HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-01-17, Page 6DR. . J. R. FORST It
Bret fir,
Nose hroat. "
Graduate. in Medicine, University of
Toronto.
Late Assistant New York Ophthal-
mei and Aural Institute, Moorefeld's
Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos-
pitals, London, Eng. At the Queen's
otel, Seaforth, third Wednesday in
ea
`- moth frame 11 a.m. -to 3 p.m.
83 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford.
Phone 267 Stratford.
LEGAL.
A
R. g YS.
►rrister, Sol%citor,Cofvegaticer and
Notary. Public. Solicitor for the Do-
minion, Bank. Office in reer of the Do-
minion Bank, Seatorthf Money to
loan.
J. M. BEST.
Barrister, `Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary *Public. Office upstairs
ever Walkers Furniture Store, Main
Street, Seaforth.
PROUD
FOOT, KfLLORAN AND
COOKE,
Barristers ' Solicitors, Notaries Pub,
�te.. Money to lend, Seaforth
e Office in
en Monday of each week. -1 . Ci. J .
Kidd Block W. Proudfoot, iC ,
L. Killoran, . J D. Cooke.
A
'YEWS'INAR ..
P. HARBUBN, V.S.
Honor graduate of Ontario ber of
Veterin-
ary College, and honorary
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary College. Treats diseases of
ill domestic animals by the most mod-
ern principles. Dentistry andMilk e -
b a specialty: Office opposite,
Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All or-
ders left at thehotel will receive
prompt attention. Night calls receiv-
sd at the office. •
JOHN GRIEVE.V.S.
Honor ,gra" eluate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College. All diseases oI domestic
animals treated. Calls. 'promptly a
t4
tended to and charges moderate, 'rete
lerinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and residenc ori Goderioh•street, one
door east o 'ilr. Scott's ;office, Sea -
forth
MEDICAL
DR. GEORGE HETLEMANN.
Osteeppiatic Physician of Goderich.
Specialist in women's and children•s
Wises,rheumatism, acute, chronic
and voue, disorders; eye ear, nose
tad throat. Consultation free. Office
in the loyal Ho* -Seaftirth, Tues-
sye and Fridays, d a.m. till 1 pm.
C. 3, W. HARN,
425 Richmond Street, London, Ont.,
Specialist, Surgery and Genito-Urin-
arr di: eases of men and women.
Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR
Physician and Surgeon
Owe and residence, Main Street
Phone 70 Hensa
forth#st
M.P. WINS V' O
traiaa ed«
Pero had three ships o ,
TSE HURON ktIIt
.
ng it ld retain
that fife rI ,n s wrote the President to the then `Seel-
* f ar, which
command of the seas Their ambition
M • • d hi w
•fought' gallantly against great odds« arguedthat if battier were necessary ointment in reproving it should be
Highest Honor for Cow Her vernier wad. more numerous and to acquire ceIozii s, they would be p
equally so." Dealing with the rest.
succeeded in eontiuir thee wai for ter generally, Presiidenl .Taft' remark -
Was
Wan Commoner. fought' in ltlurcrpe. Neither of them
co a rotary Ti t s Navy; George von L.
was fors a great dermal' army" They Meyer, "tht the action,
of the de-
is flee years, at the end of which time contemplated fightingwitlz, Great Bri
T' fi t ---and• the only �V'ictox h if ed .that whenever an officer of the
Cross•
bymember of an Brit t i~ • United States a y
h H
The
rs w ,Peru had to acknowledge erre _ twin
.wan a n, Chile .dictated , e terms o n v "is called > open
nin thegreat beats Tirate bad anothi idsf a con- in a Foreign country to weak in pub-
ash overseas Parliament sacs and annexed forever the Pro- tam lated the pox +Ility of war with
*air Just ended comes to Canada._it �P than ro- his . in- lis,:. so that what he_ says will nesse-
evince:of Tat alpaca. The ole p Great Britain, and, through
tit won for valor by Lieut. -Col, Gy. rice and Tacna were to a sarily. be brought to the attention of
-_e.aerh vfnces of A exhaustible energy and enthusiasm, =the• people of other foreign coon'-
rus Wesley Peck, D.S.O., Co 1;•• her for.ten years, at the end n` led a. are in ..Germany, that ionise .Liberal. Member for the new held byhe *limited tries, (.it i$ hie ofivious duty to avoid
tof which time there was to be a' p1e- ` su lured - him id , heia. 'great naval
h Co- , _ pp invfdio:�us comparisons ' and to limit -• -
of Skeet's., British . " ro•
constituency inhabitants of the p firs he thought than - ns of
bhscite, . the in _ programs. At t eech and his expressions
- his sp� ,, •. thing that
is Col. Peck. was a successfulthe
numb .these todetermine what nation Y nraan should concentrate: upon
_ terndehi for the country w13o�e Is not t1 �e .
