West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 8 Sep 1921, p. 3

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nous Demand for PM _ iucts is Taxing Capacity to the Uttermost. IADA’S PULP Alto PAPER INDUSTRY my‘tants ot M. mm. tho 'ii'iLi'ieo.c' BritMtt 2irat sly die. 5 BACK TO 1803, Ac. INC, TO TRADITION many 3"th b the preaont “no ' are not far touch. In: "l futures her M yswnrcm ot mm '.. have the (km 'F'S of other It!“ ('nnadn tor any)“. " .1 for their - um. Mm experienced the In: of elevation. aatd »-nt of the "Ho- t in'lustry raised "I " the second 1m 'P.. taking only a lo"! y of recent "in. on of toreats tut a). and the ' nrther mold for " the Industry It. h national hoof!- _ an old on. in the nurturing was so- 122 ot the hit COI- W. ' I) ate in of which PY Piper “In; sixty Windsor ‘raditlon. 1303. ht of £10. (, Upper of - the Thy. Toronto Mp 1nd domes. largest States. paper mature wages 123,739. ere " mt tu.. l and Ill th n y “if as! Ami ma iN to In to m ot .and whitened. walked with dummy, , mpporting Mme]! on a one uni latching his head forward. Minimum seemed much shorter And than". Her wrinkled lands trémbled sad tn to: dim on: there In an uncertain, grtetttmmt ”pro-loll. . "Won“! mtyou mm," Pore hi all to Each. and go up can I. m and to my“. I! bt--" prmemeyy he went to dine with M. _ in a village. It was necessary tol Hut» After dinner the Vill'agerafhom it. The Boches attached. There mmv in to take coffee. All had put : waa a mass of them and our men tell, on tlruiy Sunday clothes to do him one after another. urrcor They surrounded him and.1 "He was left alone. He blew-how westined him. very tsimply, "mp l to serve the machine gun and he hold out speaking of hlrncelluhe told them 1 the "a.” tor a quarter of on hour. about the war ec, no had tbeen it. In£wo and over him, natumlly, but has the iuteals ot M1erMNt one could hear ' hold it with his Bun. He couldn’t lave 't,, night sounds ot ttttt Country; because he had m lientemt and moths new In through the open wire some comrades with him, lying on the new and hovered about the lamp. mud, wounded. “a”, n - There woo a knock on the door. ”can"! to hold on. Then cartoon "It's the Bum“, sold M. Morin. advanced and found Mm all “one with They entered. Gnorln scarcely Tliiii marathon“. That I. what you t ttized the .two old ttooNos Mt _ Ison did. For. THIN." in“ they would. Ptet Bama, bent Odor!!! Imd mm. mridir, without pd whitened. Inked withth "a 3W to "I. m. Ttte) “worms Mrnqe18 on * - tyerrtdenq (mud on hsrehinq his head forward. Mme Balht gal-ma,“ to him “My named mac! “on" " “a tttinner. 1 What tho story was "Utted choral not wrinkled lands trembled 1nd in r. M _ ' W .' hr dim on! than no on mteertain, "a. nun who did m- In a hero.” '1ttrf.,n'T,t','l - her," m .1. the a. trqAtttth+r, - Stung"... and-..” "Bo-MM_MI.M_IIII¢N‘ The train had been under way since early morning. At 5 in the afternoon Guerin, who was looking out ot the car wlndow. began to recognize the face of the country. He gave a sigh of satisfaction. A smlle came over In; tanned race. He was nearing home, The train would soon Mop at his own village. In the village um! he met M. Fatigue: the schoolmater, who had taught him to mod and write lone twenty years before. Then he met M. Morin. the Mayor. Both stopped to talk with him and M. Morin invited him to dinner. The women came out of the houses and greeted him. He was very happy. But it was only when he was again In his own house that he felt perfectly content. . The train stopped. Quentin got on. The eight of tho village nation under the tall trees thrllled him, He walked slowly toward the village. breathing in with delight the familiar odor of the country as evening drum on. war, Horn. -. on automobile; 1'01- n de- tUsite purpose. lf say one thinks my on u luxury or n planking let him "eoetrttrs, by tak‘ng a trip with- out thir rnrtiethr accessory, how eoeN.ieueAdriyine is without a horn. The pedestrian does have a right to be on the road. I have never heard of a man being arrested for refusing to keep off the roadway, which mes! was sustained by any