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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1919-01-02, Page 2Seettat 'SAQtEl1 DUSr: YES IN WHERE LIE THE BODIES OF THE WORLD'S HEROES on the subject -1 was puzzled to know what superstition 'Marked many new graves . with an inverted bottle. I found that superstition allayed no part in the matter. The bottle, being the beat receptacle for the purpose, con- tained a paper of identification pend- ing permanent inscription. The director of graves registration and engineers in London, in .response to the request of the relatives ofri - is ` soldiers who , end a photograph of any It is mailedin a card- board frame and • on an accompanying ti CONFERENFS ARE IIELDATSPA INTERNATIONAL. ARMISTICE COM- MIBSION MEETS. CANADIAN COD FISHERIES New _Food Permanently Added to the Domestic Last. Codfish has come into its own in Canada during the war. It has always been a favorite fish of the French and other New -Latin countries, both in Europe and in South Americh. It has, however, been one of the most neg- lected fish so far as Canada is con- e Helpful Hints. With the coming of cold weather one should make slight changes in carburetor adjustment- Adjust the needle valve to give a slightly rich- er mixture- On carburetors which hetes no needle valve change the low speed adjustment to give a richer haute. Try different positions un - 1 the engine pulls best at low speed. „ay be jarred' shrit(or they may be ONEMINUTEOF SILENT PRAYER GENERAL CURRIE'S REQUEST TO THE CANADIANS l B t -- te-- • Brit- ish ld' h have fallen is pre- clogged. This test }'ill tell ,you i• I Capt. A. Dy as i Greater pared to a P gra First Canadian Brigade on Day g rd Once Sheltered the Former are fabut everywhere for their wealth i B even grave. gnerally l -taste: the Flowers of Flanders. Watch the wires where theyThat the Armistice Began. card.. is given tie- name, rank and i tit f this to the lamps, u� the mat.:un of the cai all I s � .� makes therii sway and may cause -The following, lefts'` has been . re- ly a Toronto man from ,his • ten on Noire t, . tee No Dead SleepWith G to as Than Those Whit 1t Beneat Allied Leaders Occupy Houses That cerned. The banks of Newfoundland F ofcod,itis notso vera known German War Lords. that the Eastern waters of Canada con an enormous quantity y o is along the Germani border -day than s e as few months, under international armistice commission is found�by the Food Board, the cod -fish - holding conferences amidst a drama- strides rama- w re it seen on ' W. D as Tells of Scene With the circulation is good: should die, think only this of ire: initials, regiment/ position of grave There is fl more IUt�ed $ �fi rM th last th d break or short circu}t. A piece di ceived That there's"some corner of a for- 'and the nearest railway station. ��iiee the torulus given b openings being d h ed around the wire and the sign field Those who have been for any length the famous town of Spa in which the y •tape �Vtapp son-in-law, law, Capt. Arthur Iiwas, write flat is forever England. Ther shall of time in France and breathed the air llthe ing industry has made enormous re enforce the wire and prevent trou � ..we've lt�ad it rather thrilling day to -day, being ether- �ay' that we've, • - bonged for�for some�'years now. plug that enters the - lamp socket will be 1 of battle are more easily reconciled r 'ride diverting f tch In that rich earth a richer dust than friends at home to the seeming tic setting, which, e th s sin spine o its ca ble. would b a master to the internal market g concealed; t `to sentiment of leaving their dust unmolested in its first graves They are among friends, hosen friend whose side slight e The air valve on high speed ad- i t the histrionic art. Here, in • e changed o e same the former seat of great German are caught by Canadian fishermen flash throttle open repeatedly. If ves o res stage woo a recorded as jusment must b h d t th Over 200 000 000 pounds of codfi If you have detached wheels reg A dust whom England bore, shaped, sacred 1 d 't piece o 1 h purpose. Strengthen d the spring and ymeg Hostilities 'ceased at 11 this morn. d f d the p n member that the metal }Tarts . ing.` We got the message.at 7.30. Just *love, O 1' when you caange *Gave made aware, b d th y �q annually. This is b far the tar e nee her flowers to love her hes uarters reprQsentati L Great Y gest nisi. cod ,tons ►" ala 1'd finished breakfast this morning . o , gays to roam." deed, of an as called to the phone arld the head are meeting daily with the y three varieties. Nor is faaccie,sabreit„%greer,s,:cil r ave me the good news. When popping occurs at carburetor, mix- fought C_ f ideal Britain, France the United States and quantity oir any Canadian fish or in t t 1 If • Il ' a v`heel, cover . 