W* . i 5 » . .i i. ‘l"‘ 'eg .wi ~ me omni.;/i'rirrowii ciuinbiu _ ._.’.'°"""" """"""""""""" " dress and ii purse containing the ine operation _ beiore leaving iojcsr ‘ ""'°° """"""" "" ‘was waited on by his minister, oundsd by a .hen spliweriii MONDAY NOVEMBER 18 1"! _ Rev. James MacDoigall and the left elbow which also caused sentation an auto parade was taken out iam emi. along _ - formed headed by Rev. Mr. Mae; fine. Amaggving -flie pie- , There are at present between two' most crippling scarcity of coal and and three hundred thousand per- sons employed iii the manufaciurclat a crippling cost. \\"estern`Canadu of iuunitioiis in Caiiada, the great' is freezing for want of coal yet wc majority of them drawing wages that in ordinary tnies might be iles- eribcd as princely. From now on these employees will be gradually discliarged the majority of tlicni obliged to accept ordinary coni- iiiercial or industrial wages. ` Whether the next year, if things go in F.urope as we have a right to expect at present. betwccii 300,000 and 350,000 soldiers will return fr0.iii liurope, discharged from the ariiiyaiiil obliged to find other cm- ploynieiit. Their dependents who are now largely supported by sep- aration allowance, supplemented by a.portion of the wages of the sol- diers, are estiiiiatcd at betweeii onc| and :1 quarter and two hundred mil- lions. These dependents must be providcd for out of the new cm- ployiiiciit that will be taken up by the returned soldiers. The closing what is available is availahele only are told there are millions of tons of excellent coal inthe .western provinces in places easily access- ible. '.l`licsc have never been dev- eloped because, 'as is alleged it is not tothe interest of other coal companies 'that these should be developed. If we are to siiccessfttlly, meet thc problems tlial are now“pressing upon us. if Caiiada is to enlerge un- cripplcd from the w;ir,i1o interests, linaiicial, industrial. political or otlierwisc must be permittbd to in- terfere with thc tlcvelop!'l'\ciit of her natural resources, no 'exploita- tion t.’ natural resources, for spec- ulative purposes must be permit- tcd. , (inc half of l-Iurope will have to be rebuilt within the iicxt few years. For this rebuilding Canada can furnish a vi-ry large pa’rt of the of the nmiiitions plants and ,the dc-._ iiiobilizaton of the soldiers means that employment must be procured for some 700,000 men. Clearly, in the face of such a tremendous problem as this,tlic on- ly hope for Canada is industrial ex- pansion and the cliniiiiation of in- iliistrial and commercial and spec- ulative exploitation. \\`e are told that the natural resources of Can- ada have been merely scratched so far: that we have touched only the fringe of Caiiadzfs wcaltli. .\nd this is probably true. lint tlicrc is something else true as well. This year. for cxaniplc, there is an al- raw material. Luinbcr, irlon. food iii unlimited quantities. will be rc- quired. and we can supply" it pro- vided we get the material ready. \Vc can get it ready if our labour is properly organized and if “in- tercsts" are not permitted to inter- f\crc_ 'l`lire arc pos'sibilities of carly satisfactory adjustments to the new conditions: there are also pos- sibilities of the hardest tiincs that (faniida has c\'ci‘ experienced l"0r cltlicr coiiilitiuii wc shall have our- selves to con,-,fratiilatc or to dc- iiuimce. "Cf ).\l.S Ol" l" I R F." V .-\ little ovcr ii wcck ago wc \\'ci‘c iii death grips with (ierinaiiy. For over four years we fought her; fought her when the odds were all in her favour; fought licr when she adopted tactics of ol`fen.sc and defence that would have disgraced an iiiiorgan- ized gang of savages. .\nd ive have 'beaten her till she grovellcd in the dust and begged us to stop on any terins we wanted to dictate. .-\iid we stopped. - .\ii'd now? ticriiiaiiy is starving and asking those whom she so brutally wronged to help her, to. feed licr starviiig people! .\niit’°"llit~ (`hristiaii world, the human world will now say "\\_'c must come to the aid of starving ivonicn and child- ren ; we are not niakiiig war against liiiiiiaiiity but for liiuiianity.” _ \\'licn l"raiicc, reineinbcrng the last forty sevcii years, remcniber- ing the iiihiiniaiiity and thc tyranny of 1871, can forgive Germany, and feed her thcii her forgiveness surc- l_\' iiicasiircs up to the Christian Standard "l.ovc your enemies, do good to them that hate you." (icrinaiiy’s humiliation has been complete but the greatest humiliat- ion tliat can now come to her is to accept food from those whom she has so fearfully wronged, from those whom she sent out deliberate- ly to riiin..»