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The Signal, 1915-12-2, Page 21 • Tausao*T DOMAIN Ilan S. MIS awaillicassid TER SIGNAL PiLDIT lIO CU., L. POWtile*g*e �wwsill*ta 4 r+ �,+dcw000ntrrsro.° seer. -see Ttis:44 papas we M aioeeteS : stud states tae tem is °eau ,triode is advsaua tally, g gse�ssli�re Tem »wa a grg�y • caw aer �sM.. i as p arse sag tie sew add/era be *tee.. resshmesse s�w,ajar.�e be �rmti•. Arsitm.erati�...a rI.u.r. aatreratisar may a—me�.— at way ti... LDvlri eTls ss lits*.—pease ler display mod eastern adsurtimmisstr will be Mese e spoil auras. L.ssI sed ether stmllor verdeoseate. tae oasts per Ilio Our ant is.ernes ad tow emu parr ytis: teryof solid t welvo Maas m as (sea.sm D.daess set a. M . Illesea�nadawide . eTt1t tF berss54+ owe rear. v te Varna. etestbsesWa.l.d.Reuses to yam. Farr 1.r Saba or ter rats. eta. est etwaedlag ave (1st. sash�ige Om far asst ***sate. ecru t)aetsirese eewhea��mentt manta. seaneamma1m tamer V a�ma� t)Va. 7M 13•41411I Oseta A.s 1"1.11eMim. the baso*, of whisk is the bMailsal er . us -s1 W t sal vii• we�mes as edver Ueemsat sod charged ae.mdlse s. :oe of To Oo.eeerosreourr .—TMe .en e.t our ..Manuas aid redere V oa tally 'nett e d tew..4. aaiUee Tusamrrat. s weekly record of all beset esewety awlibt+bticlses. he cons .aasls•tlw MU be ut.dd to saber It eon - tabs sham= sad address .ddress et twriter. not aepa�Uy =toots but as an ,vide,°, of seal i th. toots rbtY re.ob Tus AL IMOD Wt later than Wednesday woo Of mon week. THURSDAY. DEC EMBER S, alta would rook only t• s Matt rlag at r reepoweibillay. white is lea what should be avoided la the headset olt war. If the oa*ndt.. 6.v.ramemt *requires advise from the Walsh Was Osie as to wan is seeded from C eesda la the way of moisteners to the 1iW . Aerial cause, such advice can be aF cured dine:ly. without the decay which • conference of repreeetststives of the Imperial downtimes would *seas. The Maisel *.Akre piste eat that. while the et.sorubip dose met prevent the Oermeoe from finding out what they want to know, it does provost the Br ithb public from learning a good many things thry have • tight to know and (bus may br io reality a screen for inoompeteace among Britieb officers. Thee* is s good deal of soros In what The hied and Bmpi.. mays : that too long as the oeesorsbip is maintained "thee* can be little intelli- gent criticism of the operations of the war. little material upon which public judgment and opinion may be nour- ished and brought to hear upon the statesmen and generals responsible for the conduct of the war." The Dominion Shell Committee has been dissolved, and in its place is a new org•rization, the "Imperial Must - Lions Board." with Mr. J. W. Flavell., of Toronto. at its head. The new 1N15 Board. it is said, does not include any- one interested in the manufacture of EDITORIAL NOTES. Read the advertisements in The Signal and do our Christmas shop - Flog earl� _ The native sous are doing better. Of the tor■ who voli.ted at London, Out., la.t week sixty-three per cent. wile Canadian born Canada's export trade i. showing Liege increases, largely the result of the big crops and the manufacture of munitions of war. About 180,000 men hare enlisted in Canada for active service since the war began. Nearly 100.000 of these have already beam sent overseas. Who says advertl.ing doesn't pay ? Tb. Dominion Go,er.u.ent $50,t>fn,- 1100 war lois was advertised 1.1 The Signal last week aodwas subscribed in a few hours. The conscription question presents *het ditS.ulty to, tbe%attfod tinge. tis says be t:elieves firmly in conscription --always bas, ever since he passed the military age limit. Rudyard Kipling le grinding nut some queer stuff these days. The newspaper men who pay big money for it probably have much better stuff *;efw via tbeir waste -paper bask} . The commercial travellers are eeon- sidering the raising of a battalion from their number for active service. Coder modern conditions of warfare will so many drummers he needed King Peter of Serbia ie 111 with grief over the fate of his country. overrun by the Huns. And King Peter isn't the only one who feels sick over the 1 salute of the Allies to protect brave little Serbia. Besides being better suited to ser- vice use, the khaki uniform is much more becoming than the red tunic, and it improves almost any man's ap- pearance. It is said the khaki color suits every wan'. complexion, unless be is yellow. The price of the Canadian Liberal Monthly bas been reduced from opt dollar to :!.ic a year. The Liberal Monthly is a synopsis of current polit- ical events, and those who wish to kea 1in touch with political affairs as they develop from month to month should send • "quartet" to the office of the publication, IH Sparks street, Ottawa. Roumania is like some of the movibg picture houses that advertise • change of pi og: £&U three times • week. Mon- days and Tuesdays she intends to fight with 11:e Allies ; Wednesdays •ted Tbttredey she lines up with the Teu- ton. : Fridays and Saturdays she says she won't tight at all. It may be, bow. ever, that sbe is not so fickle as the piens correspondents make out. There should be no difficulty over the avoidance of a wartime election. An extension of the Parliamentary term for one year would doubtless be agreed to by the Liberal lesdete, and If the war should still continue beyond this term another extension of • year could he agreed to. While there is • genet al desire to .void party contro- versy during the continuance of the war, the dislocation of '•onstitutional procedure should he as slight as is necessary to meet the rzlraotrdissry conditions. Mr. Rowell continues his advocacy of •s Imperial conference to dlaeum war e.aditioas. Fortunately there is *o bk lihood that loch a conference wild be held. We *must *sold our own Misiotee. r..po.uIble lot. the taisong lend 14111111011111 of troops, and we moot trust the Rehab Government for the iI pesNiems of oar troops after they More vase Shies. Am Imperial confer - mem. 1.111 bad any pc *ileal effect at THE SIGNAL : t ODBtRICH ONTARIO d education is to tear tree sidldre. to IIWk. Le to• aortal*potst, enmesh- soy lemet -soy inetrtwties 1. arieolture or Me- diate I I salaam will help to •*talo tbi. object. Carried too far, it will tend to dual tee Ltrllect. it is to the lobereM_ of Abe haws sad working - was allOoatida be see that iodate/ial eiaeation r *ever .Ilowrd to become ehteieg more them • very seeond.ry sob m.I oa tie Saerieul*m of our Ischools. munition.. On the original committee there were manufacturers whose conn• ponies received large orders, a circum- stance which naturally created a good deal of diasatistscitoo. Shell -making is said to 1.e now the largest industty in Canada, and a number of .ubaidiary industries have sprung up as a result of the war which may b3come per manently established. For instance, the refining of certain metals which formerly were shipped out of Canada in a raw state is now to be done in this countr . Seven members of the city council of Stratford attempted to block the submitting of a local option bylaw to the electors of the city at the January elections. The advocates of the bylaw applied for a mandamus, which has been granted by Mr. Justice Middle• too, who found that the petition for the submitting of the bylaw Was suffi- ciently signed and directed that the council should do its duty in allowing the. electors to vote on it. The costs is the matter ass **,.,seed indi• vidosfly against the seven members of the council who were responsible tor the proceedings. The city solicitor of Stratford (Mr. R. S. Robertson, a Godericb old boy) had advised that the bylaw should be submitted, but his advice, which Judge Middleton's find- ings proved to be sound, wa. set &side try the *avec member whom efforts to block the bylaw have now failed. Renewing Youth. 01. a In. the man. however old and .tsid. Or worn with .orrow sud perplexity. Who. when he walks 1n .oneklac or to -hs.e. Hy woodland bowrr. or baro beach of the sea. o'er hind.+. or io ostler. oven. with toe. Throe. orf his see and gambol. like a chili. And grid. • boyish pleasure In the wild, Raj*vwi..'cot on the flowery lea' Rim shall the sew prow lightly M t.s too.: The Madly widow gatber'd In the geld. To her tree le.' erns .hall his heart inrlo.e, I I.i tel blunt the .harts of rare like Iron-bie1J. —charle. Mackay. WHAT OTHERS SAY. Good Advice. 