Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-08-15, Page 6•;,•"' • • • . irea":„""t:aaet _ 40) \Mille Thee met* tea from a Mortal* me GAzEnt pleat. Paper le a. substitute for ihatiter. PoSerrolled up very fine, le lured for string. Even *and hall iuys M. and tbe soles ot shoes are 'gado from luiPer. In some eases I *Weed boot sole* :made from flexible MORRISON, TORONTO, *Wel. Thee* are tacked right en to IRE IN HUN CAMP le the uppers with nails, and have a cer- OL. ten amount Of pliency and flexibility, 1 being very thin. The aoles of boots s 'are often, made of wood. I netIced a 11$ ler Leaning Out of Windows despatch in a. Geriein paper giving an account ot a men who had stolen etelle game which, had been tied te belt a trap set for foxes. The man who - so, Preen Air In Summer Time Dia Everywhere. • • It was on April 29th, 1e15, that Papa atole the fox from the tray we tnseed °Illeirt4Rook of Toronto was first reported to his home, whete it was discovered, Atte eaueette eet elle later aea that be had also eaten the foe." 'prisoner. Some of the Canadian prisoners B. was released to Switerlaed • in hereabout refused to do agricultural leseembees 1917, and in Junes lel& / work to the Hues, broke the hareest- be watt sent back to England. Ii:. Leg mitehinery given tbem and buried reached Toronto en July 23. the seed potatoes in a huge hoe) ththe On the way to the prison camp, ground. Engish newspapera uuexpur 'whlle itt the - t the reissiane gated, just as thee were printed In the wounded Canadians who bad beee'. Lention, and only, two or three days wentured were cruelly treated. "Sorae' editor, there od, were seen, for sale at bookstalls heeetoe oe its DES ARDENNES Iti RMAN NEWSPAPER CIRCULAT- ING IN OCCUPIED FRANCE 'Clever Periodical &Imitated to; Sote Dissension in Allied Ranks and • !Mislead • - There is, a little paper published in made' at a time when French artist* east to find a Pleagure he ridiculing the English. At rio time would Eng- lishmen. take any offence at the carn caterers, but uow these old jet s are revived for the purpoee showing the French that tbe national character is a detestable One. Even contemporary ,•wit sometimes found to be capable of distortion. For inetance a wine merchant ia seen we:r- ink away two thiraty voiles,- tieying, "I now sell only to elle Anseticans," Every Frenelt joke about the scareitY et food, and every French criticism of IU Government is reproduced :Atkin fully in the Gazette des Ardeenes. Yet With all the care of the editora, SIVIng GasUliste. oneambnostWpeoawetherrra. Tite Many fanners whe IWO a -stationary dariveirgrs-PenAlleilitr gasoline engine wiu And 0,, power ordinary breezee, runs at about the wwlinddminilel:bytinwigehattbye:,etohneormelieseithtehinorci same number of revolutions pet mi- nute ae the average gasoline engine; faithful engine to eau back on. but the engine ims a smaller Pulley, from a printing Press that it has been the Gazette, which sells at A UMW(' Will develop about two and one-half wheels on the line shaft. have different sized. sixteenrfoot mill in a stiff breeze sceY°4 111123t Delenna, mid legated "everysittle while the deeper of the German. authorities price and MaY be ha for the .asking, horse-powerf and a twelve -foot Mill, it is somethnes possible to Change to discover which is ,undoubtedly the has a small circulation, while the °he, and a half. The best Place .to over an old puraping windmill by meet iuteresting paper le. the world. Frenell people whom it Is designed to 'plena a power windmill is an lik taking' out all the crank mechanism,. We can imagine the fabulous price Mishit/me gladY pay 15 fralle,s apiece cupola of. the barn. . A XePladug this with high-speed gears hollow meet; built up froni ordinary that yin, be Paid for a file of it when for .and bevel pinions, and putting in bol° the struggle is over, 'far 'eurpaseing in from Holland, and when the Y can- lengths of 0 x 6 tiMbers,cblocked pee low Woodert mast with its„ steel shaft; gennine 'French papers, smuggled, the rewards that exasperated German. not be bought outright eve francs inches apart,' is run up, the base rests but this dePends to 'a large extent on officials have offered for the -aPPre- an hour for the privilege Of rea.ding on a braced .triangle of 'wood Th . . - ee the Make of mill. GeilerallY, it is _ . U trade in , a power windmill is ,set ee that its . more eeoriozni centre is at least fifteen, feet above thetkl, affair and buy a complete new the , ridge of the main. roof, • esel outfit If Yo1.1 already have a good fifteen feet above near -by tree4ops. strong tower, Monet the 'llew inill on, -Iestead orbeing bat Rilearediztbis”-that. andlnelose the bbttom for a ma. mill is "geared up" to increase the chinery rotini. KeeP nit "usmethe speed; and by. a pair of bevel -wheels, on the principle a the pinion and by meane of a pup 'jack belted to old Pump -only you will work it noer . et tbaar bQ'y'S were so badlY werunded," in One et the German cities. . Here is a war eeeref that has been said the captain, "that they fell out • * icept_for.nearlY, four years by the Ben pany were bayonetted and their bodies Brutality in. Camps. I3frat to Redeemed Area. tierce oatacIts upon the Germaa ever-. Among Wiltiernesa of Wire. 1 en. the NESMAN march. Two of 'ttlY *I'm cow' FRENCH RETuRN HOMES. glen, people, The Palter rteriterliitielse "am • appears,'giving not only accurate: if thrown into the ditches."' Roadways 'Thronged 'With People Got cendensed war neWS, hat containing Repairing Telephones on Battlefield*. nors. of Belgiune ancl -worse still, hold- The telephoneis. the principal means dri in the camps. . A Captain Nelmier, them %a to ridicule. Tbis little. th r t d elie shaft. , "There was a great deal of brutality French Peasants are again choking leg ti automobile- the terreIrs qttaid. vmg gear in e roadways below the mane, east , paper has eeivecl, the ilogetes to•bear i(tifteCit'arayi:: anCad mwatinatten' enecelorf°nth'e P ram= e Ina power wm grire you. satisfac- one or the camps la which I was lo- ' ' . e r errible naisfortunee 14 the -sure . phone lines d the operatin of the to A long steel Abaft that runs down tory service for many kinds . of work oommandant of Holzminded, Han* Vert Of Chateau Thierry, says a despatch 'di t HAPLAIN SAVESPARTYAE AT THE RISK OF HIS *WN 1,1FR FINDS ROAD BACK. lieroiem of Amerion Chaplain Re. .iealed „Despite Hie Own 11 Y 28. But this time they are ;hope of better ti.nies to ce-me. i telephones tee sieneueefs deo the centre of the. hollow mast. At -pumping, sawing, grinding, rir- going l3ome instead of leaving., at ; out it hundreds of thouseeds would the foot another sea of bevels puts ning churns,- separators, cern- cated. was most insetted. He had o I was the case in June , when the alarm have been absolutely cut off from any shellers, w small shredders, and so 'tin. 'Threshing, however is been in America for some years, and ri • 'Work. Lineenalatenunce is Use bugbear ot. the Pew" into a Pulley -wheel; azul an easy natter to belt this pulley the signaller's life- Hostile Owning it's to youieline shaft.' When the wind in his chile- enemy • here, as a shell sever blows, -1)ut the windmill belt- .on, and, splieter striking the line will while a diteetehit will Itesselt several sUP -the engine belt oft;' reverse this, came over to Germany before t e Wee sounded that the Germans were States entered the war. We were SUrt- coming., Weed to have the lights out at a cer- Every rad leading northward. con- tain hour, and to be in bed at 10-.30. , tains streams of, peasants and vee In the summer Um? ths ,..°Iiieeer$ .,tu hides of every description, with ef- t4e 'eau out (4 the. will'um" get Lue feets of all kinds piled on them. But fresh air. They were fired upon for thie at Holerainded and ether canine. The buildings heee were very gotta and of red brick. When we arrived they were just eorapleting the barbed wire a•round the outside.", en the faces of the people is a differ- ie e, _see_ ent expression that that 'which they 41* oda .,^06$44,‘... Itt too, circulates. al - bore when. they swere going the other most exclueively in occupied territorY, way. The expression. this time he with the differejlee that it is not 1)uhd they do not know what awaits them but by the eneray It is a Gerplan Ot^^; oppressed populaion, of ardiciPation, but also of anxiety, a.s lished by the The prisoners were ellowed to take eclat publication; and felts object is to bathe but the only tub available -VAS at borne* a b.orseetrough. They else had t Many resents travel in great two-.'eeUvinee the French theePle .wh° are news ot the war except- what passed thrmigh cnannels. ' Another .Unique Newspaper. • Giving this little itelg4en paper best, We imist that there is anether paper, the Gazette- des Ardennee; that e_ wheeled ayracks or carts, With one, .