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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-01-03, Page 644 S- a York Ophtlial- Mooteflati's n Throat Ros- en, Ent. At the Queen's third Wednesday in on m 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., I Street, South, Stratford. one Stratford; $14444 .44.....7,44..14704rradirr444414.44*,4444744444.44.44..4 LEGAL. R. S. HAYS. Barrister, Solleitor,Conreyaneer and Naar* P 'Solicite'r for •th. 'Do- minion Bank. Office ill rear of the Do- minion Bank, `Seafortie Money to loan. M. BEST. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and 'Notary Public., Oflice upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Nutt) Street, Seem -ea. • PROUDFOOT. KILLOR COOKE. Barristers, Solicite otaries Ue,de. Money to I In Seaforth On Mentor of each week. Office in . Kidd Block W. -Proudfoot, J. L. Killoratt, X., D. Cooke. x I tEtra vest Of Advtature Arctic 0 much of clartne ef peril, and f f . ; all the elemprits,.or adven- rlrefis bound -up, in the career,. -of Vilhiarnvir --,Stefalieson. as an explorert that, although he has frequently been heard fioin, during the Ave and one-lialif Years embraced in his latest Vanderings in the iiiretie regionS, the' story . of his experienees I unit dischheries, which he is telling - on thetlecture 'Platform, will have suffered not discount. Stefanseon has I been one Of the . most assiduous of , - .. . , 'Ole explorers.' The qn t of thc ; rth Pole he left to ot ers. Foy ' 'the great white region of thesi- lent North .contelned math 'things of .. interest other than the Pole, and he , hes found most of them. He is back ND W ITSTERINANY., F. HARBURN, V.S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-1 kry (7,611ege, and honorary membee of° Th Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of *31 domestie animals by the TOORt TrUld- brn prhicioles. Dentistry and Milk F ev- wt- shecialth. Office crenosite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All or- ders left at the hotel will receive prompt attention. Night "calls receiv- ed at the office. Trdaid..*...............44•44.48444,444444*,44444•44•44.4* • JOHN GRIM. . S Honor graduate-- of Ontario Veterin- . err +Geneve. All Oieeases oI dometitie animals treated. Calls wromettly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet - *vinery Dentistry a seeeialtv. Office and -residence; on Goderich street one Itotte east of pr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. 0.rriar" roassmorporearwrarriporsomarriar...., MINSrlinerler. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMAItTN. Osteothatic Physician of Goderich. Speeialist in women's and Children* rhenteatism. acute, chronic tuel nervous &cede: eye ear, nose and throat. Ccmsalta,tion free. Offiee In the Roval Seaforth. Tues- liart and Fridays, 8 a.m. till I pen. on _his native Canadian soil. ()nee More, • reporting, along -with other things, that the principal reason why he has not continued to chronicle the - discovery of new lands during the latter part of his journeying is that there is now no new land to be die- •eovered in that quarter of the globe. The record of the five and one-half years. shows that he found lend which had never =before been seen by any White' explorer; that he found hith- • erto unknown currents, the discovery of which' was more important than the finding of new land; that he re -e- duced the notoertsteuce of a new con- tinent to a certainty; that, instead, he was able to define two islands with A total area of 30,000 square tallest that on these are coal .deposit; as accessible as the Spitzbergen coal Are , D'sorting soldiers, were tot hh frrh file ion. ar t4e. Itafluir-t,hoiiigi, _tto they it teit to °dr hehte eor:141.i0:-'1:4`.nt of ith:- vilr-Aricti_ Ile 1 Cthrinstith.1361:sheet:kit -'01 catthi -Ate I I-. 15„ WOrh of explori.lat,i, , . ,et „ America and Japan :Stealing: ,Att tr.0.11Az.,11„.4 atroady, v,12“t, i„),,,t l'i.a'S t lt easternereroi Siberia,and, a4hiltid about the whihett31 diuiply.-;,a .;:iefsi.v.r..hr.t. 'be has Icarned 1 heta 1; *-1 '•"; ,.... Delr3tItUU Govr..1-r.a;c.rat I, were going to to keep us 'from becom- bn /-,-• !tp; *e ;0..! pi ::!::',..kTit.ri 1,0 tvtiv-, the '4 lug 01AVeg to fOrOgUel!S. - -- ini1A.IC Of I', .::: /`:- 61, l':r. (-t':,(..,,,unittxt t„.. "Our People didn't .believe 'these seal et. e . e. e • 1. L -thee eve. e ,tt - to eft- stories, nor did .they' like theway the 1 d he tt• 0 t::. ; il -');*c!' ; c i,- • t:''F:. 