ods, $14 to $14.25- do Ceuntry points $1'3.75 to $14. , Montreal. - Oats, NiO. 2 CW,- 68e; No. 3 CW, 64e. Flour, Man. Spring wheat pat- ents, .first $10.'70. 'Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs.,. 38.30: Bran, ,,$40.25. Shorts, $38,25. Hay, No, 2, per ton, car lots, $26 to $27 ,- Cheese, finest easterns, 27 to 271/se. Butter, 'choicest creamery, 56 to 57c. Eggs, fresh, 60 to 62c. Potatoes, per bag, tar lots, $1 to $1.10, • Good al, $18 to 315; need., $10 to $13; grass $6:-. Leanlia; need. quality", $12; sheep, $6. Hogs, selects, off -car weights, $16.50; ,sews, $12.50. SOUTI1 AFRICA SAVED TO T EMPIRE BY GENE RAL SM VICTORY Secessionists Vote Totalled 39, - While' General Smuts' Loyalist Party Holds 73 Seat—Returns Not Yet Complete. LFT l'he after effects of meas es may be far reaching,- es the irritation of the re, A despatch front Capetown says a- Administration has been defeat',14 ePiratorY Passage's is on° of l'be °hal' General Jan Christian Smuts the by a Nationalist in Pcitchefetrom, acteristics of this disease and ver_Ye Prime Minister of the Union of 'SouthSir Abe,BalleY, wall known in rne- often those who have ,heon robust. -- Africa, void his Coalition of the South "ing-- circles, retains Krunagedorp. become4plAtennelliabletOlOngtroablest 'African land UniOnist parties have Enormous majorities were , given hein..esetges.otered nonei, be- regarded- 'WOIL 43 seats in the House Asse-mblY the South African Party 1.,1-1 Durban with indifference, in the bitter election fight against the and Cape Tome, while the Lehor measis ard b -.Secessionists, who had enly ,12 seats,. to their credit. Labor had won nine seast and -the Independente one seat. Altogether there are 135 seats to'be fi ll Te hd . ce :re -turns received %to date were mainly from urban distriete- and it probably will be several days before the full report from the 'country is avail:Able. • " The follower's of Gen. Smuts claim that he is certain of victoey, slime the, bulk of his strength heretofore genera y owec y Party suffered a seVCre -reve,- n , Route attests 011 LAW reemoranes. the Rand diet -del,. lie Cape Town the The sneezing i3 accompanied with a South African Party gained tw o watery diseharge, sometimes bleeding.; seals, in Durban three, la the Reid from the nose, a cough of a kliort, fre- eigTh:e ay'llidctO11.1'y're7t-thre'°.;:du°'tny' oLea.de qnnueenxtnientdorlalotilosny, chhoul;:sceincers' swiofthtilitittioeicocr. s to the fact that woekingneea -soted Once the cough starts You should Prime Minister Srnuts is attributed ate' • .1 by procure a bottle of Dr. Wood S NOrWay against the sesesseon issue „raise( General .Heineeg, and ced not pay Pine Syrup, take a few doses a, day and thus prevent broncleitisspneilmonia, muali a-stention to sectional issues or perhaps consumption, getting a foot - 'raised by Labor leacleils.s:_me posi_ m.be.jr3d.,07\vsr.iot-telea,..e.-_ys,s,Teewso, :„.yea...a ago hal has been in the eountry districts. beAegtlagtoeureedseAspfltetscah, af,ry°iI1 j°11,aniles- bheiiirmseasOielisv,era,ndICetlhlyey,B19eflblismlee S.wtaittiiiont: General Snn-its has been retimnecl tion of the parties in the South ssoCri- for Pretoria West by a 'big maJoritY. don g'eneral 'elections 11°W in PIT'gr%SS bad O01,01. I kept getting wore until 1 known, is -the collapse of the Iseshor told me of Dr. Wood a Nose'hy Pixie party. Apparently the Lalsor party -Syrup, eo I sent and -got a bottle, and, before I had used it my cough was all will only have nine members in the better. ' new Assembly, against 21 in the last House. Col. Cressefell, Leader of the Laborites, was defeated in Treyville. The urban -results have been very engcouraghig to the South Afridan . party, but the country returns are causing anxiety to the Government. in that country, at 9. o clocic ,on Thursday -night was: General Smuts' South African part Y . . . an. a .73 Nationalists ... • Labor . .. . ........9 Democrat . , ted resuli,s ....... . • . 