Zurich Herald, 1919-01-03, Page 6.1001,1
LuicI RCS
sty Flay 'rolltstt 13atri.^ril
!'Iwhat , m';l call extreme 1 uigue. She
uetele to rest a little while said limn
Pula :t °c, l;t tune. 1'!n Uf the upin-
x i
"I've got ,t!"• heated 'I'owtl'c'aud,.
;•ttddeeiv interrupting., in leis tarn.
"I'; , 'nut it!"
"Y4.01 ,e caxal sore Pike it! But
whet sinned the prom -her.
1 ''Cly !':arm '{rant!; to rest said then
play!'
-Laron Dudley 'caned closer in
peering get:tiny. "I never heard
ut y(u ba ht a drinking nian but your
pl e cider, tune" Maybe .it's turned
a ehede i
v 'i't,vvnatnd laughed and indicated his
'farm by a notion of his }wad'. "This
d°'.l has been askiing something of
me to -night. That is why I
r :,u:Bit't Sleep. I'o'sibly l'in touch-
1ed With fatigue myself though not
to an; actions degree, I fancy! N\ hen
(.li.`P t,T, 1,
New that the ]isle, . was,; t''i!'r iht
land !nol:,,i tired to Ward 'l'estme n.l
The ilhrpees ,.hn t't.' ;.nl'n star; thee
iamlx: ;;I litre,
-1 . h(xrklll't wander, old farm!" he
yawned. 'Tit::, wive 9)11C (`•'(-'Id
• The iinprl;ssioe ;) ied .d, ak-rah}'inti
•seep a° rasa the was i11 'l)).:! A'fte
re- le:Is lx 7;: it.' ' c F:>, 11,:° !i ]
nit h imagination hut a, a ride he vv a
not fa:l •:fel ;d he laughed :1
at hinted'. that }I:., searching ;mot at
e moan -flooded :Ivrea > Old lith L'h01'
i'i;.e the T.001 -u thl()ual, tii:tcnd, to the
:ask t,f wcar:;ies; there seemed nee
to tet leiter „ mations expe t:met,
`e`%`❑ t yarn?' Ia suddenly de-
manded abed. -What + it you want?'
.'
After a long minute he Ieaned out n
the open ,sir murmuring gash i-
hxaturad thrc '.. "I'm cornlogs t
field f u7 r
Pe ire =ed swiftly ani 'a pre,
sourly wandering eves' the farm i ke
a friendly ghost but with this
1,.rttxxce; he was not trying to deliv-
er a nitseag ; he T4.1 t:'y:ing to re-
ceive NIP.
S. :till h't,a,' ;}i.:' :sight that -:ti:l
hours ltx;2t' .hzr, anxe to {lint a+:rOs
the aier'•?;� ihxart'eulai.e land a faint
Ihyihms ?taecate r)indi'.ay. its
{+lie Crchar;l -• -• t-!,1 ; t?i'On1
he th ught he wee n.' attire, that
come etae" prnw!er was sharing his
vigil. Isle t: n;rd S intently, he r_inx-
e, i h:]; t:) himself.
G. -ties I've go 'em t0 -night. That
3 the Desert: Queen si i etehlri _.,. oug.
a bit over on the Dahi'San road"
The Desert Qtteen vvas a thorcx:tg•;
bred Arabian mere, helonging to
Aaron Dudley, Dueler(' preacher,
shicees fur farmer, storekeeper,
aluminum -ware e agent and neor: i,gi-
bit meddler hi the ,affair cf his
t:eight hcc1. :',cel did i' neigh-
, err ' esen the nietidl;ng t;r the
mad, ev, for his meddling was like
that of Je:hee,„ Mose father-in-law,
its ]x+ famous case in- E"odus, great-
ly to the advantage o`' the one med-
dled"with.
"Good old stout," Ward Tewn:•end
meeed, looking down the vied. "Wllo
says than, an. prefe -)rt.1! phi1;„z
],)ity ]',at llo phut :..;)r 1. nowadays?
