gi; 3- J ‘s .- 0G1‘0`BER»28,f191e.r~»__. _ e _ _ T urns orn;aLorl~urowNrleUAsolAN°" l1idif2;s:.e“x.evetd~i - vm .s *-#Ivy-svn r-l _~¢_~ *_ _ ___ ,_ ;»- _'___ _ *rw A. * ' "‘ [M708 DOCTOR \¢0Rll tat of dials its incessant and tr¢~ lust because it was known GOD! by the activities of tile lah- UID DUI! ___ _._, I f ' _.~ _ _ .~.-4 _ ‘V4 __ _,_ _ ,__ '_i_ _ ' f ‘_ - _f __ _~___‘ __ __ ri _ I __ _ *_ ' ' I' _ I ___ _ _ fi, ' _ inddstry has made that _to be ' thorough, ' _has _ with ‘marilie, sud~to live its own lifebes gr its chaaoh."mw; ,,_,. we ' ~. ., _ - » _ _ ' _. ‘ . U~ 9- NIUTRAI-l1'Y-‘e"riay herd to beat, but ll has into to. scarcely any perceptible er- lilna the nstue lines. 1 ~ or the wane oe lleser 3; » '- ’-'offs' _» . - ' ' ` f " , _ _ halt long ego. " ' ' ‘ fort enabled- every one ot»_tlle Allies Coma-ut the tv/o roles today. one. while within fever# _ in fliers ll (_ "__ __ ;.. `i`~Q99u9-'»“95i'-1-fmm-P“3_° T” ".3ii7°i4iil\s as fer as the e e may hol- "” A’ _' R ' __ _ ` " - _ 5 1' ` ‘ - »_~ other band the- British Nav to carr on the wai unbempsred, ex--the defensive, ‘with every mau_en‘- .lol IM (Milk otteeth. sy ~'-, ~~ »r ‘_ -_.l‘ _ _ gp-,_ _. ~ _ -~ _ _ _ _ ~» » l > .-~__ ',__` _ ; Beisium,__tresty must he observelnwcarefnliy iv t d ' in be y.here.v19illd“_have been no war. `kitcli`el1"Il'\`r\%!i:eet l‘:>:r1e.e at kept .5 Pi'°|P°°“ °f V|°*°\‘Y 5i‘ili\N|‘- - ¢iifli=il’6l\¢l_e ofthe crop, or the direction l- _ , _ “Nations lighting for their existence wit-l1_»~dslIv lncreeelns-unml1ects__ot.ne. russell sr_o\'es,`uo idle élu _oc seeing victory brought nearer, still knowing that if the at ` bb of _ _ __ 'pil sp" _victvry iiwy Si0p short of ev ry_ ng ii\\10\_'-SVP/|'y_ -thre owa torapurpos for which they are struggliu ,»»ea'nnot]0att-iedo not-waz; er aimlessly, t » __ oted -»i.¥_»,¢ spend' -lliuch-time life li6€kell,il1.»a field df: rich fodder “W“¢ iW #fm f‘l\iDB6u` aft~ “iid Wilil may u_1`lly,_eai its' allotted cil~ K ei* victfo "is _ c d.u%\_lt t‘he`neut- rain caiigb' it.9Pf‘_l¢xserve that not on~ ly President Wilson, but Mr. Hughes, is supportllng a league. started, not with the object of interfering with the ‘helliger_ents,,in this v{_ar, lgut whlcl1"ii_iii0\‘_ Of Children. _ will do_iis part l_n_nia ing ence seo very deep and very sincere ls the pre in the future.. _.__ “It ip ll, work of neutral countries to Uhrich We Should all look with favor and hope. Only, _we must bear 'this in mind, if the nations. after the war, _are able to do something effect- ive by binding themselves with the common, object of preserving peace, they must _be prepared to undertake not more than they are able to up- hold by force, and' to see, whell the time of crisis comes, that it is upheld by force _ "The question we must. ask tllem is this: ‘Will you play up when the time comes? . _ _ _ _'fIt is not merely rhe sign manual of presidents and irovferelgns 'that is really-__to make that worth while; it must also have behind it pariiaments and national sentiments. “Supposing the conditions of 1914 occur again, and there is such a les- gue in existence. Everything will de- pendupon whether national