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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1919-6-12, Page 6WAR FORTUNES MADE IN GERMANY tIWUMBA" HELPED DEALERS HIDE VAST PLUNDER. plane motore, eighty-one automobiles mid 800 maguetoe were found, The ithope and maehines that were melee(' in Gelsenkirchen, at the teillerlea. are worth nfilllons. Berlin Pay the 13111? Many inore 1111111014 aro on 11114 Het, showing that the investigations of the 1)0lice Mll) been of use in the reeov. cry of vast tureminte of plunder. but. it ......... Is doubtful in many vases whether AllieMilitary Police Root Out Ma- much would be gained by the retern History Records an Instance of Bol - 4d :his old materiel. It lees hod to bo chlnery Stolen From Belgium - taken apart in order to he t.ratieporteil i shevism Which Occurred in Purina War. : to these rEsglons. If it 11 taken apart 1 Rome About 500 B.C. age le to be set np in Belgian faetories, 1 The military pollee of the Allied the bolts will be loosened, all the rivet- And now conies the hunger twili1! armies of occupation in the Ithino ing will have to 1K• cut and made ! Calaml reports frem Vienna tell of a provinces hove made a monism. of- in- anew, These are manufeeturere who new Myelitis which has been diecover- teresting diseigeerlee in Demo reseeee ' would mineider this material under i ed, in, Anetr,ii,e ,hi 4,he, bieliee of theee during their isearth tor inmaiinery mei ouch eireniestanees as little better 't'1° "at'-' "'et' 14 s'attat°11' Till-' abler etEden material geken out of than Pink. , 111 11.41) who mode the discovery Bee -shim tool leranee, i -Why ibit lm 114 new inaishinee.' hat" evle•d it the bower germ. Germia profitage, under the itutul.. wberever possible, lestettil of. Whim; ' Not, of ceuree Ili it the gisrm is the gence, if not with the cemlivance of boek the ell? Why not make full lee, einem of Imegar; for hunger ie :: con.' the war deportment in Berlin, hese oe Gorman frdustry eel man ,,,,,,,,, • 1141 14)1 and let a dieense. it lo henge14. annesseil great fortunes, and likON liVed we.a; it the Rhine fer the puree, of which brede the germ. It is hunger on ties fat of the landerimeing die- , supplying new inaelline:e."rlie Allies . which Mlle. The gotta is neei•isly inie • gust apparently among the nag.,,,,, of have this resource at their command. It the ev elencee of what it Was that : (hel4 wen c'-'omitatrt.O.:Oon more than '•''Flee Gersmengho,lu.ered werer1s,,11141414choais ,been the misee of deth. To the; .e. o,f E v ery ,p-:I.•s.'en s,.hsouo;ld (11V1 a 1111 01- (11 11 Ilr,tf thilty 14,1„r,1 te„,,h„lvnlodYhungis what lk f Leinidtohvhppednse.ien1 11reeetngihr in his ea ''• ' f-gCs'im,iie:• a , t,.'wo.-4.iwhee.l-ed„.,.;o..nl1i very fifteeen s”tates egma:i,el ti neolw parthambout throgh itif.0direen f thAWhould 11 11 tth1) 411 eral partof unteThe hunger When onieuelit nd plaved in the!11)11110,v' wthl establish prptue. r. eg 1 mitoi 1114(44 It to the bynet igeieminafet r1,,,musti 1111,1 . 4pondethe metier erm IS the 0101 (1)•10nli:111K hat1110Aearil emetic:111(11 4) the t --- si•,se--h',,.i.eoeiiln'ltff.- .wpWinoeeo,es,., •:.']. ig.e. .'' ‘i', ryl'..1 e!nOgbin!,.t nvecre Vngene.e i :• I 1'M:-oropee'..•. 11 0 was t:e,il,l.,).laInriee,sd Swnon411 41 hiro51111,01,,,:,c1,I,fiii,,mp.,1,1,ile!wgivinduweig111 11 thwholremf etehagyorancfifteen per centThig The Engfotie Job. De,sen(thegret sellerea In Virsou1411 101 re fepftegt fer thp,,,„1mbor:ndcsnitmntrestIt ill e Ccat of LivinFundamentel. ma1ju,dry1,11yinal:171411.114,III.r vr, 1 , .,• 1 Tho linpe and conilitimv.mreim 'linmilti werfod in tf 1) 11 wunelthvernmnt leund that thithuitiell lewpi Two thingintewoven with 41(11 if it aeteled no dditim1 proeNand 4110 othemlartct1104e4:41ae-Ne.i::.1; asa d thtcm i Pre111 then t11-1,4d,ratii 1414441 411 to thleienili that lto IItVery L•10c11 