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The Brussels Post, 1919-5-29, Page 3
ii. 191, { LAE(�ryrl l t ^+ . 1 L,k'llS LETTER OF RIM ED NURSE EDITH CAVELL'S FAREWELL TO HER BRUSSELS PUPILS. OPINIONS ON WORLD PROBLEMS 3Y CHAS. Ala BICE, B.A., LL,B„ DENVER, COLORADO. - IBRI'IAKING TIIE PACT. ' Italy, in 1914, was n member of the "'Triple Alliance," eantposed of. f'ustri•,-Hungary and Italy - lad she dial nut ,loin with the oche Urges Develion to Duty, Waris Aeolis• tee in the t,'ar ar'ainst Freneea and. et U id italae Specht and I i,:asia, leer ting end cabinet. took ', the position khat the war was one: Reviews Past Work. of :ti g t essio t 1)n the part of the Con- tn't l rntee a and the Alliance re -I tyseThe Lady of eree, Correll, the Mar- f, -i.l only to ware of defence, The 1 yeYei lingi:: h'Nurra, way- r'•+••d e eon. A.lumze 'w•ay farmed :a f;eneratiem veye'l from Flc ir;h m to ib, la .t rcc telt!' age. n lbs aim fi i he time beingto' place nt herr native land. B1 this eon - hare th lerear ('ontincrt:tl powers neetien it l:: hlti-re:tng to read the tee hr,a:n;„ Mixed in the Nalkan markable letter written by the dour( ;los, ed nurse, an the ave. of hl, l• execution, 'Erase mcnth::.:titer the Greet War olo1r 12, 1'115, to her um 'aa • 1)t Thu • began Italy joined the Entente on al 1: I:' ole Tier ,e d'liib•mleree Diph):nees in quarrel with Vienna over the future! 1 nus?cls 1!r•lghnn. I1) lt.31tes Cavell i dispoeitioh of territory, and in the: nentuu:; t.)1' aIgb.t years in which site i,,.,li i' anthat the success of the Teuton ons du cu :'.M or the school, and, hl' Torsos would interfere with the tem-� words .i t h u'ged with pathos, idle 1)t• , poral authority of the Quirinal. Be- ters iter farewell as an eloquent testi- !fore fare Dining the Allies as against her ]puny to the nubility of some of the , former associates, Italy made cer- ncr(dc w Des, ,t whofella victim to Ger- thin, as she thought, of her future, nam ruthh mese,ss. It will take rank' 4 In histny a: one of the most remark -4 secret ❑graemeutwas required a', left In the great VOLI .1 sills docmn , t, It y restoring to Italy after the war what Tice letter, which was arigivaldy . was ]craws as Italia Trredenta, in - written in french, Is translated :is I eluding the Adriatie coast. 'Ve are follows, ,!atcd Oetober 11, 1,h15: not informed of what took place at "1'r!' -+.n 0.f St. Giles, Brussels. y i I.00.1110 l c:t'cre Italy announced her sly de.+r'Nmaus: I am writing to to oppose the Teuton. you in thio sad hour to bid Yen fare- ; It may be that Britain and Prance well. You will vengeance.*that Sep were twilling to give- consent, or it tember 17-brctigilt to an end the eight yours of my direction of tbo school. I randy have been a gtteation of neces- i was so happy to be cased to help sity, of self-preservation. Italian aid was required in the war, it was al- io the organization of the work that :most life Ind death with the other aur committee had just founded,nn provers fighting, Germany at that oetaber 1, 10(17. There were hut a • ;time, and Italian demands could be few pupil;. Now you are already quite stiff and there would be no way out; numerous --fifty or sixty, I think, - , l,esiaes it was: enemy territory that Eight Years of Service, was invclved. The Italian treaty was "I have told you on Morelli' 0c not the only one. France and Britain carious the Mors. of those early days, et the. time had to play the game as and the 11111, ultle,; that wc' enco,luter- it had been played since Earope was ed, even to the choice of words for: in the making, and make morally your 'kola) 011 duty' and 'off duty.' in ! doubtful alliances to prevent practi- Belgdunt all Wae new in the profeeeion. i Arty the whole of Europe lacing with Little by little one service after an-. Germany. other wee esf blirheelgraduate 1 4 . 4 • nurses for private nursing, pupil • schen the United States went to nurses, the hospital of St. Giles. (Vt war against Germany it was not as an •replied the institute of 1)t Den:`;e ` ally of the Allies. Dilrlematic or - One nfteit Mint11'er of those who profess to tweak for the new Ger- roily deehtre . the .peace terms will est he signed if they fail to conform 1•, the llun idetl :of what Is right or jiet. Ebert says Germany wi11 not !told Danzig; 'Melberg says Ger- rimy mist 1•,r admitted at once to the ',segue of Nations on an equal- ity with the other nations or she will decline the peace proposals. Schiffer, Minister of Finance, makes oath that not an inch of territory east or west will bo rurrendered by Germany. Bluff Illus£ it may all be. Bluff we have been inclined to regard it, but a bluff so defiant, so outspoken and plain as to stake recession diffieult on the part of the German lead'ore if they :fail to frighten the Allies into modifying the peace terms. They are arousing popular feeling to a point where they may have to stand by their defiance. other if we would keep in touch with the peace table. The Lotion cable dealt with a so- called A nineteen mission to the Rus - akin Bolshevik!, Tha missionerics Ware Lineuht Steffens and William Bullus. The former is pretty well known through his muckraking and "butiinsky" propensities. The latter is local to his Southern State. Where 141r. Steffens is there Is bound to be mischief afoot, 4 4 4 • The Paris cable conveyed in guard- ed language that a deadlock had been Cheated at the Uonferenco because of the insistence of France for boundary protection and guarantees ngainwt another German attack, together with the refusal of Pres. Wilson to go beyond tt certain point outlined by Trim in his fourteen points' address of Jan, R, 11118, and his rorrerpondenee with Germain offteials previous to the signing of the armistice. It is claimed for Air, Wilson that he gave his word to the enemy na- tion