HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-1-28, Page 2df„, sent Y 71
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14,'1,. 304304,1 .rat 010 /034 f, ,f 714.4. Lunily
11 ..4, JO, ! 't he nutria fol,; 1. for a L311:10
tl
54:10' Awl 10330 see 14 513,711 lir• wart.
, d to 4 rb ,'
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,end Johan l7'3' -x 1),71 >,he vr,n34 be 0040
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.0.111.3 1'ttotro,N1 toe n1
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0141 (43( 31311 v,. 171111:< ,he Pnic Oda whom
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7 warsill m 1,3 7 t ' 0u1 h, t on with
1 ;rt3y
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104 18 104 440110 4111'•,''01 110.w.'
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ri 111.1,11 11013111'. 01 Fit 331,1,1"1 for all in -
e10111, 84341 that 1,1113113114{ 013103 of 11/1.4101.
which 4000T 113,W 0301 11404 ,,vnr3}3ntaned
'11.im 5,1d, a physical weufuw^s, took tow
10344311 ivf 11101 31130 10033,
Where 45104 I4/I1d. now? Khat non. or
3,,,31na1 wan il. 10041111 17 l4. « il,, ),irr
wilt till,• heel( In (Ueda? Surely if abo
(133411,35) In Simi tbd, nhn emhl nal'. Jlnve
1,, ,' away from loan. Ile wanted to think
than: nhe whit ,11 t 11rmrhd, a1tlu,ugh 11? 1121341
avltl, wilt }r;),),, 144 a and sorrow nits ,,,rail.
L1,0, Ifnn(5 6,101t to 1110 le'w with 'whom /he
could claim )1314. and lilt,
she ins],molten 1 ,
1 )Ml him , often r t her
>
childhood171,, and or irr 311+dh,y girlhood, and
t3Pn1'1 Ilii .3,18.141twl thvd alio had had 20
.en4litre 143 het ou tt',r hou.nehultl, 'ifs know
With 'what 4101'1,4131 alto 15071 1e0117 1.77 1411g.
la nd,
1)., on'hed f ;411 1141 41 10411.10 141411 ti,, reset
end Truitt rement n'anet' free 15,m abnnnt:
brute lv.
II, 10 •rvn1•.” Pall ,1' hlrnn,lf, "I1. it
41v et' and 411,111'.0111575” Y02 when he wan
TM hl 1110 1'00111 he paced the floor nervous,
17. Wftfi nvea• and dome with? Could a
snarl lose Jon wife f,33 e1tv117 .Was therm
net mill u, Ile? 14,.71 him 'rnranlvn In 1(111 rn,
-totty)rbrltuln- let h]m'dendon hi. heart, 11110
701110 OVERT 'h01140%141e footling. 14Wd wall
9171111 hid- NITS, oven though the mugnr,Li.
431,0141of 11If4tpt,,hm1'v4anuh W:5; drn,wlug.111111
ahne0i•'737rr7)55)],], !s w:{Ii, .5,841 a nsiti m
soma 11111tata7'1 a tlur0 1u'r4 1111,00/0000r') 51
sol�fYirl ennln. I4., 14n)rygU,tzl.
VTI1ltl.fwnl x151,,diced onl' 154yw woo 141 le
001 Now i) regrew :d, 111711 Mal ar,ntely,
Chet
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wen , 3�4yru)tra ]tufo "wg14, then th0it
,lin n11,11t .31 tt108 nye tt cl51115c0 9f ob.
dill,,0 r•enl freedom. 1.100 sari Wen
nbin frau310111 if 1 Gln not /mew rvlsArn 07,'
le
And Ihra! Its knelt AL 1100151101. ''Pleaat,3tell,
at1It 1 alp sou I i) 5011 l)V31' ).111117 50 P6y`
s* 15' 1 w:il11let , o a]
t n n e
AQ11 � / lunch n lr r
51 Il 4 131 , 6 e tie �l' 75.3 lie Shall
moralt' street, 7112 I intuit haventoy rent
1 e'4 •.
31 3 to 137 • 0tit. 311 434.3/1 331
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1n06 '3..4
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er 4.4 744; .1,01,1, alt.? r hr.ltmas,
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1.21713)31:1.17975,11,'a box el vt4o7utu.
+ r
w4,4,44 14 431 7 r lhe
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a ,:1 i is r 1.0 400303
7e ,. .e.. 191. ,4 r 11 L/9/.11,, "'1 LA.',,
/.4.4 1 i r r %4 f 7 :7 h Yrd
mora,r.g tlfi,,tt,fte:,Sir, end 1 regret to
eer .i.' .l. .r ("TV ',MA , e, 774, 4 od.
