West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Jan 1928, p. 3

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{mo we, in. I the if: mu Ho he. ah he m To P I it During the German occupation things gradunily got better. The Ger mans had no motive for damaging a country which they hoped to annex or. for 1tersecutintt those‘whom they regarded as their future subjects. Just as tho Russians had tried to Russianim the Lithuanian. no they tried to Germanize them. They were more successful than the Russians had been because their methods were less brutal; but tho success did not amount to much. it was resisted. not only by Lithuanian patriots " home, but also by Lithuanian patriots abroad. The latter were active from the ttrttt. As early as October. 1914, the Lithuanian in the United States call- ed a natloua lcongrels. which met at Chicago and declared itself in favor ed the reorganization at the Lithuani- an State in conformity with the prin- ciple ot self-determination." A Lithu- anian Bureau of Information in Perla was entrusted with th task of dithe- tu knowledge ot Lithuania among 1e general public A eotn-ittrtete-- J. Gnhrya--wae appointed to treat with the belligerents on behalf of Uthunnia. A series of Lithuanian ‘onrerences were held in Europe. at home. at lamnne. at the Hague. " Stockholm. Demands were (emulated. More is a typical declaration leaned at Lansanxte: ”The issue of the war is uaeertain. Whatever it may he. Lthuania does not whh to rem to tttttea'. servitude or to revert to a situation which would - M or Germany to Impose thetr yehe - on the country. A tree Lithuania; poo pie occupying the can" “than! ter. rlmn. and um (no political. in- ump-ems: we mandala ancient» to: t':,','Ti,,, June- I foremost "When in accordance with ttie in. lmmnu Russian outlay. thousands ot Lithuanian adults had to leave the ..-nnrr::. mum families were broken up. Tite pt-zi'tantu that sought refuge in ttv, towns. but were moved on far- ther by the Russian soidiery. Parents had thus to abandon their children. and were thamsvlvas transported in. to Russia in cattle trucks. At Vilna. for example, thousands of children ran about the streets vainly seeking their parents. The Central Lithuanian Committee subsequently placed then In orphanages. But those Institutions were without funds necessary to pro- vide prom-r nourinhmont for the child- were w Vida pr: nu. ma unce.’ 03cc ““1 to the “Curtain?! much Int: rulers are ttt mental 5m 8ourtetnttt l or no“ as} but non cl home qt bet I has: with Knut chi Span ttst the! and bro, which to read the not "Lithuahta Past and I J. Harrison. sometime Consul ttt Viki: and-KI lad plat will show, found the Lithuanian tween the human-sum the anvil ensued them In a conttiet in , they wouid much have proton-c Lith In clrcut b " tt ll ',0 The Cause of Self-Determlnatlon. " " tt ll " um n " Batu mall 1nd in Danger Lights From Little' Europe Garden-Wall Quarrel That Might Involve Millions of English Lives . By James Maynard in neutral "tttV In“! h much less ht Dr!) Ian lat bi, n min "t authorities on Lit it upon a ttrt" than , which ext-Mod from r Black Bea. Clam “in [ to Ltt Interest tl alumni Bovue. 'tttl all atoll " tn knight re slid :mty R xi d one!!! by (h th up: “D: In the h cntury. , any” SI: ot Arm or which I.- (n----." sed I‘D-.01] aiding " " their retreat the missions verythlng which they we" remove. . . Villages and I glvvn to the. ttttmost, ma- l mum-moms were carried :spvakahlo miseries began u h n Ham g3 and their individuality. their time. The War m their opportunity, and ed it. A new Lithunnta ', and tho best book in ad the story of Its use in in The one nlik n Tutu. ll 'tt Note to Ltthttaau'. "" milk being particularly It so. a much diminished . extension of its boun- the Black Bea - ml warrant. lid wont-r North, with an outlet Memet. According to to M with tttrt ot those desolated 0 Belgium. Lima-uh ‘mm the liberal and ex- United States and " The Inian " to It " ha n Th In ‘n th a fat an may up the the m d Tim a Point! with "- “pH-nuan- uuch by It. In one of our and Anvil with an outlet According to Peace Treaty, it had an area a at the ma lineman: h I one ot “magma m th went,” try British Vte no. name The n tam-red hor. " Belgium, t sum about tide was: like a absorbed .nlnnn kept 'dividttntitr. The War th Lith I a corn. t in the nuanianl it noted, eating a afBnttha Teutonic p tion and Rr Treaty, well. and u an area better. '% trepala- Mr. Hal-rim a tent- mos: favor Poland. position," t, re shall r'vultuml present within he: a more necessary: of I bith- Baltic In his bran mo rtiti Harri by E, map and 1 lath Lia ; but bed "att ur, Its I Maynard t-auelt an tho damn “hum: of m unmet." 