Somclanly Fick anld! :;ens tint hh t, T
suppose. If he sees me, he will
etop—he will be so ltlarned curious
to know what '1 n out at one o'clock
,or!” • As the hoof heat. turned the
corner a quarter of a anile away,
growing nearer in a steady crescendo
of rhythm, •1Vard added to himself,
,Y e
T
1
I. a doesn't h ent
t. sseeI'll not me,Z _ ole 5 eek:
P
The old . boy probably needs sleep
-,� ovp than 1do."
Be stood still, keenly conscious of
'that insistent expectancy which hov-
ereti bel,•nd shit and at .exthcr side
but wheh ceased at his fence, not
invading the road in front of slim no,
touching the farm across the road.
It rrarne to him, with a fleeting smile,
that the ]and across the way was not
even dreaming, to say nothing of
peste .sag its poor owner with its
dumb wakefulness, even supposing
its owner were capable of being pes-
tered by moon -haunted land!
Aaron Dudley reined in sharply.
"What you doing out here at this
time of night, Ward?" he demanded
v I cut preliminaries. "Had a
r.. Y to let me go by, didn't you?
Well, I got a mind to stop! Nothing
wrong ?"
Townsend opened the gate, going
out to stand between the wheels.
"`N'o. nothing is wrong, I'm just
haling a seance with insommia."
"Insomnl,;a, eh?" Aaron reached
under the seat for a thick, soft wool-
len blanket, which he handed to
Townsend. "This air is chilly and I
been driving quite a clip," When the
blanket had been put over the friend-
ly, spirited little mare and he had
come back to his place between the
wheels, Uncle Aaron added, "Can';:
rlcep, hull ?"
"You having the same trouble?"
smiled Townsend. "Or how do you
account fur being abroad at such an
hour ?"
The verzat,Ue preacher chuckled.
" `Abroad t' Real fine -sounding
word for driving to Dawson and back.
'Abroad!' Kind of traveled -sounding.
No. I haven't got insomnia to -night.
A woman in Dawson had it though.
Let it get aggravating. She even
got til wondering ref she hadn't com-
mitted the u npardonable sin!" He
laughed richly. "G-ot so worked up
over it, she had Henderson .end for
"Henderson!" echoed Townsend,
"Not' Curt Henderson's wife?" At
the g.aiaz:cal affirming nod, he ejecta.
later, 'That faded little old lady! It
1 too—"
goo--�-°
"I' oil. can't imagine her committing
1n im intarit sin, tan you?" ixiter-
;mtei Aaron Dudley, "Well, sho
didn't either, even if she was so
worried about her. elf. She hasn't '
spunk enough to have committed
even a middling sinifshe had' hap-
pened to have thought up one. It's
funny! Or it would be if xt wasn't
forlorn, Now don't you go telling
that to folks -for a good story. Not
unless you happen to run across ,Tutu
Tracey. He is the only man with a
wife and you're the only one with.,
out one, I talk to indiscreetly."
"Did you get her comforted?r"
grinned • Townsend',
"Sure. I even proved it to her!
And then, all the way home I've been
woatder'ng if: hnaybe she hasn't coin-,
rnitted the only unpardonable .sin,
after all. Sha has worked herself
&grout to death. What Ails her is
•
l' I locked out of the window „lust be-
fore ;going to bed}, the land slid look
tired. 1 couldn't get it out of ray
r. rode A.11,ili,or look only made it
wore se I clreesed and came out to
j cif,• ov;r the thing it ryas putting up
,i to me 'f 1 (amid. Sounds crazy but.
I'd been all ever ale place when -
l,caar:1 tZuecn h'tti raa• it of a xnil
•
ITEM.$ OF INTEREST
Relnt�n0 to War Activities i:i .high
Women Have n Pect
Jit the Women's War dila
on exhibition in the ;1Vliitee
(gallery, London, there is 0.
voted to the Queen's ` War 1
Women Fund, Alnopg the
hibit:a ,is a portrait ()i' taut
which is being give+u to eve
in India who brut a relative
the war.
