HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-01-05, Page 67
1
•"•''
•er
imeemettementef,disid7"d:Jleti
1
EXPOSITOR
meemies
TAT-X,T40
Sir John Jellicoe is
ri Gm a 25 emit bottle t tee h
a right new—I$�- meat First Sea
L�rd
hint, saidp•
tie Inspires Confidence
v31°718" ala craggy
dance of a neglected
diff—that awful lialut
• adtleing ete destruetiVe to-
dMidrult It robstlIe hair
110M Ito strength and lts fterii
eineitittalIM Producing a feverise
mew amfl diehhig of the ecalp, whitt
It lot remedied causes the hair root-.
loosen and die --;:then
hallo out fast. A little Dander:is
-
time—will sureie
t/our hair.
i• -
Get,* 35 cent bottle of Kntrivlt.on's
tents troM any drug store. You
ORM lia.ao beautiful hair and lote
af It if nett will just try a little Dan-
deitin‘ Save your hair! Try
• 1 • a oritical time h the conntra s
eisnossionmetsne mem
HP aPliOintraeint a - Sir John
jellicoti as First Sea Lord-
-
has given to the Empire a
Sense of content, aud eatia- .
faetion which it Gordy needed. " We
have known the distiliguighed officer
as Cammander-itaChief of! the Grand
Fleet, the master a fleet organiza-
tion and Command, bearing enorin-
ous reeponsibilitiesi and }conducting
quietly and 'efficiently 4 work of
which no words ',,e•uld !exaggerate
the pa.ramoune importance,. Now we
see him brought to the Aaralialtsd at
' bis -
his. right
Mind Fleet,
t 'place as
• .1
A Rio Snap
ivonegovelmioof
Five mid est quarter sexes Od
choice rielt, at* adjoining Gobi**
town, twenty' eilsintes *ilk front the
wears with a splendid fruit orchard
and small fraste -buildings. Must
be sold at once and can be bought foe
leea teen $1.,000. This is a Real bal-
1 gain= ''bettsr spot on earth for
t garden truck or poultry' farm. If yeti
want it apply today ...or particuisrs.
itteneegate pOSSOSSIOU given. We are
Hurdn's *mat real estate dealer
'O'Neil and Co.
GoDnnVa-, oNT
OENT ‘‘CASCAltETS"
FOE LIVER. AND BOWELS
Cure Sick Headache, Constipation,
. Biliousness, Sour Stomech, Bad
Bre-athe-Candy Cathartic.
err
No odds how bad your liver, stom-
ach or bowels; how retch your head
aches, how miserable you are from
coneitipatien, Indigestion, biliousness
and sluggish bowels—you always get
relief with Casearets. They • imme-
dlately cleanse and regulate the stem-
ach, remove the sour, fermenting fOod
and foul gases; take the excess bile
from the liver and carry off the con-
stipated waste matter and poison
from the intestines and bowels. a A
10 -cent hex from your druggist will
keep yoilf liver and bovrels clean;
stornachosweet and head er for
months. They work while sleep.
".„:„"
Stratford, Ont.
Ontario' *a.Beat Practical Training.
School with Commercial Short-
s& and Telegraph Depittment.
Students are entering each week.
The demand on us for trained help
is many times the numer graduat-
ing. Get out' free catalogue at
ones.
D. A. McLachlan, Princicipal
they. If SIT John was i
Place at the head of the.G
he is not less Inhis rig
First Sea Lord. •
He was designated,
that same office long befo
As Second. Sea Lord he h
for the Flee
a great work
It was known that he was
a sea command it was known also
that he would return to 'he Admire
alty _as First.Sea Lord.
