AL ISLANDS E SOUTH SEAS IRER‘S EX ul im tra thun a pipe." In speaking to th of the internation s sees it, the Marshal s "Conditions in Fr very distressing, owin sity of reconstruction which the â€" German avoid fulflling their are trying to escape by evading their oblig "The Marshal is in The Marshal is like a school boy on a vacation in his enjoyment and anticipation of his visit as the guest of the American Legion. "I am enjoying every minute of my first sena voyage." he said. "The lirst real rest 1 have had since the beâ€" ginning of the war." The Marshal is proving an excellent sailor and was among the fex pasâ€" somgers who stayed on deck, although the Paris was rolling so heavily that he had to cling to the ropes to keep en his feet. He broke his rule of cmng privately to attend the dinner ami concert for the benefit of the Passing often unrecognized in his tweed cap ami blackâ€"caped coat, the M A D 1p THREATENED UNITED STATES RAILWAY STRIKE HAS BEEN CANCELLED MARSHALL FOCH ON VISIT TO THE STATES Says God‘s Providence Won‘ A despatch from Washington the War and Wili Preside ,sqyt';s;: -tâ€" The genaite rejecteg, s | without a record vote, an amendâ€" _ _ ‘at Conference. ment to the Tax Revision Bill, A despatch from on Board the directing the Secretary of the emce von ‘t‘}"f_"‘“?::_“:l“f:'e‘l"‘;u&r"t‘;;' Treasury to immediately refund same providence will help â€" settle! foreign loans and calling for the ‘terâ€"theâ€"war conditions, and that it Pa‘vment of interest by the Alâ€" vill rreside at the conference of na.! N24 Governments after January tions at Washimeton." deciured Max.! 1, I1922. i accou A despatch from on Board the Steaimship FParis says:â€""God‘s proviâ€" lence won the war; I feel that the same providence will help settle ifterâ€"theâ€"war conditions, and that it will rreside at the conference of naâ€" iJons at Washington," declared Marâ€" chal Foch on Thursday, adding with a ‘mile, "A condition que nous soyons agess" (provided we are wise). Chiefs of "Big Five" Brotherhoods Withdraw Authorizaâ€" tion of Walkout After Seven Hours‘ Debateâ€"Will Acâ€" cept 12%" Per Cent. Cut in Wages. CRI‘* ABBEY AFFORDS ASYLUM _ _ TQ DETHRONED HMAPSSURCGS A despatch from Chicago says:â€" (he railroad strike scheduled for Oct. ‘0 has been abandored. Formal anâ€" nouncement was made at midnight on Thursday by the "Big Five" brotherâ€" I‘~~ announcement came after the stion of recalling the strike order 1 been debated seven hours. ‘We took the position that we could fight the Government," L. G. pard, president of the Order of Jroad Conductors said. "It appearâ€" that the Government had thrown full influence on the side of the lroauds. The roads, very shrewdly, the Government fight their battle. r protest was against the railroads l not the Government, but since we l not reach the roads except weh the Government, we knew it s best to declare the strike off." \t 9 o‘clock on Friday morning ) s seemer vading their obligations." ‘he Marshal is in porfect health his trip through the United ‘s," said Dr. Amire, the fighter‘s ician. "Moderation in everything ‘countzaible for his ruggedness at ige of seventy U3 i pipe." speaking to the correspondent e internation sitwartion as he t, the Marshal said: wditions in France are still istressing, owing to the necesâ€" f reconstruction and the tricks the Germans eraploy to fullling their promises. They ying to escare responsibilities «ding their obligations." e Marshal is in porfect health soidier takes long promenâ€" round the decks before and ch moal. He is extremely galâ€" 1 ha» visitors every afternoon. \his associates have been conâ€" to smoking a pipe, having the Marshal‘s tirades against "which distress you, hurt ad and are more dangerous i remarks often morit blunt here the momans in Coesans their undesirables to be conâ€" Horthy Government | has d and interned the ackaowlâ€" itinuate King and Queen of until the allied powers deâ€" their permanent plsce of i4 1 Zita. : the Rom I & Y m istery ton Lake »uda the T Benedictine Tihany, on promontory have elosed are still the necesâ€" the tricks aploy â€" to £l1 ! be their companions, soldiers under / trustworthy officers their guards, | with military representatives of Engâ€" \land, France anrd Italy in supervisory' control. ’ : The monarch‘s place of exile is a| ; peninsula,. a mile wide, which projects| \into Lake Balaton (sometimes calledl | the Platten Sea). The crest of its| |cliffâ€"like walls, 200 feet above the | water, is crowned by the ancient! | Benedictine Abbey. It is all but surâ€" rounded by sea weed, and, except forf {one small landing place, is cut off from the world. It is easy to guard. | The G.A.U.V. has appointed as its \ delegate Sergeant W. L. Rayfield, V. | C., First Viceâ€"President of the organâ€" | ization. It is expected that the other veteran bodies will also appoint memâ€" bers who are winners of the highest distinction for bravery in the British !army to make up the escort. °_ Sergeant Richardson will attend the burial services in the Arlington Naâ€" tional Cemetery on November 11, and, on behalf of the Dominion of Canada, will place a wreath of maples at the foot of the massive shaft which is rising on the hills of Virginia, overâ€" looking the National Capital of the United States, to mark the resting place of America‘s immortal. A despatch from Toronto says:â€" The oldest living wearer of the Vicâ€" toria Cross, Sergeant G. Richardson, of Tororto, will pay homage on beâ€" half of the soldiers of the Dominion to the unknown American soidier upon whose tomb will be placed the highest honor that Britain pays for valorâ€" the first occasion that the Cross has been bestowed on cther than a British subject. The amendment was offered by Senator McKellar, Democrat, of Tennessee. It "directed" and "instructed" the Secretary of the Treasury to accept longâ€" term bonds from the nations owing the United States $11,â€" 000,000,000, for both the princiâ€" pal and unpaid interest up to January 1, 1922, in accordance with the Loan Acts of 1917 and 1918. OLDEST V.C. HERO TO HONOR LATEST Sergeant Richardson Will Place Mapic Leaves on U.S. Warrior‘s Grave. The messages, it was said, havs alâ€" ready been prepared in code form. The resolution which the Brotherâ€" hood adopted, calling off the strike, is lengthy. It contains a long reâ€" view of the negotiations with the railâ€" roads and the Federal Labor Board. Refuse to Refund executives of the "Big Five" stated they would send notice t railroad men throughout the country that there will be no strike. While no announcement has yet been made, it was said the Brotherâ€" hood had decided to accept the 12% per cent. reduction of last July and would accept assurances of the Labor Board given some days ago, and reâ€" iterated, that the roads would not press for further wage reductions within a year. Only fourteen of the general comâ€" mittee of some 300 men, it was said, had voted against adopting the resoâ€" lution to recall the strike order. Allied Debt to U.S. | _ Through life, whether we like it or! AllCCUNf o,UUU ,m"es OL POUHECE~ not, we are under a reign of law in| AYY, between Canada and the ‘|one form or another. We might as| United States, is an arrangeâ€" | well submit, with such grace as we ment which should be made are able to show; for the law is puis-’world-wide, he said. ’ sant 11gyo{\d zmj:' force we can'muitcr' Viscount Bryce was formally ito "eslstt l]t;““ P"“t a man thinks he‘ welcomed home after his recent | Eo en 1 °O S oppre Oy £1¢94) and decture tour of . the United States. | immemorial game he becomes as ""Câ€"‘ Minister of Education Fisher |less to society as he who studies to‘u United Stfta Ambas »1 o | cirecumwvent the law. Often as it has| ‘10 % Me e gtes: AAmnDagsadot, ’been told, the tale still bears the tellâ€"| (,goxge Har YEYi and other pPro; |ing of Margaret Fuller‘s complacent| minent British and United | acquiescence in her destiny; and Car-' States officials attended the lyle‘s comment thereupon. "I accept| luncheon. |\ _ We came on earth to grapple with { life not as we wisn it were, not as I we think it ought to be, but as it is. | Life imposes the conditions, rot we :who live it. Nature was in business | and natural law was in working order | long before we appeared on the scene. | We must