the human vac40 (4041 terrildy in 11 beiHere is a ;i11t( 44 141)111 1fitise Pobe:es l indeea a lacumbr tmuehte ermmeierlintopey tbll at the Main11''111ih'tveeeit lwlDiet no ormin Avid/ il!PunitY iPk to e hp111 1)411 1041 14 of utorown ogino virilCingontip,1ry11, 1 11(001.1101:,i1,,1 tooltum.hemmerandoh.r y lpiiorimGerman ''tuind!vid4141'tapor with thot 1tnanco ndrile firactirir firig with little to do.harnngup 11rgetried the sixteenth etohw 0:01111 111 of thvea13.0.4 1)4 44 r.ld kpt e fothe 1'Wht the hting1gor11 10 tthffsprigAlyself.the verldireter14 til it al 14 thet111T1itf ful trnieg a 11 ht and foreinluditie:11 nd rel in mnd to of timt1,4and not 4114 detrmet of elL1rvIngidividualnolshevlimtit10rVaIill Ithfirt laW ofnasriundinil (101 partbecome11f11erearn etlOror washeriaisex411(1117totll11,,1)ii:: ig1ef rkhop11141 111 inslininthe 41 11 nothw11 thMore tnndtely imporalae in turnWhethihaimense\0Tteitn:lis41eI441Pit1nlilgv141s:oti led 11a1 en ied ththerpiargmenarfrequmt nesvaBolshvsts oLang Agotent of tile twis 1101 4111114 the beet thing to do itokeep ertnik:fo:klure t:call the men in frnom:t:e4it1;1v)1;4)18:411i(th‘l111:;,.tlni pfront i1;11n1 On dti Ieleen naeeenmatThtiret 111 11 if elehmmett,g Vlita lofty ideals of homof ing the car 110 n 14 lo to eet7ldtE1eitis itis :1Ut11;;llsas:::switI1 1141oh1111 tlamnitmtteria1 ter al,i11) 14 op:thnin politcl r0ri01 in hktry is_ai14iiiiv,,'colintryof humanitne may haveenge stateII tiis acene- - - ,. . aops$2teo1.2n3. 1•:ilee. 'fhuaTihtiiln'gs ii:.I:'1. it neceidsnan ne”polepev fet or("conlf• l; tof ,., msvya • il• ; i'i'. isen..tt ehe e ir olwinegirduto turn nuC d'er, Th,e most noble (Mion/ik 'and. ' 1144 e " 01 ientried t Ue1Illetit r iquetlenBitter rent1110 11 of the ens Demi !mdeprivhim f suetemne11111 1111114 Belied the 1)11,0 will many timee e On no,r 14 14141 We hear he litos1 olaotts Latinos of ththn wrth11 litttnk m1yearbefthbirth f thhunge04 111 nd ou shatter 1411 011111411 into the carbreter and extihustlinand Imetling1111101)lda11,,ts t.1,,011en Evet timly iee had bey thr4lmatvaille t RheaI1 (1 nd make him ee rdtinesedIf the ereaunet1ploeionome e fast ththey4401 04 with thidea of deliverin 4:: 11 peelthinatinduetg pain thm111t1111 10 reelhere are ecep411 ltd drd of a eeafireearelhave Vnto emit from the irammtity from theee flailand f Aili11,t'et f 41 1) re1 114 10111112a iretly to humanrace11 io wellloo,wil that tionsbut tharo rarer 44 11 then xtinguish11 411 be ad to rutexham4t-ripcn n cifort to operateaking tht'e"12nr4!) 1(11101014 4e41g1e14 hethirepatthose of whom Hamlet saybeout the fl ethe feed rhttl4(1111111 satv andcoldlaliugtintrprine1;1E!iitil1 1411 gerqumodst g War 1ra.ih)1 hioh Wised to xrot herThe patrieiansNVII1A01Stituted holt:etas the vord goes is to be one Dragging brakeis another cause 100114 other heavy-terning nieces these enhunitiesReliginMoles had videtsored hmsMpret from expleimthe plutieratie upper (lasehad be111 411 :nit of ten thoandof fireas i$ elso their continuous umathi"errrutthefurffvr'The drys.mum on theone handand 111 tilth,q reselma tf ind rtilMi come 1141044 111 and (141 111 thAndagain to quote the same high on a 1110011401111001140111 id( or hilly road;of tlut1411 1114 arc numheredOver- 1114 111(11)1111)11 of the Austrian Mel ettworth i1wpreree Ai 4---theplebeianstired of being xpoited.nitheritwithSlutkespeare's leaveThen constant use under such cir-erthortenthe lite of amthingwhi(e) had been 11)11 4111) with Per inglbill for 111.11111114" )t!'44(1 to retired from ilotne and decided to es•in't'''111ufsil'gcumetances will cauthem to becomeanuagos-eneine is 10 OXepilOi!,verenee for more tliisil a halfcentury That hioeovere net ll e U.SDOCTOR LAUDS BRITISHtaldieh 0(1 101100 of their ownTllelily: the thing inlamed by frctionand on a ,"hr not fire on thiad get theprojeete of 0(14001 41 liluaten deincivey reuline wavilened — I alenenins Agripawholthough a To catch the conscience of the king thnt is greaythe famewll 440141(11 140441410 for the job? The trouble s,A Sixteenth Century Prophet ot he very farm ' whmlasmall engine is boght the, "Religious intolerance" haTanishe.1 spread. Toovercomethisasmuchbuyr oesnot know how 11101)17--•Aand the Prussian has been substitutfel bv the furtherli„ee_rmw111.5 f -Ise rnell patria,ejoyedthidtence kaonarhrasittus: h SCIENCE DISCOVERS HUNGER GERM BREEDER OF BOLSHEVISM FOR MANY CENTURIES,flOW 7rATEAN-SOOTCR LT YV NT CO? t - .C . a!S tfedirdd , • a eo: 'e have made their own tren- eto stay. We have scores of farmers 'rotcting Autos Fret l'ire, herwho Most pplhave n nhdeeome ors IOm their old, half-worn-ont dysad of ilrin connection with ther,'Uggl"1""1141141141.1)44141)011111!!thyY homes and 1111100, and yet fail to con. need no more, and they are a 11000441414.eider the Metter of pledecting their We E4114a frmer the other day cershauling eexteen-hundred-ponnd bull The operation of a motor car in a trailer behlad hie motor eel', pees1 upon hitehly Miammnble ma- This trailer 4141114 11111,11' frum rubbers le. Thi,,„g0,„„,,,,0'1'141'VI tired running44(1.1,1 of a precaution 011104111 be taken to prevane1eare 141414011111 We have gone to mlht;dloa1 A f:w 11)41140114ects cf dry sand or 1114110: T,i,1,7,%, 11iiles, 17)00:,:setsea:nfirst to work 11 out mei present it td 01.1121 :0114 111)017 4n7041'f414'1:4e.4 (1Fs71:11%0.n;il,h,,‘‘1,hlikcn..owpeople of Fatropt. 1„11,,:1:ii,1111410itinili011e1..iand made 1111101011141)114 tripe 401' ether It was In 1)1)13 that 1 Iory IV., Ins thing ll more Moiety mahi1rl:c1ine0s1)1atrti1e11111esisid 1114 his ldminiit,rSullypre hernimoil thmt ome 1111winhuy11.1::1lc01111z1r„,,110:jeell the fomulatimon. a ntle 14 1119 1..,1\7cn.,1p:411witer011.rrl„r11111111tx,1,,,,11.:igli„,1110most Incomlrelemalidie eel' . a11011,:4;1;01,1ine1zti':,1 - ('10111114 me le from light hugf a Chrietian republic., 1') .111414,1 n FIRST LEAGUE OF NATIONS WHO WAS TliE FIRST TO PLAN A UNION OF RACES? e Henry IVof Navarro in 1603 Drew Up Foundation of a Christian l Republic, eeae, .1 . Who first thought of the league of notions? 'Henry IV, the '141(1111)114 ll1144 1)14 No- vane0' 44(47 the )0'n 1) people Willi ono 0)1)10, "Or, if he 01; Ind 1)111)1117the lerst to think of it, he wee the t oyour Possible,havethehrottlef ' is going to be and does1 4014 the Austrian house in the presmit car set so thatallth4410401)110mayinnaantp eedtteendb:lins ofa 102.rd.;41,410tlta 1:01:1r,1 pounds From BritishArmyDoctors thepruletariat,Wonnitoheirmartpasheth in Frence. camp and told them the fllowng Good food'ting be cut off the witch thrown out not lend to bitch it to so many discussion. Beyond the01100r il•- - - • .1114114 eenernInion aIll, eta - 1111144: To blunt the Bolshevistic sting. Me.pieces of machinery, big and little.ferencethe plans fele,, v IVgol11111 fora Ant,nibe Cmwfound tYth- 1"111”' frien Th11- .. The limbhe aidonce rose III 10 rsiorneas a rake o()levery 1401111 where though they might Imve lo (1 form to own 2 large thr,'....it.,cy wsireh•sise 41,1.M.,:, 111 , 2IV iiitill seribblers to the ' rm.nit 11,4111,4 the stomach. The lazy eentrary. is the etriking tribute paid • ; at Itheelt, neer theabeeli. paelted with 11) 1111 the .arms and legs :teetered, the Dritish army by a distinguished • kr 141 new gth Itel.,:ttiFreftell und itaidin did nothing but eat and have a good nwter ears. 'T,'",,, ,..,f,174.,,Tly was eain. • Ang.tleen amilleal ellimer. who has : time generally. while to them fell all ,seeilit e. talieeeil at ie•e...-e ..e.i. the cers in its n att end leerned tknew 1(0 the svork, all the drudgcsry. They 11e i4 w..a.,: worth over S.‘Zeo.sos ..a.,.• worth. Col. Haven Emerson. M.C.,of ; (..14,,)i, accordingly. that the feet were the United 411:11441)Army Medical Sorg 'During the invosf:T,flon into the man. no longer to procure the fooil nor the net in wiecii they had been eequi1ed. vi4.. replying to a toast at the British , hands to carry It to the 111011th. The Herr Sere:ger Loysee geite leet hie Medical ..1.4s0c1ation dinner in London ! stomach was to do Ito own chores if reeentr ly. ead a letter he had riseeived self-posemmien to emit a 11411410,5 indeed it cared to eat. If not, it could go that when at last he wae cmight .., la from 0 reenter officer of the United hang itself so far as they were con- ing signals to his bookkeeper and ac- States Army Medieal Service who , cerned. The aid of the limbs having evEsrit 110 1' to lamen in May. lele, with • cused ef the eetion ee struck the beg, thus been withdrawn, naturally the of the investigatMg 01110 -Jr, Lietnenant 'it 111,1141 eoon began to feel the pangs . ergs ,,f the liret Om 41) hospitals. The letter read: Gilles. Leysse was arreeted and fur-, of hunger; it languished and perish- nished ball to the aniennt of Sliefeeea. '*I learned the value of eimplielty ed. And with it perished also—the I of installation. I SLIM" perfect policing "Wumbe" Does the Shipping. . . rebellious lirabs." - . ot eampe. Flies were almoet =known About a tivim,ami Ili,rgian machines. In spite of the presence of three thou- Could Not Live to Themselves. all purchased through the German War sand hersee stabled adjacent to the The plebeians saw the point of• the Department, were •teend on premises hespitat. Drainage, grease -saving, fable and promptly returned, especial - belonging to a man named Schereh. . destructors, dryers, were efficient to 1y as some concesslons were granted This farniehed a clue 0144111 Ied to the a degree unknown to Ifs. Resourceful- which made their lot in the 00101111011' 1'111401414'i'1' of many otliere in ilia; vieini- nees. initiative, cleanliness, ordeal- wealth more tolerable. And, by the tes. Ail of theta had been shipped by ness and everywhere a standard of way.• in this eonnection, it may not the "Wamba," eetensibly a stock 'am' . living that opened the eyes of the most be amiss to call. attention to the fact peny due to Individual initiathe. but self-eatiefied Yank to the possibilities that the word proletai•ian, as a desig- in realitY '1 creation "1 the War De7. of salvage dump. and the uses of pet- nation Of the lower classes of society, pertinent in Berlin. When u Gerreirt 401 and biscuit tillS. The wild Ameri- whites is commonly supposed to be manufacturer Deeded me. mat,,sigi or I calls Were lam) impressed with the dis- net much older than the French Revo- machinery on easY terms he Ile'S '9 ' 1 iplhift maintained. Despite's with lution, was in current use in Rome apply to the War DePartment. whioh , 1.7.07 beds were operated In a space hundreds of years before the Christian thenreferred his applicatlen to the . we deniended at home for 300, and era. Plautus, the comic dramatist, Wumlet (04', D. M. 1414 A, \ve)em). and 1 with a simplicity of equipment that who flourished 300 13.0.. makes use of 1411(111410(8 Dee"hell'ulAs Alla. 04 011100 ' was e revelation to 1.15. The evactme the word in his comedy entitled for the Procurement ef Arms and tien system WaS a marvel of melee- "Menaechnii." Mueit lone i. The We:141v had 11111111410 Lion Every':. -here one 04100 1111(1 felt Hunger Is a gnawing caused by sine lecal ugameies ie. the enrious the ine,,illigtrable loyalty 014 1107 British contractioms of an empty stomach. regione ,ei occupied terrttery end 144)0 T0111111y, 1i:,4 eenedence in and res. Some lines translated by the poet empewered to order the dienaleging pea for his of.icer expressed an ideal Longfellow from the Gorman, relative of a 444V011 factory in order to eupply reletteushipand preved the reason- to the heart, are even more applicable the Cit.rnion applichne ablene,e ef the dieeipline. Everywhere . to an empty stomach: . The :tonal wreeking operatisme a moral that seemed bern in the num , were 4114141(1 out under the dircction rather than acquir.si. Nothing could ' "The millstone and the human heart Are ever going round: of an ia• egietion of five principal cote eind men mere etrerely together than te they have noting else to grind trattere for e eemeiselen ealcidated the memory of ''1114 .