in the general election of ,,. « .,Erie P� �
candidateg wisfied err heloses to. The lucky na dextra ors, admitting that to oval ' nest he ie to lan$uage'tha will not
last December. er. gl is a lifelong Lib. er a- g . ,
t to recompense the los take the British. Empire in capital
t was to i f �criendhip toward you are " : ,t possible
l supported the indicate t k v
fi► #_i and flexes y pp t the _ ibis- ,> " J � • �
« � 10 400,000 A be almost an impose h the
Military Service c tile
order' _ � hi a offered. o - - ed that b ." -
JANUARY
a Packetc
7, 191
r
iErt on iaea ac o
the extent of � Wiles would ries. Although s p count
other er
� O
to � �.
de i�11
f S
Act
i r
t t
r C clod y t
't
ea the ��
t n s on a conn said
h e t r and ��
of t e it $ ther,
the boys t the front ' in end d Y � President dent fur Quality ,y
f
B 540
a -
-back u e ue
Y refused', on-
erti �
u P Wet r
i? i b ge te
i e to "° u m s possa
lob s t of s bt
he tide aripId no P
1 ee u
hold th
p e
Commander
that the conditions of the propose. submarines his absence on the fighting field he
�d has continued to refuse with Gemmae r Sims o
• _ an .. `derating strength of the Il�itigh nave censure on the ground that what he ' eXpen+�`ttire._
was elected victor
aver an snit each repetition of the offer, alleging ; might be o,ereeilie. He` had as
•, �. said was a r xp ..,
onNcn iptitoxzist, d
• The official description of the ea
-
tion whdch won the Victoria Cross for
f-
Lt, -Col. Peck, nett commanding o
cci� of the Canadian Scottish Bat-
talion. is as follows •
"Foe most- conspicuous 'bravery
DR. J . W. PECK
Graduate of Faculty of Medicine
McGill University, Montreal; Member
of College of Physicians and Surgeons
of Ctar'io; Licentiate of Medical Coun-
ell o Canada; Post -Graduate Member
of Resident Medical Staff of OfficeGeneral
Hospital, Montreal, 191.4-1.b; ,
2
doors east of Post Office. Phone 56,
Bensa% Ontario.
DR. F. 3. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich street
*last of the Phone 4 6 Cornier for the hodist church,
County of
Huron.
DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY
3. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and
College of Physicians and Surgeons
Ann Arbor, and member of the Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of
Ontario..
C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trhn
ity University, and gold medallist of
Trinithe College of PhysiciaMedical ns and Surgeons
of Ontario.
referendum were unfair, , The point
is that. Chile` wants_ to confine the -
Voters to the, upper, educated .
or
white classes, whatever they may be
called, who are almost all Chileans.
mere expression ression of per=
great hopes from the su mar cis as seal opinion, since he might well
Zeppelin ,had of dirigible airships. have known that his words would be
Unlike Zeppelin, he was ably to make given the weight of his official posie
' of -re te.
her
and t 4 Ile
a. #funs showing, tion, it was generally felt that while
rsauade the iN'ar Lord', if ize aneeded � severe rebuke -the chief
war • magistrate "had his ton toe • in. n
pe writing so s e
Persuading, . that by intensifying the his
and wilful leadership when ie en They are a minority, however, the activities of the . IT boats the. Ak.„
masses of the population being made might • be brought to a victorious
attack n under intense fire, his
cote- . . . - j e as-Memorfal Forest.
elan u. d up of illiterate Indians, .who are Pe conclusion. So, awe. result, the Unit , 4, Propos
tamed quickly .captured its first oh- thepro-takingthe the close
ruvians If everybody votes ed. States entered the war, It -is Believed teat ,with
jective, but progress was held up by to Peru fore• ' lace of . ; o trenches
tante will probably go lace and. more than. the place money machine-gun fire n his right p of the ever the entire line
tank.The situation being extremely Bolivia s 1
,..a.nk. s d d for .ted
has been lost in the shuffle.
