nt down at •ad it waned tflsufferede that a •offer. Then eome one advised ms B. Pinkham's Vegetable I took it mtfl I was from the operation. 2 told woman of jour wonderfol Sao(Mdna times without number, and 1 awitting tfcat yoa should use theaa a and my name if yc* like. lata) ALKSTINK'S promising futuret; Certainly1 Palestine ta at the be& ginning of a new era. And ate though there are many difftcuf»' ties iu plain sight, this new erg; Is promising. "The view ,»f Jerusalem aa one leaves the Garden of Oeth* semane draws the heart wltlf" sympathy," writes William H. McCracken in Asia. "The walla rise severely above bare slopes where nothing grows, for It ftr outside the city proper that blbl^ 0 Never say "Aspirin" without saying ^ayer/^ ' ^ WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer" on tablets,; you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by| physicians over 21 years and proved safe by milions fori? ^ Colds vHeadache^ Rheumatism Toothachi^;-y Neuralgia Neuritis ( ; %' >t E a r a c h e S . L u m b a g f r , . r P a i n , P a l p . * , * ^Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. , % ,, Handy tia boxes of 12 tablets--Bottles of 24 and 100--AU druggists. AaplriB i* Ikt mark ri Barer ItmtMtm «C StBMRttaddNtK of 3«agllmfll It.;%#V-. - and I can doatt my ©wn wwrk but Iwy vwrL and can walk writes tww dsy as 1 bra nor husband is the office.' Z-lba. J. Hu Mew, 41* South Orange Stuffiantt, CaUfomia. Itfequne true that such troubles as i.)ieyer had may reach a stage where i operation is the only resource. On other hand, a graat many women »been restored to i'b Vegetable Com] Muriel's Birthday. The first two or three meant nothjtog in her young life. Then she began to observe thefe * Then she began to celebrate them. _ Then she not only celebrated them. •Sut advertised them. ^ Then ahe decided that tt would be 'friser Just to observe them. Then she began to wish that ahe In't observed them. - ;i Then she Ignored them. „• Then finally she denied tkms. However, there are always a few kind friends to remind her of them, jind to keep the score for her. Grinder Uses Any Current. The use of an aluminum alloy housing and a patented pistol grip and trigger switch makes this portable grinder easy to handle and gives the operator perfect control. Whil® it is essentially a portable machine designed to operate on either direct or alternating current, an attachment sent with the machine enables It to be converted into a bench--grinder in thirty seconds. This one machine Will handle every grinding, cleaning, bufftat or polishing job around the garage or shop.--Popular Selene** Monthly. LiflHtning Shave* Rrncher. A belt of ligimrfng played a meaC trick on Steve O'Donnell, a ranch** of Gallatin Valley, Mont., a few days agtv It struck a hayrack on which b* was riding and shaved all the haiir off the right side of his head, as clean as a raxor would haw done, leaving the hair on the left side untouched. The flesh was only slightly buraeg, O'Donnell was stunned. • The Awakenings He--Love Is like a dream. Rhe-^-Mtttrimony is an alarm deck. Unique Specimen., knew an eccentric Stated old Festus Pester, "who when he Sad gotten the desired number on his 'Jblephonfc did not demand fiercely. 4?Whiza! sissf Instead he invariably jpald civilly. This is John J. Poppen- 4ick, wishing to speak to Mr. Buckler.' His funeral was the largest ever $eld in the neighborhood where he had presided, and thereat strong men broke .'town and wept, like children, being convinced that they would never again {i|ee his like."--Judge. '•i* -- ' »»m.. ^ASPIRIN INTRODUCE* BY "BAYER" IN 1900 'if: vMsk for Name "Bayer" on the Tak> lata, Then You Need Never Worry. ^ If yon want the true, world-famous ^Aspirin, as prescribed by physicians j#or over twenty-one years, you must nsk for "Bayer Tablets of "Aspirin." ». The name "Bayer" •« stamped OB ' ijtach tablet and appears on each packs^ hge for your protection against Imita- '^Uana,--Advertisement. j • > v. -- ^ I n correctly Answered, •„r; "A fool can ask more questions than n wise man can answer. Isn't that so?" -. ri cannot answer you." This Crow Worth • Fortune. be Ten thousand dollars is said to have Sbeen refused by the owner of a trained crow which is now engaged In doing Mine stage stunts in this country. > 4 Fried chicken can be so expensive • pe to make finger bowls obsolete. " It la an idle whimsy, but bow many of his namesakes have read tbe poetry %f Homer? One trouble with a jealous woman . ils that she can't keep the lid on. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 BelliANS Hot water Sure Relief CLL-ANS 25i and 75# Packages, Everywhem rPlSOSi SAn AMD SANE for Coof^is (f Colds Tim array M itff«r«ai Iroai all «k« Q»K1 »*h«l. Ma Qft»l«i H« SLOW DEATH fX^SV*. AdMi, nervousness, difficulty fat urinating, often mean •erious disorders. The world's standard remedy for kidney, Brer, Uaddsr and uric add trouble*-- COLD MEDAL cai prophecies of the desolation of Jerusalem seem to be fulfilled. "Today the city stands midway between the ho£ ' rors of the Turkish regime and the promised goop 1 of the British mandatory rule. Nothing has beeil done as yet in a public way to beautify the citj.^ North and west the houses straggle outside tllgr walls; on the south forbidding slopes border tlffc\ road to Bethlehem; and on the east lies the tef» rible valley of Jehoshaphat--a valley of dry bonei. "Seventeen times destroyed--bitterly hated-*-' anxiously sought--how desperate a history since. Nebuchadnezzar captured it more than twenty-flv# centuries ago. "Redeemed today, but in her nakedness, Jerusalem waits to be clothed. She has as yet no grace, BO covering for her ugly wounds. Some day her sides will glisten with the brightness of a heavenly radiance; she will be washed and anointed like a bride waiting for the bridegroom." The prophetic part of this is written, of course, in Oriental imagery. Sir Herbert Samuel, the British high commissioner, puts the situation In plalll English and says, in his report to parliament: "Undeveloped and underpopulated, Palestine has possibilities of far more prosperity than the standard attained before the war." And Palestine's future is the concern of half the world. Christian, Jew and Moslem see in Palestine a holy land. It is a most interesting situation that is being worked out under our very ey«fc. It is an obvious chance for the punster; Palestine is indeed the "Promised Land." To whom is it promised? That is what Jew, Arab and Christian in Palestine are asking of the British government: The British government replies that under the mandate there will be complete freedom and equality for all religions and equal justice for all, regardless of religion, race or position. „ Sir Herbert's report to parliament makes IntejK esting reading, some of which must be done between the lines. Concerning the policy followed under the mandate he says: "The policy of His Majesty's British government contemplates the satisfaction of the legitimate aspirations of the Jewish race through- ' out the world in relation to Palestine, combined with a full protection of the rights of the existing population. For my own part I am convinced that the ineana can be found to effect this combination. The Zionism that is practicable is the Zionism that fulflljf this essential condition. It is the clear duty of the mandatory power *» promote the well-being of the Arab population, f«kthe same way as a British administration would regard it as its duty to promote the welfare el the local population in any part of our empire. The measures to foster the well-being of the Arabs should be precisely those which we should adopt in Palestine if there were no Zionist question, and if there had been no Balfour declaration. There is in this> policy nothing incompatible with reasonable Zionist aspirations. *' "On the contrary, If the growth of Jewish flnence were accompanied by. Arab degradation, or even by a neglect to promote Arab advano^. ment, it would fail in onp of its essential p# poses. "The grievance of the Arab wonld be a discreet to the Jew, and In the result the moral influence of Elonism would be gravely Impaired. "Simultaneously there must be satisfaction of that sentiment regarding Palestine--a worthy . ennobling sentiment--wltich, In increasing degree# animates the Jewries of the world. "The aspirations of these 14.000,000 of people also have a right to be considered. They aak for the opportunity to establish a "home" in the land which was the political and has always been the religious center of their race. They ask that this home should possess national characteristtee --In language and customs, in intellectual intSRp* eats, in religious and political institutions. "Thls is not to say that Jewish immigration Is to Involve Arab emigration, that the greater prosperity of the country, through the development of Jewish enterprises, is to be at the expense, and not to the benefit of the Arabs, that the use of Hebrew is to Imply the disappearance of Arabic, thpt the establishment of elected councils In the Jewish community for the control of Its affairs If to be followed by the subjection of the Arabs ts the rule of those councils. "In a word, the degree to whlcb Jewish national aspirations