~ g , i _,__ ,gig .ij _ __ ; - ._;; 2 S* ii i l|_lnal\0la|d\i|»» lourleniiiileutague. Tucson, Novsuasir 114, 1916. . - ifG7iirru6bs"6Fro`LiriiciL`iiiiiriiiri Our Liberal evening contemporary is hardly press- . . _ _ _ .. 1 ' ' ‘ ' i> e ~ - - cd for an excuse for the ant1~Br1tish policy pursued up to the oilicial statement that the best help Canada athrggfei. hgt;':ii;::`r:;h§r;pL=:2r°d“°$ his and inscriptions. no precious to by Mr. Truax, M. P., for South Bruce, and suggests could give would be the contribution of three Dread- Secure ledslns to-r. the Battery lu ad- that it was merely a politicalanake-shift and “not a noughts was all in the hands of all the Liberal mein- va l>0Ys' accepted except those going else- very high method of political warfare.” The same ber! illlfilll the d¢b2f¢- Where- " V ~- ‘ ‘TMR c°“'°“"°"“‘ Ch°'V°|' "‘° °|d°“' ‘ - W _ ' _ ‘ ' 1 s tl . W That the German authorized programmewoulil one if fh;b'€rfin:fhgiV°;'i§'ii?;,s ,,;°i£:__ :setter than some parts built years L1urier’s “methods of political warfare.” He has. make her ‘navy stronger in 1920 than Britain was :$11. and is flue sight ln' ltselr. We par- ‘“ n. _ _ _ Pl That the increase in German Navy was not due to We British entente with France.‘but was wholly plann- gi: ed description may be applied to many of Sir Wilfrid been an opportunist. all his life and has changed his policy and methods of political warfare to suit the circumstances of the hour with a single eye to power, and what power will bring him in the futhemnce of his life-long political ideals of the status of Canada. Un the eve of the war with Germany he echoed similar views to those or' Mr. Triiax in South Bxruce. He played up to the German vote by a fulsome eulogy of the German “VVar Lord.” s The Prussian cult of war did not grow up in a night. It has been manifest to the world ever since Prussia conquered Bavaria and \Vurtembu.rg, humbled Austria, and brought France bleeding at her feet. it has been evident to all who wished to sec in later years; in the Delcasse incident; in the episode' at Agadir: in the “shining armour” threat to Russia;-in the annual one hundred millions for the German navy; and in the twice that many millions for the Prussian war machine. Britain saw it,~the Admiralty saw it, and British tax-payers gladly paid their millions year in and year out to be prepared for "the day," whicn German otiicers toasted, and of which Germanwar lords dreamed. Not so, how€ver, with Canadian Li- beralism, under Sir Wilfrid Laurier. While the German neligion of war was being fed by every pro- fessor in every university in Germany; while the oililivi Guardian the the ed and well under .way before these agreements were W de. _ _ gf ma range tb hh or “_ lapse. The insignia and arms ot' al-I aio r de ov ac la for service._in_distant vseas, was not required for! the P de ' titi That while Germany could hold her navy on her own* short- coast'-‘~,liuis within 1 few hours striking dis- tance of Britain, Great Britaiiifhaii possessionson all oceans and seai and a horniicoast ten times greater enum H°“""'-D‘""" °““’°"“‘ E°°' than Germaniih _ , nom her son, or. william Dunn. or 'l`hat in consequence Britain _had been obliged to tm’ mm' 81°” B‘"°"" withdraw hheri ships from overseas and concentrate at home ndbr the~slifps of ‘her ibssible enemy. De T hat within ten years Britain had been obliged to reduce her overseas fleet from i6o ships to 76. ‘I- That Germany was maintaining in full commis Thai; the great German Navy was not dispersed FH st ` is That while the German -Navy`was not calculated iii forts. _ ,. . li- ldti'itht.1tl B That the whole character of the German Navy in p"mv§’de‘;d :hh segigsfor mf; ‘;1§§0;1V§§_iih,, remains ,ii the imriioriiri Neirm, the' structure of ships, annour, armament, torpedo ation' or the public. Ivislted this A Splendid feature ls its whispering . . . 