1: i -.4 ' •. - Provocatollt were acting; Bo they de- --, 1,,....8 if,..t.',- ci {-ne.,1 aided- that .they'd Set- hp a republic what ti• ! fi•ve Knd 1.0 .11.3 1,,•,, gt.iirs..71.r.14iltje , ::::\:i. j:::,;t:v .._ tcry I -J:-. e accente tbet go tine) It',..ift, tO -use alAt 0.1 -twb• the folkthe lies Welt latied to -hear-fiWni .t. . of thon, --------------apita! neer r 4 . • g - . here, at Omsk or -Temple. !Toil know the ret," he .contin- ued, bitterly. :"Titetzlite, white he was talking' intereethonalisin and the rights of 'free 'peoples, sent icetizion and gimp and &Mtn -Oration, • and a blood -red gang Of cutthroats --tend what could unarmed Siberia de? *Evert'. elty foithhe . to, the last, but it 1:11.:trele.r.r7rte, thetrz.1€:%;,)161.11icn-theriuntsdlhfeL., had otooldeinettruintat ofte.ttrro,494.dniodisil, purry,E.e.. 11..„ mcriit-Iltzt, the invaders, getting good leoeey for end f tteleht t. -•;„-Or. iwtere'D caw!, thotvohnitteit. wl•oegtetlineubeta. happy. Some f " v : ,..i."„ MUM, M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery, and Genito-tirin- ory diseases of men and women. V Wow - Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR. Physician and Surgeon Mee and residence, Main Street, Pone TO Hansa DR. J. W. PECK - Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons �f Ontario;Licentiate of Medical - a of Canada; Pod -Graduate Member Of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 deOrli east of Post Office. Phone 56, Hensel, Ontario. DR. F. BURROWS , Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth, Pborte 46. Coroner for the County of Itoron. - • rdwarktr4444440444.44444.4.4.4**4 • ARS. SCOTT 8t MACKAY 7 G. Scott. graduate of Victoria and College of Pirveieiane and Surgeons Ann Arbor. and member of -the Col- lege of Physicians and Sumons. of Ontario, C. 14fackav. honor greduate of Trip- le, University: and eold medallist of Trieitv Medieel Collette: mereber of Um Colleen of Physicians I:ha-Surgeons bf Ontario. r.r.r.,...orsrarrormrarroormorror 111-V1- !a10t Ls: 1,-1 r 11 1 0 - leiug red aed tthi et et! fpr schooling. lieved the etertee 'of the deserters r-yyd crAte theeeet. for thhir freehom. But meat of- them. Ho eel elteeee rt h in Mani- Rah ;....fhought --was 'a greet battle ityrif 1\i-th 4„1$1.,‘ wilvre he earn, aphrealiteusettwrIatihtittrogw,. ttlihee.mdeetinp,i,feaorblae 10 110, „ 0/0 7A. '"She eniehing -telkheE1,110'7:PNI.T. bY liar- rule of these, thhants1" vael. end these enabled 11 -lin to obtain , Rebellieus Sons. . Slate; he an aremPologlea1 expedi- tion to TM:Ia.:11d 1P05. This trip The King of -Roumania was ree. netted the eve:inning of hie' longing tently reverted ..tp ,have condemned. . tor the- f•-terte, an d g all th e his son, the erteeil 'Prince, to seventy - years since -then he lets either been five days' imprISOluxteet on account moving t,inepg the Arctic silence), of a little affeir ofethe heart and a seein" Nrqvit he co.ild tiee or whine, marriage outside titet tins of • royal 01 lecturing instruetively and inter-. affectionse. If the 'Story. be true the estirtgly on the things.- he has seen. Rounaanben monarch • and hiff son is pee of the most pleasing have merely adhed a• new ehapter to speakers whore the field of Arctic an old story and a long story. eeseateb. has given' to the mohern 1Cings and their Sitars have often world. Thousands of people fifth to showed a tendemete to differ, Henry hear him everywhere,. not • only for II. had a rebelliouo, brood of sons; what he has to tell them, but because Henry V. Was a wild and naughty of the -way he has ot telling what prince in his youth, the heti. to the they wish to hear, throne in Hanoveriap. days was usually on the worst terms with his father. Russ' has. always both e IRE ART OP CAMOUFLAGE. land of extte , in Russia, this little tale, ef disa talent between The Allied Armies !Now* Have the royal' father ,and the princely "Ctamoullage Dmnps." h son 'WU carried to its hulleht extent. Camouflage has now become a Peter the Great elevated his own son. high. art at the front, and an absorb- But Peter was extebebly 'a Bolshevist .ing feature ef the war. It his sa,ved at heart; he belletelIin sentences of countless lives and muth property, • death. as the cute fot most of the at times Completely baffling the en- troulhes of life.e.