I O b . The man is likely to Inc a amt dun. It in icon "and that n an at the an an In undo to yield “can of ttMt. n In "Mont from history and uology Ind arch-colon that man In. alum to: a consider- "to part of " tool from the us. yet I: to the one new tn which, with un- mpomm: exception, he has estab- lkhod no Individual rights and done no productive work. Ott land he has multiplied tho am of nature I hun- dredroxd and unprovod them In quality a well as in quantity; but what na- ture (in: m from the no he has then in m can! form and quantity, and boon content. No more diotiuctly BeienttBe body thou the British Asoocistlon exists nyuhero in tho valid, yot slum tho pom that an tho 'eqtWrsm of Its su- uusl mum thoro oro slwsys sono that hsvo s with - sud me- tiesi lutonst. At tho istost mouth; tho “dress at tho -idettt, Prat. W. A. â€ordain ot tho University of ue. orpool, vss "rotard to ocoouos'rophy. o subject on which ho is on outhority; out oithouh the popor touched tho "hgttitie Minimal: in pointing out tho lmrnouo nold lot study In tho chomicsl. coolocicol sud biological story at tho oceans out! 're.art mo, " also dwoit upon tho "rr promos] mat. ter of the food that wo get or could lot from tho I“. ‘ One of tho thins that President nominal: would do is to make some; hind of eonsus of tho ocosm. so Bl hosts for coiouiotiu how much food] they can ho undo to r%itt Ind what! lows con ho "med “on for the pro-J A week later orders came to his bat- talion that A strong German machine- In! past must be captured. A Com. pany was (he: the an, end Med. C. Company, our young hero In com- and. was ordered to an the gun. Through 1 tttttt of bullets they swept to victory. A month went w. and the you: an“: In and“; one day In the The letter was closed and sealed and dispatched to a Mend, to be sent to " mother, if necessary. Before he um that night he determined, on his new, to tests: nit gloomy forebod- "Dear Nether. One in.“ especinlly I want you to know. Yours has been In unhappy "to. Let this bring you by. Your wish has always been my law. When I left home for Maine†men years no. you told me that you wished no never to drink, gamble or war. tt was win of you to use that word ‘winh.’ Just been†it was not I command, but tho anxiety of your great love to me, t have always rou- peeled it. From that day to this. I have never tasted strong drtrth' gambled, or sworn, or done nnyihingi also I tell you would be Ashamed of. Dar mother, don't grieve it i an. i boilers in Christ. and I shall so with I clean soul to God." Only one “use convex-nu us, nnd It: glory In I that all motherhood would know it. His mother was a widow, and he Va her only son. It seemed like BN- " In to death to write this letter--. like signing his own death warrant. Tet tf " should In", there was one Illa: he wanted his mother to know. llowly, end with intintto difficulty, he wrote his message. It was to go straight into action. and that until now he had always resisted. Me would write a farewell letter to his mother in use he should (all. " was " Rotten that he decided to do it. Sitting In the quiet and canton at the Y.M.C.A. but, be reviewed the Possibilities of the next few days and found then decidedly grim. “is out. Mrs. Anton. his widow of I 11:32: of science, and semantic herself, was against one ot the most subtle and hideous perils ot the newer warfare. This tan, to amen-ant from the pretty plumbing ot elegant ladies. was in no poet's fancy, but. In sober fact, the in- vemiun of a woman. Her name In Hertha Anton, ind the ia English. And bound the - plane. to- nether. A pretty (any and a charming fan, even is" we cannot accept VOIM'I ol. ; hand assurance that he poor. nebula-g live dove would be better " without; his tail. But, whatever in origin, the; fan in the Orient. an attribute ot both ;' sexes, has belonged. down all the an: l of Occidental civilization. to woman alone. “Woman's weapon." It has been onen called-a dainty weapon, wielded only in wars of gallantry be- tween the sexes. to be sure. It has taken the great war to reveal the tan am a thing of serious military value, although not as an aggressive weapon but as an important means of defense Who invented the In? In, at! in mum, than she found herself vi!) . palm int; Venus, inland the poet, Oliver Walden "01.0.. when she de nuded one at her dons, a tun-tailor! pigeon. of his plum: "My bird, I rum. your train." she cried; "Come, don't let‘s have I has about it; 