HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1919-01-23, Page 2AIR FLIGHT ACROSS ATLANTIC
TO E UNDERTAKEN IN MAY
Trip .i Feasible as There ..re Airplanes i'W Al ill bl . :tee
Capable: of Making the JOteresey-ISlail Stiller ileiti een
England and ? sited Siatee in 1920.
tl desrLth front 4/0,1l1.11 n r1 t,nyrnc of t,r<1 i) c n t' tt
Gen, Eruttl.,r. YYIu> z tldviugtip hie zdilpF ore n,1 }t 1 with t gal era_
po„-t es Ili -1> ...1 el‘ 1 1 7 ;le tY ar 5(0,uo') t 1, c tut h
in the .'1. i r t t1d.' u,
i` will have a
t.cne coramere!,11 w.iallen,in nn city and 'oh,: l . e to real bet. .eel
terview *With tbi 1`iLly !} .in1 U m' to heel., end
!
the Al t 1 ,a, rt ct,.
lanbteflight
antri t t iii h s t,. 1, t ! r 11, aro } i„ .ledie prnl.ary' 1 L i l y bt -cola
i :11_,!': lie .1•l:: 1, and fl:g11!•: 1r :11 p ng t :re
t't.ard lu fte:L. l..a' future, S,Ycr,1
ulu at the pic.ra •_ �I sect _t
trip. Y1 -at, f . 7 -. t ,
ment as were three c.r f.1;11.Eir7 it WY. 'a %O e 1 iii >7•.
um' i t, r,.),h and cnpn.ity i., to 11 e 14.p1t, ,1
k t
n bt a rist:vr ' • ,.y n been home; in Canada long:
ex t °• officer, 'rhes0 three all of }cho'+t saw servi,•e early in .the YY^ar, and have e
.•,•1141' be:n .cnsti.lyL 1•.r, ..., lct.i . • 1 the ver bion lrt about, are de�at,ng .htn Yc
l - its g
Prexd i zr
Toronto, Tin 21 TN z nba: -,shent
N,. 1 Northern, ett-.ii% ; No.
' Not t le.rn $2.21; No 11 Nalthorn,
$2.1, .;; No, -'4 YtbeaL, $2 11:16, in
store Fort 1Ji,',inni, not including tax.
N Ini.tobt olts--No, 2 (7.W.,. Tie;
No. 3 C,W., 68's; extra No. 1' feed,
tlii3;r; No, 1. freed, in stow].) I"ort
1••1111111..,
A;nel•iean crrn--No. 3 yr,llow $i nt: New laid eggs are being sold ate
l�ro. 4 ye.'o1{ $1:00 Jnntlir.y __Nb1. 4 Convent Garden at six shillings per'
011'?at°io oats, new crop Qat• dozen: f
'whit
No. 3 white 69` to
Ontario wheat -bib: 1 Wurster, per in the bill which allows women to sit ,
NEWS fer MAIL A110tre• JOHN.
BULL AND 141S PEOPLE,
Occurrences in the Land That Reigns
Supreme In talc Commer-
cial World.
72e,e,. 70 to 73c; a w'' 1 e' Thera are only seventy-ei ht'w'ords
721 accSTt n to Pie,gh.4 oiatsid'e;.. g i
ear lot,r;12.1,1: to $2.,221.„ - lib. 2 de., in parliament.
i$2.41' to $2 10 , Nb.3, do., $2.07 to The tree given by the Duke of Bee-
' No 1 e,pailtg•, $2.6'9 to: 0.17; clench fol: the Red Cross timber sale
Giro
... e g: ting, 0 to, 82.11 f.cran,. ship. g
'x •!xw•� ;' hag: � been � Sp � o` A shorthorn S'earlitig bull Uelenginl
d lI W. B. nh David L h 1( )none.R B 1I 1('
: t ,Uro O:,l t end lYhu'h err , a ,..i -neer f :il ?:s .1 ., t o V^nr [tee which lion. T A Caller .t.• chairmen and Y
L ., 1 l
ar, G11 At --r sen. ,. at ( , oug esu �,
a an• ed• 1•orrL$, accor'dltng to freights.' to C. F. Raph.;el brought :£1,575 ($7',-
n:-' e.l the (: bent War atriatio lelen , . ,l ten, 01 f the request of the Memnon Government,
1` ,0, 2'r Sp inf,,'.$2.06 to $2 1'4; No• 3' realized £1,300.
id to act s 5• ^? 00
101 ' chief 7'' N
Mr. II. J. Dal
rete ea }',;Jit• 03 ,51.• ri„ � a1 C.t1 }Il'1 m the E��} a 11:1 i n 4.r , Citi
a
1 time .v:.:^� ace e
,n.
:cl.:
id the Geri. 1,
•t
for distant 'on n .,tla,n,s,,.,. „ y. ''bale time to
not (hey for 'titd, CRO.Q 11 to Igen •l gLo:.p O. the new Cant i.OrlS Ib hes �,
furred :dscr:a tt who 1 tnci'nate of Ilaalnousie. and Ear.. oia.ed , driven a$ auteroba:a: i ••t rot e.r'r';; w:?il Cite. committee upon its many problems, Mr, 7.'aLt t is i
it zrobal net e. Th^ -se nn.hll s, 1. t. said, will , - •'o • to- in:e ov0 •setts was assietarnt professor of psvcholog`y at McGill University,:
are to -clay, He said I � T• in the 1111' `: tr.l Universities, ctlrl pri ; ga ,, x. l r, ,
r to est an be seeable df -remainingerred as mxor with the 7th Canadian Sage. Battery. 1410, Rladtvn1t, valka belongs to Butcctpe .enlisted eery
would be nee^_, a ys
1
f the laity of whkh, few a wee•lt "7.23", tl' Sth Battalion the "Meth Meek
enough in 1914 to receive the regimental numtber served with
aerial police 0010, !lc c
t ' The newspaper says a -Keeler
d ,lea to watch
ale -
to a ,
Devils" and Yvas wounded at the sewn •
over ani r0ues, ship mail service between Englanl
frontiers. T,T-•E�d Mates during the A bit Loughuan
eine
cl I,attic. :of Ypres, Fie was tcviee peesilent of the Winnipeg G. W, V.
n tars.. ed oversees with the 1e -I, ttat1on and was wounded at er11100. Since b15 return to
News sir •s ;t has been and the tu' •-
The Evening Ne s 3 u •�
ui %eteran,"
Admiralty is embai-hiug on a big pro- rain by airship p
served
ate .s t
cat Canada he has been 'honored with many offices In vttei'ans' orgatt11:4ation5 and is now editor of "".Che
officiallt infrjrme that the British' summer of 1920 is regarded as
l i b .lets
�,.-�-•_... t r:"- .•-. _. . _ _-. _ ••y ryR .. �...... UNIFIED I:fed3Y %i iY ��MA�'d CANNON E.tl�i4 � V9 BOMB'
j
UNITED STATES BRITISH ISH L;A
VOTED "DRY" LESSONS OF WAR1 ON SIBERIAN LINE TH RHINE 'TOWNS
1920 -Remaining 8 How Germans Controlled Indus-
French General in upreazie
lvifecY;ive til
States Expected to Fall try Before 1914.
Charge of Allied Forces
in Line. A despatch from London says:- in Russia.
Sir Eric Geddes, Minister without A despatch from Omsk says:-'
A despatch from Washington portfolio in the new Cabinet, in an Unity of command anthe Siberian
suss: -Tile American nation was address before the Associated Cham- front leas been arranged, and the
voted dry on Thursday byj
constitu- ; bets of Commerce, said the biggest French general, Jules J.anin, who.dras
tional amendment, effective approxi-
thing that had been learned in the been commander of the Czecho-Slovak
mately a year hence: when the 2 WIl war and the greatest benefit that army, will leave supreme d:srection of
.stere of Nebraska, the home of Wil-: could be gotten from it was that the the allied forces in Russia,
lfam Jennings Bryan, one of the for e- British people had discovered as a The appointment of Gen. amen is
most champions of prohibition, tett- nation what they could do if they put- }railed as auguring the ultimate de -
fled
fied the proposed amendment,. Ratifi- t led together. feat of the Bolsheviki. Gen, Knox,
cation the amendment by 36 of the They had improved machinery and Chief el the Brutish Military Mission
4S States was necessary to make it i methods and also electric power, the and arse in charge of the commis-
svend part of the American constitu- igreat modernizer of industries, They :ar'iat, is •occupied in the task of
tion. Nelmaska was the thirty-sixth•
had learned much about German selecting a representative commission
State. "key" industries and the way rho Ger- to ,study and formulatte a plan for
Or in the y eight States remain out titans contrelle.i British Industry be- the election of a National Assembly,
• cold through failure thus far of their fore the war. The newzpapors call attention to
smut.
These to approve the amend- As art iu5tance. Sir Eric mentioned firs fact ewe the workmen's so -opera -
ere
Ment. missing Commonweal ow five organizations of Omsk and alas
ere New York, Pennsylvania, New svelter and t.+Lig.=ten, which, though
i na eantrolled theca: 11 Germany. came al- where have procladmed theft support
Sera`e_r,Connecticut, Rhode lea , inost entirely from the British Em- of the new Government. The Gov -
Minnesota, lie., Mexico and Nevada. rc while the whole monopoly er Ment w Gove n g
a a. , -of
Five of these messing States
are'zagrieto manufacture, indispensable
among the thirteen original missing to modem development 'is steel
States. Prohibition lenders expect plants, was held back by the dumping
most cf these eight States to ratify he of pieces of apparatus, such as crank
before the end of the month. `ase castings, on the Tyne and the Clyde
Legislatures of all eight of these at Prices lower than the cost of the
States, except that of Nevada, are in raw material.
melon Nevada's Nevada's Legislature will
m_et J:ntuary 20.
PANEL TE AT
GUILT OF STARTING WAR
FIRED -ON KAISER
A despatch from Berne says: A
German commission appointed to de-
termine the former Kaiser's responsI-
PEACECONFERENCE bility for the war has 0frl:jelly re-
centnended that he be brought to
trial, according to information es-
-
ceived from Berlin,
Elilibies Britain to Admit Repre- The recommendation was announced
selitati�'es of"D ,,,,bo ions by herr Kautsky, who was appointed
A despatch from London says:- by the present German Government
According to the official statement to direct examination df documents in
the archives of the Foreign OMce.
• given out by the Governments taking "Marginal notes in the Kaiser's
part in the ntneti rrtry peace waiver -
own handwriting on the most import-
rations the n netieg adopted the fol- ant papers in the Foreign Office prove
leering two general principles:
One. ---Each delegation being a unit,
the number of delegates forming it
shall have no influence upon its status
at the conference.
Two. -In the selection of its dele-
gation each nation may avail itself
of the panel system. This will enable
- each state at discretion to entrust its
interests to such persons as it may
designate.
The adoption of the panel system
will in particular enable the British
Empire to admit among its five side -
gates representatives of the Domin-
ions, including Newfoundland, which
has no separate representation, and
of India.
FIRST BATCH OF TROOPS
VIA PANAMA CANAL
A despatch from Panama says: -
The British troopship Empress of
Asia passed through the Panama
Canal on Thursday on its way from
England to Vancouver with 1,400 dis-
eliarged soldiers on board. men,
actively negotiating with.
the powers for recognition anti, also
for parbicipation in the Peace Con-
feren00.
HAND OVER 58,000
ARI.. MACHINES
British Sad Just Completed Gun
To Carry 90 Miles.
A despatch from London 'says: -A
big gun, mwh• teh was expected to be of
even greater power thein the "Big
Bertha" was Among bhe secret pro-
ductions of the ;Sheffield Oitnnon
Works, it .became known last week.
Thos 'gun, which it was said was tD
have been used to bombard. Elhtne
towire, was about. 88 feet long, and
n mount-
ed,
•Yvlxe o
it weight,
S :
6s ,
ed, is given :as 124 tons.
It: was stated officially that
the molister cannon would carry
to a distance of 60 miles, but •the men
working on it were of the epinion that
it probably would be destructive et
90 miles. As far ars could be judged
by 'a layman, the gun was made by
insetting tin metra tube dnto a 15 -inch
Tong. range naval •gun's barrel, thus
approximately' doubling ,the thickness
of the barrel end compelling it to
carry a shell of about 8 -inches in-
stead of 15. The end of the 'wan
Dame before the gun Could be put into
action.
it
TO SAY GOOD-BYE
TO CANADIAN BOYS
A despatch from London says: -
A movement is afoot in Buxton, the
beautiful little' Derbyshire town where
so many Canadian wounded and in-
capacitated have been cared for, to
"give public expression to the feeling
that we are grateful for the excellent
behavior and management of the
troops."
Public reference is made to the
manner in which Canadian ofacers
Allies Reserve Right to Occupy
Fortress of Strassbourg.
A despatch from Berlin says: -
Under the terms of the prolongation
of the armistice Geemeny must de-
liver by I ebruany 17 some 58,000 have endeavored to interest the in-
agricul'aural machines of vari0u's habitants in the troops by sports and
kinds. hospitality.
A,s a'guarantee for 'the fulfilment of
BRAC
ISHV��'{�'®
Y U.S.�.fTROOPS
hrle` 560) at Birmingham
cl_o S6: •ta
Barley'--1V1ja.F�i}rg, frau 'p„ • n ed for the P9
Was tats
e'..ale D � o. � ' ' Over aQ 999 W 5
„ 25. Cross Society et: Woking by the ail
RLrcTc�wheot-No. .., $1...0.
0' c ding to freighba out'sidt d'
9 0
lege-No,: 2', $1,45, no'ririneds of "Out Day" flags. -
Manitoba : {horns -Ord crop, wet Flee 'did £100,000 damage to the
•giteiTt e, ,$'11 u5, ore to• Colonial . Combing Conrpa'ny's works
Ontario flour --Weir quality, oldat Keighley, Yorkshire.
Teo$0.25 ixt U g a, M'ontread' and girl born on November
ln, 8. A Bristol
TorrolIfe 1---01' sbtpmeliv - the 11th has been registered' with-
1VI1R1£e baba, lobs cleladt. Moat -h istian name of Peaeei
real frgrg�Irbs, lungs iats3 5 20 .Tran, Ilio Christian r$37,25yyper ton; shorts, $4225 per ton. Alderman William Paine has• been:
mixe•'tl, $21 lbo $22 per ton, track II N 1 Tor ox the seventh fvee yule.$23 to $24 per ton chosen
mayor of the city of Chatham:
onto. The paupers of Swansea, are a
'
Toronto.
Provisions, -Wholesale
Barrelled Meats -Pickled pork, $48;
O
flow..
Straw -
Cas lots, $10' t o
$11, trawl, ed to remain in bed three-quarters of
an hour later to ecouomie feet
During four days of armrsGce• cele-
brations the London am0ulances• lladl
lyznpic and Aquitania Will
Also niers .park, $47, gum
three hundred and seventy-one ctslih:.
l'd'
be Loaned During �E'ebruary. les than -smoked.
Green Meats -Out of pickle, le ,While towing a German ffeon a lorry to Croydon; a sol'd5ee• felit
Smoked 1"e-tree--Rollzes 32 to 83c; ender one of the wheels and' was;
A
despatch from New York ass: hairs, medium., 88 bo 89e; Meavy, 30 crushed to death.
-Nine British vessels with a 'total ,� 31s• caalced hams, 51 to 52c; books
carrying capacity of 27,750 men have
been placed at the disposal of the
Amezticam 'Government for the trans-
portation, of troops home, it wee an-
nounced here on Tuesday by British
Ministry of Shipping, These vessels
are the Caron::ia, Adriatic, Minna•-
leoiocla, Cebltie, Canopic, Saxonia, Pan-
monia, Cedric and Orea.
In addition, it is announced, the
Olympic, Mauretania anti Acqui'tanie,
three of the largest British troop
the demands the Entente also re-
serves the right of occupy:nig the sec-
tor
eafor oftbe fortress of Strasbourg form-
ed by ,the fortiffioations'en the right
bank of the Rhine, togetlier with Yt
he was one of the principal war male- steep of territory from five to tett
srse' Kautsky reported. " It is nee- l,9olnetres in front rote .it.
weary to bring him before a tribunal.
CANADIANS ARRIVE
VLADIVOSTOI.
A despatch from Vladivostok
says: -The troopship Protesilaus, with
Lieut. -Col. Bickford, 96 officers, and
1,669 other ranks of the Canadian
Siberian Expeditionary Forces, ar-
rived here on Thursday. Rifleman
Butler, of Peterboro, Ont., was killed
aboard the steamer by falling debris
during a severe storm encountered on
Jan. 1. The death of Butler makes
a total of five to date in the force,
Sergt. Winn, Engineers, who suc-
cumbed to exposure at River Camp
yesterday, being the fifth. The lat-
ter's death is the second to occur at
that camp.
Women workers In Great Britain
are making a vigorous fight to secure
the same wages paid men for the
same kind of work performed by the
The Havas Agency anitounees the
signature of the new clauses of the
armistice es they stood concerning
the surrender of German submarines
ready for sea and the destruct on of
the submarines in the course of con-
straction Which the allied commis-
sioners discovered in German ports in
December. The clause p'l'acing the
German merchant fleet at the disposal
of the allies also was signed.
Two -Hour Aerial Service
London to Peace Conference
A despatch from London says:--
A regular aerial service between Lon-
don and Paris, in connection with the
Peace Conference, will be inaugurated
Monday. A number of airplanes have
been fitted up for the service. They
have a comfortable cabin for two pas-
sengers, including cushion seats and
a table, entirely enclosed with glass.
The airplanes will make the trip in
two hours.
plain,46 to 47c; hacks, boneless, 50
tb 52c. ll
c. bacon, 42 to 47e.
Oottage roll's, 85to 360.
Dry Salted 111;eats--•Long clears,. in wounded soldiers' .tiara Com any> ,tyt
tone, SOC.•. tat- 00003, 3011e; clear lief- The Buttery Co F
lies, 28e {to,28?Jrc; fat hacks, 25c. Worcestershire; 1155 tin0d 'rFp0
Lard: 'fume, tierces, '29?t•c to 30c; failing tri supply.a monthly return to
tubs,`0) to 3011e; pails, e Fuel Controller, "01; to th
203 0; prints, 31 to 311 c. Shorten- The Eccentric Club entertained', at
the Albert Hall ten thousand of tbo
Britis1L.Colonial andAnrerican woun-
ded soldiers.
-The supply of beer at the Newport
Cattle Market on a recent Saturday
showed an increase of over one bun -
Mrs. ,Max de Bathe. of Hartley ,
Court ,Reading, has collee1e4' Per
hundred thousand eggs for the
ing, tierces, 25b4 to 25ees, tabs, 251/41
to 26u; pails, 26 to 26'1.C' 1 -lb prints,
27 to 27112e,
shops, will.' 'bring ,additional American Montreal Markets
troops .tome during February, Montreal, Jan. 21.--0 its, extra
1 feed 851; neer ;lets Standard
iaec v,3111tp2c•
been employed in bringing bonne grade $11.25 to $11.35; rolled oats, dred per cent.
Canadian troops during the past bag 90 lbs,• $4.00 1 vr$4.4 ; bran
. The late Alfred I{edsall, a Deal
months. $37.2x, hol.te $ I1leboat man, is credited with having
568.00 to 310.00; hay, No. 2, per ton, Caved over five hundred livor from
the Goodwin Sands,
Three hundred and twenty-two wo-
men have entered for, the prelinliu-
ary examination of the Institute of
Bankers.
The citizens of EIlistown, a alining
,ddllage of Leicestershire, presented
each of the 175 local soldiers With a
guinea at Christmas.
Lichnowslcy, former Ambassador to Toronto Jan tel. Gbozo Captain Sir George Lloyd was're-
Ebert
Count Georg Arco, and the ceived by the King on his appoint.
Socialist, Karl Kautsky, former Under cattle, clenee, $12.00 to $12.60; do. Ment as Governor of Bombay.
Secretary of Foreigne'Altairs in the good, $11,00 to $11,e0; do. medium, Bernard Gapes, author of "The
Ebert Government, too, 8. 0e $ eerie, of , $10. $8.25
to $8.50; eerie, "choice, $10.25 to Lake of Wine" ttud other romances,
$11,00; do, medium bulls, $9,00 to, died at Winchester from an attack
----g.---• - ear He, $19.00 to $20.00. Cheese,
GERMAN. DELEGATES finestiiasterns $27.00 to $'28.00; but -
TO PEACE CONFERENCE tar choice creamery 5115 to 53c; eggs.
__ selected 57 to i8c; No. 1 stock 62
to 58c; Potatoes, per bag car lots
A ,despatch from Zurich says:: The $1:70;' dressed hogs, abattoir killed
Munich newspapers state that the ,$21.00 to $23.00; lard, pure, wood
German delegates to the Peace Con- pails, 2011es, net 31 to 321/e0,
ference will be Count von Brockdoref-
Rantzau the Foreign Minister; Prince
Live Stock Markets
.2. _.. ' e heavy
steers, $13.00 to $13.60;' bubob'ers'
-----•--R;r--5555--
Admiralty Will Not Relax
Blockade Against Germany
A, despatch from London says
The • Admiralty has no immediate in-
tention of relaxing its st iet blockade
against Germany, the Central News
says it learns.
