West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 23 Jan 1919, p. 2

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Pr? ttt ~15 O 5...... d gegttteettsaiisit; endurance of shell Are, And mu of being torpedood; long waiting notimless, in a sinking ship, all tho U-boat commander should " tstatue-tninth-this-ie-ttsul p sting and shank! expose his raft to a“ in turn meant the luring 3i *3,” Thott' by an eight»: pittance Here eontrirances for deception i allied with deadlines, will surely interest and ‘nstruct crowds so long' " the is in the Thames. But shi/ has a deeper fascination than that,' for within her lurks the newest in-) carnation of the immortal spirit off the Navy. In the spring of 1917‘ when the U-boats began to sink ton. fr mags at a deadly rate, the Navy turn- i ed to devise defences against thel. new danger. The "q" boats were an " invariant pert of them, embodiments i , d the ahmm’ and ingenuity of _ the tha Benin. But the heart of their new was not in their impene- - “do... In dammed to be , Mhpbmintlnn}. To gold The Navy begins to render up its secrets to the curious eyes of the civilian. says the London Times. The 'N" boat Suffolk Coast has reached St. Katherine's Dock, and the public will be allowed to go over her, at the price of a' small fee for the benefit " naval charities. Showing the Immortal Spirit of the British Navy. like any mat? erated. Sta, clothes fed“ way in one forenoon and no to a pic- n'c in the afternoon? This is what one farm woman did. Another on the some day did a two weeks' wash- ing for a family of six, and threw in two blankets and the curtains for twenty windows, then baked and put up her picnic lunch, and was as fresh, " a daisy in the afternoon. I The machine cannot perform mira- eles, however. Do not think for a minute that they are going to do the washing while you pit upstairs and read a book, as the advertisements picture the pretty lady. They are like any maehine---they must be op- erated. Shych must be made, -I-ALA_ (-1‘, 1‘ . ' . -.- - wash nim Way in on aut The, electric mochine in perhaps most convenient if you have electric power. but it in by no means the only thing. There are water power machines, dog power machines, I working out of the old familiar treadmill. where your household pet furnishes the power which doe. your! mulling. and machines which no run, try the gas engine. As to types of! machines. they are legion. The best known are the cylinder "er,1.tlers) where clothes are put in a cylinder, which revolves through I tub of hot! The Na an adops-power awn-nee: to do much of the work formerly done by Und. Motor powor washing mo- chines have forever “pm-Mad the washwomn in hundreds of homes. They in always on the job, - lute. quiet. efficient, courteous if treated well, never demand a Pn, o'clock lunch, and don't tear thei clothes. The situation in the cities is the nine. Employment bureaus long ago hung out the "No Domestic Help" sign There an no girls seek- in: domestic employment, with Ne-. torios emu-in; three times the was“. Housekeeper: in tho towns have for some time been facing the situation] and adjusting their lives to the change. Their solution of the que- tion is one which many Inna women Wuul' Without Vilnius- Next to high prices a... topie for conversation, the scarcity of labor takes rank. Competent farm labor. always hard to secure. hos about reached the vanishing point so far as the fields are concerned and the housekeeper no longer oven dreams of getting her washing done, to SI! nothing securing other help. The work is all up to the house-mother, and the mint "live or die, sink or “vim. survive or perish." unaided br, human Hands. 1 , SEA SECRET REVEALED W h Buying a Packet of Is not a gamble, but a sure thing that you are getting the greatest possible Quality and Value to the limit of your expenditure. TRY - IT. m iRrl,fll0riIi__lii'ii" of washing is lea out to d In" muscle, Could you for t blankets in "noon and go le type or whatever theiWith the crumbs to which has been ed, the power machine; added the melted (at. Brown in the which every woman whoi overt. ‘ hould buy. The wrintrerl Corn and Cheese..