t _ the ing _ in scheme ence of ontain. Vor of Na nst Po in League vuaniarn Vilna Lithu» nanian pp« in ippeal Ne publig the al L h Bric‘â€"tening Sridget. The electric sins are now being proâ€" duced at Kohler in beautiful pastel eoloringsâ€"blue, green, gray, orchid, cream, rose and the like. _ What a touch of life they add to the kitchen. â€"Pennsylvaria paper. â€" da;s pro la w ata ren d ty Have ot Hay Then you riay kiss© Fido."â€"Son snisse Strix (Stockholm>).. th Jim Corbett Tells Why Crooked Fights ae a222zc90 The Cradle of Empire TY th Dixon Merritt, to be publishe "The Outlook" for October. "If a fight is crooked, the two fight s do not have to be in on it," cor ued the former heavyweight chan m. "I doubt if they can be in o 1 _ doubt it they can _b on it and get away withit. Bu : referee. He‘s a poor man, usual m Corbett lells ‘A VERY RELIABLE | y Crooked Fights _ goyr TREATMENT ot of Money and Tempâ€" tation is Always There CHANCE NEEDED Reward of Merit uU mal 1 th i shaved t Evolution ru ibly hard for anything h money in it as there is ting toâ€"day to be honest for a sporting, gambling uch as prizeâ€"fighting is," . Corbett in an interview Merritt, to be published look" for October. is crooked, the two fightâ€" T} ma l ured m th TY th V day H 1 hi sty AIr r€ Th the mar T‘ way co, of, hess of this fact, __}‘m,"and shares on a d to‘lm-vltably his cu |down and he bec s rmt?thc bank. Sooner Ait â€â€˜put the matter r 'ig'inn | much our positior W} ffur the n | ghealth an .__‘ compare l":‘“‘g Pills. M **" * thit DIGOt hon.est have & 3 "bl.m§ making it € !$> | this riche IUCW body are lished functions ed. Ana fB8btâ€" | guid and â€" * COnâ€" new healt CRAMâ€" nen af th the ar W Count that day lost, whose low des cending sun, Sees no new transatlantic flights be gun. t Red Rose Tea, now packed in the bright, clean Alumiâ€" num package, is completely guaranteed. You can try it without any risk. Order a package from your grocer. Use any portion of it and if you are not entirely pleased return it and no charze will be made. er ‘"Housekeepers who never can ket chup find it easy to beat a batter." bc ut H t« 19 n on co es experience of Mrs. John Armour, South Monoghan, Ont., who says:â€""I am one of the many thousands who bhave regained health through the use of Dr. Williams‘® Pink Pills, and I take this opportunity of saying a word in praise of this splendid medicine. Beâ€" fore beginning the use of this mediâ€" cine I was pale and badly run down. l found it difficult to do my houseâ€" work and was tired and breathless ntI ‘he least exertion. I had tried several medicines without benefit, and finally lecided to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Soon I began to feet better, leep better and eat better, and found ny weight increasing. In a word, I elt like a new person. I have since | ecommended the pills to others who ‘ave taken them with equally good | fe *© _ been lending long. It is as ugh an individual whose income 1 fallen and whose expenditure had reased, until he was really saving y little, continued, in unconsciousâ€" s of this fact, to buy fresh stocks 1 shares on a considerable scale. vitably his current account runs n and he becomes overdrawn at bank. Sooner or later, he has to the matter right. That is very ch our position as a people on inâ€" mational account. There is reason fear that we are becoming heavily rdrawn at the international bank. How Weak, Among the many remedies offered or the maintenance or restoration of calth and strength, there is none can ompare with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Mlls. Most ailments are due to poor, hin blood. _ Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills ave a specific action on the blood, naking it rich, red and pure. Through his richer blood the tissues of the ody are better nourished, and the unctions of the body better performâ€" d. Anaemic sufferers, weak, lanâ€" uid and nervous people speedily find ew health and strength through the se of this medicine. This was the Britain‘s International" Account It Cannot Be Done I * Sun: (Bobby Jones proâ€" a new type of golf ball ntroduced which cannot be far.) There is one excelâ€" â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" British