*.. cluding whales, excursions" will be made ashore. han venture-ship, or pirates { Selrapingr is stowed in the little Dis- "eovery, writes a Daily | News 'Cotres- i For example, there are about 20 gross of empty bottles--boattles of 'all shapes, sizes and "costliness, from five ounce milk bottle for seawater . sample to intricate brass Ekman bot- tle for deep sea study, Some of these "bottles are of fine workmanship, made With 'many chambers of heavy hrass, some are coated with silver. Some may be sent nearly four miles down into icy, briny depths, there to take in a specimen of sea-water. A brass "messenger" then sent down the wire will seal them; their contents will be carefully recorded, rebottled, labelled and stored for further examination on return, An oceanographer will determine the chemical and phystcal properties of the water, while a marine biologist or "planktologist" will examine the minute forms of life which swarm therein, for htis "plankto," as it is called, is the focd of mall fish, which in their turn féed larger ones--in- More numerous. than -the bottles are cigarettes; 100,000 are being tak- en. Half a ton of suei, however, was too much for the cook; 'the amount cut dcwn, There will be traw: ng 'nets of "many different makes and meshes, from the finest silk to the coarse rope of Otter and Mono- gasque trawls. Piano wire is another important item; there will be more than 20 miles of it, for scunding depths, A new sounding method will also be used ~--the Echo sounder. This emits a tap from the hull of the ship, sound waves radiating in all directions 'Those that finally "hit the floor" of the ocean are echoed back, and from the length of the time between tap ping and receiving the scho- the in- strument calculates and records the depth on a dial plate: Other items of equipment intlude a Moth aeroplane fitted with wireless, which is to be the "leng arm" of the expedition; an elaborate shortswave trasmitting set; sets of chessmen, and a phonograph. There is an Owen's Dut More Coun- ter, to determine the amount of dust in the Antarctic--an important fae- 'tor to Ooze Insist on Gevaert the faster, better film, You'll have fewer failures and enjoy the thrill of better snaps. Ask your Dealer. ~ The ~ "GEVAERT COMPANY OF AMERICA Tosonto ta an 1 Rivals Dangzig.--After a | a brief period of quiet, rumblings are again noticeable in the relations of the Free State of Danzig with its neighbor, Poland. The writer went on a sightseeing expedition under 'the ausplees of a couple of Polish guides, On trying to enter a certain building the party found every diffiulty put in its way, until two of its members explained discreetly that they were leaving for London in a few. hours. English? Yes? All difficulties immediately van- ished. Apart from the facial question, Dan. zig, though no longer incorporated in the Reich, is unmistakably German; gs; ~ in gl HiT er running Pros] sia from the rest of Germany, ds a On the other hand, it it did not exist there would be an exactly similar strip of territory running east and west and _|dividing Poland from its coveted con- tact with the sea. As things are at Present, travelers passing from one part of Germany to the other across the corridor find themselves subject. ed to some inconveniences, such as being loked in their compartments while the train is on Polish territory, If the corridor were the other way round, it would be the Polish travelers 'who would encounter difficulties. Hebrides May Renew Kelp 'Manufacture Oban, Scot.--About 70 years ago, the manufacture of kelp from sea- weed was an important industry in the Hebrides. ' Two experts, repre- senting important French interests, have just luded an of some parts of the Hebridean coast, with a view to arriving at a decision as to the prospects of reviving the kelp industry in the Western Isles. These experts believe that, as the ex- act type of seaweed needed for the findustry grows in great abundance on rocks adjacent to the coast of the isles; the industry if comducted ef: ficiently "would undoubtedly be suc- cessful, Formerly the -kelpers of the Heb- rides cut the seaweed off the rocks and towed it to shore, but later the workers used weed torn by the waves oft the rocks. According to the visit |ing experts, the seaweed should be cut off the rocks to secure the best chemical yield, and rock surfaces at different points of the coast were in- d to discover whether a weed: there are ' certain ic issues cutting machine as used by kelpers