West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 15 Sep 1921, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

E“! cZERMANS $521. lj/ FRANCE ”T3 RETAINED IN E: T}! PR150NS. Various Offer rful Quarters, P., Treatment. ay . mus J”!d'.n h p.rst ninety. ls' Kaiaer% muse they 1'2)”an I" at Avm. when It. parts of :9.- ankl- ways. sh”. consider- mun-’3 nun! of French *ar tho m. high. he ox- " Ger. " that wrath "all! o ho- nded but. uemy relds Md! from h ac- med d to rice. any un- ten bad pa " re " of " The success of this flrst journalistic venture shows, " did the short course for farmers last winter, that the peo- ple of the province appreciate the "broadening-out policy" of their owd university and are - to avail them- selves of the opportunities offered. Ontario's provincial university is lead- ing the way in university extension and is showing its desire to serve its constituency in the fullest possible manner. On the first day of the Short Course in Journalism held this week at the University of Toronto, one hundred and seventeen persons registered, tcrtymine of them being men. The class consisted primarily of editors and publishers of weekly newspapers in Ontario, from u far out as Ottawa and as far west as Petrolia. If one may judge from the comments heard in the corridors, those in attendance were delighted with the lectures to which they were Privileged to listen uni highly approved of the action taken by the provincial university in providing this course. "ht this tinnt note we deem it our an, to retinal that our position is, and can only be, n We have defined it throughout this correspondence. Our nation has formally declared its inde- pendence and recognizes itself as a novereign State. it is only " repre- putative: of that State and as its chosen guardians that we have auth- ority or powers to act on behalf of our people. . . "As regards the prindplo of govern- ment by consent. of the governed. in the very-ofthe-R-tro the basis of any miner“. that will achieve the purpose we have at heart --that is, the fimul reconciliation of our nation with yam. "We have suggested no interpreta- tion of that pninciple saw its every- day interpretation, the sense, for ex- ample, in which it was understood by the plain men and women of the world when on January ii, 1918, you said: " "The settlement of Europe must te based on such grounds of reason and justice as will give some promise of stability. Therefore, it": that we feel that government with the consent of the governed must b6 the basis of my territorial mttlemé'nt in this war,' "These words are the true answer to the eritirirm of our position which your last letter puts forward. The principle was understood then to mean the right of nations that had been an- nexed to Empires ugnimt their win to free thcmselveg from the grappling hock. That is the sense in which we understand it. In reality, it in your "Our readiness to eontempUte Inch In “mention n: indicated in our letter of August 10. We have accord- ingly stunned the DW, that we may submit to it for ratitieation an names of the representatives it is our intention to propose. We hope that these representatives win find it pos- rT-ble to be at lmemess on the date you suggest. September 20. "We are unbuiuting in declaring' with you 'peeitleAy reaffirm that our Willingness to enter a conference claim, rating that your nation has to ascertain how the association of formally declared its Independence and Ireland with the community of nations mixes itself " a tsovereign State known a the British Empire an beat and 'it is only,’ you added, is repre- be remnciled with Irish national as- nonnative: of that State and as its piratiomr. ichoaen guardians that we have any "Our newlines: to eontempUte Inch authority or powers to act on behalf P! “madam: was indicated in mtof our people.‘ A - ox the arrangements for the confer- eneo at hum next week and im- plying the possibility of the British 00'0“ hnrirw to consider a new mu. 4 do: M by Mt-ttie. blows upon the .rfitiestten h Ddiin on Thursday afternoon of a hm in de Valera to Lloyd George, Wig that the _ ”,0. -- v... wuwu LNB'.-- Tho Trish WIN: cane to hm:- on My invoking the Mania " a“ --r.-, __ - - A demtch from Dublin -.