Shareholders in Canaâ€" Veak, Runâ€"Down People: dian Coempany are Can Obtain Relief f Victimized Gabby Gertic will be sent by ma writing The Dr. W ‘0., Brockville, Ont ti 18 i star can go strokes, there s who cannot ve been rational ac n balance n w ind Athenaeum: We been making ends onal account by atâ€" balances to London cale, i.e., by borrowâ€" t part of what we 1g long. It is as lual whose income h h eats if any her here nor in posal be acceptâ€" n the great maâ€" by all medicine nt by mail at 50e he Dr. Williams‘ th fiv [ ‘e are hunâ€" t do it in ven more. lough that up money. e yaras, ild bring is a fine was one from tee are hunâ€" do it in 'f]‘i , A true radical is a man who thinks L you are against him if you can‘t get $T as excited as he does. were had , ing ' "I have been asked by a few friends of mine who are shareholders to go ‘out and that is how I have been | brought into the matter," he said. When a novice attempts to correct the bulge in a steel plate he hits the bulge a direct blow with a ammer, with result of putting the entire plate out of kilter. An expert taps careâ€" fully all around the bulge and on apâ€" parently unrelated parts of the plate. That is how statesmanship must deal with problems which seem absurdly simple to the bolshevist, or even to the parlor socialist. The whole hisâ€" tory of our taxation, to take a single subject for illustration, is full of rash experiments where the levy has comâ€" pletely failed in the purpose for which it was designed, but has achieved disâ€" astrous results which were never foreâ€" seen, as they should have been. | wWORTHLESS LEASES. _ Mr. Hymans also admitted that he was "afraid the leases held by the New Nakamun Company have lapsed from what I can learn. Of course I have my own opinion with regard to Mr. Wescott and his doings, but I do mot popose to express it. I believe that he has now disappeared â€" I have not seen him for a long time. Satesmanship Not So Simple Mr. Hymans has denied all connecâ€" tion with the New Nakamun Comâ€" pany, and protested that he had only met Mr. Westcott onee. Needless to say a company, the managing director of which conducts its affairs in such a curious manner as this has never paid a dividend, and now Mr. Stanley Hymans is asking the shareholders for 3d. in respect f every share they hold to pay his"exâ€" penses to Alberta, so that he may inâ€" vestigate the history of the concern. Mr. Hymans is a director of the Merâ€" vick Trust, which has its office in Harley street. \ I understand Mr. Lawson intended calling on you again and if you prefer to deal with me and obtain a reducâ€" tion in the price of any shares you desire to take up I would suggest it might be best to decline his offer as possibly otherwise he would claim a commission on any shares you might purchase. I shall leave this to your own disâ€" cretion. In any event I would suggest you do not disclose to him that I have suggested a lower price to you. _ Another letter from Mr. Westcott throws some light on his own charâ€" acter. Writing from ¢/o the Empire Service Bureau, 37 Albemarle street, W. 1, to the North London woman who reported to him that a Mr. Lawâ€" son had called upon her with the obâ€" ject of persuading her to buy more sharesâ€"at 4s. eachâ€"in the company which was sure to pay a dividend in six months‘ time, he suggests what criminals call a "double crossing" of his own sharepusher. He wrote: ‘ The Gotham Finance Co. . . . has disclosed itself as utterly unreliable . . . there is absolutely no doubt they had no intention of paying for the shares bought from shareholders. . . They now brazenly repudiate their contract with me as well as the Westâ€" minster Bond and Trust Co., and have also refused to pay over to the Comâ€" pany any of the monies received from the British shareholders. A SECOND BAIT. ‘ | She was approsched by a share pusher who persuaded her to invest £22 10s. by offering her dollar (4s. | 2d) shares at 3s each. Once they had obtained this sum they gave*her no , rest, and eventually persuaded her to ,increase her holding to about £200, | at the same time getting her daughter to "invest" a similar amount. "SPECIAL OFFERS." This was done by