The Exeter Times, 1921-4-7, Page 3GERMANY REFUSES TO PUT IIITO EFFECT
AL,LIES' DISARMANIENT IVIEASURES
Defiant Note Sent tO Entente Absolutely Refusing to Dis-
arm .by April First—W on't Dismantle Ports on
Polish Frontier.
A. despatc•h from Paris sa.ysi—Ger-
many has ,again defied ate allies. This
time it is with regard to. disarm,ament,
Having refused Point -bionic to Inc'el;
the allied ,dienuand to pay 1,000,000,000
marks garlqi- by March 23, German,y
replies refueirug o put into effect th.e,
,disarmainent meas.urres ordered to the
.completeci by April 1.
As Berlin proposed to arbitrate the
.quesition of the lamount of her -pay-
men.ts to date to .prove she owed no
"baltanee of 12,000,00.0,000 On the 20,-
000,000,000 marks due May 1, she
MY/ asks t•hat the ,allies arbitrate the!
,dis,annament matter. That is, on .all 1
except one .point ---Germany refu.sets!
p.ointablanle to disarm her fortress,es.
.oin the Polish border "because of the
.danger from the east."
Germany, in her note, which is
dated March 26, replies that she
handed over all arms really due, and,
that the allies' calculatiOTIS \vere
e_Ityreing by 1,000,000 rifles. For dis-
ri,armelment of the eastern fortresse,s
t.he note stays:
"The pieces of artillery con.seryed
by Germany for the defence of the
eitadls are "'absolutely neceastary and
their surrender is impossible, in view
of present events in the East. The
same applies to the light equipment
o -f these forts."
As
for regulatinar of factories- era -
bitted, to nrantitacture arms, 13eg1an
presents a most regnaalcable plea.
Article 63 of the treaty- says:
"The manufacture of ,arms,
nuth-
tions Cr any war material shall only
be ,earried out in factories or works
the "lloaation of Which ,shall be come
municatecl 'to and ,approved by the
Governments cif ' the prineipal
land 'associated powers and the num-
ber of which they retain the right to
restrict."
Geraruany supplied the names of the
factories she chose. The allies ap-
proved them, ancl declared that,
therefore, arms could not be manna
fectured in othe.r factories, of which
it garve a lisle including the Krupp
works. Germany's new note declares
the treaty gives the allies' no right
to forbid the manufacture •of arrms irn
all these factories., and that the allies
have power to not only -with regard to
the factories named Iby the Germ,an
Government as official arms nuanu-
,
factories.
This is considered as perhaps the
most impudent' of- all the impudent'
notes Germany has 'sent the afillie,s. It
Ss virtually a defiant trouble -maker.
When Uncle Ben Went
Without.
The neatest housekeeper in Madison
'Village was Aunt Martha Giddings—
in fact, she was "pizen" neat. She
bad no mercy whatever on her hus-
band, Uncle, Ben. Thepoor old gentle-,
man was not disorderly hlinself; but
Aunt Marlia had browbeaten him into
thinking he was and had forced him
meekly to aceept all her own stand-
ards of cleanliness and order. Haw
, well trained she had him the following
incident shows:
One afternoon 'Uncle Ben tiptoed in-
to the kitchen and crossing to the.
sink, stood, there looking over his
spectacles at the shining fa.ucets and
the Carefully scrubbed slate. Then he
turned to Aunt Martha, wno was darn-
ing socks by the window.
"Guess ye've lust washed up the
sink, ain't yer?" lio aske.d.
"Yea, I have," she replied. -Why?"
"Well," said Uncle- Ben with a
gentle' sigh, "I dit iti:Ink I'd relish a
drink of water, but 1 guess I c'n get
long without it,"
The British .are losing no time in
taking up trade with Russia. With
the agreenint no more than 'signed,
the first British steamers carry.ing
Britdsh products to Russia have ap-
p.eared, at Riga. • Other British mer-
chant vessels have been signalled 'at
sea and some are putting in at Revak
It is expected that trade between,Eng-
land and Russia will now develop, as
rapidly as arranger/leaks for payment
for the goods can be made.