succumb or perish. Most of | the time our bitterness against the 5m‘dwinment is the result of our own | willful, impetuous disobedience. The | warning stared us in the face, and we | overran it. We knew the rule we ibrokc. We imagined Nature, while she might punish the rest, would show us a particular indulgence. We 4\vere deceived; but our ruefulness came too late. 3 As chldren, they overruled paront=| sutrority; as adults, they ovarrede prescriptions whose reason was long ago made clear. They have studied history not at all or to no purpose. They have learned nothing from the observable experience of mankind. They have not recognized that Naâ€" ture is as willing to chastise a king as to rebuke a commoner who does not obey her edicts. The men who complain most are thoze least inclined to obey. Discipline to them always has been distasteful. Our lives were not of our own sleeâ€" tion, as those who grumble at fortune are ford of reminding us. W# had no say as to where or when we should come into the world, and some of us would have made choices vastly difâ€" ferent. We always have with us those who cast tke fond backward look to the supposed superior felicity of a bygone day and lament that they did not live in it. They tell us that modâ€" ern times are decadent and modern youth degenerate till we grow tired of hearing them and wish that instead of vain lamentation they would busy themselves toward the improvément they desire. TO COMMEMORATE 100 YEAI}S OF PEACE Photograph of the Peach Arch, recently dedicated at Blaine, on the boundary line between British Columbia and the State of Washington, to commemorate one hundred years of peace between Canada and the United States. Life‘s Own Terms. x4 REGLAR FELLERSâ€" By Gene Byrnes TORONTO A despatch from London says: â€"The century of perfect peace between the United States and Canada was cited as an example to the world by Viscount James Bryce at a luncheon in his honor by the Englishâ€"speaking union.} The disarmament agreement,| affecting 3,000 miles of boundâ€"| ary between Canada and the! United States, is an arrangeâ€"| ment which should be made} worldâ€"wide, he said. f Should Follow Canadaâ€"U.S. Peace Example A Sinn Fein Delegate in London Michael Collins, the Sinn Fein Finance Minister, but better known as the most elusive chief of the Irish Republican Army. This photograph was taken immediately after he arâ€" rived in London. the universe," announced the transâ€" cendental lady. "Egad, she‘d better!" fulminated the Sage of Chelsea when he heard of the remark. ._.â€"/ ~," / J EM G s af y t is 22 to 24c. es * s jl° pil0. Dressed poultryâ€"Spring chickens, Mentreal, 30c; roosters, 20¢; fowl, 28¢; duckâ€"|; Oats, Can, west., No. 2, 54 to 54%¢; lings, 30 to 35¢; turkeys, 50 to 60c. ;do, No. 3, 53 to 53%%c. Flour, Man. Live poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 20;Spring wheat pats., firsts, $7.60. Rollâ€" to 25¢; rocsters, 16¢; fowl. 16 to 24¢c; ed cats, bag 90 lbs.. $2.90 to $3. Bran, ducklings, 25¢; turkeys, 35c. 1521.25. Shorts, $23.25. Hay, No. 2, Margarineâ€"23 to 25¢. , per ton, car lots, $27 to $28. Eggsâ€"No. 1 storage, 45 to 46c:!_ Cheese, finest easterns, 14% to 15¢. sclect, storage, 51 to 52¢; new laid Butter, choicest creamery, 88 to 38%c. straights, 60 to #62¢; new laid, in carâ€"| Eggs, selected, 48c. tons, 65¢. _ hexiprat * <<; l Cattle med. to com., $1.25 to $4: Beansâ€"Can. handâ€"picked, bushel $4 to $4.25; primes, $3.50 to $3.75. 42 29 Manitoba oatsâ€"No. 2 CW, 48¢; No. 8 CW, 45¢; extra No. 1 feed, 45¢; No. 2 feed, 40c. Manitoba barley â€"No. 3 CW, 68e. All the above, track, Bay ports. American cornâ€"No. 2 yellow, 58¢, nominal, Bay ports. _ f Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, 60 to 65¢. Ryeâ€"No. 2, 80c. Manitoba flourâ€"First pats., $7.60; second pats., $7.10, Toronto. Ontario flourâ€"$5, bulk, seaboard. Millfeedâ€"Del., Montreal freight, bags included: Bran, per ton. $19 to $21; shorts, per ton, $21 to $23; good feed flour, $1.70 to $1.80. Cheeseâ€"New, large, 20 to 21¢; twins, 20% to 21%4c; triplets, 22% to 23c. ‘ Old, large, 25 to 26c¢c; twins, 25% to 26%c; triplets, 26 to 27¢; Etiltons, new, 28 to ‘24c. Butterâ€"Fresh dairy, choice, 33 to 35¢; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1, 42 io 48¢; No. 2, 89 to 40c¢c; cooking, Toronto. Manitoba wheatâ€"No. 1 Northern, $1.18%, nominal; No. 2 Northern, $1.16, nominal; No. 3, $1.12, nominal. Manitoba oatsâ€"No. 2 CW, 48¢; No. 3 CW, 45¢c; extra No. 1 feed, 45¢; No. car lot, $1 to $1.05; No. 3 Winter, 97¢ to $1.02; No. 1 commercial, 90 to 95¢; No. 2 Spring, 98 to 98¢; No. 8 Spring, nominal. Barleyâ€"No, 8, extra, test 47 lbs. or better, 55 to 58¢, according to freights outside. Baled hayâ€"Track, Toronto, per ton, No. 2, $22; mixed, $18. Cargo of German Toys Arrives at Montreal A despatch from Montreal says:â€" What is stated to be the first cargo of German merchandise of any conâ€" siderable size to reach Canad» since Montreal, Que.â€"The passing of a hundred years since the establishment of the McGill University was celeâ€" Toronto, Ont.â€"Subâ€"treasury branchâ€" es for receiving deposits on which four per cent. interest will be allowed, will be established by the Province of Ontario. These offices, in form of state banks, will be opened at an early date and an announcement concerning them, and the farm loan scheme, will shortly be made. Winnipeg, Man.â€"An exhibit of four 5G6â€"pound boxes of Manitoba butter was exhibited at the British Dairy Farmers‘ Association show, which opened in London, England, Oct. 18. It was made by the Crescent Pure Milk Co. of Winnipeg, and the Shoal Lake Creamery Co., of Shoal Lake, Man. Both these concerns have won many prizes at Canadian and Amerâ€" ican exhibitions. 1 Vancouver, BC.â€"Several experiâ€" brated during the second week of mental lots of Canmacian wheat are to Octcber by e reâ€"union attended by go to Japan within the next few nearly three thousand graduatee, the weeks. The totsl booked thus far is unveiling of a war memoria) to Mcâ€" in the neighborhood of 1,200 tons. The Gill‘s heroic dead, and the conferring interest shown in Japan and the Oriâ€" of honorary degrees on notables of ent is especially plessing to Caradian many countries. Representatives of grain men as hithert> those eastern, many foreign seats of learning attendâ€" markets have been content with the ed. _ The ceremonies were presided soft wheat from Amstricsn grain disâ€"| over by General Sir Arthur Curric, tricts. principal of McGill and former Canâ€" Edmonton, Altaâ€"A valley of al.| adian Corps Commander. Lord Byng most pure jron lying on the shores of| Of Vimy, Governorâ€"General, presided, Lake Athsbasca, with deep water| 2n4 E. W. Beatty, President of the right to the clzims, kas been discover.| Canadian Pacific Railway, officiated ed by N. C. Butterfield and his son,| 43 Chancellor. Among those on whom according to the Edmonton "Bulletin.", degrees â€" were conferred were Sir Analysis of the claim shows that it i,‘Auckland_ Geddes, Bntlsh_ Ambassador 64.36 pure iron, 150,000,000 tons have| 8t ,wâ€.’“_“m“' ï¬â€˜? presidents of the been measured off, while 5,000 000| Universities of Yale, Harvard and tons, in the shape of loose blocks, are ; Princeton, and Montreal, the Premier lying on the surface of the g"'oxmd!"f Q“‘*‘t’(“"; L. A. Tasckhereau, Bliss close to the lake, ready for s-hipmem‘c‘"m"‘m' Canadian poct, and Lady aribhnit Sad suintng . inncxntizne Fushas | Drummonc. Regina, Sask.â€"A total of 471,072 pounds of wool from Saskatchewan farms have been forwarded to the Canadian Coâ€"operative Wool Growers‘ Association warehouse for sale this season. Wool is still being received at the central forwarding station here, and the total clip of the season from this province will probably reach 500,â€" 000 pounds. Edmonton, Altaâ€"A valley of alâ€" most pure iron lying on the shores of Lake Athasbasca, with deep water right to the claims, has been discoverâ€" ed by N. C. Butterfield and his son, according to the Edmonton "Bulletin." Analysis of the claim shows that it is 64.36 pure iron, 150,000,000 tons have been measured off, while 5,000 000 tons, in the shape of loose blocks, are lying on the surface of the ground close to the lake, ready for shipment without any mining operations being necessary. Maple