means of "special offers" from a Mr. George Westcott, who, writing from 48 Dover street, W., styled himself managing director of the company, from a firm called J. ’HA Stiles & Co., who gave an address at 17 George street, N. W. 1, from the Gotham Finance Co., 63 Wall street, New York, and from the Westminster Bond and Trust Co., ‘Londonâ€"wall, So far efforts have failed to trxice] ێither Mr. Westcott, J. H. Stiles and Co., or the Westminster Bond andl Trust Co., but a letter from Mr. Westâ€" cott to the shareholders indicates the nature of the Gotham Finance Co. He wrote: The experience of an aged North London woman is doubtless similar to that of many other dupes of the proâ€" moters of this company. pushers or "white collar" bandits as they are called in the United States, to extract money from unsophisticatâ€" ed people," says the Daily Mail. _ London.â€"British shareholders in the Canadian company known as New : Nakamun Coals, Gas, and Petroleum, | Limited, are being appoached with a! view to sending good money after badl by subscribing 3d. per share to enable | a man named Stanley W. Hymans to go out to Alberta to investigate matâ€" ters on their behalf. "The history of Nakamun Coals, Gas, and Petroleum, Limited, is typiâ€" cal of the methods adopted by share How Investors Are Swindled crumbling them up, They are:â€" A. (on another page)â€"3. In the Antarctic.â€"Toronto Daily Star. For all painsâ€"Minard‘s Liniment. Ask Another. Q.â€"3. How many States are there in the United States of America? n are so easy and a h miin e A It is the opinion of Mr. Jones that, give the average child a few of the right books, encourage him to go from books to wood, field, seashore or even the world of the back garden, and you will have provided him with more than a new interest; you will have given him a mental kingdom.. ’ "With the stimulus thus given, the young child will learn to make his own direct contacts "with nature. At first he will be interested more in the details than in the whole, and this is fit and proper. But as the child grows older he will learn to see nature as a wholeâ€"as the living garment of existâ€" ence. _ And he will appreciate the works of prose dike Thoreau as well as of that great observer of details, Henri Fabre." "Of course, the child will need a few other things besides books, A small field glass or telescope will enâ€" able him to go bird hunting. . With a pocket magnifying glass he can study the habits of insects. } He emphasizes the value of nature study for the child. He says, "While such a study is in a sense an amuseâ€" ment, it is also a spiritual and mental discipline and will give the child an orientation toward his world that many older people lack. It will create a mental outlook that will expand as the child grows older and that will forever keep him from that terrible fateâ€"and it is a sin as well as a fate â€"of being ‘bored.‘ "These books are to be sympathetiâ€" cally understood," writes Mr. Jones, "only by the reader, young or old, who has already felt for himself the charm of river and pond, who has learned to enjoy direct contact with nature." L ’ Baby‘s Own Tablets are without an equal for relieving indigestion, conâ€" stipation and â€" colic. They â€" check diarrhoea; break up colds and simple fevers; promote healthgiving sleep and make the dreaded teething period easy. The Tablets are the one mediâ€" cine that a mother can give her litâ€" tle ones with perfect safety as they are guaranteed to be free from injuriâ€" ous drugs. They are sold by all mediâ€" cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Cold in the head is very common at this time of year, especially in the very young. Neglect of a cold is prone to lead to serious consequences. To relieve all congestion of the sysâ€" tem is the first step in treating a cold, whether in infants or adults. For the very young, Baby‘sâ€"Own Tablets are the ideal means of doing this. Con taining no narcotics or other harmful drugs they soothe the child‘s fretfulâ€" ness, relieve its suffering and ensure convalescence. 