-erViee in the B. Dll a percentage 1(141411), Payment 40141444,le, As well es the personal and They must themselves we ground." not 100(144direetly to the War Depart- One of the manifestations of hunger professional pleeetire from our British Inent, but to the 04(1(114)1444 (141111410117experiences, we 111(4)11441a training ts that it causes nervous excitement, whose commiseion was ordinarily Il Even in the lowest forms of animal which served in good stead when ofit- per vont of the total cost. sh hos.; life this excitement has been observed. cere were sought for to est:dill Undoubtedly many machines have pita' services in the ..1,E.F. British And in human beings it predisposes been deflected from their normal mise the mind to undertakings which the methods, devieos, rules of service, pro - kin of 141111)117 service to the 1150118 same person, properly 010,01419180,s eedures were taken over direct to our of a 14011140-101411144 1(140)1)101 and SO trans- own hospital units, to the great ad- woul.d spurn as Unworthy or utterly formed for the harsh pnrpeseS of milt- vantage of the economy of labor and dishonest or even atrocious. When Jerusalem was besieged by Titus in of the quality of the medical. care the first century of the Christian era given to our sick and wounded." the famine in the city was SO great --ell that some parents are said to have Canada has now shoat 90 mills for, eaten their own children. Toward the making pulp and paper products latter part of the Thirty Years' War hi the seventeenth century the same from wood. tarism as to be unreeognizable—parts have been destroyed or melted for shrapnel. Director Peterson, of the Air Tramways, had twenty.five cars shipped to him from Vallenciennes, tno electric: motors from Ongree Mari- haye. At the Farner works, 1100 air - THE ODOR OF BEES, — 4 Three Castes of Bees Can Be Cris- tInguished Merely by Their Odor. .11 the entrance of every beehive, • during the season of the honey flow, stand guards to prevent the invasion of strange bees. Half a dozen of the nectar -laden insects fly to the tiny door. To the human eye they look ex- actly alike; but one among them is not allowed to pass the sentries, who recognize 'him as an enemy. The sense by whieh they detect him, ac- cording to Dr. N. E. McIndoo, whose hook, Recognition Among Insects, has been published recently by the Smith- souian Institution, is not sight but '9MInenihe course of his studies the man oC science has trained his nose until he can recognize the three castes of bees—queens, drones and workers— merely by their odor. His experiments sliow that the bees themselves recog- nize one another by individual odors, and use the sense of smell for as many purposes as human beings use eyes and ears. Worker bees, he says, re- turning to the hives from the fields, pass the guards unmolested, because they carry the proper sign, although the hive odor they convey is fainter than when they left tho hive, and is also to 11 very large degree masked by the odors of the nectar and the pollen with which they have loaded them- selves. Better Still. "Yes, when Jack married her he thought she was an angel, but it wasn't long before he found out his mistake." "Disappointed, eh?" "I should say not. He found she was a good cook." At one time 114 Switzerland eggs were used as money, and dried cod were used for the same purpose In Newfoundland. Sandy (newly arrived in Canadian