court. It should be taken for granted, however, that the man on foot ought to exercise Judgment in his use of the road as well as the driver of the car. If each wiyl remember the common rules of courtesy. there is apt to be little, if any, complaint from either party. Some drivers persist in making such a constant use“ their horns um they hetcme a nuisance. They not only signal on ail necessary occasions, but do a lot of unnecessary tooting, evidently because they want every one to know that they are coming and to u: d‘crstand those ahead must get out of the way. I have sometimes " tended church when there was so n nth unnecessary tooting of horns by mo- torists that the service wu almost - In; parents were dead. Nobody wculd be expecting Mm. But he was happy to come back tpr, a few days. He was going to occupy his house, which, because he had no family, he loved almost like a living being. And he said to himself that. since his wound! no longer bothered him, he would be able to give some attimtion to his land, which mist be badly In need of n. One thing only weighed on Ms mind -the idea of treeWrttt the father and mother of Ballu, a boyhood comrade. who had served In the same regiment with him and had died only In the the: Courtesy on Both Sides. Translated by William L. McPherson By Frederick acute! THE LOAN “€33. :fore coming to a cross road. unless there is a plain view of both roads "or a sufficient distance to make sure lthat a cdllision is not likely. And it should be sounded before taking gin.. Blow your own horn, but blow it with discretion. Let others blow, too, and heed their warning. Let this be the horn-blowing phUrtrophy of the motor car driver. "Now, Guerin, we want you to tell ut5---yef1, about our tton-about Att. toine. How was he-how was he kill- ed? What did he do? We can speak about it, now. His mother and i, we are--, can't may that we are getting accustomed to our loss (that would he to lie). but for the last "ar-well, we can talk about it, anyway. They have never told us anything. We know that he is dead. Thath all. Iince you were with him you can tell tttr--" The old man stopped, choked with emotion. After a painful silence he began again: broken up, and l uiir. tried to the? in a house on a highway where the exceuivo blasts from the horns of thoughtless driven made sleep almost 'rmposaible. _ . Mme. Balm sobbed'and the old man continued: M to Pull-g Others. M one is driving in on country and desire. to pan another car going in the some direction, it is cuntolnary to sound the horn once. that the driver ahead my not turn hie our in front of you and so that if needed, he may tom to the right to let the ”seem turn to the left. The driver of the car ahead in judge as to when and where he will turn beau-9e he can see ahead better and knows what obstruc- tions are to be avoided. With few ex- ception. he will, when signalled, im.. meditstdly give way. If he does not, and it is fair to presume he heard the signal, it is polite to wait a moment, before again signalling the desire to pass. One also should signal just before reaching the top of a hill, particularly if the road be narrow, that any one} coming up on the other side may be warned and be guided accordingly. Likewise, the horn should be blown be- As a rule, it is easier on tneht tem- perament and safer in the long run to let the fellow who wants most of the road have it. It can: little time or effort, to draw to one aide and slow up to let the loud tooling speed fiends pass by. And it is much safer. They will come to grief and hang them- selves is given enough rope, or they will land in the clutches of the tmffie "It was this way. He was in the front line with the others of his sec- tionwand a machine gun. They were in a village. It was nocesmry to hold it. The Roche: attacked. There was a mesa of them and our men fell, one after another. cop "We are brave; tell us. For that matter it will console us. Antoine- there weren't many like him--strontr, courageous, adventurous, and every- thing elso. You others, you knew Mm. It is the truth I am telling you. Then, surely, he must