1- . ll hl ‘ h ' ft , 1- hoats and submarines, etc” Shovvsv its design for ag_ phrce iiiter_ ,ind lt. was positively 5:. ery w chin reac ed a er ascent Kaiser had an army of spies seeking infomiation in gressive and offensive fleet action, on a vast scale in pa Britain, a'nd in Canaria too, preparing him for the th n blow lie was impatient to strike, here is what Sir Wil- tem of naval tactics follows the same design. The sarneapplles to St. James’ Park “me "e“"m“‘ l’ai“"“g"‘ d°",°"”“§€‘ d ihehiah-y Cihers oi h0h,ioh_ it iS_ tho Cathedral. After leaving* St. lziul ii _ __ __ _ “|50 rr favorite shot for _sad,iie_rid_ tho battery mounted again and drovc n extensive and systematic establishment of German ing, especially ror the nobility. 1° "~. f“Shl°““b’° E"f=¢"”'l\ "°Bia“'“"‘ our next stop was at ghd Aiheri apr dinner. Thanks again to our guide frid Laurier was saying about the Kaiser :- "There i.i' one fact in the .rituation Jvhich I a think shouts that there is no intention on the part e of Germany to attack England, and THAT a FACT IS THE GERMAN EMPEROR. THE ' GERMAN EM PEROR IS UN DOUB TEDLY opinion of the Admiralty the aid which Canada could ectly across from it is th‘e' Albertl-lull, $33* l,‘;;‘;`;§*'gf$nf§?:d"0"§ ‘E TS’ gag; ONE ol-‘ THE GREAT MEN of THE PRE- give at that time was not to be measured only in ships i§°°'“"”“‘ ”~"° A“”'°"” “°‘“‘"‘ em' ,ee ...im from ii... ..,,,',,,, of ii.. my 'i FIBRE, HE HAS SHOWN HIMSELF WON- f TOWARD PEACE." ` This statement was made by Sir Wilfrid in the Canadian Parliament. It was made while there rested before vliim on his desk the information contained i.i the Admiralty memorandum regarding Germariy’s with a family ofhcreditary paranoics. The first of the fy colossal preparations for war. W`as this blindness Hohenzoilerns to lay great stress upon his “divine evidenced by 'this colossal column. ihmugh “li” gate i“°l“di"g MMV real or affected? Before thc bar of- public opinion right" to rule was William I., who made a_spcccl1 at ih today Sir Wilfrid Laurier must plead hopeless ig- Koenigsberg fifty-live years ago in which he asserted ill norance, or craven opportunism. To plead that he th was ignorant is to take leave of the truth. He was from God literal.” The old doctrine of “divine ie elluelefl directly On the n0rth.benk E told the danger which confronted the Empire in 1907. ri ,” 1 1 ` ` oh He was told it again in 1909. In clear and unmis- takable languagc that danger was emphasized in 1911. He saw Germai1y’s expenditure on her navy mount from $20,000,000 in 1891 to $111,000,000 in 1913. He saw the German war machine grow with tremendous p They had also a good opportunity of knowing that ° spionage-had -.beensmaintained for years in England r Memoriail ere/cted in memory ot Queen nd Wales, chiefly On the Sea Coast. Vlctorla's consort .It is somewhat ° - _ - ~ l th th vi 'ri M i l And they could not faiito realize that in the izgiegar sillialriar ii ohfég. r‘;sDBc‘:;'_'°i§iS;_ what was pre-bsbly to most of us' the e Sli THE EUROPEAN PARANOIC °‘ In dealing with thc Hohenzolierns we are dealing re . - l n read for active service a ro rtion of her na buena” were waning to dm” “B “bm” Y P P0 V? tb ia ger than any other power has so maintained in mo- 5 . u er the world to protect conimcree' and colomes and or that German