--?. cups corn, l, ed by the same powericup celery, 1 cup buttered crumbs, 1‘ the clothes, so that thel teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons fat, % tr washing is earryine)eup hot milk. Arrange corn and] " out to dry. Noticelery in layers with salt. Add hot! my, muscle, but yougmilk and melted fat. Cover with! "ouht you for instaneed buttered cwmbs and bake 20 minutes. i blankets in the owl» Warmed Over Beans With Cheese. Tmoon and go to a pic-’ -Make a cup of white sauce and addl moon? This is "w'iiitlso tablespoons of grated 2',1'l'J.l um did. Another on! Add the sauce to the beans and heatl lid a two weeks' wash-' thoroughly. This is a good SHIF’ 'o of six, and threw in stitute for -meat.. and the curtains for Cod en Caaserile.-To prepare this' s. then baked and put dish take a one and a half pound slice! 2nch, and was as fresh, of cod and remove the skin. Pinon 7701151 mains for! Cod en thusserar.-To prepare this id and put dish take a one and a half pound slice us as fresh, of cod and remove the skin. Place it in a cesserole of ample size and Min mira- pour in half a pint of boiling stock. ink for a Cover and bring to a boil again. Then to do thegcook quite gently for about an hour stairs andiand' thirty minutes. Strain off the; rtisements', stock. Add a quarter of a pint of‘ They nte!stewed Spanish onion and tomato m be op- mixed, salt. pepper, a‘pinch of sugar! " made, an] a dust of cayenne. Heat, 'stir tubs filled,iwsll, pour over the dish and serve. I A wave of popularity for thin western u sweeping over the 'ttS, of China, and with the caution of war there may be expected to u huge demands for an an. of for- eign machinery, bunting» materials and equipment: gammy. all, i,.), The women of celebrated the thi eafrattehisement, ,,,v.. -.._ "'""' has been told. The men of other "C' boats were not so fortunate. They disappeared and left no trace. The; sea that robbed them of their reward holds immortal their unavailing valor.‘ These are the chances of Sea lee/ The spirit of the men who took them with delight-tUt spirit has wrought; safety for the world of modern men. The Suffolk Coast herself is a ship; newly converted to this service, but] most of her crew have served withl their commander in three of these, "special service" ships. The immedi- ate predecessor of the Suffolk Coast) ---the Stock Foree--sauk under her; crew when they had waited fifty mim' utes after being torpedoed for the chance of sinking the U-boat that rewarded them " last. The stow to certain destruction. For this the oMeers and men of the Navy scrambl- ed in hot rivalry. Through this they went, and. having gone, went eagerly attain. Their ships were sunk under them. but they cared not at all, so the the U-boats were destroyed. I Escallopcd Carrots.--.?. cups grat- _ ed carrots. I cup bread crumbs, % cup milk, 1-3 cup grated cheeae, 1 table. spoon tat, % teaspoon salt. pepper to taste. Cook the grated carrots in a double boiler until tender. Add salt. pepper, and milk and cook for" five minutes. Place in a baking dish” sprinkle with grated cheese, cover: with the crumbs to which has been' added the melted fat. Brown in the! oven. _ Vegetable Hash.--Mix together and heat in a frying pan, with 1 little we- ter or milk and a small quantity of fat and teasonings--2 cups diced cooked potatoes, 1 cup diced cooked carrots, 1 cup diced % cup grated cheese. Leftover Beans.---, cup beans, % cup stewed tomato. Salt and pep- per and a teaspoon of gated onion. Heat thoroughly. The onion and. tomato should be cooked for ten mi- nutes before the beans are added. with rinsing water and lines trot ready. You will not sit down while the washing is on. Also, if the clothes wind round the will!!! or you try to put too thick a garment through--msll, your machine is like- ly to stop in 1he middle of the wash/ ing, and you must wait for someone who understands its internal work- ings to set it going. Care in feed- ing the wringer makes this unneces- sary, however. And, to boil or not to boil, is another question. Most agents say it is not necessary-that good soap powder, scalding water end sun are all you need. Personn11r, II prefer boiling. Wristbands and soiled spots do not need to be rubbed on the board if you use trutrieunt cue. Soap all these spots carefully andI let the clothes soak over night. If; the spots show when they come out! of the tub. soap them again and wuhl e second time. Only on rare occasionsi will you need to rub them. I cup tiieed éooked turnips, Thrift Recipes. of Iceland recently third year of their story "There is no beautiiUr of com" plexion, or form, or behavior like the wish to scatter joy around us."