One of the trades canto
'greatest skill is the welkinpaai es. This work hail never
dortaken by women until dil
labor became necessary. 0
finite number of delicate p
mending absolute accuracy,
have eueceeded in making all
or three and even these will silt
to their credit,
The Roll of Manor of }3ritisll
who have given up their lives t
tain might endure now minds
ow
1Yh
in.
and the list is by no moral; co
{'his roll regarde, service and no
and shoves that, to England, Ilia
invisible" is indeed immortal.It is1 the intention of thex'gp5tish
Government to snake the lniperia,' Var
11u..euln a record as cnnplett las is
humanly possible of the way -iii ziioh
England did her part in winn'<',.a' this
n
x1-.
of
in-
te-
t:,en
vo
be
lex{
ta'7-
G50
ere.
ank
oir
eee , wee eeeno to.,the gate just to war. Every British suuject"she '
watch you pees." form himself thoroughly es'to
The cia'er mail sat (mita :.till for this exhibit includes.. 'where
ev^rat minutes before he aeke
„ta:[ :t.•e you going to do alba
i it :'1'J
Tou-xi en '. rein- was both amuse
11r -
tat
lch
(1- works at high pressure to contribute
4 the part expected from him he is not
prepared to either know or appreciate
i what other equally devoted patriots
tory. This exhibit will do nxueh to slis-
I poi that lack and create genuine ap-
e. predation of. the fact that all• work
I was equally valuable.
g • During the war the corporation of
Glasgow employed women in its -parks,
en its tramways, in its clerical de-
f
t' 't 1•
de.-
- challeixgina. when he ansrze:red:
"'I shall let the land rest this win
tar ---not a -:..row of fall plowing
1 Anil I shall let it play next su*nme
Then Pll go _on with nay farming.
have tried out • the intensive farrnin
T leareed. et the Ag ani have prove
it to be su,eess ul for six year; hu
darned if i don't think the spirit o
this farm was trying to remain n1
that all work and no play is no bet
ter for lend than it is for a boy."
"Ever real' your Bible, Ward?
asked Anra:x Dudley after anothe
silence. 'Townsend stared. `'No
since 1' wore knickers and got in
Sunday-s'hcol Iesson under ray moth
er's commanding eye. Don't yo
soil our good friendship by tryin
to convert me!" He laid an affet.
t,ionate hand en the preacher's knee
hI'm not likely to, Ward," Aaro
dropped a e•hort, broad, practical
locking hand over the }land on lhi
have given as their share towards,•vic-
pa amen and its bacteriological la-
.
_ boratory.
Mrs. 13urleigh Leach, Chief Conteol-
„ ler of Queen Maxz's Auxilliary Corps
r t (Waste's) began ding "her bit" as one
t f of the first recruits of that splendid
y mother of patrietie British women's
- organizations the "Women's Legion."
u That was in September, 1915, and
' I from that day Mrs. Leach has never
1 rested. Wheu the armistice was sign-
il I ed Mrs. Leach had under her X40.000
' women and girls of whom nearly 7,000 ,
s were in Prance. Site was about to ask
knee and involuntarily picked it u
for closer inspection in the pale light
"You got a nice hand, Ward: Strang
fine, knowing and skillful. A kin
t
of thinkingBand, N I'venotice
n x
that it folks are„let_.:alone, they gen
orally get around to converting them
selves. I just thought you migh
have been reading Levitical law." •
"What has that to do with me an
a. fool whim that will get the whol
country down on me?"
"Nothing," mused the older mai
and added, with a sudden chuckle
"You bet the whole country will b
down on you. Three hundred acre
of the finest land in Ontario lyin
idle with no excuse that on a nigh
in the last half of the moon, the lan
looked tired! I have xny task all cu
out keeping you out of the asylum
But maybe you'll feel different, corn
morning. Seen Rhoda Brookes yet?'
The hand Aaron Dudley was stil
looking at grew tense but Town
send's voice betrayed no emotion a
he said:
(To be continued.)
WOOD AND THE WAR
Many a Lovely English Landscape
Has Been Despoiled.
Those of us who have taken a holi
day in the country this year have been
saddened by the sight of vast tracts
of land, once beautifully wooded, now
left naked to the heavens, says ai
writer. The recital of just a
few of the most obvious uses of wood
in war is sufficient to explain this
, wholesale tree -felling.
I Wood is deeded for shipbuilding.
Wood is needed for thousands of army
huts, for pontoons, for Buckboards in
the trenches, for army waggons, for
railway sleepers at the Front. Food
is packed in wooden cases for our sol-
diers, and even if, cardboard is used,
wood ha; been necessary to make it.