ships were not of a class suitable for ff su an ma ch a purpose. The German navy was concentrated iri d» kept concentrated in close prox_i_rnity to the Ger- fe fence`of Germany’ whose ciiast is protected by tor- or ed islands _and_»_guarded bvnaturiil and artificial ig la o<---- . tiy received the lollovrlng letlter . . Willey,-Camp, _ __ i _ .. . Surrey, Eng. ' Oct- 22, 1816 ar llothei°:- __ Am.»luei~ haelv-1¢eomillou1ii>u» and. _ns prolnlled,-iaimgoing to try to give' noe rand, .ueed"lqss to say. all the :L-ruotnre dates'-iroin»‘Edward tlie1Con. In the morning six large English I 51. It is ii usted almost in the een- ° onged wit people. Unlike our i rim the Ehgiish peohie have seen iii hundred and sixty steps. Here again. e North Sea or neighboring waters, while their sys- tg, °h‘"g° ““ “dm'“i°“ we °f “ 98"' th I n to each pers'on occupying a seat. e _ hitheatre and having the enormous- th SENT AGE. BY INTELLECT, BY CHAR- or mone , but that it would have a moral value out of seating capacity tor 20.000 people. “ _ y ,~ _ _ _. __ _ - _ we then drove through ihe city moat) ol’ eighteen acres. We spent A(/TER. BY MORAL FORCE, BY MORAL al proportion to the material assistance afforded. 'ilu' sight seeing in K-ehemi and passed o y ailure of Canada _at that moment, after all that has through such places as the Strand 23:; isa;n”i';’)§?a(f;’i§;";‘£,l;lafesiidgiléfé DERFULLY ENDOWED. HIS PATIENT been said, to take any effective steps must priiducygild (I-iizriicpeifiii-a,;rr§9i'fa"éiégggry tiéifcilg ii ' I INFLUENCE WAS ALWAYS DIRECTED as in truth it did produce the worst impression abroad. Pall Mall. 'Charing Cleef and Trsfwl- b __ r square where the great Neison as one of .his de-fences against the ohrrrrh rowers. hu. above the many Saxons preparatory to his march on he`r high buildings iii that vicinity. L This, I think is London'sli.lgl1est mem- t° the Thames was the mnding Phwe Uriah a iimng irihuw to yr hem who of prisoners' tried uf, Westminster and ro-ught on to the tower by this gatey ohhiry in her. hom. hr heed and who to pine or die- as it pleased their cap- as certainly the popular idol as ie. ww' Many “Mable pe°Pl° Passed ndered such slgnal.servlce to his' b Almost culltln'g ioui* way through Q is multitudes in this central part of Q e city we pressed on until wo camo B' ii ir ,hint wwhhv or tha good i_ime_“`l‘:iiinks' téllhei good”-*lihrvloe of _the r This information from the .Admiralty which led hed- while .there..1-As the city was ed from there tothe Peel House and m”d°m °"ch"'§°""°' in is '¢"‘5t°°°“°_‘y "ed many hhtiéehhie ihihgs on ohr. carved and so miniature that one can y hh! as Lhhdoh is in ahhosi c°m_ hardly -see-how it is supported, lu1 te darkness at night on account ot ‘wt "‘°*9“‘d9 wld “°` "‘*l"lh° °“ih°"' raids. we did not me very rhuch_ ities ot' the present day fear should1 s bad' supper here' and dia not go "1°l'° be much pressure from ubeve ry hir that night the ciiy. heihg that the upper structure would col- e city ~’i_h'e Chhpiaih- havihg'arrah_ .ln' aults or crypts scattered about im. iher hi _ 0 we-hh iii.” id tha soverelgns ol’ England 'lie buried chihgharh ii-,hirfge_`i`he_ residence or in vaults' to crypts' scattered about rn times. the King and Quen and all the Royiii the Abbey. To read the inscriptions miiiy_ The phhrce is huiii hr grey_ on the tombstones ot’ the great and one and is noticeable by the absence .l°°k M' their siatlles' inlmedmteiy Slaborate carving and decoration “b°"°- °“" W°“|d i'““gl“° he was i" om the exierioh Neediehh iovryay it communion with them. The srratuc cohiihhaiiy guarded hy- many