71,17 a,,, r s ry, ver•, p r 4" 1,,{101.
act e I ,'1 -f rR 47413' r f a13 bet
1. ,.. 5... ,. 31 3 Wit."41 .3 ,1• r".ne. y
f•, 737,1 �1 Dud r ,year?,7 m70777,nla
1,r :au "1 rfer747 L :Yet y. ,n f
.F•-'r,g n .7154n M., 3I'e do 11 Ex d1ooio
.:and :qt.', a ,414,-1511.0. 300 r. c ,!-d ,7 with€
in 71,:4 1e„ 1', (‚17',n0 7)14,434,,.
I want y:11, one 24.1£, 411 1131.37 this
11,0141(7 le 17 you 1,ke for -t4.:r; 31x637 Tgrl,
P5,"71 7,n't re'a.e n-, and .f yy-,a 17oa14
• :1x3. et ,rico 1 eom ,.1.th, 1 •waf look af•
v^ 11, 1 n
,rr,a 17
She 7.4 n,th r)..f i.'r 3,41,410011401130
',vie 1:11071, !,r elm 11,31 ,tee, v 14.11 to
root, 111111ft - 4 tklk rinTne, ,$ f!.' 77743/.
f x31 .1,,;;11, had n;. 3000 313 I :r P "r 7137,
..4"1 32.1 31 the 31/10317.01 13131 th.rui, were
.:'• e 1,s 10.711:4 bewe317 54, 4!75' and
F rn [ran', t. 134-7, r,7,,,, ,Ar. )fry.
r I✓1.4, a ra-ner a'nrup'.77 one
• y, I f.ly 1%5157, (1e411,1,,4 71,77 d'sprevm,.d
l 01.. of et, 7.
f •1' 1031. 1.71(4,1 wiry,' 14." 1111'3111,31. went
314 '.', h 4 1 ,111,1,4 0.114, 0; .: 1 4 14341 13/53)7
har, fewly .3,Nnn ep,k4• of .1 4t :n.
'7 +.Y. Lan very 4.1141:' :47. aa1d: 'bn•
:17 jure 1,3,42. Poppy, I: MIN, made 15e
041(7 5731 at 1),131. rtnry, ffr 1. a ,e•r,y err-
. 13711.5, rrzan -
'I, 4.3.? 1,3:d thH /111011, t, why rhau4d
; 1441 or nob Stp7?"
1tu1% Ethel rh-rlgg,41 13,•r „h'n1?dera 7
know, 111 1 nor acre f am r,ghtr and
T w 0, 1 na]d holy }font!"
1 7,n 1ke 11.113? I mean it, the
r 1 ,.-ow ,4 the 1.114'
4.31731
1,31,4•0 ,1 ul front, of 5,117• lfrr, a
"0,, .lr1504 04..:1530 figure, H7 her loh,5, long U1 drrls,,a1%-ip,'ru,
"1 like 54:1, very, very much:' 0b, 04.;11
3703,1y -1 boyo a 04033 31 00/04001 4011
010',0003. When 1 am -w,lh 4.:m, bur I 4:07"]
low: l:rn, &,ppY• 1 1 4',O t 4/"93.,7. 1 ever
cheats"
"And 1u•? Does lie carr, for von?"
"If- 7,,,, not 4:141 11 in $41 21(71)57 x'01.410."
.11 11 f • ,11 Mien, but he 31e ta:niy g,ve4
m0 rite idea he touid ,;are Only if f5.
4,000,1 r,lher silly, Poppy, 1 , haul,) 540 in.
.iced 17 ,''.7' that he 7,'41,1 for 111(1 just
zhat 1 ler? for him!"
"Por 11 0ym'Sarby ,n a very 5704.4 thing to
'nark upon," 01.1) the &intone eheeraY.
Ton one prolate! t)4. matter,
1•
"Nell," n4.e. 1 told. "4 Julien Itryant was
ea 10 marry h•m,'what art, you going to
• vr"
1.1,1Y 11/!1en 5,1ua,711 a mnm(trlt, and then
ehr• t1r11,1,4er114 -
'If.1rH,an Bryan( :mike one do marry him
I noun eay 'you'!"
1'Ir41Tk7t x4'111,
(n 1rr vr g ,olw,ndoo Ju 1.411 Bryant
-rn
to it hotel. Hu vera; $3'1lvrd not 717
55 7,13, lrIrrn .her, 1111 7,1r,her rreolved 143
• 1.53 54r .hal, ,.he <,.i,1'1 trot lin1417 .1010
4..0 110 .0 111 y clay wham -Ver,
11:31 hurt had h13317.103l tnw11r1514 her.
In the to -ginning M'., 1Jaanrrx:k' had toll
54 m 00 110.11 m7rmnru1,1. 1001 11I1e0v;04
h,„h had taken 1218/” ire 4 l' them, ,hl -
1' 1n had rnnde :1 /753,3 onett,ftete or h,, life
or his m 'herr 1, 0k+1 III had mood by
I'm 7n,4t >}r.010ru31Y. Hr haul burden<MI
77mrr f with her 4I15.111,11.'411./ he had he»
ha414 Very genrr do l y, but when she
had n /rrAed a �1?/14_I thu, end 1/fe, bad
''-„11 1137' for her, 1nnr,'rver, wberl the
'45,9/ 411/17' had been, gsven 1100 Le Vie
genr.rn. 315 .7, 55, 31 t'1515 towards 11101 14.344
had f ,led 10r,er,,1,7, and 07th, -enough
•xrut 7 mot1,r4 hard W74-7117 14/041111 hid 111' 41, 111414 1110 man e. 1:1,531,' now
:0 h:•' t4. Igh'r et her,
Ile did no, even trill Stephens i111,t be
:wa<+ 153 110114100, 15' had n” meal of a ern,
vent; 311 1 17 Lief. lie ff f f
I nrfirr. 1 31 1 I n , 71.31.
Y 1 Ili
rl rn< but he vnvCa 443 Mr. P1n,yd51! and
1 '551(41 t} e 7,.w74r to ,,M. 11:10 00 0000 40
r 110 11 01. 0,101 of 5714 101033i4w w,,ll air.
1'7"1345117 443, 31'0.7 N1911010 5nl• in 311,, 111
Lan 11ut entirely willthe nttrut,.n of
14 731. her,
1 n1t111Mzr you ," he ,aid 1„ the law-
yer, sew/mint r,motherh
ver, 1lain mywithtl11Baa.
1,101 1x314 71Jnatc peri 1171 my tha41)1411.
mens, 4,l' ,rime long p'I'l/4d, Ind (51:77 it us
not my rwl5h lhat 44.0 should Metal her,
el 1 in 'my houae, • She halo gone there
14441 holm any reds Nolen to me or my Wishes
and idis mutt leave immetli .telt'. The
4111744) ion of 11551 414.141 1100 0511 Qn' 1,11, 1,, the
tigiuty. lit SStollens, who iwill got his orders
from ire,"
13551',' this there, was it 1Mt131 tnlc7m5ort.
able amuse, and then Julian said •
have, oohed you , o come I t u t 430 0•.
I
7 1 4a Mr.
v,
l'14+7da'll, Ihrnaion I want W tulnnudt you
upon annthet' (natter, 8011,, little time
Rao, yore wi11 remember, I void ths4. 1 did
not 17,x11 to Nonfat of any wife, Now 1 Itnd
t4;,,t, 7 gong brook She 111101100 1. no/mood,
57',lrl ,7/7775 MVO mo 11)47 nems Orf here"
'None ,whatever:' said aft'. Playdotl,
fquietly, h"Sh e1 fa314 • T hate dl yaln)eartx15
apt had a letter trout
the, Indy ,to whom eiie whit when oho .loft
ynu.l,tfki7r me for Indeentetlon about Mr(,
]11Nant, 114)1 lady .les been travelling,
and Is greatly concerned because who hen
had 747 newx Or any :sorb whom, 3/001' W110."
"T innnpn014 elle ram bo found,'' dmllan
]Bryant linked nt a. Ice 00100,
well, yes " said Mr, Pleytlell, "1 d71ro•
ray' she eon he trmeed if ''wo man pr0fOnl•
11101101 ?moms,"
Altlain there wee nnol.itrr pans', IOW 1.141411
Olt II
ILIIa reek of color 443 his face, Bryant
jit4hnn
become 113(311141.7 .for moo tO
1(114nv Whore 0113+ is because "'went to .iiia
7)47581t'n hrn pose for 11trers', Alia e lin..l[trte t'l
Pl Idelll asked In ' 41 quietest ryanuP
M tv It r ft
lelrnh Juli
A l to , eemsn,21a21 441,0E "5,'r Julian
ri Wn111't lmirt, 'Plthl time he tanned: vrry
w o.
orfro held hurriedly. "'I'lult••4dtn4 Ix.