Soft, absorbent, surgical cotton is
made of wood cellulose in many cases;
',splints, crutches—a thousand and one
hospital necessities—•are made of wood
Charcoal, used in gunpowder, comes
from wool. Wood alcohol is used for
munitions. Rine stocks are made of
Poled
,rn+
' for telegraphs 1.
wood. l oleo fc lc a xs aiuT tele-
phones
phones wih'es at the Front are made
cf woad.
About 'e 0 feet or the choicest tim-
ber is used in making an aeroplane.
That means that 10,000 feet of timber
must be cast to get enough perfect
wood far one aeroplane. The Hun is
not only devastating the fair land of
Frames; he is ruining many an English
landscape. And every time we see a
bare hillside, oxsee tied ;covered, we
shall remember, and, :r hope, remember
to `rune purpoee,
RAPID PROGRESS
�,o * Leo„ds
ART OF FLYING
AIRPLANE IS ONLY 1rII' 1'El.;N
YEARS OLD
First night Lasted. Fifty -Nine Sec-
onds, Present Record Is Twenty-
Four
Tv,eirty-Four Hours,
'It is ,et t about 15 years ago that
the 'Wright Brothers made their first
successful flight in an airplane, and
now people are talking about flying
across the Atla'htic. 1Mtachines have
been built in the last year capable of
a speed of about three miles a minute;
an aviator has risen 28,900 feet in the
air, and we have airplanes capable of
lifting 15 tons. The single flight re-
cord is 24 hours, as compared with th
first 59 seconds' flight of ”-Wiihul.
Wright, It is doubtful if in the his-
tory-,.c.f invention there has bean any
such record of progress in an equal
time.
In view of the thousands of lives
that have been last in airplane era 3h -
ea it is Worth. noting that Wilbui'
Wright lived to succumb years later
to typhoid, never having had en acci-
dent, and that his brother Orville still
ourv'ives and bide fait' to reach. a ripe
old age. He was in one accident, in
which ha s:tfered a broken leg, his
companion, Lieut. Selfridge, losing his
life and becoming the first victim of
an airplane disaster.
The purehx e of mound niarlcc't-
ahitt (securities hi made. eons-0ni-
witty mhos by lasing our
PARTIAL PAYMENT PLAN
It provides tion with an incentive
tel wave money, the payments be-
ing made on a monthly baste,
By title attractive method you
hmx,rne the owner of dividend -
paying stouike wiiltout incurring
ally l('1 e auilay of looney.
T1n plan is •.,fully explained in
our interesting' free booklet en-
titled "Saving by the Partial
Payment Plan," whit'h can be,
bars 4,n al plicl,tiu'x to
ff. IN Coran 0.
Ale�rnbers, ,8 entrnnl Saari; Mixer ana;°e
105.103 Transportation Building
MONTREAL - P.O.
7511 winds, but here again they re-
e I cei v eel a check.
• Obstacles Encountered, -
They had slippage/1 that there were
in existence tables by which they
`could calculate from their own knowl-
edge of air pressure the speed at
which it would the neeessar'y for the
propellers to spin in order to 'drive
the xuzxehino. They learned that there
were no pude tables, but only a .set of
oi.tiqueted empirical foL'rnulae. Isero
again they had to make their own ex-.
perir ta=ut:: and rely on their oven ob-
servations to give thele what they re-
quired.
quired. By this tinie;they had gone so
far that it.was impossible to di5c'axr-
ag;e there, and so they persevered anti!
on December 17, 1908, they produced
a machine which rose from the ground
by means of its own- power, made a
short circle and alighted :safely.
It was nearly two years later be-
fore their machine was tenable of fly-
ing six miles. This accomplished, the
Wrights had all the capital they re-
quired at their disposal. They were
on the highway to fame and fortune,
and never afterward were they obliged
to look hack.
SANIT_4lil' TROUGHS
New Device for Watering Cattle is
Valuable to Dairymen.