2 .This gives the LoYalists a. majority over the .Sectssioniets and all others of 22 clear seats. Eleven seats are still to be heard from. • a , as Id 1 p. y neighbor The feature of the reeults, ao far as The Minister of Justice in the Smuts Manitoba's Woman Nlember, Seconded Reply A despatch from Winnipeg 1SaYst-a, . , Mrs. Edith Rogers, the first -woman to be elected a -member of the Manitoba- , Legislature, seconded the reply -to the Speech from the Throne' in the Pro - Tank Attacks Snowbanks . vincial House. ' E. A. August (Iihiffs In St.' John's Streets ern) moved. the ad:dress in reply to , the Speech from the Throne. A despatein frorn St. John's, Nfld., , says:--Newfoundlancl is fighting to beat back its woret Snow siege in 30 years, -With monumental drifts block- hig its gates.after a four-day Railroad,- :steamer ,and highway A despatch from London says:— London 'Times saYs. --it under- , stands that, the -Prince ef Wales has planned a tour of India in October or Noyember next. Prince May Tour ..._ India in Autumn negotiating with the Mennonites for some time, with the end in view of establishing a colony of these people in the South. So far none of the old colony Men- nonites nor any of the Somnierfelcler Mennonites have .actually settled in in the session of 1919-20 are as the South, South, although a tract of 125,000 lowe: Partners, 361; retail merchants, acres has been selected for purchase, 218; artisans, 144; finance, 124; the and an option taken on 100,000 -acres church, 116; wholesale merchants, 106; manufacturers, 1,06; me,theipe, 81; more. , The canges,„aaniesiegatffeesed, in the pro. teaelang, .62; railway. -sniployees, sae, to the South are those at Dominion officials, 41; law, 40; engin- Rhineland, Irian.; Swift Current, Sask.; eossag, 36; municipal officials, 21; Hague, Sask.; and Rosthern, sask--31 journalism, 17; pharmacy, 17; Provin- and few seatte-red families in the dal officials, 14; lumbermen, 13; den - south district. At the close of the meeting no one seemed particularly anxious to leave the country without first giving -care- ful consideration and counting the cost. The number of families affected In the new colonization scheme is op - Proximately five hundred. The impulse to do our best,—ah, fere-lies the secret of all living! The Provincial University. The occupations of the fathers of the 1,833 students who applied for admission to the -University of TOT011tD 11 YOUR liEART WEAK ? ARE YOUR NERVES AKY? nr- so Uses: MiLEURNI HEART and 1.'12:ere are many peeplc, at the present time, whose heart 10 ffected, whose nerves are unstrang end general health impairs -al „ To such we offer Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills as the best remedy that science has produced -ler such troubles. • These piliS have.a Wonder -ad effeet ox the weakened heart and the shattered nervous system containing AS they do the 'very best elements, Ter Inc relief et all heart and nerve troubles, " Mrs. 0, Varsity Trossachs,e..Sasko writes:—"I sufferect foe over -a year adth heart and nerve trouble. I had terrible headaches and dizzine,ss, could not sleep and had no appetite. taking doctor's rnedicirie, Taub it did not elp me. I was completely diecouragei. Then a friend told, nee of Miligarn'e Heart and. 