what would be exaeted in terri- tory, and. in what manner the terri- torial delimitations would be made, Why are these leaders so bold? One and he cannot recede from that go - obvious reason is the encouragement e,ition. Once again it is intimated they have been given by at section of that the German armies quit fighting the Allred press, and by events and under assurances of kindly treat - conditions in Allied countries, The ment. clamorous demands for an early From all of which we beg to clis- peace have stimulated German tour- sent. Germany was whipped to a age and effontery. Behind those de - standstill, and her armies would have mends is the reiterated argument had to surrender in a few weeks at that social and industrial conditions most if peace terms had not been in the Allied countries are perilously asked to save them. Germany was explosive; if peace is delayed, say the advocates of haste, there is no telling what may happen in Great Britain, in France, in Italy. German leaders have read with satisfaction the accounts of labor disputes in Great Britain—the at- tacks of Socialists on the French beaten internally and externally, on land and sea. The countries she had dragooned in fighting her battles, were deserting her; phe ]tad nothing to look forward 3to but defeat and a nation-wide revolution. • e A 4 The Wilson terms were too vague Government, the profound investiga-1 when published to be closely scrutin- tions of Bolshevism by American' ized at this time, and conditions have Senators, etc. undergone a mighty change since A few weeks ago Germany was l they were uttered. Germany diT net pleading for an early peace. Now we of her free will accept them until or - hear no peace pleas from Berlin. The taint defeat stared her in the face, tables are turned. The hurry -up cry If sentimentalism aid idealism are comes from the Allied countries, permitted at the - peace table there Germany issues threats, will be another outbreak in 'less than If the Allied countries are ,in such half the time usually separating con - sore need for an early peace, then it tinental wars. The whole issue rests is to Germany's interests they may on Russia. argue—to prevent peace corning If. terms are to be made with the soon. If a delayed peace will bring Bolsheviki regime, it will be only a •':e ranatorinnt of Buyeinghen, the respondence places this nation as "as- upon the Entente the troubles pie- few years until Germany is the "man- ta (dhnic of lir, Mayer, and how many are soadate 5n the vasa" with the other dieted by some of its newspapers datory" in fact of Greater Russia. celled mum. u , as yeti May be, muleiris.; tuitions. In other words, Washing- and statesmen, then it is to Getman Germany will not have to send arm - later, later, to nurse the brave \\mut:deli ofton retained a free hand; she \vas not interest to delay peace and let theles to accomplish her purpose; she the war. If this paint year our work a party to the secret pacts and troubles come. 0111 be appealed to to cross over and has decre:cerd, it is clue to the sad' understandings between the Allies, Von .Iroelcdorff-Rnntzau, Fara,...„save the empire from anarchy. days Through which we are passing, Mr, Wilson, as wo know from his ad- Minister, is reported to have said The Peace Congress has nothing to In hept'l('i' days our work will renew dresses, had his own program, after a conference at Weimar: "It is do with the old lines in Europe. A ite A nw •ot11 and 111- power for good. If the war had beerf won without a question of whether we have every-. new Europe has been created from "1 speulc to you of the past berst? ntse ,the aid of the S„ the settlement thing to gain and nothing to lose by the convulsion. Just as it stands, it Is 1 wise 1000: ionally - to stop and would have been along the old lines. passive resistance. Neither the Peace , without any interference from peace look hehdntl oven• the roach (hal yte1 Europe would have been carved in Conference nor the Entente would long ' cartographers, it is all in fever of have travelled, and to note our errors:' accord with the exigencies of the survive our refusal to sign the peace, the enemy nation, Cannot the ideal- and our progress. In your beautiful' war. Italy would have received her terms.' I fists see this in time to avert ills - building you will have more patient sllric i eordin, to the London pact. His conclusion, we think, is wrong; i aster? Before the war Russia was and all that 1s needed for their con- Fr,..,.. 00elald here tirade the Rhine but the fact that he reaches it is the, the buttreas that saved France, Ger- fort and for Yours. To my regret 1 ,the new board ;ry, .,with • a twilight serious thing. If Germany acts on ; many, until a short time ago, feared \crus not always able to speak to you zone, perhaps, on the eastern side of this conclusion, it will occasion grave; Russia. The aim • of Berlin was to individually. You kllo\v I had much to it, as added gaarantee against an- trouble. The Conference and the 1 break the France -Russian Alliance, •111 oiler attack. P( rcI w•0ald have re- Entente will survive, but they will' and the moment it was broken the r upv rev time, but 1 hope Yon w not forget Cup' evening taike, I told - ('Lived Danzig end other cone('4sions, net that devotion to duty would bring Julio-Slnvia would have been com- yuu truo ]sappiness, alai that the pensated for the Ica: of Fiume from thought that you had done your duty, another gm-atty. instead of the earnestly and cheerfully, before God League of :Cater' there \vould have and your 01.11 eon<cionce, would he been r. halen.e of poser. 