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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1918-8-15, Page 7DI••••••••••••. FOUR YEARS OF I armiea Maimed the rapture of more I war on Germany during the year. They IDein 180,000 Italitina. In the Ger- ;are Costa Rive, Outiiemalu and Haiti, FILMS ARE ALL U S , man offensive in 'France this year The Argentine, elthungli near a break • sa GIGANTIC STRUGGLE ; BRITON COMPLAINS have been talon prisoners, • Buenos Ayres, has taken no ste.p in SIGNIFICANT EVENTS HAVE MARRED THE PAST YEAR. . . • Russia's Collapse, Italy's Defeat, The Allies' Wonderful Defensive, anti U. S. Activity. Events big with the fete of nation have marked the fourth year of the war, which now comes to a close, It has been a twelve month of alternate hope and concern for the Powers of the Entente Allinnce. It was on July 28, 1914, that Aus- tria declared war on Serbia, beginning the great struggle, During the last twelve months there have been occur- rences that in some respects have been of even greater import in their in- fluence upon the world than those in the preceding period. Russia's collapse the Italian refeat last autumn, the; stupendous drives of the Germans , against the Allied armies and the won- derful defensive operations that have again and again checked the enemy -when success for WM seemed near have held the world breathless . But, transcending the significance any event in the actual threatres of the war. American's full participation in the conflict, involving the trans- portation overseas of more than a mil-' lion men to engage in it, must remain I for all time the great outstanding fca-, Lure of the fourth year of the struggle; Two Big Offensives The Allies have been called upon to face two great offensives during the last year. The first of these came! last October in Hely, and the second,' in France, began March 21. The Ger-! man drives in France, while separated by periods of from a few days to my: eral weeks, have been considered as different phases of the sante offensive.) The abortive Austrian attack against Italy in June also is looked upon as. merely another attack against the ; western front and not as a distinct' military operation. But these offensives perhaps never would have been begun had it not been for the collapse of Russia. German and Austrian troops, released from the Russian front, were taken to France, and Italy to swell the massea of men hurled against the Allies in the west- I ern theatre of operatiens. The French and Italian drive in Al- bania began on July 0 and is still in progress. During the year British forms in Africa drove German forces before them in German East Africa and in German Southwest Africa, and finally compelled them to disperse or surren- der. This took from Germany the hist of the vast colonial possessions held by her when the war began. Submarine Warfare The last year has been marked by a gradual decline of submarine sinkIngs, as compared with the number of ships being built by the Entente Allies. The operations of the British and Ameri- can destroyers have spread terror among the "wasps of the sea," while a great mine field completed in May • by the British navy converted virtual- ly the whole North Sea into an ciecia closed against U-boat activities. The harbors of Zeebrugge and Os- tend, from which German submarines had been operated against Entente shipping, were either sealed entirely or made virtually valueless as subs marine beset by daring naval and air raids by the British in Meya Dating the year eleven hospital ships have been sunk by submarines, the latest and most flagrant case of this violation of the Geneva convention being the destruction of the British t steamer Llanclovery Castle, carrying t Canadian nurses and doctors. This I took place on June 27, only twenty- b four of the 253 persons on board being a rescued. The total shipping reported sunk p since August 1, 1917, is more than ti 4,250,000 tons, to Against this destruction of shipping t the Allies have combined their ehipsi building capacity. The actual num-, ber of tons of shipping launched and put into service has not been publish- ad, Official announcements have been made in the -recent peat, however, to, W the effect that more ships are being n built than are being sunk. Losses in Battle eras. During the ad.i.