1 They were not do: {what they regarded m ‘nmml territory"; but their Independence ' And now a words has crashed into politics, according: a leading Ohio Democrat. However. he refers to the com-borer. not tho taxparor.-43tttea. lo Dilly New. Amateur photographers throw away used hypo containing silver. One pity turtr-ttttutirur firm saves £375 a week on waste hypo. What must be the amount wasted In hundreds ot dark rooms in Britain every year'.' This Index) mans, friend inhabitants ot the British Isles use table salt them Is a yearly loss ot 50,000 tons. worth £3,000,000. Waste in matches is “hazing. Quite three-nuartars of the wood used In the manufacture remalnl unburnt. Assuming that no more than ten mil- lion people each use two boxes tt week. approximately 1,000 tons no scrapped every rear. It the wood were collected, it might prove lnvaluJ able In the manufacture ot useful pro- ducts such as oxalic told and paper pulp. So ttt come twee: of we of l Exports have been busy showing bow much money we waste ia a ye starting with cigarette: ,thev tell that out of a population of forty n lions, at least ten million men a mmwn smoke on an average 1 Even so. however. " has not ontor. e" the happy state o ftt country which hay no history. its relations with both Poland and Russia have been stormy. it han been engaged in hostilities with both countries. " is still nominally at war with Poland. though years have passed since there was any lighting. The League ot Nations has tried in vain to compose the quarrel caused by the smelled "coup or General 'r'.e.tiRowski"---an alleged "mutinotts" snidler whose unauthorised seizure ot Winn, necessitating the transference of the Lithuanian seat of Government to Kovno, was afterwards endorsed by his Government. and is believed to. have been planned in concert with Marshal Pitsuaski. First Flower of the Balkans. 'Still, in spite of these troubles, pasod. lightly over here because they belong to current controversial poll- tics, Lithuania has done. and is doing, well, and may reasonably hope to do hum-r. “Oi all the Baltic States." Mr. Harrison says, she “enjoys the most {word economic and financial innitir‘u,” being predominantly an as- r’r-nliumi country, and producing within hor own borders everything P"civrk1'Jy to a self-contained indepen- dent oxixbnce. Her soil is fertile. Inu. “time (Fond are rye. wheat. bar. ley. oats, peas, potatoes and Mx. At. tor agriculture, her most important sour; " of national wealth is timber. of which th principal species are pine, which the principal species are pine, oak, fir, birch. maple and lime. Her tiuthvr industry is also important. tar the Baltic coast is the only area in the world where the collecting and manu- imture of amber is carried on on a :wltilir‘iently large scale to be spoken of as an industry. Ear are the arts ignored. Some of the artists have a European reputa- tion.---T. P.'a Weekly. Starting with cigarette: ,thev tell us that out of a population of forty mit. lions, at least ten million men and wtutvPn smoke on an average ten cigarettes a day, and waste not loss than onedttth of each cigarette. Thus an ounlalent of twenty million cigar- ettes is wasted daily. At a cost of one shilling tor twenty, the yearly waste is nearly £13,000,000. Tho habit of putting salt on the side of tho plate instead of sprinkling it on food means that one spoonful In two is wasted. Aa practically all tho bot at , pa: Th Id have the W they cl "H yen plok on hubby M'I a” to pm! a bunch ortsartn NI. vernuuhr." (I-___'-"'""')-"'"":'-'"']'.:,,""".",';".',,'";"";"", ’61 tJP" hey elected n National Council. is National Council proclaimed the