----TU text of the letter of Eamon de Valera, wanting the invitation to the Inver- nen Conference, but under certain conditions, follows: u representativel of that minim; State that the Shin Fain Cabinet has authority or power to net. t1rliflRlllit0iianmmiss =_1r11r"="'c1"1'1""e11'2"'1' mum» gy ammmx QuickAcaonof R . ofdeVl 'sut- ... Mi... jt'g1firpcty tttst mm: . WWMWMPNEHBM A New University Course. dean-tel: from P. "1th it is onlj "" MY UNCLE. l CHAIM: wns\ 1H: Best 50mm. IN ms RedoneriT4. You Mum Mets. \ALL THE ncDALs H: HA5! J its! as 9” F-- im," swim“? 1 g "1 asked them to warn you of the very action: effeet of and! a. claim and otrered to regard the letter " un- delivered to me in order that you might have time to reconsider it. De- spite this intimation you have now published the Loni} in its original l form. "If we accepted a conference with your delegates on the formal state- ment of claim whieh you have re- affirmed, it would constitute an offheial recognition by His Maiesty's Govern- ment of the severance of Ireland from the Empire and of its existence as an independent Republic. It would, more- over, entitle you to deeiare, as of right acknowledged by us. that, in prefer- ence to nyltion with the British Empire, y would pursue a closer association, by treaty, with came other foreign power. There is only one answer possible to such a claim as that. A despatch from Winnipeg "rv.--- Approximately 10,000,000 bushels of new grain have been billed over the Canadian National Railways from Western points, offleials announced an Thursday. This is more grain than was handed up to October 4 last year, it was stated. - Since Greek public opinion virtu- ally concluded and expected the fall of Angora, with the subsequent occupa- tion of Constantinople, this severe re- verse, even if no worse disaster fol- lows, must have a profound effect. “I must accordingly cancel the at- rtuttrements for the conference next week at lmerncss and must consult my colleagues on the course of action which this new situation netesaitates. " will communicate this to you " soon " possible, but as I am, for the moment, laid up here, a few days' de- lay is inevitable. Meanwhile, I mast make it absolutely clear that His Majesty’s Government cannot recon- sider the position which I have stated to you. "The great concessions which His Majesty's Government have made to the feeling of your people, in order to secure a lasting settlement, deserved, in my opinion, some more generous response. but so far every advance has been made by us. On Four part you have not come to mat us, by a single stop, but have merely reiterated, in phrases of emphatic challenge, the let- ter and tspirit of your original claim." A despatch from Constantinople sayr.-Reports from Angora say that the Greek army is in general retreat, abandoning wounded. automobiles and war material. The Greek troops are now apparently west of the Sakai: River. Grain Movement is Gorerrwent, when it at}: to rend our ”pier“: mation and to part/titat its W. that weak! give to the prin- eiNo an interpretation that would undermine the We of every demo. mtic Btu. end drive the civilized wot-1d back into tribaliun. "I m, Btr, faithfully way, "Eamon de Valera." A despatch from London Bet--- Premier Lloyd George telegraphed de Valet. from Gairloch, Scotland, the following eaneellation of the Invemese Conference: “I Informed your emissaries who Mend) to me, here, on Tuesday, the 18th, that Manual of your claim to negotiate with His Majesty’s Gav- ernment as representatives of an inde- pendent and sovereign State would make a conference between us impos- sible. They brought me a letter in which you mpeeitleAy reaffirm that claim. Mating that your nation has Suffer a Huge Disaster S HE was -T7"s - AwwL smug! w: sND THE w»! ‘TD Be have!) sc:ctmut l5'ro eeep A Coot. "x HEAD! w,,Wi' Fall wheat, 15,478,000 bushels, as against, 19,469,200 busheh last year; spring wheat 278,914,000 bushels, " against 243,720,100 bushels; fall wheat, 294,887,800 bushels, us against 268,- 189,300 bulhels; oats, 466,303,100 bushels, as against Ir80,T09,T00 bush. els; barley, 57,607,300 bushels, an against 63,310,550 bushels; rye, 11,- 847,500 bushels, as against 11,80B,400 