productsâ€"Syrup, per imp Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2 Winter, per Ontario oatsâ€"No. 2 white, 38 to *4 s =g Canada From Coast to Coast Weekly Market Report Cattle med. to com., $1.25 to $4; tops, $10; grassers, §2.50 to $3.50; good grass calves, to $4; good lambs, $8; med., $7 to $7.50; hogs, $9. _ Choice heuavy steers, $5 to $7.25; butcher eteers, choice, $6 to $6.25; do, good, $5.50 to $6; do, med., $4 to $5; do, com., $2.50 to $3.50; butcher heifers choice, $5.50 to $6; butcher cows, choice, $4 to $4.75; do, med., $3 to $4; canners and cutters, $1.50 to $2,50; butcher bulls, good, $3.50 to $4; do, com., $2.50 to $3.50; feeders, good, 900 lbs.. $5 to $5.50; do, fair, $4.50 to $5; stockers, good, $4 to $4.50; do, fair, $3 to $4; milkers, $60 to $80; springers, $70 to $90; calves, choice, $10 to $12; do, med., $8 to $10; do, com.. $3 to $7; lambs, good, $8.25 to $8.50; do, com., $5 to $5.50; sheep, choice, $4 to $4.50; do, good, $3.50 to $4; do, heavy and bucks, $2 to $3; hogs, fed and watored, $8.50. to $8.75; do, off cars, $8.75 to $9; do, L.0%., $7.175 to $8; do, country points, $7.50 to $7.75. Lardâ€"Pure, tierces; 16% to 17¢ tubs, 17 to 17%¢; pails, 17% to 18c; prints, 19% to 20%c. _ Shortening, tierces. 13 to 13%¢; tubs, 18% to 14¢; pall«, 14 to 14%%¢; prints, 16 to 16%c. pal., $2.50; re r5 imp. gale., $2.35. ‘Mfl)l‘e sugar, lb., 19 to 22%c. oneyâ€"60â€"30â€"!b. tins, 14% to 15¢ per Ib; 5â€"2%â€"1b. tins, 16 to 17¢ per lb.; Ontaric comb honey, per doz., $8.75 to $4.50. Smoked meatsâ€"Hams, med., 29 to 81¢; heavy, 22 to 24¢; cooked, 44 io 48¢c; rolls, 27 to 28¢; cottage rolls, 29 to 30¢c; breakfast bacon, 27 to 38¢; special brand breakfast bacon, 38 to 40¢c; backs, bonelezs, 40 to 44c. Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon, 18 to 20¢; clear bellies, 18% to 20%c. ttetown. PELâ€"A numbe â€" We uald si rl tribute to the dead h 9P eelebren aho braden wond . Off B ‘Qtllm;:({glf;:i]:.ll I;:}win has resâ€" cars of selected and graded seed poâ€"| ndo I i Ine mespape on Avexident h ere qy a reprevente ‘b““ purcl'_lascdi i’{onrd(:; no:tifyim: the American Chief hae q m l‘epreoentatl.ve Pf l mflu-; F'l "uï¬â€˜z'o that the Victoria Cross has ential farmers‘ ommzat:on_ in the eb.xe‘ Aerrad, Jriig Gearee ooys oi New England States for seeding there.| * '00:! ;z:oru.ti¢;~ nb progre i ols momm.!nce re-l * “?‘It has nevc:x' yet been bestowed s iperiee iope af seee princs "' upon the subject of another State, but mrk.umm io at woupa p.otato, op lpt:'ua{ you und the American people e asmost paiate momk. Ofiwi!l acoopt the gift in order that the thMO fo!‘?most 30. 3. McQvesn, l<hei British E‘mp;nk may thus fitly pay its i § 4 l.fl'- M.WJ. MgQuee:!, wno'tribule to a tomb which symbolizes any ryeare ang . e M‘m‘e forj every deed of conspicaous valour perâ€" Thet the Aoand‘s 'bec‘m' COM'mced.fo"?ed by the mea of your great en tbmore‘, vege! Y qre 4B chpute werel fighting forces, whether by land or He 1 masin hapn ns e g.rowth.‘ n the western tront." t intigns is 59 weree wparred a mn.iâ€â€œ;::im will mecept the Victoria ho t0gs, which aye “rl: ll,hm:d u(’ p;)- Cr‘osa in the spirit‘in which it is :mwhic‘l PreJsoiah2n0s! en ney!oï¬'ered: in the same spirit that led Kebar. It consists of toys for the Christmas trade, together with a quantity of German clocks, watches and glassware. The cargo was loaded et Antwerp and Rotterdam. the commencement of the war has arrived here on the freighter West Fredericton, _ N.B.â€"New â€" Brunsâ€" wick‘s midsummer season has extendâ€" ed into October this year, and many people were engaged last week in picking wild raspberries in the vicinâ€" ity of the city, Violets and lilacs were also blooming generally. Yarmouth, N.S.