-Tit-Bits. my and causing great waste of am- munition. Our efforts in this direc- tion have also given the troops in the rest billets a feeling of security. It is now suggested that the Allied Governments Should recruit Or corn - 'mission all the leading, theatrical producers to to -operate with the soldier -artists in the development of -this highly inInortant arm of the service. The Germans copied many of our tricks and wriitkles after discovering them on the ground taken in the a "drive." It is signilicant.that ene- my documents captured repeatedly urge' more careful ceneealment. of • batteries and outpeste and praise 'the British, and Peen° o , • directiee. Every allied artily: bah "camou- flage - dumestationte for the stor- age Of careath ge seenerh, resembl- ing alraost r etreling Circus with wings and prop#r."-ty: rooms, stacks of nitderbeush andsteeplinge and -enor- mous sheete of canvas painted ,% to reereeent ineadoWs, tilled ground, id patches 01 thicket. As the army 'intsved' forWard; some, of -the railwar VILILTALMUR STEPANSSOlh. fields, and that he came lipen and lOcated Valuable copper deposits. His discoveries are the property of the Dominiou Government, under the auspices of Which his expeditioe was organized and financed Few* among the many expeditions outfitted for 'the far mirth. created more inter- est than this. - htefa.nssoa had been interesting the whole world tiver the results of a previous trip when; the lateat was undertaken: Ster One thing he had hound . a blonde race of _Es- kimos; and that fact gave rise to no end oT learned, discussion among ethnolegists. In e. letter • deted "Mouth of the Deese River, Oct. 18, 1910,h he had written: "It doesn't look on the map that we have done much; we have had predecessors in DoIphiia and the 'Union Straits—ours is tuerely the first winter journey and the first lend journey. Ethnological, - 13c -'-we have' done something, hoW-- ever, and geographically; tco, for vile have discovered people in _a regh ft -supposed to be uninhabited, ax have lived a few itionths among pe ple -who had never seen a white nuiln nor an Indian (although they hcld' heard of bolt), and did nor otMxt know I -was not an Eskimo —st) li- tia Were 111y inkoweci on what what. men are like. We have diteovert Eskimo (in sp-ech and habits) wiro 'are Scarolinavi4ns a,Ppearanvei" This diovery. mes,nt tI `begitin-iitg of he soletien of one 44 two pt.:Mier-as, natut-iy, What bo t a of Franklin's men? and what of the (1,0OO St-ndinavians appearod from i.'":reeniand in the f:!(- teent.11 century9 fro:A this ex:,xlition. Stefan.i.wou fo.thd !Aol•r% thee ready to f;ive attereive ing to an (iv:location. of with only briefly in his ot.f.zo,ional bulleti:.71s, and the thinking world Ivid not ceased to evell upon the %trong things he had -bi.en telling Sefore be Was off again. .He had gone, this time, so it. Was understood, in searct of a continent, and.it was tinderstoOd. that he would return in three year. In bo h eases P.1416 went aglor. There wore experiences 40 tha.t could not have been reckoned upon in t 1 rant. P . The Arctic' le full of sue 1 The Earluk its lost, and the par y it carried into the north. was sepi, atel, (!aptain Bartlett and eight ori, ers WON* 4..0}3011Q(1. St etanSZOn. • rnssing for a considerable rime, bit or!‘diction DR. H. HUGH ROSS. Oteduatti rfriyersity of .Torneto iPtivialtv of Medicine. member of Col» ieve of Physicians end Snivel*" of thetario: raps streduete cottresis in rhicecro Clinieal Sidled a chifigrot *oval Ophthalmic 'FrriaPital. taafgoit,* 14. /inland. University Trestdtal 1-0044^n.- Irtnelsztfi. Offlee—R.ark of POrtinkt" cemlwk, Reorforift. none No. %. Itieht netts answerea froei residence. Vie, feria. street. Seaforth • • AlitiMONITERS. GARFIELD htettiTCHAEL. T0-nin..1 A +h. earmi, fT'eoPtiturtwl 141 re., nr,..4+ r‘f enduirt-dr. rimrvrwas TrIr.rdrr44,4 4,1,1 .4.,e+drni drdlowdrf wl- Adla."0"4 Sanf.'-fil R. R. Nn. 2. nr v1,^"0 on "ft6. Sonforth. 2WC:11.if a TTTOV A S 'RR() Wiq Ir'f'/Ig4101 Vtlifit; t=nsr fn rt thei eriltrtiloxV rf Trm,„„ Parfch Clwrestr471(1P041 Strr$11110(vrn F4.14`,4 frir 1.1' rlivhap Min hp y' 1r roll -Inv I'M 151111TIP Seefe.:410 nr The lqvntmiferr. (Wen. (Thvirtratz Tena - 'Mfg% and tatisfartion ebnrant,ecrl P. T 1",TTIceR ..e„,..„,„„1 A -1104-irmarm Imo mo revors4-- • Threnrt n44'rertrin.1 ;1-1 oll rire4ct or tee proiref-r, gretron .ten-pge leverL,rte,. lircvn;ft4%." c!