-"ive into Italy last ti The year's fighting has entailed al great losses for most of the belliger- g October and November the Teutonic' I Added to these 'name are the vas- that direction. Mexieo has tomtit:led . -- ualties in killed and wounded. No de- neutral, 90 1'E It CENT. OF SCENES SHOWN finite figures have been issued by Ger- I ported on what appears to be good au-, A NV AR.TINIE ART — IN ENGLAND ARE, AMERICAN. — many and Austria, but it has }teen re- tharity that in the fighting from Bow Parisians Protect Themselves March 21 till June 14 the Germane lost more than 500,000 men. The 1 French and British losses ware eon- aiderably smaller, as the Allies were fighting from intrenched positions, It is through the cineme that the displarement that soften.. it result - n, p rmi s in a ao id tire rapid. , wake up to the fart that their truck effoeneitheef hsepepoiltne; nationa of the world will get to under- a.m. in weer end tear. Drivers Arnim: seerraheedbtioaakhavellearimel The total cost of the war to England window in Pans it has become nece up te December 15, pl7, was pland assary to carry the art of intianclung stand each other; the cinema will be a fortify cafes and theatres and to shield to maintain a wurid peace," declares a them on abrupt the nipples from unscrewing. and thus at 46,242,000,000, while French votes into int pnvete houses, to protect draw- to tremendous power in cementing the Will St .•k 1 ci bakeries and dry -goods stores with writer in the Landon Evening Nowa,' Another rn t ; loosening the spokes. blinds. But since the days when sand- urging that British motion -picture,' turnin nn paved Or')/ OUP,11 corners. avoid Y quick Pince wofilltfluernniisehketihe enamel finish in bags were piled against buildings to . )fecesle manufacturers should beater them- one hrgake t k h 1' 1 , whenhorderh, uses is mail ligae feFroir:te Gin request ltellaesurineaennIwy,hI From Injury by Flying Bits of Glass. Now that the terrific air currents from shells and bombs imperil every ANDORRA, TINIEST OF REPUBLICS easfre CITIZENS ARE DOING VERY WELL Only in India Do British Pictures Find Beat is a deadly foe !owned it, this finish remained first Saving'. to send or i etas, and this through all weathers from zero to 95 degrees temperature a Welcome, Titis English Rated tires. If your garage has large e I SilOW. I never tackled anything deep- . it a „ . er than six inches THESE WAR TIMES. Smuggling le the Chief Induetry of wind h • 1 from driving rain to six inches of Writer Amerika wheele, put up curtains. In speed-: of credit are somewhat entailer. At ; latest reports the total of the German war loans Approximated $81,000,000,- 000. The total war cost to the United gr • , projected league of nations whieli is applying the bream ee b tt• Doubtless, any mature mantlfae- Wes, according o latest available protect g 1 selves to overcome Ametlean "domina- leisure to organize the defence of its • P than any other plaee on the tiro would not recommend it, for there Is figures, is titan the other, it CallSOS a flat spot on $13,800,000,000, Since the sculpture, the French capital has had tion" of the market. Catlinatter- streets, and in meeting the dangers somethingvery attractive in the flash Calling the tire. This spot will wear more; screen in effecting the thought of the asahonierideesineverey BLny' but for the man in all weathers Republic entered the war it has ex- tended credits to the Allies aggregat- ing $6,091,590,000. Foch in Supreme Command In the midst of the drive in the sec- tor toward Amiens the Allied nations took a vitally important step. Then named General Feclinand Foch, hero of the first battle of the Marne, gen- eralissimo of the Allied forces on the western front, which includes all the line in Italy as well as in France. Even the Murman coast, in northern Russia, has been held to be under his command. Among the year's operations of com- paratively lesser importance were the British drives in Palestine and Mes- opotamia, the Turkish advance in the Saucasus, the French and Italian of- fensive in Albania and the fighting in the German African colonies. Jecusalem was captured by the Bri- tish on December 10 and shortly after - Ward the fall of Jericho was announc- ed. Since the taking of Jericho the British forces in Palestine have not been active on the offensive. General Maude led the 'British troops into Bagdad on March 11, and shortly afterward died from cholera. His forces pushed further up the Ti- gris until the intense heat of summer terminated operations, Rumanit Capitulates With the greater portion of her territory occupied by the Germans, Austrians and Bulgarians, with her Government driven from Bucharest to Jassy and with the Russian Bolsheviki openly hostile toward her, Rumania found herself in a critical situation. Rumanian troops during February and March advanced into Bessarabia, a Part of the new republic of Ukraine, but they were hemmed in by the ene- my forces and obliged, to withdraw. At last, on May 6, Rumania signed a treaty of peace with the Central Pow- ers. Since the collapse of Russia the Al- lied nations have sought to find a way to assist the people who are being ex- ploited by the Germans. French, British and American forces have been landed on the Murman