sentiment behind it is so permeated' by theles- sons 'of this war as to compel each na~ tion, _as_ a matter of vital interest. to keep peace, other than by force." ` V \ I ~~“ Th* |~°W3 °f War- occupation tins and abuts on' a reiglon M the WMM' h d ___ _'_ The Foreign Secretary insisted upon Q,-ees have brake" |,0d|es_ and me V-hen. HB I S69 il. i8 10 iwlll |1010 i_0 thenecessity, after the war, of arrlv- houses Hem 1" pam fm- their roof; QBUIGF. lo i'l9iD keel! U0!!! iiieiiiiiiiii ing mt. some agreement with respect me feng mei, windows m,,m_ than ‘he extremely tenuous thread which 1.0 i>'i\8~ ii1WB Oi' WBT. ilfgiliiiil Ciiiii U10 walls 'scarred and pierced. Grass* nes. America and England at th,” mem .i»lli1lB(il‘il1lil”l8i.B.. 6l1lDl0}'l118lli» Of grown trenches uppqar 1-lng(;~;] with U\'555‘“t i-i,mB- MMU' 0' U3 hal/9 for' alll the resources of science ln the pm- depths of rusted lm-bed wlre omnngle. :ellen the lime. if we ever knew lt. Bliect Which :tllreatens civilization and ments, and shell holes frosil or old be 'Ji thi" mu” ““l’i9ii“9/MUGS# Which the existence or the race itself. He _come more and mc-re frequent. pnl we dignified Wiiii ihe Mme 0! 010 characterized “tile employment of pol- the full view of the land oi waris not 9llM1i9il-Am9l`i0i\l1 Wi1i'» When 3 Gel" nonous gas and other horrors by Ger-i duiled in effect by itsgradual coming '"3" "Slit Wa” Pi`ei"“`i“g t° "mn fm' many" as having “let loose on the over beyond he bleak greasy sic-pee _"le Caribbean Se" 1'0" m““°°“v‘"“' world more terrible anarchy than any east of Albert, with their chalky scars jimi when We would have b°°“» 9'3"; individual a'¢archiste,' and' referred cut by tb long ‘lines of trenches. The Veil’ °PP°“°d by G°"“““y had "' "0 “to0Si`1 0 i’ liarrqrmy' is playing its part. It has C .______ before the Dom____o__B, _____{_________ taken. and: given -its share of blows. This battle has nowhere a counter- ii0l’iii C0¥¥iiii 0“ 9 0 -l _ T8 ARE part for the slow, small grinding o’ Tiiiii Di'0D°iiiii WHS 'nada by Sh' H§‘_'_f_°Y 'CLMMS U BDA 8-r"_|_ ON ¢°A31_'_ the military maclllne-_ _ Ne-ver has lm-, M19" 8,Bi¢°¢i f°r Slssesd oils _regar _ng _ _ dnan :lgeucy contrc-lied such engillos the lii`09@i`V°~U°ii Of mi 9 e Wee" _-- of. destrucion. n‘or has war, even so profoundly impressed--itself upon the fa_l1g__of nature. No plague cc-uld_be more ruthless. no natural blight more rlavastlng. This is a region of con- trast open forwthe heavy, fuoted infan- try, who must march from one place to another. Que day they may billet In n sung l<‘l_rench village, with its shady trees and, its gardens bright with roses; thc- ne_x'¢ they will plod along the straight white roads. marked by the realli” rows off poplars ou either side. \-_-,-,-_~_-_-_-,_-_-_-_»_-_-,~_»,-_Av-,-.~.~.-.»_~:.~.-=_-.-.~.=-----A--== ’f[;`i$£iH[i$" iilii ,li 5_ilt_ii»frf._Bi|i"iiiiiiii_i" t s.