have done some extraordinary things. Tell us. It will do us good. We man be prouder than ever of him when we know the facts. Bo tell us. We want to hear 'ou--" The two old people sat down. They f1xed their eyes on Guerin. Perhaps they asked themselves why their own son won't there, in place of thin young man, who had no punts. Guam: seemed emhomasod. "Well, it was this way," Guam: be gun, with a great effort. "It was about the end of September, on a bountiful day. We were near a river-trt the north-----" He stopped. "And then what? What did Antoine do? Don't be afraid to tell us. It will do us good to know." Guerin still haiku“. But with the old man's eyes fastened on him he came to a decision. gerous curves in the "We want to hear you," the old mu: repeated. A driver can watch curler drivers and pedestrians. If they see the driver and if their direction and speed of mm is such that they will be out of the way before the driver arrives at the spot, there in no need of blowing the horn. If not seen, of course the horn new be eonnded, and the dri- ver's foot drank! instinctively go to the bake pedal every time his hand goes to his horn. "He had many bullet wounds," an- swered Guerin. "The Boches tired " many bullets as they could.” "You are a. good follow to have told no this," said 'Pere Ballu, getting up. "it consoles us. We didn't doubt that our Antoine had done something ex- traordinary. But now that we know the truth we are still prouder, aren't we, mother?" Guerln’s house was next door to Pete Faugue’s school. on the edge ot the village. They walked home to. gather. "And how was he killed?" asked Pete Balm, in a husky voice. The old woman made no reply. She was weeping. They went away, and, as it was striking 11, all the others got up to so. When they were alone the old schoolmaster stopped and looked Guerin square in the eyes. "What are you talking al asked Guerin, much astonished. "Yer, your name and the whole story. Here nobody noticed it. But I was just going to tell it this evening. when the Bailus arrived. Come, tell me the truth, now. How did their son die?" Guerin shrugged his shoulders. "I'll tell you, M. Fatigue. Young Baliu had bad luck. In the 11rttt place. to die; in the second place, to die as he did. He was» drowned. Yes; at the very beginning ot the war. He went into the water after eating. I told him that was bad, but you know how stubborn he was. It was warm and we were resting that day. There was no stopping him. He went into the water, was taken with a cramp and sunk.‘ We pulled him out, but he was ttlhed. Now, to be frank, i couldn't tell those people that. It is too stupid. It would have given them un- "It'g curious, all the same." he re- marked tmnullly. "One could hardly believe such coincidences possible." "That story you told the Balms about their son. It is very remark. able that he did exactly the same thing as you did,' Guerin gave a start and turned red. "How so?" he atammered. "The village defended by a single men, the machine Sun, the wounded comrades protected, Btc.--rou did that too, Guerin. I remember it very well. It was in the newspaper: It the time. Thath what you were cited for." neceeeary pain. Bo I told them my own tstory-ts thing that turppened to me much later. It was . no. I don't deny that. But, since it happened to me, I have tahen no cmdlt any from anybody.I He paused. Pore Fatigue coughed. Then Gtterin continued calmly: "Only, I wasn't killed. I we: hit by bullets, but merely wounded. Bo I changed the ending of the tstory- that's all. What would you have me do? I didn't know whet to any to those old people. My mind isn't quick. Don't you remember, M. Rune? At school I wee never good " writing narratives. I couldn’t invent any- thing." "But what will you have to tell on your own account. shaman-9'!" _ ___ “Ah! Thath true," said Gael-1n. " hadn’t thought of that. It is orb ward." He reflected A moment tad added: "Bah! Something of the me nor: In Hilly to happen to me between now and the and ot the m." "Did they put me in the newspap- ers?" asked Guerin. He began to laugh. Pere F‘augue laid a hand on