given you carefully TrestOr careful to deal moneyâ€"changers or else nick e you. That is t a guaranty tha There are certain creatures wh’ch never feel the pangs of thirst, for they are so constituted that drink is unnecessary to them, and they never swallow a drop of water in their lives. Among these animals are certain gaâ€" relles of the Far East and Hamas of Patagonia. The male of the honeyâ€"bee comes between the {ueen and the workers in sire, and in stingless, # real thing on apa mm mmmmmamnmenmmmmmemeamcees m 1 Am“â€"â€"â€"u-m Treaty Provides for “; m‘l[' Lm Nowhere is there so much eounter-‘ cit money as in China, and in no| ther place is counterfeiting so skillâ€"] ully done. Lead dollars that look exâ€" ctly like the real thing are as plentiâ€" ul as blackberries in summer, and in iddition thoere are other doliars in vhich the silver has been dug out rom the insides and the other surface arefully restored; so you have to be| areful to deal only with reputable noneyâ€"changers, who stamp in black r _ else nick every dollar they give you. That is their "chop," and it is * _ uty that their money is the| Everywhere most of our troubles| c money troubles, writes Dorothy Dix . My Trip Round the World, but noâ€" here is the money questson such a »xation to the spirit as it is in China. here every city issues iIts own curâ€" ncy. which is not legal tender in iv other city. Pekin money is not sod in Shanghaf, Shanghai dotlars l!l not pass in Hongkong; the Canâ€" m merchant refuses your Hongkong »l@;: and you are forever running to ie moneyâ€"changers, who charge you a | iz discount for turning the currency ‘ one city into that of another. Worse still, there is "big money" nd "little money," both of which you ust bhave, and this is a sort of & ~ancial joke that you never quite unâ€" »rstand. For you can take a dollar, hich is "big money," and get it inged into "little money," and have dollar and fifteen or a dollar and venty cents. If you buy some small ticle that you can pay for with the vact amount in "little money," the ‘erchant will take it; but if you byy n article costing, say, one dollar and ventyâ€"five cents or qyo dollar and a alf, he will not take b&ack in part payâ€" ent the "little money" he has just Aoneyâ€"Changing in China. verywhere mof money troubles y Trip Round re is the mon ation to the spi re every city i Foundary Adjustments We th oundary line in a state of efâ€" lemarcation, by repair and reâ€" f boundary monuments and )ening of boundary vistas. djustment ot the boundary in > of the Woods region is a matâ€" onsiderable satisfaction. The reference to the point is conâ€" n the description of the bounâ€" f the United States in the f Parisa of 1783. By the treaty it, 1814, commissioners were d to decide upon the boundâ€" ugh the Great Lakes as fatr the northwesternmost point ike of the Woods. In 1818 the rallel of latitude was decided he boundary from the lake of ods to the Rocky mountains; the latitude and longitude of hwesternmost point in the lake Voods was determined, and in ine was run south connecting it ad the 49th parallel. { the vicinity of the northâ€" â€"s* point on the lake of the ised on notes of the surveys showed that this meridan intersected in five places lary passing through the | the treaty recently signed or the moving of the boundâ€" known as the "northwesternâ€" t" of the lake of the Woods due south, and thereby ig to Canada two small as of about two and a halt extent which were formerly ie United States, but which ‘ely surrounded by Canadian somewhat anomalous situaâ€" : treaty also stipulates that lary south of the provinces )ba, Saskatchewan, and Al iall consist of a series of nes joining adjacent boundâ€" meuts, instead of the preâ€" s of curved lines which are ‘ determination. The straight er deviate from the curves : than a few inches, and the . involved is only about 25 ng a boundary of $53 miles . _ In this case the United the gainer. A small zone n Grand Manan channel beâ€" > provinces of New Brunsâ€" the state of Maine and formâ€" ntrovertible jurisdiction, has ded between the two counâ€" xtending the boundary 2,383 om its former terminus, to seas. The treaty also proâ€" the permanent maintenante justments in the Internaâ€" dary between Canada and States which will remove nalies and otherwise lim’-l ork of the lntemtloual; ‘ommission, are provided aty signed at Wuhinm‘ bruary, 1925. All matters the boundary between the nd the United States are a joint commission comâ€" e commissioner from each ‘ ir. J. D. Craig, Director| Surveys, Department of , being His Britannic l&-‘ missioner. | to anyone needing a tonic. t There are many troubles due to weak, watery blood which can casily be overcome by a fair use of Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills. The