$9,50; do. roughbulls, $i7.$10.25• 8,000
to
cows,
$10.76; do. good, $9.50 to $10.00; de.
medium, $8.50 to 88.75; do. common,
$7.00 to $7,.75; stockers, $8,00 to
$10.00; feeders, $10.50 ;to $11.50;
enriners, $6.00 to $6,50; milkers,
good 'to oho'lce, $90.00 •to $140.00• do.
corn. and med. $055.00 to $75.00:
Springers, $90.00 to $140.00; light
ewes, 810.00 to $10,50;, yearlings,
$12,75 to $13.25; spring lames,
$15.25 to $16.001 calves, good to
choice, $16.00 to $17.75; liege,
weigtheel off cars, $17.25• do, fed and
watered $17.00; do. teen country
points, $1(3.25.
Montreal, Jan 21: Chhoite stems,
$12.00 to $33.00; ,
811,50; medium $9...00 to $1.0.00;
choice butcher bulls, $D.00 to 810.00;
goad, $8.50 to $9.00; meditun, $8.0¢
to $$.50; choice butcher cows, $9.50
'to $10.60; good, $8.00 to $9.00;
medium, $7.00 to $8.00; canners,
6.00 to $6.00; sheep, $9.00 to
411.00; lambs, 811.00 to $13.00; milat
fed calves, $12.00 to $15.00; grass-
fed, $5,00 to $7.00; choice select
hogs, $18 to 18.25.
A Worth -While Purchase.
Alaska has been worth match more
than its cost to the 'Matted States. A
half•century ago Alaska was pur-
chased at a cost of 47,200,000, and that
original investment has been returned
to the nation more than seventy Sold,
for from the products of the land and
sea Alaska has 'added to the national
Wealth upward of $000,000,000, the
greater part of which has been pro•
duced during the last 20 years. Two
sources of large and steady 1000155 are
A New Stunt -New ways of handling aeroplanes are being dev'se'd
every day. This, flying machine uses ship's guns as Cts starting p'at- copper ore and the fisheries. But I am there.
form.- ......nor s,en�u.mrm,annyt, mwerma¢ r
:,. _-... ®�s.�,,,a..._,,.<..,.ao. 1`liere 11 no wound that yea may ever
of influenza,
A naw extension to the Albert
Docks system is to be completed at
once for the anticipated shipping ac-
tivities after the war.
London milkmen' made an appeal
to their customers on behalf of the
Red Cross, using quart sans as col-
lecting boxes.
.A -civic monument has been un-
veiled in a London area 131 memory
of twenty-one citizens killed by Ler-
man ;bombs.
Lord Furness has presented Turn -
stall House to West Hartlepool ria :t
training home for disabled 50ldicee
and Sailors.
--------„..•5555'-
'"Tile heart of Wonsan.
When down the mud -black Flanders
• road
The ranks file by,
You know not that I walk- with you,
But there am I.
You limp a little-lauegh, and do not
care -
It is my feet that leave the blood-
stains there.
Through all the fury and the flame,
The hate and wrath,
Through all the ways of dread and •
pain,
I share your path,
You take it as the day's work undis-
mayed, .
It is my flesh that shrieks and le
afraid:
There is no burden on your strength
-I do not bear,
There is no horror that you face
-_ ._. - -__ know)
3)3 ',Ti �:•�� S a'tr 513"5' 3E", ,�°:F M m But that my heat was shattered by
the blow•
ytit'Ija�lt ii - _
And if from out the sower% hand
ow �� Your life is thrown
r5i fNE , A. seed against the harvest --there
Ga'T r 4, too, am'sown.
You will attain the grail :in that last
er oe r - t * �^'"'C� baeatlo
{.• , � Bee,.
• i � t"' � ' death. oltly kno44 'the sting of
(Lt. F11DR THI'b
Tom IN HERE
WE0LR-1•M our
And 2 at last -at last ,you coma
To home -to home -to me,
Only the woman that yon left
Your eyes will see, .
And you will never know I enter, too, .
haiel phare the rapture of return with
?012. tt
The. British Agrbetolleteal Wages
Boa}•d recently issued orders fixing
minimum and maximum ratee for wo-
men 'workers for the whole •0f :Qveat
Britain and. Wales.