3000 greatest rapport in the trying Naturally the Iteilian repr_senta- mulnenta of life and in the face 01 tires at Pilris are selling for the death, fal:lulent of the ae.ltt treaty that Be Charitable and Loyal- ' brought Italy to the side of the Al- lier. and Clemeneeae ani George fee "Two oe three et you will remenll - 1 as if the', bend, were tied, Mr. Wit the little talks we had, -Do not forget ,,•011 he r a fora 1:0101, however. and its then(, (laving already travelled Fro is 91`04111g Italy's claims on the ape feu' through life I Gouda perhaps see chic !:round the: they do not tit \y el more clearly tileln. you and e1)(( you with his fourteen pointe and princi the straight hilts, "One word more,. Beware of un- titls. charitable speech, In these eight 4 8 e1 on y eairs I have seen 54, touch unhappi- But if the newly -created Souther Imes which could have been avoided Slav nation is. to live it must have a o• lessened if a few words had not eeonntnic outlet, Site acres that Finn 1 yen whispered here and there, per- be given to her as her "window b liege without evil intention, but which the sea," hence the hitch in the peas ruined the reputation, the happiness, conference. We expect to see Ital the life even of someone. try 10111400 give in alt(1 abandon her claims a should' cultivate among themselves tern as she realizes what it means loyalty and esprit de corps, ,to perish in her obstinacy. "1f anyone of you has a grievaue•e against are I pray you to forgive me, MORE GERMAN BLUFF. I may anlltetine5 have been. 000 se- _ Vere hilt 1 wait never willingly unjust, Germany ;s talking defiantly as to and I have loved You all far more than what „be will and will not accept - you realize, "11y good wlsltcs for the happiness from the peace eonErnope, and atrns watch - of alt my young girls, both those who observers s in the.European towers neem inclined to telco serious - hove grachtatecl and those who are lythe threatening talk and attitude still in the, school, and I thank you for of German leaders, the courteous consideration you have be faced with a problem of a mos difficult and disturbing nature. Against the likelihood of Germany follening, a policy of "passive resis- tance" is the consideration that sire. may inflict dire evils on herself. Isl she willing to ran the risk of de- priving herself of all food supplies I all raw materials, and intensifying idleness and starvation so as to make 1 anarchy certain? Iter answer to this. - may be that the world cannot permit anarchy in Germany; that the Allies will be compelled to occupy the coun- t try and feed the German people, and that this additional strait will pro - ries contained in the League of Na coke disorders in Allied countries and forte the snaking of an easy peace. The situation is not only difficult n but menacing. It is of vital import - n ancc that the Allies should display e firmness and confidence. Any weak - y ncss in handling, for example, the e Hungarian situation, may prove dis- y estrous, - It is a toot issue. The ill- s competence of the Allies to deal with Russia has lowered their prestige in the eyes of the Huns, The war is not over mall the peace treaty is signed. - always 5110 *111 ane. "1'000 devoted directress, "Edith Cavell." Walt! "P11wat's thot noise, Mrs, Mnllaly?" "Mary Ann's hbraeticin' th' schalee," "110;;ori0! she musht weigh a tont" The word meander is derived from Alalandrns, a winding river in Asia Minor, Spanish paper money beat's the portraits of great literary Melee peinlcrs, musicians, generals and other noteldes of the notion. livery time a 010)011 stops work he• throws 11i -`t „much extra burden on ethers; 11: creates that much more pees •ly for the 1 oviel, ; tde mn5t 1)011.`e050 exports of r.,xuufac,t. t ad goods to help to pay the was richt, the Can, Trade Corn. thinks. Exports of agricultural Pico- Well be h crease , runt \ e( d tits ca1. dt 'The ineyec00n of millions of doj- lars' worth of Romanian 04�00(19 bought under Canadian credits is be- ing keverishly carried on ander the C. T. C. The fit t shipment goes May 20th. THE ALTAR OF IDEALISM. Two cable despatches have been received, one from London, tate other from Paris, taken conjunctively, did not make very pleasant reading, and one cannot be separated from the 1V1 other, When home frons school 00 ebildren Cance settluli ring down this atre('t, We'd never mind the apple tree That begged us stop and eat. We'd never triad 1110 1111 bat That lay beside the gate, Nor stop to sa0 why Jimmy, Was a wblsttng us to wale We never' thought WI''s home. then 'Till we'd 1400(1 mother's smite Of welowna :1t: the window. 10 seemed the longest mile lwe reached the corner, That turned into citta lane 11u0 soon's wo saw her funning We'd feel weal home agent. Our mother nt. the window Just malting at us there, Was 'both the (1weot011 plrl hll•0 You'd find mot anywhere. .cud if las seldom happened She wasn't there, well, then, li'e'd hays to hunt and ilnd he• 'Toru we'd feel We's Home again. Oft'llnles I get a thinking Of boyhood days of yore, Of stenos and ltnmeArreu faces, And yearn for then( once more. The village streets s1) shady, The kindly people, too, Who always took an Interest, In the things fused to do. So I travel to the village I loved when I's a kid, And 1 look the old town over But 10 don't seem like it did 'Till at last I turn the corner,. And get started 111) the rano, See mother at the window, Then I feel I'm home again, ATE WHALE FOR CENTURIES. Japan Has To -day the Largest Whal- ing Company In the World. For hundreds of years whale meat bus been used for food in Japan, says "Asia," hr the earliest books of .Japanese. history, there 111'e accounts of the capture of whales with net:( and the ceremonle'c and yeasting which followed a successful Hunt. But whale heat did not became a really important factor in Japanese daily life until about twenty years ago, when modern shore whaling wa0 In- troduced into the empire. The Japan- ese had watched closely the develop - 1 went in