sole mission of this medicine is to enrich and purify the blood and when that is done all | the varied symptoms of anaemia disâ€" ‘appear, and good health returns. You , can get these pills through any dealer | in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box , by writing The Dr. Williams‘ ! Medfcine Co., Brockville, Ont. as ever. I can walk 'utoppln‘ every few for breath as previ !lllms' Pink Pills will | in the future if ever | building up again, an lnnd pleasure in recc [WY ARYoRn mdailws‘s i From a Lady Made Well by Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. in bel old Zuriel Cook married Polly Lombard at Henderson, New York, early in the nineteenth century. His large family of children were named as follows: Zuriel, Zeresa, Zeremo, Zeinus, Zephâ€" ronia, Zerodia, Zedina, Zegotus, Zeâ€" lora, Zethaniel, Zeruth, Zelobus, Zeâ€" delia and last of all James. It is fair to presume that James was a posthumous child. If Mr. Cook had lived the boy would probably have been named Zephaniah or Zerubbabel. Some persons have a queer, not to' say a perverse, humor in names, andl when they happen to be parents they often inflict on their offspring namesl that are a lifelong embarrassment. A| writer in the Boston Herald rocallsl the case of a man named Zuriel Cook, who, having been cursed with an out-‘i landish name, determined that all his | children should suffer with him. | "I wish from my heart I could perâ€" suade every person who is run down in health to give Dr. Williatms‘ Pink Pills a trfal," Thus writes Mrs. Louie Mitchell, Oak Point, Man., who furâ€" ther says:â€""About a year ago I was a weak woman, suffering from a run down system and impoverished blood. Any little exertion would cause my legs to tremble and my heart to throb violently, 1 could not sweep a room or walk fifty feet without being exâ€" hausted. Then 1 began taking Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and after taking only six boxes I am as well and strong as ever. I can walk and run without stopping every few seconds gasping for breath as previously. Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills will be my standâ€"by in the future it ever my blood needs building up again, and I shall always Shus d s es on & ___=~We Buy aiiYear Rounp â€" Write today for pricesâ€"we guaranteo } them for a week ahcad Regarded as the largest of its kind | the world, an oakâ€"tree was recentâ€"| blown down in California. It is | lieved to be from 700 to 1,000 years | POULTRY, GAME,EGGS, BUTTER a~â€" FEATHERS 36-397&;\;%':;::: ‘[Market â€" Montroal P.PouLn & CO., LIMITED A Family of Z‘s. smm uS Your 29 Reasons Why You‘ll Enjoy The Telegram 10. 11. 12 13 14 REWARD MISSING Andrew Gump Esq. Uncle Wiggily comic strip. Fashion pictures and news. Authoritative financial page Dumb Dora comic strip. Freckles and His Friends « Daily recipes. Sporting pages. Rube Goldberg comic strip. Fairy tale. Cornelia‘s column. ° Grain and live stock quota gqflll story. Color cutâ€"out. Society news. ‘rson who is run down ive Dr. Williams‘ Pink Thus writes Mrs. Louie Point, Man., who furâ€" THE EVENING TELEGRAM wnoes vemeaeeae enesamnne onl eE "HC recommending them live stock quotation®. Friends comic strip TORONTO A number of motoring â€"experts seem to incline to the view that many drivers have dozed at the drivingâ€" wheel at one time or other during their career. But they add that usualâ€" ly in such cases the man who dozes is still perfectly capable of driving his car without danger to himself or other passengers. F a heavy day. He found it difficult to keep awake, and finally succumbed to sleep. He was unconscious for about ten minutes, when he suddenly awoke to find that he had brought his car correctly to a standstill in front of a clostd level.crossing. y "Sigh No More, Ladies."= ' Many gemâ€"like songs are found ;lnl Shakespeare‘s plays, The following ul Balthazar‘s song in "Much Ado About Nothing" ; : â€" | Bing no more dittles, sing no more Of dumps so full and heavy; The fraud of men was ever so, Since summer first wes leavy. Then sigh not so, but let them £0, And be you blithe and bonny; f Converting all your sounds of wos Into, Hey nonny, rnonny. One case which occurred during the War seems to suggest that, in such circumstances, some special instinct keeps the sleeper right. An Engineer who was driving for the General Staff was ordered out with a big car after Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more; Men were deceivers ever ; One foot in sea, and one on shore; To one thing constant never; Then sigh not so, but let them £0, ‘And be you blithe and bonny ; Corverting all your sounds of woe Into, Hey nonny, nonny. It was recently stated that a motorâ€" ist had been fatally injured in a road accident caused by dozing while he was driving. * A Good Loserâ€"Always has more friends than a poor winner. â€"â€"Finds it easy to accept defeat by remembering that toâ€"mcrrow means a new chance. * head. 6izs â€"Is always the first to get a new opportunity. % â€"Is one who put principles above profits Is one who keeps his selfâ€"respect even though he loses the game. â€"Has never lost until he loses his â€"Saves the time that poor losers spend framing up alibis. There are crises in every man‘s life. One.