Gift Of Radium ..
to Madame Curie
A despatch from. Washington
says: --President and Mrs. Harding
will re,eeive Mme. Curie in the White
I -louse, 'On
14a1r 20, andl,presen,t her
'with a gramme of raidtiiinielue.d at
$100,-000, in behalf of the women of
the, United States, who ,have con-
tributed to a fund for this purpose in
recognition of her !scientific services,
nartucularly in the discovery of
radium.
Mme. Curie will come to the United
States especially for the presentation.
Bavaria' Aiding
Charles' Cause
A despatch from London says:—
The Daily Chronicle publishc,s a des-
patch from Berlin which states -that
it is believed, that the Government of
Bavaria is concerned in Emperor
Charles' .coup in Hungary.
It is declared possible that in the
evenb of his success th,e morarclii.sts
in Bavaria will atteenpt a coup.
Mrs. Ralph, Sinith, DI:P.P., British
Columbia, is the first wonian Cabi•net
Minister, in the Britisih -Empire.
John Burroughs, the world4enown-,
ed, naturalist, diecl recently while
travelling home from California
where he had spent the' winter.. His
burial took place on hiseeight-y-fourth
-birthday at his boyhood, home, pough-
keep,sie, N.Y.
'CENTRAL EUROPE IN TUR OIL OVER
A very rare
Francis, Ontario,
WHITE BEAVER
speeimenmeaught in the Englis.h. River, north of
It is pure white, and weighs 31 lbs,
Fo rt
The Leading Markets.
Toronto.
1VIanitoba wheat—No. 1 Northern,
$1.881/2; No. 2 Northern, $1.85%; No.
3 Northern, $1.811/8; No. 4 wheat,
$1.721/2.
Manitcba eats --No. 2 CW, not quot-
ed; No.. 3 CW, 385Aec; extra No. 1 feed,
38%c; No. 1 feed, 36%c; No. 2 feed,
33%c.
, Manitoba barley—No. 3 CW, 80e;1
No. 4 OW, 681/2c; rejeetecl, 56½t;
feed, 561/2c. .,
All above in store Fort William.
Ontario wheat—F.o.,b. shipping
points, according to freights outside,
No. 2 Spring, $1.75 to $1.80; No. •2
Winter, $1.85 to $1.90; No. 2 goose
wheat, $1.70 to $1.75. e
American corn—Prompt shipment,
No. 2 yellow, track, Toronto 90c, nom-
inal.
Ontario ouits—Ne. 3 white, 43 to
450, according to freights outside.
Barley—Malting, 80 to *85c, accord -
trig to freights outside.
1 Ontario flour --Winter, prompt ship-
merut, straight run bulk, seaboard,
$8.50.
I Peas—No. 2, $1.55 to $1,65, outside.
1 Manitoba flo•ur—Tra eke Toront o
iturst pa.te'nrts, .010.50, second patenbs,
1$10.
Buckwheat—No. 2, $1.0o to $1.10. ,
Mallfeed„--Carlots delivered, _Co-
mmit() freights, bags included: Bran,
per ton, $36; shorts, per ton, $34;
white middlings, $41; feed. flour, $2.30.
Cheese --New, large, 831/2 to 34c;
twins 34 to 341/2e; triplets 341/2 to
35e; old large, 34 to 35c; do, twins,
341/2 to 351/ac.
Bubter—Fresh dairy, choice, 48 to
49e; creamery, No. 1, 58 to 61c; fresh,
6Q to 63c.
Margarin.e-29 to 310.
, Eggs—New laid, 33 to 34c; new
i laid, in cartons, 36 to 37c.
1 13edine—Canadiari, handpicked, bus.,
$3.50 to $3.75; primes, $2.7.5 to $3.25;
Japans, Sc; Limas, Madagascar,
-101/2c; California Limas, 121/2c.
