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The Exeter Times, 1919-1-23, Page 2!s not a amble, but a sure thing that you are getting the greatest piss ,b1e ality and Value to the limit it you.? VO BILLION DIMAGE TO POLAND. DURING ITS OCCUPATION BY THE GERMANS. JIM Industrial Life is Extinct and Ravaged Country Will Have Hard Struggle to Start Again. �yJ CANANAN WAR - ... M 4 A.RTISTe HAVE RECORDED OUR PART IN CONFLICT. Every Phase of Canada's Wray Activity From Start to Finish is Depicted. Poland was stripped of all naterlrils Dealing with the exhibition of Caua- 'and machinery during the German oc- dian war pictures which opened at the �o cupatiou which ended on November' 14, Royal Academy of Arts, Loudon, on $ On that day a few thousand soldiers January 4, a contributor to the Pall of the Polish Leeun, aided by the • Mall • Gazette says it was a unique population of 'tip arsaw, disarmed more spectacle of a nation's supreme en - titan 20,000 German soldiers who had deavor portrayed,. mit fix retrospect, arranged a revolt against their own but during its aeeemplishment, by her • officers. artists. The 70 leaning painters of Ali food and all telephone wires Canada, including some famous British were removed by the Germans. All in- ones, have risen gloriously to the tae1te dustrial plants were robbed and die-- set by their Government when it took Mein out to the' trenches in France and Flanders. From the landing of the first 33,000 men at Plymouth to the capture of Mons on the last clay of the war, no phase of Canada's war activity • P Y • willnot t down while has been neglected. mantled, with 'm result that Poland will have a hard job to start in again even if financia and political condi- , tions were of the best, observers say. iieen Discussing the economic situation in Washing W'ithoet Worrying. ; with rinsing water and lines got. Poland, StanisIau Larlowski, director lea :y. ou wi si of the (`omntercial Bank, of IN arsaw, Th Next to high prices as a topic for the washing is on. Also, if the said to the correspondent: The are nearly 100 paintings illus - conversation, the scarcity of labor ;clothes wind around the tvriitger or Corpstg the career of the Canadian It.wiil take nearly $2,000,000,000 to in Franca including the magni- takes rank. Competent farm inborn you try to put too thick a garment' repair the damage done in tlxe German ficent paintings of the landing of the always hard to secure, has about through—ttel}, your machine is like occupation and to put us on our feet 3rd Canadian Brigade at St. Nazaire, reached the vanishing point so far as ly to stop in the middle of the wash- : properly and to develop our great by ndgtzr Bundy, A.R.A., and the giant the fields are concerned and the .ing, and you must wait for someoneunderstands its natural resources Our oil products canvas byMajor Richard Joelt, r1.R.A. housekeeper no longer even dreamse _ ___,.__._._t' .....rL_ 500,000,000 marks annually _ return "The Second Battle of Ypres."Major Jock has also a fine painting of "The Battle of 'Vinay Ridge." In the same way the historic Canadian battles are swim " dealt with each in their turn. Regina of getting her washing done, to say lags to set it going. Caro in feed- i we are rich in coal and salt mines, pot - nothing securing other help. The ;ing the wringer makes this uuneces` ash, forests and agricultural products. work is all up to the house -mother, sane however. And, to boil or not "r+t the and she must "live or die, sink orpresent time the economic to boil is another question. Most situation is confused because Russian survive er perish, unaided by ; agents say it is not necessary that rubles, Austrian crowns and German Tr ench, the taking of Courcelette and human ..tads, i good soap powder, scalding water and marks are in circulation. The marks so on, and then the Arras-Canibrai The situateon in the Cities is thesun are all you need. Personally, I' are a heritage of the German occupa- road is shown, along which the Cana - same. Employment bureau: long! sun boiling. Wristbands and tion. In April, 1917, the Germans is- diens are seen streaming after three ago hung out the "No Domestic I soiled spots do not need to be rubbed sued 2,000,000,000 marks which they months of incessant battle to the bit - Help" sign. There are no girls sael* ' on the board if you use sufficient care. called Polish marks. The issue was ter fight for Cainbrai, whence they, ing dome.t:c employment, with fat- Soap all these spots carefully and, made through a special bank with the �!e thc L.ud lr(.sic By, 'Flog Tolbert Barnard "'What's the matter with these clothes? You did •not expect zne- to, wear partly