Berk commemorating We-lt`e's burial 1con1- es and’ or course nobody may eh_ maiids special attention and is' par. r. except on B hhechri mhh_,_ioh_ tlcularly- noticeable at thc present _ _ _ Direciiy opposite the palace hr _the time by having placed thereon thc n and British Coasts, and was! designed at every vicious Memo,-ia; and, ns the name C tl f t 1 th E i f 1-' - - -- ~ . a io ron or esani mrc or SUl_8¢ 3"d'_li*__°"°fY Particular withya view to a fleet f;‘tige5:|‘;_eIf"{$i‘c‘1‘;ri‘;‘_ nffiufiilg wtiuoii lie fought and oieoilu riot it is tion on afllargescale in the North Sea or North At- iii n tic against a navygof someolher great power. X: e steps to the base lie- nutmeg the impossible to describe this vast eil- ri statue or ,the Qhceh seated and closure ofitombs containing is-peclmens idihg.r_he royal hcehirei ii is very oi’ every architecture the world has gh and truly, ir masterpiece, of ar.i_ ever known. Before leaving we were Aimort adjoining the mince isiiyde :iso shown the ciolsters and manus- ark, remembered b ost on account ite, being me Biteyomiilihe iirst great building during the middle ages. _ ternstionsi Exhibition, 1 thins in _I-eelllls Westminster end “Sei” e ot’ tlie"¢lity,`¢0v@i-5 mmiy acres- Bhd St. Paul‘s Cathedral, another sreat nd covers an area (including thc ver an hour he-re. This vast cciistriic- 11d later as a prison. It wus started nd many otllora. Wo next went to -many of Britniil*s were old. ' .` 1 ' .I , ri; _ -. Thsmot “_ »° -_-.»¢ 1 11 ‘_ _ , , apartment iliere ‘ . ‘ - His lllldlii Bldward VII 15'! in ` ' ‘ ' ltatellso Cromweiiuud many more ls" famous personeges is uow under re- ___ pair a1lil‘ cblnehuently' visitors' are excluded from that part ot the bulld- lng. - Retraclng our steps we cross-sd the piece of Loiidonfx a_rchlt_octure--West- 1ninsler'MiilBY- ’We"iiad reid about kings. heroes, martyrs ani! poet`sf'who lay buried there but now we viewed it ln, sll”ita' `hii'g`n‘illcle'iit reality. tl1or1t»ie's"~“ihey 1 have v 'endeavored -'to serve, as far as posslhlie. those rel e who,is in`teie'sted.- The original' ssor's 1-reign" ' about 1040* l presume; ithlii the Abbey, has been preserved ter. It ls' certainly a triumph over he Knights oi' old are carved along he balcony of this chapel. Almost. all olors of Canadian regiments fighting rlpte of the monks who inhabited this nterlng. our coaches we travelled to didce and notable for its containing g a circular staircase of aboiit three e hand of the sculptor is in evid- ncc, marble and wax statues, also ho had the' foresight to arrange for ur hundred and sixty dinners. About three o'clock we drove- to y William the Conqueror and served ondon. Tho “Traltor'o Gate" loading ueen ot’ ~Scot,ts', Sir Walter Raleigh, uee'n Anne Boleyn, Lady June Grey, _.'11 _ ;-N Y . street to what' I‘ coii`sider,the' crowning it manylimel and about tba' great- »i at “the sovereigns _of Prussia receive their crown C ght held by a multitude of sovcreigiis of past cen- to the Parllment Buildings-Lords' and if ommons. This enormous structure B turies. was thus revived in all its pristine prcsump- end 11 half vlslilns here and West- '”°"‘°""' ‘"`° ‘"””'“"e‘l' E“”°'°’“"y tion by the First of the Hohenzollerii emperors. His ? grandson, the present Kaiser, fully shares this view, I-9 ' B _ idi11i40.Eti‘ilibdi as he has declared on many occasions. In 1894 hc wine" ii, whsiefvgg hfigiiliiiiiyig Xi; e luster Abbey just. acrc-ss the street. n he present structure cost about VIH and Chas' I mmmted °“ horse” 3.000.000 and the corner stone was b ii the Thameg where London Bridge .guns capture-ii