It hand^ irked electorate the
willremain-Chile.
This is fife problem thatremains
be solved;butfortunately
Manila Hemp. e
The production of manila hemp !ti-
the Philippine Islands .made substan-
tarn progress during the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1918, according to
statisticscompiled by the Bureau of
Insular Affairs of the War Depart-
nient. The quantity, was nearly 12
per cent. greater than in the -'preced-
ing fiscal +year ' and was the largest
since 1911.
•` -ult Lt, -C ',1.- Peck rushed for- it is a p le the final ounce of energy needed ,:the Belgian border, may be cones
ward
, 2
provinces
ntag8ering Russia, and contributing in France, extending from Alsace,to
with Chn the knock -out punch, with this in-
et-ard °and made a 'personal; recon -. p a ns to into a sort of national sacred°forest
troduct� op,, C}rand., Admiral Alfred as a permanent tribute - to the crmeth-
are,
at
sie aC ce;, under heavy ofy machine gch not by war P. T. von TiePitz, is nominated for
;� � c oss a stretch ground which ory of the ,k`x•euch� pollee,. -who. dield
.i e, a rthe, role , of Chief er�nan Goat
., heavily swept wither fire. Having there defendingtheir native soh. A
i ec hCG. Y p
ion he return- „proposition- to- this effect has been
reconnoitred the position,
ed and reorganized his battalion, and,
acting upon knowledge personally
gained, pushed them forward and ar-
ranged the protection of his $anus.
He them went out under the most
:tense artillery and machine-gun
:ire, intercepted the tanks- and . gave
them necessary directiohe, pointing
.itt where they were to make for
:end thus have a way made for a
tnanadian infantry battalion to push
Forward.. To this .battalion he subse-
mently gave the requisite support by ___�___..___ __ ,�__
Ms magnificent display of courage 3
end fine qualities of leadership, He
personally led the advance, and ca>.ts-
*d it to be continued, although al -
.rays under heavy artillery and ma-
-�hine-gun fire, and contributed large-,. . •_. Y4.44":":":":":":40.)
Yr to the success • of the brigade
t.r• dr."
,•«_ �v't.!s•:w•u•t•`i°►••••..°eJ•s�p'a•w.4 N.•fs�•d '")4a•i
Y
f•
Graduate of University of Toronto
Faculty of Medicine, member of Cut;
of Phfsicians and Stargeons of
Ontario; pass graduate courses in
practiceal monopoly of an industry
Chicago Clinical School Of Chicago;
tleitat was to attain gigantic propor-
Itseysl- Ophthalmic Hospital Loncien,
tions, with the exception of the ni-
hotels-,•• •-oeeet•-..t.-_,. prepared by the general council of
• • • • • • • the . Department of the h[el' - nd
Vice•Admiral Sims Was Will be submitted to not only. France,
het the entire world. -
Always Very Warm Friend BERM DANCING MAD.
i
Of Unity of Anglo-Saxons
« in Waehitigton that, as one of
the collapse of German sea
Included the Wild Scheme power, the strategte-reason for keep- "Men have been coming home at
•
9ermans 'Who Survived War Trying
to Forget
\ The corres ondent in Berlin of the
Inaily Enpress, dealing with the re-
turn of the German army says the
slcenes of enthusiasm marking the
omecoming of the troops
are end -
Of Sea PoWer for Germany
Qt-tariel
eTRONS of a boxing meet ex-
pect the last bout on the card
to' be the reajost IMporta.nt of
the evening; they would not
ta to see a curtain -raiser at the tigie
for the .fell of ethe curtain. TRis
Aeglo-Saxon custom Must have been
eieeteolted by Peru and Chile when,
a f.f.v weeks. ago, they decided 'to go
fe tem They have' since concluded
to arbitrate their -differences, ,when
tney found that the world at.large
Wm prepared to take 'just as much
lettere:et . theft: arbitration ea* in
their war. A few years a go Alte prose
pact of a .war between these powers
iewald have sent newspaper corte-
epondents scurrying from all quar-
k ers of the earth. To -day die war
eorrespondents who have not gone
'ence are looking up railroad time-
tables In preparation for lecturing
tours. Newepapers would have let
the office boys retort the conflict 1.ri
South America. It would have bee.o
an ironical comm.ent upon civiliza-
tion if, just at the enn of the "war
to end war," when the powers were
about to gathee together to form a
League of Natioes to keep the peace
wo lesser countriesenshould hese
appealed to the sword.