things on a horse?'" She dropped a gaxintleted hand on his shoulder as he 'walked beside het along - a narrow path towerd the house, • He laughed seemly, apparently un- conscious -oi the smelt. friendly. hand. "I ant talking about my handma.icion, not mei If you wish my opinion, it i;, most gratifying, even flattering! You look adorable! But Mrs,. Davis makes no discrimination between riding breeches and `pants,' I didn't think your horse could get through this gate ---and it's the only way out. You will hare to take him over•,. Jest when •they were in • mid-air, Mrs; Davis appeared on some breathe less errand and stepped transfixed. for one inarticulate• second, Then she yelled frantically: ""That there horse is running away with that boy!" Townsend paused to explain grave- Iy. Mrs. Davis shaded her eyes with her hand,. staring, grimly after Rhoda, tulle had followed the drive- way to the barn and was already turning the horse over , to a Davis, visibly admiring, .even at that dis- tance. To his keen amusement, Mrs. Davis did not deign Townsend a second glance but proceeded -o•n her interrupted errand with a pregnant "Hump!" of contempt, Coming back, three minutes later with an apron full of vegetables; she stopped definatly as Townsend greet- ed her: "'Z§rait a minute, Mrs, Davis, I want yon to meet Miss Brookes." • Rhoda was coming toward them in a progress much hindered by • a family of collie puppies whose ,adora- ble clumsiness accentuated her lithe grace. She had pulled off her gloves, and was having a tug of war with a might invent something but all the inveixtions• have already been invent- ed! My hair isn't curly enough to get rte into the picture; and Babylon and Nineveh hove :already been dug un by regular areheologists. I haven't telescope or I'd locate a neer star. and I do not understand navigation or I'd hunt- up a third ole or go fishing for , old Atlantis. I'd write ite 'you a .sonnet but -the only word I knew that rhymes with Maeda is soda and 1 cannot think • of . e way to wort;. it in. of eetively. • In- deed, all that s kept, axe front getting, to the top,• is not never Navin' no black-smith'n' shop! For - two more cents, I'd kiss you but I agree with Ilashimura Togo—when honor comes along too much are not enough. I also share his belie# that honor are noble but inconvenient! Wlxee-el It's been six years .since I have seen feu glowing with wrath! I'll -be good now! Take off your hat, dear, and. make yourself at home. Pll rustle up some .ceder. It is parti- cularly good this year end it Inc not turned, notwithstanding Uncle Aaron's insinuations not very long ago.." - 86 �aST BEFORE r x TE" REVELATION , OF A H EA FRT, i"'. Re'ine Written 1»' An American Mayor Just Before An Attack on the Argonne Forest. Of what does a snlclier think the night before he.goes into battle? e. In the Luxembourg, Paris z� .x mos- terpiet:a of Edouard l7etallle eitti`tled ""'floe Drealxl." ]t sliotc> l'h(1:311113:se 1 of French soldiers Alf" nrer ! stacked muskets, Slaopfng viem are their dogs. In the clue i is a vision of a vietoi•ioue rV. ling beneath the banters, they move onward, According to tho painter of drama- tic ,1 tic sCeney, "victory was the wing on t the soldier's iniad the night before the 1 battle. 1 It Happened that a llissour; soldier ! in France wrote to his wife just before 1 the battle after which bo was pro- r t e time dor- na or to lieutenant -colonel He was gone some little , I muted from maim Age ing which Rhoda sat staring into the, for gallantry i11 action. Major J. E AW apple -wood fire, trying to decide 1 Rieger, of Kir•kville, Mo., led into at. which she resented more; the frank i tack on the Argonne forest a battalion longing in his clear gray eyes or his', merry self-possession! She was i of 1,000 men, of tvliieli only 400 came peril- ously near tears and she knew that, out uninjured. A lamellae -gun 'bullet Townsend's delayed return was ow -1 broke Major Iioger's told glacier and ing to his perception of that fact. he was struck by a piece of'shrapnel. When he did return, as ho poured a He commanded the Second Battalion. glass of the cool amber cider, he 139th Regiment, Thirty-fifth I?lvisicn;. said easily: A. E. F„ in the Argonne battle. "1 think your director would do Before the Battle. well to take a course in agriculture or perhaps have his scenario writer Just before the great battle in which do it. In your last release there his battalion was destined to softer were some of the most absurd blond- so severely, and wliiclr action caused • ers. It really surprised may for his promotion by General Pershing on your company= or corporation or the battlefield, Major