Iepandence of Lithuania. The Ger. ‘na. who were beginning to want :nds badly, nnnouuced themselves "llheratorC' and sue them do juro 'oi,rtrition. Subsequent attempts to hack on this recognition and create no sort ot “personal union" be- 'en Lithuania and Prussia were "-ecstutlr resin-ted; and the victory tho Allies made Lithuania safe tor Wasted Millions ' happy state 0 0 history. Its 11 " and Russia h [ been engaged countries. " War-o elected a the demand. of the nu parties." since no kept It towards t destined end mire us- , obtain be war. m midst of 1917 Council. d create m" be. : were victory safe for obtain Lithu- tl to admit that old age is a bar to mar- riage or real love. Rather two per- sons of widly diplomat ages marry be. cause they really love each other than two young things who are entering matrimony for reasons other than at- tection. and who, although perhaps not dieiiklng each other, yet are not in love. The marriage between my brother, the Kaiser. and Princess Hermine was a Iovirmatetr--rst both are no chickens, to put it rather vulgariy. True, they are not so very dinerent in age. but they had every right to marry becauée they loved. That was the answer I gave. to my brother, the Kaiser, when: he remonetrated irith me on my marriage. mo? If one loves, than one has a right to snatch ail the happiness that love brings. And it the object ot one's affection loves also, then the world has no right to deny either happiness. The question of their respective ages does not enter into the matter. Old Age is No Bar. I am quite in agreement that youth should marry youth-that it is, per- haps, better-but I am not prepared "Victoria,' he sald,~"you are acting madly. It you marry this man you will be $110 lashing-stock ot Ger. muny!" There can be no wrong present where true love rides paramount, and l submit that it I had refused to mar- ry tho man I love because I am so much older than he. then I should not have been doing him a kindness, but a wrong-tor I know that his love tor me ls such that the rest of his life would he barren and unhappy without me by his side. There is little doubt that in the course of years we shsll be separated, because I am likely to be called into the Great Unknown many years before my husband, bat I shall have had those few years of unutterable happiness and bliss with the man who possesses all my heart. And does not every woman agree with "Wilhelm," I replied, "you married when you were nearly my as. 1nd But I contend that love is no re- spector of age and that the ilre ol true love can burn as clearly and as purely in the heart of a woman-or a man-at the as of eighty on eighteen.' It two persons tir.d that they are soul- mates-that they are consumed with tho grand paselon for each other-- then they lime overy.rlght to marry. Ago has; nothing to do with it at all wit is sumc!ent that the ail-pervading emotion. love, is present. There ai- war", Chum, of course. the question of eltiltlpen--hut in this age marriage is not considered declasse or immoral because, the parties do not have child- ren but live alone together in unin- terrupted bliss. He Would Be Unhappy Without Me. Children may be a blessing to mari- tal happiness. but they are not essen- tial. and because the two contracting pavties do nob-or cannot-increase the human race is no reason why they should not marry. Marriage is an in- dividual egtate---it is personal, and it has greatly annoyed mo that so many people have concerned themselves in my love idrll and my tttltilled deter. mination to marry the man I love, even though he is many years young- or than myself. Should sixty marry twentyaix? Should ninety marry nineteen? Can parties ot such widely different use: really love each other? Are such marriages immoral? All the” ques- tions hoe been put to me since it wu announced to the world that l, a mr man of sixty-one, was engaged to marry a y .uug man many _ years younger than myself. I have been derided, ridiculed, censured, and the object ot gross newspaper attacks, which have said that old age ls a bar to marriage when one ot the parties isetill in his or her youth. " I Asked Him to Marry Me! For I Fell in Love With My Boy Husband-Sister' of the Ex-Kaiser, Who Recently Mar- ried a Russian Many Years Her Junior, Gave this Exclusive Article at a Special Interview in the Palace at Bonn to London Tit-Bits T _ .. _ . " . I _ q _ _ r"". ' IM Q , " u, K. .