'Nerve Pills. After taking one bog I began to feel loetteis and after 0-0.veu bwteg1 felt like a new persori.- 1 heartily recommend them to alr my friends'!" Milbure'slIes,rt and Nerve Pills are 50c, s. box at all deetlees,or niailed d.irect by 'roe MilistunoCo. Limited Tororrto, Ont. tistry, 10; soldiers, 8; art, 5; veterin- ary, 4; library, 2; fishermen, 1; not specified, -.240. The homes of the 4,777 students in attendance during the same session were distributed as feriows: Algoma, 24; Brant, 90; Bruce, 96; Carleton, 108; Dufferin, 26; Dundee, 24; Dur- ham, 41,; Elgin, 56; Essex, 68; Fren- tenac, 14; Glengarry, 9; Gren.ville, 14; Grey, 93; -Heldman& 49; Halton, 57; Hastings, 45; Huron, 125; Kenora, 8; Kent, 58; Lambton, 67; Lanark, 46; Leeds, 48; Lennox and Addington; 22; Lincoln, 64; Manitoulin, 6; Middlesex, 121; Muskoka, 14; Nipissing, 23; Nor- folk, 36; Northumberland, 39; Ontario, 112; Oxford, 79; Parry Sound, 12; Peel, 72; Perth, 135; Peterborough, 66; Prescott, 4; Prince Edward, 14; Renfrew, 27; Russell, 6; Shrine, 189; Stormont, 13; 'Sudbury, 10; .Thunder Bay, 15; Temiskaming, 11; Victoria, 56; Waterloo, 81; Welland, 64; 'Well- ington, 142; Wentworth, 169; Yoek, 182; Toronto, 1,828. Attestion is drawn to the wide representation of all parts of the Province inS, this dis- tribution of, students, And to the fact that the lic'ness from which they come represent inc remarkable way almost every variety of occupation in the Province. These figures show how thoroughly demo -erotic is the char- acter of the student body, A coal of dark rsea otter Tor, claim- ed to be the 'only one in Europe', ,was recently offered: for ',sale at .3205,000. The book of Samuel hnentiens the use of forks, referring to is "fiesh'licok of three teeth." Stliarzknr2VnImen. "nc U ‘Xt.A0v,4 6E9P-4!.. feLLow 440141 Tht, t4P'''tQl*4 Manitoba flour --Track, Toronto: First patents, $10.70.; second patents; $10.20." - Buckwheat—No. 2, 90 to 95c. Rye—No. 2, nominal; No. 3, 61.50 to 31.65. Millfeed—Garlots, delivered, Toron- to freights, bags included: Bran, per ton, 340, firm; shorts, per tone $38;' white middlings, 341; feed fiour, $2.40. Eggs, new laid, earlons, .62 to ,64c; new laid 59 to 61c.. Butter' creamery mints, o6 to 59c; fresh -made, 59 to le: bakers', 38,0 45c. Oleomargarine., Historic Mace for large, 31 ±o -31½c; twins, 311/2 to 32c; beef "giade,...9° to 32c. Cheese, new, New Ulster House old, large, 32 to 33e. ; A despatch_from Belfast. Ire - Maple Syrup, one -gal. tins, 33.50 Honey, extracted --White clover, in lad says :—Negotiations are in 60 -30 -lb. tins, per lb., 23_to 24e; doe progress to obtain the Old, Irish 10-1b. this, per l•b., 24 to 26c; Coterie House of GO/ilinOnS 'inace' and No. 1, white clover, in 21/2-54b. tins, Speaker's chair for the new IJ1s- .per lb., 25 to 26c. Churning cream --Toronto creamer- ter Parliament. They 'are-heir- ies are quoting for 'churning --cream, 600 per lb. fat, f.o.b. shipping points, nominal. rednesday Ilight, -although the storm had Ceased..., The first sally fronathis city against . p the besiegisis'.elerrient was made by a whippet. tank captured' ,by Newfound- landers in the war, which was pet to work crunching down -.