1 to t sur i I w fought and So wrote an English soldier about beckons tem, a to die. - So thought in terns of his them. In life they were one, in death utmost diplomatic formality and -deal- - this surprising, for codfishing early own country many a son of Canada they are not divided. in before he died. Teutonic Biscay and of the Portugese coast to r D s y R _ _ - . ell. ,A common ea r n,tare is tolean mixture smells- the metal con ,, . r d h common cause united Germany strong at exhaust it is . too rich. ; otherw Tse the de- - ,t.,,,.p,• l`.e de- majo g!� __ r rat lilill.:u;is:Goa•[•alae.a:,..a..va.t.t..y,-:g witthe problems arisingfrom theattracted the fishermen of the Bay of tachable. set the men all buzzing. No soldier passing down the far- flung battleline of eastern France, where the long procession made of graves flaliks the trenches could fail to weeder ether his body, too; would isot 'become part of the 'oil of a for- - - eign laid, The t.:_,„,,, folks riay grieve been seriously ileittyed and izp, ded b . a lack of fish. `' `"`' that he time-honored custom of plat- y ing their dead in the family plot of It is winter most of the year in the cemetery is displaced by the grim, that Arctic territory, and during the. necessity of this war. But their sons, cold months the mails are carried to who actually faced death, far afield the interior of Alaska on sleds drawn from kith and kin, felt well content by dogs. for the most part at the prospect of The dogs •are fed- on fish, bought in lying -where they fell with the undy- quantities, frozen. But latterly there ing glory of the cause lighting for- has been a scarcity of fish. ever the field of contest. There are The Alaskan dog wants fish to eat, and nothing else _Satisfies his raven- ous appetite. He vastly prefers it to meat, raw or cooked. Fish is what he has been brought up on. The nat- ural history books, assert that ,the canine brute is an omnivorous animal, but this remark does not apply to the --- 0 MAIL DELIVERY IN ALASKA Letters Are Carried to Interior On Sleds Drawn by Dogs. The mails in Alaska recently have pla=ces which history cradles in its arms- with special reverence, like Thermopylae and Waterloo. 'Greatest of Historic Spots. But - will any historic spot, ancient or- modern, claiip to rival in brilliancy the glory of the whole battlefront do of he will touch anything of vegeta LOGGING THE' LIEUTENANT. :tlerneh" are logged or tried by court-, to thank God for riving us. the )e ter I 1 f liberty has be fed the' steady march toward the Rhin® nutritious Its palatability depends The :bat- eu a c Then try'the car on a level road at N. -. i about fifteen miles an hour. Hun two If in a hurry to stall a spring from talion vvas parading at 8, and whin t! To the , conference the Entente rep- Newfoundland. Indeed, it was the pre - blocks motor from their temper- valence of cod on the Great Banks blocks throttled down, then open squeaking pour a 1 the kemsene aver was announced on rarade'a cheer went ai•y homes, which a month ago were which brought about the fact that throttle all,the way. Car should speed + it, guiding she oil down the sides up that you could.hear for .miles. Tho . the personal headquarters of three of Newfoundland;was the British first up rapidly and smoothly and en:_ ine's with the finger so atwill run in be-; Hien laayyhed, kissed, . punched each the greatest •figures in Germany in re -'colony. should not labor, stall, miss expo- tween the leaves. Wipe off the ex- other, and in some eyes etas the odd pions, pop back at carburetor or give cess. Pour cylinder oil over the tear, probably a passing thotl`li of cent history—the Emperor„ General 1 The bulk of codfish taken in Canada muffler explosions. lately. n -the same way Now shake' some pall test • t Ludendorff and Feld_ Mar:,hal von is .salted sand •dried for export to the - springs...�i�ho::hat(,.,.beoti..rest ,c�tr.:G the ,ail. wiij,,lie.c�lir t rx.,in.,..,.,?`.t _ -. Hindenburg. To add �a 41na1touch to °`I..ai.iii countries. South America, the o the picture, while the main actors hold ' especially, does 'a large trade. There i.00k aver the hot air inlet to car and find the leak. ing for the last two weeks, n4'ter ad= the stage 'liens pass and repass in the , is no reason why our -own consump burster, and see that no air can ea b _ '' vancing 23 miles since Oct. 17th. t�•cr:+ . • . ter it except around the exhaust pipe. Do not test the battery with, a; to be inspected by (yen. Currie, the streets remarkable lines of ,:super- � tion should not be as large. � � � If -there is acold air vent it should � screwdriver, as it makes � too great boys' so it . was a . numeraries. Grave -faced o ffl is e r s , 1 The cod is native to both the At- commander, at 10.. garbed in field gray, stalk about with lanti`c and Pacific oceans In the