\iid llie greatest triumph that licr victorious enemies can ac- hieve is to give hcr bread iii the hour of her liiiiniliation and starva- tion..-\iid shc will need to be watch- cd while being fed. for it would not bc' unlike Germany to bite the hand lthat feeds her. 'l`RUE T() FOR) To the Gcriiiaii Red Cross nurs- es who stole the food that was sent to the llritisli prisoners are now added the (icriiian prison camp- keepers who steal thc clothes scntl to the Aiiierican prisoners and sell them. This is true to form. For the men who stole altar vessels and des- ccrated the cathedral at Laon by tlurning it into a stable will not _shrink in their last days from glut- ting their hate iii any way that liti- manity may rccoil from. lint a peo- ple learned in historical compari- sons, who believed they had inher- ited all tlie rights of the Roman liiiipire. might have been supposed lo know of Titus and the sack ol _leriisalem and to recall that his- tory has ever held against him as the crowning iiifaniy the looting of » %f9'¢J¢¥¢¥I¢%‘7¢i¢&¥1#¥¢¥¢5l¢%%¢ll4¥¢¥¢‘XH¢wa=##t’¢til!$7¢W5¢fl¢5¢5¢ Window Placards Have a _ Small “Circulation” oootieeeeeeeeoooeeei ‘ la the mari who OUGH1' to b `0ooeoooooaaaooaeougguoo Q-JQI ~l{i\ve you about concluded that he has placard-blindness? Or por- ~hups i-t occurred to you that ¢ window plucard has, after all, rath- er u LIMITED CIRCULATION, und is therefore. u poor thing to rely upon IF YOU REAL-LY WANT T0 SELL! Bayern, you lee. have A theory that real ostota¢l_._ot is ot any.; iiiipoi-urea. or tim li o¢siiiAli.e. is suns io be iriver-urea in tho newspaper when the owner wants to sell it. l TO THF. L.\_\` 'l` the temple at _lcruszileni and the ex- posing of his shame in the imper- ishable marble of thc arch in the Forum that looks toward the Col- osseum, rccording and glorifyiiig in the deed, The (iernians have not hesitated to put on record their long rule of rapinc_ The ivorld will per- haps be all the better for it if they 'continue true to form to the last: for a niaudlin and besotted pre- tcilcc of virtue' at the eleventh hour would but disgust.On the oth- cr hand, the continuance of the blond beast type of deeds inexor- ably marks out the course that 'the :nations will have to pursue to ex- orcise the evil that calls itself- kiil- tiiri- and is above all things abom- inable cven to the last. _ \ l9$$$8$_$#i$%%%%¢k¢&%$ uy your property hard 'to find? 4 Dougall and our _retumed hero. i-i which 'the citizens of Cape 'l`rav.-rse joined with a heiriy welcometo Gunner Campbell. To Gunner Willi -in G. Campbell, Cape Traverse., _We your triends and fellow- ci_ti_ze_ns of Cape Traverse and vicinity extend to you a must hearty welcome on your reiuin to your hom: iii yzur native Province, after having sei vcd on the field of battle in defence of the_ cause of righteoui=nf~~s. against that cruel tyranny, ann toui oppressim which for u - wards otfour years has vhri-a-en ed and disturb.-d th peace of inf world. We are pleased to kn 'ii that althougfi you have saffe-cd greaily at the hands of our inver- erate enemies you are still spand to be with us 'gain. and art ttianklul to see you -nji ing a measure of health. We tiu i th_ati'0ur well earntd fiirlou.h will under the ble~sing of Heavei contribute towards your complet e recovery- We deeply sympath- ize___with you in the loss of you loving father, who ever sini- your departure from home pray ed for your safe return, but w trust that through the mercy iii God we will all meet around t i ihrone of our Heavenly Father when the battles of Iife ari- fought a_nd won. vi e highly appreciate the sacrf- fice you have mide in our belial and we also realize that in th 'noble performance of your duii you have aided in preserving o us the blessings of liberty and i securing a peace which shall li enjoyed for many gent-rations Weaisk you to accept this smal= gift as a feeble token of ou esteem. gratitude and sympathy and we hope that i- due tim- your stay with us will b.