§nowbanks' on -Water 'street, the city's main thole, Smoked meats --Rolls 80 to 33c; ha -ms, med. 38 to 41e; heavy, 33- to 86c; cooked' hams, 53 to 57o; backs, boneless,' 55 to 60c; breakfast bacon, 42 to 50e; special, 50 to 56e; cottage rolls, 35 to 37c. Green xneats--Ou'c, 'OE pickle, le less than smoked. Barrelled Meats ----Bean pork, 335; short ant or family back-'boitele,ss, $40 to $47; pickled,rolls, $53.to 356;, mess pork, 38 to 41c. , Dry salted meat—Long clears, an tons, 23 to 25c; in cases-, 23% to 253/4c; clear bellies, 291/2 to 301/2c; fat backs, '22 to 24e. ' Lard—Tierces, 22% to 2314c; tubs, 2314 to 23%; pails, 231/2 to 24e; prints, 241/2 to 25c; shortening tierces, Itis to"15½c per lb. Choice heavy steere, 39 to 310; good heavy steers, 38.50 to 39; butclices' cattle choice, $8.50 to $9.50; clo, good, $7.5eto 38,50; do, riled., 36 to 3.7; do, corn., $4 to 36; butchers' bulls, choice, 37 to 38; do, good, 36 to,37; do, come 34 to$O; butchers' cows:choice, 37.50 to $8.50; do, good, 36.25 to. $7; do, cora., 34 to 35; feeders, 37.75 to $8.75; do, 900 lbs., 37.25 to 38.25; do, 800 lbs., 35.75 to 36.75; do, coni., 35 to 36; canners and cutters, $3 to 34.50; milk- ers, good to ehoiee, 385 to 3120;- do, com, and med., 350 to 300; choice springers, $90 to 3130; lambs, yearl- ings, 39 to 39.50; do, spring, 310,50 to $11.50; calves, good to crioice, $.1.5 to looms of Lord Massereene at An- tTim Castle. The offer , of the use of Belfast CityHallas a temporary building for :the new Parliament will be accepted. . , EMORRIi0iO3 Arim CAUSED DY CONSTEPATION. There are few complaints more common than hemorrhoids,,conamonla- Celled piles, and scarcely anY.,which cause more trouble and misery. Piles are divided into -three' clitises; re., itching, protruding and bleeding; and consist in a fullness of blood and languid circulation in the portion: of the lower bowel or rectum. The einef causes of piles ard. stipation straining at stool, and the: using of 'drastic purgativei. This .lattdr ese-Would very strongly,.advise against as these strong purga,tives, especially those containing calomel ,and other mineral drugs are too strong for the average person's bowels, , A mild laxative,will do more to correct ' this trouble than anything else, and this you will find in I\ Inburn.'s Pills, a pill that is purely vegetable, small and. easy to. talse,' and does not gripenveaken or sicken. ... 'Milburn's Le,xaaLiver Pills are 25c. a vial at all dealers or, mailed direct - en receipt, of price by The T. Ilifilburn Go., Limited, Toronto, Oat. The Russian ruble, before the World War,_..was worth a little over fifty cents. Now it takes 5,000 rubles to buy a pound of salt pork. The mon- jik fawning a hog that woulddress at 200 pounds, is a ruble "Millionaire." t An official list of the heroes who fell in the Great War is being published to be- completed in eighty volumes: _ - Between June and December British towns adopted about fifty places in France evhich had suffered in the Great War. Lord Robert Cecil Heads Economy Party A despatch from London says:— Lord Robert Cecil has accepted the Chairmanship of the group of mem- bers of Parliamen tfavoring economy.' This action means the organization of ,a new Opposition party, with Lord Robert as the Leader, at the opening of Parliament next eveek. „ The lie*" party is expe.ctecl to have abbut thirty members in the House. Cecil 'is an able. and energetic Leader, who has been looked upon for some time as a passible successor to Lloyd George in the .Preimiership. He is opposed to imposing harsh terms on Germany. 13riand Without -Boots. The fact that he has always worked for leis living is a, source of pride to M. Briand, =who for the seventh time a - becomes- Premier of France. The son of a Paris shopkeeperehe began as journalist, andsmigratectto the law. So straightened were his 'circum- -stances that once,hWhen. invited te lec- ture at Rennes, he -had to reply: aim- posible to come. No boots." 