lat- be closed. If there is no hot air' a drain on it. Use a iycirometcr- If very memorable inspection: After the tragic tread and salute with military ter, there are, in fact, three varieties, pipe on the engine have one. installed the liquid reads 1,27u to 1,300 all is' general had inspected us we closed all. precision aa.they meet other grave of- ling, red and bray cod. The last named as it will more than pay for itself 1 well If it gets down to 1,200 have, around him, and- he stood on a wagon Seers wearing Allied uniforms. resembles the Atlantic fish. The flesh owing to the difficulty of evaporating{ system looked over by an expert, seat and. talked to us of our record . Like Cinematograph'Film.,•' of the codfish is not salty. Fresh or tae present low grade of gasoline. Th•e Germans make -their way unob-frozen codfish is as white and pale- If the carburetor is water jacketeL, trusively through the crowds og En- table as. lake whitefish. Atlantic co make sure the circulation is good: about to. go down a long hill even if , , Facie in the. British a.t~m.t=;...�$�ktP�;ha�ea:a..� •,e.�. tente troops. No recognition •passes can be procured in first-class condition ;Disconnect one of the pipes at the P'P you do not intend to use the engine never failed in an •attack when ad - between these recenity active enemies, as far west as Winnipeg: Pac f c co carburetor. Water should run free- , s a- brake. It will give yea a sense except perchance whe the. -former fish is marketed as far • east as that. vancinv; and they_ have never lost a rT}} ly out of the, pipe and also out of the of 'security. As a matter of fact, then trench.' Then something eery im- salute officers. -German lorries; fiyfng Point. Dried, salted; boneless and opening iii the water packet. Some- engine should be used as a brake oe• ressi\e happened. Ile.said: 'I want white flags, trundle on local missions shredded codfish can be procure1 any times these pipes have valves which casionally in order.to'save the brakes.' escry neer to take off his hat and we Alaska He will starve before along streets through which British' where in Canada.• l r ' in France during the last 3 years and Get into the:habit of putting the g months.. He said: "The old 1st Bri gears into lova or second speed when gads have the best record of any bri- ..�. from Flanders to Lorraine, where the g ble troops and transport are moving on The codfish is cheap and highly - - '"" will have cne minute of silent prayer,, glowing amp o 1 e s en it even a biscuit. on the cooking. Canadians do not eat martial. The Admiralty is willing to and strength to defeat and erten by a myriad lives laid down without a Owners of mail teams tried starve- It is all like an endless• cinematograph of carman ai•m theft had threat nuc 1 origin, thought of self? No dead sleep with ^ film, with never -ceasing attractions. • enough codfish and; our present cod- How Officers Are Punished for Mis make allowances for the vagariesthe G y • greater calm than those who rest be- tion.. but it diidn t work. The dogs, The commission began its sittings fishery is largely dependent on for- conduct in the Royal Navy. youth.. the world.' before they would consent to eat corn- _ the daisies and violets. and h other h truck be just after the armistice was signed. .sign markets. A larger home con- Although a naval captain can exact FROM meal mus or er sue In Silent Prayer. sunny jonquils of France. They could {name so emaciated and weak that they At that time the enemy was still oc-• sumption encourages the fishery by tinquestionin obedient® from all un- In were 4,000 officers and men never be transported to a fairer Tiled ' copying Spa. Since then long lines of quicker returns on money invested. oft and for one minute •,► could not pull the sleds. der his command, he has no power to Gunner With a Canadian Battery Goes parade, than that which they have earned with Dog -team mail routes in Alaska hurrying and disorganized German It will also induce more men to go into inflict punishment on an officer. In the red of their own rich blood. We i average 200_ miles in length. In de- traffic and troops have aped eastward the fishery—thus formig nursery the event of an officer's misconduct,' can afford to leave them not onlywith i • inpostal matter to the people through the watering place. There are for the Navy and.the Mercantile M liver g the captain must apply for .the otfen- satisfaction but also withpride, where now something more than a hundred ire. ' of the interior last winter these teams der's trial by court-martial., As a mat - they lie in a foreign land that ceases German .officers And men in the place A- leaflet has ' been prepared, and pulled loaded sleds 176,700 miles over ter of practice, however, the, captain to be foreign because they are there. the