-. Ems-non shall be - I-" The power that wins a holy victory. To lives for whom their added strength And who shall say they do not hover near--- The wistful souls ot those who died for France-- Keeping their women brave through want and tear, Transcendlng death to bring deliver. t Each week, in rain or shine, she trud- ' got, out I To that green little graveyard by the sea, Where rests her Jean. She tidies ten. derly . His wooden cross. repeats a prayer de. vout, . Then. cheerily, she chats to him about The simple interests ot every aux: The new-born calf, the apple crop,, the hay, Since of his presence there she holds . no doubt. l "While they did not rob our taurs,l, " on the third day of the occupation of} (Warsaw in 1915, ttfe director of the) ' Dentsche Bank of Berlin came to mel |and demanded my cash balance 015i g bubles, the surrender of which, he con- l pended, would regulate our debts to: his bank. The Germans did the same! I thing in Roumania after the Treaty ofl l Bucharest. 1 "It will take $200,000,000 to recon- struct us itidittstrially without counting the other sums we mvst spend gradual. ly for improving the railways and the cuties and rebuilding houses mined in the course ot the war." . "The Germans transported home all i the machinery from the Industrial city 1 of Kalle: and then set are to the city. This was one ot their great crimes in i 1914. They did this although there .1 was no battle fought there. They I' drove out the people by bombing the l city and then robbed it methodically. i "The Germans also requisitioned all _ the factories and machinery in Lodz, i whirl) is the Polish Manchester, with“ ; its vast cotton and woollen mills. In_ ' their entire occupation they continued l ’to loot Lodz. Even last September; ,tbey carried away all the iron pates. ',' and floorintrs from the faetori, 3 they carried away all the tron pates and Morings from the taetorr "They stole our vegetables and our fruits. They took by requfsition every- thing they wanted. " 5 "rt will take nearly 82,000,000,000 to “t: repair the damage done in the German ti, occupation and to put us on our feet l iproperly and to develop our great tei, natural resources Our oil products “ return 500,000,000 marks annually and l- we are rich in coal and salt mines. pot- " ash. forests and agricultural products. it! "At the present tune the economic It situation is confused because Russian it: rubles, Austrian crowns and German dl marks are in circulation. The marks 1' are a heritage of the German occupa-j d tion. in April, 1917, the Germans is-l d sued 2,000,00tktytt0 marks which theyl L called Polish marks. The issue was] dl made through a special bank with the i If announcement that after two years! tl Polish marks should be redeemed by! h! German marks. By this scheme the sl German Reichshank was not comp»! led to issue extra money and, there-' tore, did not injure its own credit. I "At the same time the Germans Itl fused to accept the ruble as legal ten. I I der. The Austrians accepted the ruble I . in Russia and Galicia and also intro-' I duced the crown. Thereafter all sorts I [I ot complications arose, with no one: / knowing the precise exchange valuea ' ot any money. This bank simply has; I ceased to par dividends until we etrl tablish a new money standard. Prob.) ', ably the franc, for the three Polands. : Must Win World'a Confidouas. ( j “First we must establish a sound .