bushels, and flaxseed, 7,166,300 bush- els, as against 7,997,700 bushels. These are preliminary estimates subject to revision after completion of the threshing, the prevalence of rust, both black and red, in the Province of Sas- katchewan ceeasionimt difficulty in the preliminary estimation of average yields. For the three Prairie Provinces the preliminary estimate in bushels is: Wheat, 271,508,000 (234,138,000); oats, 331,270,000 (314,297,0003 . barley, 42,720,000 (40,700,500); rye, 9,567,000 The Shantung proposals are brief. They include the return of the penin- sula to Ghina, with full sovereignty A despatch frcra Ctawa Bart'.-- That the great wheat harvest of 1916 will probably be exceeded by the har. vest this year is foreeait in a. report issued to-night, by the Agricultufal Branch of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. According to the report, which covers the condition of the crops up-w-date, the average yitlds in bush.. els per acre for the principal grain crops will be as follows: Fall yheat 21%, as against 24 last year. Spring wheat 15%, as against 14; fall wheat 15%, as against 14%; oats 30%, as against 33%; barley 22%, as against 24%; rye, 16%, as against 17%; flax seed 9.10, as against 5.60. Upon the areas sown, as esti- mated on June 30 last, these averages represented total yields " follows: Ontario's New Lfetttenant.aot"trrtttr Col. Henry Cockshutt, ot Brantford, who has taken the oath ot Mice " Toronto. Japan is doing what she can, wher- ever she can, to put her house in order before the Washington conference. For some time she bu been making an effort to agree with the United States on the Island of Yap and the cables thereof. She is seeking an er- rangement that will be satisfactory to Siberia and is now offereing to return Shantung to China on what appear to be liberal terms. 1921 HARVEST LIKELY T0 EXCEED ' THAT (hi BANNER YEAR 1915 THE WRECK OF THE GIANT AIRSHIP A striking photograph of the wreck ot the Ib38, as it appeared lying in the river Humber, at Hull, Engltutd, Busy Tokio. REGLAR FELLtucs--By Gene Syria. oats, 57,000 000 (57,657,000); 1sarley, 18,488.000 (17,520,000); rye. 2,880.000 (2,318,600); flax seed, 798,800 (1,157,- 800). In Saskatchewan they are: 178,580,000 (113,135,300); oats, 183,- 863,000 (141,549,000); barley, 13,500,- 000 (10,601,ti00); rye, 3,957,000 fit,- 535.000); flax seed, 5,420,000 (5.705.- 000). In Alberta they are: Wheat, 60,716.600, (83,461,000); oats, 90,407,- 000 (115,091,000); 'barley, 10,732,000 (12,739,000); rye, M80,000 (8 420,- 000); flax reed, 585,000 (726,000). The figures within brackets represent the yields of 1920. The average condition on August 21 of late sown crops, expressed numer- ically in percentages of the average are cheered at the prospect of their wheat now in the fields drying out without much damage. Thresh?N, however, will not likely be resumed uettirthe beginning of next week. yield per acre for ihe ten years 1911- 20, is reported " follwws: The figures within brackets, repre- senting in the order given, the condi- tions on July 31', 1921, and on August M, 1920; peas, 83 (89, 99); beans, 94 (95, 99); buckwheat, 92 (90, 101); mixed grains, 80 (87, 105); com for hum, 10 (97, 101; potatoes, 86 (89, 102); turnips, marqtolda, 82 (87, 98); fodder corn, 104 (101, 102); sugar beets, 89 (93, 101); pasture, 88 (86, M). The figures for 1921 represent the following forecast of total yield in bushels or tons: Peas, 2,390,000; beans, 1,030,000; buckwheat, 7,443,000; mixed grains, 22,657,000; corn for husking, 15,304,000; potatoes, 97,616,- 000; turnips, etc., 84,030,000; fodder corn, 5,649,000 tons; sugar beets, 272,- 000 tons. Preliminary estimates were issued on August 10 for hay and clover, 10,374,000 tons, and alfalfa, 862,000 tons; first cutting. A despatch from Regina, Sash, "ys:--With the fine, cool weather, farmers in Southern &uskatehewan and political rights, and the removal of all Japanese troops from the area. In return Japan asks joint Japanese. Chinese operation of the Shantung railway system. Therefore, Japan cannot hope to enter the conference with her rela- tions to China all neatly completed, packaged and labelled “Facts Accom- plished." But Tokio will do what Tokio can. (8 278.600); flax tsed, 6,801,300 (7.