trails of the frozen country. attached to General von W interfeldt, may be obtained free from the Food can apply, to an unsatisfactory officer My first sight of the graves of those Dog -teams, pulling 500 pounds of who is representing the German Gov- Board, giving a number of ways of measures which are tantamount .to who had fallen on the field of honor ernment. These men came to Spa in preparing codfish for the table. punishment. was in the earlyr'spring of 1917, when mail each trip, give to Nome, on the civilian clothes under orders of the I w:}jked over part of the Marne, says northern shore of the frozen -up Ber- Republican Soldiers' and Workmen's BUT GREAT BRITAIN DID! The most common of these Is "log- s noted son of Canada, Bishop Brent. ing Sea, a regular twice -a -week mail Council, but dinned uniforms` on their ging." The captain sends for the ship's Peace reigned where once the battle Royal Navy is Foundation Stone of log, and in the presence of the com- The Allied Success in War. mander and the offending officer, ho had staggered and swaged. I makes fan entry on the current pogo, No one could fail to be struck by Neu Bois, is occupied by the Preach, ad -the evident reverence with which these bl account of solid ice. { The American Admiral ists of the which might run as follows: "Lieu- soldier were laid rest. There F t on the main Cordova { dressing recently the journalists tenant X- cautioned for neglect of tot other earners with do a, hill which housed Ludendorff. The United States, said:—"There has been duty as officer of the watch. The of - was no touch of carelessness, no early - p pan ideafn;the American mind that the (icer concerned is then required to forgetfulness from the living for those villages. Thus, for example, mails for American Navy had' been doing the g P mans are living in hotels or are bil}et- whcse swift passage from earth saved Point Barrow (the northeastermost ; bulk of the work oyer here—at least Frar.ce—and the world. ted. about the town. The conferences - of Alaska) leave the main route . a half. That is not correct. pointare being held in the grand salpn of More than once I have been over at Solomon, a short distance east of the Hotel I3ritanique, which was art The statement had been made in mir- the battle -scarred Vimy Ridge, made Nome. From Solomon a dog team of great headquarters, and in which acleAmo fan newspapers that, by a immortal by the Canadian ,corps the makes regular trips to Kotzebue, tag- the Emperor finally resolved to quit acle of efficiency, their Fleet had 9th of April, 1917. I recall one vast ing the mails beyond the Arctic circle, ' Germany. brought a million and a half. of troops crater that told of the absolute oblit- to this side of the Atlantic in the o y 280 miles; and from Kotzeube another ' The German sentry at the entrance d battery well. Am leaving for h:•iglisnd to- eratioi7 of those who received the - { , - course of a Yew weeks. displeasure is by forwarding_ an ad- march starts #ar Point Farrow, _-660_- the hole} legs lila heels aharo'v.. to a L that is Kutug t, tier w for fourteen ' shock of the explosion which formed t` a didn't, said Admiral Sims, verse t►onftdential' report when an bl- leave, and ,miles farther north. the delegates enter or other ofiicers "but Great Britain dld. She brought flcer leaves the ship, or on other stated march to Cologne, in Germany. I nave • will be glad of the rest atter what it. It has been converted most fit- F To cover this distance of 650 miles pass The sittings begin at l0 o'clock been with several different Canadian I've been thryugh in the last three tingly into a cemetery of. those who ' over two-thirds of them,, and escorted occasions. The officer thus penalized perished there. A recumbent cross merely once might well be considered' daily. Prior to that hour the German. - regiments and.we have always b'':;n months,- over the top fourteen times a half. we escort only a Malt of the loses, as Cantle, all chances of early, in attacks is pretty i a remarkable performance, but the delegates take their places at s huge • the best of chums, but I have no met fair. Rod inscription, ingenious in concep- merchant vessels that come over?'The promotion or consideration for. good • man whose dog team does the work table and receive the Allied Officers ,why the British billets. one soul I knew, during niy stay in To- 1 1 really can't imagine that the war MONS TO MONS. delivery over 1200 miles of trail through the winter season from Cor- dova when postal service by steamer arrival. The Kaiser's headquarters, the Villa is impossible on, while the British are in the cottage on From points - to -Nome route o er g *United States representative occupies teams start, serving. numerous distant Hindenburg's headquarters. The Ger- one of us stood with our steel hel- Through Whole War. mets - on our arm, our_ heads bowls!, To -have been with ._the,.Britlalt..:t • believe that ` a very sincere Mons in 19-14, and to return and retake prayer 'went up from every soldier Mona, with the Canadians, in 1918, has present. The general couldn't say, any been the unique .experience of Gunner . more. He finished up by saying: 'Men " E. J. Bowyer, of the 110th' Heavy I3at- ' of the old 1st Brigade, my heart is 'ere. R.G.A. He was a British- rest•- ; too full for words.' And tears rolled vast and 'was called out at the; out.