•rt' • Tee, Irrtsr, vrveresit! T1141,44, 1 refry 4,rrr11..4 rd ikrm IN-0,3"r4a 'rho Trntro., Itte- vn-fir Porkf*rii*. rothTnI44v x masterpieces. of hhigileh hetion, is a genttine story,. it -spite !of the fact :that we are kept vainly waiting while We reed hundreds of 1 Pages foie ate .hero tee, .heltorti. There_ete Many hi- grestaTerie but . thee -Author ilWityt -.takes' up', the thread .of his narretive with .cOnsuMmate. art. Sterne knew something about the, ,realities Of war. . wee the son- of 'alcaptain in. the *Molt army an&Wes born in the town of Ottiontei, in the. south of Ireland', where': hie father's regiment was stationed At the time. He was a clergymen himself, end -not altogether an edifying '-0116, .10 hia hteettert BOW highly. etiggeie tive letterf9 _addressed te .A Married woe:lane-4111 ..shoW,- But. his .genthe WOO Of rare 'ordeO. Beth. humor 'and' pathos he. pookesoed in a. very =high degree. Ile was indeed "naughty man., e But seMehow we, must put .up with the "naugIttinese": of gereills. 'fore if. tte- Comstockizeet--ttlie writer takes ehe liberty. 'coining that. word; is George °Bernived PAW has. used thetneologisra ‘`Coitettoelterhh-e may never never find, those hrettehe thinge imprisoned in lineentientional boiekth as the, pearl le intheoyster. ItwasSterne Whet tgave ois. the int- mettal portraits of- Thiele Tobyt and, of :Cora:Trim. They had both 14%1- eethin Marlbotetigh's Ways; but their . military- experiences are Only meant - ries. Each had a wooden leg, and- eachteyee in this mutilated condi-. tion, is enjoying the blessings 01 peace. War is an abn,orinel The historian ,must describe it vend even in the best descrtpe goes of battles, Military tea:micelle ties are a bore. The soldier meet remoter them, but they are dull read- ing in a novel. -Cereantes, who had fought at the battle ot Lehanto,. wee far too wise to hareduce any battle scenes inte "Ddn curbiote.- Boboyit ,I.ouis Stevenson 'lute drawn Attention . to the ahnost entire Absence of any elusion- to war in Fieldineo -"Tent Jones," although the period in which. Jones is supposed to have lived. *AO one in which war never ceased. There is a solitary reference to the war between England eh& Scotland in 1745, when Tom, sent adrift.. by Mr. AlIvrorthrtt and without a gulnea to jingle against a milestone, is about to enlist. SterenSoie.hAs himself 'sinned' in this' respect. The fighting in "Kid- napped" and in "The Black Arrow" affords him an opportunity for Niger, ous :writing. But e'en the molt fective description of blood-letting his stories Is only -a "tour de force. Victoelingo and Dila* Pete'. eau sacked history in order to get- sub jeets for .their romances. Met- itth Hugo's attempt to describe the bat of Waterloo is only rhetoric.e speaks of 34)014m. ae "Inge ignoramus," and chteacteris .'iVeterloo itself as the t "triumph mediocrity," adding, *liken etthi tion 01 colossal ignortincte "Water' is a battle' of the first-elass gain by a • captain of the second." `7Ev an intelligent sated boy could Trect Vichethilugo's mioltiterprete of history. Flatibeetth Who twr .about the mutiny, -of Retail liareatt mercenaries, .ttiok geed not to ;hesoribe actual war,' k that itheould be an, ahoinination Action.t Zola,• who was an a thoUght he could write a novel the FraecotGerman; tear... The t. was "La Debacle," a book; w, makes 1tur see -war as a Shatahr t diatt Gathering 'Beechnats ,In Switzetiater 'Ile- Central Contool of Greasee organized lest autman. the athetings of 'beechnuts, says tilt Tangle de Geneva. The gathering of nuts was made by, the adopt elilldren under the direetion of forest authorities. Froin these nuts tlaey were able to prepare 1,10(4.000 pounds of edible oil.• The 'pug aed white almond con- tained th, the beechnett has a taste very eauehlike that of bazlenuts. furnishes 4'w*ItOtir- Which may- be 'con- verted into bread, and a soft oil which has the ad:Vantage of not becoming rancid. The French- 75's. r There is no known 75 -centimetre ghee If there were Its bore would be mere than 29, infilees. The.fametis French 5traillimetre gun has bore a little heel; in size than the Ameri- • 1-111Ck .fead.„ heat being, approxi- mately .2.96275 iinfltett;,- the German 7-miliimetreets_ A" Attie larger than the Alferacara, nic appronimatele trucks remindekone of the seenery . iiclieL Cates to be 'seen t tlae.,rear of thee- ' detged *testy, treo tat week -ends. , • . • On .Taly'llry. Mitt* SLIGHT, ERROR. . Telegrapher's *stake Resulted in • practical Joke. It was . at Kra.sniarok that we barely missed a good joke Ain our Red Guard friends. /they had, re- ceived a telegram to prepare to re- ceive sixty -barani, which were to ar- rive oft the train that day.