There has been a certa n sense, of
disquiet in England at a .sort of
quiesence that seemed to lave settled
upon the Admiralty. Whether the
disquiet was juatified is net the ques-
tion here. The extension of the Mere
maesubmarine campaign, to distant
wa.ters called obviously for new dia-
..
deed, for
the war.
wrought
, and when,
to be.eveit
um Coiwicte� as, a Spy -
Dreyfus, Victim of a Plot,
Now i1ihts for France
*48.4444.4T Is not
aae 0F rt a jai inrooph
yDr
: Y, and' who w
gebtseinegreftoorf tihs
In:Mg la*rels
he Ge. rmaae w
•aetrate the tl
Ydratilic brake
uta• feature, e
tereiting to r
nneetion with
eyfus was deg
will be kerne
r in the office
r:seAdttaebhi: Win
ss'
_rap of: paper
re to explore
t
et.
As a result h succeeded in plea -
g together. a d u out whieht PrO-
d that SOMe each o weer was. a
traitor.
On the utatttr being reported to
he Minister fo Wart ah investiga-
t on was held, and Captain. Drey-
we of the art Ilery, was arrested
leasittedi;Masimiette
eral y , known that,
fu , who 'f,iguOd
hist ry ; twenty-t*O
an alleged Gerne4lit
a a eused of Selling
Fr: nch
co try to -day and
n the battlefiei&
reeiniest able to
ret of the famous
iv -hi h Is so irnpot-
tli
.75egun.
call that it was in
this that Ceattalit
aded and sentenced.
bared that the jani-
of the German Mill-
s, pkolted up 1 a
00 ntght which
108i and- incited
e , este paper base
Prime Minister's Tour
Will Stir the Loyalty
Of All Strong Canadians,
IR ROBERT BORDEN'S na-
tion-wide nem on behalf of
national service will un-
doebtedly profoundly appeal
to he patrioltiain of the \country, The
me Minister's misiiion is n,ot—as
his great speech in Montreal attested ;
m4n behalf of a. political party; hita
appealis to allheanadians, Irrespece
tive of parte, origin, or creed. N.
Canadion statesman—and. We OW
thiti Without dears). to overlook the
entinent services of others—ehae earn*
ed, a greaterright to ;challenge the
BritishSpirit of our people. During
hav a seat n Faille nt, 1 ame no
tiro for criticism. My t k, d such 1
effo t as I am able to exert, have -
bee from the heginnitig b,e ind the
le r. -eyed Purpose of tne Pri e Min-
iste , and they are so *OW; and so,
I b lieve, are the tho gilts and ef-
for s of the People of ana a. For
eirkilt believe thio: t at - hatever
clams are to be offe ed, batever
rep tations are to be ade or lost,
UM is not the tune for thes thinge.
Thi is the time to staid u der the
flag that we all love, nd or the
gre test cause that e a mated
our people and our people's allies,
and behind a Governm nt 1 whom
tom will record t , on the
wh le, it has done well It is for us
to tand for that eau e an ander
1,
tha flag until victory mats pan our
be flora It is because the p ople of
tifl country believe that th Prime
toter and his Go .ere ent and
the majority of his su port rs have
tak ii. that attitude an
mi ed to occupy it to
a 0 nee eye to victor
far transcends the
y—it is because
e this that I heliev
the Governmeut u
obody should dre paying
Prime Minister th silly compli-
t of. saying that he has ade no
takes. Like all hu, n b inga he
ot infallible, but 0 his denirds-
Ion this may be said: tha in.vital
ntials it hes moved ever cirward,
in the right direction, ever to -
d the goal which 'the. anadian
it
ple have set for t ems Ives in
war:. Brrors of j dgra at there
have tmen, but its mpul s have
n the. right impulses, its. mothem
right motioes, its pies the
t principles. And einless we
e veam much the tenber o the Ca -
an people—their solid rity of
`zenaine, their serieesness of pine
e their understareling of the
teveen:that:
e shpriouldme
theft in-
edidons
41
It
11
f.
the laet time and m half years Sir
' lteberti Borden has' guided the • De-•;
-minion through the, most Mem* 11
crisis in its tdat04—through the shin
mOst. critical: period in the history ,of
, the world. The problems that his
. pre eeess the
d ore had to salve were incoa-
sersntial in comPatieon with those, ra
He haft, rested .under a burden,
WO
HAD WEAK HEART
COULD NOT WORK
COULD NOT SLEEP.