Rieger wrote whatever they call themselves, poses this and mailed it to his wife in 'Kirk the best!" tones offering three times .he wages,' announcement that after two years liaised to their last engagement which humorous pup, to the imminent des- asHe set the pitcher on the mantel villa: '+ let the clothes soak over night. If culminated in the triumphal entry into t t' f f the T One Front Lines, Oct. ?1, 1918. Housekeepers in the futons have for; the spots shaty when they came out polish marks should be redeemed by Mons. 1 1 h and lifted hie glass, smiling some time been facing the situation i of the tub. soap them again and wash German marks. By this scheme the Many Beautiful Portraits. whip to Townsend Three others j quizzically. and adjaat:ng their lives to the a second time. Only on rare occasions. German Reichsbank was not compel- I m immensely proud that you go change. Their so_utivn of the ques- roc ion o - one o e g Dues, s ' down at wooly assailant came dragging er her � ui ,, , • p Apart Pram the actual figlztixig, lrow- were doing their best to try out some i to see me—in- pictures• , You never led to issue extra money and, there- new teeth on the lustrous soft loath - t ever, the paintings give a comprehen- wrote. T did not know. I I often fore, did not injure its own credit. er of her boots. She had confessed sive view of every other phase of to twenty-eighti lvonde' d," She lifted her glass ' At the sante time the Germans re- years to the Dun -tin response. Canadian war activity overseas, the kard preacher and the Traceys less ; c fused to accept the ruble as legal ten- Had you communicated that won - than an hour before but had she j der' to me, I should have been glad omitted the eight it would have best i to set your—curiosity—at rest. I theescribed her as she frolicked with; was under the impression that you blundering collie pups. I never She turned laughing eyes to her! „wanted to see or hear of me tion is one which many farm women i will you need to rub them. can adopt—power appliance; to do much of the work formerly done by Thrift Recipes. hand. Meter power washing ma-; 2, Forestry Carps, ahxth lour provided chines have forever supplanted the! Leftover Beans. -1 cup beans, � inerRussia Austrians. s ri Galiciated also intro- timber for the armies of four nations; -washwoman in hundreds of homes.; Cup stewed tomato. Salt and pep -the famous Railway troops, which of They are always on the job, never , per and a teaspoon of grated onion. of acomplication . Thereafter awith onell s one orts ten worked desperately under a de- late, quiet, efficient, courteous ift Heat thoroughly. The onion and vastating lire, have contributed so again. treated well never demand a teni tomato should be cooked fdr ten mi knowing the precise exchange value • host and his housekeeper, to surprise " notes before the beans are added. of any money, This bank simply has much to victory: the Veterinary Corps, amused love -light 'n one pair of ey es She made a little face at him and o'clock lunch, and don't tear the! ceased to pay dividends until we es- which has charge of three million star- and unvoiced "brzen hussy" in the resumed the discussion of the lapses clothes, Vegetable Hash.—Mix together and ling worth of animals; the hospitals other, Then though Mrs. Davis did front things as they are, in the photo heat in a frying pan,with a little ova- tablish a new money standard. Prob- and even the patrol boats in the Eng- not know how it happened, she found :play in question, a discussion which The electric machine is perhaps3 b ably the franc for the three Polonds. , lasted to the dessert of a surprising- most convenient if you have electric t ter or milk and a small quantity of ' lish Channel, some sof which were herself shaking hands with Rhoda, : power, but it is by no means the fat and seasonings -2 cups diced Must Win World's Confidence. manned exclusively by Canadian who, not waiting for the formality•b Big. dinner s. 1presently announced only thing. There are water power ! cooked potatoes, 1 cup diced cooked crews There is a splendid collection of Totvnsend's introduction, was say- Y • • "First we must establish a sound government which will have the con- fidence of the outside world. Any gov- ernment must have money to run it- self, but it cannot get looney without confidence. When such a government is established we will put out foreign loans for the purpose of buying ma- terials and starting up factories. It is even necessary for us to obtain loans in order to buy clothes; also machin- ery and locomotives. Everything in the country must be rebuilt along new lines. ""The Germans transported home