in which cause are aroused by the 1 Progress of the ups start port of Gdynia created on Polish soil not 20-miles away, They also re- sent somewhat the "intrusion" of Po- Heh business men., Reasons for Rivalry Among the major questions which haye agitated Polish-Danzig relations may be cited the affair of the pillar boxes--trival in itself, but involving Samplers will collect ooze from the sea floor. A few sledges are being taken, but no dogs. The work being mostly coastal and oceanagraphic, only "day | A few random items from the food supply are 48 pounds of Christmas pudding (with buttons and sax- pences?), four dozen bottles of horse- radish sauce, 28 pounds of and--seve pcunds of Epsom salts! The Discovery herself? She was Captain Scott's ship for his famous expedition of 1910, 'and is probably the best ship afloat for work in icy oceans. Her every line expresses strength. Her timbers are of stout-| est oak. She has stcod years of Arctic and Antarctic work, and is good for years more. Twenty-six men and "all this gear, she will carry for a year or more, yet her tonnage is under 200 tons, and her length is only 198 feet. To see her size and know her work makes one yealise that Drake's the whether Poland had a privileged position in the town as well as in the port of Danzig--and the af- fair of the Westerplatte, where Poland tried to establish an ammunition dump to the great indjgnation of the Danzigers, who declared the dump would be a menace to safety, Both cases went to the League, with the result that Poland won a temper- ed victory in the first, and Danzig in the gecond. The pillar boxes are still there, and the observant traveler who arrives at Danzig by sea will §till pass & secluded spot at the entrance to the Vistula Canal guarded by a Polish sentry. It 8 not easy to decide to what ex- tent the danzigers are right in think ing that Gydnia is depriving them of business, Danzig has a number of unemployed, but so has the German port of Stettin, further to the west. The capacity of Danzig Harbor {is limited by the. length of the wharves around which the town is built: It 'would be an extremely expensive busi- nese to expand the port beyond its [present size. Gdynia Able to Expand Gdynia, on the other hand, 18 being built on the open sea and can expand efinitely without great difficulty, and for an outlay not prohibitive. Its present capacity fs about 2,000,000 tong. of cargo a year and rapidly de- veloping. The population is 30,000,000 ad bth ax annual natural increase near- ,000, 'Nowhere in the world perhaps will you see 80 many. children, and the na- tural resources of the country are scarcely scratched. Given peace and government, there is reasonably good ~ |little doubt that in the years to come | to their utmost capacity to deal with growing volume of tranic. France could ig be used 1n the used in the Hebrides. SAVE THE CHILDREN In Summer When ( Childhood Ail- L... ments Are Most Dangerous. Mothers who keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in the house may feel that the lives of their little ones are reasonably safe during the hot wea- ther. Stomach troubles, cholera in- fantum and diarrhoea carry off thous- ands of little ones every summer, in most cases because the mother does not have a safe medicine at hand to give promptly. Baby's Own Tablets relieve these troubles, or if given oc- cagionally to the well child they will prevent their coming on. The Tab- lets are teed to be absol harmless even to the mew-born babe. They are especially good in because they regulate the bowels and keep the stomach sweet and pure. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 26 cents a box from The Dr. Willlams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. over." No, only twelve miles out" J of <Ftl fF ey iL : id] il i i iL a H iis i # I Ik : ; 3 if it 3 mB Ha DeWilliams PINK PILLS *'A HOUSEHOLD NAME IN 84 COUNTRIES ** - ] the German crew. The Germans Hoped To Retain Navy After Armistice Sailor Describes Scene Scapa Flow as Allied Ves- sels Surrounded Fleet Men of Verge of Mutiny Long Imprisonment Let to Quarrels Aboard Craft Berlin.