‘ (government which will have the con- lt iidence ot the outside world. Any gov- , l eminent must have money to run it. ii self, but it cannot get money without ', I , confldeaee. When such a government ( l H's established we will put out foreign 1' t ‘loans for the purpose ot buying munl V toriais and starting up factories. It is I t L even necessary toy us to obtain loans . t g in order to buy clothes; also machin- ) t ‘cry and locomotives. Everything in) the country must. be rebuilt along new i lines. ' All food and all telephone wires were removed by the Germans. All in. dustrial plants were robbed and dis, mantled, with the result that Poland will have a hard job to start in again even it tinaneia and political condi- F tionn were of the best, observers Bar. iDlncuuing the economic' situation in {Poland. Stanislaw Lariowaki, director lot the Commercial Bank, ot Warsaw. 3 said to the correspondent: Industrial Life is Extinct and Ranged Countrywm Have Hard Struggle to Start AgaM. Poland was stripped of all materiali Ind machinery during the German my cupation which ended on November 11. On thatday n few thousand soldiers of the Polish Legion, aided try the population ot Warsaw. disarmed more than 20,000 German soldiers who had arranged a revolt -agaitttst their own omcers. DURING ITS OCCUPATION BY THE GERMANS. TWO BILLION " DAMAGE IO POLAND A French Peasant. Is the "Whir Lady" walking these momentous night in the Palace of Berlin? Always, says tradition, when, a Hohenzollern is to die or some: catastrophe is overshadowing the} family, the “Weine Dahe” is to be encountered in the corridors of theI Royal Palace, yd more than once she f The; been kno n to speak and an: nounce the coming doom. One can. Imagine the White Lady's utisfac-‘ tion in her task, for in real life-so the story ttoes--she was the Counteu I Agnes of Orlamunde, whom a former: Hohenzollern had bricked up alive in n vault. ' l But the peace that King Philip had hoped for lasted barely seven months. The young king was at- tacked by smallpox, and Osd at the end of that period. Before his death, however, he had made an act of re- trocession of the crown to his father, who for another 22 years bore unwir. lingly the heavy load of kineship, which he had so unsuccessfully at-i tempted to, throw off. l I But even kings who abdieate by "heir own choice are not always ar. jlowed to enjoy freedom from the (burdens of government. Philip V., “he founder of the Bourbon dynasty, gin Spain, was a nervous and gloomy rman, much tormented by religious §scruples, and he found life as King of Spain intolerable. A' the age of i 40, and in the 24th year of his reign, ‘in order to look after "the affairs of his soul," he resigned the crown of Spain and the Indies in favor of hit eldest son, Don Luis, who was at that time only 16 years of Bite. F I The most remarkable voluntary ab- tdication on record is that of Chris- (iii; o"'Sweden, daughter and suc- lcessor of the great Gustavus Adol- fphus. Growing tired, at the age of 528, of the restraints imposed on her ;by her high ofliee, she resigned in ‘favor of her cousin and went to "tome, which city she entered in t,he; costume of an'Amazon. Latter Shel ' settled in Paris. The desire to resign se] returned in later Fears, f to recover her own kingdc a bid for the throne of 1 There Are Many Instances of Royalty Who Quit Their Thrones. History affords King Ferdinand of Bulgaria many precedents in the art of abdication. but few have ever resigned their thrones except under compulsion. There Are l ”i... v- r'"""'""'") and Lady Drummond, who labored so' unceasingly for the Canadian steel Cross. Them are also portraits of, many members of the Canadian high} command and a whole gallery of Canadians who have won the Victoria! Cross. I Apart from the actual lighting. how- I ever, the paintings give a comprehen- ‘Iive view ot every other phase of lCanadian war activity overseas, the ;Foreatry Corps, which has provided _ timber tor the armies of four nations: the tamonl Railway troops, which ot. ten worked desperately under a de- vaatating tire, have contributed so much to victory: the Veterinary Corps, which has charge ot three million ttttttu l ling worth ot animals; the hospitals and even the patrol boats in the Eng- lish Channel, some ot which were manned exclusively by Canadian. crews. There is a splendid