â€"The nast two weeks have seen a tremendous quanâ€" tity of apples shipped by way of Yarâ€" mouth to Boston and New York marâ€" kets,. Already some 31,000 barrels have been shipped. The crops are good this year and shipping to Engâ€" land will commence very.shortly. $2.35.) Dear Sirâ€"Mr. (retary of the ( 0 15¢ Fund, has comms: c“per charactor of the ® 7M byA sistance vou are « I trust you and the American people | will acecpt the gift in order that the {Briti-h Empire may thus fitly pay its | tribute to a tomb which symbolizes lmry deed of conspiczous valour perâ€" formed by the mea of your great fighting forces, whether by land or | sea, upon the western tront." In his inaugural address as Chanâ€" cellor of MceGill University, Presicent E. W. Beaity of the C.P.R. said that the modern university must issve from within its walls and serve the people of both urban and rural comâ€" munities. "If," he said, "the moun tain will not come to Mahomet, then Mahomet must go to the mountain." Briefly and less figuratively stated, this means that universities must serve their constituencies by moans of extensgion work. This is the type of work that Ontario‘s provincial uniâ€" versity has been doing, with magnifiâ€" cent results, for some time. Apart altogether from the regular courses, the University of Toronto is giving during the present eession something of higher education to 275 teachers, nearly 500 farmers, 128 journalists, over 300 industrial laborers, more than 80 women who are taking houseâ€" hold science, approximately 2,000 of the general public in the smaller urban centres for whom single exâ€" tension lectures are arranged, and one or two hundred who study in special tutorial classes. With a continuance of the present development of this "qutside work" soâ€"called, the provinâ€" clal university will soon be reaching many thousands more beyond its walls than it can accommodate within them. And it is by this comparatively new form of service, in addition to the irudilional teaching and research, that the provinciel university really folfils s duty io the citizens of Ontaric, whose proocsty it is. Be sure that every pear eontributions will be a far~ reconstruction of the Arm« ple, who, in spite of a wor amities, has ncever lost ho regeneration â€" and mission world. Yours, with blessin@s and It is singularly forting to think of people, that on the love and brotherh sorrows of the ey ian race and toils of their sorrows. As the years go new | sufferings pe: pendency on the o expected hblows cor pieces much of whai plished. But we enj constructive phase « generations arne bei and educated y t organizations. America wil accept the Victoria Cross in the spirit in which it is offered; in the same spirit that led her to place the fiveâ€"pointed star on the tomb in Westminster, a iwribute to â€" steadfast | valor. â€" Phiede‘nhia Ledger. In return a cross of Maliese shape comes across the water to the tomb of that Unknown American Soidier who shortly will rest at Arlington. It will bear the vroyal crest, the crownâ€" ed4 lion and the red ribbon of the Victoria Cross of the British Empire. The legend "For Valour" is stamped upon it. Since 1856 it has been the most highly prized, the most carefuliy guarded, decoration that might come to the men in the ficets and armies of Great Britain. _ But 552 of these crosses, made from the metal of Rusâ€" sian guns taken at Sebastopol. were granted in all the years between 1856 and 1913. Mr. John G. J Chairman, Arr Toront: Dear Sirâ€"â€"] The fiveâ€"pointed star of roseâ€"goll, with its oak leaves and its greenâ€" enamel wreath, with its American eagle poised upon the bar which bears the simple word "Valor," now rests upon the tomb of the Unknown British Soldier in the nave of Westminster Abbey. Kneeling there, General Porâ€" shing, ally and comrede of the unâ€" known dead, placed the Conpressional Medal of Honor on that "narrow house" which has hocome the symbol and the sign of British valor in the great war. Since 1862 the Medai of Honor has been the most signal distinction Amâ€" erica can give for deeds of the most distinguished gallantry in action. This decoration, with its ribbon of wateredâ€" blue silk, flecked with the white of thirteca stars, has been the supreme honor of the American fighting man by land or gea. Modern University Service. Patriarcat Armenion Constantinople. Cross and Star. mc t elightfc the gres n pr tort i0‘ i1 snatter to een accomâ€" n# also the vor., while , shoitored o of relief n be Armenâ€" tigation n In nadiam mstiam s the this the 00~ alâ€" Lhe