- _ .-__-_:rHn__3211A§l_lL'0TrarowN _ooannrax __ _ 'MDI_2CEMBER 14, 1917- _-- Lt V _ ~ _ .. _ _._ _ ‘== ' _:__-_?_;_,‘ I-Flease G and Think 'Ov-er, xafdifiil T&~PER ,WORD EACH advertising in this col- 'ist _ accompany Order-; -ge twenty-tive cents. .0CKED.-The heavy est week have left the such a heavy condit- ,is been but little, traf- r several days road- 'he principle order ot -ly any produce has to last eight or ten general rush is ex- ns weather conditioiis forablet-vii. _ i»snsonats_ Hustls, Sumnleiside, ue from a visit to ttetown,-H. ` . fcDo`niild, il’/ibntagiic. 'on _inthe Hardware -iessrs. ll. -T. lior oerside.-H; r I -TAKING ON SUFPLJEB.-The S'tesmer;A, D. MacTter from the Great Leaps, -Capt. smith. ln.¢_hHrse'. WI# .|11 litlftpllliudsy, taking onsziviillea- The steeinerls coal laden and let; on Friday morning for the port- vf New York.-HL -Sci-toot. wonk.-'rue S-tanning of Middletonlschooi for the_mont|\ of November is ag follows:--Principals department. Grade- VIII-1, Blanche Roberts; 2, Mm-y Johnston; 3, Mable McCard1e`; £4, Ernest Smith. Grade V~II.-`-_1. Charles Johnston; 2, Vincent Murphy: 8,__Feiix Murphy; 4. Laura Orokea. _Grade vt.-1,E1mer wright; 2. Ellllifflf Gtimpbeil; 3. Albert McCar- <\le'; ,&._..Laurenc¢ Gaudet. Grade- V.- 1. Elmer viyoharts; 2. Callie Myers; 3. Mildred .-right; 4, _Wallace lirad» show. ,As‘sitant'@ Department, Grade IY,f1, -Hat '__Kehoe; 2, Wilfrid Mc- Cai-dle; 3,"fO¢é“hm°lne Campbell; 4, Em ma. Myers._`-Grade lil.-1. Margaret Wright; 2. Eletlut Kehoe; 3._ .lean Craig; 4. Sobinus Johnston. Grade il. `~`1,,Clare Myers; 2, Harold Mulligan; il. Wifmitred Wright; 4. John Ga_ud@l~ G.rade_vI,.-_-_1_ "E-ssie \Vright; 2,, Dor- othy ltvrtgut.-N. i T\,.. , l -_-_-_-f:_-‘-_-_-_-_-_-_ - . . - A - -_-_~ . _ _ _._ _ _ - - - - - - A A _ _ » ............ - - - -_- -~ A-f -_-,_-J - - -_- ~-_ - l?ll£i|?_AR_ t 5 iuxi wh "D¢d.u°ti-mf’ -lips l_ieaC,h¢d t ¥“*.‘!;,f=f hi*-."'1l.P'l. lftl¢'°=*f1‘iS»l _ i.. __ _.,_ \» _ , r. 12-On Sept. erived from a givcu in the _ called “Deduc- ' \Vnr," which -ed by Lieute- ‘in F‘rcytng-l.or- rtor-innstcr go- n l1‘nlkt=nlu\yu _:al stall". Af- lcruiun censor-| is now `rc:\t:h- nrkal_ily inter- liiiscrvt-ti, (icu- as u "motif-r~x ~_n nii_liturists_ .hairy history. ss, and he is l’au-G-crnian, \, rcpreseiii-'. have every kfui i`or his nination_ at tic-rnian mi- st plans. :hnical, and ly profes- sian militar-I 9 i gument cui- led "Still thows how .in soldiers mciflsm or to thc tur- military V _ . rible murder oi' peoples point` inevi- tably to the necessity of disarmnmcnt to pave the way to permanent peace? The reply to that is that nobody can undertake to guarantee it long period ot' peace, and that n lasting peace is atiurantaed only by strong armament. . . Moreo,ver,_.world power is incon- t-civubic witllout striving for cxpros- slou of powcr in the world, und con- scqu:-utly for scnpowcr. iilut thnt in- volves tho constant oxistcnco of :\ large number ot' points. of friction. ilciicci nrlscs thc `i\ccc.ssity for odo- quutc arnxanimits on land and on sou." it will bc obstirvt-‘tl that thc- tloputy chief of the German general stall' in- sists upon a. continuing German thirst for -sea-power. in another passagc he says: i “Tho world-war affords incontrover- tiblo proot' that ticrmuny must for all. time to come maintain her claim to sc-.1-power. We need not at present discuss by what moans this aim is to bt' at-iiicved." _ _ i Power of thc German Sword. 3 i-‘rcytag goes on to declare emplmti-, cally thatpthe reason why Gernmnyi enjoyed pence for so long before thc present war was not thc strength oi' the movements for "fr-aternizntion of the peoples” and many “fine speech- es." but solely "the power of the Gt-.