â€"of the most fateful is when the barber gets to your Adam‘s apple just when you‘ve got to swallow. Ditto is the Engiish form of the Italian word detto. In the original it means "as aforesaid." A Poem You Should Know. | WE WANT CHURNING: Steering in Their Sleep. Sentence Sermons. Where Is Andy Gump? T HE Gump family is plunged in gloom! Min and Chester are desolate. Andy, the breadwinner, is still missing. Dame Rumor says that Andy is headed back to Toronto. â€" There‘ll be a real clue next week. Goldberg, Gluyas Williams, Blosser, Chic Young, W. J. Enwright and others are daily contributors. Meanwhile, the best comic strips and magazine features are found every day in THE EVENING TELEGRAM. Rube Read THE EVENING TELEGRAM every day for laughs as well as news. It is Toronto‘s favotite newspaperâ€"read in five out of six homes. Buy it toâ€"night from your news agent or subscribe now. 15 16. 17. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 21 "What‘s Trump in Poultry." Radio page. Short stories. > Flapper Fanny says. Uncle Wiggily Bedâ€"time Stories Tips to housewives. Club activities. Cartoons. Daily puzzles. Golfing instructions. Chess and checker problems. "Salesman Sam." "Out Our Way." Latest world news. Gluyas Williams‘ drawings. ONTARIO We ‘supply cans and pay express charges. We pay daily: by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge: The motherâ€"inâ€"law of a young wife is undoubtedly in a difficult position. She has brought up her son, often at very great sacrifice. When he comes to her with the news that he has deâ€" cided to get married she is full of mixed feelings. > To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad favors and contain not less than 30 per cent Butter Fat The young wife won‘t understand her motherâ€"inâ€"law‘s feelings until she is a motherâ€"4nâ€"daw herseif. For referencesâ€"Head OfMce, Toronto, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker, Established for over thirty years. Most of the interference of relatives is meant kindly, although it is done so clumsily that it fails absolutely in its object. f A * The littlée blunders of éarly married life never do much harm, certainly not so much harm as the quarrels that enâ€" sue when relatives interfere. The greatest mistake young married people can make is to live with the parents of either, after marriage. _ The first year of marriage is a year of adjustments. Young people, durâ€" ing an engagement, see each other at their best: After marriage they, find out all sorts of little things about each other, things that disappoint, unâ€" til tenderness and tolerance help them to hbear them. * If they are alone these differences soon fade. When relations ire there the temptation to confide is too great to resist, and once a third person is dragged in, all the privacy that is so important a part of married life, vanâ€" ishes. CREAM Young people should start nestâ€" building alone, éven if they can get only one room. And relations will, if they are wise, stand aloof until the period of adjustment is past. Color Six Centuries Old. Beige, the fashionable color of the day, was popular six centuries and more ago.. Monks who illuminated old manuscripts used this color for garbâ€" ing their saints and angels. > Ask for Minard‘s and take no other,. Bowes Company Limited, Toronto Motherâ€"inâ€"Law‘s Mistakes. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Most p_oopk would be:surprised if told that the dandelion growirg on their back lawn had its origin in Afriâ€" ca. ~Yetthis might easily be so, for seeds do travel in the most remarkâ€" able way. % e * _ _ How, then, do they do it? One way is by air. Those that‘travel in this manner have a kind of wing or paraâ€" chute attached to their seed, by means of which they can be carried by the wind for miles before they finally come to earth and grow. Others with the aid of a light float take a sea voyage and travel with the current of the water for great disâ€" tances. Rut by far the most interestâ€" ing way ~* a!l is the seed that travels with animals and birds. This is done with the help of a hooked attachment which clings to the animai‘s fur. Charles Darwin once took from the foot of a wandering bird a small fragâ€" ment of hardened earth; this he moisâ€" tened and warmed, and waited with curiosity to see whether or not anyâ€" thing would grow from it. To his surâ€" prise no fewer than eighty plants sprang from this small portion of soil. Baby‘s Own Tablets Ars Fine for Nervous, Sleepless Children. MANY MOTHERS RECOMMEND THEM From Canada: the fame of Baby‘s Own Tablets is spreading over the world. Mothers recommend them to other.mothers and wherever they are tried nothing but words of praise are heard for these pleasant tasting little tablets that promptly â€" relieve the minor @gilments of young children. "Baby‘s Own Tablets are one of the best remedies for children‘s ailments Iâ€"have ever used," â€"s@ys Mrs. Arthur T.