11faw. Joariat Our own ides is that The Orange Sentinel would do well to keep its mouth shut about Catholics, as regards this war. Any organ that wants to help in the war can do heat by preach- ing to its own people and lotting the test alone. A Warttusg. Montreal Stu The Canadian people do not want • general election curing the war. Terre or no room for doubt.abcut that. They want the politicians to drop their monkey bu.inees and work together for the safety of the Empire in its day of danger. The party which lays lt•rlf open to suspicion of. treason to this tauaniwoug popular desire will troffer. An Educational Ganger. Yaro and hair. In these days when leading Cana- dian educationists are so strongly advocating instruction in agriculture In all rural schools, the following para- graph from The Nebraska Farmer conte, as • timely warning of a very real danger. Our contemporary soya: "That farmers may be fitted to take their proper place in the government is one reason why the rural schools should continue to give. In,tructloo in the rudiments of • broad education rather then to be Mooed into corn and hog schools Palmer. must not per- mit -fad -chiming educators and 'reboot - men, by intr during toy much vont- timed training, to destroy the useful- oe a of the rural schools in training for cit izensbip." This warning eppliee n only to agricultural instruction, h 1 to rill pba�es of industrial eduralii in puh- il c schools. Industrial education may easily be carried en oar that it will endeavor the valise of our schools as de, of nrn•d•mindert, intellt- �Mt and in their pla.s per - d.me .�*t industrial slaves Mut Hub seem Uoemaey M an example .1. blot bit mads industrial ellilikell rent .ed braurb of her neer sod many thou emery waw rdIy Pronianire our (.mge�m u*sam Let as ma begot test the first object The Graves of Ypres. p'ernietereodeat 1 trades Canadian Daaette, Oct. f.. There are enemy sad reminders ice amid about ruined Ypres of�those April days so terrible for V•ada and yet so g lorious Then is the Gold in which our wen wee* playing football as the resort colonial troops toe* past them in dismay They bad left their com- rades dead and dying behind the trenches, choked by the Bendtsh gas. Those who maw that rad on that awful.day will never forget the scene --the i.rrorrtruck French c rlooids, bot ry iog south ; on the other side of the road our troops moviog steadily north to 1111 the five -mile gassed esp. and in the middle of the road Belgian refugees—old men. faint woven and crying children—flying for • Ater from the oncoming Hun And herr, too, we found sad mem- ories of the first battle of Ypres, those •weeloiwe days at the enol of October. 1911, when the fate of Calais and of E ngland seemed to hang by • thread. It. was a desperately critical moment in the thrust of the willion °erotism, for the coast, when every man was Hung into tele British cattle front to keep that battle -front unbroken. Transmit men, personal guards, far- riers with their hammers, the field *arks, even with their' rolling pins — ever y British male thing threw his all into the blood • fight that day ; and out of the wild. chaotic whit) of fight- ing came the salvation of England and the Bri•ish Empire. %Ve stood harrhraded in the little improvised British cemetery where rest the Grenfell' and other martyrs of those fateful hours. At the head of each grave io a wooden ;r ons. the name in ems carr* burvit`into the wood so that it should live, thtongh rain and sun alike. And. s` -range to say. though the church near by has been °tricked out of recognition by the German shells, this little English graveyard remains untouched. "If 1 should di". think only this of one, That here's some corner of a foreign field That is for ever England. There shall be In that rich earth a licher dust con- craled." A hundred thousand French, Eng- lish and Canadian graves lie in that salient of l-pres And, in the word. of Sir Robert Borden, the day will never come when Canadians can look over that valley and not Le nerved by the remembrance of what Canadians did to save ube day for our free Em- pire and our free borne,. POSTAGE ON PARCELS GOING TO THE TROOPS IN FRANCE. The Poetoftice Department' at Ot- tawa has issued the following state- ment: The Department is in receipt of ap- plications to have parcels addressed to our soldiers in France sent free or at reduced rates of postage, there ev:- dently being an impression that the Department has control of these rates and could do as it wished, but this is not so, as the question of poetess is fixed by inteinational agreement, an that it is not within the power of the Canadian Poetofflce Department to undertake to carry the parcels free cr at a reduced rate of postage Under internatioual law, provision is made for the free transmission of parcels for prisoners of war, but this privilege does cot extant] to parcels for troop. engaged in active service. nor is it within the power of the Department to so extend it. The rate of postage required on parcels addressed to the troops de fiend. upon the location of the ad- dre.,ee. if the addresses is in