forest land): "Whatna beast's yon?" Native: "A young, moose." Sandy: "Och, hand yer tongue! If that's a young moose, I'd like to see one o' yer auld rats!" coast down long hills. Trailers for Automobiles. The automobile trailer has come to stay just as the automobile has cense and shops. Is this not true? engine is neded, two are needed -as! ed by Sir Robert Cecil or Weigirew one small eagine for the light workH Wilson, of the household, and a heavier and "Regarding the general 111)1141(411 more powerful engine for the barn i state of leurope," to again R.:metal 1 from Peirson, "Henry IV, wished to have associated as numy soviseeigne 11) and weakling calves, but in the far- possible in the plan he Mei formed, on out Queensland districte, where large the one hand to reduce 1141' territorial Packs travel together, hunger has 1 poveceeions and the sources of revise:es been known to make them bold enough of Austria in such a manner that that to attack men in their lonely crimps power would cease to be actually hoe - This is the name given 0) the wild after the 1110111101' Of wolves, the and threatening to the other try what the wolf is to eastern Europe The dingo never barks, but his states, and on the other to establish clog of Australia. He is to that mutt- er the coyote to North America. Hunt- weird howl is a familiar sound in the among the hereditary monarchies or bush of night, and is bloodcurdling in the pftecipal dominions of leurepe nn ing with a pack or alone, lie is a eon- the extreme, being especially trying equilibrium of power of such maitre stela menace to Australia's chief hi- on the nerves' 04 4)18 newcomers in the that they might henceforth easilyde- AUSTRALIA'S WILD DOG. The Dingo is a Constant Menace to Sheep and Hard to Exterminate. dustry, the breeding of sheep. camps. Owing to the dingo's cunning Many are the schemes devised for and swiftness in changing quarters, the dingo's extermination, but his he holds his own in Central Australia capture or death is a comparatively and is likely to do so for many a day rare occurrence wheu set against his to come, oven though the prices set constant depreciations. There aro dog trappers who spend their whole time trying to catch dingos, men who have studied every aspect of their work and who spare no pains and avoid no hard- ship in a continual warfare with the wile end =Mug of this sheep slayer. Although the dingo is met with from time to time in almost every part Flowers grow profusely in many of the Australian bush, his principal parts of the Arctic regions, The most habitat is the rough range country in frequently mut with is the cotton the centre and north of New South plants in flower, the white, silky tops Wales and the deep dark scrubs of swaying hi the Arctic breeze. 'At Queensland, present little use is made of it, from The dog trapper's life is of the lone- an industrial point of V•ISW, except liest kind. For weeks, perhaps where the down is gathered for filling months, he camps in the desolate pillows. ranges, setting he traps and watching Throughout the cotton fields flow- ers 1(100111 in luxuriance, as is only to be expected in a country where the sun shines continuously duping the summer months. Among others, the floWer-hunter may gather purple larkspur, bluebells, monk's -hood, primroses, asters, lilies of the valley, and even a kind of Arctic geranium, pink or white in color. upon his head, already a generous one, should be doubled or trebled, FLOWERS IN ARCTIC REGIONS Cotton Plants 13l0)om, Also Larkspur, Asters and Lilies of the Valley. with ready 1.1 110 to the 1110011114 night for a chance shot at the enemy, In the bush there is a price on the head of every dingo. In some parts a dingo is worth ten pounds sterling or 01401I. fifteen pounds to the man who delivers his scalp to the pastoral board or to the squatter. This