- 583800). For Manitoba the yields are: Wheat, 37,212.000 187,rri2,000); Whatever Japan and America may do as to Yap or Japan may arrange in Siberia, it is certain that any agree- ment made as to China prior to the conference must wait upon the con- ference for final disposition. While the Pekin Government is charged with being pro-Japan, it hardly will dare settle the Shantung and other Chinese- Japanese problems on the eve of the parleyo. Little Damage Caused by Snow in West China is a divided nation, with North and South tightitte a series at little wars for 'mastery. Whatever the Pekin Government-does will be fought by Canton, and Pekin heres to upset everything that has been done by Canton. It is, in fact, a grave ques- tion as to who is entitled to speak for China in the parleys. I Edmonton, Alta.-ldtttoBioet and g the outside world is soon to have iii.. rect wireless communication with i Fort Norman and Fort Smith, as well as other northern points, according to the plans of a local firm which has ‘just been granted a federal license 1 for the operation of commercial wire- ‘less between these points. Marconi ' equipment will be used and wireless operators will be brought from the ' coast. It is expected that the system I will be in operation by early spring. Eggs-No. 1, 42 to Me; Idects, " to 61e; new-hid, est-tom, 61 to tBe. Buttbr--Cr-, No. l, 40 to 48et do, No. 2, " to 40e; chin pram, aé to Me; bakers', 28 to 80e. d,?oin"'r"i"e-Be"t grade, 22 to Cheese-New, large, " to 28%et twins, 28% to Me; Milton, 26 to Me. Old, large, 28 to 29e: twins, 29 to Me, Honey, 'irGiieu..WitTi'te'" clover honey, in 60-80-lb. tins, Err 1b., 14 to lik; do, 10-11». tins, per " 16 to 16c; Ontnrio No. 1 white clover, in 2%Urulr. tins, Jer lb, _17 to, W; comb honey, Calgary, Altar-Willard Meek, the famous author and playwright, whose "Tiger Rose" won widespread ropu- larity, is in Calgary collaborating with Ralph Kendall, member of the Calgary police force and author of "Benton of The Royal Mounted" and "The Luck of the Mounted," in the preparation of a new play to be designated, "The Maple Leaf Man.” Mack, whose par- enter live, on a big farm near Calgary, is looking for red-biooded material devoid of mushy Mstttimentalitstn and picked out Kendall as the author best fitted to supply his needs. Ontario ftour--86, in bags, Montreal and Toronto. Peas-No. 2, nominal. Manitoba flour-'rmek, Toronto.. mist path, $9M; second pats., $9.86. Rye-No. 2, $1. Mulfeed--car1ou, delivered Town to'. Bran, $28 to $80; shorts, per ton, $32 to $8SA; ftedffoyri10.. .. nuninai. Ail above in store, Fort William. Ontario wheat-F. o. b. shipping points, according to freight: outside. No. 2 winter, $1.26 to $1.80; No. 3 winter, $1.22 to $1.27; No. 1 commer- cial, $1.17 to $1.22; No. 2 spring, $1.20 to $1.25; No. 8 spring, nominal; No. 2 goose_wheat, nominal. . . -iidrrei'-Mtutinii, 66 to Toe, accord. int to freight: o1Atai.de., .. . , per 'daz. 33:75 to $4.50: ' Smoked meue-Rous, 27 to 28c; hams, med., 88 to (be; heavy, 29 to . ' . 1products, $34,939,475; tobacco, SM; YiI-ctonn: Bf..--?'".' salmon musk T, 866,294; textiles and manufactures Butuh Commons during the year 1920', thereof, $81,866,566; agricultural im- totalled 1,187,616 cases, according tolplementa, 811,759,709; boilers and ma- the report of the Fisheries iiii;aitlGiiGr, $31,209,129; castings and ment. Chum and sockeye were in the hardware, $10,862,157; books, paper, majority, accounting for 486,081 eases) etc., $11,202,755; lumber and mfra. of of.the total. "iiiii; $12,978,670; vehicles, $5,955,- Edmonton Alta -.-Edttustbtoet and 736; aluminum kitchenware, $824992; aL, _..‘_u- Ld,",' _ -..-_ bas 1.....