‘ . FAI, L > " .. f " ml v Tc), Ld L". . Far] , _, 1 1' 'f.)' ll $5 , , ”Q r . "vi r , Fi, " LN 7 w“ _ a q . "a "E.' g s g, . " ' A ,1... (r"ri',?jftvM! as- .. 5'1 . ~ " . . f _ . Fr:', TT c.'d; q .- 1 , _ " .‘ _ " 3., ' . _ . {an ' ‘1 r, = . , , 'NE 2'irii'i'i?,hti'tit2 "'11:; 1' ' v. ' ‘ il, a; wr ECG - ' l ' . . FA ' "e , .. h '1. " Lt', o ‘ e . gilt ' " , a. .y A; A ' 1, , .. ," , :. ‘1 , "' ," rr - s ...2' lrRMlitMr" -» " '_':,". .,-" ' -" _ LPd .h Ln . G tim, 'il 'rin tai' ' M' - = a, 4:1? _ ' ‘ 'tcc':. . , , “t a .' Ks " H . we. ’ a 't5irs? . rr " ' F? " . . " Kg 7 a ’ 'c,p.'l ' r, P FS" kt ( . 7 ' " P, " , E .. "ri' a - . J l . fl 'T l . P. . 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I , f: , V . .1 l _ V Itat-tsi")" Ira {is . _ its; H ' Pd 1‘35 ( (i, . _ ' .. a. Eg H ' _ _ ' iMBEgE YA ' i q 'ae, _ f ta T -. V _ MT" l _t'iTN2 . 'il! my. , s ' . q T BRIDE OF 63 CONFESSES F.UNERAL CORT‘EGE OF LATE PREMIER BORATIANU Buried on his own estate, thegcasket was dx‘awqpn a cart by six oxen led by old retainers. The Jolly, old readers seem to be in enthusiastic agreement with out plea for much lese talk by radio-an- nouncore. but the consensus in that we are too severe in advocating n rule that an announcer must conihttt himself to subject: he known some- thing about. B. B. C. tor instance, suggests a niilder measure: that an- nouncer. be allowed to use only such words as they on: pronounce. In conclusion, I would exhort all those who are denying themselves happiness because of the age bar to marriage to take courage into both hands and stand before an altar and not to have happiness stolen from them by public opinion. Age is no bar whatever to marriage. Love knows no 1ockatnftu--not even the bars ot old age. Cupid is a wily rascal. Perhaps it is rather tragic when he shoots his arrows in persons very far removed in age. but when he does so let Four heart dictate to you. If your heart says "yes," then have courage and to through with it, and it true love is in- deed present, then I do not think you will live to rezret it. I think that we are going to be the happiest couple in all Europe, and in frog: making any difference to our lov , the difference in use between us will rather cement it. There is only one thing that mars my husband's de. lirious happiness at our marriage, and that is the tact that I may be taken from him before many yen-s are pass- ed. That was the only consideration which has kept us back in any way in our desire to become man and wife. Love will not be denied, however. and after considering the matter fully we decided that we would snatch our tow moments ot happiness no matter what it cost in heartbreak later, when it be- comes necessary for us to be parted across the bridge that separates this life from the next. Forked tongues have said all sorts of unkind things about us. tt is a tact that I am a' Princess ot the Blood Royal and that I am a wealthy wo- man. and these two Ituttn have been used in order that my husband may be termed adventurer. This is a gross libel. Firstly, he did not seek my hand. lashed him to marry me. Secondly, during the first days ot his courtship he was unaware of my posi- tion or wealth, and thought that l was an ordinary German Woman of per- haps moderate means. No one was more surprised than he when he found out that I was Pripcess of Schaumburg-Lippe. It is therefore certain and obvious that he loves me for myself alone, and not for that which it was my pleasure to bestow on him on our wedding day. My brother was silehced, and has since refused to have anything to do with me, and up to my wedding day retained his disapproval of my mar- riage. I do not look my ttge-only the other day I was told that I look twentydtre, but I must admit that this was flattery. One thing I will say, and that is that I have kept my looks and figure-mot by artitieittl aids and cosmetics, but by exercise and a healthy life. I consider myself to he