‘- 'I‘0Yi-HS ill'-:man sword. which could not display !l011l`lY iid' its true strength uutlivthe war broke ll/211'. Hilti i out." .Fra-ytag expects that agrfo- I 8€0i_b€ eX~_ mans oncc i`or all of “confused cosmo- - 'H15 they politan scntimentalisni." WS. Gcr-I There is a little special abuse for 'GIY U0- the United States: _ 'ff i>l‘0>i “The fact that precisely the presi- '\liitnry|ticnt ot the United States of North America has advocated the brother 10 Iilll'- .hood of thc people surely ought to 0 f1D1ll`_i_t`righteu us. Ainerica's behavior in 0|’ gil!‘i`l'fthe war has shown that paciflsm, :is YYOODS- represented in America, is only n bu- , r of \thoso _at war has siness paciilsm. and so at bottom no- thing elsc than crass materialism. -'0 I0 iliili i1¢QThis truth is not alt:-red by tho fact cursory tralnj that it is wrapped in it hazy garment ~ "S0 Wh0 “F0 ot' ids-.ilism and so seeks to hide its to in the course _ed out to be lit real meaning from the innocczit. Nor is the truth altered by the zippeal to ~Vi\@I1.Wl1F ll¥‘ell\¢S,democratic tendencies, for precisely _t a genqous source .ily so can we arrive ,.c’s army. in which gonc through thc school .ng army." ' _iuand the German Sword. . _,rag-says thc-re can be no re- _rr ..-in of thc two years'-for some this war is showing that tho to-'wlio at present hold power in the fzrcnt demo- cracics have risked in irresponsible fashion thc future of tht- peoples en~_ trusted to their leadership." | Moro intt-resting are l<"rcytag's oh- servations ot' the peculiarly economic' character ol' the war. Ho lays stress upon the fact thu thc Germans were so absorbed in their own warsr oi` . ms three years'-service. lie ut-_1S64, _1866. and iS70 they imve_ never lp tnchcs value to the various schenics V Pl ,our .mr:k. .o mon -ir stom- 'in your kcpt handy apst-t stoniaf-li _ight_ it`s thr- . most hnrmlcss .n the world. ,I sport to military account. but any “lt nnty hc nskctl what is the uso of nil this. Will not *hc gencral cv- linustion of Europe aftcr the world- conflngralion of n t‘ct'tuint._v put tho danger of a now war, to begin with. in learned what thcre was to learn from fhr training boys and for turning 'tho American War of Secesslon. Hence their disappoigitnicnts about substitute for “rcai schooling in sol- tho, blockade when th .ir original plan rlicring." lin proceeds: Ito crush l-‘rance had failcd. I Hut in n passage which is worth a good many 'other pages of the bool: put tuizctiiert i-‘roytag observes that Gorinnny‘5 cnemics -iulledio takc full advantage _of the -possibilities ni’ tim- background. and docs not. this tcr~| the blotzkado. He says: ‘rx ASI intend clearing out 'my' é»3`ti14é`§'toéi2` bfféiiocrnttns, _s'rAT1oNi;Ry_ ‘ XMAS GooDs_, CARDS AND BEOQKLETS, DECORAfI*IQ_us_, _FANCY BAS. KETS `(_]anaReSe), _LADIES’ _AND GENTS’ LEATHER P~i.iRSES,_v `LAlE_~IES’ HA_NDBAGS, ‘TQIMLET CASES, ’&c.`, &c., it will Lbe t-o,your intérestfto ca-il and look th-ings over for yourself. 7 l _' m _ The assortment of XMAS C'X'L-`END_A‘RS, CA'R'DS AND BOOKLETS is the. bgeeset ggsghigdigg tI1:lI(;11i(dvl;I§;ts,. and Ladies’ and Gents’ Leathei~'Pt\rses,Wii1 \vest in the city. ' ` ' Try '.1 tive pound lot of our TEA at the right pr'ice.