Maple products—Syrup, per imp.
gal., $3 to $3.10; per 5 inam
$2.75 to $2.90: Maple sugar, lbs., 19
do 22c. •
Honey -60-30-1b. tins', 22 to 23,c per
lb.; 5 -2*, -,Ib. tins, 23 to 25c per lb;
Ontario eorab honey, at $7.50 pea: 15 -
section. case.
Snaked meats,-4aras raed 35 to
36c; heavy, 27 to 29e; cooked, 50 to
55c; rolls, 31 to 32c; cottage molls, 33
to 34c; breakfast bacon, 43 to 46e;
fancy breakfast bacon, 53 to 56c;
1 L'S ATTEMPT TOIEGAIN THRONE heasTe, plain, bone in, 47 to 50c.„-bonte-
I , 49 to 53e.
•
Half of ex Hungarian Army Aiding to Restore Former
Monarch --Three Governments Consider Haps-
burg Restoration as a Casus Belli.
A despatch from Paris says:—Cen-1
tral Europe is again aflame. Charles,
proclaimed the "Apostolic King of
Hungary, Emperor of Austro-Him-
gary, and King cf Jerusalem,"
Is marchiag at the head , of
half the Hungtarian army towards
Budapest, where the Government,
lisade,d by Admiral Horthy, is report -
1» be preparing for iminediate
flight
A state of war has been declared
between Hungary and Jugo-Slavia
and Czecho-Slovakia, while Prinee
Gleika, the Roumanian Minister to
Paris, said- that "before the Haps-
burgs are permitted to remount the
throne Roumania, will fight."
Jugo-Slayia en Thursday afternoon
mobilized three army corps and cum
picak Peco in the frontier -region
6,ward.eil to Hungary under the Tri-'
anon treaty. They seized the impor-
tant railiva,-y and industrial town of
Szegeclin, several inileS within the
Hungarian territory. The Czeeho-
Slovakian Minister, Oauki, in Parma,
declared that the "situatioa ie the
gravest. If Charles takes Budapest
it will be direct defiance - flung into
the teeth of our ultimatum—and
means war."
Martial law has been procl.airnecl
practically throughout Central Eur-
ope and the Balkans. Censorship has
been imposed upon all tele,graPh and'
telephone lines. All foreign news-
papers have been forbidden to 'enter
Hungary. Railways, in Hungary,
Jugo-SIavia, CzecheaSlovakia. and
Roinn,ania have been taken over by
the military. • '
All 'frontiers have been closed and
no travellers are perntitted toenter
or leave Hungary. Passenger trains
in Hungary have ceased.. Charles has
demanded tbre payan.ent of the eivilltiat
due since Octiuber last, arnou,rking to
150 000,000 kronen, and a liberal an-
nual ,,grariat from the time he was de-
throned formally by the national as -
amiably.
Kidneys Troubled Her.
BACK ACHE SO BAD
COULD NOT SLEEP.
The epidemic of -"Flu" has a great dell
to be responsible for. In nearly every
case it has left some had after. effects,
and in a great many cases it is the
kidneys that have suffered.,
When the kidneys have been left in a
weakened state, very often sonic serions
kidney trouble will follow if nal ttended
to. Doan's Kidney Pills will prove to
be just the remedy you require to strength-
en them.
Mises Florence Earnshaw, Apsloy, Ont.,
writes:—"Last winter, after I had the
"Flu" r was troubled with 'my kidneys.'
My back ached so I,could not sleep, and
my ankles were so swelled I could not
walk. A neighbor told•me about Doan -s
Kidney Pills. I got two bbxes and
before I had the fa•st'one taken 1 felt
a change.- I cannot recommend your
.medicine enough." .
Be sure, and get Doan's Kidney Pills
. when you ask for them. An oblong gray
Cured meats—Long clear been, 27
to 28e; deter bellies, 26 to 27e,
Lard—Pure tierces, 19 to 19%c*
tubs, 191/2 to 20e; pails, 191K. to 201/0;
prints, ?011a to 211/2e. Shortening
tierces, 12 to 121 -Ac; tubs, 121/2 to lac.
pails, 13 to 131/2c; prints, 141/2 to 15e.