‘ Allen, of Auburn, Me. "My little girl was nervous and could not sleep. I tried the tablets« and she was reâ€" lieved at once,. She was also troubled with constipation and nothing seemed to help her. I had used the tablets but a short time before her bowels were regular. . All mothers should keep Baby‘s Own Tablets in the house for they are a valuable remedy." Baby‘s Own Tablets are sold by all druggists or.wlll be mailed on receipt of price, 25" cents per box, by the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co.,_ Brockville, Ont. A dittle booklet, "Care of the Baby in Health and Sickness," will be sent free to any mothéer on requcst. Britain Leads in Wireless Progress. The new wireless station which the British Government expects to open next year at Rugby will make it posâ€" sible for Great Briain to talk to the entire world without the aid cf interâ€" mediaries. Trials start in November, with twelve "Eiffel Towers," as the giant masts, which rise 820 feet in the air, are called. Never before has the Riffel Tower in Paris been approached so nearly in height within the British Empire, although the famous tower in Paris is 90 feet high. The masts are among the tallect in the world, and are twice the height of St. Paul‘s dome. Five other stations are being built simultaneously with Rugbyâ€"at Bodmin, Bridgewater, Skegness, Grimsby and Dorchester. Britain conâ€" fidently hopes to lead the world in wireless development, and link up with the Mother Country not only the farâ€"flung Dominions and colonies, but every otherâ€"part of the world. Had Acquired the Taste. Missionary (much encouraged) â€" "So you like religion very much?" Cannibalâ€""Yes, we acquired a taste for it from the last iwo missionaries we had." Sheep raising has, for many years,| scientist been an important branch of farming | on Manitoulin Island, Ontario. Be-( The t sides the good outlet for lambs to| much g« tourist camps during the summer | century months, large numbers of lambs have'==== been marketed in the fall in Toronto| and other centres. Owing to a dry season a few years ago, the sheep en population of the island fell away to some extent, but it is steadily building up and with better stock than was | previously®®aised. | A Last Liar Has Best Chance. "When I was in India," said the club bore, "I saw a tiger come down to the water where some women were washâ€" ing clothes. It was a very fierce tiger, but one woman with great presence of mind, splashed som» water in its face â€"and it slunk away." "Gentlemen," said a man in an arm chair, "I can vouch for the truth of this story. Some minutes after the incident occurred, I was coming down to the water. I met this tiger, and as is my habit, â€" stroked his whiskers. Gentlemen, those whiskers were wet." Willie‘s Proxy. ~"Willy, won‘t you. have some more jce cream?" "No, ma‘am.â€" Mother says I don‘t want any more." Minard‘s Liniment for Distemper. Sheep on Manitoulin Island. . How Plants Travel. ==« _ ~Perhaps you are using good tea. We think "Red Rose" extra good. â€"~Won‘t you try it? Other elements enter in, however, to complicate the situation. Among these are: The amount of money a merchant can wisely use for advertisâ€" ing; the character and variety of stocke; .the size of . cach advertiseâ€" ment; the use of other means of adâ€" vertising. These and other factors, with the problems . and alternatives they present, must be carefully conâ€" sidered in planning advertising. The oftener your advertising apâ€" pears, the quicker it builds up a folâ€" lowing and the more productive it beâ€" comes. The thing to do then is to make sure your Advertising appears. When the Titanic disaster borrified the civilized world, one of the tales of miraculous: escape concerned Oscar Palmquist, of Bridgeport, Conn. When the Titanic smashed into the i¢éberg Palmquist was flung into the iceâ€"cold midnight waters of the Atlanâ€" tic. He swam for hours, hopeless of saving his life, but dauntlessly refusâ€" ing to. let himself give up. The icy waters chilled him to the bone. He was bruised and battered by floating debris. _ Again and again the waves broke over his head, or eddies