'The promoters, rather than anis' the lec- ture, forwarcie,d the price of suitable footwear. BIG OIL DEAL ON PROSPECT OF DOWNFALL OF BOLSHEVIK REGIME British Oil Interests Buy Title to Catica.'sils Oil Fields from -- Russians Who -Held Tit le Under Rule of Czar. A despatch from Paris says:,-_--sThe' Considerable secrecy snaroands the Shell and -R-Oyal Delta" oil sinterests deal. But it is learned it -is of such are reported on -good authority. to -have magnitude that lawyers ;who handled concluded a rather remarkable ,poli- -the 'deal here got a eommission of tical -commercial bargain.. which- several million francs. The payments amounts to' betting that,the Bolshevik made by:Shell and Royal Dutch are -regime in Rt.:sista, will fall within ten. said to _run into many millions- of Under -this arrangement, which, it A number „oft Russians' ow -nil -Os; Tro- is understood, was oonsurnmated perty in' ther,Grosriyi fields are refu- ... Paris, the -Bfitish, oil in.tereits have gees in Paris and are engaged dieeet- bought from Russians .ivho held title ly the negotiations, it is eat& to the P.roPerty under theCzar',s re- It is It cornmon report R,neeian gime the rights- to oil from the colonies here that'a rtuenbeir of 1Zus- , , Grosnyi district in the Caucasus. Tho sians recntly- have had much money basis of the agreemerit-ii,a payment to Spericl—eneri who didn't have so now of from.five to"teri per cent. 'of much a short time ago: -the estimated value of the production Negotiations are .said to "be finder from those fields in return for 'which way by WI B.ritisles and Eaeneh cif British, interests' bre a,ssured the ex- interests to make a elneRar arrange- . elusive control -of all production .of meet for ethe control .af, oil in the that district. Baku Eisteict. This district 'le now There is is -tinee lirnit a :to years under doubtful control, being held to the agreement—in other evords,-if by Soviet organizations ef. 'Aierbais" at the end of 10 years the old 'owners are unable to regain their property the deal is off. Naturally, if the, Bol- sheviks :fall this year and are replac- ed by a regime which 'recognizes the old property rights, the British inter - $16; sheep, $6 to 37.50; hogs, fed and ests may get the oil quickly, . " bt:"T t4A. oral oc0, Otql,"4 Re)V 4'c,5 It's a -Great Life If You Don't Weaken ar.o. LArm ip Nfow Dor weAKEN I find it a _great ,farnilY medieine for iolds and coughs, and I now keep it in the house all the time." - Dr. Wood's- N,orway Pine Syrup is 35e., a large bottle 60e., at all druggists and dealers. Puree °ray by The T., Idilburn Co., Limited., Toronto, .Ont. aseasseasaassa—,...anes—anasssameasa.aa The Past In Its Place. It is a common'elesire among -mare kind to 'Wish in -vain -that yesterdan might be raved in the' light of tin exp 'today possee see., . " Often a mania heard to say thatha wou'il give much to recall the houno of Youth irrevocable now. Ifhe could have theenback, lie feels that he would put them to dif.fetent and -to hettei used. In the years that are not to be , , retraced he took -many false turns; lea. made egregious blundars for which, in many ways, he has since paid a grie,v, ous penalty: He is tempted,. in tuning over Ills pages of the book of memory, to gb into mourning at , many Points; te chide himself bitterly: "How foolisl I was to temst that inan!" he -exclaims„ Or perhaps he says, "I should have acs ceDted thisspositionginstead of thebrie I