--On June 2}, 1919, Admiral von Reuter ordered the sinking of the German battleships which were at Scapa Flow. Richard Stumpf, a sail or, describes in the 'Vossiche Zei- tung," - Berlin, this' event: "In the 'patriotic courses' which we had to submit to in the fall of 1917 we sailors often discussed what should happen to the English fleet 'after our victory. Some thought we should use the British battleships to increase the German navy, while others, the mod- erates, pleaded for sinking all enemy ships. = Any other possible solution did not seem to exist. "Hven when the German request for an armistice became known we still remained so incredibly naive. The enemy demanded that our battleships should remain locked up in neutral harbors. We thought: "After peace has come the ships will go home again.' 'This optimism prevailed even after the united Allied navies had locked us up in the Firth of Forth, "A manifesto of the "chief of the navy, countersigned by the chief of the 'Soldiers' Council, decreed on November 18, 1918, that all battle- ghips should be disarmel within a 'week. If this condition were not ful filled Heligoland would be ied by the Allies and other retaliatory steps taken, "I doubt that we ever worked as in- tensely during the World War as in those days of November, 1918. Our ships were ready to fight at ®lmost a moment's notice; but to demoblilize them ompletely required gigantic ef- forts. "On November 17, my ship, the Heli- goland, was completely disarmed. Thousands of fine yellow bombs lay on the pier, and our vessel lay fully a yard higher on the water because it had become so much lighter. "The neutrals, with the exception of at \ Suan, didn't seem to want to lodge vessels. Finally it was said that {te "Engian insisted our vessels ~ first he searched in one of | their war harbors and then would bo gent to some 6 prison,' . of November 21, oh a ren Sime Hs olgtie in aid rn Uoigray, dnugnore. rman c time, and all Only after taken place 0 on' hock suriag X 48 Several days passed store every- . thing was arranged, The exceedingly Sige 'service soon resulted in t deal of 'homesickness among under 8tood this aud. therefore reduesd the | Tew from 200 to twenty men, accord: [ing to the size of the ahip. "Men were prohibited to 'go from one ship to another, and none could 80 -on shore. The fear of Bolshevist infection must have been 'the senson But later on our relations grew more friendly. The decree never was re- called. The mail was our only con- nection with home; but it came only with great delay since the British looked over all letters, "Because of our long imprisonment the crews on the various German ships grew very irritated, and there were quarrels between the so-called radical and moderate elements, Ad- miral von Reuter arranged with the 'British admiral for a signal which would serve to call 'the British to aid if there should be any mutiny on a German ship "When the peace megotiations ap- proached their end we came to know that the Allies would mot return our vessels to Germany. The English press snoke about sinking them in a solemn cerémony 'n the presence of all Allied navies. "The tehsion among us grew intol- erable. We all thought that Germany would not accept the peace treaty and that there would he war again on June 21; "It .was easy to sink our battleships. A single man could do that. He Just had to open the valves, turn one cer- streamed in, In peace times we had practiced that a good many times and had accomplished it in half a minute. "So we hol.ted the war flag at noon on June 21, and a few minutes later our ships sank. Unfortunately, the British fired, because they were so ox- cited, and six sailors were killed." The tiger's a malicious, Farecious, atrocious untrustworthy cat; He's agile and brawny and striped black and tawny, And Bengal in India's his habitat. Asiatic With cunning dramatic, this beast Goes growling and prowling with fiendish intent; He slinks through the jungles... and seldom he bungles A job when on foraging business he's bent. This never pacific, horrific, ra treacherous, vicous, tain 'flood valve,' and then the water -- |. He. Who. can give a proper hearing to what Is said, and avails 'himself of At, is superior to one who compre hends everything by his own intel lect; for the one has cnly comprehen ston, While the one who takes good advice has action also.--Zeno. einen ment , |Minard's Liniment--Used for 50 years anaes Cn Senator Key Pittman closed a novel with a bang. "These post-war novel ists' he said, "write about nothing but the amours of married men. married men are always 1in Their He YARNS AND BLANKETS LL PURE CANADIAN WOOL YARN for hand knitting. Try us for manufacturing your own woo! Blankets and yarn. Samples and orices pplied free = Mail orders promptly ate Ton ed to. Write-at ence for information, Flesherton Wooilen Mills, Flesherton, Ontario. John Nuhn, Prop. 4 GENTS SLANTED TO SELL FRULT A, Trees, rees, Roses, ed Eling and a complete ine "of Nursery Stock for old established Jutfit furnished Cash commission "aig avery . Good ary still open Write . 