There have been v
ations of the issue bet
Ormtries, and it is
-posed to be a boundany dispute, but
in reality it is a quarretiover an im-
earaely rich treat- of country, which
far many years has been one of the
chief sources of revenue to Chile.
,They fouglet over it once before and
Chile wonnetThat Chile would not
have won again had the". matter
been left to arms it is difficult to be-
lieve. Between the two countriee
there stretches the inimense water-
less waste of Atacama and Tarapaea.
which-waS for •a long time supposed
to be absolutely worthless since no
rain Nils theee and nothing grown
But in. the 'latter half of the nine-
teenth centurY, it was discovered that
in this waste were practically un-
limited supplie.s of nitrate of soda,
and since this fertilizer was in great.
dem.and in 'Europe, this desert sud-
denly became immensely valuable..
The Province of Tarapaca belonged
to Peru at this time, Atacama to
Chile, 'while adjoining were Arica tend
Tacna owned by Bolivia. All were in
the heart of the -nitrate deposite, the
importance of Which Chile vv4. the
first, to discover. ,Chile then mlade
bargain with Bolivia whereby for a
coneideration of $10,000 she sacured
the right to 'the nitrate in tbe Boliv- '
Nous explan-
een the two
enerally sup -
*sealed, University Hospi
England. Office—Back of o
Bank Saaforth. Phone No. 5,
Calle answered from residence,
torla street, Seaforth
- trate that Peru could glean from her'
own province of Tarapaca. Peru in-
dtestriously set to work, but Chile
had the lead, and was never over-
taken. It appears that one of the
strange peculiarities of Peruvian na-
ture is a jealousy of more thriving
and prosperous neighbors, add slie
bngen. to hope that Chile would
choke. Bolivia also witnessed Chile'e
prosperity with ill -concealed feelings
of envy, and finally the two entered.
into a defensive' alliance. It is supe
posed that it was at tile suggestion
of Peru that Bolivia irnpoeed .tax
ou all the nitrate that was exported
from Tacna and Arica. This brought
a tierce protest front Chile.'
I3olivia disregarded the protest and.
losealea Auctionee for We County et Huron.:
Saks conducted in any part of the county.
Charges moderate and oatigfaetIon guareitteed.
Address Seaforth it. 1t: eta 2, oe phone 15
on 255, Seaforth. , 2S53-tf
THOMAS BROWN
Licensed auctioneer for thc counties
of Huron, and Perth. Correspondece
arrangement% Sor sale dates can be
made by calling iep Phone 97, Seaforth,
or The Expositor Office. Charges mod-
erate and sabisiaction guaranteed..
Liceneed Auctioneer for the County
of Hurore Sales attended to in all
Parts of the county.. Seven years' ex-
perience ha littanitoba and Saskatche-
wan. Twms reasonable. ,Phone No.
175r11, Exeter, Centralia P.O., R., R.
No. 1, Orders left at The Huron Ex-
positor Office, Seaforth, proraraly
110 is to blame for the
war? :is now the great
queition in Germany.
Had things turned out
differently the question would have
been, To whom shall We 'attribute the
chief gloiy for the war? In that
case, of course, the Kaiser would
have hogged the principal honors, but
there would. have been other claim-
ants. But in the view of some auth-
attempeed it) collect the taY, where-
upon Chile seized. the port of Anto
fogasta—so now' you see what the
word means. This ineviaably led
to a declaration of war by Bolivia
in I a79. Peru offered to act as
nediater. 'but Chile suspecting that
she would favor her partner In true
Peruvian fashion refused her offices. -
It was then Peru's turn to grow sus-
eiciotia, for she feared that victor-
ious Chile might attempt to seize
her own nitrate province of Tarapaca.