‘_ Can guarant'ee every. r pound we sell. Don’t wait till theiast day to buy‘your“Xmas Presents. (_]ome now and make your selections, you will_have more time, and we can give you bettttr attention than it hen the rush is on _ Victoria--Row--Opposite Post 'Office ` Opcn t~\"'¢*\ii|1g.';s i`i'o|n now till (‘-l\l'isi'|nAas - *__ _ _*_- F-ia ~ nom- enemies only gradually U0-l" 'ved thc truc situation Thi' OPM' l- NIGHTS AND LADIES filtions which thcv had hegtin t=xtl‘i\>Cl‘i *There has bcen u good deal of dis- . . _ I _ _ _ , ui b- little ih;. full at van tzilggntlii' tlhe ewoild economic situation. which was fuvornhlc to them and un- cussion lately over the question of knighthood -especially in (lunnda - mvorame In M. they did so only when 'and thc “sale oi' honors" has. very ~ , they met with un.-Expected i10W9l"i °f rightly, como in for severe criticism. resistance in the Central Powers." nom. Omen of knighthood um; spirit of the Armies _ 7 There- arc some interesting reieien- ces to the spirit of thc various ar- mies. The Austrians are only Weil' then with a patronage vcrging Oli “Oll- t@mpt_ Frcytag once says outright that “thc Germans were on several occasions threatened with thc Austro- lflungarian army -being defeated utter- ly by the t`ur superior Russians." As regards the Germans, Frcytag says that the want oi’ otlicers tnude it- self felt in an extraordinar way after the original heavy losses in the au- tumn ot 1914, and otherwisc brave men occasionally failed when their leaders were taken away by enemy bullets," He declares that the Ger- man army has at traditional contempt for danger surb as belongs to _,no other “pcoplc's army," but in this, as in all other matters, lic- insists upon the lncstinmble value ot' disciplinc and training, such as can he obtained only undcr 3 system of avowed and tleterinined miiitnrism. ' _ Throughout the lesson which Frey- tag is most concerned to teach, is that the new experience docs not dis- place but must he grafted on to old knowledge; He repeatedly declares that the importance ot' outtlunklug strategy has not 'l~‘ ziffected _by the losses of the war; what Germany must try to do is to obtain by "policy" n better starting point. for her future wars. ’I`hc following passage may he tnkc-n as F‘rcytag`s rcnl “deduction t'rom the world war." "If, as we hope. policy succeeds in future in preventing tht-. rg(-_u|~,-¢,n'ce oi' such at menacing situation. or, at any rate in producing the effect that wc shall have greater freedom for .vio- lent and dcclsivo blows in one dime. tion. bon the war will take a differ- ent shape and will be more like lor- iucr wars. Our business, therefore, is to maintain thc fundamental ideas or war as tile-.v llvad in thc Gorman army up to thc ycnr 1914, to soak th:.~m in tho experiences- of tim pro, sont. wnr,\und to make the fullest technical use of these expcriottcos- but tu tio all this without giving an nntircly new direction to our thinking tioncti once or'twice in the book. and the nnéionr says the London Mmw: they iight? lt. is n tendency°to taboo "\0|lf-giver." - while -Lord means., nobility embody so great it tradition that \ve desire to see them not abol- ished, but redeemed, so that once again they might shine in the eyes of ing Post. Our ideals of knighthootl stretch back to the days oi’,chi\'n1ry-to the days of the round table, when King Artbur's knights \veut -out in_searcli of the Holy Grail; when the knights ot' thc Crusaders fought in the lloly \Vat‘s; to the tlinos of tournaments and tleetit-i ot’ valor; ot` which we are still justly proud. Yet-are the lads in khaki less brave, less noble., less true __knlghts than those steel-clad warriors of long ago? They uiay not wear their ludy's glove in their hul- nicts, ,but they carry her memory t`nitht'nlly in their hearts; the vision they have before _them may: not be the vision of the lloly Grail, hut can we say it is less noble? Are they not fighting for right and ideals-vjust as the so-called honors of our modern* day-thc majority would not. wish to accept it-but nevertheless 'they are as truly knights as any that snt at that mund table centuries ago. But what of the "ladies" for whom the title "ludy." using instead' "wo- man," in the prcsont den1or:ratic,rln.vs. At a recent meeting in this city .a speaker remarked: ‘.