Europe of the harpoon gun and the swift little steam vessels with which whales could be taken in great numbers, and the Toyo Hegel'inilut- ltik Kaisla (Oriental Whaling Com- , patty, Limit:ND was eventually formed to carry on op0ratione do Japan. I To -day it Is the largest and most progreesivo whaling company in the world. When once fairly launched upon the new venture, the Japeacse Proceeded in a eharactertstically thorough way. They secured from !Norway the finest equlp11loat obtain- ' able. and hlr0•d the mos, expert whale- ! men to teeth theta the modernmeth- cels of killing and preparing whales. Moreover, their efforts did not cease Here, for they tools not only the cyst from 'Norwegian methods, bat ;introtl:ucea imp.'oyeinents adapted to German armies would he flocking over their own • 30('1111 needs. the border, * _4 • 4 Russia ,is out of the game now, permanently, many fear, for a long,' long time, the most optimistic con- cede. What is to take the place of I IIad ship's anchor fall on my kuee Russia? A number of "selfeletet-' and leg, and knee swelled up and for ruination" States, newly hatched, un six duys I could not move it or get stable of necessity, and liable to fly ho1p. I then started to 0140 ellNARD'S asunder, ' LIl<11Ih "P end two battle; cured me. 1 If it be contented that the Inns of; PROSPER FE1tuU ON. 1 Alsace-Lorraine and parts of Poli -h!' Germany will cripple thr.t empire,' the answer will he that thrrintrh the: P disintegration of Austria-Hungary,' Get:Many will gain in territory and/ 1 population more than will be taken EARTH'S RAINIEST SPOT. I from her by France and Poland. Ger- r 1 many will be sufficient of herself, and Hawaiian Station Recorded a Mean will draw her raw material from Rainfall of 518 Itches. • Russia. A "soft" peace means an early re- sumption of war, and France knows it. But a League Of Nations Is to be founded, Yee, but if Germany gets control of Russia and Austria she can establish a league of her own Ask for eteiaard'e and tette no other, What Has Britain Done? What kis England done.? Kept the faith and fought the tight For the everlasting right: Chivalrously couched her lance In defence of Belgium, France, .This has Britain (1000, What has Britain dote? Given ovary seventh son, ltiet (Ito challenge of the Iiun; Placed her sten on every ileld. Proud to die, toe proud to yield. This lute I1ritain done. What. has Britain done? Answers every retell000 breeze Blown across the seven cams: "Watch and wed secure we keep, Vigilance that never sleeps." This has Britain done, What Britain done? has 11s l On every front, iter flog unfurled,. Fought a w•arld•wu' round the world; Thhen, When 011 10 11111(1 and done, Ask her allies, asst the Titus, "What hos Britain done?" What Tins Britain done?. Por her slain Britannia weeps . Site might boast who silence keep, But when all is done and l sa tic 1, cle1l the roll and count stet' dond. And niknmvw Int site h,t.s clone —Rev, Frederic Il, 'Iodates, B.A. "We learn our grandest lessons front the unlilcolicst muster s+ ---Agnes Laut, The reputation of 1101014 the rainiest p1'tcc in the world 111: long been en- joyed by the Hill Station Cherra 111tn- 31, on the elope of the 11inu•llya. in As - 0 (111, will( 11 mean 011(81all that has recut vallium-ty :.tat'•l, according to the length of the rec0 d and the particu- lar rain game. in rp1:2t1110 Tho Iite l 1,1114(101 value. based on n forty-yeer record at the Che•ra Punji Pollee Station, is 495 inches a year. Blanford, the W11101,4' 11110W11 authority on Indian meteoratn, ;v, thought that the 1110011 in 50111e places at C'herro Punjt exeee118d 500 Invitee, but no- where. amounted to 1100 inches. So fur ma at•iuul records go the rain- fall at the Indian Station is stirpassed by that recently reported by D. I1, Campbell, of Stanford University, as staving been nteastn•ed at Waialee, in the Tslau(1 of 801111, Hawaii, though the record covets only Ave years, and the mean might he reduced by a longer p''I )lI at c 11501' 0010)), i im 191' 191 i, int lesiva, the Hawaiian. station, which 11) 5,075 feel above ((011 r moan rainfall- f ., trd'ct a the u .15 Tavel, rich inches, or 111000 Hutu 43 feet, Mr, (=lnip1011 says that Walalee is seldom free from rain clouds, and the Precipitation is almost incessant; hence whole surrounding region is o bolt, bearing; 11)14 10005 thickly draped With drippillit m0eeee of moss and div etwrn•ts. • City Pots. i fl tlG.:ifl�J�t�pittt FROM HERE' T ERE‘6';4 An An Irish Proposal Pllddy e!ipped ills arm ar01111 1'111- dY'n wi Tat and :+.eked, "Asn I ,t.4)• (t-...-111', ;ure, • replied l ,lei,•, .`you're honk'. Ili' yn,)r 0%0," WOUT'1•'RA 44i'1'1l••1.1 ,, n f.,:IFt r t1'fri1tre 1 ".11.04.1..r,.. 1,4(11(514 00)11- alla.:'1',1 i( ll, 1Ir40lrr1,,_ 4.1d•11141001', (,n:,ufa,. 11040, J.1.111.01. S.rvar roI/Z%-a't WAorrn». D�)C'. PAIR u] PIGEONS ARI) UP Any fano/ poultry to sell? Writ. for Prices I. Woloraurh 51 Aon. 10.18 Ft. Toon 1(8011810 Market. Mont- real, Go», ,-... 20)03181&e. T l'RF1:41 1041 r 511 T1s 110 A W10111<. XIIIn at•n nitb a 114110 bene - Bo11d'- fry fren bo11001. Royal C,'ierte 0?? Seeien^e, Dent. 4a T,mnntn. (,n0 da. i'uP. RA7,£ r 1 r 1x -,t 1r I 118 i 'I'Al'17r3 TM, 1,14181)11 11 (00.1)1 discos:dog x141 �V r n'1 int, i l Taal r 1,_ nt n lia'tern illnr•; e t,f n third. - Untarin im,urr n 41111'1,1 1 ' Tio'c 6$� Rn fn 51.2014 1)1110,1: h "1'03 1 la,itn it, t+E'., 0'1111 role, "Faith, O'11ee:1 1'emie1( e4• 1,1,1 To)n,�o.. I'111 .,(o, a+1) 1111 10'0 11)114); 1" 14'•" '10,iy eboald he (lie?' 11404' 1 +'.1 tee Ulhar, f.l.e/ Lit. TI! 4,1 V,. lnl-rnol oral ....throat. ,red 04 It 81- '(01, he's 0414 0' 1)11( 1 04'rc 10M,cutli1) 11 b n 1 0 0onrlh'me(1.),ncin. nt•D10diral and 1'o thin, ruldnc.:49 !trains, but WAts rn. r,t•n1,1111,10 11 e pure Flannigan, 411(14 • her, 111111011' 'Ilan both 41 ee Tut. together:' Clow Titin He Was. She Knew. - T.ord Reading milled led at a dinner party about 111e eoclincy accent, "A cockney made" he •add, came over arid Nettled 11) Canada, H01' mieire:3, who was , aidov told her one day flow she ('acne to lure hal husband. 