SS) Peru. declared war, and anrived
jue.4. in time to take Bolivia's pla.ce,
for the latter, with no navy and a
swell army, was speedily put tout of
"tie:. Chile was, indeed, well prepared
orities the man responsible for- the
war and for what has' happened no
Germane is Grand Adrniral Alfred
T. von Tirpitz. Tirpitz is now re-
ported to be a fugitive, He has a
notion, which may develop into
mania, that before all accounts are'
squared he will., be noted before a
court of justice, either Gernta,n or
international, and be made to answer
charges growing out of the activities
of the german submarines. As heed
of the German fleet he eannot evade
responsibility for the soffintarine. war-
fare.
It would appear from stories that.
have eome oot ofe Germany tin the
past ten years that von Tirpitz, was
one German whogwas able to imriese
his views upon the Kaiser, to been
bulldoze the All Highest. That he
was- a man of tremendous force of
character there is no disputing, and
ing the main strength of the United
States navy massed in the Atlantic
Ocean will no longer exist, and that
its &vision, with 'perhaps world-wide
distribution .of Int milts, is inevit-
able In the rearrangement. of war
vessels almost, certain to eneue, the
fieet which Vice -Admiral Sims has.
commanded since the entrance of the
republic into the 'war will undoubt-
edly be affected. 'In reward for his
able dionduct of the United' States
naval toms. in turopean waters, it
is expeeted that, before- the present
month expiree, this dietinguished offi-
cer -will have been raised to the ronk
of admirsd.'
It is not strange that a raan pos-
dett Sims should bave won tlis way
to the . highest consideration In his
chosen profession,: but it Is strange
enqugh to be interesting that Wil-
liam Sowden Sims, who, while rank-
ing as commander, in January, 1911,
was gunty of "a serious indisere-
ADMIRAL VON TIRPITZ« -
that he has a bigger brain than the
former King of Prussia is also plain
enough. It is therefore easy to be-
lieve that he Might by force ite in-
tellect compel William. Hohenzollern
to take a course of action to _which
he might object, or at least to have
a free hand in matters en which he
could claim to be an euthority. There
is nothing unreasonable in the sup-
positione that the submarine cam-
paign was designed and carried
thrOugh by von Tirpitz, and that' the
Hohenzoilerne accepted, in not
througb. any liking, but becauSe they
theml. that this wee elle infallible
means of winning the war.
Germans who rose to high .rank wi-
der ;the Kaieer's patronage who was
not of gentle birth. great energy
and lila fixity of purpose inede
ix force in the eountry, and on one
occasion when the German ariegto-
crats protested against hie 110o -tithe
ness and brutality.. the Kaiser is 're-
15orted to have said: "You will hane
to get along with him as best you can.
That's whet I' have to de." Von
Tirpiten father was -a lawyer in an
inland town, and the boy entered the
0-nrmdm navy it the age of 16, when
the German navy was a small affair,
and chiefly valuable as providing lu-
crative employment for sons of
broken-down Prussian noblemen.
The idea of Germany having a
great navy, in fact th,e greatest in
the worlde was von Tirpitz's idea,
When thisridea crystallized in his
mind we may say that he became in-
sane. The notion of an overmaster-
ing German navy had been euggested
to fizhi. Her navy was made up of to Bism.arck, who discarded it, and
teodern, and her also to Moltke. Both Of them were
trrvnts were Krupp -armed and well
nientRAL SIMS tAND GRANDSON.
,tion," should be' tegarded as worthy
of especial boner in Deceitaber, 1918,
because of the remarkable discretion
with which he performed some very
delicate tasks. •
From the point of- view of' der-'‘
_many, even then menacing Great Brie.
