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awake to their own welfare and have elty brought Hresairs (6 bear upon the Hon That T pedple Htde they are dalnt for with tion_of order ing sf g bands of Kurds, Tartars and illustrative ‘of the .lawless éxisting throughout the ntries writes - a staff corre- t of the Associated Press. sfi ot.h?@{'fi unfiéd %m franght with extreme dal ere are accol ing. force is inefficiency. many |tne members of the party were nei B for uzsg condition, and a lack fer robbed ,stripped of their clothies wledge of one’s self is the and turned adift to ma:fi the .best of b D ve . power on €] ta seme friendly city, or ev- “«n.,_..ahnuldbe edfieamgnufilqn ve in_self afd try d n 3”&, gxshd.pfienstoqzhercam- Become effective without the approval|things well instead 5 vmm because of the magic name_ of of the peoplé md it.was fly a ma- |ever. you start to do fie lnl n: Thle is erica. 1oruy it was | concéntration and because of it ?) n was the mind of Shamil * Bes, sed hu‘ o g % W ,my thing is well done which is under-|chieftain of the nomad band en- ching faith it oics taken. trenched. against the Armenians at 'y Chuseh St Tl hene 105} 2 ‘y. fi,t{';,“,_,?fho ‘”’ TE] We asé ail the tims p he village of Kulp, which saved the - fay V3 1 P % B 15 God, bit what-the world is suffer- |lesser members of the mission -from wewBEn of THE Aumkrn Fress, thefr eyes shuf that °" réceive it.|n."ror is man's faith in man, and in |the customary fate of captured card- overnment, It is pot good. for ‘us to. vanp THE SUGGAR OUTLOOK. | SNtiaT iher God o mioct he 1i hal béersaid for a otk time that | eause of the v;uflfd's agony tmy‘c-n after t anua ce of | be traced to the fact that men refuse ] ‘?b %"g&y' Tt o belleve in one anoltiers iniegrity has hl’éw:se be ut that this dlh:Emlutely refuse to trust one is nor necessary and could be prevent- od in o ther and in. self, :is-| ably not.yet,been seen by outsiders. cd by the contifiuation of the control |what will make the world = safer ~fof | They had come up from dusty Alen- exercised by ‘thé équalizatioh . board.}al] of -us. It has been trul said: | po by train acrusi the north Trat board pointed out tHe situation ‘aith does nothing alone! One’s | the shimmering Mesopats n Des- |cads would come to establish peacé mnmha %6 and only | faith in God must excite God's faith ert, until reaching Mardin, the mag- | he would saerifice the sheep of his recent!y the' tF 1 in him; and to demofistrate faith he nificent, stone city set upon a moun~ tribé_in a grand feast. of rejoicing, | o ¢ country was told that the st 05 Sometiing Destigs Siying tea- | tain. There the seven automobiles of | He gladly offered io let pass {he fear government was going to take over son repose .and faltering. in . his|the .party had been tfaken ofi the flat automobiles, a.nd took a note whi¢h he the sugar Aistibutioh th&t {t was 6] 1oks! True faith is dynamie, never cars Of, the Bagdad railway and-after |said he would. deliver when they, came. ke placed under the direction of the |, loss of power. tless ‘adventures with impassable| Affer a warm Jeave-taking. the aus departraent. of. justics swith: Attorney roa s, bridging the 'unbridged Eu-|tomobiles proceeded to higher gfound General Palmer the vum(bl The riffemay shoved aside by yl whén he saw ihe by the ,car, - tom was sw throng of {1 skin }ur .Lns, 1 mantled by slwr grmed with lon; curio x.gwb car\'é SW( ‘*“i the backgrot ik Gtoe bi%"ir women ull luua l.t‘{ou sil General H: lett - hig ifachine and walked uiex to the chjeftain; - an old mam of rawny . beard : proudly gave his namie is E@ When he learned the party wu cdm posed of Amnagu he tol riven toge! igk wl ¢ Is iabmeu( for . the trolley- e e L i cated and apnmved the ordinancé and presented to < 'the !nifl sahn-da M ming Beeemhué im ‘ WiTH & FULL LiNE OF MEATS AND VEGETM UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF W J. SHUGRUE: Yutm PATRONAGE is EARNESTLY QW ksLs of !ql:m-rel rl Shamil Beg came to the knowledge of the mission members after this fashion. For three weeks they had been traveling from Constantinople, intent on really seeing the lands of The triune faith of man in |Asia Minor as these lands have prob- ~!l| &“'E W"Im AL pgtte of publicatien of 4«41.