on a par with a woman thirty years younger, and I think that my husband has not married an old woman, ex- cept in the matter of age, but a well- preserved wife that will do her duty to him as stanchiy as it she were twentydive. you am happy. I don't. care it I am the laughing-stock of this and the next world, I am going through with it. You will admit that I am, per- haps, old enough to know my own mind! " Love Knows No Locksmlthn. Strange Custom in Rumania A higher form is "memory by " societion" or 'htionsl memory," end this is s more useful form to culti- rate. In searching tor past ideas and sensations that hsve "escaped our memory" tor the moment. we try to remember something that occurred " the some time, or we turn over in our minds similar ideas. trying to it: the particular time hr competing them with other things that we know to have happened at e certsln moment. This kind of memory is made up mainly ot associstion of ideas and the Ancients, notably Simonides, in 600 B.C., invented system known as "mnemonitm,' which depended upon symbols and places. Mnemonlos ere still in vogue. especially in the pen nicious practice ot 'crammittg," which is like a permanent crutch to s week- ened limtt--a help at tirtrt, but a hind. rance when the limb could now strong mellowed to develop its orig- inal power. The faculty of repeating long lists ot lumen and dates is not necessarily a. sign ot great intelect: people or no- torious stupidity and weak mentality have been known to be sble to per- form such tests of memory. It is a. power that depends upon the lowest form ot memory. tint which is known u "memory by contUuitr" _ Since memory is of such 1ttegtimablo importance it be hooves mankind to use and strengthen it to Its full ex- tent, for that habit in to the individual what heredity in to the race. Memory can be greatly cultivated. and the power ot recalling minute incidents not only acquired but tttarva11ouis1y in- creased. The Bruhmins ot India do not " pend upon the written word for tm. parting their sacred teachings. They learn prodigious quanitius by heart; some of them can repeat as many as 160,000 words without hesitation. No idea that has ever been in the But, above all, a good memory can mind can tMt tstttirelr forgotten, In be formed by the habit ot concentra- abnormal tstates, such as fever and lion. Clearness ot recollection de, delirium, memories are revived which pends entirely upon clearness of re. hare not risen into actual conscious- tention. and unless an impression on- ness tor many years. The dying often ters the mind iirmly and lucidiy it will revert to experiences which they have be remembered vaguely and confused- had in childhood and have sppsrently lr. long ago forgotten and there is a . widespread and popular belief that The Wilt as an Adjunct. a. man on the point of drowning rs. It is natural for the mind to tty " views in a tittstt all the minute events at a tangent when it tries to " itself ot " past lite. upon some particular idea. and lack of attetttilott is a. habit which grows Progress Without Memory. apat'e unless corrected. From this Ot all the faculties possessed by point of view the will can he made a man memory is the most vital to im- valuable adjunct to a good memory, provement and progress. The way of tor it can be called in to bring back experience is the one way through the wandering thoughts when they life; without experience there can be stray from the subject in mind. no progres, and without memory ex-i But the mind must desire to attend, perience is of no use. A human being rand for this reason too severe an " without memory would be at the end fort, causing intense fatigue. is to be of the longest life no further advanced 'evoided, since lack ot concentration than at the beginning. lil one ot the ilrst signs of nervous ex- All the mental faculties depend up- :haustion. Interest and novelty tend on memory. Neither sensation nor It stimulate this mental desire tor voluntary movement could exist with- ',eoucentration, and therefore tttttttot. out the guidance ot former recollec~ fony ttt apt to make it ditBeutt and tions; we cannot voluntarily perform ‘tedious. any action