tain, as she had been for years; the
commander's expression of the
friendship of the people of the 'Unit-
ed States for their coustns across the
sea was, of course, extremely offen-
sive. Germaer writers and !speakers
in Germany and -in the United States
had' eommented with bitternens upon
• it, a bitterness dincreased by the
knowledge' that German ports had
been left out of tle itinerafy of the
United States flea to which Come
mender- Sima' ship, the Minnesota,
was attached on Hie cruise to Euro-
pean waters. It 'Was even asserted
by Gerrnans that the remarks of Com-
mander Sinuelwere inspired 'by the
United States Goyernrotent, The pein-
cdpal German agitator al, anti-Amer-
ican senaiment in Gerinany at the
time was. Count ean Reventlow,
.whose literary activities during the
war preeipitated nearly three .years
later are familiar td .01 ..newsptiper-
readers.. He heldithat, the failure of
the innten State*. fleet to visiteGero
tram a political point of view, insist-
ing that neither lack of shipe nor
went of time afield be advanced 9,9.9.33:
The "serious ;indiscretion" ' was
coannitted an London, etea dinner
given by the Inirn Annyor about the
time first referred to, mild at which
one of the sneakers, The offence con-_
slated principally of a sentence in his
Tenter -Its to the' effeet that if Grnat
13ritain were ever seriously tbreaten-
ed she could depend an "every man,
every dollar, and every drop of
bloodk'alet the United States to come
to het aid. The attention of Presie
dent Taft haeringnbeen called to this
utterance, Commander Stine was
reprimanded in due form. "His of-
fence has been ee conspicuous,"
bert, the, Chancellor, takes • his
ace on a rostrum opposite he
gr
041
he.Opal Pin
Continued from Page 7 1
"Thank you" Durant turned away
from him as if his eyes might betray
his purpose He spoke slowly, as one
p carefully ' choosinghis words.
who is caxefudy
"When you appear in. court aga�t"
me," Y "perhaps you don't
he began,
mind stating under what name you
will testify"" �;,
,l "What has that: got to do with it?"
"Something• ,Your name isn't Corn-
wallis isit?"
walks Brook ,
"No. You know very well that d am
. here incognito."
"Yes, and your real name is?"
"1 don't know that I care `to.tell yeti
that"
"Just your Christian name then."
"Alexender."
• "Alexander. Yes, that's right!' D.u-
. rant made. a slight gesture of sa is-
. Brooke's eyes widened and fixed on
his iiignisitor, but he said nothing.
"And your age?"
Brooke .hesitated, but ,only for a
inonient. "Thirty-three," he stated,
never taldng his eyes from Durant.
"Yes, that wonfl.tbe the proper age
enell- Embassy. He addyesses tno according to Burke." - s.
Peerage, have you?" Brooke smiled.
rtial music, while the crbeele more comfortably; 'Ws a PAY you
eer and wave their handkercblein.
;into the street this morning, 'to a title that you're altogether too
amazement •—.and the apparent , young for yourself."
1 4‘Yes 'I could hardly pass for thirty -
t ree, I suppose. In fact, I'm only
ttped in the window'. of the Ent- n
syeea eagimeat was palming the _twenty-five." Durant grazed. him
andenburn Gate to the .old i we t .; with 'a glance. ‘‘Ily 'the wayecan you
twIfiere t7r:ubewaesrekedla. stfo- i
ter, I heard it played bontinuoulnil: i; rseomwenlybstiteht'
wiled with laurel wreaths.
Brooke looked at him, puzzled, then
e were evergreens around ( eke e expect a o me
el helmets and their. tunics and !Mast November 18th, to be 'exact 991
$ Were covered with flowers. ' "Not an idea."
'What particularly struck me wan "Were you off the Italearie Is -I
st
gu
tn
ce
attitude of the homecoming oin- lands .
. Those I have seen in the Berlin - may have been."
ga risen were quiet men, many of . "I'm sorry you can't remember. Ale
wh
ram
the
tro
are
old
cha
in had removed their marks .of . low me to aid your memeory. They r
k. They seldom were saldied by I in the Mediterranean, ofe the easte
r mete ' Oh the other- kand Coast of Spain. - wish you'd mak
lie just returned from Me ft ont 1 the effort to remember. It's import
well disciplined and salute as of . ante
The officers themaelves are un- 1 "Important!" Brooke could no4
ged. They exhibit themselv"cn, control his e:uriosity. "Wh ?" he ail* I
' Berlin is dancing mad.
mo
population, who clieerethem loudly.
There ; time allowed his ey s to dwell on 1
I BrfooTekee—au.s,bee-c-aupsen7
me to -day."
-are a,bout 50 cabarets in the city an .
dart ing-goes -avail the -afternoon and "What!" Brooke, for al) his nerv
tim the edict closing dancing loans
at is o'clock will be removed awl -
dant ing then will continue all night.