( desvaten- e bereln are alse m of having been his band -from :their .mountain homes by the Armenians, saying that now they knew not fwhat to do; that widi- ter was coming on and he feared they would starve. He had .appealed in |vain he said, to the British and the trip of | Ti#is, and if he. thought the Ameri- Eyerybody wants more mongy 4nd Resecd Dhratéd and the Tigris, climbing and |and a wider valley, when the Flisten- |General Harbord and ascertain for|ts ride.fo. ths ot P‘?fiu : $otheed tood. Adublnlstigne, .. SgeE S ;’;”sie‘:;‘;"i£ descending the Taurds ranse of|ing snows of Arara came suddenix in |themsslves. then that the party had |Harboid, - Hlng i Be . v v a 1] Urpo: camy JENKING’ Ry.aAez, was: expected”to, alivéhce &' few centss dollar will buy, and if some of the | Tountains, which gradually = climblfull sight. The party had come on @|come for the purposes o tiivesticating | usver came. . ... ... thrice their height to the plateaus of | Sabbath, the first day. of the week, Ararat, the party crossed, the Turkish |near the place of fabled flood whexe trontier nto Russian Asia Minor, or!the human race liad heen preserved by Armenia as is now called part of the |Noah’s Ark landing until the waters country. cleared. A few miles out of Kagizman, in st the siddened ruins of Kulp {lie almost dry bed of the Araxes,!Were reached. As the party Swung Gengra]l Harbord’s car .avas Stopped | Lhrough the picturesue spot, a shork by a humble patriarch offering melons | hajt was made to speak. to a startled carried by his son and the latter’s throngjng w strangely beautiful fittle girl, dres their rifiés ahout the machines, yhilé in a bundle of rags. Then the mi hurvdreds of their women ¢ . children sion’s forward machines met old man on horseback, . who _talked yolubly, possibly to disguise his spy character. Following the .Tonely vailey, while “Billy” Poland of the commission for Belgian relief discourssl S miner- | al richness, next ‘the mission rol‘ed‘ around a gigantic bend of the rond the political difficilties in. Armenia nig other neighboring countries. leariwhile Shamil Beg took the pnsoners to .the center of hig eamp, had spread rugs'for them to Sit upon, a dire 1t, and a sheep. killed in their honor. Thén he entertained them Withs toriésoft hefileofiof,Ca ¥ them with ‘stories of the life of his h | band, of the troubles growing out of the, war, and declared the only way to bring peace to Asia. . Mindr _was through,a strong, foreign hand. , More than -this, -he promised. protection, for the party and volunteered to rescue the other machines from the Kurds. “We are all thlev we ust be to live,” he said, witzsa sorrowful, smile. “And remember this, neither we nor the Armenians are fit for.self~givern- ment, and. we,won’t be, for many long By the announcément 10, the_effect j]uu American Consulir Agent V., 0. enkins has been releaséd from the fuil fn Puebla it is apparent that the st note from this country had its #flect and that it may have furnished them with information which hasten- éd actlon, but at ahy rdte régardless 8f the fact that it was previously elaimeq no action could be-taken a Way was found to do as this country demanded. It ig a demonstration that Mexico was insincere in its reply to the first note from this country, But along. with the = préssure brought to bear by the note it is.be- Tleved that né little inflence. wa erted by the developments and dis- profiteers should have their. way a 1920 dollar would - be , in. comparison with the 1913 dollar worth about ten cénts; or ten dollars would purchase as much-as one .dellar used.te. If the farmers should . demand « six-hour day and one dollar an hour wages we should have the pleasure of payihg one dollar a loaf for bread. Our hard handeq sons of téil stand between us and the hatdest times we hdve, éver kpown.. We can help by making old{ things last longer and buying less. We have reached an era whi gh priced | goods are of a poor: gualit; and patience will -restore order. How long do you suppose man roamed the, earth beforc-he thought of pedigree. There is little doubt, he ha begun to bank upon his ancestors. be= a pound but not to 1ump to unrea< sonable fisures. 