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The Clinton News Record, 1919-12-25, Page 3r•-w-•rassa., ..,r -*+-+tie, ....-,-r +.!,.,"'""'"aa rani" """*".l World's Unrest and Christmas Peace Bethlehem is real, It is n place to "Glom} to Cod in`lhe higklasb; /which travelers may go. I have been Aftd on earth Peace Antoni' viten, in h 11 w i V - of ho1 1 s 1 1r naed �. tlrexo, illysolf within the last six s ve • mfrom the Weaterli 1 elnisTthero i gnths,_ � -faits of devout ilgzilns Pe ho traveller stetting' on .11 Barb, y 1 Ieltnnl hillside the sweet • old story will jnl'n their steps tllithrar as -soon as the events 4tewel ,real. It vista. 0 place It w u ' as e s u n er a' s tt >•e > well . a t� s 1 me, s present; paralysis oaf normal life is a When este jocali;.e it the understand cuasc, New highways have beer More l1 1ty its Ovoz- present monniug. opened by the war, so that one may 'Ilio old carol seems like an inteeple- now go from London to Bethlehem by rail, with only two brief terrines "It suns upon -thtb midnight elear, •on the way. That glorious sung of old, From angels bending nems the enrtIi Bothfehem is Ill itself not tiro inose To tench their harps of gold; thoti dist of Judeau towns; probahly 'Peace on the earth; good will to anon, that distinction to -day belongs to Ai From l'eaven's all -gracious King', Karim, where Elizabeth dwelt and the world in solemn st!aness John the Baptist, the kinsmen of To hear, ales angels sing. Jesus, wan berm and where Mary went s to visit her cousin before the birth of "Still through the cloven skies they the babe of either, Tosday Beblllehera dome, has lost meth of its Oriental char- With peaceful wines unfurled, aster,., because of the many modern And still their heavenly music floats O'er all the weary world; Above its sad and lowly plains They bend on hovering wings, And ever o'ev its Babel -sounds The blessed angels sing. Cation written yesterday: -- Christian buildings in it, which de- nastion and missionary zeal have rear- ed. The population is mostly Chris- - thin; and the `main industries are the ivoticing iii mother -oaf -pearl and olive wood. ]lbthiehenlites are distinctive in both dress and appearance, prob- ably owing to Crusader blood and in- fl:uence.. A Pen Picture of Bethlehem. On rt terraced hillside, . Witt the limestone rock outcropping, and vine- yards tuekeddt, sway on tiny ledges, and -olive trees growing on the stormy soil, is built the "little town of peth- lehem," with its gray, square, flat - rooted, limestone houses, standing al - "And ye, beneath life's crushing load, Whose forms are bending low, Who toil along the -clim'bing way With painful steps and slow,— Look nowt for glad and golden hours Come swiftly on the wing; 0 rest beside the weary read, And bear the angels sing. • -/ "For lo, the days are hastening on, - By prophet bards foretold, Wizen with the ever -circling years most solidly- along narrow streets. Conies •rounnrl the age of gold; • Through the doorway the visitor from When peace shall ovet' all the earth m, which is only five miles Its ancient salon -dors fling, Jerusae And the whole world gives back the song Which now the angels sing." Christmas Help for Tesday. •Whatever-anakes that fust Christ- mas real and near is a message for our own day, for we' need- to hear, above the clash of class, the strife oi-- strikes, the pandemonium of profiteer- -British troops guard the town of ing and the harried hunt for heppi- Bei'hlebem to -day and keep watch by 11ese, the old, old truth sung bf the the-Mangera For long years Turkish angels over Bethlehem's little hills soldier; guarded the' Church :of the that the Peacemaker hits come and Nativity, which housed the ecelesias- that good will has been ,incttralated in tics of three-tvnrring Christian faiths a inauger. That is the most present -Greeks, Latino and Armenians. Now and practical and 'important of mall -a genial Tommy -stands at the on -i words• for our day. .To find a sole- - trance to the crypt eoiutaining the tion of 'our riciclles, the calming of Manger, "to keep the priests from our unrest, the way of light in our srrappin', and from stvipin' each }lour of darkness, we need but to go other's laivps," he says. Sectarian hack to. Bethlehem and find the real - 5t, ifo shows at its wcre:t at the Church ity o`f. Christmas: -of the Nativity.and the Church of the Our tune's turmoil takes a thousand •holy Sepulchre. forms; its real need is only one. Cain- " The oldest Ohristian edifice in the oofiaged by humanity's hectic spur - 4' world covers the traditional and 0011- suits of pleasare is a deep -flowing de- s-ersnlly accepter tete of the Manger, sire for real peeves peace among men On the hillside was the village khan, and peace in the human heart, We where Mary and Jeeeph lodged,'alvd 'are weary of war, and much of our the stable, as is stall the usage, was current restlessness is only a reaction the cave room cut into the limestone, against its work and its woes.. We with the 11fanger hewn out of the think we want easier lives and pleas- iiv111g rock. Outwardly the church anter times and greater prosperity; is unprepossessing, with a door so -in tiuth, our need is for peace of epir- small that it admits hut one person it and for an era of good will among at a time. Within, the partition which all men. - 1 ecclesiastical jealousy had erected. has Until our overwrought slid liglnt- 'been removed by British influence, seekinf; world follows the shepherds and the, proportions of the church as to the place of the Ohrist it will not it was in Crusader times inay.be seen. lie healed of its fret and its fe'rs.,.The • The examinee to the subterranean .love of God, made personal and near -Meager-crypt is crown through a side in Christ, is alone sufficient to ••satisfy chapel. the present quest. If red -stained The Storied Hails. Ruse;:a, distraught Europe and While the town of Bethlehem has entirely changed, the surrounding •scenery remains the same. These are 'the very hills uponi width the sh.ep- '1leeds watched thole flocks by night. • -These fields, acmes which we looked et a glorious moon arising -above the seeking. mountains of Moab, beyond the. opal- For the Christmas truth is the •escent waters •of the Deaol Sea,.were truth of a living and supreme God, once flooded with a celestial glow interested in man; of a loving Saviour,: More wonderful than the ounsete we making clear the character of God, have watched here, Silent now at• and of a divine 'spirit. of good will eventide, the echoing -hills then re --which alone can bring in that golden .sounded to the denies of an angelic age which is best described as the .chorus. Kingdom of Heaven. The brother - It was here, on the very spat where hood toward which the race struggles •we stand, that the greatest of mese-, will be realized only when Christmas ages, •straight from heaven, was, heard Day has truly broken everywhere.— by a group of. Workmen:-- • Wm. T. Ellis, ALLIES TO MAKE War Material Handed Over away, may see the, men and women tailing at primitive lathes' amid the dust of mother-of-pearl. Alas, the workers are not many now, for War rind 'starvation took a heavy toll of Bethlehem: The shops where mother- of-pearl articles are sold are few and meagre, and their principal sale is of regimental badges to the British sol- diers, EIGHT OCCAN LINERS. SAFE} M, ' . AEU .'BATTL ATLANTIC GALES Delayed Vessds Reach Nev X ere With 117,000 Passengers —Roughest Trip . Ever M axle, Says One Captain. ^7 �Y I11 ,q_�+..;;: /� r F in ' sem w ? 'ems ee e, retest, Set CEA_-__ eel 1?Ust', Soseeo8Y! pLL I esegas-ARO 'KATY Mien THEY MAKS G ooi A Chance For Ja 1Viillion ! NO HOPE OF RELIEF NFLD. DOG SAVED FROM H. C. L 92 PERSONS Export Trade Being Fostered Swam to Shore With Life Line ne at Expense of Consumer. From Wrecked Steamer. A despatch from Winnipeg says:— A despatch from Curling, Nfld., duce women to keep strict accounts of There is no hope of relief from pies- says:—The passengers and crew of • their daily expenditures in order to Olt high prices for some time to come, the coastal steamer Ethie, numbering, study of them to eliminate muleces- according to a statement just issued 92 persons, were brought ashore on aft sary items. According to the plans, by members of the Board of Com- life -line which was fun out from the amounts saved by this means would mew. There will be no relief, the ship by; a Newfofmdland dog after; be invested in Government securities. commissioners declare, until interna- their vessel hit upon Martin's Point.' Women's organizations which have tional trade conditionls return to Boats could not make the hazaedoua been enlisted in the eanlpaign include normal. passage from the stranded steamer, the Association of College Alumnae, "With the high price �' g p e of wheat and All effort to shoot the line ashore Daughters of the American Revolu- millefeedsand the creating of the failed when tlioiline became caught.) tion, General Federation`of Women's foreign demand for all products, it is Men diel not dare attempt the trip, Clubs, National Catholic War Coun- hopeless'for some time to expect any through the waters, and so the clog) cit, National Congress of Mothers and relief from prAsent price conditions," was put overb-eard. The dog bravely' Parent-Teacher Associations, Nation - the commissioners asseet. took the line in its teeth and battled' al Council of Jewish Women, Nation- Present-condJtions have been seized against the rough sea, the line being al.T<'ederation of Business and Pro - upon by •some dealers to profiteer, released, £essional Women's Clubs, National the board /charges, but all. high prices With block and tackle the Ethie's League for Women's Service, Wo - aro not the result of profiteering, crew, aided by fishermen on the shore, man's Department of the National Many aro due to natural increases rigged a life-saving device, using a Civic Federation, and the Y.W.C.A. forced by conditions growing out of bdatswain's chair for a carriage, One the'war. That export trade is being by one in this chair 91 of the 92 pert Montreal Pltaces Whole of fostered: to the benefit of the mann- sons aboard were hauled to safety. lecturers and producers at the ex- A baby sixteen months old was puffed Ontario Under\Quarantine pense of the consumer, is another ashore in a mail bag. ^ allegation. The Ethic, which her] been engaged A despatch from Montreal says:— in the coastaIeervice between. Curling "Commencingon Wednesday, the • v Ir r C i• uS.>n l• •1 W r A despatch from Now York says:.- Substantial evidence of the fierce winter n' h prevailed a amens wl ieh ave eve i p fee; tlinee' t teal days'along the ste er lanes between this eonntry and Elurope was shown by eight big pas- senger liners watch arrived her on Thursday with oro" than 17,000 be- watts Huila enerusted -Mitts tee, rigging cowered -with 'sleet and salt from spray caked on fu1- nels, prefaced -the stories told- by ships' officers of high winds and gi- gantic: waves that swept their vessels from stem to stern, The ships arriving were the Rot- ,aerclam from Tolland(via Plyimbuth; the Baltic, }Royal George, Germania and Caronin from British ports vin Halifax; the Lafayette from Havre, Heagenejford from Norway, and Europia from Genoa. All were' from three to five days overdue, and some Of them reached port too late to dock before to -money/ r b n o low morning. The first of the big limes to come in to her deals was the Rotterdam, which reached quarantine late fast night. She was three clays late and hr e master, Captain J. Baron, declar•, ed that the trip wee the roughest be had r h ever Made, His dC t. sir nws bupported by hear Admiral Andre'w 'r'. Long oi, the ilnitod Sbates Nnvy, who returned after oecorting the Hing wind Queen of the Belgians back to their ministry, Adanirai bong said that one week ago, when in mid-Atlaniie, the weather was sb rough that the big liner was rocked like a Cradle. One of the passengers was thrown L'a'the deck and suffered a broken leg, On board the ship were five stowaways who were scared from that: hiding places :by the rough weather. The Carmania, another of the be- lated ships, had to put in at Halifax to repair damages caused by co11is2on- at sea 'With another ship during a fog off the Grand Banks. The Caro a, from Southampton, was close-toThe Germania when the accident occurred and ehc responded to her wireless calls by putting •about and going to her assistance. The tendered help was not needed, but she acoompatied her into Halifax, , THRIFT CAMPAIGN SEES FILMS OF LAUNCHED IN U. S. - PRINCE'S TOUR Women Organized to Fight Royal Family View C.P.R. High Cost of Living. Movie in Albert Hall. A despateh from Weishington A despatch from London says:— says:—An army of 4,000,000 women, The Albert Hall was 'crowded on Wed- repiesenting ten national organize- nesd'ay afternoon when the King and tions,, has been organiizecl by the eav- Queen and Princess Mary and Ole ings divisions of the treasury depart- younger princes attended t3 display merit to enter the fight against the given by'tha Canadian Pacific Railway high cost of living,' on behalf of the London hospitals, of • Beginning January 1 and extending films depicting the Prince of Wales' to April 1, a great thrift campaign :Cahadian tour. Sir George Perley will be conducted ,Jn an effort to in -'presided, and the Royal party remain- ed , during the .greater part of the show. The audience maintained: a running fire of enthusiasm as the pic- tures of every town the Prince visited were shown,' The show was repeated at night to another large audience, and was pre, siided over by Sir McLaren Brown. and Labrador ports, went ashore last British Government Spends -- Weelnesday'dering a gale while bound Over $15,000,000 Per Day south. The wreck "as not reported here until the shipwrecked.passengers and crew arrived from Bonne Bay, all A despatch from London says:-- wires having gone down in the storm. The average daily expenditure of the Government from Apnil 1 to Nevem- bee 30, was reduced to i:3,099,000,'as Cardinal Mercier compared with more than £7;000,000 Honored in Paris wileered Asia and. perturbed America during the war. Freight traffic ex compared only hear, as if for the' first pendi res were reduced to 250,000,- A despatch£ rom Paris says:— time and in fullest reality, the mess - 000, ascompared with £08,500,000 Cardinal Mercier, Primate of Belgium:, age -of Christmas they would not need revolution or Bolshevism or any of the desperate remedies they are now TREATY EFFECTIVE Will Put League of Nations in Force Regardless of U.S. Action. A despateh from London says:— Regardless of whether or nob the United States Senate may in the meantime take favorable action on the puce treaty, it ie. asserted that the Allied Govermnents have come to an uniclerstnttdillg to nialt:e the '.peace treaty effective without the adhesion :of. the United States, and to put the • League of Nntione on its feet as soon ••a8 poa Jilii'e. No definite date for teking this step wee deeded on at a recent meeting of the. Supreme Council in view 01 :tile fact ultatail° Jape -nose and Italian By Germans to the Allies A despatch from London says:— Winston Churchill, Secretary for War, announced in the House of Com- mons that the Germans had handed over to the Allies 5,000guns, 25,000 machine glees, 3,000 trench mortars, Mid '1,700 airplanes. They had still failed to deliver 42 locoljzotives and 4,760 railway trucks,. --The Secretary considered that the Germans Iliad made a tremendous .ef- fort- to .comply, with the conditions imposed upon them. -• His Second. Tour , Begins in March A despatch front London says:— prior to the war, - Peace With Turkey At Earliest Moment was recently received at the Academy of Moral and Political 'Se,ience here. The president of the academy, in an address, exalted the heroic attitude in the war of Belgium and her King, and eulo;ized the patriotic firmness A -despatch from -London says:— ea Cardinal Mercer during the Ger- Without any disrespect, and without man occupation of the Belgian king - wishing to deprive Ameica of the dont: honor of sharing in the guardianship Cardinal Mercier in response prais= of Christian communities, the allies ed King Albert for the leadership of have decided to make peace with his people, and paid tribute to France and iter allies, who, be declared, offer- ed their gold and blood, mixed 'with the tears of their wives and inothers, in order thnt respect for the given word, for justice and loyally, as against passing material interests, might triumph in the world. Saskatoon Hasa Chinook, and Fuel Outlook Improves A despatch from Saskatoon eaysn— A chinook struck Saskatoon on Thurs- day night and snew is melting rapid- ly in the warm sun. Gerald Graham, Assistant foe Northern Saskatchewan to the Fuel Administrator, -•-says the fuel situation in this district is much improved, and the prospect of several days of fairly mild weather promised a chance to get a little reserve oupply, Turkey at the earliest possible mo- ment, Premier Lloyd -George declared in the House of Commons on Thurs- day. Weekly Airship Service From L imdon to America whole Province of. Ontario has been Charles II, oak" balustrade, $15,000 placed under, quarantine, so far as for the panelling in the old state din- Montreal,+s concerned." This decision, !o room, Anel which was taken on. Wednesday by intee r century 9,750 for the panelling sofven- the munici; al authorities, is now law, picture entlery. The black marble staircase, which consists of a double flight of steps and a gallery, failed to find a pur- chaser. The palace -stands in the heart of the Lanarkshire coal mining district, Duke of Hamilton's Are Treasures Bring Million A despatch from Lanarkshire, Scot- land, says:—Hamilton Palace, seat of the late Duke of Hamilton and Bran- don, who was premier Duke of Scot- land, is being dismantled and even the furnishings sold at auction. Remark- able prices have 'been\realized from the sale of pictures and jewels. The total aggregated the equivalent of $1,277,700. Most notable among the paintilfgs was that of the "Beckworth Children," by Romney, which brought $260,000. Other prices were $24,000 for the and henceforth and until further no- tice all travelers from Ontario to this city must comply with the demands of the Montreal Board of Health. 'This also applies to all persons coming to Montreal from the United State's and passing through the Prov- ince of Ontario. immortalioed by Scott i n one of his Captain Alcock, Daring-, Aviator, Injured A despatch from London says:— Captain Sir John Alcock, who made the first nonstop airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean, has been seriously injured, according to a idoyd's despatch from Rouen. His plane crashed near Oottevrard, ,in the Department of Zine -Inferieure, Nor- mandy. Rudyard Kipling. On behalf of the Imperial War Graves Commission he has written an 1 easiest appeal to those vit,ititlg the a , French and Flanders battlefields to Another overseas tour us being pian••' F+c • E. It A , A despatch from London •says:—.A -observe reverence, for the deal. +'This Thousands of tines throughout Can- P+n. c A. ° .,tally, lt.,. ni. o eelcly airship service to Auzerica is is 'holy grotuJ, says Kipling, "and ads agree hein,J injured by the, nailing zepreseutetives had to nousttlt their Heel for the }?-.ince of Wales: Ina A graduate of, Queen's University, eontem, ate( bya combination suet not he run over. with.icri *' r respective Governments. President recent speech he announced that thenY' T b nation -oi, t tl, .of adyert-c ba -natter to tient, Not 'Wilson, it i$ known, has been inform- King was sendiing him to Australia' who has the distinction of being,. the atti•ation firms, yvhieh, are ereclitndi - — Only z.s the stark insured amt the cam - ed of this attio,lf ea tin Ames, tiro and New Zealand. oyrly woman School Inspector in with the intenticn of acgn-'r:ng the Women workers now a •- bitrm levee broken which give f egh d. He will probably , + i t y gives s u1t�'i htnbassadur. Davis, who attended sail next March, Anel be away six or Ontario. The honorary degree of 11,•34 and her sister ship, the 11..-3J, crags shout $2 a day,evhile beams the an cp•`serturi to to attack the trees, but ,some e£ the conferences, seven months. - ILL D. was• recently conferred upon 'these are•heing altered to meet pas-' wily they were canting lose their 40 tial •�POFes behind etuoll Mane serge as �± 1i n„ry �� months. - arty by her Alma Mater seiner and cargo 1 quirements. ' cents at day. harbcre Inc moths and other. insects. Mess A4 ,ales---.. nunsseasee smaumseseas eseesasseexses aas lr eassa.,em,o uw.... e e,,:xue.,;.,,r�e.csaasu-,•mas,0rzmsa m.+un ..wv..,nn 0Lt00a2O .. ,00 Jsc,e...d m me...me, @.we; .-,.,0m00•n BRINGING UP FATHER x Yt, 0 most spirited ballads. It was built in 1822 to 1829, and one of its mar- vels was a porticp of monolith Corin- thian columns which were copied from the. Temple of Vespasian at Ronne. The foundations of the palace. have become so affected by time that at was found necessary to dismantle the historic edifice, British Air Policy Defined. A despatch from London 'says:— Winston Churchill, Secretary for War, has prepared a scheme for the Royal Air -Force organizations in peace time based on the expenditure of 115,000,- 000 ($75;000,000) yearly. The main outlines provide for one'flight squad- ron for each division of the army, to co-operate -with the troops in all stages of their training, besides three general service squadrons, and also one or more squadrons for co-opera- tion with the artillery. The fleet will have permanently three airplane squadrons and two sea- plane squadrons. India will have eight service squadrons, Mesopotamia three and Egypt seven, 'while the naval 'bases at Malta, in the eastern Mediterranean and probably' Alex- andria, will oath have one small sea plane Mit. Lay aside the pipe and tobaceo and see how noon you can save enough to buy that farm tool you hate needed so long. ll'alikaiata- lalla 1 F1A\'5 rA DoeLNit. 9 1 ,lily!,, ,1 fii laaf.C,0t.i.m`f • SHE; Lal' elate iht.)E F 11//y M RE HFE� pOf1 E7: f/ 1500re Iain ai t 1, '%'. ram''.• , IN 't HE g1._ • . /Il'/ia�/__- w©C)F'!;� • aeleaes- ENGLAND, O 1'h froedoni oY the olty of Deepen has bona ootlferred ole Llout,•Gellliral Sir'9Uililam Raine 1vlatsbal , Tile Prince of Wales has presented it Cup fol' CoalPetitioe fit 'the at Pun- ry s'an's Pay Plower Show,, A team from ILM,S. Excellent de. featod the Steels Exchange Rifle Club at Bfsley by seven points, W. Wlubel'ton Vox, of Nor'tllorpe Miall, formerly ohairman,of the Lincoln (Jaunty Coined, 11led.i'oceltty. The old woollen drill•hali of the 24th County of London Regiment at Sleek - heath shag leek•-heathhas been dostrofed bye fire, .. General Perslag, chief of the Amer!, can Porno, has received the degree of D,O.L, from Oxford Tlniversity, Percy Reginald Jackson; a ten-year” old boy, accidentally fell into the River Tribble at Ashton and was drowned. Instructional centres tor the train-, ing of disabled leen for the bullding trade are being opengd by the Minis- try of Labor. kite death occurred at Cheltenham-, recently, of Joseph Hale, a Crimean veteran who had served with the Royal Fusilier -fa Thomas Samuels, a collier, fell 500 feet down a shaft at the Doislialn Col- liery, Wrexham, and was dashed to pieces. The closing on Sunday of hair -dress- ers' and barbers' shops throughout the United Kingdom has been made com- pulsory. 1 Burrell Hammond, of Brampton Hall, ` Aylsham, Norfolk, tools shelter under a tree during a storm and was killed by lightning, General Sir W. Marshall stated at Durham that Mesopotamia might be made the finest cotton growing coun- try in the world. Rats gnawed the water pipes in a house in Scarborough with the result that the ceiling gave way and the house was flooded. One thousand oversea agriculturists representing the Dominion forces, -visited the .Royal Agricultural Show at Cardiff, • Seven hundred laundry workers of Bristol are on strike, having refused the employers' offer of 28 shillings for a''forty.eight hour week, - The children and grandchildren of the late Sir Thomas Powell Buxton, have placed a memorial tablet to him in St, Thomas' Church, Upshire, Spirit -Dampers. "0h, Nell, your dross is so sweet! But whatever made you do your hair like that? It makes you look quite old," That's what Ne1l's friend said just as she was off, to a dance, and had no time to altar her hair. She was_ only just on the rightside of thirty, so couldn't afford Id look older. Now, advice given our friends about their appearance is, if gentile°, of great value, but it should be given at the right time, The girl above mentioned found it difficult even to talk to her partners, She fancied all the thee that they were,,@pthinking she was an old frump, whogoughtn't to go out to dances, and were asking her for a stance out of pity. Soddenly, however, she caught sight of herself 1e a,mirror, and was delight. ed to notice she looked suite passable, At once she got into the spirit of en. joynrent, regretting ehe had taken any notice cf her friend's words. There are far too many apiritelai ip- ers ebout, I heard the other day of e woman who visited a bride for the first time in her new flat. The young couple only hall one sitting -room, and the ebony piano, which was a pre. sent, didn't harmonize well with the other furniture, "Good gracious, Bertha! You must take that thing out of Here; it simply spoils the look of the room!" chirped in Mrs, Tactless. The bride, who was full of joy and life before, felt her heart sink, There was nowhere else to put the piaato:. but, she diel so want her room to look nice. Tears- Came very near her eyes, Seeing the mischief she had wrought the visitor tried to put things right, and the incident apparently passed over. Yet it had taken all the life out of the hostess. Again, it was only the other day I heard of a girl who had been out for the afternoon with a man to whom she was rather attacbedAnd wanted to im• press well, She had enjoyed herself thoroughly; and was quite bright until Ole' came across her sister, who ox. claimed: "You've never been out with Mr. L— in that frock! You loots a per- fect fright!" Personally, I would put all such tact- less folk in the stocks, or pay them out in their own coin. There's a time to give a flint, and a time to rest quiet, ly silent 11 one hasn't anything pleasant to say, holding one's tongue Isn't a bad way out. The Cornet, Stone of Clvhlzatlon. The citizen standing in the doorway of his home, conaente'i en hie three: hold, his fs.m:ly gathered about his hearthstone• tibio, the evening et a well•sreet day closes in scenes tend sounds tl,ct are dearost•--lie shall save the nntirn when the drum tep Is futile anti the leamtialas ole exn heated - '1 Olicer gnaw Costorl. Tho mart•le11 KaiIr women are cone polled to speak a language different from that of their husbands. They, may -trot even pronounce their luta, beside; names, bet tonl,uoilly refer to theta as the father of meand•so, "lt le better he follow even the shadow of the -i:.se than. to remctln cement rich the women" An irrigel!;or lane 1r leg ieu(1t on this Maeria, Kieer in A tlstr1li,:r tt^ill i,o 94 feet hictll and will impound 1,000,- E100 ween-fr:t of wilier, Flour with ,which blend can be ;Wade 1.•oing ohialntd from oigae beets in rranrtt as lh-: 001011). ai; swim:lie-hi ors reritetibta.