his shoulder. q "What would you was»: for our Hum! club to and?” “had In. mnbdnb. , "A good coat-book," myondod he brutal Ian-bud. Want can; No Anabel... Gel-mm has paid Anemia. for the amp. she punk and will also qrttaghra. mace m Brguln_ do not cud M I, but they do prom to In" The Mainland? and the worst is yet to come) about?" Nothing astonishes visitors to the West Indies more than the speech ot the negroes. Naturally it takes its tone from the language at the people who used to be their masters. In Cuba and in Porto Rico they speak Spanish, and on the islands ot Haiti and Mar. tinique, French; in Jamaica and in other British islands the negro speaks with a ooclmey accent. In Montser- rat, which Irish planters peopled in the seventeenth century, all of the des- cendants of the former slaves have a strong brogue. Not very long ago, says Sir Fred. erick Treves in the Cradle of the Deep, a British ship dropped anchor in the main harbor of the island. and an Irishman among the passengers, lean. ing over the rail, accosted a sooty negro who had come alongside with fruit to sell. ' Slips underneath the maple trees- And slowly climbs a. may slope Then through a. little nagging gate It goes Into an orchard old That hold: within its melons - More treasure: than our arms can hold. Down amen of sunshine necked with nude. While overhead the swallows all, The nun-ow path loads willing feet When summer’s peace broods over Ill. It zigzag: like a. wandering child Through waving amen tan and But mm: to 1otter with I laugh Where woods and mountains can be seen. And bubbling songs of bobolinks Fall trom the air on every side. Across the road, up to the church, It ends at hut. in winding way Where words of prayer and hymns of "Oi say, Cutter' he cried. "phwat's the chance tor a live lad to get a. job ashore?" “Faith, Yer Honor," answered the negro. "it It's wun-uk yer atther, ye: can fotnd It in gobs tor the lookin'. An Oi'll be thankln' ye not to be callin' me Cucey. Mulca-ahy’s me name. Pathrick Mulea-ahr" "Muletvahy'. Saints in hivven! D'ye mane to tell me yer an Oiritrhgnan'." "Ag good a. wan an yersm." “Warm, wurm! An' how long've ya been wurrukin' here?" "Ye don't tell met An' In tint mime ye've turned as block " me hat! on me uowl, tr Ot any long enough to make me fortune end so on back to Clonee with it, 'twibl take some mlghty loft perahututin' to get Maggie Murphy to marry me, en' she not bein' able to tell me tram any mum!" It leaves the doorstep worn and gray, Then on again beyond the fence Where elm trees fringe a meadow Hundreds of other!!!" won-mom- ed people have we Idea that . use!» at". work consists merely in new; chaos. "king um um! min- ing the next day'. Mom. In met. M an: to be “soulful s Maethee mug-pend hour- ot study In m tiiurtur'esp*reftPtaoayrt “Folve years, come St. Pathriek't, Day.” - The Summer Path to Church. Whmwum1 Minnow o." To meet stray butterftiea and been. Rest" like a. bleujng on the dar. ' ---Adelur Wuhan The Teacher'- Tusk. A Black Irishman. _ most widely and book: In tho Bulk!!! “We. and for close to 200 you: T In: charmed both old and young. When Jonathan (Donn) Swift "rived In England from Ireland in Much, ' ITM, he brought with him the unnu- 'iseript of “Gulliver's Travels" cm! in- itrustad It: publication to Pope”: du. ,cretlon. It appeared In November. : 1726, and Built was paid 8600 for It. “Gulliver's Tuvalu" I: on. ot tho That tamoul book bet! its origin in the ideas of a great genenl entire on human foibles. and In projected " early as 1714 try the Scriblenu Club. But the extraordinery can spent on the work try Swift, the breedth of its application and the completeness with which it express“ his peculiar lenti- menu during the twelve year: that followed " settlement at the deenery ot St. Patrick's make it in every way his own. Critics have pointed out the sources from which Swift derived the ground- work ot hie plum. They hue ex- plained the special mullahs to con- temporary history, which abound throughout: and they have expetleted oii the extraordinary skill with which the story is told, the exectneu of its