'I lost toy husband , n the w eats rn prairies,' the lvonta r said H,1 was killed by y a Mewl. I srtnpo•:e yott know what a bison is?' 'Lawful, 300,' said the cockney rook '1'd like to 'ave a (((1111 for ove;y one I've rnarle a puddin' in.'" Too Smartt "How ,many peeve 11111) I on my plate. father?" asl:e,i at :quart boy. "Two, nay boy," sol:-Wore(1 his father. "No, sir; I have four, end I can i prove it." "How do you Make that out'" \S'111. Or, haven't I two peers, and don't two 111111'8 nuke fuer'," grh111Ld the urchin, ":111 right, my son, You have 10.',1 too many," said his father, getting up and reaching over, "Frere, mother, you take one and 1'11 mice one, and John may have the two that are left." Army Life. A soldier just released from 111e ser- vice was the guest of friends at a dinner in celehreti,n of his return'; 11011)1,. The maid had plaec•d an elaborate array of knives and forks and (reams beside the gueet'e guest'.pt. ;e Phe seldier looked at the showy itr' 1 ray, carefully selectNl one knife, one folk, and one spoon. Shoving the rest of the silver from ' him. to the :1elrtn'iae of hie hoes, he to narked: '•'1.0 ninth equipnle:tt to keep', clean:' Would Get a Good One. The tracker had been explaining fractiiuis to her class. '(Chen elle had 1 discussed the su1111'et 01 length, wielt- Ing to see 114.0. 11110.1 light had been sited, she inquired: "Now, Bobble. 0:111ch 10(:(1111 you rather bare, one emele t 0 110(1 halve.,?•' The little Owe promptly replictil: "•T0:o 101 t '•Oh lobbies' e edailm.d 111e•,. t+• W0111111. 0 little r1111app0inttelly:. ley would yon prefer twit 111010es?" 9;acause then I coal(' see if. it 10111 11'11Iy: ' . rdiaara'a Liniment ILtrsOonuaa's prises. Tom, the country six yoar:elll, pro - senting himself one day in even more Gum his 051101 state: of dust and dis• a le' `f be was s1n'd by his mother 1 8 t order. w.1). a would not like to be a little elty boy, el clean in white cuntillwity'a be lilt t nn el and 511000 suet etelrklllga, "They're not children; they're pets," be alma o ed scornfully. J4otr Talmo:t'a 2)1111nene In the house. Water Lan., When the world turns ever and t1:1+2o c,a 31- (.30111141(111, I mean to go a-Wr:1l:tug, alt along the \rater Lane -- If I pass the nate anti whistle, 31181 111(0 I used to do, Will an -abode' come to me-- and o11! will it be you? 1`p Water Lane i'nt 0e i•a.; new.. my pau: neon mt baa 1- „ :Ind if I sing (: y1nsl0' 41111 Fritz d: o11 n1 trio - But it leads tot .:1)i 11101'8 Corner tout n'ito Severn hide, Acid 1 t tl:1'1 stop to talk to you, r1111111001' 11111011 1 111e11, It lends to Dead Meal's Porter and when I'm there, 1 know, There'll uaue a :4111111E11 0a11 is rho, anal over I shall go ITo pay old Fritz'o little bill ---ami then come home, to you. Maybe. you W011.1 be eventful if I wear 11 hit of hate, I IVIlen we've turned the old world over and put things right again Ch1 come a -walking slowly- ;111 down the 1\'atee Lane 1 nue. not have to wlhlsile, just like I 11,0.01 to do. For some one will 11e waiting- - and surely 'twill be you. TEN YOUR SKIN GIRLS! WHITEN WITH LEMON JUICE Make a beauty lotion for a few cents n ere kles sallownees. remove to c to r , Your grove: has iho 1'luene and any drug store or teltei, counter will e1 (1 - ply you with tutee ounces of orcllat'd white for n few route. Squeeze the jnire of two fresh lemma into at bottle, then put in the orebard white and shelte wolf, '1'ltis ntaltey a gnarter pint of the very best leucon skin whitener end complexion beautifier kno'o'1. t • rant rt•eamv lotion 1[assagc this fiat,, ' fixe nock arta and into the face. daily it a lhntult, and just see haw freckle., tea. sellotvtess, reduces and r 1(i 11111'$11 die - appear luta 11,1 „muni h, e"ft. tont teen' the skits hernnus, I'cu. it is helm - leas, (Ind the beentfol reedits will sit The Dog Caine Back. A line' ri dug' h 1. e Ing to a loan :n Melvfme Aisapnu, 0.011, end the owner Fl)11ler ted it had been 0)11(11, So 111) pu1 01 10 ad LI the paper (.1 1ns1^.1;.01 that it be print, •1 1x1 -113 ns he beet Written 1t: "Lost dr ran away. One Bever •rh1- erod llnrd dog (called Jim. Will sh..s Meng of Ityderfobby Its about three days:" The dog cane home the (01100i::g clay-. MONEY ORDERS. A hmuinien Express Money Order for fir% dollars costs three Ce1tt5, Tlu poet sings of Goal and the sweet earth, With night's soft teerdraps -wet upon her face, Opens her sleep -cleared eyes and woad'ning finds God In a sun -filled place. —Isabel Ecele:,tone Mackey, M.inara's Liniment gees b7 Yhralciana. .The Siamese strive to have in their 11euees an even number of windows., doors. rooms and cupboards; for they have a supesatitien rept, •iirg odd members. • • It has been discovered that in the Inter stages of the war the •enemy was redeem' to the use of thistle - fibre, which is only approximately half the strength of linen, for his reronlane coverings. S --O O o—O •0.