by tho British and ar- ans that river. We spent our hour mor and sw°rdE Wm" "Dm time im" ing spears. Passing down farther we ho central or white tower or "Keep" n which ure the armourles. Here peclmeiis of every imaginable kind ot otlceable are this statues of I-Ieriry ack and clad in full armor both hold- ntered the chapel of St. John. Here, *si* *’f Remember the Boys in the Trenches this Christmas __ the best present you can afford Makcriitciiiliiiiiiliiig con fortable and warm. Months ago we were »\;u.l.ing the market for such articles as would give tncm pleasure and comfort. ' Here are a few articles: 1 . fKh k' Woolen Gloves 850 1 px ou 3 'Braces S'lk Hdkf Good large size Khaki 1 ’ . 1 C 1-2 dozen Khaki Excelda H’dkf. 75c » 1 1 $2.85 for the lot All regulation colors and styles for $2.85. 1_ We will box the above Xmas goods for you and look after the mailing. Here is something warm and comfortable: Great big Military Sweater Coat, Cardigan Knit, Khaki Colorhilizgizes good value at todays prlC€ $5.00- 0Ul’ rice . . _ p Here are some feet warmers. 100 Pairs Heavy Ribbed Knit Khaki Wool Socks, all sizes 600 pr. _or 3 pts. for $l.50. Good warm lined Khaki Gloves,M0‘cha»‘- or Dogskin, $1.00 pr, Fur Lined Mocha Gloves at $2.25. ' - _ _ 8 only Heavy Trench Flannel Shirts worth 2 25 for 1.75 each. Snug Ear Comforts, just the thing for the boys 40c each. Body Belts _all wool, all sizes, Just the thing to keep the Boys well 80c_ea_ch. _y Ofhcers Neck Ties in Khaki Silk Regulation, also in Silk Crochet 50c, 60c and 7o_c. _ Fringed Cravats, made either from Eiderdown, Angora and Mercerised Fibre in Pure Silk, Khaki Color in regulation style. Prices from $1.00, 1.25, 1.85 to 2.00, _ We also carry them in a pretty light fawn. Also a useful line of Pyjamas, good warm underciothing, ties, wiistlets, . gloves, mitts, socks and all other accessories suitable for the Boys awayl"fr_0m home. So help the Boys at the Front by helping your- self. We will mail any of the above goods to your friend, you will have no bother, just drop in and order the goods and we will do the rest, 35 pairs Soldiers’ Breeches on hand at the old prices, these make of breeches are the best made in ubiiciy Stated hiS_,bclief that “the Hohenzoilcrn ruling gfllee or Assembl . This n w r - is “ sig" "G°“u°m°“ Pi"“"° "-i’m9"° strides. And heisaw the peace-loving Asquith G0- family" was "placed here by God and is accouniablc iii vernment strive with might and main to meet the ap- to Him alum," In 1910, at Koenigsberg, the K;_\i5¢r, 1;] Y o es'em es a.. hall and contains statues ot nious' orators ot bygone days such s Pitt, Chatham Burke and Fox.N£'xt e were taken to the Klng's roblng proaching crisis. N0, Sir Wilfrid cannot plead ignor- speaking of his grandfather, said that the Prussian room their through marry eiiihoririe ance. As one ‘who presumed to be a statesman, it C was his duty to know, and know he did. And yer with 3 a fuil knowledge of the danger which confronted the 9 rown was “accorded him by the will of God alone Zillilftlllelll-S» One ll0flC°9~bl0 f0l\ll1l‘0 Of nd' not by Parliament or by any assemblage of people ai-i, exiiiiiiieih The two ini-ge-,ii oiigi. r by popular vote,'f and that “he thus 'looked upon “ai Painting” °f U10 W°l`1ll 81° ll°l'°~ hem will being the fine specimens oi’ ne representing “The Death of Nel- ¢ - ~ e ~ e 0 Ell‘lPll’€. What ll'l_¢ilSlll'€S dlli LHUYICY f2lkC t0 mC¢f ll? himself as the chosen instrument of heaven.” 'I he sony and me other ~~fi~h,, iiimiiiirii. He did ll0fhlll$ ill h°l'°i¢.aftltud¢5~ T0 21 ffallk YC" Kaiser added: “Looking upon niyseif as the instru- “"0" ‘lf the PliKflm1F°¢|1°l'B' fm' Amer' a.” in the miiln buildin`g`we saw the ~ . . - ~ ' . ' _ . . 