sucked him under. ; The yenrfts the logical basis for the advertising plan. Each day holds sales possibilities. You must make ‘But he swam on! kept afloat by his indomitable willâ€"power and byâ€" his strength and prowess 2s a swimmer. At last ,after many hours, a rescue ship picked him up, more dead than alive. He recovered quickly from his hideous experience none the worse for it. The reported discovery of a plateau only 150ft. beneath the surface of the Atlantic serves to remind us how litâ€" tle we know of the portion of the earth‘s surfaceâ€"nearly threeâ€"fourths of the wholeâ€"that is covered by the sea. A few months ago the newspapers recorded Palmquist‘s death. HMe was drowned in a pool barely six feet deep. It was only in 1901 that the stupenâ€" dous Britannia submarine mountain range was discovered by the cable ship Britannia in the South Pacific. Tell me not in smiling numbers, Selling costs are what they seem And the man who cuts for orders Gets the lion‘s share of cream. If you strive to build a business, Do not be a human sieveâ€" Letting leak your needed profit, Trusting luck will let you live. Lives of dead ones all remind us What it means to sell on guess; Their departure makes us keener To sell right and not sell less. For no trade can long be loyal To a man who‘s all regretsâ€" Can‘t deliverâ€"whose just living On the interest of his debts. The Edward VIL range, tco, in the North Atlantic, was unknown to oceanographers until comparatively lately, although some peaks rise to within 100 fathoms of the surface Near by is Mount Laura Ethel, its summit only thirtyâ€"six fathoms beâ€" low. That the earth is much older than mfl' Troubles Women Often Have the sun is the opinion of a wellâ€"known «+ * a » scientist. | Rellev;d Iebty.byedu E. Pinkham‘s â€" | eg Compound Say "Bayer" â€" Insist! For Colds Headache Neuralgia _ Rheumatism Lumbago _ Pain _ m _ Accept only a whichcontains proven directions Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100â€"Druggists Aspirin is the _ trade mark (registored in Canada) of Bayer Manufactuze of Mone» aceticacidester of Salicylcacid. TEA "is good tea Scenery Under the Sea. ‘The Price Cutter. A Grim Jest! The same good tea for 30 years. THE MERCHANTS‘ CORNER Planning Your Advertising. Bayer â€"Exchange package the most of those possibilities every day. You must never let the public forget you. You must never give even your established trade a chance to forget you. You must exert every effort to bring in more frequently the occasionâ€" al customer, and to get en ever inâ€" creasing number of brand new cusâ€" tomers. The spending of your advertising appropriation must be spread through the entire year. The newspaper holdâ€" ing marked advantages obtainable in no other way, should have the bulk of the advertising. Seventyâ€"five per cent. of the appropriation to be used in the newspapers is a conservative allotâ€" ment. :\ . . Vacuyum _Cleanors are . now being used to groom horses in the U.8. army. PAINS IN LEFT SIDE AND BACK *Montreal Standard‘ and I have taken four bottles of it. I was a very sick woâ€" man and I feel so much better 1 would not be without it,. I also use Lydia E. Rinkham‘s Sanative Wash. 1 recomâ€" mend the medicines to my friends and I am willing for gu to use my letter as a testimonial."‘â€"â€"Mrs. M. W. Rosz, 580 Notre Dame Street, Lachine, Quebec. Doctor Said an Operation Provost, Alberta. â€"**Perhaps you will remember sending me one of your books a year a]go. I was in a bl({ condition and would suffer awful pai% at times and could not do anything. The doctor said I could not have children unless I went under an (Z)eruion. 1 read testimonials of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vefeuble Compound in the rs and a friend recommended me ‘: take it. After taking three bottles I became much better and now have a bonnfl baby girl four months old. I d> my houseâ€" work and help a little with the chores. I recommend the Vegetable Com : to m& friends an‘ am willing for you n use this testimon‘ i) letter, *‘ â€"Mrs. A.A Try, Apanus, Box 64, Frov«st, Alberta. C Men who have tenâ€" 6 der, sensitive skins, easily irritated by shaving will find Cuâ€" ; ticura Preparationsideal. w The new freely â€"lathering Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick permits shaving twice daily without irritaâ€" tion of the skin. Cuticura Talcum, an antiseptic powder, is aoothlng‘ and cooling to the most tender skin . ‘ Sample Each Pree by Mail. Address Canadian BE ~ Cuticure Shaving Stick 26¢. Jepot Cuticura 7 ~alcum " EYESEP) olesome easine Refreshing Ointment 25 and 50e. Taleum 25 TIFFNESS of any kind can be quickly relieved by masâ€" saging with 12§5UE N. [JRIN fFor Younr after shaving nfr‘eshing 18 coolz'ng and x* uj #p l "iealy J 4 ¢ E.