- Z. Islectric wd gas own-tun, 817,182,- Manitoba oats-No. 3 CW, 55c; No. 4 CW, 68%e; extra No. I, 58%c; No. 1 feed, No. 2 feed, not quoted. Manitoba barley-No. 3 CW, 80c; - "A%G.iekCGrd---Pioenpt shipment. No. 2 yellow, c.i.f. bay ports, Tle, nominal. "7617175180 oats-No. 2 white, " to 46e, aeordjng to, tr.eurhty. oyujys . Toronto. Manitoba wheat-No, 1 Northern, $1.67; No. 2 Northern, $1.62; No. 3 Northern, $1.56; No. 4 wheat, not qupted, . -- - ----. -- .. WA', rst pau., $9.86; neon Buckwheat-Nominal. DOMINION NEWS IN BRIEF ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Weekly Market Report Durirg the past "" and o hid many Ccotttaeht.an citizen- how been out. of employment. Yet, during all the period we continued to import ttoois at a record pace, (0-4 is the pro- duet of the field or factory. that eoetld have been produced in par on coun- (00' cairn, ununut, - w .11., uv, and" $7 to $9; do, 00:11., 82 to $5; limbs, you'lings. $6 to $6.50; do, spring, 38 to $9; sheep, choice, $8.50 to $4; do, heavy and bucks, 81.50 to $3; hcgs, fed and watered, 810; do; off an. $1026; do, f.0.b., $0.26; do, to the funny”. _ chef bulls, ith 83.50 to $6; do, com., $2.60 to " ; feeders, good. 900 lb... $5.50 to $6.25; do, fair, $4.50 to $6.60; milkm and springs, choice, $65 to $86; {they phoiqe, $10 to__$l2, tits, thtts-UNtg. Wan, Not 2 61 O 61%e; Can. West., No. 8, BO 'lo 60%e, Blow. Mun. Spring Mora, am, $9.85. Rolled can. but. lb... $3.10 t9 $8,20. Bran, 880.. 8 ottt. P1d9n tleaky $300,000,000 worth of our total importaticns for the no ending Match 31st, 1921. could and should have been produced It home. ma we insisted upon mood: ot Can- "ian production instead of taking foreign prcdoeU, additional “to pay- ments amounting to $100,000,000 maid have been distributed and we wculd have had no unemployment problem. cs; Lvrdv--Tiereea, 18% to 19e; tubs, 19 to 19%e; pails 19% to 19%c; prints, 20% to 20%c; shortening, tierees, 14% to 1416c; tubs. 14% to 153521115, " to 16%e; printa, 17% to . Good has” “gen, $190 ttl; bum " to $6; do, med., $4.50 to 85; do, com., 83 to 84; butcher heifers, choice, 86 to $6.50; do, med., $4.60 to 86.50; camera and cutters, 81 tet_$2.50; but- No. 2, per ton, at lots, $29 to no. (been, Bnert qnatertts, 18 to "Ike. Butter, choicest wry, 88 to 89e. Eggs, new, " to Me. Potatoes, per bag, ctr lots, 81.50 to $1.75. Butcher sheen, $6; an: cunt, $3.50 to "ISO; top veals, 812; lambs, $8 to $8.25; sheep, $2 to u; hon. $10.60 to $10.75. The remedy is in our own bu Ask always for goods produced Here are none of the "ticks in- ported dur’nz that period which could have been supplied from our on farms and factories. Barreled meats-Bean pork, $28; short cut or family back, boneless, $41; Pickled rolls, $38 to $44; mess pork, mm; 16 m 21e: in cués. new to 21%e; cleu' homes. 1814 to 19%e; @3435 to 15%;, -- _ nears. _ehoisis, $6 _tb _ 'r,, db,A_goo_d‘. Fresh and canned fruit. and vege- tables, $11/i00,876; meta. fish, can. and milk products, $19,766,366; bis- cuits, confcnio-nery, em, 88,977,677; hide, fun and skins,, lather and by- 859; asbestos, $977,160; salt, 929,995; fertilizers, '4/272,0tr4; household and Slightly Initarda in stitytst--Aviator Albert Higthe, while piloting the Sopwith dove plane, owned by Messrs. William Marshall and E. Reyes, crashed 1,200 feet in n trig! flitrht " noon on Thurrluy, but escaped with minor injuries. The ma- chine wau to have been an summon at the fair here, and was being placed in readiness for. a series of flights. It iunded in a tree near the wireless station, and will he a!mvst a total loss. Met cooked hams, 55 to ti8e; boneless Inch, 42 to 482; breakfast baton, 33 to Me; special, " to 48e; cottage will, M to Me. Green meats-Out of pickle, " less than smoked. personal equipment, $9,416,005; brush.. es, $1,077,718; mania! instruments, $8,486,744. Buy Canadian product: uni keep this money in circulation in Cumin. A Japanese wiroer presents- his sweetheart with a beautiful sash by way of an engagement token. Dry tu'ted _Peate-Looe c1999, A dupntch from Sun Ste. Marie 1,200-Foot Drop in in I It u again reported that Huron” has heard wirekuoknbdcn “um: outlay" mm. M Intel-Sous dot- and dates, three dots and n duh, guard. to be m exact. Ire only 'to be int-ted by was timed to the prodigious electric-wave length of [WW new, which In in an. I longer than any radio “VG used on our qagth. 