collection! of portraits, interesting personalities) such as Sir Robert Borden, Sir George ( l'erley. Princess Patricia of Connaught i on] Y "A.. nanny” " _ There are nearly 100 paintings illus- trating the career of the Canadian a Cups in France, including the magni- ficent paintings ot the landing of the 3rd Canadian Brigade at St. Nazaire, by Edgar Buddy, A.R.A., and the giant l canvas by Major Richard Jock. A.R.A.. "The Second Battle of Ypres.” Major Jock has also a flne painting of "The Battle ot Vimy Ridge." In the same way the historic Canadian battles are} dealt with each in their turn. Regina l, Trench, the taking ot Courcelette and l so on, and then the Arraa-Camtrrati' road is shown, along which the Cana-l dlans are seen streaming after three, months of incessant battle to the bit-i ter tight for Cambral, whence they passed to their last engagement which l culminated in the triumphal entry into i' Mons. I g'CANAmANYfKRW" i'! PICTURES EXHIBH Every Phase of Canada’s War Activity From Start to Finish in Depicted. Dealing with the exhibition of Cana- dian war pictures which opened at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, on January 4. a contributor to the Pall Mall Gazette says it was a unique spectacle ot a natloniasupreme 011- deavor portrayed. not in retrospect, but during its accomplishment, by her artists. The 70 leading painters of Canada, including some famous British [ ones, have risen gloriously to the tagtti set by their Government when it took 1 them out to the trenches in France? and Flanders. From the landing of the . tint 33,000 men at Plymouth to the'; capture ot Mona on the last day of the (r war, no phase of Canada's war activity 1 has been neglected. I ARTISTS HAVE RECORDED PART IN CONFLXCT. THE ART OF ADDICATION The Berlin Ghost. Many Beautiful Portrait.. a throne of Poland. kings who ab4ieate by sign seems to have cars, for she tried kingdom and made “5 death,i "But it is really on marine engin.. Ft of re-, cering that the year 1918 and the '3 father, 3 war period as a whole have . been "t..,eei,l-icuxtrtGrdinary. The twelve months' kineship 9 record in production of ships' machin- fully a'.- ‘ cry is held by the Willsend-Slipway Company, of Wallsend.on-Tyne, which / turned out engines of 316, 'am horse- power, but other great time have " these' turned out machinery in amounts‘ alace of.wlnch would have been notable inl m, when ', normal times. ' some I Year of Highest Reads. ng the] "The year 1918, however, was the is to be _ year of the highest records, the Fair- of thiliield Company on the Clyde “one, once Ati,lproauiiliii marine propelling mochin-l .l'ery totalling 468,410 horsepower. ”This was the year when high power " destroyers were being turned out al. .moat en masse by all. firms for the gpm‘pose of hunting down German (tmbrniiriaea, and it will live for all ‘time in the industrial annals of the lUnited Kingdom as a fear of extra- " An Imposing List. 1 "The list IS composed of battle- 'ships battlee cruisers, light cruisers, destroyers and submarines, together with armed merchant cruisers, sea- ' plane carriers, monitors, mine.. ‘sweepers, those new vessels known ‘53 sloops, which are really little _ lighter then cruisers or low-speed des- troyers; gunboats, patrol boats, hos- .pital steamers, and also the “Q"l boats and "PQ" boats, of which Btt: little could be said while the wari ,was on or can even yet be said. l I "The battle cruiser Hood was the; greatest of an our mystery ships.; She and the Rodney would have,' been the greatest surprise packages: of the war. In speed and gun-power 5 they were to have exceeded any-3 thing afloat. Only the Hood, how-l over, will be. completed, as a great specimen of the latest in British naval architecture. All that exists of the Rodney will be scrapped. OUR . "e-r-"'- --v~--rv"“‘- , "The wonder work of the war per- 'iod,” says the Observer, "is to be found not in mercantile shipbuilding, but in naval, and, above all things in naval engieering. On the Clyde alone during the war 481 vessels of 770,347 tons and 6,093,830 horsepower were; constructed as additions to the naval i strength of the