1'" make it beauty'a pet and pride. And you'll be better on without it." he determined to yield to an impala 'he :toddm "ou, And gently strip- H, r bird ot "on caudal ranger; strand " [old-bright. hair Ibo clip- To His Mother. $dimrthe$eeretsgtiseteil" 1lhefaoolliilitarrIhtam. In " iiineration of the important necrete that the sea may hold, the Itory of the tiieiish is worth recaiiing. The tint ot the species to be caught . were taken south ot Nantucket in 1879 and were at once declared by the 'United State: Fish Commission to be [In excellent food Oli. For two years :or no they came to market in con. siderable quantity. Then. in 1832, the echooner Neutrino sailed for two day. and a night through water the surface of which was covered with dead tite. tieh to the estimated number of 256.000 to the equate mile. For a long time no men-h were caught: then, a few years no they began to reappear and are now plenty again. Men of science believe that the cause ot the disaster was a sudden shitting of the Gulf Stream and 3 replacing tttttow of cold water from the Inbredor count, but no one - surely. “Hut then entered into the spring: of the no? or hut than welhed in the search of the depth?" a creator income than an equal area ot good farming land, and only a be- ginning has been made u yet. The oyster hairless, tho lobeter business and the "lmogg bnainese are almost the only depart-elm or the (rent in. dnatry of M; in which anything bee been done to make the enpply per- manent. All the other Important fish. erles ot the world-ttur cod. the amt- uon, the mackerel, the herring, the halibut, the t"rordflsh---tttmy been con. tent to mm to luck and to so on de. pletlnt a natural supply that they have done nothing to. increase or even to maintain. German lace mattufaeturers are copying English patterns, and Bend- ing lue to Great Britain to sell at many per cent. less than the home proddctfim. Said to he the largest in the world, and 400 miles in width, a new oil- tle1d has been discovered in Western tymada. Boon after the armistice he return- ed home. Never will he or his moth. er tenet the night ,rherr--atter much tttought-tse handed his mother that letter. She had shed may tears in tite-but never such tears of perfect tor and pride. When they knelt to. gether In ovetwhelmmx gratitude it was " if they heard Lvl,tee Shin; "Woman, behold thy ion! Son. behold thy mother!" in the very not against which his bend ind rented. Bo the days and nights went by with escape after escape. Still he struggled to main- tain his Cotrfidettee in life. trenches. Snipers were busy, and he had been seeing that his men were not carelessly exposed at any point. Wearlly he leaned against. the back wall of the trench. Suddenly came an fmpahro to more his position. He could not explain it; nevertheless he obeyed and ewung around on his elbow. Ping! A German bullet unk into the wall At one of these demonstrations, Mrs. Ayrton, with a three-inch fan, sat It one end of a six-toot table while smoke was poured down from a tunnel at the other end. The action of the miniature fan not only dispelled the fumes but quickly gained such control over them that the current of air at up pre.. vented the smoke trom coming out of the funnel. The use ot this antigas {an in cases ot accumulated sewer gas has also been crowned with success, the tan in this ruse being applied at the manhole. Her ideas are being ap- plied in factories. motion-picture theatres, mines, and wherever noxious gases are generated, and they mar even revolutionize our whole theory of ventilation. I The Ayrton entina tan is not more ,tlnn twenty inches square, is con- Extracted ot light material, and works on the hinge-end-sprlng principle. n was used by the British troops during the last months of the war, and the soldiers gladly testify to its etteetive-, neu. The inventor has given public demonstrations in London with glass models of dugout: end tunnels, from which smoke, which was employed in. stead of gas, wan quickly expelled. to the horizontal, driving the air " fore it in steady pull and setting up a lush current from behind. On this simple principal aha constructed the autism in. inure-ted during the In in tho prob. lem of expelling poisonous gas from the trenches, from dugout: and from hollows in uneven ground, when it lay long utter the nttaeking wove had mud over. She discovered that the proper way to use 1 tan is not to wave it about, making the air