‘~_»»- i il_ii»S|£K_~iis£iiiiElil >'. .. .' lest for liver end bowels. for bllloue- _ mud' ana to ,',u'"°m¢¢¢ |-_among ”'"' °°“' '¢°”'“”""‘ A ‘I of'Kir::'Consta_ntine's interview'with Epp|¢|EN¢y on -|»HRouQ_HN¢5g_ - - .» ~_elms_¢|p¢rlon. : ~¥'_:‘ ‘Pa \1 . Je "rf o . _ _ . ,_ . »_ i""' , _ h, ll el' Arlll - the wal* his! risls intended for ll e active. _ ff* _'-4 ':m'|“::::r lrnbw tliet'i'heseelie'il forges. but there hell 'rodey the siliciency of tlledefrlgu _*_ _ r`_~» \ i _i0W _tire the undulating pisns. all as Fields gl-eobly distinguished by the 0! lilb lurrpvrs. _,There are no___fences', there are no waste places, there are frees. _ no half-clesred__iand`_ 'nlllsllcery inch of ev-Hit line ite a abt 'h` cle. This ordered thrift appears mech- anical ol* smoothly self-s-uppcrtlng, un. - less the i'armer’s life is known-his i0ilS lilllirillli work. the faithful ser- _vilce of' his brave woulemthe healthful admiration of the Canadian. soldier, _not only for the skill and courage of the French' army, but for 'the brave. _silent industry of the women, the old .men and the children of the French orms. War-Scarred Fields. ' ' The transition from this scene of beauty, peace and ancient prosperity is ildelitgy distressing. Fields are given over to the trampling rows oi tethered horses and are- disfigured by a variety c~l‘ encampmenis' form or~ deriy white- tents to huts of rusted biscuit tins and low dlscolored biv- vies. The-re is u certain inevitable litter of material. salvage heaps and smoking incincrators ;t,here is an. ob session of a loitering military. The houses are all occupied by uniforms more or less cleanly; a few civilians are 911§9.SBd in selling eggs; candies or embrddered picture cards ,and other odds an dends. /Phe roads blooll and jam wih a cesseless procession. of army vehicles' or marching units Either the dust rises in a choking cloud or the mud spreads und splat- ters everywhere. This area of active of more sinister appearance Here stoutly resistng shell of the defense ~N r Let the world Kn_ow._ through which the indomitable Eng: _ences to an “nth-_nkable D__°p0s__ lish had fought their way and so per vice for a period of ilve years after and munitions, they carry merchan chairman of the Board of Railway umm oners, lssi thi aft rnoou BOSTON, October 23- Neutrality rgldadcored by Dr-. Hugh C_|_._bot yan. ____ _y _:\tel'nool_r, during sn address K ° __ 9_made at Peter Bent Brl_g~ tham Uiillllsi before the members or me _Boston branch of _the__Surglcal , esslnge Committee. Dr. Cabot was surgeon-in-chief of the Fourth Har- ;ardEUnit at General Hospital No. 22 t- . -1"., in France, and may rg. urn to. work there until the war is over. He said that by proclamation, the people or the United States have been naked to tin their consciences £0 an unthinkable proposition- neu, irllity. He then asked how an hou- efii _ii1ln_ can remain ‘ neutral in lr iltruK8_i~0,like this, _ and if it is sur- ilrllilnl that our English brethren Wonder where we stand. , However tenuous the thread `_|s hy, ,which England' and the United _States are bound. Dr. Cabot held that the worligoi' tho Surgical Dress. iiiEB Committee. which has sent _q_lran_titles',of dréssings to the allied i10BDi¢&iB.f0\’ lyear and more, _ is _0lle._of the agents for sustaining the »frie_ndsi\IiP__betweeu the two coun- tries. e did not deny that the dressings are extremely useful to the surgeons