1 “the dots and . duh in combina- tion form the eharaeter "V" in om- l wireless .lrttetet, and it in a strange 'mimidenoe that radio nation: on earth use the letter "C' for . puma ‘vhich would um with the supposed 'o'bjeztive cf the “mud wave from, ‘mother p'anet--4hat is, to teat out l, eearmonication, “nae who eccl’ " and: a poaalbiliw " radio from lava will do wall to "duettut-ituatmttorotetotnos than twenty years alnce we transmit» tad wireleaa our the face of the earth in terms of a few yards inataad of the preset“ range of 10,000 miles. The skeptical mar alto meditate on the fact that, unless our utmmmera an] telescopes derive us, the Martians l have worked wonders on their sphere, tbuilding a network of canals from pole to pole across the fare of the planet, ao that the melting snrws ct their pol-r rrzion). will-h 1' rm t. their only sovrce of moisture, my. irender their little wor'd inhaainhl. l Is it beyond imagination that _'. l n it,regie,tt,,1,.', energetic and lntcl‘icuu inhabitants cf mutter w.r'd. “Inch A idowly drying up, should at cm t mm- munieatiott with their male {mumb- tneighbors and. as their plight bor,-rc, .morc desperate, call f r lulu? In any event, sine tht, ru".l " suppoeed wireless from another w M ii: given by no less an auth'maz th, n 'Marecni himself, the kcznz‘sl inn (M will be mutant in further ttr.enr I, to confirm this remarkable pursilril'tv [name the sensations of the wire'em operator a he carefully tuncs his newly built receiver to the great wave and fairly queens his brain in an ttte ‘tcmpt to catch that tnmevtlental Iletter "V"l “It is a vat and general hunger in Rustin." any: Captain kilpatriee, of the M Cm. recently liberated. "It I. not a famine hem and there. but s cry for food everywhere. It luau tint yummy there was hardly enough food in Email m keen c "at population alive. Camp the drought. and I sky darkened by #eitMt- " rests, Ind galloping famine took the place of slow “nation. There was only a little food for every one My; My there is norm. he.” today than Wu no more than a bare enhance; mm millions certain of dud: wait eahnly for it to coma It is not only a famine in the Volga, or a famine in the Ukru.ne, or a fam, he in White Russia, or nmone‘ the Mid“ of the Don. Instead. the food shortage that has come this {all in the climax of yarn of little food. All Inuit hn been feeling the pinch of hum for a long time. It i . national hunger that thr world u. to dad with in Russia All Ind-huforyunbecnon the vow of the starvation that bu come in tho Volga W. that in reached down Into the Ukraine, our toward Asia and Wm even the heat of Great Bunk. Unfortunately, we hare no wireles- tstation of adettuat, power or weve length to - a mysterious caller new“ the great etherie void. If we had lush In manual. the lent we could do would be to reply with many Wing "W" followed by repeated "OE"; end after several exchange‘ of much mutual greeting the year 1921 would be renumbered in history as the date of the first epochni $th dance of intelligence beween thc Nor would we Mop at each meagre communication. With evidence that More is a much older world than ours. it in reasonable to suppoae that ite inhabitants are mate" of utmnomv as well a. other an: and releases. to that any event observable by both worlds would be a 'mtrleet for funk." Imam! undentzandim. Por example, if we exploited on eclipu of the sun by our'moon. we might say to Mars and all older planeto, "Mcsn eclipse. Inn." whereupon their three- atsrey thinkers who also had observed the phenomenon with their teletccioes would know the characters of tele- gnphic code with which we describe our planet, in satellite ond our mat luminary. The voices from Russia are Mm!- tr.g into a single trote, whrther thry be the voices of those lone inside or than of the observers and workers who wt in but yesterday. They - that all Russia is crying far food, outside of the cities where Sm'iot strength is concentrated. Waste from out! Ilium will be winged in power We». Minuet and come“ mature and the dimibution of ”New by a com- pw formed at Nottingham, England. Winter is now emepirst down upon Russia from the wink: of the Arctic. It will envelop e nation, cnfeehied by you! of hunger, apically facing a (ankle. the lib of which bu nevov been known In famine tuutnlts. The Russian ”new. is dying on m and, his "ids unplowed. (Ninth!) and would behind him. If the win. ter of I’ll-22 is to he the worst wintet in Run“. then wilt will the wintet of 1922-28 he A. Vast as Russia, iike t .1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy