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The Clinton News Record, 1919-1-23, Page 6Is n t gamble, but a sure thing that you are getting the greatest possible - Quality and Value to the limit of your, expenditure. TRY IT. NAM TWINEDJ assary, a peseoge cut clean throeigh r — A the ruins of the fellen straws, The What I Savir irt a tonclon Air Raid By Willirim Harper Dom, , PART I, Bismarca's thee/7 was thet to brine wee to an -end one meet take it to tfie very. fieesades of the peeple whose memo mese compromise, must 'make war se aba!rible foe the people at tame that they wit agt, ntand an envonditional eurrender. For four years the German took his midnight "teeror" to the very =nee in French and 13ritisla homee, and never wore these people strongete Bore I went to France 1 esed to Wonder whet Were the enation of a nigat raid, weeder whet the moth- ere- of France end Britain went threugh thote nights whom the 'Hun wou d break • lieu&defense,. • BE but triumphantly Pore tosday that .eongested districts, Foe, be it Something was Muting my teeth. aa'abill looks and xeala Int -"Awn and drop death into the heart of the like a pair of yellow goals. LGINM NEW oue bullet. Swith, swith, thuds! Shell sislin- tees oalne whapping pate tereysng theMeelves in the conorete, AeroSs the Place a gur, tore loose from a roet-everywhere they were be:ten:roe like 'bidden wale:have, Suddenly ,\Nbich Mgt. the eardrums:, Even the shriek - Mg men w&s. still. few stars were shooting thrones space, oral go Provieg themselves to-- be battle plusses. The red glow still etalned the heave's*. The barking of 4 dog somewhere sounded' vera louci,Un noticeO, a phantom mist, bed gather- ed and was hanaing low, the (lite netts of a taxicab boring through it 0 DEVASTATION OF COUNTRY AL- MOST INDEScRIBABLE Resoles:fel Skill of Belgian Army Engineers Establishes Railroad . From Bruges to Brussels. I have completed one of the most anstrective tours that it is possible for te noncomeatant to make at this stage of the war in western -.and east- ern Flanders. The' civilians' hour has struck, and the problems, Con- -fronting the -civil population .aae no- , where more diflicult than -here jii Bel- gium.. Nothing, indeed, could be more ,heartbreaking than the spectacle that : amine the canoe on their return. . After crossing the Belgieft frontier In the neighborhood of Furnes, I pro- ceeded fust by road to Ostend. Of Fumes, Pervyse, .Ghistelles and the Yser iteelf there is no need to speak. Tim miseigtof these ruChaeovered fiats *hence the floods are rapidly being drainea off is untenable. But the sheer - hideousness of all this havoc • and slime merely enhances the glory of those.who' in King Albert's words in atm speechfrom the throne, made and kept the Yser "the last rampart" of their country. This devil's acre of . rubble, and stifle upon inile of rusty wire, might well be preserved as an object leison for all these. • Of -Ostend, too, though for other reasons, there is little need to speak. With its grass -overgrown streets and shattered house fronts, the town looks as if it were the victim merely of some cement earthquake visitation, But there is a good deal to be repair) ed, and the inhabitants ire wokking with a will. Glass, of course, is at a premium. The maritime station was ,completely dismantled by the Ger- mans, all the Mesmeric, including the 'roof, is -being bodily reinoVed. The weight of a train sorne thirty coaches 'knoven, he takes the Premiee that I.fettesina took Mit my stone-cold of all varietiee whath the engines of the Belgian army now pulled, now -pushed at a walking pace to ita des- tination. With two slight breakdowne, at Ma - lines and -outside 'Brume's, the whole journey occupied about fourteen hoore The success of this plucky experiment, coupled with the equally succeseful reopeping of the connection with Paris, deserves commendation. Bait quite; apart from the railways, Belgium is scarred heavily by the war. Burnt and bombarded villages and desolate factoriesOaalthough out- wardlythe larger-tram:re preserve the semblance of life, tell a1iet4 own tale. The Oudenburg district, which used to supply Ostend and the coast towns with such perfect ansiicet produce, has been converted into !pre waste land, overcast with weeds of all kinds. Indeed, all western Flanders has an unspeakably bare and unkempt aspect. BRITISH TRAP MANY SUBS Since Signing of Armistice 122 U- Oloats Have Been Handed Over. Sir Erie Geddes, First Lord of the AcIreiralty,, describes the men of the 20th British mine -layer flottila as soma of the bravest and pluckiest of the British Navy. ' .Sir Eric said that night afteidifight British mine -laying submarines had to proceecatheough the grant German mine fields off Heligoland to discover channels through .evlitch German boets left and returned to their bases. The British seamen then blocked these thannels with mines. Duaing the first six months of 1918, $h Eris added, mord. than 100 German boats were caught in these trap mines. "Ou one °erasion," said Sir Eric, "four of our flottila going into Heli- goland Bight were observed by six German outpost boats which Were town station is in better shape and leaving, Our Mate by eubterfuge got is now being cleansed of the lastj je ' F inside and laiel their mineseana on the traces of defilement in the foams oreturn oueney anopped uls all six of thtricolor of rance.f German time tables of through trains the Garman boats apd . -took their Away in the distance I could hear Save where ten million ghosts drift by from Ostend to Bruesels, Cologne and crews prisoner. • One mine balmier the shieking of the sirens as though Berlin, together with a variety of across the Channel bel -ow Ostend trap. the cataclysmic din were not warn e Who nei_theLInOWnocare. _.1.›..__r ped 17 German submarines in one nig enough of the assassin's peesence. propagandist placards, including 'the Overhead droned and whined the I FOOLED THE GERMANS actions at a nation bet the peoples so-called "eferkblatter -nut Welt. month, — The allies destroyed or captured lanes of the Paris Air Patrol, like viewpoints oil that action are an indi- klieg," and the text of the ICaieer's -1)1re motif of some wild sympliony,'. litsval Camouflage Kept the Huns last speech to Essen workmen. Things 202 Gee -ratan submarines during the while the planes darted among the! Guessing as to Ship's Course.cation of mental characteristics. No war. In addition ta these, 14 Ger- eters like enraged fireflies, spitting' one in Germany apparently had a are so far advanced that three trains are now running daily each way be- man submarines were destroyed by red streaks from their machine guns, I Naval camouflage was the artist's word to sayan reprabation 01 the dis- timen Ostend and Bruges. The ser- the Germans themsolves-ten in the and ma.noeuvering, to drive the Hunscontribution to the defeat of the sub- graceful yielding of a great fleet with. vice is still primitive and tentative. .• 1 The pioneer mind • in the out !Irina a shot. Adriatic and lour efE Flanders. Seven ' ' others were interned in neutral coral - but remarkably punctual. . Belgian Grit Praised. tries. The sum:ender of German subrnar- bombs dropped' into tha poorer quata tees are certain to fiisd choice tar- gets araong the children. The sec- ond. premie° that• a termiled, war - weary. mother is the best peesible Rayon wore aragang with a begle material for thes kindling of the 'sounding the "All eleater There fine of revolution. had been theme hours of at. Midnight was .the hour w‘hich the • (To be continued.) brain of the OSSASSM of Ileac° set for his work.. You got the warning, such a weaning as evenoethe, Hun might have planned, one which ' in the first weak momept of struggle back to consciousness chills to the very marrow and raises goose flesh down the spine, It's the siren! Sissree-eeeumem / struggled up in pitch blackness from a ' dream About things -five :thousand miles away, found my light button and snapped it on. Skome-ee-um-m! Skeree-ee-unieml "Never leave the house: always go to the cellar!" - The Paris Military _commands this; the gendarmes will enforce the de- cree. And old madame who pre- sides over the war -time destiniee of the little hotel insists that it is suicidal to go outdoors. She has seen four yeare of this thing. Madame may be right, I reasoned as I jumped into my clothes, so may be the Paris Military, as well as those shortecaped gendaemes, but I collide:at -stomach the thought of a. cell'ar with the bursting walls,and ths. flying atones. I wanted the open - to see it and lireathe it. SK-REE.EE-1.1M-M1 The siren tore past einder my wine dow. The next moment. I was dress- ed and out in the Math hallway, mak- ing for the street five flights below. On -the stairs I crashed' -ineo Pres- ton, an ambulance driver from Ver, ohm, He was on his way up to get me. We made the street with its lamps all blue -shrouded./ Down Mont-Thabor we yen to the Rue CaStiglione, then into Rue de Rivoli, straight along the ancient high, walled Tuileries to open Place de la Concorde. The thunder increased in violence. "The barrage is up!" ,yelled Pres- ton; "the teethe is he -re!' We stood with our backs against the 'monument of Alsace, rising. like an unshaken pledge in the very cen- tre of the etorm, still draped with "Let's go!" said someone. And before I reached the little hotel the black eanyops of Rue de 1019. No flash from the rusting' gunS! No oifle lights the plain; No clotted crimson riverr ens From Flanders to .Lorraine; The white year dawns above the hosts Beyond the last red flare, Save for ten million drifting ghosts, Who neither know nor care. How quiet now the lost trench seems, How still across the fold, ' Where lately through our broken dreams The mighty thunder rolled; Where through our restless, shaken sleep We heard the big shells sing, Or saw at dawn tbe long line leap To take its final. fling. Can it be that at last the rod I Has brought its final lash? . Where no more oat the bleeder sod A beronet shall flash? Or can some white dawn know at last The final charge is through, With flames of war forever -past Where life and love are due? Can it be down the world we may Wake up at last to know The soft white dawn of some lost day GERMANS SHOWN IN TRUE CHARACTER DEFEAT REVOALED TelaJIgPL NATVaa OF THE, HUN, The Whole Cormen, Nation lattellY Defleient In Moral Flare-- • Merely leretal Thegs, Prete the viewpoint of a psoolsolo- glst, the Gerian mind le showing the Sons lemerfeetioes In defeat welch it ex -Minted so mausoleums:lye-while the War NSW aetiveeprogress, says Jas. LonglaaPrefeesces of Psychology Ip New Yea. University. We now the that -the last four and a half years have given us a perfootly Moor impree- sion.of the German eharacter In cer- tale aspects, The anost striking trait,. of this tharaater' is a lack of moral fibre, which throughout history all nations - like all persons, have looked up to as a supreme attribute. The Germans have shoWn themselves to bd merely brutal thugs. Front the broad viewpoint of hu- manity, some might have hoped that they would have continued to fight and derend thole territory; at least until they had lost os snuch territory as they took from France. Tees would have given- them a chance to show heroic qualities if they had possessed them. The appalling evidence of the lack of the finer moral Imalities in practically a whole people is a. die - Met loss to all of lla as human lielngs. We caimot escape the feeling that the human race bas been degraded by the evidence that in Central Europe so large a proportion. of the population of what we call the civilized world Is totally bereft of this essential virtue. It is -plain that the Germans are un- able to see themselves as others see them. Th.eir recent experiences. would have had a chastening effect on most Peoples, but no such effect Inc been visible in them. The flight of the Kaiser is an Ma- oatien of their type of mind. Think of the number of rulers who have died at the heads of their [lama:a, making a last desperate, hopeless, but never - the less heroic stand. But this man runs away; he has not the fibre to people. and sbare in the -fate of als We dreamed of long ago? .World's Champion Quitters. Where witht he .ghostly shadows Let us suppose that England. haa blown,- . been defeated and that an English Soft arms once more shall hold their King, corresponding in Isis relations own th his people with the Kaiser, had Across the silent night? taken to ignominious flight. Popular indiemation at his cowarcnce would then serve them broiled or with saucc. have known no bounds. Yet, though • For six persons, the censorship has been removed in Ox Peet. -Ox feet arca gelatinous, Germany, no one there appears to have ' TWAY Meals From Waite. Pure baked and' topped with rale ne Tasty pounsbing meals) mot be "I" "rid m""hinaihrw whip lx1hhe ali made from what is 'usually regarded as waste. Below will be Opetind number of suggeselena whith have en painted at the suggestion of is economical, helmets every ha of The 1.100 .of bread anti" butter plates hotel chefs. -They are fello-wed by e number of reeipes in whieh no wheat unueed butter elan ba.saved tais way. Sewing machines :should be kept int. meet:lately clean. Kerosene is , gOOd thing to use for -taking off "gummed" oil. Egga stains its lineal should be Wk. ed in cold water -never in hot, which would make thean almos•t impoesiblo to remove, excellent dessert, Keep the table sugar in a ;ergo salt shelter and you will be surprised how muah you save. floe. is ased, and very little sugar. The use cat wheat flour sobstitutos le not now compulsory, but the value of these racipes as a chenge in the diet, and affording housewives a chance etill further to extend the use of Me tteatnown flours tor which the fam- ily bast taken a taste in .ahe last twelve months, must not be overloplts ed. Then the question of expense', too, must be taken into account, and in the uncertain future in food mate ten, .every cent is worth watching. Fish Soup. -Take the ,head and spired bone of one 'teed fish. Put in saucepan with about two quarts of cold water, well seasoned with cars rote, parsley and onions; let boil for about two hours. Brown ona onion cut flife, with small piece of salt pork cut in small dice, add the fish broth an.d two potatoes, cut in small squares. Let cook thirty minutes. Add two fresh tomatoes, peeled and cut in small pieces, let boil five minutes. Season to taste. Add half pint of crearri and serve hot with chowder cracker, For four parsons. Giblet Stew. -Take the neck of turkey, cut in three pieces. Remove gull from liver and cut liver in two pieces. Take the meat only of the gizzard -well cleaned, and cut the wings in two or three pieces each. Put four ounces of butter in a sauce- pan with the wings, neck, gizzard, and when these are nicely bled, add the liver and three tablespoonful of flour. Stir well, let the flour coolc for one minute, then moisteit with stock or water,. season well with salt and pepper, add one dozen small on- ions., half dozen small new carrots, cut in tWO, let cook slowly for an hour and a half, remove the fat and add a hall pint of fresh, green peas, and let cook for another hid hour; then remove, and arra. For four Not Lost But Given. (A story of an Lacteal irieldenta The day nurse sat by the soldier's To rbeesdt for a little sPace. "1 musttii.nwtristaeicito my folks," her pa. And the day nurse turned her whitt 'Capped head That he might not see ser face, For he never would write to his folks But again. earid not fret or grieve, Though the good right hand which had held the pen Was gone from the empty sleeve. Now, the little clay nurse would ziol own Howtasshke. shrank from the painful He handionsfered in silence and all He "hacl no't written" and time had • flown; She knew what he fain would ask So she wiped the tears that had blur. red her sight And steadied her voice to say: "Well, here I am; if you want to write Let's do it right away," She brought a pad and pen and ink And -waited a little spell, While he stared at the ceiling and seemed. to tlaink, And the clay nurse trembled, but clicl not shrink persons. From the tidings the had to, Beef Palate. -Take six beef palatee, , She wrote the messages, grave and rub them over wita,salt, blanch them' gay, till you can take oft the upper skra. And smiled at his whimsical mood, Then cook them the same way you But the cruel thing. she was foreeci cook sheep's trotters or calf head, to say • To -day no storming vanguard leaps To leave its share' of slain; At dawn no Tolling thunder sweeps From Flanders to Lcirraine; Thc white year brealcs against the sky Beyond the last red flare, uttered one word in criticism of the KalsorM bourse. It seems to them natwal, to us abhorent The Germans are tho champion quitters of all time, and it excites net spechtl emotion in them that ties Raiser has quit also. , To the psychologist net only the and will make an mexpenswe One ox foot will be enough for -three Tise question, so sharp and terse, or four people. Take ono 1! oat'- Was out, and he showed no grieved squares; put in in a deep ansacepee Just smalieleclin-the smile that had pewee very clean, bone it and cut it in small ' with six sliced onions, two or three to charm sliced carrots, one small bunch of The heart of the little awe. parsley, 'one bay leaf, season well "Why, no, don't tell them that!" he add two &sees of .water, one glass "Jueteests"-then it little pause - with salt and freoh ground pepper, of eiaer and a small glass of white "That I've gladly given rny arm al wine. Let it cool: for four hours-- aid slowly, and serve it hot. In my elts_ntrL,..4's eause." Calf Oraw.-The craw is the -cur- Like a ghost at her elbow stood, "Shall I tell the folks you have lost your arm?" The din swelled -not a - barrage' work is that of Commander Norman Before the war.. the Germans badbey Comes in the Morning. ley part of the intestine. Take one concentrated in any one arc of the Wilkinson, whose workshop -the pretty well concealed them true re- el -eying, ill the north, east, soda, a haraog°1"Dazzle Section" -is to be 'found at tion city's ciegumference, but. al character by making a display 1 the Royal Aradeiny in a dingy.an room oE my tulmirable- minor :qualities. and west. "Lord," muttered 'Preston, "hes i brightened by innumerable quaintly here with bells to -night! Usually he patterned models of merchant shipa. breaks through from the, northeast,' The place has the engaging aspect of Suddenly there came from above a loud, musical hum, like the sound of a g.ant top spinning furiously an a sounding board. With tail -light aglow, a plane hurtled beneath the steam, teamed, swept away with in- credible pined, like a casteoff frag- ment of A meteor. What was the matter with that plane? -Down it dived, turned. and, work- ing lower, drove straight f or Pres- understood that the cum of camou- ton aud myself hugging the base of the pedestal'. n - was so low that we flee° was not to make a ship invis- we could see the :pilot as he to across -the path of the moon. "A w;nged Hun as .sure as •-a.la gasped Preston.: "Look out- du-ckl" . The searchlight .of that plane was periscope you watch a camouflaged tearing et us not more than fifty model on a mimic sea and are asked cunning in his deceited heart. The full in thr eybs; the pletne itself canto Superior Man is shoWn in the mer: , , the child can got his arms out, or it Ease thou thy pa,, 0 helm feet from the ground, pie groper_ to, mark' its course. It is extremely . difficult to guess anything like right If a grey ship is. Placed on the be'aad of the excellent beast with 11111C11 los, n may be hooked all the way. One As the cloud mid the someme emit ler was moaning deep, kindness to all peoples; the meals way to prevent thumh-sucking ist to Thou may'st go to the depths of lt.'ef fasten the bag so that the child can- But the Cott of 'heaven ie kiam It swung to the left, barely grak- ed the Egyptisoreobelieke and then- it is, on the other hand, ease'. ing fellow is dieplayed in the black bead not get his heeds to his mouth. The_ Thy sorrows shall - \War mons brill,: 'Once I wag on a train going a The idea that invisibility is aimed bag may be -made of tom material, An The gems for thy mote's adoenino all -wool blanket is best in winter, but 'Weeping may last till the Wight is muslin will answer Icor summer. it • should always he sufficiently anomy ; But ijloeyetsluell come in the moveieg se. that the child can turn and move , , freely about inside.. An added deei THE "CANARY GIRLS:. virels to feel:en tepee to each et the • — towel: corners of the bag and tie them Munitions Workers Suffer in lialr one to the corneas of the bed or crib., • Skin from Trotyl. When the child ie thus faetened loose- ly within the bed the ordinary bed-. in the Brinell munition; factories neon may be drawn over him with.' women equipped with ileeproof goo oointeallielsteey iIitti {,b.fre II -41.1111i. khlicitikisathreallits 0110; enzi Lez,,epa,,,e0eannne1,,eyaggierit,;!,,,e,t,taiii.,,,o1e1,1 turns. One great :advantage of the end ekin turned beight yellow, me sleeping bag is that the mothette noel worlibig in the dangerthe Trotyl . met be disturbed at night to see wuse workera theve are who nntet, get tehether the child is, eovered. ' their fuses veered (e the thousandn A child :amid alartiYa be co1t. of mi inch. Woman f„0„, the wth.,r, pletely undressed when be frOOS t) epees, specialists in ecienee em bed, and lilialo er ila` titta .'2,1"thati mathemlifice, aro working as tool tot- ehould 110 worn at aigilt. it It IS .50 tOrS; OtherO MOW 60-poued elwilt said flint it is neeeseary for the child „Ra nee, women, agoi„, work b. to W"r A shill' 'II "10E' n change the tailor abups ana vanteens cen. Atha] be made from the one Ile has netted with the /maenads; or Med a "."1". 11"Y '1.`11hi"a. '11111.'11.1 leggings and macintosh. do timeline alenee he theretighly eared :net dried ant tat,ntiat hitt strong nitut mot at eight, ready la pet on again ,the .., e , angusn wonom 1101 merely ehow in• heel, :ray, Idiom:am , nil mght , eusow and s91 '(5 and l'ea-eor, but time elatbing Await' he well eared mit ot ham, set upon their work the seal decre derrag the dey. or valor. Their lives ere in +angel Nora OW Material:4 ill WhiC11 illOy SVOI•k _alai .111 tit) beCOUSO 1:110 :NOLOrlea are cider objeetivee of air raiders. , tnto s Thesmost •extraordielmy triumph, Ines is not yet complete, says a Lon - however, of Belgian grit and the re- don despateh of Jan. 6; the -number sourceful skill of the army railwaYa already braught into British poets is engineers is the establishment of a 122. There are at least 68 still to single-track connection with Bruges and Brussels via Eecloo, Ghent, Tee- G be surrendered, • • -- qrman surface war -gimps actually anonde and Manama Theolighout the brought into Pmitish pots were less greater part of this routs, mmecialll -by ono battleship than stipulated in the Eecloo-Termonde section, the per- the armistice terms. The reason for manent way, sidings culverts, bridges, this is that neither the Saxon DOT signals, station bundings and °thee the Maelcensen kaev been completed railway weeks lsave been wrecked out by the German yards. Th German of all recognition by the retreating battleship Bacien is to be banded °vet Germans. A clue to the method by ineteaa. She will leave German waters for Scapa Flow within a week. ' The Motto of .the British Fleet. "TIstese • is Nothing the Navy Cannot Do." Beware, yd foe, Who trouble these brave tars Who have auntie a steno in history; They make the pathway sure beneath . the stave, Protect the weaker nations' liberty, Ms deeds perfumed by these that save the nation And make the tyrant quiver near and far. The beavest of the brave in all erea- • Hon Hear the motto of the fearless British tar. "There is nothing thee the Ailey ettn- not clo" Is,theblianoot,to of .our. fearless boy e in Inscribed amen the "batTacks wall, which this &oast:sten was wrought anay be•eeen in the large unexploded land mines lying singly Or in pales in the ditches and hedges • every 50 or 100 yards_aloog •the easternmost see - Hone of the track. Some are rusty - and mua-coverea; others still. pre- serve their grey wav paint, with gmeen :rad black lettering. As these lie most thickly just befove Termonde, Many were prohdbly dug up again hy the Gearnans themzelvee altos the conclusion of the rannistice. ' . Het from Eeeloo through Ghent, especially the impotent suburbs of Ghentheugge and Ledeberg, to &Ilene- bire, where the lineal to Thematic ancl Alost diverge, the mites aave (Acne their work with em .effectilre, in many casts evith a maleeoleat des- tractivenees which is hart to peralle/ al y -whose in the war arm The whole promenept way is rept aed pittee, the rails an broken and splinterea lite rotten wood, oe twisted Into Wire atm every Imaginable contention, in some plflee8 StielCi17 eunight, in a Christmas toy shop. These models represent every type of meechant ship In the early due there was a model for every, ship. Latterly each type had its special design in accordance with which the sbips were painted at the ports. • The scheme, which began to be put into operation le • May,• 1917, made great heaalway once it was .cleaely rale -which is impossible -but to conftase the sebmasine commander as to her true couree. You can see for 5TM:self at the studio how it works. Looking .through an imitation very fresh, soak 11 in water with a Weep thy dere arid. 0 ei„od,,, litgo salt for one hour. Cut .11 in Till the earth with thy teats, its small pieces and cook•it in water with drenched, Among these were their love of muslc one onion, one carrot, small bunch Spread thy furrem,-s of gloom e'er the and their industrial efficiency. They Parsley, one bay leaf, salt, ethvee, heaven's d'ome had succeeded also in establithing a. for two hornet; when well cooked Till the light of ivzi• 0.4,....r he reputation tor scholarship, which we serve with vraelgrette sauce and boli- imears the 'eivere shall leap Sleeping nage For Children. For th'it. sorrow, now know was based largely on bom ed potatoes. Ear six pereone. ._ • And the hills shall rename nt toy 'It is so difficult to keep a child . . When the dawn shell awake thr covered', especially 111 cold weather, shadowe will break, that many mothers have adopted There'll be singing and eunshinc sleeping bags for their children. to -morrow. These bags are most easily made by 131,,a, ye tempestuous e eels folding a small blanket in the mid-. Till the force of thy fury be seeM dle and eewing up one end and the Follow Ole path of the lighlainet ether side. At the top there should wrath be strong hooks and eyes there &mold. 'fill the garments of night he erat at intervals of a few inches. The Them is room for thy teettbled :,ere child is put into the bag and the books fastened so as to hold the top rqFar out on the boundlese deep, of the bag around the neck and over , aaero, rocked to MA 011 11:.! ().(..11,'; left open the reet of the .way so that - breast, the shoulders. If desired it, may be ! Thy voice shall be hushed 43. se ,:p rowed capital. These things wore cons-plcuonsly placed before us, and biMded us to German defeats. The truth acts at last burst upon ue, and there le no mistaking it. as. THE CHINESE VIEW Kaiser Compared With an Emperor 'in Chines.) History. Here are sore comments on the Kaiser from the pen of a Chinese etudent: "The German Kaiser is not the ropeeior Plan as decipbered by Use. Chinese literature; he is surely a moan fellow containing much fraudish clean fifty miles an hotne when it at is still widely held by the public le a etit. The craeh .of it rang in' • a . and was for a long time a mese of struck a broken rail and turned over my memory for years, le prajectee among :metahant caPtaine. plane OS it wheeled and (Move head • the submarine am: ended wove They know know better now, and • befora . But the crasb ef that Mtge battle thusiastic advocates of camouflage, e.---- on: :against a massive coluite of eteel :and stone just a biseeit's toss tong m-,. wheat we -steed-it eves epochal. It THOUSANDS OP IVIINORS' MISSED slim+ my every sense. .. We must 'leave -Stood iininovahle ChilcIreel'of Ge-Telc Ond Armoliall meld never be extincted by such silo - 1! a full half -minute. Then we stertn• Residents of Terkey Abdneted. horiorable barbarism means. Now ed pell-mell for the mass of Wreek-• . the German Kaiser lse also awfully. age. We found it - reeking with 'the ' Repeats received .from Constantin- . . • wishing to slave the people aed ex. francs of essonet which ran an oplo say the Greek and A.rmenian • 1 tinet the civilizations of the tit -a- nthers .sprawling menet, and in othees To catch. the •eyee of all. streame over the uprooted cone -rate . mitten . , pa s tate la e lave cnmec soma ,- t d • le t e 1 f • 1 Ise also clestro - the lit , - , • again .flung.: Into the acljoiniegefialas. I Then herb grills -tiled witia4he. vecn!st. otser our shoes and into the • • • ... Tbe tall iron lattice -work sigma t the foe can do. . - t And While we stood there and "el'ke; I • committees- with the . puepose of'. ' .a .O eratme boo s and the arts 'an 1 .1 stared, -a broken, -twisted !brag. 1„ seaeching foe tens of thousands of . , - - , c t to ships. . and mess the people of the Allies' all bent and brolcee, Mal. equally tall meets have :fallen .. in their teacits I With. an instinct to be brave- Intil. they reach their grave, - down Over its 'eyes while bided leak, locevated leather, -with helmet driven forcibly taken away from their homee . minor clench...cm, including yoepg giels, eations of Die tinregenerated devils_ of . the hell wife ninch loving kindness only to himself. "In the history of China wee an eirperoe who .burnecl the books and slew the scholars to extinet the civil- ientions of the peaceful inhabitant:4: but he was not succesarul in hie crafty tricke, .for the civilizations iron electric light standaede have aleo ln muse of justice sweep the ,oeoan been beought down overywhoe, while blue. :for long sectiote the double tole- -No niaLfor Mita You saY, nor' Prete graph poles have been felled with it every day, eons) instrument of pueci,iom Bridges Are Wrecked. . ,T1i6 wholo track i0 littera with 'shattered fishplates, tieplatee, mute, eerews, Metal:tiers, and seem- ingly incetricable !lagoons: of wire, Siglial boxes, canine houses and goods depots are either reduced to Nape of powdeved leric'k or - move sieves. The beidges over the Scheldt and other elvers and canals Zoe the most part lie in broken sections in the water,. :tvli011ee they emerge odwase, wane lille -mama bridges have subsidesi bodily etromi the track, and in orals -MOS t.110 macadam roadway dips dawn at nn angle of 45 degrees,. {. Through this pathless.waste, work. ',Tog shy and night, tho Belgian en- gineers haye carried their single track to Bruges and Brussels. !Vie wreckage has 'boon hauled aside, now 'bleepers laid, culverts ropairetd, tem. vorary bridge anti, 'Where nee - ed from under the rim, torched craz- by. the Turks during the War to be ily out of that wreckage, pawing the made followers of lateen Or to be air and muttering, placed in the harems of high officials Preston leaped forward, caught the nod msdaryicflicers. "There la nothing Clio navy cannot dm" reeling form and tore off the lrelmeal I toolc one quick gimlets at th. vhegt,' ATI investigation by the Gvelc Com - Bennie anve theee heroic tura their ly face, and then van to atinoths'm bit o'd'''d" 11 re-P"L"d.to hav° .'-'°801tod ot human wreclaw cast twente feet. in the di8ovel'Y in 11'41'inNI° day nf120 To seall fhe 11 ni lis,, 1 0 01 till, away, This was the rem -hints gun.' mraildreinef whon 85 wee'e 1COOt a deo , nes, aeo lie lay *roams* Wit Turkish ctom:enema peplum asylum. •With might unaeme 1101,1 felt through all the earth, And jis their grip the nation's oafs. • T11080 naval lads so brave will -always -prove their worth, e Their watchful eyem they never, never sleep, , AnsI what they have they hold, so hoar the story told, The motto of Great 'Britain's mighty 11, t Calmat's Deland Reveutte. As shown by the statistics or the imulsnsll rovoDues of the Dominion for the fiscal oar:. ending March "31,IPiS etc total general inland revenues dar- ing OSA rest• amounted 10 e241,781,4,11ta A little or:era had sienthered, two T'lle 'Turkish police. nee :le:Oared to or throe Erenet, officers ;rad as Malty have issued orders authorizing Twits Ar"vle" Privatos. Where thee" holding tram: Graclo thildren to re - "awl!'" 1.1.°3" ""r Imn'ed• But that turn them only to-thair parents. As 1 1 severe L1lousaiu parents of the minors have been inassaceed or de- ported, these clinch:on, aceording to the order, thevefore vernain (11 Teel:ash hands, e Eightems Lepers in Canada. , In the leper lazaretto at Traeadle, LEL, there are thirteen loos, and in the Duey Island lazaretto, B.C., there Are five lepers as shown by the - report. of the Illiniscr of Agriculture for the fiscal year 1.01.7-18. 'i.1.`bose are doln matter, tor the great thought then -was that this WAS a Vrench plane. In a trice the Red Cross Inan had cornered a wandering taxi and -nlyisked lils cleerges off to a surgpon. A volley of car -splitting csplosione fore loose at my vary elbow. 1 whirled to Set it 1„)",g.rreneli camion, wilier bad thundered up unnoticed in that (lin, rkirt its ant14lirc:rati, gun hke mat . 14 volley finished, It roared away. Overhead a terrific burst or Aran:. nal shells sircgile air, and as 1 watched it a Hun bombing piano, its signal light seappiag furiously, (trove 5(11 only 0114100 of leprosy in the no - through tbot hurtle -an of Steel arta 011111,ed bad, 14 Safety Ma11 11101111- M1111011 fla lar m success," Bet he will eot be ,TAPANESel SHIPBUILIHNG lifts Ithjeyed Great Prosperity Satre Otatbrenk of the War. The shipbuilding, industey is :Japan. hos tIOVVIOOad it) ail aa'Irkit1111110.1171.11.11('‘OX11)(;:11111;1 ti)ime 11'1111: tlnl'Ill't01.1"51k 1tl‘p," to the aapnneee raintee, has enjoyed exoptional prosperity, Malty oietera corning from :lamed, ne ne from vernacular Journal, shipbuilders real- g4teer 31111aaCtSQ S111110WOITO• A (Tordilig to 10 ised very good resultP .ror limo rim 14,„llopt,d ri„, with eggs anialces fl half of the year 11)18, in tlit periati wool main dish, sixty-ilve steneuves, all over 1,000 Mice Will not hole Med gross tons, were launched 9 ;Nunn, with any mixture reels -lining lee. their tagerefolte /ATOM tOlalago me- A but Ahmed held over varnished ounting to 1911,417 (51115, '11510' figures, col:spared with the corrosliondher per- iod, 1017, show nu inoreaso 86 in tho number of vessels 1001 ot 74,079 ions in aggregate tonnage, They also show a gain of 40 in number and et 108,845 in tonnage over the first halt of 1010. ' A Born 'reader. 111 vaateen al'ecttala Military depot, cratked eggs were sold nt furniture will remove white keting for Isis 01005; entered the ran- i...educed 91'i08, An trielt soldier, mar- TO1Tonthlo Put in L'ornors of tho teen with a basket nod sold: "Camille W'11:411'Oho ,W111 do AwAY with n.bihs, two dozen best cracked eggs." "Cleat+. e'ennut eater, creamed willt lewort ee ego utll done„ Pat," replied lhe jaiet, may he used for cake filling, orderly, "b'ur', und they're 110 If •eut aPplos aro placed in salt met- then," said Pat, giving the egg -crate .101' tor telV 1uuI 1113' 151111 1.101 violent kneel:, nie some t'rr turn brown., Tliim cracked ones, nuiel,,"