or Kola penin- sula, the north coast, They have not actively intervened, however, be- ing here only to protect Allied Pro- perty which had been landed at the port of Kola before Russia -withdrew from the Entent Alliance. Ill Siberia there is a well-defined anti -Bolshevik movement which has been built up around Czecho-Slovak prisoners of war, who armed them selves and inflicted defeats on the Bol- shevik). A new government has been set up there under General Hor- vath, president of the Chinese Eastern Railroad, Japanese, British and American marines have been in the city of Vladivostok for months. Neutrals Countries that are not engaged in he war have suffered during the welve months. Switzerland and Bol- and, being adjacent to Germany, have een threatened by the Central Powers number of times in matters relative o economic concessions. Holland es- ecially has been beset with difficul- es, and at aaesent the Allies are pro - sting against her exporting supplies o Germany. Norway has signed an agreement ith the United States by which com- of paper cut in elaborate designs and the Colonial Office, should assist in Two years ago one manufacturer, 1 and whose machine muet stand oi.4 of bombardment and air attack, it has public, the writer further demands ' evolved a new decorative art, the use . that the Government, possibly through' Enamel vs. Nickel Plate. — pasted on windows to prevent per !subject . to the elements, the black / regular model only in the finish. In; service finish is a blessing. sons from being injured by flying frag- pushing British films on the markets of matereareiee Put eat a service lu°dol I If the rider has a new shiny nickel of the empire and see that "the heart motorcycle. This differed from the plate finish on handle bars, aPekes, ments of glass. At first the Parisians used the cross place of the bright nickel of England is not American." of St Andrew, made of wrapping Pa- sentiment emanating from British handle bars, spokes, ets., was a praeti- etc., and is obliged to use his motor per; but that obstructed the view and screens are American," the writer con- tally indestructible black enamel. rusting. When the season of bad rid - Plate "f in bad weather, a coating of vaseline "Ninety per cent, of the ideals and soon ceased to content them. An tinned, according to a copy of the Best of all, it was absolutely rust- ionvg•eristhoevenri nickelpistevaae1 i willnemay lateye pb itewfirptmied evolution in the protective) grillava article transmitted in official dis-.Proof. In the 18,000 miles I rode my uff, leaving alm nickel in first-class from the merely practical nd util- patches to the Bureau of Foreign and machine in the first year and a half II In their search for improvemens, grumble, I are sure, if 10 per cent. of condition. Darien to the artistic then took place. Domestic Commerce, "We shouldn't! — -- wit paper, scissors and paste. Si. men( shown on American screens were ) named the ferget ine-not to be sold Parisian artisans have done wonders the ideals and 1 per cent. of the senti- ELIZABETH N Andrew's cross has been superseded British. But they are not. Ameri- by intricate designs of trellises, as- can ideals and sentiment dominate the tragals, and festoonings. Large plate screens of the whole world. glass windows have provided a par - Americanization of the World titularly fertile field for experiment, „ The British dominions, so far as since their size permits the carrying the cinema is concerned, are in the out of the most ambitious concep- hands of the cinema "kings" of the tions, In spirit of emulation, shops United States, some of them of Ger- defensives. Straight lines have given as any to see the Stars and Stripes place to curves, characters to whole flutter on the screens of the world. silhouettes, 'hit t 11 QUEE OF THE BELGIANS THE FORGET.mE-(JOT Is HER MA• JESTY'S FLOWER. _ In raise money ihal the race of Bel - teem children should not be blotted from the earth. And when she had named this tiny blossom for her Hower, the Queen said that she never would name another; that always the forget-me-not should be her !lower. "How eould I ever think of another," she said, "when the thought of what this flower has meant can never leave Inaugurated the Custom of Flower me?" What has it meant? Well, first of Day For Benefit of Her People and all, it has meant that Germany Is de - the sources of color, until to -day perspec- tive letters and allegories and em- There are few pictures nowadays in iwnhich Old Glory' doea not get a look- July 25 was the birthday of Eliza - Now to Save the Babies, destroyed) that Belgium shall have no future—thateetr0ediShe er hbeabgyehioleodehsehnatil the ee beth, Queen of the Belgians She was destruction by shooting, maiming, stab blems are being used. "Americanization of