Eng- land, the rate on parcels for England applies, which is twelve cents per pound ; whilst, it be is in France, the parcels are subject to the rates appU- cahle to parcels for France, which ate as follows : lib ..i::cents S Ilr.10 cents a •' 48 , a " 2 " et " 80 • 88 „ 8 " 11 lr2 " 1 In 10 " 1 18 Il " 1 ai These are exactly the same charges which existed for years i etween Can- ada, England end France before the .vas, and are the result of an agree- ment in,- convention trade between these countries and Canada. and as these enunti lea have not agreed to cower their rate* between Beirland and France Canada has to pay- to them lbs san.e rotes as before the war and must charge the ..tet. postage. in all cases parcels for the troon• must las .ddre.sed care of Army Post - office, London, England, but ibis doe. not in any way affect the rate of post- . ge. which iepends entirely upon the location of the addressee. Ma "MVP 07 7111" TO 0011DITIZATZD CHILD Delicious "Fevlt Laxative" can't harm tender little $tornaeh, liver and bowels. Look at the *nagana, aa011e! if (Dated. your tittle omah Hams*, liver sad bowels heed etteaalag at sass. ross. liettesa. basal sheep sig .eetiatwAl4 Or b - tea stlomar tsar. Waft bad; has D OM Weak dlerehmat tan of ',KNIT* a teammate! at '"p1h..la rue. of Fila" aid r a bow Muter el the lent, a MemIN1116b Mer mered1' little WNW t11�Sle1 (fry lee1 yet have a Divi *gala. A yetit tier a 'head* bottle et litres fle Ms." *Yoh oar tabs tell direcame for babies, *114 Oils at all alis aM to gfewW'aps. TOE WAR. 4••••••••••••••••••••••••• HOW IT $THI11CIr ONE AItILR1tlAN, Orderly—"lashes'•*, bees is Mill •s- other *sop from that Aoserie•a Peeei- dest." "Answer it yourself, Frits" "What sbaU 1 say, Ma jest•t r •'Oh, anyibing."—urs And what a variety of explanatiose "anything" comprises ! The LtoMtsals wa. destroyed bemuse she bore muei• Lions of war t t the sunny. But the Hsspsrian was bound welt, and, of course, bore no mood loos. Well. thee• it is declared, unofficially, she prob- ably struck • mice—quite probably. n inety *tiles out at sea—and a* w she was armed ; 1. e., she sotalol the one small gun to which • mwehaets man is entitled by tntern.tioaal lent, unrevised by Germany. The Amble too was outwerdbSund, bon no meals flocs and carried oo gun. But *be had a bow. sod therefore might make .,a violent attack" upon a sacred sub- marine. The Ord*na could not have been suspected a trying to ram, be- comes the torpedo passed her astern. Prue, but the weather was bad and the oouunaodor could cot see well ; so be blazed away on general principles. As for the Atra.rioa. *hips Nebraskan and (;ulfligbt, excuse us, '•mist**,." ; very sorry ; shrill regret it the like happens again. Aad et. on. Subter- fuge alter subterfuge, strung like Frankfurter sausages ou a string, sad dangled before our res with viae truculent intimation, ",What are you going to do about it : Take it or leave it !'' a When the Prophet had spoken— "Peaoe, prace, when there is no peace!" he added : •' Were they &shamed whet they committed abomin- ations i Nay, they were not at all ashamed, neither could they blush ; therefore they shall fall." And bo we say now. No war of Israel was so right.eou. as that which is being waged at this moment for Freedow of the World. None of course was so terrible. none so ghastly, n one so heavily laden with w.nsce to mankind if sentiment or we•kuees should compel a peace in name which would he only a tru.-e in tact. Be it for months or for years, the mighty struggle must continue until the cure of ages shall be lifted and the triumph of Democracy over Autocracy shall be complete. leen and not till then will Europe be immune to war's starers and America be free from peril. If we would be true to our republican faith, we cannot keep too constantly before the minds of our oountryweo the fact that the overpowering issue is be- tween Government subject to the will of the people and Imperialism founded upon Torre. Aod if we must fight, we shall have at least the satidaction of standiog shoulder to shoulder witb deueocra1ie )Cogl.nd and with the SW - ant sone 64 France -to *heroost holy of wan for civilization and humanity, and of realizing that the cries of the dying di -1 pot ries from the sinking ships to Heaves and to America its vain. W. retnembered the *fain. God forbid that we should forget the Ltsi- taois.