all machines, dog power machines, a. carrots, 1 s, cup diced cooked turnips, of portraits, interesting personalities in1VIrs. Davis, I am Rhoda Brookes. working out of the old familiar i'rz cup grated cheese, such as Sir Robert Borden, Sir George I think it is wonderfully ,kind of you treadmill, where your household pet j Escalloped Carrots. -2 cups grat- Ferey, Princess Patricia of Connaught to get dinner for me to -day. Mr. furnishes the power which does your ed carrots, 1 cup bread crumbs, iia cup washing, and machines which are run ! milk, 1-3 cup grated cheese, 1 table - by the gas engine. As to types of spoon at, % teaspoon salt, pepper machines, they are legion. The best Ito taste. Cook the grated carrots known are the cylinder machines in a double boiler until tender. Add where clothes are put in a cylinder I sa}t, pepper, and milk and cook for which revolves through a tub of hot; five minutes. Place in a baking dish, suds. • 'sprinkle with grated cheese, cover Whatever the type or whatever the ! with the crumhs to which has been power employed, the power machine' added the melted fat. Brown in the is something which every woman who ! even. can afford it should buy. The wringer Corn and Cheese. -2 cups corn, 1 the machinery from the industrial city WhoQuit= his oel:ght m Rhoda's power to ot'er- Their lrhrores• cone that n."st difficult of all box- very large proportion of our troops. is also operated by the same power cup celery, 1 cup buttered crumbs, 1 of Kalisz and then set fire to the city. , g 1 p p sister, friend --all forgotten just px r History the teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons fat, fi This was one o£ their great crimes in Y affords Ding Ferdinand fieri, provincial prejudice.~ , .T3e had Nor do I think the explanation of the • mother. Then, as the truth came to which washes thewashing clothes, so that t P eted the attention of the puppies , o 1 hardest part of is ca_rvin,:, cup hot milk. Arrange corn and 1914. They did this although there of Bulgaria many precedents in the psychological conditions is very far them that some might not return, long - the todry. N Not ester in layers with salt. Add hot was no battle fought there. They art of abdication, but few have ever' to himself clot seemed Davismo; l edlie to seek. In the first place there is forgotten songs of religion, learned in wet clothes outy }stoning as li2rs is modulated only do yen save mus=_"'.e, but you; milk and melted fat. Cover with drove out the people by borubing the resigned their thrones except under ,into, (To be continued.) "SPIRITUAL WEARINESS" Townsend tells me you are a surpass- -The Attitude of the British Soldier ingly good cook and I am looking in Victory. forward to a real treat. I warn you that I have a vast hunger." Notv that the realization of victory Mrs. Davis afterward admitted has had time to soak in it is interest- later; all wore smiles, for the hour of r that it was not what Rhoda said that ing to review how the great news has vindication had come; soon was heard won her over. She insisted it was been received by the British Armies, the songs about mother, short stanzas "just. somnethin!g in her voice and in says a war correspondent. I have of baby songs, cradle rhymes, lullabies I herr ce es oriel the way sh t hold my found everywhere a soberness of spir- of mother. Manly voices, harsh, un - and hand. I cedars, she wase't a bit and Lady Drummond, who labored so unceasingly for the Canadian Red Cross, There are also portraits of many members of the Canadian high ttommand and a whole gallery of e'anaenans who have won the Victoria Cross. THE ART O1< "i BDICATION Just Before the Battle The long, long night marches had. ended; the dragging of weary feet through niud and debris was over. The groping through rain and black- ness, made doubly so by dense forest. was done and now, concealed in the forest of the Argonne by day, the army of attack quietly rested. The order of battle was handed me and I read it to my assembled battal- ion. The day for which the long training, danger and hardshi•?had been incurred had come at hiee •, We were to attack the hill when; 40,000 French soldiers had fallen in defeat two years before: but death was there, artillery, machine guns, mines, wire, trenches, tunnels, a mighty stronghold. We were to be ably supported. I told my men all. The order was received in site their faces took on a determined look, but no fear was there. I noticed them eke I had her sized up.'' it which noes deeper than mere stoic trained, unmusical, became sweet with There Are Many Instances of Royalty; • Townsend's face gave no hint of ism.. Indeed, there is a sensible