is made up by sums contri- buted by the sheep breeders and al- lowed by the dstrict councils, so gen- erally recognized an enemy is the wild dog. With such handsome emolu- ments to encourage him, the profes- sional dog trapper is not easily daunt- ed, and his patience and perseverance are remarkable. Sometimes he may get as many as three or four dogs in a week, but as a rule he is doing well if he gets three in three months. For the most part the dingo con- fines his murderous attacks to eheep Soap rubbed on the screens and screen strips prevent sticking. Javan is considering allowing f or- eigners to operate mines in her ter- ritory. This is a decided innovation in the land of the Mikado. The greatest tea drinkers are the Australians, who consume about eight pounds a head of the population every yeay. preostuaoross.-ocriamsmacr, 1141.1f)•`fOOR TROUt5LE I YOU teietei HAtebLE. YOUR wire. Rteel-IT• PeF FIRM • TELL, HER r- '(Ci0t4t 141,4BOSS - oetqw,11) (44110 pitiN i____, SAN ' ele.e/E 'sem EVER. ..)E.EN 1,1'( vel e"E . r 51Eg re, X ZIT CU. X NeT Gl- 1E7 3E2' 3/V4PA.."11021iiE4EM 3Eto DON'T HAVE 1-0 SEE NSA- AIL 1401eiEesi AeRe. /NUKE IS IT PN'a itAD JERR`f ? j JERWI'• HOW MANY TIMES MUST 1 LL'Nc1OC.0141E NET2E.L EXC...U5E J1144- ME WIFE, WANTS ME • le 90 410 o ;rr Vailk WELL!:WILL SK -C, YOUR LIKE ''''t.1111:1:44.11 -1:$4.1r ( gnus fend their own independence and that of weaker states against the attempts of restless 1141(1 ambitious neighberee "The king and his tissociates wer0 to work to make impossible the quarrels which up to that time had armed Christian states one agalnet another, by establishing for each of them clear- ly defined borders and frontiers, and by settling with fairness their de- bated rights and their conflicting (1114)11111. "The king was to try, by his ex- ample and adviee, to lead the other pr1nee8 a movement toward giving' 10 their people no interior government sufficiently moderato and wise to IWO. ent reralts against the onvereign 111 the future, and to destroy the cause of civil wars, "He Weald tryfrirthermore, to have the different states which form the Christianity of Europe convene to form a council where all would be re- presented by their delegates, and which, by consent of all cqually, would decide as Et friendly arbiter their dif- ferences and would replace war with conciliation." Problems Then and Now. The point of differenve Iles the prominence then given to the question of religious wars, which were In vogue in the early seventeenth century, Ro- man Catholics and Protestants waged war on each other, end both fought the "unspeakable Turk." "Henry's ideas embraced both the religious state and the political state of Europe, wrote Poirson. "In what- ever related to the religious state, he Proposed to unite with the sovereigns of the states already his allies or dis- posed to become so in seeking suit- able means to establish the three do- minating cults --Catholicism, Luther - ism and Calvinism—on such conditions of liberty and force that all those who Professed them might henceforth fol- low them untroubled, that any of the thee cults might not in the future oppress the other two, and that the Principle of religious war might thus be destroyed, The Rich Suffered in A1r Raids. Official details issued recently of twenty-five air raids on London be- tween May 31, 1910, and May 19, 1013, completely dispel the idea that while the poorer classes suffered great loss West End residents entirely escaped. The reports of the London Vire Bri- gade show that in tho raid of Nevem-. ber 28, 1916, the residences 04 11(0 fol. lowing well-known people were dam- aged'. Liont,-Gen, Sir Alfred Codriug, ton, Lord Gaecolne Ova, Lady Jane Taylor, Lady Wernher, Duke of Dev- onshire, MarqUess of Salisbury, Mar. quess of ?Attend, Lord Northcliffe, Earl of 'Yarborough. Duke of laUtland,