undulute over n wide apnea. but to bring it down sharply iron: the perpendicular To To To To To To To To To To To To 'o apologize, 'o begin over, 'o ndmlt error, tt be tmselthsh, o take Idvlce. o be charitable, o be considerate, " keep on trying, . think and then net, tt Protlt by mistakes, I) forgive and forget, . shoulder a deserved blame: BUT IT ALWAYS PAYS. It Is Not Buy. cool to merriment. dfank intention. ally more wine than usual, went with 'an artlflciw., excited fever to my home, went to bed, had a profuse per- aviation, and rose in'the morning cured." "r, myself, am an example that an established case of contagious illness can be cured by a glad exhilaration of spirits. It happened in the year ot the war, 1807, when a pestilentinl fever broke out, that I had to attend many who were ill with it. And one morn. ing I felt that I had every symptom of the i1isoraer---tridotetrs, .nental dullness, weakness of the limbs - every Sign that I must stttrer for many dash before the malady would break out. But duty commanded, and others sut- tered more than I. I determined to go through all the morning's work as usual, and to enjoy a midday dinner to which I was invited. At this tlin. net, I gave myself up as much as I The power of the mind over con- taglous disease to well illustrated by Charles L. Leland in hls “Have You a Strong Will.'" _He one: the case of the celebrated phyalclan, Hufeland. who recalls a personal experience, " follows: illness Cured by Merriment. Miss Margaret little thought, when she wrote her name on we wall, that she was laying a trap to land her friend and one of his chums in prison. “ls Miss Margaret ----_ here 'Y' they politely inquired. "That is my name." It we: a shock to the inspectors, but they proceeded quickly with their questions. Indignant denial was the first attitude. Then slowly came the admissions. She had cashed the cheek tor a. young man with whom Elle had attended a country school many years before. She led the way to a lodging house in a near-by street, where the inspectors captured two men and seized the rest of the stolen goods. One of the men a your previous had been I. station master at the place that was robbed. a short time two years before. She _ atoms as it by myriad hammers, and could not remember her name, but cartridges were scattered tar and wide promised to try to recall it. A tewithroutrh the debris, exploding in vol. hours afterwards she was still unable leys or in scattering blasts for many to recall the name, but she remember- ', minutes attcr the explosion. One ed having seen the girl write it on ', large stone was thrown as far as the the wall ot the cloak room ot the .Central Company's oMees, a distance college. fol two miles, and smaller ones to the At the spot described the name was lwest end, three miles from the mags- found. The principal of the college ‘zlnes. in the most distant parts ot remembered something of the girl and the camp there was a startling breaks thought she had been staying with 'age ot windows, lamps and chande- friends in Toronto. The city directory I liers; and the hotel bars and canteens was next consulted, but of the flirty I were so heavily pelted that the tioortt families of the name in the city none V were swimming with what we might had a Margaret, and it was a MargÂ¥call dynamite cocktail, a liquid com- Bret that was wanted. It was decided posed ot every liquor under heaven, to call on all the addresses. The first trom Cape Smoke to Heidsieck and one was that of a.house showing signs iPommery. Witnesses of the explosion ot wealth and responsibility. it hard- ', thought that hundreds ot people had ly seemed worth while, but the inspec- been killed and injured; but almost tore touched the bell, and almost im- miraculously. as it seemed. only two mediately a refined-looking young wo. 9 persons were killed, one a white, the man answered. {other a black. l Before the numbers of the stolen} orders had been reported, one of the' orders was cashed in Toronto by a woman who signed her name as "War. ren." The teller could not give a deg. cription of the woman but remembered l that another young woman, who was q also at the wicket, had given a little: smile of recognition to the woman who '-, was getting the money. It was easyl to tInd ttut" second woman, but she proved to have no recollection of the , person wanted, except that she had; attended business college with her for ', The trail that leads to a