1 ic quest for aid in 1907, he gave a point blank fCfllSé1l- ment of the Lord, without regard for daily opinions ihroneii oi their maiertier the King Ill HTISWCI' 10 3 i`l3ti0l'l3i d€lTl3.l"|(i that W€ (i0 S0ll'l€' .and int¢r|ti0[]5_ I go my w3y_” A5 long 35 fhg Kaiser and QUBBII BIBO 0f,Lll0ll'..Rl0YBl `HiKh' thing in 1909, he gave us in 1910 a puny navy of use- can lay the blame on the Almighty for the'murders less ships. And finally, lil 1911421 he St0°d lll 51'! and the outrages perpetrated through his orders, dis- WHY Of ¢ff¢CflV¢ aid t0 tim °0mm0" ll9~VY» and 83” U5 cussion is useless. The only argument that will ap- peal to him is a crushing defeat that will show him And iillsi W¢ HFC loid bl' d°dA“Cti0“ frm" the aim' that the god from whom hc had taken his instruc- l°§}’ for the acting Of MV- Tfuax in Smith Bmwi was tions was a god of his own creation and fashioned, af- done merely that his words would reach electors to ie, his own imagi; a eulogy of the Kaiser instead. whom they would be pleasing. Certainly the Patriot puts it mildly when it remarks that “it is not a very high method of political warfare.” sm wltrmo Anifiriil-1 iiniiaefncv We have seen from the brief outline of the1'Na"fal history- of sir wiifriws regime and the first year of all E\1fe1>e’s death-chamber-tread softly. Speak in =1 so of Sir Robert Borden's, that Sir Wilfrid Laurier Whl5P°f~ ` ' ' his former Cabinet Colleagues and ,supporters were never tired of declaring that there was no ernergency.= .rea _was necessary to its security.” From this and other sources they knew also :- the Navy of that Empire. i nosses the Prince and Princesses of Wales. in' the House of Lords our guide showed ua the seats' occupied by the late Lords Roberts and Kitchener and other places ot unusual lnte'ros~t. » . Nwleloiienonnnsiinnumqim DAILY 8ELE6'i'|0l8 FOI ililllbllll IEIDEIS no-91 flifh|lilCU W yourhats." The altar and everything about the chapel is intact. It is very old and notable as c-ur history, tells. us on account otlts ,being the BDOt in i snclenttlmes wliere the Knights ol old watched- their armor preparatory to taking the- vows- of knighthood and devoting their ilves. to chivalry. Here also the old kings were married the Tower being originally the old Royal residence. Then we descended another flight ,ol stairs to a. room ot’ relics. Here- we»~saw_ the 1-cloak in which Wolfe' died at Quebec, the funeral gun-carriage of Edward VII ‘the suit worn bythe Duke ot’ Wellington when he was constable of the Tr/wer and many other interesting things.. Direlctly be-low St. John's chapel we entered a room containing the old execution block and axe ,a, model of the rack used long ago for extortlng confessions from prisoners and tho cell in yhdcli Sir Walter Raleigh was imprlso ed. Leaving thlskeep or central tower wel went to the Beauchamp tower used. especially during the Tudor sovereignty, as a prison. Here, on the Patons, l I Canada. Today’s value $7.50, Paton’s price 5.70, Limited i _J e- f§""i' - -cr; caused the eitact s ot to be uvcd had time to glance st the llrst day. Madame Tuseaud wus n French lady an ers ` lllfc ll D t p on. The lniages are very .- some years before her death., ‘like and placed around fthe hall in After leaving the Tower we rc-tiiril-illlmil i70Bll1l0l'l§ lhlll- Ono Willlld mms' ea to our hotel tired and worn -'r_-vi 1:- - , i, v. l; `,’>- -,' - ` 1- ;1.._.~, f ._" -"'~.l,f‘_'1_-i"~.`-.1`:"i"-i.Eii W . . _ _ ,v _ _. , _. ,. .»_, . . .