Int rnthe ,lu0e'I`tn,' Then be Thiel to
4,ho 4atwyer, 'Took lire,,' by oaid "7 Yule
p+1se 7r,m lsnaw hlvty Po dant nv141) '2)1(1375
''t)nal oaf mfn:t•1,s',v Ihu 11115 ie vol', olotros',
If two people 'leant •tn 117 ,put Ip:trt, the
]env Dan 71c, 17„ 35117fi 11?"
here In *110 inntjtod'131150111,110law fol.
In the Wake of the War's CyelOnr.
The picture eh0ws, what is ?rift of the once pretty village of Domremy, Department of the Marne, France -
FROM MERRY RA HEM)
: Ems PY MAIL Al101ee 4O11:1
DM AND BIS PEOPLE.
OCGurrt+nees 10 ibe Land Thal
Veigns Supreme 10 the ('off'
mereial WW'orld•
Thousalnat of acres of Land fn
Carlisle have been iil;ode as a re'
s5lt of the recent heavy reins.
Owing to the depletion of staff
caused by the war, the General Post
Offices at Rochester and Chatham
are -closing earlier now.
At Sheffield the sale of int71,d.at-
ing liquor it, prohibited after 9.30
p.m. on week nights, and 9 p.m, on
.Sundays in all Iicensed premises.
The authorities have decided to.
increase the establishment of the
5th Battalion of the Devon Regi-
. mens, by the addition of 98 cyclists.
The skipper of the Fleetwood
trawler Belmont, reports the find-
ing of an ivory -mounted set of bag-
pipes in his trawl when fishing 25
miles off Barra Head.
Lieut. Louis Van Estee, of the
Belgian. Artillery, who died from
wounds at Cambridge Hospital,
Aldershot, was buried with full
military honors at Aldershot. •
Mr. Thomas Kidney, a well known
Leeds steeplejack, has just died at
the age of b3. Be was the oldest
steeplejack in England and had
a world's record in having felled
167 chimneys.
Mr. F. Sanford Thomas, deputy
coroner for the city of Lond,rn, has
been appointed to command a com-
pany in the 7th Battalion of the
City of London Regiment, and has
been gazetted a captain,
Serious damage was cawed by
fire at the Manor House, Sedgley,
Staffs, an ancient Englioh resi-
dence. The owner, Mr, G. E.
Brown, and the servants removed
all the valuable furniture to the
lawn.
Mr. George Cronheim, a German
merchant and principal of a firm uf'
lace manufacturers at Nottingham.
Was found dead a week ago at. his
residence at Nottingham with a
bullet wound in his head.
The Cemetery Committee of the
Deptford Borough Council have re-
commended' that a portion of the
ground on the local cemetery be
reserved for the burial of sailers
and soldiers who were residents of
the borough.
There is great dissatisfaction
among the miners of County Dur-,
ham at the action of the coal own-
ers in reducing the wages of men
See per cent, at a time when many
have enlisted and others are work•
ing short time.
Owing to the large number of
local coal miners who have joined
the colors, there is a scarcity of
laborers in some of the coal mines
in tile Manchester district, and
many Belgian refugee colliery
workers are being engaged.
At Southampton Charles Bowden,
cartage contractor of Eastleigh, was
fined 8260 or three months' impris-
onment for having purchased from
soldiers a number of army blank-
ets, rugs and waterproof sheets,
the property of the Ring.
The coal, cotton and engineering
industries in the Manchester cl s-
triets are now prospering so much
that the city council have been
c 1
asked to pass plans for extension
of over a score of local works to
which additions are necessary ()w-
ing to improved trade,
Owing to the number of men on
war service, the London Fire Bri-
gade Committee is experiencing
difficulty at the present time in oh.
taining recruits for the brigade. It
is proposed that 104. ($9.50) be
paid to each member of the bri•
gade who introduces a suitable re-
cruit during the next three months.
k,,xr1 n 011,14 4,014423 318:d Br- Pleydell a spirit of friendship. and affords no the United States Ands the two!
to x ry 3mr : Dry»r„ cant. asrt resivn ter received in the same spirit- call aspirations and common sympa-
4,:&y "and L ,5a .de F, 141.3:31,1:11
yr basis. for war talk, for it had been''. countries nearer together in liti-
dvra1,4 S1xv Pry r the, yOa < d iruav � g loo'
l
reirterw•sly, pint; by belligerent nations is always - tends the gory and triumph of both
uliang 'e u -' t4. is a tremendous fact, and or-
Juf.an Bryant got a1, and mo ->,r1 most The treatrrlent of neutral skip y p
'Y4>75 7 ,a n. d ! a Very delicate subject. and one re-' nations.