can be fulfilled in Palestine is condl- < > Mag qakk ratlaf and often ward off - diiifrr die--am Known aa tha national lameiiy of Holland for mora flan 200 I" yean. All drngglata. In three aizaa. jh$ Lask far 4km MN MMU «* mif hmm Cuticura Soap Complexions Are Healthy Saa»Sc,< : 2S ariSSc, Ta tioned by the rlghta St p r e s e n t I n h a b i t a n t s . These have been the principles which have guided the policy df my administration. "It is the policy of the administration to continue, wherever possible, to apply the Turkish lawa, to which the people are accustomed. Changes are made only when they are indispensable. Bfli- '• fiency is essential to good government, but there ^ is a point where efficiency may become harassing. - The danger of passing that point Is foreseen. "The many faiths and sects which find in \he 'Holy Laud their origin or their inspiration are free to maintain their teachers and pastors, and to "practice their cults, without let or hindrance. In the controversies that occasionally arise between them the policy of tbe administration has been strictly to maintain the status quo." Nevertheless, native Christians and Moslems are appealing to the British government - not to put into effect the Malfour declaration, because, they say, the Zionists wish "to evict and dispossess the Arab population of Palestine." The Balfour declaration. Issued in November, 1917, approves "the - establishment in Palestine of a national home for ' the Jewish people," and states that the British feov- •verament will use their best endeavors to faclll- " vtate this object, while at the same time reserving * ;to all non-Jewish communities their full civil and religious rights. The Zionists Assure the native peoples that their fears are groundless. "Oor policy In regard to the Arabs, as In regard to all our problems, is clear and straightforward." said Dr. Chalm Weizmann, president, in his address to the Twelfth Zionist congress, recently held at Carlabad. He declares, furthermore: , - "We intend ^o aliate no Jot of the rights guaranteed us by the Balfour declaration, and recog- - "nltlon of that fact by the Arabs Is an essential preliminary to the establishment of satisfactory relations between Jew and Arab. Their temporary Refusal to recognize that fact compels us to give^ thought to the means by which we can best safeguard our Yishub against aggression. Self-protection Is an elemental duty. But we proclaim most solemnly and unequivocally that we have in our own hearts no thought of aggression, no ihtention of trespassing on tbe legitimate rights of "fjjour neighbors. We look forward to a future in ' Hvhich Jew and Arab will live side by side In Pales- . tine, and work conjointly for the prosperity of the Icountry. Nothing will stand In the way of such a future, when once our neighbors realize that our rights are as serious s matter to us as th«|r rights are to them." That there are troubles of many kinds is evident from the report Some of these are referred to thua: "The methods of agriculture are, for the most part, primitive; the area of land now cultivated „could yield a far greater product. There are In addition large cultivable areas that are left unfilled. The summits and slopes of the hills are admirably suited to the growth of the trees, but there are no forests. Some Industries have been killed by Turkish laws ; none has been encouraged ; • the markets of Palestine and of the neighboring^ " countries are supplied almost wholly from Europe. "The seaborne commerce, such as It Is, Is loaded and discharged in the open roadsteads of Ja?a and Haifa; there are no harbors. "The country is underpopulated because of this lack of development. There are now in the whole of Palestine hardly 700,000 people, a population much less than that of the Province of Galilee alone in the time of Christ. "The long delay In the formal settlement of the international status of Palestine has tended to disturb the asisds of the people. Kven more serious has been the consequence that it has not been Bpasible to issue a government loan. Withont a • Ickeli, many public works that would be directly or indirectly remunerative, cannot be executed. "The financial conditions of eastern and central Europe tfnd internal difficulties within the Zionist organization in the United States have prevented the Zionist movement from providing as yet any large sums for enterprises of development or colonization-- although, indeed, several land purchases have been completed and many preparations made for the future. As a consequence, while there has been much pressure to admit Jewish lnuni grants there has been' comparatively little expansion in opportunities for employment.. 