the world born in Bavaria; nevertheless she Ail this ingenuity and thought bear bing babies, Deporting into Germany through the moving picture has been does not look German. witness to the excellent morale of the healthy boy babies. Starving and , city, and shows that our Parisian going on for the last four years. She is slender and dignified, with a neglecting girl babies, Reducing allies are accepting. the arrival of American ideals, the American flag, long face anti shin, clean cut aquiline , older children to servile fear, then ' raihvay stock, motor -cars and police retateees. bombs and shells with perfect Phil -I carefully inoculating them with Prue - courts flood the screens. To the peo- she is simple, yet a Illttle statelY, • osophy. ' sian ideals and Prussian habits. No , ple of the British empire the greatest friendly yet a little reticent, as the'honor of the war has equalled the men of all time are George Washing- Queen of. a sturdy, clever race like ton and Abraham Lincoln, Nelson, Drake and Wellington have no place on the screen," Canadian pictures are almost wholly horror of what Germany has done THE LATEST IN GUNS Englishman Has Invented a New Automatic With Many Ad- e vantages made in America, the writer asserts. their comments on the Germans. One to save even a single child from the e Belgians shoulde. ,and is doing to Belgian childhood. People who talk with her, who do 1 Queen Elizabeth is fighting a great not know her well and remember her figbt for her nation's babies. Every Bavarian birth, often try to aoft pedal', way under heaven that she can use Australia will have none of British day an American In conversatiln with Encouragement for a speedy and decisive vitcory over the German ar- pictures, except topical films, and the Queen spoke of the hellish Huh Ilan she has employed. And so the there also is no market for the Bei- and the unapeakable Bache. Then he fragile little blue forget-me-not be- rriestish product in New Zealand. India remembered and tried awkwardly to comes the Queen's flower tor Belgian. is found in the large number of is the one "bright spot" in the empire where British films are welcomed. "Let us have some reciprocity with America," the article concludes. "Let "Why retract?" she exclaimed. "No little artificial forget-me-nots were sold us exchange our pictures and learn of words are bad enough to describe :in an hour and $6,500 we -s obtained, one another. It is that or the them—Hun, Bache. As for me, I am ; Other cities have had sales, More Americanization or Germanization of a Belgian. Every thought, every faith, land more cities and towns will and every hope in me is Belgian." I must sell the Queen's flower. The The American continued his con,. little blue flower of memory should versation unexpurgated. ;never cease to sell until the last Hun There was no public celebration of has left Belgium and the last Belgian her Majesty's birthday. it always has baby he had Inadvertently left alive been a strictly family affair with the has been fed and placed in a woman's exception of the Bala of the Queen's ' arras. flower. Flowers have always been a ; efficient new Weapons which laavd lately been perfected by the allies. The very latest of these is the Madsen automatic gun, the invention of an Englishman. Simplicity of operation and lightness are two of its many advantages, which are described as apologize. The Queen fluehed angrily. I am a Belgian, The first forget-me-not day was held in Washington. Twenty theusand follows in a London newspaper: the world through the cinema. And The Madsen kun weighs just over it is going to have a big effect." twenty pounds. It can be held to the shoulder long enough to fire the con - ANGELIC RUFFIAN A PROBLEM tents of a magazine, and can also be fired from the ground by means of an He Is Only 4, but British Colonel ingenious stand supporting its stock Seeks a Trainer for Him. and barrel. The legs of the stand are the gun to different heights. The gun a London newspapen shows that a back witrYihYra7,1". telescopic and can be adjusted to raise The following advertisement from Passion with the Queen—it is a Bel- gian Trait. The most beautiful private The awing of the sea I would bring garden in the world belongs to the is only 44 inches long, making it very Colonel had a greAer problem than Belgian Royal Palace. The Queen's In the ring of my verse, where the wild easy to carry and aim. commanding his men: ., father was a 'famous flower fancier,' waves rehearse. "The cartridge magazine is formed "Colonel, young wile, and smallruf Bannldvercuarnidouatlhye enough hfiasvorlratr has , I would music embalm of the wind - always been the La France rose: Bright night -water pour by a flame - And palm, And this flower loving princess mar• I colored shore. ried into a flower loving family. King 'm Albert's father was a wonderful maker , y songs and my ships—o'er the foam each one slips of thin plates and is in the form of a flan of angelic exterior, aged 4, offer quadrant. The gun will fire either ,home, board and $150 a year to a stngle shots like an ordinary rifle or young lady who will undertake to in - automatically. In the latter case one still into said ruffian the elements of man unassisted can fire ,nearly 300 Bayard, develop a naturally strong af- rounds a minute, including the chang- fection and help said wife in house ing of magazines. j and domestic duties, Family, less of flower gardens. It WaS a ,natural thing then for Queen Elizabeth in , Full sail on the way to the Port of "The barrel and its breach block 'Colonel pleesantly. situated. Good 1910 to name a. flower to be sold on Good Day. carrier can be readily removed and parentage and upbringing and a cherry They must sail on and on, with their her birthday for the benefit of thecargoesdawn, tuberculosis sufferers of Belgium, To the Kingdom of Rest in the purple - She named the La Prance retie, and eyed Weet, that one day'a sale of roses nt two ' ---.^,-*----- replaced by another in about twenty disposition main essentials. No pes- seconds. Thus with a hot barrel cool- simists." ing while a second one is being used, --as—a------ it is possible tp lire the gun practical- SWISS AID BEE CULTURE. ly continuonsly, — pennies each brought In 500,1100 . , . francs. Iu 1912 her Majesty named , Doing the Thing Right "All water-cooling apparatus has Sixteen Pounds) of Seger Allotted to the edelweiss for her birthday flower, An army officer's wife, says the been eliminated in this gun and it Each Hive. and this one day's sale raised 250,000 American Journal of Medicine, wrote does not depend for feeding upon a The bees will be looked atter francs for negro sufferers in the to an army medical officer saying continuous band of webbing. Like that her chlid was suffering with n„t f 11 b tl S i G , Congo mereial relations may be carried on. °- g says a communication published by eller automatic tins its continuous Pretty Custom Continues. , tonsillitis. She addressed her letter, ., action is secured through the recoil of ; "Dr, Burke."' The officer, who was Sweden has been dealing openly with ItithnedmiliEtaereyh dheepeinnlieneetneit, will receive After the war swept over lier little a stickler for the deference due to his Germany and has been threatened the barrel." —a sa. .— 'country it seemed as if this pretty sixteen pounds oa suatir for each bee rank, returned it with the remark that notion was doomed, But it was too he should be addressed, "Brigade Sur- hivIeCis expected that title amennt will destroyed even by the trampling ; Whereupon the lady -mote back: lovely and significant a fashion to be goon Lieutenant-Colonel Burke." be enough to keep the bees until spring, Owners' of bees who desire to receive sugar rations will have to make their application before the end Three new countriee have declared Not serve his country when he could," tf this month. ith boycott by Great Dritam. Both ations have lost severely through the °predations of German submarines. Denmark is in a serious plight also, el it has been reported that there is resat suffering among the people of Who loved a soldier dead tat country. Than be the wifeaof one who would Her Reply. "ph, shall I go to war?" said he, She looked at him and said: "A spinster I would rather be ..namenntar...Mharismarcoma Sea fa 23 en I cb:E? , This Unique Little State In the Pyrenees, now the Andorrans, citizens of the little republic which has preserved its ,independence among the crags of the !Pyrenees snce medieval times, have developed smuggling until it has he come their great War IMIllairY is told in a communication to the National Geographic Society from Herbert CO. rey, war correspondent. A part of Mr. Corey's emnrauneation is issued by the society* as a war geography buile• ,tin, as follows, "Doubtless Andorra smuggles at tale best of times. That Is the concha - cion, I reached at least, from the per- fect openness with which every one discussed the free -trade proolivities `of the Andorrans. One might have thought they were talking of the spring plowing or the price of lambs. And yet Andorran seeretiaenese has become a proverb in the Wile. 'Tell thing to an Andorran and it is lost,' is one form of this saying. Nowadays, !with the neighbor France in the mar let for everything that Andorra can furnish and too busy fighting to watch her douttnes very carefully, the men of Andorra are reaping a golden ban. vest. Scandalous rumor has it that the Spanish frontier guards look with. a certain complacency on the illegal traffic. "'I have a cousin who Is a frontier guard,' a man in Barcelona told me. 