7,154x71.7.1 .r nu,; 171 h ' b 715 d.
x1.tt •
hart:a.0a.:e:r an, I ani r.t roar w yes, quiring the best minds, thorough.i CHAS. 3L. BICE.,:
tr1 t e >te rat l y )'.") r x^ ,t eine trairoid in the field of international t Denver. Colo., Dec, 31, 19I4.
raurl from inti?' > law and diplomacy, to adjust. It .+.
I ; ,p glad to bear you ear that.; 11r. will be recalled that troubles arose
a. r' 1. 1' x ^a rmo:2nrs ; Z O VE HERO.
X 7.7311 r..d, .x31 d tli x- v 311-0. A 0 A
,n h r ..:,e. X rnrtrsa: r nr that I v/a:+ ovrr shipping between. this Gauntry;
hadn't' ' jr e 1 77 a 4 7123-11,2 two; 3004"
vary ,nettra51',-rel •, the `:me y1a and Great Britain during our great'
beard 01 Sim- Marr•xrk, strange bellow' Civil War, and which were not set-+ He Sacrificed His Life for Beloved
lir your lryafiy w ttee ,/,mar, 0u had 1 France.
marrAtel," The you:Hy:7 MX/1 dill not et.- tied till long alter the war had.1
rw1r fal, 14,4111, 157. Pleyrl 11'7 worms sweat ceased, ` A rare and stirring incident of per -
1>,.m took r17n that Last he sesemed to be
.nsewer, web (mow -a rn and that lotutely Though differing somewhat in sone! heroism Is that recorded in'.
., .rksr '4.13':14r,urly aghast 4..m. ' on the afternoon of ivovember 23rd.
•I 11 i nrt1107, extraordinary," 11:: 31141 protest f„,J Great Britain this week T- other in Belgium a
Car-
' ail the, mrnt3.`LrJin w4. -eh had character from those cited in the a semiofficial notice given out In Paris
of a low core, I-1 was wmptcl, and they held a genuine threat of war, "neday
two bothat, hot I would never hart. man column was r.dvancing to attack
left ter, aril• the last 511505 I expect/4a true causes belles, far the reason is position in the forest of Brie, de
•rata that she would leave mel but she did that it was the openly charged that fended by a detachment of Zouaves -
stn and she hthavrxl r•rue31+- Pled Ii •t l d
put 1443• where 1 xm now-hoverc) Bend mc' the Confederacy in its efforts to de-, Germans forced a Zouave prisoner,
Ful fr.'wa, gruel to leave we so she S:d.to Great Britain was purposely aiding • Our men noticed that .before them the
a wad ar a 1Yne to ret, rate know whether stray the shipping of the North. and at the same time they beard cries
• '•4.)n
she one 1,v,n,s r r d ad i'1 a
. ,ere re things
'454.4}, are 111317.3.4:70.b101 And on her mut There is na such claim or contention ,, of 'Stop firing!' For an instant our _
rr:et 7,• 1,11404116 b 1:'ty of ail that WI :n.' involved in the present protest, rifiemen and the men in charge of our.
•'A d ro Yen 'rrart to ;lave a. coot✓ie:,r The old controversy. was peacefully .machine guns hesitated. Then from
a/'r>trai 'r rr,nn 3f r,, Bryant, htrru.3 74.31, y p e the German ranks they heard the
lt,:t you imatz. ng rho -wars doing the Iva., settled, and the two countries have {
1.31 you?' There wise a tittle touch nI ever since remained on the most! voice of the Zouave prisoner; who ironycal-
: r r , led to them 'shoot comrades!'
1n w 11e. de., a Y co,
! won't g,, ,nth any rc 008*,' sold Jae friendly terms. There is nothing; "There then flashed out from the
Lan Briant very oe.dly. "I it1t atlas a - now existing that approaches the t
tart. I want Irr.,dom. i wan to bavo ranks of the Zouaves a general die-
shy ate to myrolt, wrtho't any any seriousness of the Alabama claims, charge of rifles aLn machine guns,
IV -0130, rn3r, 1137:aurae•-- - • and the dispute that arose out o7 !The Bre laid low the assailants of the.
'I understand, ' said Mr. Pierian and 1
plates for the future, Well, I shall have T have no doubt that this country soldier whose devotion made it possi-.
e u into t4.-. matter rather .ne, "Il" vt•ill insist upon ble for his countrymen to Checkmate
Tirv. r,.e r:, a Ilt:le nut of my, flee, p n full reparation far
• Ile got "5,5 ue4 you have rhade nt1er t,lern.. Zouaves, and with them fell the heroic.
Bryant. I think you would do better to any real damage done to American the ruse of the .nervy.
urn 4,71 lted 'r0111.1014011. . lie yrs more u "15 the name of the
0 1 than t am and he ,s if I may ray unknown to th• world,at least his
h nlhup shipping, cause• d by any unwarrant brave man is
lett; htlm'pered by certain &Ironies ed interference of the British fleet; • y ent will retain frever the re -
'than I and I am equally certain that Bri- me membranes of his sacrifice, which 1s
t will have nothing to do with that
for such damages, when duly es- stances of personal heroism recorded
tablished. in our glorious history,'
It is quite inevitable that the;
fleet should wrongfully detain some'
shipping in its eagerness fin ,'Wouldn't you like," his mother
pp g to d. asked a little be "wouldn't you
contraband goods and prevent them y+
reaching the enemy, and to this end' like to give your toy boat to that
no doubt the war fleet has been in- poor orphan who hasn't any
strutted to detain search ves-i father?" The tittle boy looked at
'lone 1 see to
said T. 1y a •. "
and 1 wet nee zn your wlthte about your sets suspected of having contraband 'his toy boat and frowned. Could
MOM," eafd. Jnlran Bryant. "If You 'won't tisk. justice will gladly recompense equal to any of the most famous In•
a for me in t 4.,f, well, then, 1'11 go to
eorneone etre;'
3131. Pleydell 'b';wed,
"X[ you ' 53!) 75/1771111 me to coy m, that
w'11 b" preferable,'
Julian winced, Ile was almost hyper-
. 110113.1 Ye 343 11(!03 da14,
"Ail right," he said tersely. "I only
thought I bad b,"irr'broach the matter
to you araC 17.,14''431+20 you have no ob.
Ie1:4 nn to dealing with other' bueinlln
for rn 1 %"
id M Pled1.' andg
11101.1100 without delay."
It, wan nut ion,{ before Mr. Tenderlsl
1 ditrmcered that Ms partner was in con-
, slant r/orre0pondence with Julian 'Bryant,
1 and to and out 3Ir. Bryant's w.hereal7;nt8
I 'was :u1 rmy7 matter,
Ile did not approach Julianby letter,
I but late one afternoon he presented him•
self oat the, hotel.
To be rentlnUe4.1
411-
I
' - -...-
AM elltICA'S PRU'I'IIST '1'A
GH5751,'J' BRITAIN.
B1 Chas. 11. Bice, Denver, Colo.
I Perhaps no single incident of the
great war has awakened more in-
terest in the two great .English-
speaking nations than the pretest
I filed by the United States against
I the treatment of American shipping
by the British fleet.
I Tho deepatches also indicate that.
the protest is arousing keen inter-
: est &cross the waters, AS the matter
is being widely discussed in the
I public press. As indicating the
!deep interest involved, a special
1 rnceting of the British Cabinet has
been celled to consider the protest,
and this morning's papers declare
*the Cabinet near to disruption in
l the debate on the subject.
In this country among a certain
Wass, there is s. suspicion that un
fortunately amounts almost to a
Nape that this protest holds a pro-
mise of war between the two coun-
tries,
There is always quite a large
elites in every nation, who want to
4756 trouble, hub these howlers for
revenge are generally the last to
enlist when the trouble comes. They
glory in trouble and eortltentian but
they want somebody else to' make it
and to suffer the consegeences,
They are of the
e mole variety of
heroes,; 'ever ready to throw bricks
when concealed from danger by the
people surrounding them, Happily
that ease is not very strong in this
country.
Sober, thoughtful, sensible men
and women do not Invite distress
and suffering that would be sure t.)
result, were this country involved in
the European struggle. They are
not influenced by false sentiments
of so-called "National honor," and
"rights 01 American ' seamen
Ile hts g ,
to the extent of wishing to see Ole
country rush 1040 a centrover4y
flub means'feat loss of life and
pro erby ental, at least, Chet it has
been clearly established that the
"national honor" has been iDaule-
ed, oe our rights have been need-
lessly interfered witil by other,
On the contrary, Ameriea s pro-
test to Great Britain was made in
articles aboard, or conditional con-
traband intended for the enemy.