1 "The agricultural development of the country, . Mid, indeed, its urban development also, are greatly hampered by the condition of confusion into which the titles of ownership of land were allowed to fall during the Turkish regime. There Is here a tangle which will need years of patient effort to unravel." Of tbe total population of 700,000 the Jewish element numbers 76,000, almost all of whom have entered Palestine during the last forty years. The success of the Jewish agricultural colonies sttrscted the eager Interest of the masses of the ^Jewish people scattered throughout the world. . In many countries they were living under the pleasure of laws or customs which camped their capacities and thwarted their energies; they saw In Palestine the prospect of a home in which they might live at ease. Profoundly discontented, as numbers of them were, with a life of petty trade In crowded cities, they listened with ready ears to the call of a healthier and finer life as producers on the land. Some among them, agriculturists already, saw in Palestine the prospect of a soil not less fertile, •ml an environment far more free, than those to Which they were accustomed. Emigration of Jews to Palestine Is Increasing rapidly in central and festern Europe, and the new Palestine Immigration regulations would allow of a controlled immigration of. about 17.000 Zionists of the pioneer class during the coming year, said S. Landmann, secretary of the Zionist Organization, In an interview. Mr. Landmann. who is now tn Vienna on a special mission in connection with Jewish emigrants to Palestine, said the selection of the emigrants Is being made by the Zionist organization, which has established Palestine offices in the Important Jewish centers. Preference is given to young people. strong in body and determined in spirit, who have had actual experience In agriculture or other annual work, and who know Hebrew. Several thousands of such pioneers--known by the Hebrew name of Challtzlm--have already left, and others are waiting In the large centers until proper arrangements for th?lc transport can be made and until new'openings for employment In 1-Palestine are reported. ;One of the features of the pioneer movement 1 Isithat it Includes a fair proportion of girls of welltsldo families, who have decided co devote their fives to the new Palestine. They act as land girls and take care of the domestic arrangements In the Jewish colonies. " ^Reviewing the whole field In "Zionism and World jpOlltlcs." Dr. Horace Meyer Kallen concludes that St least the cornerstone of the future Zionist edifice has been laid. And Dr. Kallen believes that this is an event of profound and hopeful significance for the Jewish race. He feels that the Jew has too long been compelled to choose between tbe unwelcome alternatives of sinking his rich cultural and spiritual heritage in thoroughgoing assimilation with the life of the country In which be lives and of leading the starved, unhappy existence of a suspected outcast, a man with a det nite racial consciousness but without a country. CANADA JandofProspoily/V offeri to bome wektii ocportunkiM that caMOt be secared ebewbere. The thousands farms* from tbe United States who have accepted Caa> •da'a generous offer to settle oa FREE horn " er bar farm land In htr provinces have bee maid by bonntifal crops. Then Is stffl FwMbTnTiirSIB to tW M ten •Hand similar to that which thr tos jrlslded from SO to 4S h la tba act•--oats, barley and flax aho la aiMt en in western Canada km raised cre(jB • » •ingleseason worth more than tha wbols costal their land. With such succ*«s cocnss umoswHj. independence, good homes and ai thaMWU and conveniences which stake Itfa worth Svmc. Farm Carflam, Paalby, Dairying are sources of income second only to grain growing and stock raising. Attractive climate, good neighbors, chorcbes; schools, MOI martotaTrsUraad facttttas, natal trie- C. J. SROUGHTON. ROOM TTL. 1»J W, AdiiwSt»Chiesee,HL:I.M.IIsdiAQfiAll] M Itflwws Ansa, Detroit MID-AIR NO MORE DRUDGERY IN KITCHEN Gearing Generation of Houeewivee ' IM/I Erect a Statue to Memory of Denver Man. A builder In Denver Is installing in his newest apartment house a service which is nothing short of revolutionary. He is putting a dish-washing machine in the basement. It will be operated by a man. Ail that women Y>«nn will have to do Is to pile their dishes into baskets, set them on the dumb waiter, and take them off, when they come up, clean. This ideal landlord declares that, la view of the shortage of domestic help, he is trying