•wash. al/ their own clotties tue, two, mid sometimes fiVe horses- .in 'horse -trough Water Showers single Ale. The carts are 'loaded With could be had outside the camp. household. effects; with. bieyeles, .bird "We used to see a' few ..eiViliana serolaye7 Fagee and similar -belongings..swing.. strol.ling about ohlside ing oyer .the sidea, Greadfethere, lie continued; "Thee appeared ;to he grandmothers and babies ride with well dressed . There was little food in feather mattresses as seafe...Fatheri the shop vfindtiwee-ea meat. or bread. driveethe carts, and mothere and I was in Bamberg' in lanuarY; 1011 walking children and cows, goats and • ' It was much. worse than Berlin, where the etrete 'were precticalIrdesertedi s traj hehirtd*, • Various SUrpriseS 'alvait• dinerent I never saw a decent lookleg horse iti groups of the French people.' Some Germany. The streets in the. cities et".thetn. wells -And their thicketvalled looked dirty and deserted. Weinee oh stexie er.4rante Iceises hammered to 74) appeared to be doing all the' WOW: g girls e41,3 pseces be, the German heavy on the, streets. The youti nothing mere. than .Pile Of .erustied, all been conacripted for- work in the Munition factories, and 'Work just the same- en mem yee&ghoyes work- . . on the- reilvveys, .1n. Germany. it does. • • not matter what yciu are, 'Even a clergyman hat to work so munthoura each day. Soap at a Premium., "Soap bathe gieat• thing. to have itt Germany. - If you have soap. or ehnee tate icnt• can get anYthing you want. Yolk -Should. ate the soldiers' !seeks. • They are absolutely caked with dirt. la 1917, -when dysentery broketiut, the Weide 'were waened that it was through 'leek of Epee. The'holisewives Were told that they Mutt 'wash thele beads and, bediee switle sand; as cooldng food their 'sande if not clean; would, spread, dirt and disease .: ..The • Hun Will have a hide, like an alligator after 'this war la' over 'from 'taking and bat13.0. The faces of moat of the Run soldiere are covered with 'whis- kers, for tacit of shaving seep. They like a butieh of hoimes-tlieir faces bristling witb. whiskers and thele • necks filthy. •- • "Me lasting impressions Of Ger- many are just one word -dirt, dirt everywhere I couldn't- Sleep for fleas in my bed. 'Every eight I ueedato. teet right out' of it. 'The - too heavy; and generally electric. light is. not always Satisfac- tery. , lints "through.", That‘raay mean .a • ' RICH mental love songs which remind lam He has a great weakness of send. on a..ditrit wieter's moreing, to get a 'BRITISH WAR SONG called trom hie bed at, fitty,' ome a.m.,' . „ of liome and of -as' sociatiens that lift 1 ler'i temper is sorely tried when he la ' • How Chaplain Lyman R. Rollins, of the 1.01st infantry, Americans, won the French Croix de 'Guerra OF re- moving'llis Meek at the risk of his life in a gas attack to discover the way for his lost raiding party, returning from a, sliceessful, raid into the Ger, man trenches, is ,tokii in a recent muff. tierif The Living Church., Tbe stolq leaked out despite the fact tbat the liPs. of Chaplain Rollins, who is in tb.e United. States, ot present on a seciet military mission, are scalcd, • three Or four mile walk or more --out. • IN COMEDY • • • hia camp or billet. • hire out of the somber sutreenelie' gs of and lio,me--and such petty annoymices .Tonnny Atkins. bas all the intense as falling, into 'shell holes end getting • • reserve of the Briton, To sing about caught in barbed wire ih the darkness, SOME kAMFIJES OF TO1VIIVIY'S fighting for freedom ,against the ene- . mies of right, for the sake of the Rumoit. " ' flag, and all the rest of it, strikes him supposed to read It that Germany has and last,. but licit least, shell -dodging • wen the wait and that 'het altos are The Hues are laid on 'the ground for jest and righteous altogether. • . the most: part, and the lineman must Ineldentally it seeks to Sow' discord Pass lle9.:three811 hand as ho among, the Allies, betee particularly traces it along until the break Is found, energetic in are effort to convince. the pulling it up out of the Mud, .whore French People ;that their natural and traffic melt have 'embedded Itt. He hireditary eneinies . are the English, may,. however, traverse the avlioleflirie, who are now prolonging the war to Weil linden° break at all, and then he establish a. sort of ec,onomie and cone has teloolt for anhortearc‘uit-the eur- enercial ascendency over Prange. rent is rehiring te. earth, soinewherese It -circulates,. foe, in Switzerland, which, of .course, is not se easy as where pane are take)" to represent 'it finding a break. ' • • - as the veritable voice.' cit 'France. • The Gazette is well, disguised. It Is printed in the Free& language, the moues of the editors are French names, though the writers' are not less fields rock or shattered woodwork. Their haVe•been Pitted' every few feet German than Hindenburg.. It is well as, if* n ire& yetetable-gat--i dens tite bare,,theVegetables having ,gone to feed the Germaes. Senile of the people will find their houses itanding•in greet holes, the red -tilled' roofs and windows shattered, and What Was left behind, when the exodus begen. in heaps, everything of value or of use to the GeTznans having been taken. • ••• Some of the people will find their kitchen Stoves standing, mirrors in- tact and beds in place, the latter wile indicetions of having recently been occupied. . These will be the farms where the Germans made themselves .comfortable, and when the -allied of- feesive began they were se •taken by, surprise that they did not have time. Printed_ea geed...Peer cleverlY tinted, and, apart feoM.'being cruel lime is ah admirable sample of netts: miner work. The• Gazette issues' four times e week from ,Charleville, sup- posed to be German headquatters, aild Is as much part of Germany's war' Mechanism. as arty batter k of hewn- zera. potteding away era French vil- lage • : • Attempts to Fob! the French:, • . • . A ;specimen copy ot March, one et the last. to reaeh this countryi •feti: tutes drawing copied from a Ger man 'piper, and called "Winter Even- ing in the Champagne," a most eombre study ; of Weak sky, crier -winds and the .desolation of war: • There also au excellent drawing of disgusted -to destroy or pack the utensils of French soldiers strugglieg knee-deep Which they had been enalciag Use. in mud along the Seinme. Another • " . ‘•• .aerfal photograph nears this' label: Why -Canadians Must Save Food. "Deulemon.t-sur-Lys, t Destroyed , by Err lish Boinbardment." - - In clays of peace the meng peonle --g of Beigivra were a wc.limed iceopae. Among the illustrations, of course, is that stock picture Wields represents custoined to a liberal diet ` ' of- bread,: Getman soldiersplaying with little butter, potatoes, eggs, meat, peril, French and Belgianchildren. . This frith and vegetables.. • Now they, exist work ef art' failsen Accuracy, it 'being Lines run between the different `sec. dons of a battery, bete:ace the various in is in reality.the greatest tregede• batteries •in a brigade, ' to the brigade in the 'histoel of the world. , * The itself; and to, the battery's ' observal • truth ige.,,that ;the British private has tion -post, ' In the aggregate they ab- discovered a new' philosophy aPpros acne) some miles of wire, so that the peiate to mOdern War -he bee nis•• "lines" part of the signaller's job le no cover that it is too serious a. Wei- -•-neeeetzie - -- e .: --- eest- _ _ • see, e_ . iiess .to:'.13eAakeir, seriously"... Ruiner ---AS already Mentioned; theasignalier t and - iliPP"seYe le the eUly. aUtt4ete. 0. Is also .a telephone operator ogee& its unutterable ghastliness • ' s; tors are required for the battery- eie In all the British. soldiers' • songs chaiige, the batterkommender's pest, thesetniteast•te the ion& of the Ger:. the battery wirelesi station (to trans- an Army le most striking. Here is. mit . to .the battery -Commander the one. which might well be called the Wireless messages received from acro - planes), and the observation post • ',e,,..‘ '-niaintaining•.communioatiote during.,leee bells oeHell go ting -ling -ling an aotion • and 'gigue -.gayer tee toe - Fel' you 'ill& not for me , ".. •• ' with. thelefantry When ad advance rtIr me the angela ehlg-4-ling-e-lleg' takes place, in order to keep' up ice- ' They've the goods for me ' • ' co-dpe7ktion between. the infantry' and .° ,d.eath, where la' thy stin"Aint-a- the artillery, is, of course, the most ' . ling, . : -. '• ' • ' i difficult end hazardous part of the ar- - 'Wile"- grave thY• .41e-tereel corations have been. won for heroic de. the bells of Hell ting-a-ling4aAing, For -you, buteept for me... ...• tillery sigeallees :duty, and many work performed :tinder such circum z ' ' " ° 4- • '''• ..: '' '' ',emcee . . . • , e . That is the nearest he has ever. ap- . "Maintenance Of Communicatiote" preached to an exPeeseiche in song of to Sum up, is the signaller's job d , an • e his religious faith.. upon his courage and. resoUree t znay. . Song of tne British' Army . e eventually re* the result Or many al There le- one song : in .9nitinniar Which 'might Well be called the song critical. fight - •• • ... • .. A night raid on a German 'trench 'Woe ordered, and the unit to carte it out 'Cele/fed., 7:-Theeff-wereythree-ef—, ficers, tine of whom was Chaplain Eel - tins. The 'commanding officer clid not want him te gte; but he insisted 'that hamiglit to go, The .engineers reel the way to de troy barbed wire entanglements toni lay telephene lines for cemmunicatiou with the rear. Behind them the raid- ers crawled on their stomachs in the , inky blackness of the night. ,The en- ' gineers cat the barbed wire on the 'American side, and the raider i crept through. • . Guided by maps of the german,' trencbes, the engineers led up to a point where the raiders were to, stop . and lie low while the box barrake west°. put in operation. With less than t two' minutes to spare, the engineers, , mimed, t the telephone were in , the 'and th The Hues Might be Deceived If They bliish--they lire not. mentiened m as indecent. Such things make him - polite eallitary • gociety. ' The mere • Heard Him.Sing "I Want • • ilamboYant type of patriotic ;Mese which proclaime vvith gusto that • a . . to GO. 'Ontee • A Striking feature of the British • oldiers' was- aongs itheii• humor. Even the French find it' difficult - .to .understand how\ii is that% the Tommy apparently looks uPon as mere ceniedy an or ou of t Am _ricka front Vile trenches as. shell were • thrown on three sides,: of the German vector, ieavieg the side open "to the raiders untovelted, • a Lost Their Way Back • • •t .„; At the appointed tinie` the ba' rrage ers flattened thexaselves. storm' hroke from, back soldier's he is the only life for inc was • lifted and the 'Americans started and Se -birth, frankly rideples. fOrward. The raid Was a success, • - He hasi no illusions an to the glories but in the midst of. the Gennape turn . -of modern warfare. One of his fave orite songs begins: ", When this blOody war Is over, , hapPY I shall be. • - INDEPENDENCE DAYS, Werld's Day taf Freedom- Will' be Gate with the vis'on Oe the way back t e . ed on a gas attack, The Germans putt . • on kheir gei masks 'Mid started back,. fearing that the Germaris wohldscirop- a baxrage.betereen theta .anct• their trenches and 'cut there Off. .The breath of ,the Wearer of a gas mask ma -keep. steamy film on the ins . side of the goggles 'which interferes. Anheeia.Siliereie Wiene. , erigmeers, luelf blinded from the saeam -.Nott..havo..folight. nor4i diectoothii.- of their -Own. reath, Jost their way- . 0 in ail ages and Wall eMmtries,' and i and ran--straight-np egainst. a' Secti011, of American barbed wire Whieh • had ' yet the United'Steiee geeptis tee* the only .nation which observes any Inde- licit' Weil etit on the Way out, The -. Pandence DankeJuly 4th Yea almost slightest delay in returning to the ,t 'every country hi Europe copld eeeeetrehe'hes might mean slaughter for the e brae° as day when It 'Made a bold for treedenl.' :July- 14th is Pran-ce' lee whole party. by Gentian artilleey and s machination. fire. Independence, laay,„ ....Tilly 14th 4.789, Chaplain Rollins, did not hesitate . tiassr the burning of the Bastille, where Before the barbed Wire entanglemeete ',.. political prisoners were confined, and -‘ that steed iii his Way lie citellY remov-; which. was the'Visinte sign ot 'genera- ed his gas mask: Holding his breathe' tions of, tyranny. Tliat act Was the he took a geed look tip and down the .first in, a Series of settees which eetale entanglements, until he located what lislied the present Republic Of Preece ' he thought .,incts the point, at 'which October 5th •is Portugal's Independ- they had been cut by the rariderS, enoe Day; ,In 1910 • a RePubiic was Then he put his Mask hack on anr.r .proefalined. The - first step to Serbian led the party :to the hole in the en- - • - . . endepeedence was taken- on July 8th ; tarigiement and to :safety, 1808, whet). epeane Was declared be Upori the return of the, raiders and , tween Turkey and Sertdin . Cin July . their report, COlonel- Logan, of the •?n,d, 1871, Reese became the ' 'minter 101st infeetry, threw his. arms around . ot a.united ItelY, and the country ': came the chaptain and hugged' him: : • es, under the same liberal .relli. " -Monte- alkalies, old mien," he said,- I.. didn't it the front cen.shig'it: It is to be negto broke awey fromeautocratic , want y011 to go, eu. - '-thank G d now' of the British army.: • Every _soldier heard in. everi 'trench dugout and bit,. governiimit on December 'lath, 1.a05;', that you did." . ..., and :Belgium , issued a declaration ot '• • '. ...-- . - TipPing is at least an .ineient cus- •on the ration allowed by .the Commis- , • No Tip for Him. ' let in France, °The; WOrds do not independence egainstlielland on Oct°, scan and the music. cannot be coin- tk 1880. . • • • • • • her `i 4 WH It.EACE .COMES, . well knowe that the correct method tom. In the eighteenth celitt*Ir an mended for martial,grandeuror de- • • . • . Britain's first step, toward e freedom . „ for a German to dandlesa French child 1,talimi-vititer to --England remarked- lieate haemonies but' it -is Tommy -At' was-tlie Megna-Charta r ' shake the sheets1. but even then lesimafor Belgian Relief. . The Geemans .would wake up liege time to time ' allow food that is sent to Belehm neimply Covered with the Insects" to be distributed there le Order, to , His that impressions upon reaching Save thetaselves the expense and 'England was the large number of pee 'trouble of feedingaheir captives: The ple gales about their daily work as effect of the meagre feeding Is notice - usual and of the traffic. . There are able -among industilat iverkere a automobliee Geritiany and most workehop in. Antwerp where 800 girls -vehielco :teem to be drawn by oxen. are employed in making over Clothing Itt Iliielend the soldier saw theusatuls sent • from Afeerlea, len Or. tv0Ve. fogerfee, poor, eiset": An Anierican:actox Who. - the Allies. °. Tiled° documente are . . I 'went toga 'Orse • .. • . , is to grasp it by the ankle and bolsters ously batter its head' against a Walt. lefore fete/eating end impressiv,e. is the series of maps, alleged to explain an Irish •peer replied to the ,Duke of, sheers that it is. not to be teken ;seri- the "secret treaties". diseevered by the, Orliionde's invitation to dine: "II ousbr., These are the words: 13cesheriki in petrograd, which are your grace will give me a-felun. ea to SuPPOsed to reveal the hidden- alms c't tpay your servants, I will. I am tas I want to ge 'ome • r • • ' that it Is petite to dine with the nobile ins' s masterpiece.. • It is alined 'a Ity, 'where you pay the servants for dirge or lenient, colored With jese that ten times as much .as you eat. And touch ee elusive cockney,hunnir Which chiefiy :-.-of'-iraftwitY--earSrittinding-about-itile.-faint'eacir.day.,---Tlio-reason - •:reelife-rtiirrindreirtir_mone-mtrriel;unimer had a schedule of the hp --,Tha -shells ,..and.,..tlie„..whizzbangs4.14,y Many ot them Were.big freight Cars. • ' "This I noticed," teed he, "parteme ally When' travelling thiehigh Saxony from near the 'Austrien. feentier. All branch railways and single track rall- y/nes were overgrown with weeds and the rails red with rest. They wete not being used it Mt Factory. ohieaniee I eaVi by the score With no smoke.eom- ing from them. • Substitines For Everything, "The Geritatis haee tiebstitutes and rotten substitutes for alniest every - 'to dealt.: Their :usual breakfast is a cupful of toerealine,_ whicli ie roasted lie used its a Snbatitute for coffee Of alt those workers 90 per cent. have not tasted any Meat foe SaYeee•except either' designed Try once took ,att English house for the Czar Was a. traitor to the Allies or by. Gerrean eiperis to prove . that. the servants expected printed for the I don't want to go to the trenches no cr. German cause has been misrepresent-. guidance of his American friends, and '' more . . _ ed and that the Entente had long put them on the bedroom e mantel- / went to go over. the sea . outonoa the downfall of the Fatherland. pieces .• He had taken a particular Where the ..Allemens cannot catch . me; dislike to a very British side -whiskers be, my,. ed butler he had taken over with the 1 want .to go 'sane. -. . house, end the list, after enumerating . - • the sums to be paid to the chauffeur, • one eau imagine a German over- s - rush and they roar, :' the email portiop of bacon isseed by - The war news is a chronicle of unite the Belgian Itelief , and more often tempted German suecess. id those engaged . giveo uP 'to the • And to 0.Sow DisCorci. " in Manual laber. Wnen ,they de get .meata-sefell, it is dog meat at about 75 cents a potted, This- is but one. of the reasons whir we in .Canada are asited h Dominions to Have Vette n _Runnymede On iune 10th, 1215,. but .Britis ., . . . with the majority of the ceuntriee of , .... Terms of Settlement. the World, ehe will probably change the 'date of 'her Independence Day to At the dinner to the Ca ns.dien edie . that on w*ce .. dee. groat New Is: *9.n..... 1, tors now visiting Pnemcd, gr. 1•;ley-d ;. dell deadnietts the right to' join in the . . Canada's Khekt uniyersity: . George- ,Irrevcreably pledged- to llte Bre. , • : settlement Ot peace terms. After the, educatiOnal Worketeissetarrtedeetrine12 learaycarse• • nethiegleee „- in -enstipes . Dueing June the Khaki UniVersity enermous sacrflees they have Made for • Canadian centres in England and the could be conceded to theni. • • .degistered pupil e in this menth hum -1 Canada, Australasia and Smith Afrl- bered 2,500. , .A more extensive' ca have 'contributed hundreds. of then, • . course will open in September: The sands of men to the *.pritish. Armies in educational correspondence depart. Eerope. To the Colonials from over-- . meht showS great groWth. .The fol-' seas has fallen .the .welenie duty ot Towing figures of students are given: I fighting in Preece or wherever the Correspondence course.* agridulture,) interests. of the British Empire were • Being a Tentonie production, there the iniusemaid, add. so on,. . finished bearing thia song. and drawing certain 188; engineering, 276; business, 150; Is naturally a: humorous department. with, 'The guy with the black whisk- inferences to. the Singer's morale. academic subjects, 245, Of the men It is usualy.compiled frern files; of the. ers you will meet in the front hall- .Eut the British . soldier will utterly who 'register for educational study,: 98 to save meat and wheat for export. French press, the seleetiona being not a. cent' eonfoluid those inferences every time, percent : continue thelr studies. MO °lam mmi of` -03E413 3C:0 +PAI HELEN IT: Streets Lkta Ate maAnt * READ/ ? IstiOtt EtAIS*1 1 AND I MAO e-' ' .1 LOIN Joe' As PONtei AS YOU ba. .• 1 to be 'safeguarded: In -South Africa, in- South-east Africa, itt Togolands at Syria and in. the Pacific, they have shed their blood without . stint in the Common cunse. • ' -The British -Empire' was never- be fore so itrongly welded • togetifeee throughout all its pities as it.le to-dayi;,- bays the New' York World. In re • .6potiding to the call of sentiment the dointniane have not only fortified the union, but they ha.vp,,..a,s 1 Sur enema ' tented rightfeeqiliidee la- paperlar ,Coanallt.oeWar and Petiee: . Whait the -day comes to consult am frg the beligerents :upon the ternis rf'peaOe with Germany, the reptesen fativosbt tlio. Britian docailfaust utiy bo accorded Beate 'et honor with. the reit, If ,nations. like difba end* •COsta Bien, which bay° entered the war are to Tiger° • cia the. peace • table, with better reaSell Canada, • t Atietralasitt and Sonthti AfrIcti eltottld be there. They, too, have 'thoir in- ' toreilte to Dreamt to the final .11.0845titt* Their night to .elitire in the de. &tone to be reached and in tuo ere fores000t 6± trotttlet, hiva been estab. 0004 horoo4„Mlat1Ono teellimisiseereese4ne-....