at the front. but their greater purpose, an he asserted. is to tie ,together thc English~speaking peoples. _ _“These dressings are an outward and _visible sign." be continued, as U6 indicated a piiefof. dresslngsnenr him in the. amphi-hospital, _#that while as a government we may have lost. our heads as a people we have not lost our honor. ' “This is it demonstration of which we are sorely in need,.lor.tbel§e is _‘I great danger that at the close of the war we shall he without n friend. We shall, of course, be _ able to compel 'a sort of friendship thro- -lgh our control of the purse-strings of, the world. but'-such friendships are "lbout as lasting as the personal ones In which money plays a part. It will be difllcult to convince England that lmerica is a friend, and God knows _we need her friendship, for the Eng- `iish~speaking peoples united could_be counted upon to preserve the peace The purpose of t ese res ng. country, but of the neutrality of the Individuals, asking us to tie our con- sc ‘ti that an honest man can re- ron that America is the friend “sh_Bp,,aklng peoples. will a eas iidencc. con l ho still love the bonds between Eli!! W" _ hal mem WL., Dominion and the Mother Country after the war was oV0i'~ In Order i°| determine rates, Sir Henry suggested_ that all iriter-imperial Board be sct_ up which would ilx_ ocean frelght_ rates so that undue advantages may not be taken of shortage of tonnage.! He believed that no dliliculty would_ be experienced in this direction li' a_ maximum rate were set up in a mai-l~ t ndard rates on railroads to maintain their _ships in the British- csnsdian service when perilwr ii1°Y_ could get better rates between sayl New York and' South America. _‘, __.‘T»__-E_..__ _ 'mm 6°" Hssrlfsrse: sfhl lntenie Alllee Mike Further De- mands Up_on_Grc0¢i°- A ' ln pales) ' ‘ _ I P I - ' =;‘ct.f;r-' (Via London) -'l‘_h_P_ qi-oak Govemment__today ise'u-- ed i' siltelnent to clear UD i1i|°“°‘l°"' the French military atlache on Fri- ner that s a _ __ are fixed by the Railway Commissl_on.| In sum, . Sir George Foster questioned the__,m|" presented a letter which it clalln_~ posslbility of inducing private owners *Q3 Boy-Ed' had written here HByi¥i_S- Providence, R. l., October 24-That Captain Boy-Ed, debarred GBHDBD naval attache of they WasllinSi~0ii _lmnbase‘y, despatched the U-53 and two other submarines here. to force a_ United States ruling on.thelr activlr ties, was claimed by the “Pl'0vi real?'_-_vllrel_:'_f_the'wsr began. One was, ' -_ "all ,011 ' li , dthat_ te mos dev c,_'1‘ rlnei`1er" es _ s_‘_,§q_h; a tc 'piii~'li“§‘__ nl: Teexsrmcrsoqanne visa _t-°l>'r__m=llli»l_,eolL=rti_lng__t__o:if§ H v, » ee., ~~ t _ --s refs- _ __ ,t, lie" i‘~'°i-”»»'f~'»'»f~i'i'=-"-'-*"~"» ‘::*'*f;f..:*=.‘.l.l~s*.I'~.".l.'W\"°'°-»'*`-- ~ ~' "1 .~.' - I tion tween' , "_ r ._", ‘ ' _ . 1,45., 'f_._ _.rm-l-el. ruse. lilo -f§,“7§'Q'.,:,.,|,__r¢l;| r mls: mol-pint. ,wmv action _ef mln affords on . i t iso;-.' lnisenv-_-=ladls‘°~ ‘dur _rr toll animations were med . lllu n' or iirrulsbrence between ` l_.< L' ',,Uli'Fllll‘ill\‘ii." `y8i|0'§Y» Themgfdgohliharines may' D! Wivllls' uillcien¢Y»' \il6.'tlf0`lil\Ieie`. (_, Geri ` " ' _‘everything tbli il ‘movin shortly from Athens an_d_‘ ir man army. _`elimi_rsl»ly__org_eni and wit »:_31|g°°'v'f-.eos _ _L_ manifold renal, rergetrts rue, __ __ .. _ _ " - _~ “Wil Alleuter despatch sent out fron\»_.Iliinerlt the one tiiitig needful: tht as i °:....."'~:-'.;.. -'°'°l=°"° ls.: “ ' H ‘Mall ”°"mi'“°* “.‘°‘~"‘-“"°. “fer 'sir i‘.:.°‘.,:'.`§"f:.."l§_».t"...l.£'.‘.£ °i.li'::'f.‘:'* "“f,wnl -lr your lneemrmlllicry ol-con era _ __ . ‘ _ ‘ ."" _ 1' ,"-»;=_. gm mlllons of ,:,_ w ¢||¢,‘:¢“¢he|-“_ per; of the not forget its ttls cruisers, widens? ' _ A , _ * Guan; nnwtwuntry, and deliver to the Enientvge qgtieel marpent wipe on leo( 1 illustrating a problem which must , _ _ . _ strange wireless. code messages sentf 0 lt Fil* __ . '_ lrigpfnctlons to l1cr,_i_,he Jonrilail’ de- " ` " "‘“ t. Don't forget been no pr-evlone intimetion that the ermy has carried it into e trerlell I 'v_t“l" ' ` lime lnnrer lone lull, thnseeneate mek ei! fe eemins em we _. A -_ A ' ' A H ' " f h A | li. -wi _' i r i ' _ v 1 _ - ~" ' 4 ~ 1 ~ ~' ~~‘ _ ',` , ~_ ' -___ _ _ - ` ' ‘ '° ”*"‘ el»n»n.¢,u»o. liaeruwlmuemeslo ,aeemaameume s ) , _ » _ _ > _- . " r 1 , , J. f _ - .. _- - rf, ’i»..rw »»_. ‘ . . .‘-|» » ~.,“.~».v, rs ,r...~l..r..r;.,.2 :.Jf.¢‘~,l. _ 4 0ll‘§i&0 Yr Y r V _ ,f ‘-._ _ ' I g __ - ~| _ _ _ . ~ _ _ _[___ _ _ ‘ ` _-..._ M,~.,, _ /__ _ _ ____,{, __ __ __ .. no _ __ _ _ ' _ _ - *Q s, _ _~ _ ~ n. JU -‘ a ” ' ` N .< ‘ f~f ~ _ flute _ __ __ _ ,._,.-,V _ l _ \ /‘ if - ' ‘ ' __ 5 ' ‘ u ~» _ .tl il The Cheque in § Never Ferl# _ _ _.5_______ l 1. -_ _ ‘ ,_ .i .‘ : ul ' i 5 ' - " - . z ` A Contrast: ' _ . _ -4 _ »~ _Far into the future, as long as » 1 c the i_li]_"ve, the monthly in ‘_ ' come of the Canada __ Lrfei will come to her door be faced by many women. "*°A l If"~`7 _ . l' 'Vi ` awtllow Aim rum immune; `No. r--not-_ moron ‘ would like to borrow a. few thonmud llollhn, tollepahibeckany timeslneueedodit.` * _ .rf " ~~ qw’ 1 ‘_ l Q _ .1 \,,- ,_ .' *Q- ‘<. "is, /' _-_ 'repent wrtlun,re_c_vel_.yeera~‘_ __f\ li" ' é I __ _ ».~, ~ ._=‘.~' 4.- *gli-HJ father is worried' over his business. everr,tl|et~amountl sg Egg I 3 it No. 4--Her huebandle most intimate e¢'ah\et,mai¢iligehadinvestment,il -f f -it the neponlillllty of advising her ' in order tolrelp you _in ¢|0il\`¢ this No. il-Hs lder thinks due should lllv@7h.:._ _-..___ _‘_ Ask _for ‘fl,’l’i‘l_f§f_e.ll\v¢ratory Form” t will She DOT” l 1 s r “_ l ». ,~ _ _ __ _ '_ Frei) ~ in words, consult an, old, med Company. with ' evidenceiaf etpsrleitced in life iuelrl' alice; ain|__l iv' ` "to ldere, I fe earl eelireyiy °Casell:aL .iz I’ _ - .vw _...@--..._-_<.,.~ r . r _ > . \.,_____ _ __ IA _ _t,_é__ r Y, i . && 'frat _ .__ l, i V' T nalioorridar 'roacm"l°o i ~ vi- .f W... 4, . _ ~' va ..r > . _ . W- K- .ii0GE_1i‘S»' » A ,~ .~ _ _ _ ~ “ » :° »l . - Prlncvliwenl-.lelsua. ` .- ._ ‘ " .°` ai ,‘ _5 ' lv' (.5 » cMAnl.o1"rs'rowN ;~ _-" .~ \ f ' `-_. ' e' *A lv _ \>"’;.: - y ,°‘_ »°. e’ _ -‘. 1 l ' I I ‘ ¢.'"‘ fs' "8 ’ ` \' l " ~ ~‘ , Il ' 0. _r _ _ _° _u , \` v _'I _rr ' . r . . . » Ps' . ..__ . 2-. 'a\_¢ 4 _ » L » r - ,» -~ -e.-~ '