—O--.0"(14 a How's Sur l�h �h''s This o Cincinnati authority s1ya corns dry up and lift out with fingers. Hospital records show that every time you cut a corn you invite Tack. jaw el' blood poison, which ie neediese, says a Cincinnati authority, who tells you that a quarter 1111ce of a drug called freeze:10 can be obtained ,,t IR- ' tle cost from. the drug a.t„-n bet i:: suf. 1ficient to rid one's feet of every hard or soft corn or canoe. You elmapl, 01111) o. aroo,1)F treczu0 on a tender, 101 1r, L;: -111111 Forenes:3 is instantly reh yeda (-11 ly the entire corn an be lifted out, root and a11, without ut pain I This drug is sticky but d11c st ,.':00 and is claimed to just shr•)y •I lip any cern without inflaming; or 0y):11i tart• Wing the surn'nnditlg 111guo or stein. If your wife OSPar& high heels she 1 will be glad to know of Ude. Rii aj�npayJ ., d^@Qe a ©"ei ep , btRt_... at.:, Co 1.._�ae & Ct t. ��. Lm Are relieved in a few 11501 by ei of takinz 36 drop of Nodal' 501040 3 pt ' Co Sy rep aft ornealeand onretirir.l;. (e) ,t It tl,seodree the lime and acid ®u e) accumulation le the muscles ac.d ,0 (O joints so these deposits can ha J P ��; e'ypollr-1, thus relies 14 Peat Dad el 8) so 140-1. Seigel's Syrup, aijtp to known au "Extract or (Loo.:," el tto� contain-snoeloponeiotherstrong to 'p) drugs te !till or mask tilottui?,of e (0 rnea0•alien: or Lumbago, it re.' moven t_ttr'edus0. 51)15. a b1Stthi'l"- N druggists. l at I t Ce o. O.�JO �QVey OO,O�'e'210 ,do. 649 Mist Flora &{!yko Tells How Cu c 'a ea led Her Ph p ci "My face was bmy itchy at first, and after that it was covered witlt r pimples that disfigured it v!ste badly. The pimples were \11 hard and red and they w000 4.'s a nat l and th eY were re scat- tered all over my face and were soitchy lhadtoscratch J'1 and I could not steep. "These bothered me nearly a year dOint- ^ 9 a an sdCutic.a o lute u Tore p be rent and when I hadusmuitiveculea of Cutieura Soap and five bo:tes of Cutieura Ottttment 1 was healed." (Signed) Miss Pieta M. lastelco, Gardonton, Man„ Dec, 26, 1915. Having obtained a clear healthy skin by the use of Cutieura, keep It clear by using the Soap for all toilet purpose;, assisted by touchup of Ointment au needed. Do not f'all to include the exquisitely aoudad . Wit - cora TsIcton your toilet prepare.' after bat • Bons. Splendid aR i ll it., Po free reale 0(111 np18(111 14) 11451 11118 9'ulemn 08111, s ) "04eaeura, ,, Der t A, r11te0, 0, 8, A," Sold /•arywheru, pilau y'uu. ISSUE 21--'10, a ` „, •,ly 'fj-^r�,ttp� }}40(�1•11.. d�eitni"+ that the change is easy when one finds that r 'tea or coffeedisagrees. , . Instaiit,POStnin, !Is a rich,tasty y bevera e, absolutely el rem -from a ., ee71ne e . (b Bot ,,No Waste, Je c •s w Su e ia cf :rr r ' "' Reasyln .. xti t,- .- . -r„ x1 ,r •, ti arc fe' ' ?,•ka10,'1 , T'l 1V1 other, When home frons school 00 ebildren Cance settluli ring down this atre('t, We'd never mind the apple tree That begged us stop and eat. We'd never triad 1110 1111 bat That lay beside the gate, Nor stop to sa0 why Jimmy, Was a wblsttng us to wale We never' thought WI''s home. then 'Till we'd 1400(1 mother's smite Of welowna :1t: the window. 10 seemed the longest mile lwe reached the corner, That turned into citta lane 11u0 soon's wo saw her funning We'd feel weal home agent. Our mother nt. the window Just malting at us there, Was 'both the (1weot011 plrl hll•0 You'd find mot anywhere. .cud if las seldom happened She wasn't there, well, then, li'e'd hays to hunt and ilnd he• 'Toru we'd feel We's Home again. Oft'llnles I get a thinking Of boyhood days of yore, Of stenos and ltnmeArreu faces, And yearn for then( once more. The village streets s1) shady, The kindly people, too, Who always took an Interest, In the things fused to do. So I travel to the village I loved when I's a kid, And 1 look the old town over But 10 don't seem like it did 'Till at last I turn the corner,. And get started 111) the rano, See mother at the window, Then I feel I'm home again, ATE WHALE FOR CENTURIES. Japan Has To -day the Largest Whal- ing Company In the World. For hundreds of years whale meat bus been used for food in Japan, says "Asia," hr the earliest books of .Japanese. history, there 111'e accounts of the capture of whales with net:( and the ceremonle'c and yeasting which followed a successful Hunt. But whale heat did not became a really important factor in Japanese daily life until about twenty years ago, when modern shore whaling wa0 In- troduced into the empire. The Japan- ese had watched closely the develop - 1 went in Europe of the harpoon gun and the swift little steam vessels with which whales could be taken in great numbers, and the Toyo Hegel'inilut- ltik Kaisla (Oriental Whaling Com- , patty, Limit:ND was eventually formed to carry on op0ratione do Japan. I To -day it Is the largest and most progreesivo whaling company in the world. When once fairly launched upon the new venture, the Japeacse Proceeded in a eharactertstically thorough way. They secured from !Norway the finest equlp11loat obtain- ' able. and hlr0•d the mos, expert whale- ! men to teeth theta the modernmeth- cels of killing and preparing whales. Moreover, their efforts did not cease Here, for they tools not only the cyst from 'Norwegian methods, bat ;introtl:ucea imp.'oyeinents adapted to German armies would he flocking over their own • 30('1111 needs. the border, * _4 • 4 Russia ,is out of the game now, permanently, many fear, for a long,' long time, the most optimistic con- cede. What is to take the place of I IIad ship's anchor fall on my kuee Russia? A number of "selfeletet-' and leg, and knee swelled up and for ruination" States, newly hatched, un six duys I could not move it or get stable of necessity, and liable to fly ho1p. I then started to 0140 ellNARD'S asunder, ' LIl<11Ih "P end two battle; cured me. 1 If it be contented that the Inns of; PROSPER FE1tuU ON. 1 Alsace-Lorraine and parts of Poli -h!' Germany will cripple thr.t empire,' the answer will he that thrrintrh the: P disintegration of Austria-Hungary,' Get:Many will gain in territory and/ 1 population more than will be taken EARTH'S RAINIEST SPOT. I from her by France and Poland. Ger- r 1 many will be sufficient of herself, and Hawaiian Station Recorded a Mean will draw her raw material from Rainfall of 518 Itches. • Russia. A "soft" peace means an early re- sumption of war, and France knows it. But a League Of Nations Is to