Mem"- women are kept in a state of
fear of death, become weak, worn and
miserable and are unable to attend to
their household, social or business duties,
accoimt of the =Mural action of
the heart
To all such materers IVIllburn's Heart
and Narve Pills ere prompt and per-
manent relief,
Mrs. J. Day, 26t John Street South,
ntainilten, Ont., writes: "I was so run
down with a -we& heart I could not even
swmp the lime, no could I sleep at
night. I was so awfully sick sometimes
tl; had to stay in bed all day as I mas so
weak. I used three and a half boxes of
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and
am a -cured women to -day, and as strong
sis anyone octild be. I am doing my own
housework, ieven' my own washing.
doctored for over two years but got
ato hdp =rill I used your pills.
'# Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are
Ea. per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all
dealers or reatied direct on receipt of
iee *Vito T. MIL,BURST CO., Lnerteln,
, Onee
For Prices
'ma terms el sale of des following
brands apply a --
ma ORDER DEPARTMENT
estioelBrowegisa Unita -
lime 63 RS Maimilin Squira.
MONTREAL
Arn
INDIA PALE ALE
CROWN STOUT
PALE BITTER MS
DOUBLE sTOISIS
MALT EXTRA
Dawe
Ea MD PALE A
e SLACK. ORSE A
EXTRA STO
BLACK HORS- PORTER
Lurie. B---KINGSHUR CLUB SPECIAL
HOMEBREW
PALE ALE
- PORTER
RONEAMAPI LAGS.
twoomsioweiltIlliii111117M/X ."117.7...311
aflfl
are liod.
more aitert
ONLYla localities whirs
iria b.
no &eased steles testate -
•
- sat Ipiticazi0Oon.
„.T4A Aar Beard had no
„
answered thtY expeetations of the
'Country, and the Adinireltyi was sup-
posed to be the obstacle that resist-
ed development. What the Admiral-
ty .had asked for was a sufficiency .of
machines of thettype required for its
duties. For the solution of these
and other problems Sir John Jellicoe
has unrivaled experience. Coming
-
fresh frora the greatest command
ever eommitted to an admiral he
will bring to the Admiralty the very
experience, and, the very authoritte
it requires. On the question. of the
air service, which has been; so much
debated, the Empire may now feel
complete confidence in whatever the ,
Admiralty may db, for the new First 4
Sea Lord knows well, from his own
experience, what are the aircraft re-
quireinents of the Fleet.
Few naval officers have had more
varied experience than Sir John Jelli-
coe. His long experience at sea is
matched by his great experience of
naval administration. In the creation
of the modern navy he has played a
conspicuous part, and has all along
been associated in that matter with
Lord Fisher. For three years he
was assistant director ef naval ordn-
ance when Lord Fisher was chief of
that departnient He was a member
of the ordnan.ce committee and naval •
assistant to the 'controller of the t
navy in those expansive times. Then
he himself beca.me a _lord. commis-
sioner of the admiralty and control-
ler of tile navy, and after command-
ing the Atlantic fleet andthe .second
division of the Home fleet he be-
came second sea lord. How as a
young officer he -had risked his .life to
same the lives of others is well
known. He was, commander of the
Victoria when she went down off Tri-
poli in collision with the Camper -
down in 189.3. His nerve rem.ained
unbroken in that terrible .experi-
ence, and throughout his career he
has retained' that quiet self-posses-
sion which is the mark of the man
conscious of his strength and assur-
ed of his powers.
Sir Sohn bits a singular power of
winning men to himself. He has
evoked the best froni every officer.
and Lad.n in the fleet, and deep will
be the sorrow at his departure. Only
those who know him 'know how
greatly he is beloved by the sereice.