- Now, 'barani means "sheep," so the ,Red G-uards made ready wagond and an abundance. of hay and feed the welcome aninials. Instead otssheep, however, there stepped off ,the teain sixty aristocratic nobles, heavily guarded. They were being sent into exile from the northwe.st province of Russia, The telegraph operator had I made the.traistake of reporting barani instead otbaroni,. But it made `good fun for the crowd .at the, station. The best insight irdo true condi- tions was given me by Izenkin, whom 1 had known. aS a soldier at the front, a few months. before. chaneed to run: across him near Tomsk. I knew him to be a shrewd, pr. sperotis peas- ant, -and I took hir* to get his views. "New, Izenkin," I said, alter 'greet- ings were over.. tyoutre a good Bol - sheik, or. Conlin unist--7pardbx mei .—,so tell me about the reforms you're putting throu gh here tn. Siberia." comieally vomited at nte with both eye. "011,'Oespodin Atkinson, you ItDOW very • well why I pretend to,•be Bol- shevik beeause it len.'e safe to be anything else. Moet of us here in Siberia are desceiaded from pal:Waal exiles, and we've always tried to keep up our education a littler. aeht b worthy of our ancestors' slight for liberty. And now it seems as if everything hid gone to pieces._ "My people tellene that even when Kerensky Wax in power a lot pf low toughs from the Petrograd fa.otories, to say "Lathing of Siberian cOnVicts, were reeeleing pay. from somebody te go through all our villages, try- _ , aounced to the,Tri Otto the • new name of the Royal ousols,ad family to be "the House nf Windsor." The Mitten unanimoustY iRd9rOd 'the an- neuneetrient .;tlet putting it Into effect lAblithed 6 the same day.t I Iliiitilffiffill111011111illilillfflilliillii11111111)411)11111tille"11 Once you have tasted the goodness Crag* rof Teller's Oa eal ke s, you do as thous ods of other families do, keep them on hand for daily us Packed in air tight packages. Sold bir all grocers. "The Buy Word for Bio$C-IiitS1 930. HI li 1111 i II 0111111.1111 If 81 111111 filliiittil tillIgliatare. 3 • Silk Woollies. painfulner fI 11e s 41. :3 in :r: ffoip oi, en s pug f 0 , ruti 1 Ii.fhe shs -themsel i Onslide, faefrthetheis7dis(3. ..b14r.eiced and the .belowhthe ti ahe 'Of th ilfaigetill, 7he 07 lith'eet1;wilall.rd,11arel:eeet.ne are ' Ideal -pi ce eOreitse e atton, _ In her,ef I elt SS Ceeee;f: the Marne Area efill e wassely oeettPh- Mg me i a tendon. renth wart fere t e c thing • of e men gets ' wounde91e''diucity.t,..itAi.,, t'proWjell4tinl ,Atit'' kl_erbitt:Pwoary-: s and all, istnnuatgett 4. body' Ici ' 5 V t it 4 it? it In - ur men • unclad d oPed lock- jaw a ter- eir arrival hospital In crl:Eigtiha- 'IA' iltilatlii;175Hdettetst i h bee known fee, 'o ;he Me; but th hanethcid first adop ed ' o etintlaieteri the. refftedy- pnly nee, he SYmptb had appear- ed -g ve rere;-few.eue _ sslig results. l',T0W- thaeilt is the ' eral practice to : thnintter -the aeitititiin tO all i. -Wou dedt en immediately' they eh- rire it the: hospitelettle dieeade has bee nreOleally wipeu out. . .. . othe -: troublesome enemy, to the rt.,A.' .C. is the 4 tiphold germ. In one • Metery ontilde ,Bloetnfon,; , •tel are the graves: of - over one lh man ;victims of this complaint, w a die, in, the Bilft. War, Our te al fatal casualtleir in that war frim allitauses Ai ounted .to 22,600. Of this -number, 8.040, or slightly . o: er otil*third, Vier:?;'-grequixted for b typiteld fever. tiaiPPIIY, the Boer Vvar alsei saw the. Arat succesitil at - t ittpts Co prevent.typhold fever Or eats hif tinocelatien! , Although In- o utatien is -anot est „quite utiversal the British. army, elle Va-0,t-Inajol.- 4,67etet ;;'al:- and hflagV:reb3rtepl..Y'rril utIon t113.11e'' ad of June, 1 Olt, thawed that the 1 ' leathseate . among' the-- fortunately ew-eeueproteeted Wits seventh times s kteat as -aniouget' the protected. he results of the inoculation heye, herefehe; been exirereely enceeesful, althoheh the cottlit,ions of medere trenele warfare in France and Bel- kitiro.: have favored the develop- ment of this disettae. In .Gallipoli there , was very little typhoid, but , a tardily relative,. known as "para- typhoid.", Was. prevalent. The 17- phoi antitoxin unfortunately, Tient- - ed; -*lee% against this germ, but co , ued . experiment Produced a to , with *hi& 'nee are now in- oca etede It Protects the body .41 hist both tyPee .. of