unless we know before- I Repetition u tt great aid in memor- hand whet we are going to do, and the iizing. The more often a thing is re knowledge comes only trom remem- pasted the more deeply is 1tnrnprests- berins that we have done it before. Pd upon the mind. and each repetition All the Mental Faculties De- pend on it Memory is the faculty possessed by the mind of preserving what has once been present in consciousness so that it may again be recalled. Thus it consists of both retention and recol- lection, retention representing the power of storing up tor future use, and recollection the power ot bring- ing back into consciousness. Often impressions are received by the various senses, eight, hearing, smell and mute, without our being con-clone ot them: for this reason ideas are sometimes believed to be or- iginal when they are not really so. and on this basis may be explained some cases of involuntary plagiarism. 160,000 Word. by Memory. 2 Art of Keeping a Diary l Repetition u a. great aid tn memor- lIzlng. The more often 3 thing In re. 'peated the more deeply n It Impress. god upon the mind, end each repetition jmeanl easier execution, (renter speed 'and dexterity. Even when I thing fence lenmt seems to hue been forgot- ten, it I: found that on e second " 310th it u mastered much more - {and quickly. _ WWW bah-n .theri" Jones, to tho tram: "How 1. ----H---- tt you hun't mane-tad In to m \ ”our meant?“ Mm: "Oh. I The companion“ maths. “Inner u]: n gentlem- (a may!” ”gunned by the pm ot an otttt-i"rndsod. Thou how d'tem at on dt mount mmuujut u. on tho In: In doe- not our“ "Why, - t - [libido meant» In to “new“ at all: tun. t conch“ Maintain. 130101138. "'l, 1iiG,GiiiiGrianafo Finally, in the worth ot Qulnullen, "rt enyone eel: me whet ll the only and great In ot memory, I Ihell any that it In exercise and labor. To learn much by bout, to mediate much and It poellble daily, In the most emu-clone of all methotu."--Etha1 Browning. Trusting the memory eervee to utrengthen it. it in not they: a good plea to depend entirely “150:1 volumin- ous notes, tor just an e limb the: u never used will wute and become useless, so the memory will become week and undependeble trom lock ot development. The “visual" remember by tom. and the "auditory" by sound, and in order to bring reprosentetlve memory to Its highest perfection, both varie~ ties must be cultivated. . But, above all, a good memory can be formed by the habit ot concentre- lion. Clearneee of recollection de. pend: entirely upon clearneu ot re. tention, and unleu an impression on tern the mind tirmlr end lucidly it will be remembered vaguely and confused- Ir. The Will u an Adjunct. It is natural tor the mind to fly " " a tangent when it tries to " item! upon some particular Mea. and lack of atteutllon is a habit which grows apabe unless corrected. From this point of View the will can he made a valuable adjunct to a good memory, tor it can be called in to bring back the wandering thoughts when they stray from the subject in mind. Those who and that they remem- ber a page ot a book by seeing mon- tally the shape ot the letter: should try to hear in their minds the Bound ot the syllables, while the "auditory" (who are usually good linguists) should try to visualize the printed words. The “Visual" and the "Auditory." But it is best ot all to cultivste the third sud highest form ot memory, the "imaginative," or "represent..- tire." The fortunate individuls who have naturally a large share ot this useful faculty of retailing vividly out events, belong to the world ot poets. painters, and all crestlve “tilts. They may be divided in respect to the kind of imaginative memory thy psssess, into two classes, the visual and the auditory. THE won" 1717746 ABOUT NIT "What I: the mm thin. M luff" TORONTO Miss Alice Morley, who “an [in "Hullelujn" number In Wt the Dock, and who is American born " Wk! wants. remarked that the - 3mm. husband was at [out " gen- emu]~ ‘he average modal. Behind the scene! at tho [Aldon Hippadrome .racoutly t dine-odo- nrou an to the relative column, In money Ingmar. of Amoflm and no. link husbands. A lady friend of he". I Intro. " name your landing, no paying be ttrat mm to a yam hula. "Mr dear." the on“. lulu the course ot too, “who: lunch! - menu hug you mode. with Giulio! Don he unto you“ "can: - onco, or do you jut at ill to: money when you “alum?