-We may be sure that he will bring
about him at the Admiralty those
who will work whole-heartedly with
him. He has been for years a
thoughtful student of tactics and is a
master of strategy, which latter will
be his chief business in his new of-
fice. He is charged now with the
strategical distribution and opera-
tions of the fleets, and the best rela-
tions must exist between himself and
the gallant offivcer who succeeds him.
Jellicoe is a pattern of all that is
test in the navy, - Having himself
held the supreme command for over
two years,, he knows what must be
the. relation of the Admiralty to the •
mainland at sea, and that is perhaps
the greatest advantage that will re-
ult from his appointraent.
•
4:1APTAIN DREYFUS.
! on suspicion. The Whole case de-
; vended on the handwriting, and two
' xperts were brought in. They &s-
eed, and just when the judge was
°liberating, a messenger from the
.1f,finister entered and showed a
legram from the 'German • to the
talian Attache, which read, "That
al of a Dreyfu is becoming too,
g." 'That s aled the officer's
te, and he, 'Wass sent to Devil's Is-
ICASTOR I A
Xer Infants and Children,
Da KW YO -1 Nave Aims keit
Bears tie
Signature of
-
le .
. Dreytae. Proteited his jetteceeenee,
and his real friend*, believed in. him.
Later on a neWspaper published a
mile of the f mous letter. It
was identified by. stock-breker as
being in the Aland of Major Ester -
hazy, one Of his a ents.
'Another initest gation revealed
the fact that Esterhazy Was a man
of dissolute habits, but cleared him
of the major chaege. Later 011 a
ehange in. the Freuch General Staff
resulted in some oid correspondence
being overhauled *hich seemed. to
implicate both Esterhazy and Colonel
Henri. The later as arrested;, that
rdelt he killed hitaself, and Ester -
hazy disappe.ared:
Flarther investigations established
the fact that Henri and Esterhazy
were the traitors, and that they ha -d
tampered with 'the telegram that led
to Dreyfus' conviction. Originally It
read—"That animal of a D is becom-
ing too exacting," and ,referred to a
COUIMOU intrigue, and net to Ihmyfus,
whose name was inserted to ensure
his con.vietion:
The accidental discovery of the
torn paper by the Paris concierge
undoubtedly caved the secret of the
Preach .75 from Germany. Dreyfus,
althonorably restored to mhis form-
er honors, is now fighting for France
against the enemy who was mainly
responsible for biz downfall.
eFEWEELFRYNIN TIOEN,lettaS.
liEsliting of Rings and Other Things
Soldier's' Pastime.
• The monotony of life in the
French, as in the British trenehes is
varied by a nuimber of small indus-
tries', turning to account bits or stcine
or wood or enemy cartridge, cases and
spent bullets ln ingenious trifles for
use or for mementos.
Quite the most popular manufac-
ture is that of finger rings from the
alutnizuun used in. Germa.n shells—
"les betimes boehes" they are called.
Them are of many kinds, from rough-
ly hollowed out circlets to highly po-
lished rings decorated with delicate-
ly shaped fern leaves and hearts or
inlaid with pieees of polished' French
topper on the tap of the German.
metal. The French soldiers carry
this passion, ter making amateur
jewelry into hospitals.
The Brittah nurses at L'Abbaye
Royaumont tell us that most of their
'patients who can use their hands,
,are busy makirm "les bagues boch.es"
at every available moment atter the,
surgeon's morning visit. They all
have their little stores of G-erman
aluminum in their musettes of poc-
kets and many .have brought with
them a complete outfit of files, Mee,
emery -paper, and finger blocks cut
from bits of eticks. When the time
comes for the "sertants" to bid good-
bye to comrades and staff there is an,
interchange of souvenirs. Then it tee
that "les bagues boahee" fulfill a
pleasant destiny of further strength-
ening the entente cordiale as gifts
for the fingers of Britleh ward sis-
ters and nurses. Manchester Guard-
ian.
Warming the Hands --
For warming the hands there has
been invented a small perferated
tube containing an asbestos pad with-
out which is a wick to be soaked in
bessin.e and lighted.
.1 -
th t 'confronted and still confront' ) rar
oft responeibfilty heavier' than that tra
borne by any ether Prime Minister
since Genfecieration, and when all let
known, and the fnlf story, is told.,
history Will, we believe, pronounoes
that he has displayed great qua -Mies
--qualities which were necessary ter
the great partethe 'n.ation, bag played
in this struggle.
- In the memorable speech that he
delivere4 in Parliament on the war
vote last session, Dr. Michael Clark,
one of the pillars of the Liberal
party, who is to speak from the
'same platform with' the Prime Min- ;
eriSis through vrhich they h
es
eve
Wa
pe
thi
ma
be
the
rig
ta
na
cit
1. ar
he e
for
squ
•e pe
the
til t
of
deter -
d, with
a cause
bbles of
ple be-
am be-
e war is
'4
ister in. the West, paid this earnest
' tribute to Sir Robert's condect of
the war:
"I listened with very great care to
the statement of my right hon. friend
the Prime Minister from beginning
to end. I listened to it calmly, and
as 1 listened I was proud to be a
citizen of Canada, and proud to bem
citizen because of what the pressed
Government of Canada has done in
connection with this war. There
were certain -things which loomed up
before my mind as I listened to that
statement, and the nrst thing with,
which I was impressed was the mag-
nitude of the burdens and the ma
sponsibilities which came upon the
Goverament of a sm.sil portion of the
British Empire wit)1 the swiftnesa
and the suddenness that we know
eharacterizea the commencement of
this war."
"It was my privtlege, as it was mfr
honor, at the beginning of the war,
and as it has been more than owe
since, to: express what was my cleat
ecinviction then, and. what is equally,
my clear con.viction now: that the
head of the Government and the
Government itself and the m.ajoriter
of its supportershivere seized at once
With the importance of the 1sSUeS4,
and bent their whole energies to the
task o1. contributingee proper quota
on the part of CanaQeto the succesee
ful proseention of tbe war. That'
was mer couVietiore then and it is
cenvictio, n now, arta I am ele.ar itt
o0 Mind that hiWiry- will reeord. ,
whateVer b& petty Petty Poli km.*W.-e
fortimes of party in this couhtry,
the nett or any other election -ref alai
confident that the impartial historian.
will record that my -right hon. friend
who leads the Government has, front
the day the war -cloud burst, kept a
single eye to the winning of the war,
and has not been. Ied aside or divert-
ed from that putpose by any small
motive or any small e,onelderation
whatsoever."
Thie le not the fullsonte eulogy oe
a partisan admirer. It is the honest
onion of a fair antageniat, the
sturdiest champion' ,of Liberalism
that this country has known since
the days of Cartwright and Blake -7—a
Radical of the British school who
ataiked by the side of Morley and
Gladstone in days gone by.
It is easy enough ia a time of crisie
to find fault with governments. It
does not, as on. Arthur Meighen ao
well said the other day, take a big
man nor a great ma,n, to create alerin
in time of war. In a notable lecture
on the "Liberty of Citikenship" !e,
great American political Philosopher
lately said:
-To rebuild history itt teneghtatichl
and to avoid in, our minds the errors
that have been made is not at all a
difficult art. It is no mare difficult
than to get rich out of yesterday's
stock market. But the statesman:
who stands in the front of the ad-
vancing line and facing the future,
has no control over the past. His
eonsain ie the present and he. strives
to influence what is to come. He
must act before he knows what is
going to turn out."
These -words admirably describe
the differeum between Sir .Robert
Borden and his critics in the conduct
of our share of the war. The Prinee
minister is the man who has beeil,
and is to -day, "in the front of the
advancing line," and who has to eet
.before he knows how' things are go-
ing; to turn out. His critics sojourn
in the calm. shades of irresponsibility
and with all the advantages that
come from rebuilding history in
Imagination and getting rich out at
yesterday's stock market rush upen
platform and into print to censcire
the, man who is bearing the bruut of
the battle. To this class—and they
are not all included in one party—
we again ar iraend the words of Dr.