proportions, the accuracy or itl logic and the veriaimilitude ot its facts. Perhaps no other work ever exhibit- ed such general attractiveneu to all classes. It altered personal 1nd politi- Five thousand crates. or other: on- load ot British cannabis potatoes com- mise the tirgt of this M's export at this commodity to Manila. The ttmt movement ot potatoes from British Columbia was in 1920, and the tubers Canada is one of the moat fortunate countries in the world, no the repre- sentative ot a Netherlands company that has several millions invested in Alberta. Saskatchewan and Manitoba reports after a comprehensive tour of investigation He.“ J. D. P. Ten Boeach. ot Holland, one of the princi- pals of the HoutuMiA3attada Mortgage Company. He expressed himself in Calgary as being well pleased with conditions and prospect! in Western Canada and is "tittfled, that this year's crop would be marketed very pront- ably. The value of the sea tltth catch in Canada during the three months peri- od, April to June 1921, amounted to $7,624,810, ot which Nova Scotia ac- counted tor $3,436,527, British Colum. bia $2,462,238, New Brunswick 81,086.- 781, Quebec $359,150, and Prince Ed. ward Island $280,164. Winnipeg" oMeitu population is within 607 of the 200,000 mark, follow- ing a. net increase of 2,546 since Janu- ary, according to the city hall re. cords. The lust assessment figures' showed a population ot IM,947, but 3,722 births and 1,176 deaths occurred this year, leaving the net increase of MM. How long is a (by on the sun? It seems " odd question, con-Mer- Inx that what we call the any is made by the sun. How on it be otherwise thin (It! all the time on the solar lamina? - Baked for tweettrtire miles ot its length with recently located placer claims, the Lardeau River, in British Columbia, promieee to be the scene of active placer mining " soon as the wet season- begine. There is great in- terest in the experiment of washing gold on this river, but just " present owing to the dry weather, the water is not available for placer operations. Len Mountain Lake, and the islands therein, in the Province of Sammy wen, has been erected into I bird unciuery under the Migratory Bird. Act. Shootinz ot “no birds in the open season will be showed on all portions of but. Mountain me unrul- ery, except the islands north or and in- cluding Pelican Inland. More than 2,400 soldiers have been placed on Alberta land by the Bo1diersf Settlement Board since its organiza- tion was completed, and of this num- ber, not more than tive per cent. have proven failures, is the report issued try Edmonton authorities. were so well received that tt to bo- 'rut/however, is merely our plane- tary viewpoint ot the mm. In a We: can of the ttem, B Pr The titat samples of this season's threshed wheat arrived in Calgary and have been pronounced by George Hill, Dominion Government inspector. to be of excellent quality and quite up to the samples received but year. The samples were trom the Taber district end graded number 1 northern. The wheat is of excellent color Ind shows but little, it any, trace ot the dry westher experienced this your. meanu‘ono complete revolution of . o.imttat body. The Inn. maven on a. axis,ttmtaotbrenrthdoer, tam. ”31011131000013.deth ttiunr,tnotherwoe%yio00houm how long the - norm-y'- a” " tnttthqr_t'ttreenaNetoiindet. 1hir.ioeqtmiirBtrb*ett"1sonrt" by. meVm. The tMer-- "aattuiatthinetnfPtmur, iGaibiiiU out an the I. believed tutmtttttatrtteF-orott_rtttta nu oeettmd.thattt_ttttgro an -tsoi4retttoattor9etrr ,ru-teeartertothemtoofitor" Bits of Canadian News. lmgthofDaysonOtllerPlanets (high of “m vet’s Travels" . ONTARIO ARC TORONTO would”. tom on! at!" to are radon In high “to. low and can: mam-u to the mlear, marvel. to the mantle, wit to the young ad may," bloom of mommy tad potter to the mu and maxim. at deep and bitter man” to " glanced no and abundant! nab!- tion. The - to Lilliput retell chUttr to the' court end politic- ol mind, and Sir Robert Weinole " pieiniy h- timeted - the cherecter at Pro mier Funny. The factions of hith- heele end low-heel- of the tstoe, no doubt apnea the action: ot the Tories and Whigs: the men Indium and the " Indium. the religion di- versions ot Pepi-t end Protestant; end when the heir "punt we: described as veering one high heel end one low, the Prince ot Welee. who " that time divided hie levers between the two leading political vertic- in England, laughed very heutily It the competi- While new other “more have given the world hungry voyexee of . tsupposed traTeBer to Ideal mime, it we. unnerved tor me to enliven the morality of m- work with humor; to relieve its absurdity with “tire end to give the most Improbable event.- tn Uppemnce of reality, derived from the character end ety‘le ot the narra- tor. Even Roblneon Crusoe hardly up eels "Gulliver's Tnvels" in gravity and viruitnuitude ot nemtlve. Soldier seitlere in the northern pane ot the three prairie provinces will har- veet from twenty to tttirty-tive bushels ot wheat to the lore this seuon, ec- cording to Captain Boyd, federal in. spector of the Soldiers' Settlement Board. Communities have been ei- tablished at Riding-Mountain. Piupot. Porcupine and Pouoe Coupe. Each settler in these memes hue on aver- ue ot eighty ecree under cultivation, and, according to Captain Boyd, have done remarkably well. lieved I large export true will be de- veloped. Tho B.C. Department of Nun! At- taim has in view the Installation ot u very powerful continuous wave sys- tem wireless Mation near Vancouver to undertake land work and communi- cate with distant points up coast, thus leaving the present station at Point Grey to handle shipping business only, stated 0. J. Desbaruixs, deputy minis- minimal eroueed the interest ot the Buddhilte in modern sports until . much gene we: arranged between the Buddhist We“: and the Clad-tun Bible clue. Neither Me scored tut. til the eighth inning. when the prieeu out 3 run eel-one. Then, in the lent ot the ninth inning, the Christian- got two ttttm The Buddhist high priest. in spite of his Ion! connection, let a felt grounder go between " logo, and both runners neared. Christians 8, Buddha.“ 1, was the on] more ot l mu game played in the ground. ot the no“ Buddhht temple It Kyoto, Japan. Chum”: At Anyox. B.C., total production of copper " the smelter amounted to M,. 821,680 pounds during the past year. mostly from ores mined at Hidden Creek mine. clone in. The total ship- meats of copper are from the mine during the year amounted to 807,863 was and the foreign ores used amount. ed to 47,070 tons. a good deal ot this coming from the Dolly Var-den mine at Alice Arm. "But, said mother, "you don't want to be I dirty little bor, do you? _ i went my little boy to hue . nice clean face tor the ladies to his!" Upon this persuasion he sue way end m wished. A few minutes later he stood watch- tug his father Ive-hing. "Ha, ha. daddy!" he cried. "I know why you're washing!" than ours. That of Jupiter is slightly! less than ten hours long, and the length ot Saturn's day in ten and three-tent!“ Mun. But when It comes to Uranus and Neptune, the two outermost and mmst diatom. of the sun" eight pm the astronomers are again puzzled. They do not. know the rote " Web “the? ot them mom. [taken thoouth 866 anmth‘ A couple" loamy would tho sun. which I. all . your. Heron-r. you} a only 01¢th an m. m on Von. b "' an. no MegtHIt you In or: at." long. not of Jaguar b “dunno-nuance. mm: M of Mn our “with. m u long: that at an“. out,“ uno- a.torte,ituteettqttsnet06tttr- no but. or 00.1.1 do”. 1 It no coo-om not) a. lull b ”with. that - - do. on: in moo. tt II, mm am my: how all: In“ at you. to not. by about --» an: m u an at o and. an “Come Along, denrie," “1d Mrs. Jones to her three-year-old son, “and hue your hoe washed." "Don't want to be washed,” came the reply. He Knew. Mr. and Mrs. Jones had been in- vlted to a friend's tor tea, 1nd the time had arrived for preparing for the visit. ntradeadosrsrdetunitvtheroisno "'iFf! G-tttent Podium Gina. MMhPoHi-l him" <3me , The but" But. of Ann-Mu. Mr. M about atmorttqr be“... It Inn! and Inuit“! ladle Alb. - uo put up I "Keep on" In a “nu Home You" rural-c. to " win. - ud Christian. The Ind II W” --to