be founded, Yee, but if Germany gets control of Russia and Austria she can establish a league of her own Ask for eteiaard'e and tette no other, What Has Britain Done? What kis England done.? Kept the faith and fought the tight For the everlasting right: Chivalrously couched her lance In defence of Belgium, France, .This has Britain (1000, What has Britain dote? Given ovary seventh son, ltiet (Ito challenge of the Iiun; Placed her sten on every ileld. Proud to die, toe proud to yield. This lute I1ritain done. What. has Britain done? Answers every retell000 breeze Blown across the seven cams: "Watch and wed secure we keep, Vigilance that never sleeps." This has Britain done, What Britain done? has 11s l On every front, iter flog unfurled,. Fought a w•arld•wu' round the world; Thhen, When 011 10 11111(1 and done, Ask her allies, asst the Titus, "What hos Britain done?" What Tins Britain done?. Por her slain Britannia weeps . Site might boast who silence keep, But when all is done and l sa tic 1, cle1l the roll and count stet' dond. And niknmvw Int site h,t.s clone —Rev, Frederic Il, 'Iodates, B.A. "We learn our grandest lessons front the unlilcolicst muster s+ ---Agnes Laut, The reputation of 1101014 the rainiest p1'tcc in the world 111: long been en- joyed by the Hill Station Cherra 111tn- 31, on the elope of the 11inu•llya. in As - 0 (111, will( 11 mean 011(81all that has recut vallium-ty :.tat'•l, according to the length of the rec0 d and the particu- lar rain game. in rp1:2t1110 Tho Iite l 1,1114(101 value. based on n forty-yeer record at the Che•ra Punji Pollee Station, is 495 inches a year. Blanford, the W11101,4' 11110W11 authority on Indian meteoratn, ;v, thought that the 1110011 in 50111e places at C'herro Punjt exeee118d 500 Invitee, but no- where. amounted to 1100 inches. So fur ma at•iuul records go the rain- fall at the Indian Station is stirpassed by that recently reported by D. I1, Campbell, of Stanford University, as staving been nteastn•ed at Waialee, in the Tslau(1 of 801111, Hawaii, though the record covets only Ave years, and the mean might he reduced by a longer p''I )lI at c 11501' 0010)), i im 191' 191 i, int lesiva, the Hawaiian. station, which 11) 5,075 feel above ((011 r moan rainfall- f ., trd'ct a the u .15 Tavel, rich inches, or 111000 Hutu 43 feet, Mr, (=lnip1011 says that Walalee is seldom free from rain clouds, and the Precipitation is almost incessant; hence whole surrounding region is o bolt, bearing; 11)14 10005 thickly draped With drippillit m0eeee of moss and div etwrn•ts. • City Pots. i fl tlG.:ifl�J�t�pittt FROM HERE' T ERE‘6';4 An An Irish Proposal Pllddy e!ipped ills arm ar01111 1'111- dY'n wi Tat and :+.eked, "Asn I ,t.4)• (t-...-111', ;ure, • replied l ,lei,•, .`you're honk'. Ili' yn,)r 0%0," WOUT'1•'RA 44i'1'1l••1.1 ,, n f.,:IFt r t1'fri1tre 1 ".11.04.1..r,.. 1,4(11(514 00)11- alla.:'1',1 i( ll, 1Ir40lrr1,,_ 4.1d•11141001', (,n:,ufa,. 11040, J.1.111.01. S.rvar roI/Z%-a't WAorrn». D�)C'. PAIR u] PIGEONS ARI) UP Any fano/ poultry to sell? Writ. for Prices I. Woloraurh 51 Aon. 10.18 Ft. Toon 1(8011810 Market. Mont- real, Go», ,-... 20)03181&e. T l'RF1:41 1041 r 511 T1s 110 A W10111<. XIIIn at•n nitb a 114110 bene - Bo11d'- fry fren bo11001. Royal C,'ierte 0?? Seeien^e, Dent. 4a T,mnntn. (,n0 da. i'uP. RA7,£ r 1 r 1x -,t 1r I 118 i 'I'Al'17r3 TM, 1,14181)11 11 (00.1)1 discos:dog x141 �V r n'1 int, i l Taal r 1,_ nt n lia'tern illnr•; e t,f n third. - Untarin im,urr n 41111'1,1 1 ' Tio'c 6$� Rn fn 51.2014 1)1110,1: h "1'03 1 la,itn it, t+E'., 0'1111 role, "Faith, O'11ee:1 1'emie1( e4• 1,1,1 To)n,�o.. I'111 .,(o, a+1) 1111 10'0 11)114); 1" 14'•" '10,iy eboald he (lie?' 11404' 1 +'.1 tee Ulhar, f.l.e/ Lit. TI! 4,1 V,. lnl-rnol oral ....throat. ,red 04 It 81- '(01, he's 0414 0' 1)11( 1 04'rc 10M,cutli1) 11 b n 1 0 0onrlh'me(1.),ncin. nt•D10diral and 1'o thin, ruldnc.:49 !trains, but WAts rn. r,t•n1,1111,10 11 e pure Flannigan, 411(14 • her, 111111011' 'Ilan both 41 ee Tut. together:' Clow Titin He Was. She Knew. - T.ord Reading milled led at a dinner party about 111e eoclincy accent, "A cockney made" he •add, came over arid Nettled 11) Canada, H01' mieire:3, who was , aidov told her one day flow she ('acne to lure hal husband. 'I lost toy husband , n the w eats rn prairies,' the lvonta r said H,1 was killed by y a Mewl. I srtnpo•:e yott know what a bison is?' 'Lawful, 300,' said the cockney rook '1'd like to 'ave a (((1111 for ove;y one I've rnarle a puddin' in.'" Too Smartt "How ,many peeve 11111) I on my plate. father?" asl:e,i at :quart boy. "Two, nay boy," sol:-Wore(1 his father. "No, sir; I have four, end I can i prove it." "How do you Make that out'" \S'111. Or, haven't I two peers, and don't two 111111'8 nuke fuer'," grh111Ld the urchin, ":111 right, my son, You have 10.',1 too many," said his father, getting up and reaching over, "Frere, mother, you take one and 1'11 mice one, and John may have the two that are left." Army Life. A soldier just released from 111e ser- vice was the guest of friends at a dinner in celehreti,n of his return'; 11011)1,. The maid had plaec•d an elaborate array of knives and forks and (reams beside the gueet'e guest'.pt. ;e Phe seldier looked at the showy itr' 1 ray, carefully selectNl one knife, one folk, and one spoon. Shoving the rest of the silver from ' him. to the :1elrtn'iae of hie hoes, he to narked: '•'1.0 ninth equipnle:tt to keep', clean:' Would Get a Good One. The tracker had been explaining fractiiuis to her class. '(Chen elle had 1 discussed the su1111'et 01 length, wielt- Ing to see 114.0. 11110.1 light had been sited, she inquired: "Now, Bobble. 0:111ch 10(:(1111 you rather bare, one emele t 0 110(1 halve.,?•' The little Owe promptly replictil: "•T0:o 101 t '•Oh lobbies' e edailm.d 111e•,. t+• W0111111. 