A new sanitary drinking clip for the
exclusive use of cows is now on the
market, and its advantages are nu-
merous. Fleet, it is claimed that it
will turn axany en unprofitable cow
into a profitable one by increasing her
Milk supply. It is obviously aiso:.a.
preventive of disease, aiia.as a' labor,
saver • for the 'farmer:, there is no
doubt concerning it.-
The
t.The cove actually controls the supply
of water by lifting, or closing, the lid
of the fountain herself. When the lid
is raised the supply valve is opened
and the drain outlet is closed, w]xilc
lowering or closing the lid closes the
supply valve and opens the- drain out-
, let. No water remains in the cup, as
it is at all times empty, except when
the cow is actually drinking from it.
Bach fountain is attached to the
water pipe just the sane as an ordin-
ary cock or other plumbing fix.tore,
and no separate or float tank is re-
quired. The cover also keeps hay and
trash out of the water.
Experiments have shown that a cow
will refuse water that is stale and
filthy with the miscellaneous debris
P for 30,1100 more. Although ate age
limit was eighteen years, Mas. Leach
a'. refused. to place the other unlit s;tiy..
xng she had found that soiaic at 111
s fi t 47egh1
t i )�
a sixty
were infinitely h
Y o ... ,
mere Y •
E
aer
tliaxl:otilaxs at forts. 7iu spike pLiei
t real importance Mrs. Lea�.h is oixolof
the most unassuming .women imagin-
e: able, therefore delightful. She has
e none of the pushing, masculine traits
of the woman who commands badly.
1 Her smile ds ready and her laugh in-
fections end genial. Knowing Ger-
many thoroughly she prophesied the.
war long before it cane. Der husband
t is Brigadier -General Leach. in com-
a maned of the famous South Wales
t Borderers;
in November, 1914, the Mayor and.
e Council of the city of Lyons worked
1 out a system of re-education for the
French disabled soldiers and the Work
A 'I'oy ',Yas the Inspiration.
It is said that the interest • of the
Wright Brothels in flying was first
aroused when their father' presented
them with a toy called a helicoptre,
a fltagile thing that would fly for a
short distance. The playtLling natur-
ally did not lung survive, but its
wonders never faded from the minds
of the boys, though years were to
intervene before they began the eeri-
ous study of the flying problem.
At school in Dayton, Ohio, they are
said to have -taken littlb interest in
the literary' or artistic branches of
their study, but early showed them-
s.:ivrs possessed of a strong analytical
faculty and were. keen on mathematics.
Their school studies were cut short,
however, and they opened a small
bicycle repair shop, whichy'9hey Later
developed into a modest little- factory.
comfortable
Here, besides making „h comfor a
vin the hVeloped their mechanic-
g y
al skill, Which of them thought of
the flying machine first is a moot
point.• It appears that the idea was
in the mind of both for years before
either ventured to speak of it serious-
ly to the ether for fear of good-
natured ridicule.
However, the notion at. Mast got it-
self expressed somehow, and they
set to .work in their spare time with
the conviction that in the development
•of the idea of the gliding plane lay
the secret of ultimate success. Their
first model, a sort of improved kite,
gave them reason to believe that they
were on the right track, and after a
couple of experiments they built a
bigger model on the same principle.
Model followed model, each a little
bigger than its predecessor, and each
of them adding to the enthusiasm of
the young inventors.
How They Obtained Capital.
Then came the time when they had
spent about all their money, without,
of course, having received a dollar in
return. �It became necessary that they
should either give up the fascinating
pursuit or raise more capital. 'They
appealed to their father, a retired
bishop of the United Brethren Church,
whose sole property consisted of a
was begun the following month at
L'ecole Joilre. That work spread even
at that early date all over Prance and
has been adopted by England with
variations suited to the climate and
the nationality of British maimed.
WISDOM OF A VOTER
How a True Alsatian Managed to Use
the Right Ballot.
The simple people of Alsace, who
11 have all these years retained in their
I;. has been estimated that Noah's
ark was 547 feet long, 01 feat broad
and rad feet high. Its capacity, ace
cording tis Bishop %1'ilk,ins, Was 72,-
t;25 tons.
hearts a strong love of France while
showing a desire not to offend tl eir
German rulers too much, have fre-
quently had a hard time of it when led
to the ballot box to vote for repre-
sentatives in the German parliament,.