to make housekeeping easy and pleasant for housewives. He plans to have a delicatessen store In the basement, from which meals can be sent to apartments by tbe dumb waiter. In «onnectlon with this iag*» ice the idea occurred to him, that even If a woman preferred to cook her own dinner, ahe would like to have her dishes washed. What a cbangfe from days not long past, when man was In the habit of telling woman to "go home and wash the dishes!" Now he takes the dishes right out of the home and washes them for her. Housekeepers In separate homes will soon demand similar service. The establishment of "dish laundries" may life to modern coaditteofc^Chrlstlsn Science Monitor. Unto the End. "How's this?" asked the lawyer, "You've named six bankers in your will to be pallbearers. Of course, it's all right but wouldn't you rather choose some friends with whom you are on better terms?" "No, Judge, that's all right. Ithoae fellows have carried me for so long they might as well finish the Job."--The American far the n e s t s t e p I h a l j u a t t n g h e m e b e g a n W e e k l y . v ^ SURGICAL WORK French Authorities Equip Airplanes ijtfl^h Every Appliance Necee* . Sary for Any Operation. TIM* French authorities have found airplanes so useful for transport and other services In their colonial territories that they Intend to Introduce large multi-englned airplanes, which will be assigned, with a pilot and a small stair of mechanics, to surgeons who have large territories to cover. The cabins will be equipped as operating theaters possessing every life-saving device that modern surgery can suggest. The surgeon, with his assistant acting as anesthetist, will be able to perform major as well as minor operations Just as readily in remote areas as If he had his patient in a well-equipped hospital. It will be possible, should a patient In transit develop any, suddenly adverse symptoms, to perform a delicate ope jetton lo mid-air. Not Vain. have you been my poor fellow?" asked a kind-hearted visitor at a local hospital of a big negro who was strapped up In bed with an Injured back. "Dls ain't no pose 'tall, miss,'* an- •werd the patient In tones of disgust. "Dls am merely de careless manner In which dein forgetful doctors went away and leT me yestlddy.* - -mi No man should try to r*rt» eft' automoble unless be has horse sense. States and Autemobtlee. Pennsylvania leads the Union In* tbe number of passenger automobiles . registered, according to a tabnlatlMh* prepared by the bureau of. pabBv roads. United States Department e#i •Agriculture. The total number S^' such cars registered in Pennsylvania IgK 557,765. California had only several, hundred fewer--557,231. Passenger automobiles In New York are eetfc» mated, In the lack of complete tnfar* matlon, at 505.642. Other states sbewNV Ing large registrations are Ohio, 547,•» 000; Illinois, 512.541, and Texas. 412,- 382. Nevada has the smallest ber of registrations, 8,688. • f V An Eya to Business. ^ pardon," said the stout, halS , pi gentleman who had blundered Into beauty parlor. *Tm la tbe wwog^^ place." "Not necessarily,'* replied Mma* '3'. Kalso. "We have had great sacceo* v v' in reducing plump persons and wtt hair restorer is the best on the mai*; ""^ ket.w " vT "But rm looking (or a Mr. Partes* ; d a divorce lawyer." „, "Three doors down the hallway, sir, * to your left. But please take this car* - with you. If you get your divorce yeatj; * may want to look In on aa again."*-* Birmingham Age-Herald. A wise person likes flattery he realises that It flows entirely good will. The successful musician baa ai for tone and an eye for coin. rs*4 : What Kind of a Day Do You Wish Yourself? Suppose you covftl make a wish ii ttl* breakfast table and finally have tha wiah coma trua. Would you say, , ^ "I wsnt tins to ba a food day," or--'H tfci willing for 'this day to drag along?" If you keep on wishing your daya with the food yon eat, finally tbs wish is lifcely tu coos troa. Grape-Nuts helps your wish for a good dajfc Nothing miraculous; just the natural reault foam right food with the right taste. There ia a charm of flavor and crispoeaa to Grape-Nuta that is like the smile of a good friend at the breakfast table-- And Grape-Nuta, with cream or mOk (fra«tt or tinned), is fully nourishing--feeding the tissues and glands, the bone and blood, with just thoaa •laments which Nature re<iuiras*™*bmld^||^ Strength without any "heaviness." Grape-Nuts ia the perfected goodness ct wheat and malted barley, scientifically developed --ready tr eat from the package. A Grape-Nuts breakfast or lunch is a practical wish for good hx& "There's a Reason?