mood melody; each los own hearts deepest of depression in the demeanor of the longing was giving expression. Wife, the natural reaction from the state of days gone by, were heard --songs of cave time. Celine you for instance, I buttered crumbs and bake 20 minutes. city and then robbed it methodically. Compulsion) i "My Lands, Miss Brookes! You chronic subconscious tension in which the Lord. And mingled together were wash wash nineteen forenoon en the old I Warmed Over Beans With Cheese. "The Germans also requisitioned all The most remarkable voluntary ab- ! give me an awful' scare, goal. over men have lived through the most ter- the notes of love and protection of way one np faretan acid �, no to a plc- �—Make a clap of white sauce and add the factories and machinery . in Lodz, dication an record is that of Chris- ;that fence that -a -way! I thought rble of all human wars. We have mother and Jesus --all others were amber of imminent tragedy, The During Battle and After. sudden lilting of this shadow has been Later I heard those same voices followed by the sense of spiritual when in tate attack; not now the soft weariness. Further, there is a haunt- voice of song, but the shout of combat ing consciousness of the universal --a mighty roar! The voice of the sorrow which has been caused, people is not the voice of God, but the ' n:c in the afternoon'. This is what' iwo tablespoons of grated cheese• which is the Polish Manchester, with tine of Sweden, daughter and sue-; you was Herorun off with. And I always been under the impalpable p pable forgotten. one farm woman did. Another on Add the sauce to the beans and heat its vast cotton. and woollen mills. In terror of the great Gustavus Adol !thought you was some boy! 1 de- • the same day did a two 'weeks' wash- thoroughly. This is a good sub- their entire occupation they continued phus. Growing tired, at the age of clare I did! I didn't get a rxght forto loot Lodz. Even last September ee, of the restraints imposed on her good look at you, the way that horse ing a family of six, ane threw in . stiiute for meat. • i was jumping around. It looks lilae two blankets and the ellmain: fors Cod en Casserole.—To prepare this they carried all the i pates emp ing rove once, o a e mga his ley c Uric away re ion pa es 11Y her high Disco, she resigned in t t• P d t d th th' - .went window, thea baked and put ; di .h take a one and a half pound slice and floorings from the faetories. favor of her cousin and went to you do! I've seen you in the pictures Y t ryas ac f" ash' Of call and remove the skin. Place "They stole our vegetables and our Rome, which city she entered in the but I always thought there was some as a {l• aley • it the after>r••on i it in a ce::serole of ample size and fruits. They took by requisition every- costume of an Amazon. Latter she trick to it. I must be seein' to my Scarcely a man out here but has lost mighty voice of soldier men. Seeing The m?c ane cannot perform miry-; pear ,n a a pint, R up hex picric loath, arm J hell of boil'n stool thing they wanted• settled in Paris. caking, I don't pretend to cook like a relative or a pal. Jubilation is before them those who had pillaged waver. Dr, nor, think for a Cover and tiring to boil again. Then "While the did not rob our locator, The desire to resign seems have t7'andy Tracey but Illi„ try to have tinged with sadness. Then, again, the and murdered and burned and en - minute that they are going to do the' cook quite gently for about an hour cin the third day of the occupation of returned in later years, for she tried • y= hon rho had di appearend, Town- . oa, ii- washing while you sit u p -:airs. ane}! ar' thirty minutes. Strain off the. 'Warsaw in 1915, the director of the to rec:�ver her own kingdom and made 4enc1' laughed. - reacl 02 book, as the a<i troll^r:cat: `stack. Add a quarter of a pint of Deutsche Lank of Berlin tame to me a bid for the throne of Poland. t " ."You win! \With lilts. Davis to Pietase the pretty lady. They are; stewed Spanish onion and tomato and demanded my cash balance of But even kings who abdicate by stick up for you and Uncle Aaron to like an • machine the must be op-' milted, salt, pepper, a pinch of sugar bubles, the surrender of which, he coir- their own choice are not always an justify you anti with l?rs. Tracey's ike y Y crated. Starch must he made, 1 and a dust of cayenne, Heat, stir tended, would regulate our debts to lowed to enjoy freedom from the sanction, you will bo able to make • :fedthe ,• i ,r tubs filled well, pour over the fish and serve. his bank. The Germans dict the same lturdcns cf tovern;nent. Phili > V my life a sore distress all the