•' cloven his cheeks. Needless to say he break of the war.. He was a motor- got three of the.loudest cheers- and .a man on' the Toronto Staeet Railway. tiger sibs men could give. - Gunner Bowyer was gassed in 1917. „Day after to -morrow we move up Ina letter to Secretary Gibbons, of tae to German territory, and hold a - Street Railwaymen's Union, Gunner bridgehead on the Rhine. At prep- .. Bowyer writes on Nov. 25: "You will exit we are'near alenciennes, a beauti- see that I am at that fatuous place, ful city in a beautiful country. Yester- Mons. I shall never forget when I was day I 'gathered a bunch of roses -and append ,his signature as 'proof that he there lit 1914, -and never thought I . is aware of the unfavourable notation. should ever see it again, but I thank chrysanthemums from the garden of In due course the fact is recorded at God, He has taken care of me all the Chateau de Montmorency, where the Admiralty In a volume known col- through the .ups and downs since I left our battalion hradquaeters is. , I live Canadian shores, on .Aug.lith, 1914. in the chateau, and have a very nice loquidlty as the Doomsday Book. -quite of rooms. Wine billy, too, may be li{ttited or I was at Valenciennes a few days ago' • where the Canadians fought the last ''At present I am adjutant; of the stopped at the captain a discretion. battle of the war and took 11,000 rise battalion, and consequently live very Another wa • in which he can visit hispris- oners, an now my a pry is attached tion and execution, tell the tale. At reason he continued another comanding point where the has a contract with the Postoffice De- standing. The latter walk silently to have been able to do this is "becausc4, partment to make three round trips their chairs, where each delegate bows up in the North Sea somewhere, is struggle was acute a massive monu- each winter . (from November 1 to profoundly to the man opposite before lying the great British Grand Fleet. ment marks the spot and records the May 15), carrying 600 pounds on each victory. Behind the lines the ceme- northbound trip and 300 pounds on teries are given the same thoughtful, each southbound journey. , tsar as at home. They are grass sown and planted with flowers and sht•ub New Kinds of Leather. • under. the supervision of experts. 1 ' know of no city of the dead more In -'the hunt" for new sources of sitting down. They can .do this work because' the There is no word of greeting and no British Grand Fleetis so powerful that pleasantried are exchanged, and the r the German High Seas Fleet has to business of the day is conducted stay at home. If a catastrophe should throughout with the same grim preci- happen to the British Grand Fleet, elon. Just what problems acrd under there is no power on earth that can leather strange things are turning up. consideration, of course, is not a mat- $ave us, - for' then the German II1g of frogs and toads can be tanned and ngs are r nor e o e turn ng the seas. Tlie British Orand Fleet is turned to account for card cases and smoothly - other fancy articles. The Government We, Thank Thee. Fisheries Bureau says the skin of the Great, God Who watched'stl four long seemly and Christian than the many , ter for iournalistic discusstont, but that have been built along the western It has been ascertained that the skins thi e t d t h i Seas Fleetcan come otic and sweep battle front. In Death Undivided. One of Abe earliest cemeteries I visitecr was in Ypres, where the first codfish furnishes an excellent leather, grave bears the date of October 14, • tough as parchment and very durable. 