It looks as though the real ques-
tion at issue is, regarding the treat-
ment of conditional contraband
goods. That this should be treated
exactly as absolute contraband and
seized and conveyed to British
ports for disposition, works a very
great hardship upon shippers. But
even so, I have 430 doubt that Great
'
Britain is willing to co-operate with.
this country, and with every other
country, in living strictly up to the his brass buttons. "Well, Admiral,
laws of nations in their treatment what you say is true. But when you
of neutral shipping. The protest is
only a business procedure between
two friends, who have been fore-
most in preserving the peace of the along? asked the ensign, who
world. That they should forget their thought he had made a most diplo-
friendship and undertake to settle made defence. But not so. The
their business differences by the crafty old seadog thundered forth:
sword is too ridiculous for mimed' "I lived an my father-in-law for
oration,
The period that has elapsed since the first ten years, but I'll be hens -
the treaty of Ghent was signed 100 ad if you are going to do it'."
years ago on Christmas eve, has not
we not give him father instead?" he
asked. •
A well-known naval dignitary
has a beautiful daughter. A young
ensign, with no resources but his
salary, fell in love with her, and
asked the old gentleman for her
hand, The father at once taxed
him with the fact that he had only
his salary—hardly enough to keep
)
him in white gloves and to burnish
married you were only a midship-
man, with even a smaller salary
than mine. How did you get
been without acute crises in the re-
lations of England and the United
States. Had England pursued a
policy of callous greed, she might'
easily have made the preservation
of the Union impossible in 1861-05
by intervention on behalf of the
Confederacy; and again in 1898 she
i ht lutve farm d acoalitioni h
mg, e with
Spain. That these things were not
done shows the strength of the bond
between the two nations. Many
have been the explanations of the
vast volumes of American sympathy
with England in the present great
struggle, but the undying truth is
that this sympathy is rooted in the
organic life of the two great Eng-
lish-s eaking nations, and by itself
affords a unique and surpassing'
celebration of the Century of peace
just closed betweee these nations.
America knows that the indepen-
dence of the new world le due to the
very conditions that made England
an arbiter of Rurope'a destinies,
and instinctively she knowas that
England's downfall would expose
this entire hemirsphere to devastat-
ing wars from which it might never
recover.
Why should the over :sea demo
6raaiee hate lengland when every
true democracy on the earth finds
ID Ingland its prototype, its pa-
tron end its strertgqeh) And in turn,
it may be said with egtuai truth that
England's strength would not he
what it is to -day had she not the
s5'mpaelly and morel support of
every true darnaaraoy on earth.
Thste the rounding out of the con -
tarry of peace between England ,and
rr MS
"Wormy," thal'e what's tto 4atAor o! 'em. Stomach and
intestinal 3701„15. Nearly as bad- as distemper. Cost you
500 1011011 to feed. 'eve. Look bad --'are •bad. Don't physic 'om
to death. Spohn's Cure will rcarove the worms, improve ilio
appetite, and tone 'ow un all round, and don't :physic."
Aots 011 glamla and blood. Pull directions w111 each bottle,
and sold by all druggists,
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists. Goshen, Intl„ U,S,A,
$500 FOR A NAME
This ie the beautiful new 1705(01ne, 133540 111
DonnCanada, endorsed and used exclusively by Mdo.
Pauline Donalda, the famous Canadian Primo
a.
We want a suitable name for it, and so will
give. 0600 IN GASH PRIZES
as follows: -
5)400,08 for the beet name.
60.00 for the Mug, description of the perfume.
26.00 for the second best name,
10,00 for the second best,doscriptlon,
6,00 for the third beet description,
and tan 61.00 prises for the next best deoorip.
ldone.
The winner of tdlo contest will bo decided by
couln1N,tee of. Montreal's leading. advertising men
and their decision Will bo min], Should twoor
more contestants send In the winning 0=0olio
'rase W111 be Ovally divided, and an additional
prise to the value of MOO bo Riven Muth 8UO.
oessfu) ddontestant, No employee or momber of
this dim shall enter the contest, The con-
test Moses at midnight, March 2105, 1918.
BOW To ENTElti—To enable every 30titest4nt
to tr,V the new perfume before submitting their
suggestion for a name.a make 1,h toltowLog
Special OOtr5—Eor one dime, ten conte, wo wIll
• send one of our Bimetal Souvenir Bottles of the
Perfume—regular 25 bents size—together oul►4)714.