Choice heavy steors, $10 to $11;
good heavy steers., $8.50 to $9.50; but-
chers' cattle, .elibiee, $9 to $10; do,
good, $8 to $9; de, med., $G to $8: do,
com•t $4 to $6; butchers' bulls, choic,e,
$7 to $7.50; do, good, $6 to $7; do,
co.m., $4 to $5; butchers' cows, choice,
$8, to $9; do, good, ,$6.50 to $7.50; do,
corn.'$4 to $5; feeders, $7.75 to $8.75;
do, 900 lbs., $7.26 to $8,75; do, 800 lbs.,
$5.75 to $6.75; do, corm, $5 to $6;
canners end cutters, $2 to $4.50; milk-
ers, good to choice, $85 to $120: do,
corn. and ined„ $50 to $60; choice
springers, -$90 to $130; lambs, yearla
ings, $10 tO $11;'do, spring, $12 to
$14; calves, good to choice, $12 bo $13;
sheep, $6 to $10; hogs, fed and. water-
e.d, $14.25; do, weighed off care,
$14.50; do, f.o.b., $13.25; do, country
points, $13.
Montreal.
Oats, Can. -Weste, No. 2, 63 to 64c;
do, No. 3 60 to 61c. Flour Man.
Spring wheat patents, firsts, $10.50.
Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs.'$3.35 to $3.40.
Bran, $36.25. Shorts, $36.25. Hay No.
2, per ton, car lots, $24 to $25.
30c. Butter, c,hoicest cre
Cheese, finest easterns,am,22.3r,1-535 to
o
55Y2e. Eggs, fresh, 35c. Potatoes, per
bag car lots $1 to $1.05.
Butcher steers, good, $8.50 to $10;
med., $8 to $8.50; earn., $7 to $8.
Butcher heifers'choice, $8.50 to $9.50;
med., $7.75 to $8.50; come $6 to $7.50.
Buteher cows, choice, $7.50 to $8;
$5 to $7; canners, $2.50 to $3;
cutters, $3.50 to $4.50. Butcher bulls,
good, $7.50 to $8.25; -COM, $6 to $7.
Geed veal $9 to $9.50; med $7 to
$8.50; grass, $5.
Hogs, off -car weights, selects, $16;
heavies, $14; sows', $12.
The Silesian .Tangle.
As t'he average man read the re -
Sults of the balloting in Upper Silesia
and noted that the Germans polled
about 60 'per- cent. of the vote, said
average -men settled back with the
idea that one troublesome post-war
matter had been cleared up. Wherein
the taverage man seenis to have been
'nista:ken. Upper 'Silesia is not to be
denied herr "place in the sun" of the
world's neavis. Instead of. settling the
matter, it seems that the plebiscite
throws the whole situation into a
tangle that meat finally be passed
back to the Le.ague of Nations for ad-
justment Far from being the end
of the quarrel, the French and. the
Poles , would make it the beginning
of another long-drawn-out dispute.
Geographers, ethnologists, eco.nomists
,and industrial exp,erts are all to have
a Word.
' !Royal Pc ion Def.:hares -Great 'BritaiTi to be in a "State
of Ernergency"--My Dev clop Into a General StrikeL---
Coal Pirpblein Difficult of Sollqion.
A despatch, foOm London says —By
a Revel preoldnaation imaied on 'Pi -Mrs -
'day, declared to
be ir a "etele of oraergenc " in view
oj' he coal mirmrsi strike. '
This is the frsrst time, in British
111,s'161.7 that an industrial crisis has
been so qualified.
The deela.ration of this "s.tate of
emergency" ellrPowexs t,he Govern-
ment to apply certain special mea-
sures provided for under, the a,et
which was plissed by Parliament last
October, and ythich was introduced at
the period of another mining diffi-
culty.
'The last co,a1 strike WalS settled 1,be-
fore the Eme-rgency Act 'became a
law, and this is its initial application.