0 little r1111app0inttelly:. ley would yon prefer twit 111010es?" 9;acause then I coal(' see if. it 10111 11'11Iy: ' . rdiaara'a Liniment ILtrsOonuaa's prises. Tom, the country six yoar:elll, pro - senting himself one day in even more Gum his 051101 state: of dust and dis• a le' `f be was s1n'd by his mother 1 8 t order. w.1). a would not like to be a little elty boy, el clean in white cuntillwity'a be lilt t nn el and 511000 suet etelrklllga, "They're not children; they're pets," be alma o ed scornfully. J4otr Talmo:t'a 2)1111nene In the house. Water Lan., When the world turns ever and t1:1+2o c,a 31- (.30111141(111, I mean to go a-Wr:1l:tug, alt along the \rater Lane -- If I pass the nate anti whistle, 31181 111(0 I used to do, Will an -abode' come to me-- and o11! will it be you? 1`p Water Lane i'nt 0e i•a.; new.. my pau: neon mt baa 1- „ :Ind if I sing (: y1nsl0' 41111 Fritz d: o11 n1 trio - But it leads tot .:1)i 11101'8 Corner tout n'ito Severn hide, Acid 1 t tl:1'1 stop to talk to you, r1111111001' 11111011 1 111e11, It lends to Dead Meal's Porter and when I'm there, 1 know, There'll uaue a :4111111E11 0a11 is rho, anal over I shall go ITo pay old Fritz'o little bill ---ami then come home, to you. Maybe. you W011.1 be eventful if I wear 11 hit of hate, I IVIlen we've turned the old world over and put things right again Ch1 come a -walking slowly- ;111 down the 1\'atee Lane 1 nue. not have to wlhlsile, just like I 11,0.01 to do. For some one will 11e waiting- - and surely 'twill be you. TEN YOUR SKIN GIRLS! WHITEN WITH LEMON JUICE Make a beauty lotion for a few cents n ere kles sallownees. remove to c to r , Your grove: has iho 1'luene and any drug store or teltei, counter will e1 (1 - ply you with tutee ounces of orcllat'd white for n few route. Squeeze the jnire of two fresh lemma into at bottle, then put in the orebard white and shelte wolf, '1'ltis ntaltey a gnarter pint of the very best leucon skin whitener end complexion beautifier kno'o'1. t • rant rt•eamv lotion 1[assagc this fiat,, ' fixe nock arta and into the face. daily it a lhntult, and just see haw freckle., tea. sellotvtess, reduces and r 1(i 11111'$11 die - appear luta 11,1 „muni h, e"ft. tont teen' the skits hernnus, I'cu. it is helm - leas, (Ind the beentfol reedits will sit The Dog Caine Back. A line' ri dug' h 1. e Ing to a loan :n Melvfme Aisapnu, 0.011, end the owner Fl)11ler ted it had been 0)11(11, So 111) pu1 01 10 ad LI the paper (.1 1ns1^.1;.01 that it be print, •1 1x1 -113 ns he beet Written 1t: "Lost dr ran away. One Bever •rh1- erod llnrd dog (called Jim. Will sh..s Meng of Ityderfobby Its about three days:" The dog cane home the (01100i::g clay-. MONEY ORDERS. A hmuinien Express Money Order for fir% dollars costs three Ce1tt5, Tlu poet sings of Goal and the sweet earth, With night's soft teerdraps -wet upon her face, Opens her sleep -cleared eyes and woad'ning finds God In a sun -filled place. —Isabel Ecele:,tone Mackey, M.inara's Liniment gees b7 Yhralciana. .The Siamese strive to have in their 11euees an even number of windows., doors. rooms and cupboards; for they have a supesatitien rept, •iirg odd members. • • It has been discovered that in the Inter stages of the war the •enemy was redeem' to the use of thistle - fibre, which is only approximately half the strength of linen, for his reronlane coverings. S --O O o—O •0.—O--.0"(14 a How's Sur l�h �h''s This o Cincinnati authority s1ya corns dry up and lift out with fingers. Hospital records show that every time you cut a corn you invite Tack. jaw el' blood poison, which ie neediese, says a Cincinnati authority, who tells you that a quarter 1111ce of a drug called freeze:10 can be obtained ,,t IR- ' tle cost from. the drug a.t„-n bet i:: suf. 1ficient to rid one's feet of every hard or soft corn or canoe. You elmapl, 01111) o. aroo,1)F treczu0 on a tender, 101 1r, L;: -111111 Forenes:3 is instantly reh yeda (-11 ly the entire corn an be lifted out, root and a11, without ut pain I This drug is sticky but d11c st ,.':00 and is claimed to just shr•)y •I lip any cern without inflaming; or 0y):11i tart• Wing the surn'nnditlg 111guo or stein. If your wife OSPar& high heels she 1 will be glad to know of Ude. Rii aj�npayJ ., d^@Qe a ©"ei ep , btRt_... at.:, Co 1.._�ae & Ct t. ��. Lm Are relieved in a few 11501 by ei of takinz 36 drop of Nodal' 501040 3 pt ' Co Sy rep aft ornealeand onretirir.l;. (e) ,t It tl,seodree the lime and acid ®u e) accumulation le the muscles ac.d ,0 (O joints so these deposits can ha J P ��; e'ypollr-1, thus relies 14 Peat Dad el 8) so 140-1. Seigel's Syrup, aijtp to known au "Extract or (Loo.:," el tto� contain-snoeloponeiotherstrong to 'p) drugs te !till or mask tilottui?,of e (0 rnea0•alien: or Lumbago, it re.' moven t_ttr'edus0. 51)15. a b1Stthi'l"- N druggists. l at I t Ce o. O.�JO �QVey OO,O�'e'210 ,do. 649 Mist Flora &{!yko Tells How Cu c 'a ea led Her Ph p ci "My face was bmy itchy at first, and after that it was covered witlt r pimples that disfigured it v!ste badly. The pimples were \11 hard and red and they w000 4.'s a nat l and th eY were re scat- tered all over my face and were soitchy lhadtoscratch J'1 and I could not steep. "These bothered me nearly a year dOint- ^ 9 a an sdCutic.a o lute u Tore p be rent and when I hadusmuitiveculea of Cutieura Soap and five bo:tes of Cutieura Ottttment 1 was healed." (Signed) Miss Pieta M. lastelco, Gardonton, Man„ Dec, 26, 1915. Having obtained a clear healthy skin by the use of Cutieura, keep It clear by using the Soap for all toilet purpose;, assisted by touchup of Ointment au needed. Do not f'all to include the exquisitely aoudad . Wit - cora TsIcton your toilet prepare.' after bat • Bons. Splendid aR i ll it., Po free reale 0(111 np18(111 14) 11451 11118 9'ulemn 08111, s ) "04eaeura, ,, Der t A, r11te0, 0, 8, A," Sold /•arywheru, pilau y'uu. ISSUE 21--'10,