JAR 86. NO, 14a "FOR BRONCHITS A Coal Miner Thinks There Is No Remedy Like Vinol. Belleville, 111.--"1 am a coal min- er, . 1 doctored for months for a chrome case of bronchitis with a ter- rible cough, sore chest, throat and Jungs, so I could not work. I could get no relief until 1 tried Vinol. I stopped my cough and buit up my strength and I feel better in every way,"--Andrew J. Gray. : It is the healing, tissue building properties of fresh cods livers aided bw the strengthening blood building elements of tomie iron contained in Vinol which makes it so successful in overcoming chronic cough, colds and bronchitis. Mahood"s Drug Store and at the best drug store in every town 'and city in the country. SEMI ready Talk. Semi-ready Talk: "Pictures ard very pretty--and very handy to have around when 'a fellow is unable to write intelli- gently about the things he has to tell. "Picture advertising in clothing has reached the apex of style and ¢ost. 'New York artists get $500 for an imaginary picture of an Apol- lo-wearing Dukenheimer's latest cre- ation. "But the real makers of fashion-- the designers of style-- recognize the creative talent in Montreal by hold- ing their Fashion Convention here this, year, = These men gan't draw but they were willing to come from all parts of America to show the Semi-Ready Designer the best they had and see the studios where Ssmi- ready styles are created." DAVID J. WILL, 213 Princess St. Alkali In Shampoos Bad For Washing Hair Don't use prepared shampoos or anything else, that contains too much alkali, for this is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle, The best thing to use is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil, for this is pute and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and heats anything else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces last the whole family for months. "and rub it in, abo ds cleanses thoroughly, ly, The hair dries quickly and evenly, and {s soft, fresh looking, bright, flufty, wavy and easy to han- Besides, it loosens and takes out icle of dust, dirt and dan- -- miply moisten the hair with wall | the colony was stirred by {impending raids. Sitting Bull was OUR ARCTIC EXPLORER PEN PORTRAIT OF VILHJALMUR STEFANSSON. (He Had a Narrow Escape From a Business Career, But Became an Adventurer and His Exploits Culminated In the Discovery of the Blonde Eskimos. 3 HROUGH the medium of the American-Scandinavian Re- view the reader is presented with an interesting pen por- trait of Vithjalmur Stefansson, the famous Arctic explorer, who is acknowledged to. be the foremost scientist-explorer the world. The writer, John Holmes, prefaces his sketch of the explorer's life and pers sonality as revealed to him in a re cent interview by a few introductory remarks, in which he refers to the affinity between the ancient Norse Vikings and the modern explorer-- both possessing in an unusual de- gree a fundamental desire for travel and adventure. Although by parent- age 'an Icelander, Stefansson is by birth a Canadian. The famous ex- plorer Mr..Holmes found to be 'a modest, soft-spoken person with the mild and unaffected manner oftén characteristic of men who have ac- complished big things." "There is a touch of the i- clan in his speech and gestures, and the only scars he bears of his battles with the North are patterns of fur- rows around the eyes, such as you might find adding good humor to the countenance of any Western rancher who has lived much in the open where the winds are never still, He is of good, medium height with a well-knit frame and the fair com- plexion and light-colored hair char- acteristic of the Icelanders, perhaps the fairest of the Scandinavian peoples. > "He 'gives no such impression of dynamic force or physical vigor as his great fellow explorers, Amund- sen, Shackleton or Peary, when the North Pole discoverer was in his prime. Yet I believe that Stefansson has commanded as large expeditions a8 any of these men, and he has un- doubtedly tramped greater distances around the top of the earth than any other man. I wondered at first wherein lay his strength, and al- most before I knew it I had my answer. "In the course of our talk I thoughtlessly questioned the literal- ness of something he had said about his poldr experiences. Well, I struck flint at once. He thought, of course, that'I doubted his word, and I am glad he 3s 1 sa t a slisipse. of Ra e ! 16] was ollod. of tie She volver "Stefansson belongs by right to the select log cabin class of famous men, now becoming almost as rare as buffalo fur coats. He was born in 1879 in an immigrant's cabin on the shore of Lake Winnipeg, north of the Canadian city of that name. His parents were among the first Ice- landers to venture from their,native island to try their fortunes in the | New World. They moved ina prairie Schooner ucross the line' into what was then the Territory of Dahoka, when the future explorer was eigh- teen months old, 'and settled in & farming colony of Icelandic immi- grants near the hamlet of Mountain, Pembina County. Here Stefansson 8T€W up on his father's farm twenty miles from a railroad. The country was wild enough to harbor a few In- dian bands, and every now and then reports of a still 'alive, and to the Icelanders he was a sort of American troll," which Rover materialized, however, in their midst, most poverty stricken Icalander, the saga classics, a few epic ballads, ri- mur--and, of course, the Icelandic - ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1919 be Baily British Whig Find a Frenchman, Two years ago today, June 20, 1917, the first contingent of American troops, under Major (ieneral Sibert, arrived in France. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle--Upside down nose at Kaiser's collar. ed ha nt mi Forks. That journey was a memor- able event, for, at eighteen, hé had aever before ridden in a railroad train. 'He then proposed to sail around Alaska to study the Pacific side of the Polar regions, Stefansson preferred a short cut across the Continent to the Mackenzie delta, and induced Harvard and Toronto universities to finance this trip. He traveled by Hudson Bay steamers down the Mac- kenzie, tramped part of the way, and arrived on the shores of the Aretie Ocean in a light overcoawand a blue serge suit. 