Ber fuer& are looking forward to
" t is a remarkable sight to see
. cab rets packed . to suffocation with
veci en in expensive toilettes and
both soldiers and civilians dancing
and drinking wine costing Ole) a bot-
tle. Seats,..at the theatres Call Only
be bookedwtwo days•ahea,d, 'We are
Propheent
When in 18.714France Ifie bleeding
on the ground, and heel& provinces,
Alsece and' Lorraine, were," torn from
her aide, the great poet7Vietor Hugo,
aroSe in_ the National Assembly ou
March 1, 1871, and said:
"Oh, the hour will strike—we feel
it come--thiS marvelous act of rceti-
youl will see her take back Lorraine,
back Alsace. And then, will that
11? No, shewill take hack Trevee,
enee, Cologne, Coblentz and the
le left bank of the Rhine. And
tak
be
Ma
Who
you will hear Prance shout, 'N'.e,e
hatve taken back from you all, earl
I am ening back 110 you alt. under
,one.condition: that is, that we hen,:e-
fordo. form but one people, hut, orie
family, nut one reptsblic. eni red ea.
to demolish my fortressee, you are
going to demolish your totem -nes.
The Rhine for Let as be 'the
same republic, let us he the, United
States of Europe, let us be the Con-
stitutional Federation, let us 1,e'
Eur oneanel iberty, let 'us be univer .11
peanel And now let us shake hefeee
for we have rendered n servIre
fro
ere
other—you have delivered
1 my Emperor .and I have tltr4I;-
you from yours!"'
heir regard fore him, thowever,
gre mightily the night of the bri-
gad 's entry into the fight up Mont -
fou _on way. They lied notiped that
he ad a genius for knowing wbich
kit hen in the outfit winuld serve the
best diuner on any given night and
for rapping 1.71 there easUally at mess
ti
for nderisliment, but bow great his
ta te were in that respect they
new r discovered until this particular
nig t, when eight of the officers ap-
Iget i them. a „decent meal. At the
each man, vanished iato the country-
' side? came bank with a -basket fnll of
#a
pr red such 9, 11.701.011f3 and wont
der ul six -course« dinner is they had
Oh, with celeStiat sauce, eggs
transforms& past recognition, a salad
for the gods—it was a feast unbe-
lieva.,ble. There were inquiries, and,
when cornered, M: Bouehette admit-
ted that, 'trier to the war, he had
been head. chef for the late Alfred
Van erhdt. Now he is trying dee-
per tely hard to retain his rank stne
stat s as an interpretor.
JECAM1,41,0 ft-
pitice,arid had to.
choose brtwee,n,
e of whil
Well t to the sor
spot direct, and'
. the other by
way, which woaitt you pre
that gets there. direct!
That is just the reason (0,
people'd preference for Peps fen
ailments of the throat, bronchill
tubes amid lungs. It eps get there
direct, Because they are breathe -
able, while remedies °which are
swallowed only go to the stoma+
Dissolve Pee ba the moUth,
and the vapor which ,is liberated
is carried by the breath direct to
'the breathing passages and mi.
ute air cells of the lungs,
stroyittg all germs, and soothir
delicate membranes.
Once you try Peps you 111
never use any other remedy or
coughs, coids2 sore throat, br
chins, tightness across the ch
night cough, laryngitis or a th-
ina.• dealers 50c. box
neksz g Tom, Send his
weasel elao'ea=, advertise.
moat .and Ic. staalp (to re-
turn postageleto Peps oe
Toronto. an d
receave free trial
package.
gs
-• IT.
.-A. ifactory worker, was -Mean an
remark, " We often have accidents,
but I've escaped so fard' He little g
*thought he would bit next Yet he e
*eel His injury Was only leaned
one end he tieglected in It began
to fester, Then blooddsoleoningaet
in and developed so oulekin that be
How about you? rou may be
next I Von can safeguard youraelf
against the result of '-accidents,
many other mule have dene, ;by
keening ZaM•Siik always hendy.
nisi S. A. Wernicke of Hilt012,
B.Ca accidentally tan a. needle se
far into' her finger that It plena
-the bone. She searrites: "My hand -
becante 'so stiff and swellen that
could not USD it. I naturally tried
every remedy I knew of, but It only.