-per marient. Signed in behalf of the con- tributors ` Mrs. E. MacPherson .Mrs Mont. Campbell Mrs. John F. Campbell _ ‘ Mrs. Harry C. Muirart Gunner Campbell was take completely by surprise but in ii few well_ chosen remarks ex pressed his izratitude,and wishei to convey to each contributei his heartfelt; thanks. Sllllllllll llllllllllll Ill Hl-SP|ll Mrs. James Holmes, Hampshire has received the following letter from _her son, Sergt. Ira, whr won his stripes on the field and has also been_awarded the miIi~ tary cross. bergt. Holmes has been in France for thirty months having joined up with the cavalry in Regina :- ;&m%mmm»»mw&¢¥xx e Daily' Selections For ° U Guurdian Reader; Furnished by W. B. Louaon U$$&$&u¥»Bb$i0Dl0 THE DAY's RESULTS _ _ *asses 992i ls anybody happier because you puss- ed his way? Does anyone reniember that you spoke to lilm today? This day ls almost over and its tolling time is through; ls there any one to utter now ii kindly word to you? Did you give a cheerful greeting to the friend who cu/me along, Or a churllrih sort of “howdy" and _ tlicn vanish inthe throng? Were you iiclllsli, pure and simple, as you rushed along the way. Or is someone mighty grateful for a deed you did today? f I ,9 Crm you slay tonight, iii parting with the day that’s slipping fast, That you helped a single brother of the many that y_ou passed? ls iz single heart rejoicing over what- you did or said? - Does B man whose hopes were fud- lng now with courage look ahead? Did you waste the duy or lose lt, was it well or poorly spent? . Did you leave it trail of ltlndnels or 1. scar of discontent? Au you close your eyes in slumber do you think that God would , UBI. You have earned one more to- morr-me t work you did ` ' today?" T I shell for a souvenir and will in char eof aaiiatrol and had my ` Y , see him go. lie was faithful to me till the end. We were one mad gallop when he was shot and he rolled over and I went under him but the faithful old brute seemed to know that he was squeezing tie life oct me ‘or he just raised himself and -rolled over clear of me. and died. I He sure and put on my reni- mental numberfwhen you write. I was wounded on the 10th and am jo.: getting strong enouuh to write. l figure tne war will be over by the time lam well aiiain. i The nurses in the hospital surely treat us fine, we just have the best of care. Will close now with love to my parents Your loving son, ra. HARRY N BREHAUT' o. I-liirry N. Brcliaiit, formerly of Rox- bury. died ut.hfs rciildctiee 'ln Pea- body, Mnsii., yesterday ol’ pneumonia at tlic age of 23. l-lc was tho son ol' the into James H. Brehaut. former head :prootreuder of the Post. Born in Roxbury. young Brehaut was fitted in 1907. lie entered ilarvurd ln the Georgia Gettler, of Hannibal Me. Mr and for the past tive years had been connected with the A. C. Luwreiice Leather Company. at Peabody. `l-Io was a member of 'the Roxbury Latin Club. the Triangle Club of Harvard. the American Cheitilcul Society, and Waslilncton Lodge. A. i~‘. and AJM. Funeral services tigers held at the Immanuel-Winlnut ,Avenue Church, Roxbury, Saturday ht`3.30 ip. in. ln- termcnt was at gbniicaster. Mass. Deceased was a grand nephew of the li"-0 MI'S~ (Chill-) Jnsopli l~‘iilrelilld,`of Georgetown. ‘ ¥E¥¢5i¢=l¢¥£¥¢%a‘Et!¢97¢&¥5¢¥¢%lt5¢¥¢ it fi $.=l¢¥¢§'¢§i饢%¥¢¥t¥¢=lf5¢`%@¥5¢t`;¥¢5¢¥¢¥¢¥¢¥¢ ,1¢Q¢¥¥t#¥¢¥%!¢5¢%a¥~##¥¥l¢#§2¥£¥%¥%!¢#¥% D559 F¢¢lli~§¢¥hl¢¥¢¥¢¢l¢$¥¢t¥€¢-W 5# ¢5»Zfi`%$¢5¢£¢.t`i Answering Want Ads IH n day-by-day education in practical affairs-in business ways and means-in values! You LEARN about real eo- itate-lwfliere you've GUESS- ED ABOUT \lT heretofore. You became property-wide. You learn rental va/lues. You explore and test afnd study the “work-iiiai-ke`t_" ' You touch and tnko inter- est and part lii'tho clty’s life AND YOU PROSPERI wiiiiiiiiivtiiiiiiiisiivisieif-i.iii‘»‘-‘ ti The “Buyer” is Abroad in the Lund Armed Witli Some Clilllwd V Want Adi l s noni iooii iii. if iii.. scissors have encountered your “for sale" ad. l{s'lI becllpplgg. and unl- werlng ads tomorrow. tw. and yours ought to be there when he reads the parm'-il'~ you have ANY. THW03 T9 sei.L. / _ "Used l.lilngii." always limi buyers if l.liere'll still USE- rui. riimoa-ii. to SOME- BODY, they are worth mon- ey. _-unb- *pv uv. 1'.o.i.iu|co-r1'.o.o_ , .... ..... ......... Quality A Fit for every -.style 0 Shoe.a" m I t H _ s ooooooooooooooo #E $4k$€§$$¢lH§¢lt¢k¢k¢k§F$% A _‘N i ‘ny 1,.-.T ir- 0QQOQQ$QCQIQQQI% ::Your Problems Solved A /il' I ` tt* i .$1.4 If r_.==.s_.ff;r;* sr jr( I aeraar'§1