'And I knew just exactly what I was doing,' said Stefansson, 'l was going to live with the Eski- mos, learn their language and study them; and I did. I could never have own quarters, dressing as a white man and living like a white man. 1 got my furs, caught fish and killed game, cooked it nyself in the Eskimo Lhuts, ate delicious meals, whenever I was hungry, and stayed for eighteen months," 2 "His second Aretic exjedition kept him in the Far North for fifty-three months, 'from. 1908 to 1912. This expedition was under the auspices of the Government of Canada. It was on this trip that Stefansson found origin, nant of the lost Norse. colony of Greenland, In the course of this expedition Stefansson added many new features to the map of Northern Canada, exploring one river, the Hor- ton, more than five hundred miles in length. He commanded the Canadian expedition of 1913-18, from which he has just returned, one of the most elaborately and expensively equipped #r expeditions 'ever undertaken. ¢ explored and mapped about one- fourth of the 1,000,000 square miles of the hitherto unknown polar ro gion of the Western Hemisphere, found new islands, corrected the out- lies ot others on the map and estab- the non-existence of one is- ud, the discovery of which had been , iunced some years ago. 1 ; "dhere remains but one thing more 4o tell of Stefansson, and con- sidering the fact that I have already stated that he is an Icelander, it seems nlmost superfluous to niention that he started out to be a poet. He contributed verse to the college lit- ol 'monthly in his undergraduate days, and even achieved the distinc in of having his translations of Iee- ndic poenis published in an Eastern a hive read some of aa Verse written many years ago, can testify to its merit." apd THE CARIBOU. done it effectively by putting up my | the blond Eskimos, showing unmis- | ful y ~Ruropean and believed by many to be the rem by © 19 Brock St. We have a supply of cut hard wood and kindli . * J. Sowards Coal Co. and motor cars, lig and generating systems of all makes, and storage batteries. Inquire about the new threaded bone dry battery before purchasing. WILLARD SERVICE STATION I, LESSES, Prop. 'Phone 1340 mmr 'The mountains," Be said, 'seemed to | |i be alive and moving." Various other: reports sustain the estimates of mil- lions of caribou in the Barren Lands of Canada." At present the herds are inateess- ible 'except to a few bold explorers and hunters, but as settlement and railway building move northward it may be necessary to take measures of precaution against such indiserimin- ate slaughter as destroyed the vast herds of buffalo or bison in Canada and the United States. An immense supply of food is available for our future needs, and this is a part of our national resources which should be carefully conserved. A Canadian Choir. Considerable success has heen en- Joyed in id by the Bramshott Canadian Male Voice Choir, a vocal organization conducted by Sergt. J. bh Adamson, who was well known in Toronto . the war as an or- ganist, choirmaster and music teach~ er, Since last Autumn this male choir, made up of Canadian soldiers, has given & series of concerts in London and elsewhere in England, their programs including composi- Sons ke Gounod s "By Dabo ave," Edwa erman's "0 Peace by church music be familiar with Sergt's 's 'sacred compositions. He has also written a number of ly which, "Tintagel" nfid * concerts, London, England, by the well known Engl Miss Olga Haley: Ontario School Statistics, According to the Minister of Bdu~ 'cation's report for 1918 the attend- ance during the year was 561,865, divided: Public, 457,816; Separate, 70,04%; High schools and collegiate institutes, 29,087; continuation schools, 5,104. are 6,102 Public: Schools, with 11,274 teach- ; B48 Separate schools or col- légiate institutes, with 1,051 teach- ers; 137 continuation schools, with 241 teachers. The Public school at- tendance averaged 295,652, an in- crease of 3,047. Separate schools at- tendance was 46,019, an increase of 722. The total -expendifiire for schoo! purposes was $16,865,431, an aver age of J per head for the total ish e2a0-S0pIano, : ada Kingston Cement Products Factory Makers (of Hoflow Damp- Proof Cement Blocks, Bricks, Sills, Lintles, and Drain Tile, also Grave Vaults, : And all kinds of Ornamental Cement Work. Factory, cor. of Charles and Pacrick streets. Phone 730W, EVERYBODY'S DOING IT Come on folks, spring is calling you to do your Sleguing and painting now, and we are ready to supply you with all neces~ sities to do the job right. Paints, oils, varnishes, fillers, brush. es, pails, brooms, mops, dusters--everything is here, and what is more, prices are moderate during this May clean-up and Paint-up time ¢ STEVENSON & H Phone 53 85-87 Princess St ) Ton messasase I Am No Alarmist--But | Say "Buy All The Clothes You Can Now" There is no use beating around the bush. Bare facts must 'be met with plain statements. i" The cost of woolens to-day is gradually reaching a new high | mark. Labor conditions are very unsettled and the sost of produc-. 1 "tion has increased accordingly: mm Never has there been such a demand for merchandise, higher prices to prevail. hat AND In I CONG TO GET WORSE e buying ic should at this time more than ever, be careful where they make their purchases. The already high-priced .mer- chant sees a good opportunity to add on extra profit an blame it on conditions. But I am maintaining the enviable reputation | have es- tablished by not deviating from the policy that has made me the larg- gst sluthiey in Canada with a chain of stores from coast to coast, that of selling fn y num Cone Men and Save rei pes gma causing -answered--1 give the best VAIL.U Ur o ode patterns and fabrics Tha yoason ¥ Have sold over one-eighth the dale pilation"e Can. | is easily ani ESS Concila a. Drop s In most attractive looms. : Rr 2 ih that your eyes will be opened by the enormous + sign |