country. In this to-’ tal are included no merchant vessels ordered by the Government, and no; general service trawlers, tugs or handycraft built on Government 1 order. _" Wonder Work of War Period in Found in Naval Entrineeriru--48t Vessels in Four Years. - In an article on shipbuilding, the London Observer states that the total output of the United.Kingdom dur- ing 1918 of both naval and mercan- tile shops was 1,245 vessels, of 1,876,- 411 tons and 4,349,260 horsepower. l {the 1am and -iedpiGtiii 5;? iri"i'i'ct,rriiiiirG,ti'"iiG Km" “if; fourth!" -... --. -- -__ "Tm "m fh'rezuhrbordbrs. Ammrm'ayaAwmmMormx~' Behteqthetuttte. gthe We to the mod m this had bunt oven- the British Empire. Ml Jun before the (nut battle in which It,',',' a lawn-mover “I frveiy used onEbo-qk the examination necessary to'tats battalion wu destined to 51mm “ham ra . "and the may In" 1e1N "diet " a 'oHior, W n he feared,‘ so acutely. 3nd which action came , 3 and lg; 'F-, JltjVJTdrt,,Tgt' imam on mm 'tet, he LO his pro-cam by General Pershing on wide of x cement walk. No my. his new "is for ',',Q to 'il,A" my‘ thq .batttertteid, Martor mytr tT."l" it,',',',',":,',',' of tat",',',"',", had eva- taken ' Mint It can.“ this next. tum I 'dt and matted It to his wife m ' iitc'ttorthoutphttodirma thdrttt. then home F ' . .v e: I _Won:derfui to refute, during all tttti/iii,'?, help 'it'l"Jl,'lt gigam Front Lines, Oct. 21, 191t Nikkei: MOM-o Hum? made no tee.-i',t.tt crops the Old Man has ever Jttqt Before the Battle We", 'Nrneertrtntr " son’- hbon. kmn. RUU who her haw lamp The long long night marches hau' [Wind]. m earried Vim“: on in”! I D . d 1.991.170“ “who to sunset @1333er a g,t'Sfnr,g't f',,tf,L,t,i 21.31... 21...} y..E LL33 'ttyr?"" BATTLE CRUISER "001) m SURPRISE OF WAR MOST ltihlNliu,0IB iF MYSTERY SHIPS V.__._. -7... nun. uwvnuyu-ucu WWII» ',PredrtoytariCiiriiiiiiiii"iire" family together and invited FM members of it to go with him or a pertsonaNreondueteii tour of the place. (e?iiisriiiiF'ilii'ityi'iir or me "/IT.' I w you 30/ " M Ttten, mi " happened that a Missouri soldu I Vim o'.d tin I y, ' . in Ptanee wrote to his wife Jurt herorw small homo! the family and neck-noun next fail, u the oeuiitrt - meted from Worm lieutenant-comm ‘23er 1xnttaually t.? be warn-'you my, you don"t mod to bother tor ullantry In action. Mnjnr J. E ibonmda l . gamed. up am the loose anszing shot}; money. It'll be fmth-i Bloc". ot Klrkvllle. Mo.. led into at 5!” used '/'lf,,tt', 3 8:3: as can}: It 2','l,"lt, f: tigric,,Tt'lgtu2,'g tuck on the Argonne. forest a b:tttaLin, :mwm us. He stacked the amt- and now gm it but)!“ good te of 1,000 men, ot which o.nry 400 mm (tered Mom wood into . . if” "dan-u" I m sue you! uninjured. A machine-gun hum: 1 The Arublpery on “In” had ml SWIM!!! . 1tJrg,',d hh Ir.','. broke In!" Rider's tield glasses and iplnnted in . t'gL're'dd'tdT)stgi,, and; 'GU, ml Si . I i . ,"'l','e't,', . {he in struck by a piece ot shrapnel swath-gm tttentiort, had W11 into (he went on with M: s'llg','f (hid-u (Ho commune!“ the Second Irottalio; la/St Altnost obscuring the m“ [Midi he M tnkea up 'dter L!" 139th Retlmont. Tttirtrtlrth “Wish”. 1te1.ttNe ngedAtQ lhe 'sidtofidey.3sintr “an!” WI; emfad. LA. E. P., ttt the Argonne battle. I PART rr. ( "Why, ist','.iiit',t' Jet, an 'tti'.' All the cm a of old iron he th-(t,.x_t:da?r1cN PW rumba " ow Gl) into 3:15: sacks and sold t3: Ll/ie M We" think to do oll than Jupkdealer,' reaming $14.68 from tVe/oy;'.-'.]' she "W wheat " onttght Isak. _ and» of the Bower but. and 'AeA." I The fence; were remind. A mwlshrubbm. She had te furtyiddet Iroof was put on the grant]. The by her masterful ”a HPI! m to H-hicken house, which JAM in a hal- PM front port of die A“)... attye b NOW and etutght, all the. link” caused had begun work than. "lullmyy [by heavy rains, was moved to . high “ranged in tio- garden, sl- mid/ and dry location. Every 'spring sighing hlangy. ' jcoun'uieas chicks had been drowned ml “I learned most of it at 00W. , i!he rush of waters from a spout near said Tom, in mp1! to her question, I Iby, and Tcan determined that sueh al Two days later when a uni-ante {1051 should not again occur. {deter called Alonso Emu by tale- !, From the front gate to the front phone and said he had I My!