‘l will not say, ladies and gentlemen; l address you as men anti women," evidently intend- ing to convey' it compliment thereby. Did hc over take the trouble to find out the moaning of either -title? Lady, correctly speaking. corresponds with Lorti-and means “bread-giver," or maintainer of laws. At the presenti more than that oi' “lady'."' Anti is not the woinan of today proving her right to that title? Not merely is she ii "l08l`~Klver" to her housdhold, not only ‘“brendfgivcr" to hcr children. but, in the far broudcr scnsc oi' initi- istering to tho wants ot' the multitude without her gates, ot’ i'eed'lng thc hutr gry, “in the ordering, the t-oiui'm't- ing. and in the beautiful adornmcnt of the State.” THE FORTRESS OF HAM. it was in the old fortress at i-iam that l<‘rancc's lust Emperor was a pris- oner i`or many years. After Napole- onk, downfall at \Vaterioo it Bonaparte was as popular with thesiicceeding Freiicli kings ns .liin the Penninu with banks presidents. So Louis Napoleon lloiiiparte, heir to the l.ittic Corpor- ul's dynasty, was first banished and then shut up ut lium. lie cscaped from that place utter fixing up a dum- my in his bed to -t'ool the attendants and putting on the clothes of a cal-pen tor, he walked through the’ prison gates with a piece of timber on his shoulder, went to Paris. was elected president, made himself emperor, and was snnifed out finally at Sedan. it was at Ham _'from which the routed Germans fled recently _and whose fatb- ers were hispwu couquerorg that Na- poleon ill. found himself another inau of destiny. And for s couple ni' dccari- es it seemed as if he wore. The ordinary white painted stool or the bathroom can be nnidc ' umrc attructive and camfortuble by ilttinil with a cover of Turkish tow<=iins_ Cut a circle to ii; the tap ol' the SUJOI and sew a stralghtpiece about ilv»- inches deep around 'thc edg<_ Bind the seam on the' right side with whim tape, and around the bottom or tho valance- crochet_ n elnblo sht-li cdiie with rather heavy mercerized»crocht't cotton, eitiierpink or blue. ,Bath tow- els made to match these art lnvtfly- Buy the wide Turkish toweiing by the yard,.cu; to any length dcslrctl. Mid crochet the shell on each atlno in U10 sumo color. Two hath towels and two ytoqllcovers, ith ,_ initials in th-~ sumo color. 'iywo bath t0w‘elsllli\lMM on strategy and goggles" _ time is there a title we could covetsnme color done in cr06s~8ill<‘h- "l“V‘1 a useful and dainty gift. 1 l 1 , » il _ BR-INGING FATHER t _ ____ ’ \ 15/\C_l< TQ r~1;5_ (OQLD .HAVE -ini; sooo To -L VEQY- Few -worsen i' ~ 45 WHCQE CAN You 1;/OULD STAND Tt.\\¢5 HQUR AND M QR ,\'V'|C`t*\.`l' I DO` WHO WHEN i Ti-uNt< \< Mosman ETC - Ei‘r_ -\ V ‘SAY--with ,V ` 'tyco i '(f‘rA|_».? ' c-4 -_ -,_i‘--_ Sven i A M' ' .» ,._ asv", -¢ A \~"' . ,__ \._ ..,,_ _ mn ¢ if _. ‘ ,|.~ _ _ ..|_.i-. iygivm-“»l=n,.,-. .. .-ni. 1- 5 p M ,mm i if i _ f,i{#»¢\U*\*\i l' -.Tl t-‘aa nina# ,, » .1 Bxewou me f Mkééifl ¢\-»- ,_,_..-_......,.av' _ ,I ,_ ; » ~~~.~ .‘,.. _ _ _ .~ _,, _._ _` P _ ' "_ 5*: " _..- 3 L. ?".».»-3'|¢ggg_v§`»~;,_., _*_ ~ uf- _ ,-/gift--“' 1--L A -A - 1----¢ - --~ _ - A »t, ,. _,,_"_~_____-__-:“_Tv _»_"Y;_ ' _ t LI. V 4 if - . --» 1 ' ` 1-slut” _ ' 1-»~w~vq@--gf' ~~" ~ _--». 9. _ _ ,_----_y ~ _-_ » " "“"' ‘ ~ . '_ it ' . ° \ I 2" ‘ i - ` . ; V ’ii'iat..l V