remain- clothe to t.r.a;, e , pthing in Roumania after the Treaty of '' 1 dor of your visit to your parents!" Bucharest. the founder pf the Bourbon dynasty, ""\yard]" t i in Spain, was a nervous and gloomy ""Yeti know quite well, Rhoda, that "It will take i 00,010,000 to recon man, much tormented by religious I have had no change of heart either street us indiistrialiy withoutncdunting scruples, and he found life as Icing as to you • or the farm. Then why the other sums we must spend gradual- it 1 bl At tl f not be s t' f d t 1 t A SEA SECRET T RE\ EALE13 lie certain destruction. For this the — tip er and men of the Navy serambl- Showiitg the Immortal Spirit of the ed in hot rivalry. Through this they $TI$iSh '�Tacy, ore:it, and, having gone, went eagerly t 40, and in the 24th year of his reign, ; carefully cultivated content?" , wounded one felt the earth Strang bo- p ": gu owed by the rompinggrant Children and Receiving Herne, t The i �gain. Then slits were sunk under etities and rebuilding houses ruined in pink- Heath him, but a sort of v;cli to lire x atm• begins to ramex up its notat all,so the course of the war,,, in order to look after the affairs ofthe total erxlfstrneiit of immigrant g them, but they cared „ tongued 'puppies. they walked slowly, her who bore him and a elle to an secrets to the curious eyes of the the the U-boats were destroyed. i his soul h d ti f l ' h Indies I p unseen hand of power as life snectac e ofthe long-su,rering in a i- slaved,theybecame as the avengers tants tramping hack to their too often of God and spoke with His voice and destroyed homes must needs have a acted with His power. Never will I depressing influence. I think there is a real grandeur in this subdued retention by the conquerors of the greatest victory in the history of the earth. British Bays' Showing. As shown by the report of the I heard the wounded—not a Cr•, just a is re o cava me o my Chief Inspector of the British Imrni- a song, strong for mother as the forget their look, their voice!. We swept everything before us, capturing and wounding and killing tiro ex'^my in the flee of artillery and u1-wlxine guns worked with desperate speed. • I heard voices again, now : uielue1--- they were of mother and Jesus still. ly for improving the railways and the Spam 1a o era e. xe ag•e e e resigns se crown o to the house. Rhoda made no re 1 " boys in the Canadian forces aqua s slowly ivilian, says the London Times. The The Suffolk Coast herself is a ship A French Peasant. ; Spain and the nc Ues in favor of his and avoided his quiet eyes by re- nearly 26 per cent. of all the boys Cl" boat Suffolk Coast has reached •newly coitrexded to th}s service, but L ,„ud ; eldest son, Don Luis, who was at that newing the trig of war at the porch who carne to Canada. slipped away. Mother, you are honored' above the ac lx week, in yarn or shine, ges out • To that green little graveyard by tiro sea, timeonly 16 years of age. , steps. Townsend passed her, goin But the peace that Icing Philip ` up to hold the door. open. Entering, • had hoped for lasted barely seven she turned to ask in a low voice:. 'months. The young king was at- Yu would rather I had not end of that period. Before this death, ' stay.” d ce— o however, he had made an act of re- i "Don't l.t et's go over tl, Ward'. I trocession of the crown to his father, still think you have other, more in= St. Katherine's Dock, and the public' most of her crew have served with will be allowed to go over her, at the ; their commander in three of; ,these price of a rmalI fee for the benefit<"special service'' ships. The in'imedi- of naval charities. 1 ate predecessor of the Suffolk Coast Here eoiitrivaflees for deception : —theForce—sankWhere rests her Jean. She tidies ten , com Stock under her derly r tacked by smallpox, and died at the ere? would xathex you ha allied with deadliness will surely - crew when they had waited fifty. min- His wooden cross, repeats a prayer de - interest and instruct crowds so long utes after being torpedoed for the vout, as she is in the Thames. But she chance of sulking the U Boat that Then, cheerily, she chats to hila o,bout has a deeper fascination than that,` who for another 22 years bore uuwil- dividual talents than farming. I rewarded theta at last. The story The simple interests of ovary day: Jingly the heavy load of kingship hate your burying yourself here. If for within her. lurks, the newest in -1 has been told. The men of other "Q" The new-born calf, the apple crop, farming were all you could do,i$ carnation of the immortal spirit•Fnal }years wap a no$ so fortunate, They the liay,emich he had so unsuccessfully at- , would be different "� She pused, disappeared and left no trace. The Since of his presence 'there she holds sea that robbed them of their reward no doubt. holds immortal their unavailing valor. shall sit they do not hover These are the chances of Sea Service. Ainci who sI y Y pted to tItroty otl ! searching his face with troubled The Berlin ..Ghost. s I eyes but as he waited in silence, she continued. Oh, I know that a suc- Is the "White Lady" walking these cessful farmer is as rare as rubies the Navy. In the spring o when the U-boats began to sink ton- nage at a deadly i•ate, the Navy turn- ed to devise defences against the new danger. The "Q" boats were an The spirit of the men who took them iiea.r momentous night in the Palace of and that you have succeeded. But. importantpart of them, embodiments p fat s frit has wrought The wistful souls of those who died Berlin? Always, says tradition, when you are alive -talent maul Get your p with delight—that p g for France - a Hohenzollern is to die or some other talents out and use them and j "�f the adaptability and ingenuity of safety foo., the world of modern men, then 1 will talk to you—of other the Sea Service. But the heart of Keeping their women brave through catastrophe is overshadowing the things." ss was of hi their impene- want and fear, family, the ""Seine Dame" is to be ""You have had xio thongs of heart their success ,, trable disguises. " len clamored to be The women of Iceland reteatly1 "1'raxxscenrling death to bring deliver- •encountered in the corridors of the either, 1 s__,,, said g allowed to go to sea in them. To go to sea in them meant the Turing of the U-boat by an elaborate pretence of defencelessness; endurance of shell Are, and even of being torpedoed; long waiting. motionless, in a sinning ship, till the'U-boat con= ander should at test be certain•that his victim had eign machinery, building materials wiey'i. -o ac...,t" . ,fay around us. --- Hohenzollern had Bricked up alive in to paint a picture and it is so much Emer ort, easier to hire the barn should cxbase his ('raft arid equipments generally. l a vault, painted! 1 celebrated the third year of their mice enfranchisement. To lives for whom' tholr added strength A. wave of populanaiy for thing's shall be western is sweeping over the whole' The power that wins a holy victory. of China, and with the cessation of • "There s no beautifies. of cont - hugethere may be expected to be huge demands: for ail sorts of 'for- plexiou, or form, or behavior like the I) Royal Palace, and more than once she thoughtfully, taking her shoulders it to ' has been known. to speak and an-' a light grasp between his bands. n.ounce the coming doom. One can "You are a funny girl! For two imagine the White Lady's satisiae cents, I'd write a book, or paint a tion in her task for in real life ---so picture or the barn or something just h f' Ways knew you could, l,ut I 'don't ,, to give you a c anee to say, 'I al- the storyher was the Countess , of Orlaznunde, whore a former know what to write about Agnesnor how tin axis no s g The pendulum i1i. New Zealand sheep breeding is reported to be swinging in favor of the Down breeds. Stocks Purchased by our PARTIAL PAYMENT PLAN enables investors to become the owner of selected standard se- curities (stocks or bonds) — without making any large out- lay, payment being made by easy monthly instalments, just as much as you can comfortably salve from your regular earnings, This method provides an attrac- tive plan of stock purchase, and is fully explained in our interest- ing booklet entitled: "Saving by the Partial Payment Plan.", Witte for a free copy. le Connolly Et Co. Menihors Montreal Stock T,:xohange 95-106 Transportation l3ui!ding fsIONTREA!. - P.O. king, the president, the general, the groat of earth. The song of Heroes is of you. Could you ask more than to he first and last by those whom the liberty -loving world delights to honor? Your, name and that of Jesus bound together in the hero's life and death. "Mother, behold thy son; son, behold thy mother." Coal on the prairies. A.ceording to estimates prepared'', experts there is enough :oft coal in the four Western Provinces of Canada to supply the world for a couple of centuries. The mines of Saskatchew- an, Alberta and British Columbia have scarcely been tapped, but have produced a total in. one year of 6,000,- 000 tons, to the value of over 25 mil- lion dollars. The coal is of very good grade, and is equally serviceable for steam purposes and household heat-. nips. The Canadian Dominion geologi- cal survey has estimated that the coal :uedix contain a total of 145,400,000,000 tone. covering an area of 87,000 gen.:are exiles.