got worSe; Blood -poisoning devel-
oped and extended right up tay
arna The pain was Intense, an& 1
arm -which iwas in a terribly
tiam*eil- and ,swollen etate, and liter-
ally covered with. lumps. 'A frientt
advised Me to use...Zam-Buk, Virldelf
I did, and it was not long before. "
the pain grew less. • With persearere
once the inflammation was all ,
diawn out, the swelling and lumps
- disappeared, and my arm was -seen
quite Well again:" •
.Zare-Bule la also best for eczems
and all skineeroubies, ulcers, rim-
ming sores an4pilets. All steres, Zee,
was oft his guard. His jaw dropped,
and the high color perenial en his
cheeks beaame spotted with white.
"What rot!" he managed to exelabot
after a time.
"It really seems to, me," Duran
said very seriously, "that Yell *WM
-pt? know iif you were drowned last
November. 7
Brooke forced a laugle "You're
chaffingr he retorted, gradually re-.
gaining his ease. oliow,4could I have
Ibeen drowned? I am here?"
"Yes, you are here, but Who ar0-
you—really? Unfortunately for you,
, My &other's body was 'recovered, lies
I bured in our family vault in Eng -
"Your brother! So yes do claim—
but what rubbish!" Brooke turned
impatiently away from him.
"I let you off once, because you
looked like this older brother of mine,
, the late Lord Bellmere, whom you very
impersonating, was drowned off the
Balearic Islands on - November Inth
land because I thought you would have
i sense enough to take yourself away,
but now—now you must liay for it,"
Durant stated -coldly.
'Tay tor tr Brooke laughed sneer-
ingly. "What has this trumped-up
story got to eo with the matter that
brought us here?" Brooke glanced
hopefully toward the sitting, watehful
inspector. "You're the thief here, not
L No wonder you'd like to vent your
spite on nte for informing on Yon, na
wender you've put together this aston-
ishing cock-and-bull story. What
else could you do? What does every
crinnial do when he's caught in a,
Oituation like this?"
' • "Criminal!" Durant glared at him -
"So you intend to pursue that eharge,3
1
d°1Af°11te?r" the way you have acted?
Well, rather!" Brookes face boiled.
"Noneense! You'll soon .find it is;
n't, not for you. What! Ido you think
a valuable necklace can be stolen
from this room, be found late
! on you, and that Vier' yott cart eS-
• cape merely by assailing me and by
calling the eharge nonsense?"
"You know very well that if any-
one took that necklace from this room,
Yo;t14:PYdrooludv.e'g'aitVe" it to me!? •
(To be Continued Next Week).
rashiarn-
onie
ing from
He raise
and look+
For pe
stood sta
wrought
tide was
was so 3
hear the
be shook
,,and all
from hm
"Why,
he cried.
• What is
drew he
shut the
either sk
announce
to him g!
dies fron
led her
nothing
limply fr
and therR
from tru
of each v
the last
don't beli
bout inte
pathizerd
Rose st
did you la
asked.
"1 deci
we took t
erm
for not ,og
if he slue
back. Qi
of ,the
grumbled
order ten
trunks, ea
departed
waaa
shops
for collec
ways like
trays so
erm s(
anything
hi here -t
won't be
anyway, t
To prove
tray of a
before he
ed one en,
the trun,
hand undi
paRment
forth wit
held toge
"Good,
ticketer
"Hurry
trunk. E
the ticket
exelamati
- Rose rule
On the
small ob'
cord. T1
aned the
sprungeo
aperture
diamond
Hidden
the theft
muttered
off and 11
wonder
be hidirie
Before 1
ed the pa
the floor
bot's em
Rose s
doubtin
ed out
dropped
Then sl
"Look,
in that
Her req
.obeyed 1
cept sole
llemande
about hi
think
She shr
dread in g
gethern
hack an
decision
that it
queetion
Une satisfied customer said:
it never knew Graham Wafers
could tile so good until tried.
Telfersi; They are perfectly de -
She's right. YOU try them,
Packed' in air tight packages.
For sale at all grovers.
elters
Hifi
IMMINERIUMMIll
Itnifintiouto
Heavy
trellis B
tible lift
ed the
other si
ease, he
the nex
he W40
faint si
Cabot a,
fes
o see
here."
nation.
She 1
duty to
o• ther h