In ono election in a certain Alsatian
district the two cadidates were Katie,
an Alsatian of French sympathies,
who had protested against the ann xa-
tion after the war of 1870, and a'br-
man. On election day a peasant dile
to the polling place, which was re
sided over by a German official, the
peasant had ; in one hand a tierce '''ore
Which was printed the name of Ise ire;
and in the other' a ticket bearing' ,rhe
name of the German candidate. N
"Mein Herr," he said to the`Gerx ?�?n
,.
election official, "will you tell me ver. • cls
Of these tickets z
::
)
e s is the
better
h The ofticer.lookecl at them, " l�iyr
this is much preferable, said he, ,,,, z-
1
eating the German ticket, ,
"I thank you," answered the /,.
'i
ant, "1 will keep it next. my t'
He folded it carefully* and put.
side his coat. "As for this otll.
said he, with an air of putting it ..s y
froth him as an unworthy thiel
will leave it here." And he put` e
Kahle ticket in the,,ballot box. • iY
1+or-' an. economical pumpkin i is
filling take 2 cups of pumpkin • or
squash, 2 •cups of milk, 1 egg or 1
cracker rolled fine, 3t teaspoon • of
ginger, 2-3 curs of sugar, tea pooh
of salt.
small farm in Iowa, and he, without a
moments hesitation, sold it and gave
his sons the necessary cash.
With the first machine built with
these funds they moved to the sand
dunes of North Carolina, there to
continue ill more -favorable circum-
stances the investigations that they
had begun in Ohio. Their first tenta-
tive flights were made at Kitty
Hawk in 1900, and their machine
was supposed to fly bit the kite prin-
ciple and carry. a man against wind
blowing from 15 to 20 miles an hour.
The first experiment, was successful,
was no man
although there aboard,
and they concluded that they had only
to increase the wing surface by a
comparatively small 'area to get the
necessary lifting power. To their
astonishment they found that this in-
crease made an almost imperceptible
difference, and they carne to the con-
clusion that they were either on the
wrong track altogether or that the
tables of air pressure in 'common use
were at fault. It developed that the
latter was the case, and the Wrights
continued.
Fol' some time thereafter they con-
tented themselves with gliding down
the hills, against the wind, and found
it was easy to snake flights of several
hundred yards in this way without
danger or difficulty. In 1902 they
built thoii:.first motor. It weighed
of t11e lsaxn m it, ani, therefore, her
milk supply suffers. This fountain
is a stimulant for her to drink laige
quantities of fresh, clean water.
The modern dairyman cannot fail to
appreciate the advantage of this cup
and desire' to have it installed in his
barns.
No up-to=date dairyman can afford
to let his animals or business suffer
for the sake of saving the original out-
lay in an investment which will prove
more and more profitable as time goes
on.
•
THE CZECHO- SLOVAKS' CLAIM
Republic Must Include All of Bo -
hernia, Says Premier.
The Czecho-Slovak Republic, recog-
nizes no part of the territory within
Bohemia as open to any controversy
to be settled by the peace conference,
as suggested by the 'German Boheni-
ians, it was declared the other day by
Premier Kranars to a delegation from
Bohemia. The
German Bo delegation had
appealed for the withdrawal of the
troops of occupation, the release of
persons etho had been arrested and
the restoration of quiet and order.
The Entente, Premier Kramarz set
forth, had signed an agreement by
which the entire country was declared
to belong to the Czeoho-Slovak state:
He assured the Germans that their
cultural and national development
would be assured thein, and added that
he desired the return of the troops of
occupation as soon as possible.
To keep the cut edge of a cheese
from hardening, smear a little butter
over it,jandso keep it from tlhe air.
"It's a good plan to put 'something
by for a rainy day; a little sunshine,
for instance,"
tesehe
", FU1IJRE OF
SUBMARINE
MAY RECLAIM OCEAN `t) HIDDEN
TREASURES.
Also Increase Food Seppiy and Aid
Navigation end Undersea
Engineering.
Will the subluarine at the poae0 ems-
ference be swept from the table into
the Watstce basket of civilization--•°batn-
ned as aix "intolerable tb:ing"—ox' will
it renlal�i a menthol' "persona grata" of
the navies of tate world? What. in iltrr
future status- the submarine?