Fret, flontest SIM, and O Ono
Premium have Co bio
All for 10 cants. It in s y vo the e
Contest. 911' to enter,
Write,today, You will be delighted' wit)I the
507fume, and l,sNo 1.3 ohanco to win the big striae
RUGGERS, GRAY & STEWART, PERFUMERS
Dept. t-, MeMe332 ■LEURv ST., MONTREAL'
p
On the Farm
Winter Feedfor the Dairy Cow
During the winter months it le'
generally found difficult to provide
such food as is necessary for the
dairy cow to keep up the regular
Ru:
of milk•
At this season of the year feed is
generally scarce—the proper kind
for the dairy cow—and that which
we have on hand is often of en in-
ferior quality.
After coming off the green fresh
grass they do not relish such dry
feed and being of an inferior qual-
ity one will soon notice a greet de-
urease -in the flow of milk:
For this reason it is very import-
ant for the farmer to try and pro-
vide an abundance ofdifferent feeds
to make up for this dry or inferior
feed,
Ocourse the flow of milk cannot
be kept up to what they give during
the spring and summer when pas-
tured, but with plenty of first-class
bay, sueh as alfalfa and good clover
and fine feed of bran and cornmeal
kept on hand that it may be fed
liberally two or three times a day
as slops, there will not be so much
decrease in the milk supply after
all. That is, if it is given to them
liberally and regularly.
Do not think it is a waste to feed
such feed when there isn't anything
but dry hay of some kind to feed on.
On the latter, the cow can barely
maintain her flesh; much less keep
up the milk supply.
When we have good clover hay
and alfalfa, not so much of the
bran, fine feed or meal is required,
as both, when cured properly, are
very strong feeds and cattle thrive
on them.
I am not going to attempt to give
the amount that should be fed, as I
leave that for the dairyman to de-
cide for himself, writes a corre-
spondent. What I wish to impress
upon the reader's mind is this: The
necessity of having on hand always
a liberal supple- of bran, meal, fine
feed, etc., to go with the dry bay
or corn rudder, which is generally
of an inferior quality. fed at this
season of the year.
With the above feed mentioned,
it is impossible for the dairyman to
obtain good results during the sea-
son when cattle are hot pastured.
Apples should be kept just above
the freezing point in the cellar, if
possible. Potatoes at a tempera-
ture of 40 degrees and squash in a
dry place where they will not
freeze,
The squashes should be fed early
in the winter, as under ordinary
storage conditions they cannot be
depended upon for long keeping.
Of the apples, the culls of the ear-
ly winter varieties are, of course,
first used. Those of the longer -
keeping varieties may be reserved
for later feeding.
A bran mash with chopped beets
or carrots stirred into it is a great
treat and is a beneficial form ,1f
feeding which should be offered oc-
casionally. Be.sure that the bran
or meal offered to the 001V is sweet
and geed or trouble may result
The corn stalks may be fed clnae
a day and clover or oat hay at an•
other meal. The last meal of the
day being the bran and vegetable
niixttire.
Squashes and large beets should
always be partly cut up as they are
difficult for a cow to manage when
whole.
Barnyard elannre,
Professor F. H. Iiing, in his beck
Farmers of Forty Centuries, de-
scribes the methods used. by the
Chinese, Koreans, and J pa 1 e'11
collecting and preserving ereeietis
manure, both solid and liquid, a's,.
the system of composting 1 d. In
China the manure is pl4''ed 57!az
ed terracotta urns.5n131 hat' :,.3
capacity of 1,010 pounds. In Simeset
cementeined frits are 11!rel, t4.`
liquid excrement as well us 511' 11.71
]id being cerefiily pies iced. 1')
China the compost piles are ea?3
fully plastered with a layer of cart',
mortar. The results of the latest
scientific investigations tlo not give
pmUS any better method they teat
practiced by the Chinese for cen-
turies,
Unnecessary Alarm.
When Frederick the Grow, at !he
beginning of th Sev'en•1•ecrs' 4L'nr,
was in possession of Dresden, 1• wet:
to view the work:.. of alt in the r,,i'a1
picture gallery. The gallery direeier,
fields), too1c the king through a:1 lee
rooms and explained each picture its
; they went along. Frederick ex5reli•
I sed leis unreserved admiration for' all
the pictures, but when lie calve hetero
certain
painting by C'orreglo,
loviewed
- rn.
pp and V ewed it with pertleular
interest.
If you are wiling," he said stub
donly, "1 should like to 11a7e that pie-
t71'e-"
Reidel gtisped, for he expected the
king to ;say that ho wished the 7;c!nl•o
for himself. But t",e king noticed his
anxiety, tied striking him on the flack
said, IA1 4hing:
"If you are willing, 1 should like 50
have that p001711e-- copied!"
Slllal'ty.
Rix' --1 heard
something this
mauling dist opened n1,y. eyes.
Dix --So did I—an alarm clock."