4A SMIPLE TREATHENT FOR CHILDREN‘S COLDS A high lift on the way to hoisted aboard the Bosworth : horses will be distrihntad thrawel Nature First For the Child AND TINTING are so easy and perfect IF you use the same k ind of dyes Profesâ€" sional Dyers use. "Dyes that are put up in highly concentrated, finely powdered, soluble form. No work to dissolve them. Never any shaving, scraping or crumbling them up,. They are:â€" I1§SUE No. 44â€"27 > ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO _ &board the Bosworth at Liverpool, England. A group of these wil be distributed throughout Canada for stock improvement purposes A â€" Wele WHAT IS HE THINKING? come Canada. A Suffolk Punch stallion being Minard‘s Liniment too Lumbago. " Paris Temps: (Britain‘s "strictly correct attitude" with regard to Tanâ€" gier is approved.) Great Britain has always remaiped hostile to any modiâ€" fication of the status of Tangier that might affect the principle of the interâ€" national regime, which is the safeâ€" guard of all the legitimate interests concerned. While the Spanish claims have been modified"" they nevertheâ€" less call for conditions difficult to reâ€" concile with rights held under treaâ€" ties. It is unnecessary to, remark that the negotiations will co‘tinuc in an atmosphere of mutual confidence, but the problem of Tangier cannot be settled by any improviged colytion. "I have made good progress since I came to Alberta three years ago and have become permanently established through engaging in mixed farming. I believe that Central Alberta is one of the surest places on the continent for a man with practically no capital to get a start." In a letter sent recently to the Land Settlement Branch of the Canadian Department of Imimnigration and Colâ€" onization he states: Calgary, Alberta.â€"T. A. Duncan is now regarded as one of the most sucâ€" cessful farmers in the Didsbury disâ€" trict. He came to Alberta three years ago from Montana and began farmâ€" ing. He now has a farm, a complete line of implements, and good buildâ€" ings, all paid for.. Good Progress in Three Years In addition to the Murray, other’ Victorian rivers have also been used‘ to a great extent for irrigation and | water supply purposes, though o na | somewhat smaller scale, the various | systems being designed ultimately tol bring the benefits of irrigation to al | parts of Victoria where it is required, | so that the best results may be obmln-! ed from the land for agriculture. ~ The river Murray is about 1500 miles in length, and almost the whole of its valley, and the land for great distances on either side, have been rendered productive as the result of irrigation. Most of the land is used for fruit growing, grapes and citrus fruits being the principal occupations o fthe thousands of settlers who have taken up irrigation blocks along the river. gation and water supply works. (Last finangial year the amount spent in this way was £1,300,000). Of this sum £482,000 will be spent upon the construction of storages to insure a continuous supply of water for the irâ€" rigation channels. One of the areas of the state which has been transformed from waste land into a wheat growing district by means of irrigation is the Millewa land of the northwest. This comâ€" prises about 1,000,000 acres, and with the advent of a reliable water supply, about 750,000 acres have been taken up for wheat growing by 900 settelrs. â€" Victoria has done more than any other state in this direction, and it is now pursuing its endeavors with inâ€" creased vigor. The state ParlHiament has this year authorized the raising of £1,400,000 of loan money for irriâ€" 20 years by the state Government. Most of this work has been done in recent years, and the system is being extended as rapidly as possible in orâ€" der to bring under culttvation aeras o fland which require water to make them fertile. This vast irrigation system is supplied from Australia‘s great waterway, the River Murray, which is now sending water through thousands of miles of irrigation chanâ€" nels, in Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia. Comes mm e Wmee To Melbourne, Vicâ€"All the produc-llnation which is gra tivity of northern Vivtoria is due to / problems and anxieti the great system of irrigation whlch)perlod. as Britain is has been carried out in the last 15 or | called decadant? o VICTORIA PUTS £482,000 ASIDE FOR STORAGES ontinuous Water Supply for Irrigation Canals Is to Be Emigrant Tangier Provided AATENT S 120005 and anxieties of a deflation period, as Britain is doing, be truly called decadent? _ The country has difficulties and problems numerous enough and crushing enough to desâ€" troy a people of more fragile constiâ€" tution. An American, writing from London, has said: "This country is bearing financial burdens that would break any other notions" There is the exact point: Britain is bearing them. Sore Throat tish habit of selfâ€"effacement and selfâ€" depreciation is so ingrained that it causes many misconceptions. It afâ€" fects a proper assessment of values in actual war effort; the world has to be told sometimes toâ€"day a thing which the historian a hundred years hence will accept as selfâ€"evident, that the greatest factor in defeating the aims of the Central Powers after 1914 was the might and the concentrated effort of Britain. S8 the misconcepâ€" tion persists in the troubled years which follow the war. Can a nation which shoulders the burden of debtâ€" repayment Britain now bears, and meets the obligations at due date, be called decadent? _ Can the nation which faced the crisis of last year‘s general strike and emerged as Briâ€" tain did be called decadent? Can the nation which is grappling with the problems and anxieties of a deflation Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer Maa#facture of Mononceticâ€" scidester of Salicylicacid (Acetyl Salicylic Acid, "A. 8. A."}. While 4t is well known that Aspirinmcans Bayer manufacture.to assist the public against imitations,*~c Tablets ef Layer Company will be stamped with their gencral trade mark, the "Ly i¢ Cruse * H Amâ€" JC Spread on brown paper and apply on outside. Reduces swellâ€" ing and eases pain. ~_When you serve RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE to your family you are giving o. them the best tea you can buy. TEA DOES NOT AFFECT In clean, bright Aluminum Auckland Weekly News: The Bri| _ MUSICAL INBTERUMENTS 7=t Retain the Charm x at Of Girlhood @A Clear Sweet Skin S Cuticura {E | Will Help You Use Cutiours Soap Every Day List of "Wanted Inventions" and Full Information Sent Free on Request. THE RAMSAY CO., Dept. w, 273 Bank St., Ottawa, Ont. FOR. Is ONR-euralg'ai Decaci=nt? PIRIN Handy "RBayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100â€"Drugrists. Acccgt g_x_l_!_y "Bayer" pack which contains proven directions : WOMAN COULD :‘ HARDLY WALK €6 e * $% "is good tea Do you feel broken down, nervousi and weak sometimes? Lydia E. Pink=‘ ham‘s Vegetable Compound is excelâ€" + lent to take at such a time. It always helps, and if taken regularly and perâ€" sistently, will relieve this condition. 0} - Â¥ time. J was told L_v_ghy a friend to try !y;our egetable Compound. 1 did, and y the time I took two bottlies 1 was beginning to get around again. J took ten bottles in all, and now J am all right again and doing my own work. J have six grownâ€"ups to work for, so I have plenty to do. J also used Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Sanative Wash, and I think it is good. But I owe my health to the Vegetable Compound, and I think if more of it was used women would be better off. 1 would not be without it if it cost much more,""â€" Mrs. NELUIE J amEson, £05 East Cane non Street, Hamilton, Ontario. BOYS & GIRLS Bimply Christm Physici than the over doct gold send trust you Co., Dept facts Mend X, business making unbreakable glass substitute on wire base for porche® greenhouses, henhouses. Sample, inforâ€" mation sent. Box 26‘, Exeter, Ont. Mrs. Horn Tells how Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health Hamilton,Ont.â€"*"I have ta\en Lydia E. Pinkbam‘s Vegetable Compound anteed. Montreal N AN START YOU IN PROFITABLE® TLTRAPHONIC GRAMOPHONE, 38 J selections $165.00 for $55.00. Guare Classifhed Advertisements ( UR BLRT scientificall y Astrology â€" of $2.00 Given ®2." Poisson, 340 Mountâ€"Royal East BUSINLSS CHANCES L1 11 BIRTHDA Y rticul D and would not be without it now. I had a female trouble so badly I could hardly walk and J was all runâ€" ts il Hol No WOoORKk JUST pPUN ROSCOPE by Science In toresting ddress â€" 8. 107 W plew W Seg