—Tbe North Ametpean Review (by the editor). • • • "MISSING." Wheel the elution* hearts say. "Where r He doth answer, "In My rare. "1. it life or 1. It death r• '•Walt." he obi -pet, 'Child. here faith " "Did they mod toyrL ts.darer. ••1a there lore like litee to blw. t "Wen they frightened a the b.t t" -No. the .Ung of .leath 1. past." 'LI)i.1 • thought of 'Hoot -In. e- rt.* t' 1 looked down tbro Mother -eye.." "8arlour. tell n., where are they r ''In Ms keeping. night and day." "Tell us. tall its how it st.and..- • N.ooe -hall pluck them how My hands.- -The Bookman (Los.font • • • WOMEN, ZEPPELIN RAIDS AND MUSIC. I live with two or three friends i wo- men) in a very poor street (the disre- spectful call it • slum) In one of the poorest London boroughs. The house we live in was once a public -house, and retsina most of its characteristics except the alcohol. Among other things it has double doors and a big room on the ground floor, and a bar whets tea and cocoa ran be got. When the Bret air raid came I was not rat home, Nit the trued wo- men crowded Into the ace es if it were a refuge, and my riends Dad • busy time in quieting them. In the following weeks nerves calmed down : it WAS thought that no other raid would follow. The raids last week put an end too that illusion. With the tint 'round of the guns on October 11 then wee a rush of frightened wromes and children into our room. Then were over seventy at one time and the big room was full. Hastily we got whet order we could, and'at once fell to soaking and handing round hot tea. And then 1 thought of the piano and got it going. The Russian National Anthem caught the children, they picked it up an I sang gallantly. And peace was restored. When the later raid came, near midnight, and once more the gun near us harked, and meg more the roofilled almost beford we could m t the doors open, 1 bad the piano going immediately. The player started at once on children's hymns, and some of her own 806day-school children aught on goickly I declare i wished the Germans, as they flew past nn their death -dealing errand, could have beard that little gsroup of children singing lustily "All thing have t and ug l .. tisk" They might have thought w sgMth • queerer lot than ever Ur w b they have takes 1t se • welcome The Zeppelins passed and the guns ceased Sting. but the children sass no "Tell ms the *tortes of Jewoa" and other favorites. When it came to "There is • green b/M far away," and 1 told them all how a eoi.paoy of our meet in Primes went into a charge d eg loot that my hymn not long ago• yore eo*ld have beard the proverbial pin drop. What the women is these narrow, crowded streets all over poorer Looker •••••‘. '•••••••••••••••••••••000011111110 i ' W. ACHESON di SON • •• • • • • • • •: •: •44: • •44 • • • • • • • • 55c • • • • • W. "ACNESON & SON • Take Advantage of Grea 1 Savings in this List of Desirable Goods Plain Grey Domet Flannelette 800 yards of 34 inches wide, extra heavy and splendid weave, suitable for skirts, sheets or underwear. Special price 16c per yard 28c Grey Flannel 28 inches wide, super quality, 3110 yards only, at pen yard.. Hosiery Purchases of Cashmere Hose will be a joke when present stocks are sold out. We have several hundred dozen at last year's prices and recommend all our friends to buy. Ladies' Cashmere Nast, all sizes, seamless...... Special 500, 39e, 30e, Yarns 25c 2 -ply and .J -ply super -mill Yarn. Best qual- ity, grey, black and grey and white, 70c at per lb Worsted Yarns Khaki and grey shades. beautiful 4 -ply stock. soft and durable for knit- $125 ting sox for soldiers, at per lb G Carpets Yard - wide ^_ reversible, heavy qv Pard -wide reversible, heavy union Carpets in neat small patterns Stair Carpets to match. 23 inches J?gc wide. at per yard Halifax Tweeds Genuine old-fashioned, heavy an pare wool, 28 -inch Halifax Tweeds tot men's, women's and children's wear. Greys and navy. Special at per yard Grain Bags l:atra large size double -woven Grain Bags, best Canadian brand, at per doz. $3.50 • • •• •• •• ••• • •• •• Men's Sweater Coats • ••• Knit of soft all -wool in khaki color, high V collar, heavy ivory buttons to match. Double rib woven cuffs, worth double this 1a.