“ "oh-or-both," replica the on. "Not No'. Nor." per-bud the child. "it one weep jumped our all the omen would jump utter K. Mr hunt he" sheep." Then seeing the pulled look on the tucker”: tare, the little girl “Who od awkwardly: “You know 'rldr motlc, miss, but I know than.“ "of .ntorjectod ”nobody, will an f out!" litt of can ”are... "Oh, no," cried the city mung to. mm reproae1ttul1r. u‘You tn not a stupid as tint! Think min. " there were ten cheap on one I“. of the fence and one - Jinn mt, nine sheep would be Ion. Don't you {aemumn Min Hailey mic. the following incident in am at her contention. "Now, children. tt than are ten sheep on one sldo of u [once pad can jump: over, how may [hoop will he left?" '80 The m. Hon. T. I. Hummus, who was at one Mme a_teacher in In etc. mentary ‘school. tell: an amusing story ot a city-bred young woman who was put in cm of a country school. The clul In arithmetic I'll before her. She said: "No Show. teacher." answered a we Me In: of [on summers. unholy. The manna of tho all you no no serve I. the noun. ot your tpersonality. “Tobacco II n nub-inc. (M in the body, and it. “inlaid is poin- Gill. i am not suggesting that tobacco mould be guaranteed to which: not more than a trpedtUd amount of nico- tin, in iho name '31 u spirit- m lundcrdiled tor alcohol; but u to bacco is similar to alcoholic bent» axes, in that excess of both land- to serioul results, the public would hare some sort ot guidance or pro- tocllon. it in almost metairs, In! no ample, that it is the moi-inu- ot tho tobacco which is indirectly mm.- iblo tor many ot o most lotion . iccta; that the pyridin Mum. are largely responsible tor morning cough, which load: Inter to "chronic bronchitis and cardiac hum. ”The“ are conditions which hi least no cap- able of improvement. The limit?! of Health, which bu drum do.- much tor providing pure tom" d n certain standard. will, I hope. below long F80 m tobacco an important figrtb or in the public health." bacco consists In remain an. " Its nicoun by mean- " ”In“. These ao-cnlled denlmtllllod tailo- coa have 50 per cent. or non at their nicotln tamove-d, and have boon r.- garded, therefore, by phynlchlu II relatively harmless. at all emu a far at! their nicotin In concerned. tm. fortunately lhis Is not the m h.- mus It Ins been shown an! that do nicotiniBed ciga- yield In their "not. as much nicoun as vu proton! In tho same class of cigar baton columni- union. "Improved methods of mm (In nicotine are, however, not be!" '0 pertmented with shroud. Don. at cigars and tobacco: in um 'tre- ue treated with superheated not.) by this means practically the wholo ot the nicoun in Bald to be removal. and the lob-coo I: la“ ninth-tun; the nteotut bu I My uh lot Illi- cultuml purpose; I hare Ind no or portunlty. however, ot “perinatal. with these products. Phil-Insulation “battery. - In The Britt-h lulu! Joan-l (la- don). A porous HIM to n my be put into the non of the up; the [M00 tor rooting sad so“ tion mu be lncrouod. or -.-. don my be mental. or mum‘- sunco which helm-Au om a be placed In the bowl of tho I..- Theu but pipes In and mm nnd the bowl. an lined with it. metallic oxid, like am of FM in I une‘mte of division. w - tobacro smoke over " (in nicoti- " pyridin derivatives are am These pipe: have not. howvor, MIC favor, he reports. Ho [out on: "Another method ot improving to. These pipe. have not. llama. [and favor. he reports. He no. on: “Another method of W t+ bacco consists In removing non. of It: nicoun by means of column. These tin-called demoed-1M (oblo- cos have 60 mar cent. or more or their Vatgfotm method-format ulcoun from (ohm “on! an. the Juice which um to (or. tn - are described In a 'eettgtgq by De. W. Convenient-For Wifey that t" Practical knowledge lined with do. that of PM lawn. m m It an nood- all no coco-nut. t, haunt. mu Io so. on: of Improving to. amoving com. of no of when“. momma tobac- _ or more of their e" iN,

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