fever, but, a it was discovered too late to be hitse in that ill-fated campaign. Until. the sixth century the silk worm was cultivated,. only in China, where the precious eroducts and the eecriet of its cultivation were guarded with vigilant jealousy so as to insure China, the monopoly .of silk Ananu- facture.. Takes Mild Baths. jiapt. J, A. Lewis,. M.O., formerly G.T.R. trainman at Brockville, now bath in the .R4ver Jordan, but in Palestine vrritei that he takes in does' not endoy it. teteRetetehhhetehotetettteteteweettteetttetet War Novels Se ciorri Great, tethetettehheeetteteotteetteeeeteetheettehett • COOR.DINO to Leeien, a de, lightful 'ciontributor to the eh.epterhPoot-Exprees, the Jew that!. the war ought 'to have led to the phoduction of great_ neeels Is very shallow en& shows an utter zaisconceptidit of the true pro- vince of ;fiction. blaine noveliste for notliaving written better itoriet about the great eonflict ethich has made so many a us "see red" is really very silbr. would be more reasonable for critteo to deprecete.,. the folly of thoSe3vho. try tO, convert it into material for fiction. Itgis nel the noielist's furftiOn, bat that oi the journalists, th tell tbe. stery of thewar. Even ifc on ZolaSe eystem, or. the realist in 'settee goes to the scene where the lighting is tatking place,, .and niaelrers' ja'rgtin oi war, but f?Ses wh'llaetttally happenis in the breeches d in "No Mall% Lantl," he cannoChive us the tragic background ot thls. world ' strtiggle, The .poet can write beautiful 1.Yrict about the Star. 'put" it Is the epic. which. will reveAl he the 'w-Orld. its bee role proportiens anh that Can ecarcelyttbe -written until the stattke 1 and the thuudere of battle haw passed. Some novele of more that °relit nary merit have, tactS:been written a:bbut One "The Pont. Vorsem.41r of the "ApecalyPse," by Vicente Blasco A,„ 11-lanez, e A. gifted, • Spanish !Writer/ -Whe' 'gives us^ tit glimpse of France: before the battle M the 'Mine- t • Writers 'St • can , ng Action from melodrama. nue Ouida "end . Hall Caine and .40heilit!nuth 411t&eltItS . their bitokse-wied by doing se they generate the same- `nexise of h rror and disgust that one at e Ing • a dreadful aceident.- Even so eat a novelist as .Tolstoy has not mice ed„. Knowethe Anecdote. In picturing a batthesatigatto ly in "War and Peace." It is not in • °vele that We can expect to find tlitt greet war of ouittims) realithically d ieted. The psychologist who dissects • wain nature in Betio will study the home life of men an women and sh w ua. the action of the passions loth nor- mal condition. , 0494104Sehletheettetetteeeke Allied Scientists Are Able to Do Their W k tt this respect •at least,good has resulted from the ..war, for medical oelence has advanced turthei thts direction in four yea, '1;11 'twenty of peace ., wi lit benefit, civiliza" tion long atter last -glimmer. -,' Se I made a point uf this war has become te-dintentemory. being at the Country Club -this after - /1 —Chambers Sourlia1.00U when I knew he was to be there, •1 .aurdoeasoice.kt;,dhimni1 teHedescribedescribed Lord Bell - mere. B "Ob Hadar 4'1Vit, I was really relieved. - Mr. Durant *male claim that be is Lilted Bellmere;eo. you mem% think Of hint as .an intekiatot>" "No, but—et! Rose hesitated. "No.„ but " t?"' • ' - I "Why dui MT. Durant declare that Mr. Brooke. ,tsull" "I don't -blew, 'Rate." A look' of IperpleaitY oinie over Rildats face that she. drove -114y withta forced 'Mille. "But you sant you, had some new, didn't Yoh?" he dettintidea• quickly. • "Yes, but ii,,n1.ritrolible for or Mr. Dan . - .47,-.1- toieffer of Ws '. ' # :in regard to the auto= I"' 4PP6110enr ' li'-*Ilii.'ul r;r1 so sorry for him," murmuhed. Hint. ) A !bolt of deep comma ame oyer her face, but g'1"ofriehe . simpicions- r who had attempted_ P en The Won 4drildidd r f • SiMateossiners Sr.,, •Qtte. . "in my opittienp notother medicine. Is so good. 'as 1'1404a -tires' for . Indigestion and Constfp*tion. For yeas, I sufteretii with these - dreaded clisessesttettingt kinds of treatments tinta waif; told I was incurable. 4 Otte day a. friend tad Me to ttir 1"‘::1117:5i::ate16..anthiCiabot:::::akfo'c'arThi:12:rtg triali sizel*is ewas 2 eg immediateal right again". ' • 1.- DONAT ,LALOADE At all-dealeis- or front Fruit -a -three Limited. Ottawa: i Rose sat down in a chair facing her Visitor thlook of 'gen e satire on her face. 