1914, and the last December 31, 1917. The same is true of salmon akin. Eel Over each grave is a cross and in- skins aro employed in Europe for icription giving name, number, corps binding books, and in Egypt shoe soles and whether killed in action or died of aro made from the skins of certain wounds. In some instances additional f,shes ceught in the Red Sea. Stur- crosses had been erected by friends or geon shin affords a handsome erne- comrades. One group of Australians mental leather. and the hide of the had a common cross and over the armored garfish is much valued in graves was a map of Australia and a . Europe, being covered with horny bit of Tasmania in a. low relief of plates that can be polished to an ivory - White stones. Until I was informed like -finish. years The anguish deep poor man has known, To -day, bow- kneeling at Thy Throne, We thank Thee. , For Peace, blessed Peace, which fol- lows strife, Relief from weary hours of pain, . An_d for the light which beams again, . We thank Thee. skin of its feet. With young chickens Iimmo the skin is tender and there is not Our mistakes contribute much to much fat. An older chicken has the wisdom of others. hard and scaly skin aroundthe feet. the foundation -stone of the cause of the Whole r,f tite Allies." - This is a cine anti generous tribute from the American Navy to the super- lative importance of the work which the British Navy has accomplished in the war, says a London newspaper: Deprived of her Fleet Geriiifany sinks at once to the position of a sixth - rate naval power. - • Young fowl can be judged by the An officer who commits an offence mato, but -please God, we shah .meet is over --it seems impossible. Now, I •when the time o e t t' want to get back to civilian life as soon as possible and get to work." that brings him before a court-martial comes s for pie .<, r i urn is liable to sentences which vary be- back to my wife and child after being_ tween 'death and a merely formal Ve- away for so long. primand. For disciplinary • 'offences "I have been to Vimy, where the the usual punishment is deprivation Canadians fought and . earned a great of seniority or a severe reprimand, .name Por . themsctives, and the menu-_ with or without dismissal from the meat .that hay 'been erected• there fu shin. Tho former sentence lute the memory of thein'is a thing worth sae - shin. effect of placing an oflleer ing, andsometfiing to be proud of, and below • many who were previously ;the cemetery there . is well cared for, HOW THE WAR WAS MADE lies elutions - Which. Fix the Guilt of Bloodshed«on Hun Rulers. New revelations giving a sinister insight into the plottings of Berlin ip 1 Lcjai ior to him, and; also results in.; I was with the 48th at {'atnbrai, and July, 1914, come in o1lcial reports loss. The latter constitutes 'must say they did their work in apleu- from the Bavarian Minister at Berlin.. . a more tor less permanent "black eielid order, to his. government at unic•h. - They mark" against the o11'ethier. For grave { "I am sorry to say. there are only four show, among other points: offences imprisonment or dismissal i of us 'left in the battery, of t1t 65 that ' . 1.- That conditions were deliberately - from the Service are generally ao<ard- , came over troth (Cignaj� a with me at • imposecli on Serbia push as it 'VMS ed. t 1. the beginning. I heater that we have., 'known could lead to war. There Is. however, a special code for got to take our turn for dot:icrbil!z:t 2. That as 11 wee Anti it' 'liour refractory midshipmen. Frit miiior tier, but how lung it will take it is Of fate," Harlin gore 'Vienna a tree offences they may be requ •ed to re hard to. say. I am aux%us. to get baric. hand, •evert -at the. risk of v, zr with main on board fora fixed period -=in Bets' •wishes to the boys cit the 113th Rus.;ia. - other words, their leave M stopped. Division, hoping to he hack with thein 3,''fhat •plan: were laid for the For more serious offences the captain soon, ark' a+Jaai;;er taia,l the Imperial Gel man Gov,; has the power to deprive them of $ etnment "to be as much surpi'ir.eci as seniority for any period not exceeding .Fireless cookers,,that can be built ! the other Powers by Austria's,actiou." six months. It is only under exception- into an all's of houses have been invent- ' •t. -That the Prussian 'General ..'ititfL al circumstances that the "young gen, ed. •calcu1ttting on the unpreparedac r; pit{ Prance with rifles . and hiatvlt.z� reckoned to defeat .Prance., in #'fir• weeks:`' - The• was ,started as Bcrkrliii planned, lout, instead of four weeks, it went over four years, and the rulers of Ger.- . manyI and Au:ftria have gone. The Paris Petit 'Journal, 'comment- ing onthe doe op iitr, wi ites: "This document • Cnuit.itutes an i,�ali'�tnient 1 ' e,f the Kaiser, the Crowe Prince, and his carnai•illa, as well aid of'thc late - Count Tisza, the chief culprit- in the i.ciglboring empire• Tisza has ipniii his debt. It. is now for the Allies to rake the other scoulidrels,,who will rH.,1 q .1:,(11 •„1•1 c,) i.,,.... . ., �ll:i.,i,:.41., ,•tom. ats their tames,” When frying meat or fishpl' cc,?unatcr neer' .. ace ic. t!'1 salt, (fry ,duster. een it. Chia lct,s sMarcel eitcape and no R1'Ca?e epat1"r: C 'Qi' the range. ,.._{ To rcvi\'e .patent, leather runwe',? with 'a soft rag soaked in olive oil a>!d mill. and afterw rthcpol iFh v. ith '11 • • 1 SItm OI-X1VC# 171,01 30-ALTI33137Et, tie011 ;o r-^ . • • - eetete tee— - — - --___