“ Eccor tl.texr had never been a mlk. fcr the tuna, the father called his son 1Ton} hand one of cement and contmu-‘to him and said. "By Jittktr, Tom, the led i? around the house to the hack Norton people have offered me $.2.00 pawn. and then to the barn. The aaacmsfprtheplaee,-ir'l1 [mitt-a :ceIlar 'et'"s, grown wobbly and tttt- m if I'm we at. Pen 4rotng to ta.fe were replaced by cement ones.:keep it! If it‘s worth that much to glue house and bran: were paintd. He M it's worth more to me." i Igcrgened the bag]: poreh oet_wltirh) "This is a widen opportunity Ito, The fence; were remind. A new roof was put on the granary. The 'hieken.houe, which stood in 3 hal- All the scraps of old iron he Endl- ered iata gain sacks and sold to a .iugkdealer, reaming $14.68 from the The Biind Eye That Made Good ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO W 'etr.npliAsftd, what By Ida Robertson oen-1beoterouitheudtieiin has even- on.'knvwn. Wyylmaiasurmevttwnr nch mm wow grow my}: chaff to oen-lfeed a company at not a regiment. ‘Bocfidos,lwmttogetmofflhe ttlt'g2,guTgtg, Str/r,' in w- , . . , F p m to grow gur- the1eurs _iCtho.y'll let me. If I can I The Yukon Territory during the (year 1916-17 produced fish valued at j$60,210, principally salmon, Whitefish land trout. according to the report of 'the Fisheries Branch, Department of 'Naval Service, covering that period. :Boats and gear valued at $12,437 l were used and 248 men were employed in the Yukon fishery. The pendulum, in New Zuhnd sheep breeding is reported to be swinging in favor of the Down breeds. iThe Attitude of the British Soldier i in Victory. Now that the radiation of victory i has had time to soak in it is interest- ing to review how the great news has been received by the British Armies, says a war correspondent. I have , found everywhere a schemes: of spin; l it which woes deeper than mere stoic-l . ism. Indeed, there is a sensible ne . of depression in the demeanor of the . very large proportion of our troops] Nor do I think the explanation of the [ psychological conditions is very far to seek. In the first place there is the natural reaction from the state of chronic subconscious tension in which men have lived through the most ter.. tte of all human wars. We have always been finder the impalpabiel, :shadow of imminent tragedy. The; sudden lifting of this shadow has been [followed by the sense of spirit I lweariness. F urther, there is a L'lSI iing consciousness of the universal sorrow which has been caused. Scarcely a man out here but has lost a relative or a pal. Jubilation is _ tinged with sadness. Then, again, the 3 spedtaele of the tone-suffering) inhabi- I ', Itants trimming back to their too often l destroyed homes must needs have a" depressing influence. I Fthink thereI' is a real grandeur in t is subduedH reception by the conquerorsrof thciI greatest victory in the history of the} t earth. E y. M Connolly i Co; Member. Montreal Stock Emu“? 103-106 Tnncpomtlon Building MONTREAL . PD. by our PARTIAL PAYMENT PLAN enables, investors to become the owner ot selected standard ae- curitios - (stocks or bonds) - -- without making any large oat- lay. payment being made by my monthly ittssttumiynta, Just In much as you can eomtortatstr one trmn your regula- osmium. This method provides In attac- tire Nan ot stock purchase, and tt,tllppeijiti,iifiiiir,"iil,'iti,",t'; et and " Vin; by the Portia! Payment PM." Write for n in. copy. Stocks Purchased ordinary shipbuilding activity and one which contributed more than any to the supremacy at sea which ulti- mately strangled Germany and com- pelled her to cry aloud for peace." dam 'ir they'll Eat hag" Ti"! Tin help it I'm not going to let my bad eye _kfest me from being patriotic." 1'.'e,p 'I touyouuo,"'tntiifNn,1iugtr. mg. I “You needn't. I want to tell you 'rit*tnowtutwltsnyoutro,tmekto ,cohlece next fail, a the oeuititrt my: Portman-dont-deer-tttsr anything About money. It'll be torm- couing for win your expat-a. I’ve changed my mind about um calm 3nd now mm it is - good. Be-; aaacmsfprtheplaeeidr'l1besiig- treetdifr'asellta. I’mxoingto :keepdvt! 