'It vanished. ,Itilda dear," she exclaimed. after a moinent, "wouldn't it be *startling if it tinged out that neither of them was Lora )3ellmere ?" Hilda's sage shake' of ' her beatzl seemed to dispose Of the possibility - "But, Vida, wide One says'that the other isn't and—it's shameful of ine, but I couldn't lielphearing Mr. Durant trying wildly again and again the past few days to get Mt. Brooke on the telephene. He really seems to e be de- termitied to have it out with with bira. He vtouldn't do that unless he knew that Kr. Brooke was an imposte.r, would he?" 1 . Hilda smiled. "Mr. Dugant doesn't claim . that he's LOrd Behnere, you mustn't overlook that, Rote. And as for Mr. Brooke--ewel, I've receiVed almost infallible Proof to -day that he is. That's what k came to tell you." "Olh I'm so disappointedi Tell me." "Rose, you w you don't care whether Mr.,pi.ri tit is a Lord or not "Except for your sake. Yes,' but tell me!" 'Hilda laughed -ea little too long. "Well," she bran hastily, "the Eng - 111 lish Copsul bbX!G IS an aco011aintance et war than 1 of ours, and I h43ard that lie had been at a hoiree Partst with Lord Belbeere • . A 1+at;r4t. eifator Delahaye,1 in -dimming itseee-Lorrttiae to the French Sen.- te recently, -recalled the famous let - t re -Written by ',the- late Afonsigner reppel, the Blehott .of Angers, and e bishop's' wish t 'before he died that If heart be Interned in reconquered- , . . _ liace-Lorraine, - said the 'Senator, 11 not be able'telake back to Ober- _ 'BA; the birtrice of ...Monsignor 'reppel, the ket containing the dead prelate's heart. ' : - * ._ I. Mgr. rreppelh. who Watt a weit litiown Preneh biehop,,died in 1891. --tt . , •` Ivory' V+ iini#1,1 Fatah.- • '14-7treitejl setetOtta,,hair4 tho .tagetatds-riery-.4.0 ,o st..Ou the fruit ot, a small palra. gra urollliCally in the Soudan.' Without lento c Aid thteptelefeletetettetretetettettehe•eth ERMANY, 'before th was considered by .portion of the glebe home• 01 Selene% praetical discoveries .4one Conitameed; tile mei of ,sci Britain and her Allies hav the ne4I no tuition from 111 JWIY, 1914, Pr(di whole ,.01 the ,antisepties the, medical world were -tared by German chernica It the very mement'wben became ,an urger& eeceSsity,- . were .eut off. The need of s ' The business of': the novelist is to depict human enture. *This he must 1: do not as a philosopher ,eite. as a "tetentisr. but awn story -teller. He does not accept Prof. Valliant Lyob, Wen -lids require frequent L'eesing, as Phaps' definition of a novel as ea comparatively few bantlageis are re - good story.well told." But he freely 'quire& ' . acknowledges that, if it be not a it often haPPetts, er, that E'en "itreitira out bothic:dllyeid,,,a0nAe`noetve ti germs before antiseptics eate applie,d; Forms invade the body and dig ttliesineUntalt:twelexpei inrimeTntsiendg,4ea antiseptics of the old type, to those in use, ettOr to • menceinent of the war, .covered hy our seientists. inahotliscoveries, however, revolutionize. 'conipletely : garding the use of Atiffisepti Early in their .ineest fiii ;was.lound that ti 01:41 A 01 the the West Indi - kite* e about antiseptics than ;hid dern ' German cheraisto. caught trying t escape hi severely thrashe to diocou attempts on the part of t But it, was ri t. to t the benefit to be lo e .depriie ,setvites of such errant sl • It was ascertain dSthat, to rapid recovery, he -wOun -be rubbed -with a tnixtur • Water sled leraon'Suiceo T a mthtere of co Mon. ;Mit a litice eit the bl od was, 'carefully etudie . It Wati f whilst ordinary 'else lice. , destroy not MAI the germs ' imit also 1 ethe tissues of. et body, actually. rezttted the tee° - wound,' the .4{1 !ave-tred 1 -promoted the ow of th fluids teem all ., of th the injured pa, amulet te; healing the' Wonihth septical method limed now trolly adopted, a *atter - eonsideration .ht the To Dr. treitaurer of the Bible Sticiety of AmerItta, said in an address recently; "Welltill a dee elcitabloignotance of the Bible even among the litglier chtssee.. When, 'no* end thenewe meet some one .whe iaesaes a -little biblical Owledge, tilonely, °mitre king to made to he -.er she Iseaptette - mend about ihet A young and - his'W,AfeWere:_ Once. me ;about.a it-. they h the famous titre- gallery --sof. the -Tritido in -Spaeth 'What did you like. beat', itt the Pro:dot"; I asked.. 