took.": Or he is roefulafor' advice that he refused. He May have' mach af-filiations, in forhily society business, which have brought hiin itt tle but care and sadness. rronly he could have the alternatives before him , 'again', if only he could retrace --the.s.." Path and be -greeted a second -chance! Now he sae, -when, it is too late; new he. is Wise, but :the knowledge emnes toe tarditysto and -guide hie ac- tion. .He made his ,choices; they made his life. „The tinio he 'squandered, the talent he prodigally' flung to the winds, the- health he undermined:shy taking liberties therewith, these are forevermore a 'forfeit. He ,cannot go back. - The period _of hie life that once , . , was 'luminous with happy prophecy, beclouded with no dark miegiving, has. become a sombre history. It is a tale of great expectations disappointed.; 01. the 'best intentions that never came - to anything' of moment; of riin in place of riches; of defeat deed despair instead of victOry. a • " But that manis a, creaturoof a Tom: and craven apirit -Who lets himself be smastered by-reflectimia such as these, The proudest 'and' the 'greatest among, -as, atone time 'or another, have mods , a mess genthings. The beauty and ths bravery of life' lie not in harking back but in going ahead. The heroes -and heroines are the folk- of steed ehtfors • ward'action the sun of the ,present shining day; tat the unhappy crea- tures •who cannot. rise above the de- ifression bred: in their ,minds 15 -as their: own memories. Yesterday belongs in ite Place; it is of the past: It --may instruct but itemust not. perplex ,noe baffle to -day. With every dawn' tha /rushee- the sky We 'are. given a day that-IsS asnew,as the.' first tiny -of the, world We are meant to begin afresh with it. ,,,The' years that arc to he are beckoning us away from the tiers of the yeassethat were. It is a inerey et v,oa ,an, whose subservience to IVIoscow and rieot a nisfotteine -tha"e niiot appeases at this time doubtful. A pipe -I g?.,„backO..„, ;thee from Baku to Batum on the Black Sea ;built by...th e Czarist G ov ernment, runs through 'Agerbaijan „ancl Georgian territory, This is the :richest oil district o:f the Caucasus. _ -Irtesarrrarres==s-a-f-tx.=........7.¢=latiwziezzu,niaaran, 40mrt- ' t(telo'ci4e!a44QLD A'‘Et4C;4( 1 V4 CAt.41 tvlatAkt t40 u -se $tt,INT,A* t) tsX "VO 'By Jack Ra6bit • ad. NNOIGESTmaik:ii. 04,ei eat S. -rasa- S. — , CAN., gAT A5YT1U±ii NOW. The, misery "svii-i11.- titoinsali, tr-CubiCe ' cause, -the sufferer knows only too well, - 'and anyone Cke-ho siiffe VP lanowe evliat • ' joy it would 5±00 i,C;, -be ab--le-to Nit kilift,r0 inesis'a.clay, and net Ide eatished -I3efore you cafe eat heartily, and not plait and choose ,your foocl, you' l'r,Wli, A ° ,.., a.arrs fiPAlt‘A.m..... . put your irt:0°',VInnarilthi Ej.(3'19titgih-V-'06 ..1,e)uleletaleaell''.3,11' 'will ,cs"laarP1:°.ei::'141:1SO 'f13a14ntit'a6nt'Yibitg:'eei:ltia-ni.o'n—n4i"Ia'f'il:ilgl-:d;''''3.1-1'ip'l\'''ie..1'i,1.::'sgit-il'i„.Y1'°',.' very often other remedies reso letwerleal to reach, ., , Mi. Al4o.Beeknorth IPC8Sr.r. (01; Oill- , wrItoe ,....,1,11 lifiNg ' been_ it great suing -Cc: from tudiostios„. alio. .dysi'yer,..sirt, for several' Veers', and coeld not (set aPV- thir4driritliout aliniSnilying from the liala ,,Bi:nerudtdhoedotiltiP,-Blirfietee' 'iddf :1.-Ilif$1:ict3:ttiOil:fil:C1.4111:11filtl,Irli.,IY'a,1„).p /:%°15,ti°0:11iii,Tt; ", I : say It roipve4 nie. I etta eat anything Ilic)1Ar'il...' 'climianuP?arefeja°1tricYd, 464iiac)t(y1 '1)7 41''tr4)1i; ' is 'I' ' i urn 0-, LirastA 'lee -onto 0:4 A'A