1fit'amtrththrstmuehto thein it's worth more to me." tr'6'T?y)s..iotatro'ttyytr?tittnt'tvto “SPIRITUAL 'meiNEss" Yukon Fish Statistics. ' Mother, you are horiorvd abdu- Ikinc. the president, the “new. _ - of earth. The song ot 1mm lot you. Could you ash‘nore than Ji, ttrst Ind In! by those wtrx.u liberty-loving world delights to hum ‘Your mo and that of Jesus bo I Mather In the hero's life and an ' “Mother. behold thy eon; mu. bet It!!! mother." I According to estimates prepan A ', s" experts there is enough soft co.] ..l the four Western Provinces of Canada to “Pl-’17 the ‘world for a couple " eqsturiea. The mines of Saskatche“ - us, Alberta and British Columbia In” scarcely been tapped, but have produced a totsl‘in one yes: of 6,000,, 000 has, to the value of over 26 mil. Iion dolls". The eon! is of very good nude. and is equally serviceable for steam purposes and household heat. ing. he Candi” Dominion “01021- eat - hes "timated that the coal beds contain s total of 1d8,490,000,006 “wavering sn sres of 87,000 mum miles. I During Cattle and After. Later I hurt! those same Voitos, when in the attack; not now the sci voice of long. but the shout at cond; --e hunt, roer! The valve of tht people in not the voice of God, but 'r, mighty voice of eoidier men. Sewn: ”anthem those who had pil‘vww I’d nurtured end burned and a: saved. they became as the avengw» of God and spoke with His Volvo i.od acted with His power. Never wul I forget their took, their mime! IV,, swept everything before us, caphninv and wounding Ind killing the mums? in the face at artillery and tn,ihir guns worked with desperate spend I t heard voices again, now sun-mu} ithey were at mother and Jesus H‘.‘ I heard the wounded-mot a cry. rd:', Ia song. strong tor mother ar, ti " wounded one felt the earth strong in. heath him. hat; sort of tarewull 1 ' her who bore him and a clinging u an unseen head of power as life Fl mi.» slipped away. The order no received to “have their been took on a determined look. but no tear In. there. I noticed them Inter; " were smiles. for the hour of Vindication had come: soon wu- heard the so“: about mother, short stanzas ot My soon. cradle rhymes. lullabivs of mother Manly voices. harsh, m: trained, tnunttaieai, became sweet w“), melody: each " own hearCsdceiwr: Inning In giving expression. w..n-. sliver. friend-it forgotten -- +va mother. Then. " the truth cum.- trt them that some might not return, long. torxotten soon ot religion. learned m days cone by, were heard‘som': sw.' the Lord. And mingled together new the notes of love and ITt'oteetlon " mother and Jesus---a!l others "er forgotten. The order of battle we: landed ttle end I reed It to my assembled battar Ion. The day for which the long training, denser and hard-Mp- had been incurred had come at lest. We were to attack the Mil where 40,090 French eoldlerl had fallen In defeat two years before: but death was thnre, artillery. mechlne gum, mines, wire, trenches, tunnell. a mighty stronghold, We were to be ably supported. I tuid my men ell. Front Lines. Oct. 21, 1918 Jul More the Esme The long, loll; night marches had and“. the (Ir-“lug ot weary fem them and and debris was over The - through rain and black nun. made doubly so by den-e forest. In done and now. concealed In the I'm-t of the Antenna by day, the army of stuck quietly rested. Am to the painter of dram... tie noon-I. 'Metorr" was the thing on the colder: nlnd the night heron: the m. In the lax-um. Pull. in n mae. mloco at Edouard Deuille entitled “The Dana." It Inc's a long line of hunch soldier- aleeping near their W Bum. Sleeping with then, an their M.’ In the clouds above, lo 3 vision of a victorious army chug In; bonenth the banners. cheering .1: they more onward. - oe m don a soldier think the nut baton In (on into battle? Women by An American Halo: Just Odor. All Attack on the N Argonne Fond. REVELATlON OF A COLDIER" HEART. Coal on the Prairies, L we earth strong I sort ot tarewun t and a clinging t, ”we: as lite til, TTIE BATHE" lit R"? F31

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