'He says that if the war lasts another year lee will retire. At 410 a mule he is already rich.' 25 Miles by 20, "The situation of this quaint little survival of lost ages favors this form of activity. The republic of Andorra measures about twenty-five miles in one direetion by twenty miles in the other and is located right on the crest of the Pyrenees. It is as though the little State were a wedge driven in and dividing Prance and Spain at this point, Charlemagne gave the Ander- rens a certain measure of freedom be- cause of their services in the field. The streamed down out of their hills and helped Louis the Debonair fight the Moors, with whom, however, they had a. lively quarrel of their own. For Gat he aye them a. franohise. "Napoleon looked the little State over. "It is a political curiosity,' said he, 'It must be preserved.' Oldest of Republics. "Andorra has maintained itself as a political entity for more years than has any other republic in the world. The tiny State of San Marino, in Italy, vies with it ln point of diminutive nese, but Andorra was hoary with age when San Marino was born. "It is not worth fighting for and it makes no trouble that a few police- men would not quell, Nevertheless, it s a reel State. "Andorrans pay almost no taxes at all. Each year a small tribute must be paid to the Prince Bishop of TJegei and to the republic of France, and levy is made on the incomes of the Andorrans for the purpose. There are almost no other costs attached to the operation of the republic. Each of the six cantons in which the little State is divided' elects annually four councilors and the twenty-four select one of their number for president. They are paid a few sous each when they attend a meeting of the council. Their horses are fed by the State arid they have their meals. Now and then the ball of the council needs a new slate on the roof. The annual budget stops there. "Spain has been fairly robbed of her mules by the needs of the Allied ar- mies, and so the further exportation is frowned upon by the Government. The King is Overworked, There is much concern quietly ex- pressed in the inner circles of Court as to the health of King George. It is said that while the King keeps hard at work about all the time, night and day, he is not in the best of spirits, and shows considerable indisposition at times when it might be expected tat he would show spirit. It seems hat our beloved King is taxing his nergies too great in his ceaseless ef- orts to attend all of the funetions ado necessary by his position, and t the sante time to do things that would tend to alleviate the suffering of tho wounded and those seriously affected by the drain of the war. The King is not sick; he is overworked, and takes to heart the great affliction of the world mused by the war. This depresses his spirits and at times causes an i_nd_isp_esoiti_on. Cerdston Alberta, celebrated the sixteenth anniversary of its incorpor- ation on July 1st. bloody boots of the Duns. In March, ' Dear Brigade Surgeon Lieutenant- ai 1918, the young Queen appointed a Colenel Burke. I am sorry about my t, different flower for a purpose for mistake. which no flower ever before was used I P. S.—Please bring yom• sword with in tiro history of the world. She you to take out baby's tonsils. 7a7metacl.xszeFoac=onamarl."7x.?3!.!.!;5t --- , i. ^ , 4 V , .......„?.„, ., p..1,4,,•,,A,„ '• ' 1P:1'4 .,. de .' ' ----zaJei, .'4r 4, . / duelel DEAR, STICK orrice --LLNI.,,,...,i1LeLlAWFUL 'kyr1 " .,- .4+,4 114 LAYE MD To ATTIIE • ' roitA i, ' ' , ., .4 .. , .., 4 , . ...., -. ,.., 1,1- 4 ,,4s. ,e''gr‘: ciEE BEER 1.AaT - li,. ' A' 44' ,., ,i., Vii s,..„ ' V 1 M.,,4 Deis Nisi THRee F -------7--- 4 ,, , , li 11,, w—e.'ve, volt ,0 . i ; k r , . a 0 i • ,, -rue cims ' m — ALI.R1GSIT-ALLIateit fit. Go EiAci4 IAN Ti -lis WAR is AN THING r(Ho Po You THINK I RAN INTO To. DAY ON THE.sueer ova Yea Guess i: DoWN VoWN „..—. . Iv . 44'. 11' '1)1?"r • • ',.ay, , , ;4, . c,, si, .. .447. ,., / -, ''..>, "'''''''-44, ,A,...., y4,41,47 fl 'il fat „ • , Ck, .5 , .---......- , •• . / f ..",,,4'. ro ' r. , ' 1...1.:. e "0 , , -,F,q1,, i',, /.1 ,,.‘,. 1 ...1 , „as,,,,,,, L.. i'4,htillia ... ' / 4. 'Oc 4ifi. L s ',' , ; ,11. ‘ii A , ,i1K,' 4 . 411. 7.74,/: 47 _ ,7,1,01, ), •:45 *.' it ,. 4 i 1..• .1, . 0..., _ eej " ..., --.• , 1 47,. , 7/ - • ........ ' . .... i,,,,,. ....-.,4„., , . '', .i,,4" ,4T.: V'' ... , t? ''. P.'" ' ,. ,.. ,... ,,,,, .--- 1 .0 k .. , . • . 'i,'v • - .. At. .,Y;,' ... ' -...,—. -- The sides of the new =Reese fold out flat with the bottom to enable ; etothitig to be packed in it without wrinkling. "'Set me some great task, ye gods, and I will show my spiritt"Not so' , says the Good }leaven, 'plod arch plougba" -Emerson. There are many oubatitutee 61,1 wheat flour but no eubatitutee for I peace.