"'Yu cannot make omelets with-
out breaking eggs.' It is one of the
misfortunes of -war that it brings
guided, and the grave fut
they f , and their. eompr
of the that thisernntr
plaiy in this world - ---t
Mi s appeal to their
sti et and their Britieh
will niA bespokenia
no
of
wh
wo
be
be
eri
ed
dis
fin
ira
th
co
act
ta
be
be
ma
he
we,
le
St
of
v.
sy
ca,
wi
REPUTATIO, N.
ill0F. HUGO NitiNST 'RBERG
of Harvard, whose cavities
on behalf of G rma y in the
'Melted States have been so
orious since . the c mm mcemeet
he war, fell dead a few ays ago ,
le lecturing to a e ass M young
en. If he had diled bsfore the
inning of the war Ie wo ld have
n profoundly mourn by the Am-
en people as one of their greatest
cators. Passing way now. he
ppears amid the reek ge of a
reputation, regrett d on y by his
ediate friends. he eopie of
United States wh k kn w Prof,
ensterberg realized soon eter the
inning of the war that hey had
pletely misunderst od is ehar-
r , and aimshey realized;
reover, that -all . the year he had
ti lecturing at Ha ard he had
u an unoffielal age t of the Ger-
Governniellt, sow lig s eds that
hoped to reap tor Ger 1 any. in
's red harvest. 1 onsb ereel the
ding psyhchkelogist itt ti e United
tes and ranked as t Ito y flower
German culture, h sud enly re -
led himself !a. Junker, with no
pathy for ideals t at th Amera
people as a wh le c erished,
h not even the thoughtf 1 man's
eierifinee
IleROF. HUGO OfUN'STE
BERG
ab lity to weigb evide ee or rid him-
self from race prejudi e. He justified
the attack on 13elgiuM; the sinking
of the Lusitania; ever e outtage that
the German army counnitte , and he
soaght to show the Amerie n people
that their duty was to bee me Ger-
meny's ally. For a time he was Ger-
many's beat spokesmau 4n t e United
Stites, for he threw hrasel , into the
wcrk of propagaeda w th tremendous
enthusiasm and ingeneity.
He wrote ietters to the nelw'spapers
r lils own signature, and' over the
s' nature of others. He Inljerviewed
miters and public mon, ana though
re uffed time and again he vould re-
appear whenever ati op ortunity
presented itself. In the !past few
months he char dhb methods. for
11011Me
R1OF HUGO MUNSTERBEgG L9ST I
1
greater profits even to the farmers, 7/.r' YOUR Ce_eD x CROSFe
to the sons who are left at ,honte
while the other sons are sacrificing FEVERISH, CONSTICEATED
all they have at the front. Mistakes?
Of course. And critics? Of course.
Said Byron,
'A man must serve his time to eve**
trade,
But censure critics all are really
made.'
"For my part, in such a crisis la
the history of our Empire and of the
country, as a private individual citi-
zen who happens for a momeitt
liat beams ititia ChMage
Om thertireviir
**•.2osimbeeoes.4,
LOok Mother! If torigue a coated,
cleanse little bowel* wIt4 "Cali-
fornia Syrup of Roar
Mothers can rest eesy after giving
"California Syrup of Figs," liecailse
aefew hours all the clegged-up waste,
ficiur bile and fiermentieg feod gently,
moves out of the &mete, and you have
a well, playful Child ese/da.
Sick children 'coedit% be Owed to
talte this hamlets* 'Ina laxative."
Millions of withers keep it heady he-
c4use dioy know Eta aetloa ea the
stpma, liver and' boZ is prompt
arkd sure.
eat bet-
" which
&Wren
!Ask now drenglet
tie of °Califon% Sy= of El
contains -directions Ler
of all ages and ter
emetemme
urity! Nutty. Puri
The one dominating note that rims
all through the making of Sun
Soap is Purity.; The $5,000 Guarso,
antee you get -with every single bar
, is not a mere advertisement It
marks a standard set for the buyers
who select the choice S 4t
materials—for the soap boiler—for
the expert chemists—for the girls,
even, who wrap and pack Sunlight.
Aft are mindful of the Guarantee
--wit is a source of gratification to
all the Sunlight workers.
Surd.' h
oa
ne oaa come to ate conclusion tnat
the sentiment of the American people
could not be turned against Great
Britain. Then he came forth with
the proposal that Germany, Britain,
and the United States should form
an alliance which should guarantee
their own future and the peace of the
world. Ridicule met this suggestion
and gradually. Munsterberg fell -
silent. His ela,sses at Harvard, whien
used to be perhaps the most numer-
ously attended at the university, fell
away from him. His superiors at the
great American seat of learning
spoke out strongly in opposition to
his teaching. His influence, except
with Gerinan-Americans, disappear-
ed. His formetastanding as a psy-
chologist was forgotten, and the pub-
lic generally earde to regard him as
a pest. Nor is It likely that when
the war is Ocelt• his former reputation
will be revived..
Hugo Munsterberg was moved to
my last year •In one of the periods
in which he Was subjected to Ameri-
can criticistnefor his ardent advocacy
of the German cause: "I anx a Ger-
man and have never intended to lie
anything (aim." He had prolonged
his stay in the United States chiefly
beco.use he had become "fascinated
by the hope to help toward interna-
tional amity." He conceived his
task to he that of an. interpreter "of
the German ideals to the English-
speaking lands, and the Anglo-Saxon
ideals to Germany." Et incessantly
eulogized eGerman kultim and pro-
phesied that it would spread over all
nations, but he denied that he had
participated itt any political action of
the Germen Americans.
The intensity- of pro -Ally senti-
ment in the community in which
Professor Munsterberg lived and.
worked cost him, however, the es-
trangement of colleagues who Wore
the war had been among his closest
friends. Professor Josiah Royce was
one of these, and on the latter's
death, last September, Professor
Munsterberg absented himself from
the funeral on the ground that his
presence might prove embarrassing.
The sent a floral tribute, however, and
in answer to triticism ,penned
marked eulogy of his old associate.
Twice his resignation as a Harvard
professor had been urged by col-
leagues and alumni of the university
bemuse of his propagandist efforts in
behalf of Germany, the second time
in. October, when a letter Purporting
to have been written by him to Chan-
- cellor von Bethmaxtu-liollweg was
intercepted by the British authori-
ties. In this letter Professor Mun-
sterberg was. quoted as predicting
' that President Wilson would jump
at the chance to become peace medi-
ator.
1100nr for All on Earth.
There are on this globe about 1,-
500,000,000 inhabitants. 'Most of
us, who lack the sense of proportion,
at the mentiou of this big number are
apt to speak of `the "overpopulation's
of the world. Yet, if we spare a few
moments' thought we shall better
know what this represeets.
There is in my study room a geo-
graphic globe about fifteen inches in.
diameter. On that sphere there is
marked a little slot about the size of
the point of a pencil—at any rate, so
small as to make it impossible to
write the initials of its name, Lake
Champlain, upon it. Yet, whenever
Lake Champlain freezes over, there
is good standing room for every one
of all the inhabitants of the earth,
and. then this lake would be consider-
ably less crowded than some of the
busy etrcets of New York.
Indeed, strange as it may sound,
every one, young and old, would find
about one square yard to stand upon.
Nay, inore, if the very young and the
•
very old would pleaee to stand aside
crn, the shores of the lake, the remain-
der a the total inhabitants of the
world could arrange a skating partye
where there would be less crowding
than is aeen on a busy winter day on
that skating pond in New York's,' Cen-
tral Park.—S. H. Blakeland itt
lid21111.