use A W's DIM“ “that “a. “a accession luau. taunt minimum. and W I. ulnar-y ad palm“! hum I. - “with And the “Keep Out” tttgn II um In. Today the mm“ in lo an. vol- eouelnmhun autism. hundred - no. morbid“- mm Itself Is no mote exclusive an 5m lug. summon Kabul. the capital of am "ohm. “madly ml. or (u- cttc "than. ot rockl. donuts. trrittnted alleys and towering. unmanned rung". For renou- of (out. pulley, the Amir has long felt the moonlit] of - clndlu MI t',ttleh-et land to the [mtg-t possum extent (mm the out- side world. Only I few Europeans. mat?! British, but occasionally also an Amulet": and now and then I few Russians or Germans, have had per- mlulon to come into um country and to 'rNottrrt tor I while In In various capital. But even on such rare oc- culom u when u foreign engineer or doctor whose services are badly need- ed ll admitted by the slice ot lb. Amir, the vleltor II subject to a. an velllnnce that amounts almaa to im- pritscracerit. No ttmttarr.utdoN or ministers. not even tttisaionaries, are permitted in I. side in this forbidden Modem land. "Splendid isolation" in a sort of Ar. clun tradition. a conviction that a. coming ot the inreixner will spell a. and of the Amir and his unique. almo- iute rule. not! can“: of In“. To-day no other monarch nnywhem wields such ttttdisputed “(horny or in In Clo-er touch with the everyday lit. ol " subjects, He person-Hy runs his country's religion, In loreign " tain. um he even supervises much of It: commerce. Ho also owns and um- lors the cnly Izewmaw‘r printed in all “shaman. 1nctdevtta11.v, he lump. ttttye') ttutctttutsiletr, and he m-ver walks. Even (rem one palam- to an- other he goes by motor (-ver i-‘hurt pieces of mad hum cupmiuly In hi, manure. With an area ct 245.000 square miles. Afghanistan ts, nrxt to Til"t, the Isl-zest country in the world Hm ls virtuslly clceed to the 1'iti.r,ons of other nations. llul political lin. at wary, alert Kshul is in sharp contrast to the meditative m-vlusion and vim-hm Eloofness of the plum. humus ut [sluia‘ Amir Amanullah Khan, lilnugll his mntu in Indian and clsewherr, i.~ in close touch with lilo world',, rum-ht events; sud, as the last ralnulnim; in- dependent ruler of a Moslem country, now that the power of thr Cali, h at Bumboul is broken. he wields n Lats touching tnt1ttettext throughout the All» hmmodsn world; lino, because his land humans to lie Just as it does «in the mp of tho world, it in plain that for s long time to come he will be an active force in the political den-mule. at Indie Ants. Like lenelik of Abys- sinis. Quail w ot the Hnwuilsn ls- hall, at an In! of the Fiji Kings. this Aim. ram and obscure as his kingdom is, stands out in his time I. s picturesque world "ttres. Wm. Livs In Itrlct Occlusion. The women ot Auhsnlsun sre kept in - It“ occlusion and no mar. - and thsn the women ot any other lesion Ind. The mule of Auhunluan In moved unholy by C.r8bwtu" and In largely In the mm of Hindus and MIMI. The" is not a lane ot nllroul In the m. the Ant! (cu-lug that and may.” - uh hot-don Impou- nth. Like the Ant), the Afghan con-idem n unnecesury and even unwise (but women would learn to road or wrlto. No girl. are admitted to the lunar school: an! no mulhhn we employed to tqaett them, uni Auhlnislan know. mm of women titterts. w from no. I luv xylocnphp. ”In. and. “exam: to: women, . um. um and f M t by "ttrio 'rmhotrrttnti.gmrdtusedinttra- law unubmlvcnmoch-t- mum-um. Milan-Me- Muhammad-0t a. minus no nah ml- lny Manama tii-ts-tbr-ttttttso From the World War. [hung]! In took no active part in it, the Amir 'unerqred with singular yum-g His old And our» rival "chum-2.7. (Lent. Britain and Rueslu. drawn “will” no allie- In the world IN “Mt-l. left hm a (to. had. and In 1919 Gust ttritaa “an", recognized the political ht. depondonoe of this ntuvh-buflctel sun. to with: rulers she had no In"; paid I In annuity. with “no; no when at who raiiniTG" _-___ " d - M“; n ' 'j,ti,l'fd'sit',tt?i,'ihi':? “W“ m - u,- 11'PP, Inn hm cent w 'iGTirTEiE um Mnbmaent “mumbwhm ttowtgs " inc-um“: . bl F

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