I Fighting the 1J -Boat and the cow-
1
oax-
i. 'idly beast cunningly concealed within
its shier doat of steel has s.) engrossed
civilization that the yri0atiou of the
'future etates of this instrunl nt of
! warfare has of necessity been defer-
s rod. Now, with tixe tine of reckoning
i at Idaind, tt great towering interroga-
tion point emerges from the titin mist'`
, of the sea at Lire .how of the subuxar-
j isle; upon it;; elipprary ducks and evil -
eyed periscopes is cast tlii'3 shadow of
the impend i?hg ineluisitivxr, reflected
Ifni] and. free peon the culprit by the
t•..
IJ is .lain n reclaimed '
I Mu of i e ranged civil{:::'
tion. already it has beer deeeeed that
Germany mutest pay, and pay to the itt-
;txe;;j., for the diebelical carnage cn. d-
neuron from t]ie turrets of the 11 -boats
and from the elnuxibers;'of the Gentian
Admiralty, ilty, where unresiriete;l v cif••
fare was ordered by t]te arch -villus
of the world. The case of tate tiub_.
Marine vs. th world i:; about to be
calla;d,
Provide An Antidote.
1`iei ace that gave the world the :Alb_
marine may settle the tutul'e of the
i "srorpian of the deep" by pi'cvittil,; au
1 antidote that will completely netatral-
ize the "sting"' or the hidden inonstei'.
!Indeed, it is not altogether unlikely
I that when the curtain i; fully lifted
Iand the remarkable exploits of our
naval scientists revealed it will be
found that the T; -beat has beeu robbed
1 of its terror'. Already we know of
depth bombe, nets, .smoke sore ens,
1 "zigzagging; " torpedoe4, mines, sound
i detectors. underwater guns, magnets
land vari..tl,i tithes' anti-subniarint� de -
v' . - lu pea- t.!ine the subniar!ne
may be mads ineffectual altogether
for wartime.
That the submarine may serve ixn-
niauity in peace times los -mem
is contended by those in ailtix:iiit -.
Already it develops that the submarine
will lead the W8s i
nda'�'g sonic elf
the wrong of the l.{ -boat. In the sal-
vaging of sunken ships . and the re-
cover• of lost cargoes the submarine
will play an important part. Even be -
fere the war this was proved feasible.
Millions of dollara' a' v ortb of vauable
merchandise nlc,ii;s recltiiitatioa on
the bottom of the r) :deny vessels
were sunk in the No3 tk Sea and the
English Channel, where the Water is
comparatively shallow. Engineering
thought now is directed toward the de-
velopmen.t of the best diving and lift-
ing apparatus for this work,
Peace Time P:arsults,
Navigation under leo fields is an-
other peace pursuit mapped out: for
the submarine. Ports bound with ice
fields during great parts of the year
may be made communicable, accord-
ing to- submarine engineers. North
pole explorations via the submarine
also are hintod at, the underwater
craft escaping the long rigorous de-
lays clue to leo fields. As submarines
in wartime have dynamited their way
ahead with torpedoes, so, it is held,
may they clear their pathway of ice
masses.
It engineering lines also it is ex-
pected
zpected to work revolutionary changes,
"In general submarine engineering
work," says an expert, "in the con-
struction of breakwaters, lighthouses,
driving piles and buil:iiug abutments,
and in the deepening and improve-
ment of Waterways and lharbors, the
submarine will he utilized. In pros-
pecting for and the recovery and sep-
aration of gold from river beds and
seacoast bottoms, submarine devices
have been found to bo very efficient
and ceonoxuical. A new method of
laying tunnels under 'water has been
proposed in which adaptations of the
submarine will play a great part, Thus
it is evident that the submarine has
a utility entirely apart from that of a
military weapon." '
When Dreams Come True.
The thousand things I could not say
Before I crossed the sea
Dear love, the Weeds I could nut speak
And all you are to me;
The thoustttid dreams I coul,l' not.
dream
Wien Life for gold dial dance,
Are Life to me, dear love, since Death
Became a dream in F ranee.
The thousand things 1 cannot write,
The things that I would do
Shall all be yours, dear love, when
God
Shall send int ]some to you,
•
t