111 1-
Shell Shea: iss the etterm.
That peculiar nervous aired:too
popularly caned "eheil shock" bail
been one of the mast prolific tiamaen
of temporary or perinanent disahnitte
in this war, says The New Ti
World i Itt all of the armies lemma
numbers of men have had to be ten
Talided home because of this fwaee
tional nervous ailment, althougle
they are physically sound. In fetre
medical men who have studied tneose4
cases of "ahell shock" assert thafl
the wounded are gractically immense
preenmably, say $ lone distiwebefedf
English surgeon, "because a want
neutralizes the action of the psycialti
causes of shell shock."
It is asserted that "physimi owe
cussion resultng from a Shell mislallaq
aloe" Is "an extremely rare and ene-
usual Cause." The same is saki
alleluia -el intoxication by gasses Mime
.eratee 1 ellen explosions. In Owl
vast majority of cases inestimtimatafle
him beeti found that the causes" Ara
purely psychic in their aatesso.4
"Horrible sights are the most totei
quant and potent factor in the tame
daction of this shock," says Dr. Hare
old Wiltshire, an Etnglish somMeeed
"Losses and the fright of
buried are also important in this,10-4
spect. Gradual temeleie
from continued fear is an.
disposing cause, partieulady
nI neuropatitic dispositioa." ;
A Talk on Rheumatism
TELLING HOW TO ACTUA
CURE THIS PAINFUL
MALADY.
This article is for the man or woman
Who suffers from rheumatism, who
wants to be cured. not merely relieved
t -•-but actually cured. The most the
rheumatic sufferer can hope for in
rubbing something on the tender ach-
ing joint, is a little relief. No lotion
or liniment ever did or can make a
cure. The rheumatie PailiOn is rooted
in the blood. Therefore rheumatism
can only be cured when this poisonous
acid is driven out of the blood. Any
doctor will tell you this is true. If
you want something that will go right
to theroot.of the trouble in the blood
take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They
make new xich blood which drives out
the poisonous acid and cures rheuma-
tism to stay cured. The truth of therm
statements has been proved in thou-
sands of cases throughout Canada, and
the following cure is a striking in-
stance. Mrs. F. M. Simpson, R.R. No.
I, Blenheim, Ont., says: "For a long
tiene I was confined to ray bed, and
actually crippled with rheumatism.
The trouble first located in my ankle--;
which was much swollen. I thought.- it
might be a sprain but hte doctor sea
it was rheumatism and advised inc to
go to bed so that the trotigle wouki
not be taggravated. I did as directe&
them caused me considerable pain. I
knee, and then to my arras. The limbs
first to my right knee, then to my left
but instead of getting beter itspread
were much swollen, and if I moved
seemed to get week 1 nother respects
and fell off in weight from 154 to 110
pounds. I had no appettite and seemed
to lose interest in everything. One
day while reading a paper 1 Wine
across the case of a rheumatic sufferer
cured by using Dr. Williams Pink Pine
I decided th try them and sent fon
three boxes. By the time these were
gone 1 had certainly begun to improve
and with help was able to get up. Con-
tinuing the use of the pills I was first
able to go about with the use of the se
crutch, which later I discarded for a.
cane, and then through the use of the
pills I was able to throw the cane =dee
as well, and go about as briskly as. a
ever had done. I feel that Dr,
Hams Pink Pills have been ablessing ted
me, and 1 strongly recoil -line -lid them
to other similsx sufferers.. a
You can procure these pills through
any dealer in medicineor get them be -
mail at 50 cents a box for six boxes
for $2,50 fro mthe Dr. Williams Medi+
eine Go., Brockville, Ont. .
34j
\M.
,r
7
-:1
Man
lead,
Mlud
food,
lear
eau
Fat
by
?arm
You.
Se ss
,g337w::
ife
eer