• Please see them, at each $1.50 White Quilts til) only white American 4 -ply crochet dot - ton Qus or Bed Spreads, large x1.35 size, eaeli Men's Fur Coats Men's Black Dog Coats, No. 1 skins, collar of select Bocharan Lamb, lined with extra heavy farmers' satin, sleeves reinforced. Quality of coat guaranteed by ns t'>,5 00 in every particular. Special each �ePP�arr • Rugs Seamless Tapestry, Brussels, \1'ilton Rugs in every size. Selection we have is large and prices we have not advanced on stock we had placed order for. • 0 •• i a • • • Deed is music, singing, above all friend- ship and fellowship, hearts cheered and souls strengthened. Their hus- bands and sons, their fathers and brothers, are facing death for us all out "sowewhetes in France" or the farther off Dardanelles. A generous friend wbo believes in singing bas Riven us a portable organ. And ,we are going to carry that out into the streets and dolomite street bymn•sing- ing these dreary evenings No meet- ing—not • suspicion of ooe; no talk- ing or reading or praying; not a syl- lable—except as the hymns do it, just that and no mon.—Tee Methodist Times t Loudon t. * • • THE FATE OF GERMAN SUBMAR- INES. UBMAR- INES. In toe scent complete breakdown of the German submarine attack on merchant vessels. we witness another of those silent victoties over the Ger- man navy, of which the present war has been so fruitful. The first and greatest of these, of course, was the complete immobilization of the (ler. man high .es fleet, whose twenty or more dreadnoughts and battlecruisers have been shut up helplessly in Ger- man North Sea ports and In the Baltic from the very day when war was de- clared To what are we to attribute the sud- den collapse of the (German submarine raiding expeditions? The attester is to lie found in the two fields of m.- cbanice and psychology. It ie safe to say that no branch of the great naval and military operations of this war has been the subject of woe* thorough investigation by the scientist 'and the Inventor than that of submarine war - tan in its defensive side. Very fruit- ful his been the steay el this}rombi.m. and most effleient have been *Ghee eson adopted. Not until the history of the war come* to he written, probably, will it be known which of the defensive moss - urea have proved to be the most sue - earful. Probably more submarines have been accounted for by nets thea by any other means : alt h a large number have been sunk by royers .ad swift motor -tow rushing in upon aged ramming them or destroying them with their rapid -Are guns. We are informed that not a few boats have been lost when they easee to the soda.ni at night to recharge their bat- teries. The exhaust from the oil en- gines is very noisy and can be beard over • great datum. and. naturally. the .ubosarinee chorea the night time for battery charities. The destroyers and armed motor -baste gather in the submarine -Infested area Sher sight hoe bilge. and by e•r•ef.l Detente( d!- tteet the location of the enttmarine.i creep upon then quietly, and thee make a final ds.h to get them with the gun or the ram before *bays sage The oontmapletion of a litllgoehtg death is a sutakeo sabnsetas may weltstrIke limo to haat. lied the British AlbilMsy herb .ii. ddeadly esti et the pug totegy off *8. ble by re esy *ealbea tlf tie or plateIei the d1 1u5Am et ihe U la What the tMMsbwee at w Naas at Oa asp Enlisting ! When you put a tc:ephone in your home you enlist our staff of skilled workers in the service of your wife and family. To lighten the labors of the household. to keep the family in touch with their friends and to protect them in emergencies, the tele- phone is alert and ever ready, day and night. A telephone in the home is a boon at any time, but during the inclement fall and winter weather it is invaluable. Ask to -day for rates and information. Enlist in the great army of enthusiastic home - telephone users. Score Dell Tel.whone is s Long Distulare Mafiosi The Bell Telephone Co. OF CANADA. of a torpedo set red Ib•t a sub- marine woe esesairkK the U -best was hauled to the sertee.. shot 1.11 of holes and allowed to sink without u weed Wag paW,bsd of the occur. ieal effort upon tler The of twbaaarleo sortie. of chip a±M&-te Asses as to the fats of the sehataelats atter 'bey have Ido Wilhelmshaven or the ytmra/possul1th of the bag as tie fats d .ate °bid co sailer Wan Inwere destreyedi ay eareered de n se the was de it knows. the Merge_ etc uamsrt•IMy was miming he past feet soothe over belt bbe.dredd boats bar. bailed M sway* They as 'bey sumated eat heal their imorel boor, and that was the leaf that was mann or beard of say of shwa. Von Hindenburg has said that the p+sseet esateet le Ina of servo& ff sn, It may well bs s gsmatiete whether this portantaus silent. whisk W bil- lowed the peonsee tit tie ghosts apse tie high Ms has eat bus a pomaded faster le brseklag *taws the ewer aebmarlua warfare.—Tb, eglshal�a £*metes a (bow York). r 1