'Maple ('rove Nurseries. Winona, rio, firm. their armours. Well, in real life, as a matter of fact ,the opposite is the truth. "You remember the anecdote about the married man whose wife said as they were leaving the restaur- ant: "George; 1 didn't like the way you stared at that blonde in red." "No," said George. 'Neither did she." "Another married man in a restaur- ant, when his wife took him to task for staring -at a girl, put on a senti- mental look and said: "She reminds me of you, darling." "Then," said his wife tartly, "why not stare at 'me in- stead?" LUXO FOR THE HAIR Ask Your Barber--He Knows WEEKLY NEWSPAPER "FOR SALE Well equipped for publishing and WO STEAM PUMPS, IN PERFECT condition, large capacity. Watkins, Room' 421, 73 Adelaide St West Toronto. ENE STEAM BOILER, 150 H.P, cheap, pply Watkins. Room 421, 13 TAdelnias Street West Toronto. Pursuit of Truth It is more hanourable to the head, as well as to the heart, to be misled in our eagerness in the pursuit of truth, than to be safe from blundering by contempt of it. 8. T. Coleridge. Saws Old saws re- paired and sharpened to give good work, Complete stock on hand of new circular and band saws. Write us about saws SIMONDS CANADA SAW Bo LTO. MONTREAL 7-29 vancouvER 8Y. oN bi printing, doing good bi Must have substantial down pay- ment. Good reason for selling. Apply Box 8, WILSON PUBLISHING CO. LTD. 73 Adelaide St. W, Toronto Cuticura Soap and Ointment lintiseptic so + « Bure and ire aug Unexcelled for cleansing, purifying and protecting the skin and hair, 50 years world-wide favorites You cap earn year ~by qualifying as Agent Telegrapher. Course approved by the railways. We secure positions, Write for Free Folder TODAY. Day or Mail courses. Deotninion School Telegraphy Led. | W.L. 2 Toronto Dept. Sagacious, gosh-awful carnivorous Cat Attacks and devours his prey at all hours, From elephants down to mere man ~think of that! If ever you go where you're worse off than nowhere The jungle of Bengal so wild and remote), Remember my warning, both evening and morning, Beware the big cat with the beau- tiful coat! BE Extremes He that had never seen a river im- agined the first he met to be the sea; and the greatest things that have fall- en within our Knowledge we conclude the extremes that nature makes of the king. Montaigne. PSR, Unselfishness To be unselfish is everything, espe- cially in love and friendship, was my highest pleasure, my maxim, my dis- cipline.--Gcethe, No one exempt from talking non- sense; the misfortune is to do it solemnly.--Montaigne. A Different Woman pleasure in informin you that valle have worked w ders for me 1 have Jeena. real re of Tier ! ond Kinoy froutée, an after trying one ama. [erent 1 had to Give bp my work, but Shanks to SRputehen Salts i am back at work again, and I I my son a little every morning, and I don't the little complaints Tow which a hid narally gets, He is happier and a's PA aha gf om and self. Bin. Them myself in a hurry." --(Mrs,) M. Original letter on Ble for Erischien Salts 1s obtalvable » an stores in Canada aé a at irs department A bottle contains Ha months--good health half-a-cent h 10 tant tor 4 or b a day. SRE ARs Ene Excess acid is. the. common causé of) indigestion, . It resul in. pain and sourness about two hours after eating. an alkall which best corrective tt ME the 0 years sin vention © One Phillips' Milk of to Magnesia nly instantly ma less and "tasteless and its action is uigk. You will never rely on érude methods, never continue to 'suffer, when You fearn * how quickly, how {Pleasantly this premier 'method acts. Please let it show you--fdow. - -- "Be! sure to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed: by physis cians for 50 yéars in correcting excess Hunters Take Minard's along for any mis haps in the woods, Good for sprains; cuts, burns and bruises. MINARD'S] By KING OF PAIN LINIMENT, fness HEAD ona RUB IN BACK OF EARS - INSERY IN NOSTRILS ue EAR OIX, Dect do folder on request. INARD, Inc. JA. 4/70 A eo New York City +. "After having an operation, { was | very miserable, weak, nervous and very near unfit to work. | saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advertised and tried it and believe it helped me wonderfully: | have no BY {aaldns Back bottle soutadus Jul diree-