'V Zore re O tke:hudbanda Correff- _ _ _ _ . gia Astantlfilid Bee in the garden. - With the helpihteeitt the .serpttatt Then _ theeio -100ked at•ine. With superior and added: *ea, that • War, great as-the, ut, in e vier nee of S40W1:1: may. 1 the ed nufac- firtns. tiseetics suepliee tisfyjeg, and led !interested:us...es ially'becauge, you - see; 'we new; the *neap:kit." Groat urtrion. ' .. Ii 1707, rroT, on. , the :union41th Scot.. Alit' Great Ittitttitt bectone the,,effi- ci 11, name efe the -British;tkinetikene audi so coiustltute.cI until ;the union -v. tn:Irelanhiin,18.01. . Sit* January i1, 1801, the OffictetInanie Otthe 'WAS., d m, incltidiUg, England, Wales, Ire- land and Sand, and the kneighbor- i g 'smallet4,1slante, is the United ingdura dt,., Great.: Britain and Ir04, nd. ' d many superior = T he come • ere dis- Their ended te eas re - ions Lt drivers -1 en More. the mo - Staves re most age Bildt others. owners of the* ilea, and promote used to ef Set - effect of 4 tenant herefore,r end, that ended -to she said Rose lookingchats to find Durant at the office.. "But, Hilda) dear, -yetit greet listening," she . complained. °I don't believe • you've • heeled it WOW Of what I've just been telling' you." • Hilda etarted guiltily. "Yes, I have, Rose.". She made a conscious effort. ',"It ;was about a idoubtful-looking char- acter who called,on Mr. tap. The faraway ,look left her hive eye. "Re had. „ one; black and one purple eye. Stranger She 'darted again. "Them was just suchte; Man waiting in the • hall when I eau* up." h-Ssttlihr Rose put a finger to her lips, kettt the sounds in the • hall cealsed and the door of the ad- joining TOQ111 closed. "Well, he teems to havetwaited until Mr. Durant came in;" she observ Continued from Paige 7 But alter he liald gone .she seemed ief,two minds ai.t6telephening. She r sank hack in the-'.ebair, and seemed, to meditate deePly. At ''' best she started up impulsively to the door. • Just as She put her hand on the knob, 1 theto came a- kilo*. Rolle lopened the door, and her fa -0:e 1ighte4 up. . Outside stood Hilda, lier_. tong, dark naincoat drenehet but bertblue eyes sparkling ' and tor cheeks: pink and damp. ' A I couldn't say inside -a minute longer, it was suqh a won ' rful, lel, tent rat* eight, she., etl„. ca - fully chtiing the door .be Iffr, S liseliPited outdeed a ran down, 1) .to zee you fer a ew minutes." "Oh rve gat a was about to Rose, tearing Hi beetle from her. rerne belt lngteihrterja.skeRd *aldoa as well pointing toward t next is anti -,Rose . shook • head.- • "You • -oen:f somegenda°entedetieerlietthse thesi I eillterhiniy lmei Whose "Roo, You're so witty! turned her back. apparent100 Telt*** her rainmit, "You know i,don't care the way you suspect. your snsobilldaalinnanyodedu IsVethoilltehall,a endly interest fa the riving male' easiereemuch easier to afou.1 INTeikr much to you! I e henhe" .exclaitiafet ralneeikt mann.. bkrtell. yos!" he in? breath POOR COPY emed 'abstracted. "X - can't i1p feeling responsible for that autontobile bill. 11 wonder If I ought not to do something about it," she said More than half to herself. • Retie was not listening. "Whoever his Saller is, they seem to be having high words," she exclaimed. "Rose, dear, do you think you could man* somehow to pay it for in— without his knowing anything about "Yes, Hilda, but listen!" , They heard the door of the room thetttet violently open and tifurilit's yokel low But vibrating with anger, sounded through their ,Own • obeyed doora• r • get out, you .treatherous tit* sneak:, Don't you dare show year face here again!" ' he stormed. Thee his (100 slammed. They heard his 'visitor laugh sneer - and then shuffle down the Whoever his taller was he didn't sta 'long," -commented Rose. "And li$ten to that. He's opening the.Win- dotts to air out the room." lIiIda made no response. The two giris merely looked at each other. se (To be Qontinued Next Week)/ 10 YOUR HILO 1$ CROSS, FEVORISH CONSTIPATE] Look tothart 11.t.urslua 11 cMet ,claanse little bowels Intel- °Cal fdettla Syrup Of rtteett lifo ft, few bowl •sour bile moves out a well, ela Siek oh* take ads Millkete remise Ailteer aele liver Ask y California IRS direetiOug All egee aitttfOr Mter giving " beetitufe in. ed -up *ask, lood gently Yell have coexect io 't laxative." keep it Itetiottla the prompt and lure. for a- bottle of " whisit eon, StArsilkliPkt Ald dbane bis West: hee ed tth serve Wou that 1 agrt came ,for y011.1, OW11, befori Du; er riot h the hand ought It fro; Then. the ti 011 ne, telerh what Bunc fel - be I did' new the b place Rot oth teste<1 thing Ile .9ht er tel elie ter a tem • D e his re as is