thief is often tortuous, but that identification sometimes hinges on the most trivial cirrnmstanros is illustrated in a story from The Recollections of a. Police Magistrate in the Canadian Magazine. A railway station at a small town in Ontario had been robbed and, besides some money, a number ot express orders and railway tickets had been taken. The Handwriting on the Wall and the worst is yet to come f There are some singular discounts allowed in the book trade that on one occasion were happily illustrated by Mark Twain. One day while the hum- orist was connected with a publishing [house he went to a bookcase and, picking up a volume, uked the price. He then suggested that, no a publish- er, he was entitled to tttty per cent. discount. To this the clerk assented. The clerk took out bl: pencil and flgured industrioualy. Then he said with great obsequiousness, "As near as a can calculate, we owe you the book and about thfrty-sesen and one. half cents." It. "Aml as I am a personal friend of the proprietor," Mark uncanny con. tinued, "I presume you will allow me the usual twenty4ire per cent. dig.. count? It so, I think I may M We}! take the book. What's the tax?" “As I am also the author ot the book," said Mark Twaln, "it would appear that I am again entitled to fifty per cent. discount." And every Good Word you send into the world is a allent, mighty power, working for Peace, “with, Love, Joy, Sue. cess to all the world--- Including yourself. I The shock was felt from Dutoitspan to the farthest limits ot the west end !ot the camps, and terror-stricken peo- ple rushed out of their houses to see (a vast heaving cloud ot smoke rising :hurtdreds of feet into the sky. ', The magazines were dashed to pieces, as the Kimberley papers re ported, by the terrible power ot tho explosives. In most Instances the gel- vanized iron was broken into tiny atoms as it by myriad hammers, and cartridges were scattered far and wide through the debris, exploding in got. Ieys or in scattering blasts for many minutes after the explosion. One large stone was thrown as far " the, Central Company) offices, a. distance} ot two miles, and smaller ones to the] For all the world is so closely akin that not one individual may realize his desire except all the world share it with him. Would you be loved? Speak love to the world. Would you be successful? Speak sucoess to the world. Would you be at peace? Speak peace to the world. Would yon be healed? Speak health to the world. l The 'strictest precautions are mecca-l saw in storing and handling the ex-’ lplosives that are used in the diamond l, imine-a of South Africa. The need ot, ‘such stringency was emphasized by; an explosion that wrecked a dozen! magazines near the compound ot the.' Victoria. Mining Company three years l before Mr. Gardner K. Williams iii') sumed the management ot the De Beers Company. in his book, The‘ Diamond Mines of South Africa. Mr. Williams describes the result of the explosion: The clerk bowed. He could not deny A Thrifty Book Lover. . Your World Power. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO A Terrible Explosion. in this case it happened to he the council ot industry in a small Western town that first took the matter up. The town in question is a progressive little city. the centre of a fertile farming and ranching country. and ot late years a large oil centre. Appreciat- l in the need of better roads, and real- izing that the funds available trom taxation must always be inadequate for such demands, the local council '0! industry evolved a plan. Briefly, this was to name a. certain date as "Good Roads Day," and to issue a call to every public-spirited citizen to do- vine that day toward the improvement " the main county highways. l This plan found ardent supporters,' and the day set was June 22. Adver- tisements contributed by the two daily newspapers asked for one thou- sand workers to report tor duty with web. a generous lunch and unbound. wi enthusiasm. Captains were ap- pointed, definite areas assigned, and as the volunteers appeared they were assigned to certain teams, their indir' vidual preferences being consulted' wherever possible. By mutual agree- ment the stores and business houses' ot the town and several of the sur-, rounding villages were closed tor thoj Today nobody argues about the necessity tor good roads. That the need in a vital one has come to be accepted without the possibility ot question. And here in the "try of how one community approadwd the problem--" story in which other: mar and suggestions of value. And it's the same with kiddies, too, you Fathers and you Mothem. Just praise 'em up for what they do; don't leave it all to others. A Bit of Praise from mum or dad has bucked up many a lass and lad. France bought from the British all the railway lines they laid down in that country. So easy! Yes, so easy that we let it drop unthinking, and get to giving Tit for Tat, and Discord comes like winking, whereas it we would prac- tice Praise, a week would hold Seven Happy Days. In short, we're chary overmucll of due appreciation, and so Love hobble- on a Crutch, or dies of sheer star".- tlon, when all we need is just to say: "By gum'. You look A1 to-dny!" And when Marta Man 1 but, don't grzmble at expenses, or In the are gov-‘1 all the tat, and there are Moods an Tenses. Not Tell her that she locks, a peach, and watch her Ipurkle at your speech. If Susie makes a ripping ple, or tries a. crisp potato, don't eat your dinner with a. sigh, And look In grim as Cato, but tell the hate that " Good, not let her think her pic’s I Dad. Of course. when Courting Days no on, before the happy Wedding, our words all show how much we're "Gone"; they're soft. as feather bed. ding; but when the Honeymoon in past we tlr the tltstt of love halt-must! Let's praise each other now and then, and not he always hlnmlng. It’s good tor women, also men; and it they would be aiming at matting Lite a. pleasant round, In I3ompiitttetttts it should abound. I The silver or silver-black fox was the first American fur animal to be domesticated permanently. Back in l 1894 a trapper on Antlcostl Island near Prince Edward Island, caught a pair 'ot beautiful silver foxes which he salt to Charles Dalton ot Prince 1s'dward, island. He kept them on the Island! one year and they would not broom] He then turned them over to a Mr. Oulton who took them to Cherry Island. Oulton was the only inhabi- tant on the island. and the foxes, nut being disturbed, raised the ttrttt pair of silver foxes that over were reared in eoniittement. Dalton and Oulton‘ I The silver or black-silver fox in n color phase or the common red to: found neuriy everywhere in Canada. Silver (one bear the some relation to red (one; that black squirrels do to gray squirrels, or black mueknte to brown mulkrats. Through selective breeding in captivity, the silver or silver-black lurking: have become fairly constant and good animals re- produce true to type. in the typicnl silver fox, black replaces the red of the ordinary tox, the result being a beautiful black tur overlaid with a sprinkling of silvery white guard; hairs. Between the ideal silver-black; fox and the red are all grades ot crosses, which, of course, are less valuable than the true silver blacks, yet worth many times the cost of the ordinary red. Leasing says: "The most agreeable ot all companions is a simple. frank man, without any high pretensions to an aggres- sive greatness; one who loves lite and understands the us: of it; obllglng, alike at all hours; above all, or a golden temper, and steadfast as an anchor. For much a one we gladly exchange the greatest genius. the melt brilliant wit, the protoundssst thinker. A Good Companion. (Jo-operation ad ‘mow Greaseâ€, A. "we" Win-Ill'r the results. A good my miles ot road smoothed and leveled, culverts repaired and crossing: improved, chuck holes filled in and boulder: re- moved; for the city men. a quantity ot healthily tired muscles, a supply of blisters that were displayed proudly as badges of honorably discharged service, appetite: such in may on otilct, worker seldom enjoys; for the farmer, the conscicusnesl that the next time he had occasion to make the trip to town. either by car, or with team or truck, he would and roads that were roads in somethinz more than name: for farmer and city man alike, a solidarity ot feeling, u renew- ed community loyalty that will con- tribute much to future enterprises. Was it worth while? Try it in your county and use. at seven outlet on the appointed day the teams ullled torth try wsy at sutomohiie end truck to their res~ pectin sress. Naturally. the men. line element predominsted, but may wives accompanied their hubsnds, and greeted them " noon with lunch- es more than welcome to hmished appetites. Under the impulse of cheery enthuslaem and good-natured rivalry the work prone-set! as mid labor might not have done. There may hare beeen slackers: if there were, they were in the minority. By far the greater number put in a full working day of old-maimed elort. _ Was it a success? Well, consider} the results. A good many miles of} plural es.w.w..,.1.-a -- . . _ day, and employer and employees like contributed their fund or "elbow .____,_..._. "t see," remarked a gentleman as he paid a and! newoboy for his paper, "that you are putting up i good mny my building. in your town." "That to the only kind we he paid a and! newsboy for his: pupa, "thnt you are putting up i: good nanny new building: in your} town." "That It the only kind we. put up here, sir," replied the little' fellow, with . touch of civic pride. I We any succeed when others do not believe in us. but never when we do not believe In oumlvea. We can only do what we believe we on. If we hold in mind n cheap, dis- creditable picture of our-elf: it we doubt our ettieiener, we erect 1 bar- rier between curse]! and the power that achieves. _ Thin unfavorable Judgment make: " itttpretmiott on the plastic mtnd ot . child that lasts through Ike. A boy will grow up convinced that he la ber. low pm; mentally, that there is some- thiug the matter with " mind, that he hun't the ability of othera about him, and that, no matter how hard he may try, he will never get ahead or amount to anything much. In time, this belief no undermines " ambition that he gives up attempting to excel in anything. His whole chancter be. come- ail‘ected by this unhappy con- vlction of interlority. and " a result " life in a failure. , There are multitudes of people who have such convictions about them. aelvee. They often have their begin- ning in the home or the school, when a child is told he la a dunee, a. good. tor-nothing, and will never amount to tutything--that he can't learn like others, can't do thlnn like othem. To drag through the years with the beliet that there is something wrong with you, that you lack ability to'do the thing you long to do, or that you have a serious handicap, physically or mentally, that you are peculiar. queer. or interior, takes the edge ott your endeavor; it more your - of mind and happiness; it deprive: you of the satisfaction which should come from honest effort to make good. At_"ren o'clock on the " is a terrible thing to so through life with the conviction that some- thing serious is the matter with you, that you are inferior in some way to those about you. that you lack ccrtain ability or certain qualities whit-h are necessary tor great succcsai. or to make your lite count for very much. Something dag Matter Prom Prince Edward Island the in. dustry has Iprcad Into New England. Michigan and Alaska and Into all of the provinces of Canada. ' In the early days of the business M high as $31,000 per pair was paid tor breeders. Prices slowly decllned Ilntll the end of the war, 1918, but sluice then they have steadily Idvmced mull tom; for breeding now sell all the way from $600 to $2,000 apiece, and it In animated there are more than 4,000 of the animals on the lsland, possible to nu- theee very vein-II animals in uptivity. no they mm a few more wild foxes from tnppeu and continued to breed them. This fact they kept a dark secret from til {their neighbors: in fact, they did not leven tell the immediete members of Itheir families. After . few years. lwhen the number of foxes led in- ; creased, they killed A few and shipped them to London to the " suction sale of furs. So (autioue were they about the natives knowing their busi- ness. that they sent the skins to mar- ket from different station: tand re/ wired word of the results of the sale: [ telegraphed in code. The prices rem ceived evidently were so high that the fox farmers showed Sign: of great prosperity. At any rate, it was not lung before the "closed corporation", was broken and the neighbors also be. gun to raise sliver foxes. I than demonstrated In -""-.r-- that it was! an m RED-N ,_.- w nan-Vt: use I.“ storage dam in the world, the (bin, " the head of the M. lauds. Hm. Quebec, with a .eNratttt, than. thet of the Amman dam in In“. TFT - - lull" in: picture theatres, attended by 750,000 daily. -- A silkworm now being produced in the Utdtad State: will loin it threads of my dodged hue. an ooh ine matter being tneerted into th- Iilk'nrm’n "o silkworm'n Where there Is a very and! salary and a has “any no! the mt- un which“ tor their etttidmet'q education. unbmou to Gnu them " contly, Ind/[o rat-to be somebody. um that than is lichen And the little -ttittgs have dwindled, tho Itt. tle saving: gone. it take. . lot of stun- lnt and character to keep one} mum age and pone. where money in can!“ (6:6 pay hon-chow bills and to been the funny coins. [know of no not! of worry it“ {on much a teehitc can on ml. which at; Into the very marrow of tttttN being. like an money-worry, the you: about the whom-Wuhan to an Many an no so communal that they can stud almost any other can. of trouble better than to worry “out where money in can!" tun-.- a, ---, ,___- ---.-_ - ell-I'III, unw- um mm. as well as 100 center», which Ind ec- companled him when frequent leaves from the trout were [rented to him. The tact that some truck: have been Mentitled by the Count does not won-y either Gen-n or allied Justice~-Kel- lT?t.er-tuuakiGita-iiri and Count he. only the shell ot the .L-n.... -- In“ - - - _ chute“ to leave algae}; The investigators were unable to shake his testimony. but lumwhe they were unable to aacertain how Boomer amused " present comfortable for. tune, although there was testimony from Commander Keller to the elect that he. in order to avoid 'runisutettt tor pillaging without permirslon, can to " superiors "valuable presents," which are now known to have includ- ed heirlooms of the Count's “may. Moreover, Keller: home contain- iarco atom of linen. lace. and um. Reamer appeared an Menace tor Interment»: and “cued a confession that he had taken the property; but persisted that be had reburled it in the woods eeverul mile- from the chateau. He he returned there sev- ernl times. he slid. but was never able to locate the exact spot. Roemer, “(er ensconced beyond the Rhine, agreed to recount his war experience: to Count d'Andicne at o time when he was not Wt ot the lotter'l identity. He told " visitor how he dug up the chest: of riches. Whether the Count become excited at this point is uncut-in. but Keener did not reveal the present location of the plunder which diam-red from the chateau and the Count was ankle to continue the conversation until after the German ofilcioll or the Deput- ment of Justice were ordered to pro- duce the former oftieer. CAME chi)“. "er have ': As soon as the armlltlce was signed the Count decided to try to obtain tus- tice, but Justice proved as tieet In the chase u did the German manners. While surchlng in the omcl-l records the Count loaned that Cari. Keller, who Is now working in a town hall In the occupled regions, commended troop. " the chateau when It In ptllued. The letter admitted tum: several souvenirs, but said that a subordlnete pill-(ed the plea thoroughly. m, W" "iii-ii-r- at Alt. Canadn Ind in The plunder", a man named Roen- er, appeared before a. Frisian court to give testimony, end utter listening " h'a weird concoction the judges toned punishment impossible, but use“ the coqts--35,0tNt traner-wliich the otilcer paid without a murmur. The Cuunt‘l Itory of his Innate: and " subsequent axons to recover It hut mart of " wealth is typical of “It has happened in scores or [nuances since the Allies decided to take only a limited number of Gemini chief: before the Mimic tribunal. Betrayed by Mia mm. When the war started the Count we! in Carlsbad and succeeded In reaching France, but the rapid enemy advence cut him " from his chateau. The German. pinned the encient estete of its work: of art with the conni- vunce of former Gem“ sen-nu, who had discovered the wealth hidden be. hind [the walls in the counts. '; Although he poasenu the signed contesaion of the German arm-er who plilaged the Chateau Franc-Ware! in Belgium during the early days of the war and has undeniable - that the looter, who, although poor, was living on the proceeds of a ule at valuable tapestries and the come-ta ot mongol callers of silver and gold which had been buried in the garden ot the chateau, Count Jean alum member of a noted Belgian family. was astounded by the discovery, only in November, that the peace treat! has not left a possibility of punishing the maraudcr. GERMAN OFFICER PLUN. DERED ms cum: Que; No hovilbn for Punishment of Thid. Kay, 1920, Bat mow. and Wed-3| " n arm-er who 1nc>Warot in , days of "M e - that h poor, WttB of I we at 52;. Frji;' ' i O ii u my; F a “w ti.rfaTa.t â€a: a: I; For C t, Nothing $13 'Ett"i'il A Pho Christa S. Mc M Th te f1 01 Christi; Pure " ooll Cotton fille, Down mum Comf piece Our w China “a Blanke Full lin "r-i,, Phon Th sh sh Sa are Fanc