Labor leaders of all shades of opin-
ion had protestedtagainst the bill, •but
it was put through Parliament, and
then practically forgotten. News of
its application, 111 la4ct, came as a
great surprise, even to antany
There are eertaia indications that
the coal strike allay ,clevelop into a
general strike, a warning of whi,t,ch is
eon-veyedli ',11','"cen-
ference by ths two other members of
the "Labor Triple Alliance"—the
railway men and the transport work -
The coal strike alone apart from
its grave social consequences, will
completely paralyze British trade and
Mdustry, but a general strike would
be a national oalamity at this time.
Efforts for a compromise are still on
loot, but no progress has' so far been
me,de toward a sell:Ilion el the prob-
lems.
The coal problem is extremely diffi-
cult of isolution, because while every-
one admits that the miners have a
grieva,rice in facing fl heavy Dedsuction
in wages, no cne can suggest how it
may be obviatod eiteept by a Govern-
ment subsidy. This seems to be out
of the question.
It is also adtraitte,d that the diver-
sion of the coal to overseas trade was
due mainly at first to the exorbitant
prices fixed by the coal owners, who
were determined to maintain their
i.mmense profits in addition to meeting
the increased wages.
Now by reat,s.on of the United States
competition arid the iruereasing res-
triction icif the French demand beeause
of her, coal reeeipts front Germany,
the situation demands a sacrifice, but
neither the miners nur the owners are
willing to fate it.
No etrike can ameliorate such a
situation, but it can certainly make
it worse.
The coal rninera, in determining the
existing wage contnacte, gave notice
to all mine employes, including the
engine/nen and purripmen, who were
the chief benefieiaries ander the war
wage scale, and this notice which the
coal owners contend was only a form-
ality, these workers are now threat-
ening to, aceept, thus allowing the
mines to be flooded and rifinting the
industry for an indefinite time.
Succeses or failure fox the strike, is
expected to dead upon the results
of meetings of the railway and trans-
port workers called for early next
week.
Educational Expenditures.
Ontario spends something over
twenty millions of dollars annually on
its public, separate, industrial, cone
ti.nuation, and high schools, and, its
collegiate institutes. The great bulk
of this, amount 'is contribtated ande ex -
vended by the muHnicialltiallean-
selves. On uni,versity education .the
Province .spenidts leas than two mile
lions .of dollars; that is, less than one-
tenth of the •are. o.unt spent 'on primary
and secondary education.
No one who realizes the interde-
pendence of the various grades of
eclqication will argu,e that university
education costa tbo much. "Primary,
secondary, ancl higher education are
part of great education effort. The
goal of that effort is to develop a freei
human being who has been prepared'
for the responallogity,,,apfmaclegirling1
things' for himself. Each division r of
our educational system has ita share
in this preparation.. The same pupil
may pass through ell ' grades. The
teachers of ther primary schools are
taught in the secondary schools by
teachers who have them -selves been
taught in, the universities. The effec-
tiveness of university work largely dea
pends on the excellenee of the pre-
p'aratoay schools, a.n,dthe wh.ole tone
and atmo,s,phere of the seeniidtary
schools are ,createcis by their univer-
sity-trained .staffs. The character of
the work in the primary schools is
ultimately influenced or even deter-
mined by the ideals of the University.
The interests of primary, secondary,
and higher education are interdepen-
dent an,c1 interlocked. No 011.0
est can be impaired without weaken -
lair the others; none can be improved
without strengthening the others. To
set the financial claims of one against
the other would be to impoverish all."
IMMIGRATION ORDERRETARDS '—
INFLUX OF POPULATION
A uesp.atch from London says:—
The Canadian ,steamship companies
here say that they- are receiving from
twelve to fifteen can,cellations daily
for passages to Canada, which have
been booked by prospective emigrants
from the British tisles, the reason
givc-n being the co.nthmation of the
r estri c ti on re qu i ring the i no r cos ed
amount ,of landing money, which was
box; a maple loaf the trade mark; price ree,eraly decided upon by the Can.:
50p; a box at all dealers, °rd'ulai1"1 adian Cabinet The Canadian mum -
direct ou receipt of price by The T.
gration authorities hea..e are said to
Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. '
favor this action in so Tar as it affects
It's a Great Life If You Don't Weaken
/frn13golietz.
Splm VaN5 6-1
tss\I-LuM W6s
BizooDING so moct4
ovE.9- HeNR011ivie.s
WoRK..E.0 -1--‘,44et4iN4
sic)0- 13`i SIDE- AHD
400 TeLL
(7._17151..1
vsle_ Bccri-A
f3R.oscpt)V.D 6,N
iNk,i1/4i FLA- —
0.
ditiONZ-1 it4 '16E- bOsit41:.ss
ect1/41`i
Cus-roi4eR
50M-Acto iT` 001-4'1"'
PIN'•1 To COT 6-kNg op—
continental .immigration, but it would
appear that it might well be modified
in the case of Britishers. It hits
,h•ardest those who had booked their
pascages and made their arrange-
ments before the landing money re-
quirement was increased. Now some
of thos,e people find that they cannot
-go, and hence are ,cancelling their
passages daily, much to the discom-
fiture of the Canadian railway arid
steantship,,companies. In s,pite of tleis
Tact, however, all four ef the boats
which will carry emigrants during Lite
month of April, are already full.
co\u61-0-
"1N6 "To
cu -t' FEt.,1.0v4:5 "TtilliDNT"
In.CeN\USe.
5i4N-iPoo so I 6IND
frkltft SEKT
re -Et: M-E006,t-ik
t'IP‘e.. As Mt
-r !_err ki(H
SHPSHPOC)?'
Acektl
Prt1:'
General Degonete
French. General -in -Chief, who is con-
ducting .the railitary operations in the
occupied German territory.
Some seventy periodicals printed in
Esperanto, the universal language, are
11DIV
"NV e sleep, -but th.e loom, of life
never *tops; the pattern which was
weaving when the sun went down is
'weaving when it .coratis tip in the
I morning."-a•Henry, Ward Beecher.
•Yil r.4
Move Degultdy, or Do They
ROME CHSTIPATED9
If the truth were only known it would
be tound that half the ills of life are
caused by constipation, for when the
bowels cease to work properly all the,
organs of the body become deranged.
A free motion of the bowels, every day,
should be the rule of . everyone who
aspires to perfect health.
Keep your bowels regular by the use of
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills, and you will
have no constipation, no bilious or sick
headaches, or any other troubles arising
from a wrong action of the liver or bowels.
Mrs. G. Brown Lewisville, N.B.,
writes:—"I .2aavo 'been troubled for
years with a constipation, and trying
various, so-called remedies, which did mc
no gtiodwhatevcr, I was persuaded by a
friencl to try Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills.
They have done me worlds of good.
They are indeed a splendid pill and I
can, heartily recommend them to all who
suffer from constipa lion. a,
Milburn's Laem-Liver Pills are 25c. a
vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on
receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto. Ont.
-- By -J-L16.'Rale,bit
P\ 6i1E,Kr
L.‘Fe-•
o N T"Vre.-Lj
ema,,,,raeltet
-a
--""'-ateeetilt4,4Se
"'•
ma -7.1
ClUICKLY
RELIEVED.
It is hard to leee,p the children from
catching cold, they will run out of doorii
not properly weappod, or lame too
mech clothing on and get, overheated and
cool off too steitlenly, they get their feet
wet, kick Off the clothes at night.
The mother cannot wateh them riO
the time um what is she going to do?
chil\Idl°retlaie'sr3 COrnllgUllSaL 011reVee:ldS:legblUetel h
MtleS;
look for a aemedy ou the first sign.
A great many mothers are now giving
their children Dr. Wood's Norway Pine
Syrup, as it is so pleasant and nice for
them to take, and relieves the cough or
cold in a very short time.
Mrs. S. Crowe, R.R. No. 5, Truro,
writes:—"Two years ago my
little boy caught a severe cold which
left him with a very had cough. Ile
could not rest at night, and became very
thia and weak. The prescription our
physician gave me did not help him,. and
I did not know what to do. My s:ster,
in Manitoba, arote me to try Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup. I went right to
town and purchased two bottles, and
before they were used my boy's3 cough
had disappeared, and he *became strong
ansi well again.
We alivays know what to use now for
coughs and. colds.",
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is 35e.
and 60e, a bottle ab all dealers.
Manufactured only by The T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
The "Terrible" Turk.
Those who know anything of the"
Turk at home in his tottering domin-
ions ate well aware of the fact that
he has a way of posing before the
visitor • and before a distant foreign
government, not merely as the sick
man of Europe, hut as the great
gentleman of Europe end .of Asia, too.
Few equai and none surnaiss the flaw-
less geniality he can assume; he is tha
devil's own' that nt alonnin.g the livery
of light and masquerading es an
angel. Hekirows that those who have
narrowly watched him call him the
"terrible" Turk, and with reason.
Anxious to lift from himself this, hard,
true name, he uses all his skill in
camouflage, all the deferential dex-
terity of personal address, all the
veneer -of manner that bidets 141.1.3,sam,eql
intent an.c1 the black heart to "bam-
boozle" the westerner.
Front the way in which -western
diplomacy is now playing- into
hand, it, would seem that all the les-
sons of misrule arid: bloody massacre,
chiefl'Y at the expense of the Armen-
ians, is utterly lost by those who have
been hoodwinked, by the Turk and
are enamored of inurde,rers. Those
who side with the Turk are compound-
ing a felony against civilizatien. They
are supporting arl that the ,opinion nI
respectable mareleind opposes. They
give countenance to monstrous. infam-
ies and bloody villainy without a par-
allel. Whtat on earth has the Turkish
Government done 'that it should be
perianitted to live and that it simuld
actually 'be receive(1 with professions
of favor, and even friendship, by those
whose eyes should have been wide
open ti a the real Turk long ago?
We are speaking of th.e Turk not as
an individual, but as a governing Inc-.
tor. It a...e'ems trim that Turkish s,ol-
diers in the field were often found to
be .claivalrous foemen and that some
Turks of the ,old regime have been
kind, honorable, charitable neighbors
to the clastreiss,ed. But the Young Turk
movement, whose chief protagonists
have been Enver Pasha and the nuir-
dered Talaat, has disappointed the
hope of the world for better, things,
and has finally shown how empty are
the prof,esssions of reform when de-
tached from conduct. Much of the
stacrificial cost of the war has gone
for nought if it leaves the ruling Turk
the same free agent ih the Levant
that he was before 1914.
Among the inventions since 00.11-
federa1:ion are: Telephone.s, wireless
telegrtaphy, airships, automobiles,
trac.ters, , gasoline engines, electric
fireless cookers, motor boats,
sulky plows, oil -propelled boats, par-
cel posh, rural mail delivery, thermos
bottles, typewriters, moving pictures.
i'NEUITIS7, FOLLOWS
- - - THE FLU.
The epidemic' of flu" loft in its train
many weak hearts and serious nerva
troubles.
Mrs. L. Wilson, 03 Ridont Ste King-
ston, Ont,, writes:—"Over two years ago'
WWI {Aiken very ill with Spanish influenza,
followed by- nedritis of the head, high
blood pressure and congestion of the brain,
and I was left in a 'very weak state.
My heart end nerves were so terribly
bad I would have weak, fainting Spells,
sometimes twice a day'. It really seemed
to rne my heart would stop beating. it
doctored, and they seemed to do all they
could for me, but I grew so bad, day
after day, they thought I could not get
better. 'I had given up all hopes of eve/
getting well, as I WM failing very fast. '
It seemed to mo it was a, God-scna VhCJI
I loblifsd ill the paper and road about
Dlilburn's 'Heart and Nerve Pills.
theright that there was a little hope
where there was n spark of life left.
1 'eommenoet taking them riet away
and I am, now on my fifth ox, and
pan safely nay I am a lot better. I
1 truly think that if it had not been for
your wenderful medicine 1 world not
have heen here how." ,
Price 50c, a box at all dealer, or
uarIcd direct by The Milburn co,
pnlited,70470ta, Ont,
„,