3 3 < Now this has aill been knonked in the head by the statement of .the at- torney . general to the effect that his department .is. not . going to. supervise PR n of sngdr that the Loard of egualization will_dissolve thé eng of this month and tHat his activ- ity in connection’ with sugdr will be confined * o the - pmsscu( Bn of the profiteers. ., In view of an the claims that have been made relative to the - bringing down ofthe ‘cost of living ‘it would appeay: thit there Wad ay good an op- portunity to- make s6me heddwity re- garding, ()ug gommodity s any other. SOt 5 ik WAk ously. They toid i Dhilel ,story o having no bread, of being hunted by the Armenians. of having had their homes destroyed 4nd of , hdying -de- stroyed the Armenjan village of Kaip | Shells SEIl llr‘flhg. (Thé Assbeiated Press,) Redidents of the de‘astal&i Hls(“'u of France,are stil fleeh? ts of shqll Flirabnel. he nuq ace ig sed y th ng swam res w! F the sf?qus thgl fie ‘3 he hauled away hnd zxp 3 safe. blace, i Major H. O, Greene,!of. o a_thrilling ride.and narrowiy 6scap ed g hail of shrapnel on his.. ,%ny, rom St. Quentin to Laon as a re; of .these fires.,. A French working in; a fieid, nu.r Houmnv(llg was gasned nd eonandershle damage .trip,, 20 es . beyond,. its Gooree “ane ment, with many differences of opjn-|he gave the signal for the party to i co 1e. certainly because they havg hag been done. S ssions a age was invented. If | to° behold the river bottom covered g lizhts announced its arrival, | vears. Beésides, ‘we hate each other cus sl;n in the Unfted Statés senate, |1t Would appear: to be timo to prevent T e e e saiod | with cattle bnil tents of some nomad|1h & Hibkdeat tho . valey resounded | 0o much to rule together.” Tn the vast, desolate.fields, th the deémand for thé severing of re. | the unteasonibie increase in price ra* sword it was he would-have been will- | tribe, _Then Major H. W. Clark, of|with rifie shot, cries in the darkness| Short,-lark-eyéd, determined, et ands of unexploded shells- have been Itions with Mexico . and the with-|tbes thaf trying to curb it by prose- | BV perhaps, to have forgotten, it. Of | Boston, declared he heard shots com- | from hundreds of. men. and dozens|polite, Shamil Beg sat through the |[i0ked up by German prisoners . drawal of recognltion. Mexfeo of|Culiéng dfter it- Was ulrendy taken | 1% DRSS I e o ished an- | ing from the mountain side to the|of fierce figures loaped dbout the ma-|nisht, guarding ‘the party against his | i0ush. “:;" are details. hauling course heard of them and it wag fol- |Place and the eonswmer made t0 PAY | casfry is not. to bo-snaeged at; but i | tiht: At the same time General Har- | chines as it stopped. Hussien Bey; be- 1 owh robbefs. The party: by the fire ’-"fiy an e}'&" ling. . them h;('!w'e lowing these, including the chafges|Whatever is demanded. We are worthy of them we demon- |board’s car was seen to stop, and the|ing the. only one who spoke Turkish, n up when the lights of ;angfl e(ve{% ay; "M’eh“: i an. againgl the Wiplomatic and consuler| Remoyal Of conirob simily means|strate that blood tells; but Worthy an I e e e e s wehiare DatUsAel representatives of Mexico this | that there- il Lie all the sugar that fcestors only reflect upon unowfthy } . n _ | courageously . towards the tribesmen | sight. The men of these machinhes bish by e, o fonall cou that J L 1l t6d but at fancy prices and High | scions the burning Jight.of contempt. | |[FTTERS TO THE EDITOR | Vith his rizht - hand ofi, lis heart, | had a terrible story o tell. They had eing. burned, docasiona cet I ey that_denking JWiks “given ik 'a gl AL g gd Inflated by their greatness we make[ shouting “Peace; we are friends” just missed death. Before coming to|Ure .to patehes of dry weeds ihe iberty. p_u es (do. not~eontribute to Iowere: more prominent our. own nothingness. Tending to the Jeb at Hand. Soon came up a short, active Tufk,|the friendly Kurds, th had, been |dccidental bursts are numerous, Roads The, felease of Jenkins Wil relleve living costs. “Just How: much we can | TIO8¢ PIOF only exist because Of OUF { Mr. Editor: A man {hat can clean g |2fterward know as Riza, - whi p In|suddenly attacked from all sidé passing 1#8095 whete - shells. are, be- Somewhat the tense ituntion but it is| expect prosecution, of thé | SErry Cye “Lack of mierit on our part | lamp, without breaking the chimney |Dond: driving back his felléws lash-|rifie fire. = Captain Loring's machine ;;15 SHS 5%y §,"“{d°mb:""a‘ iy, T trom to be fealized that. slhce that cise do- | Profites what has | pB% G i Shame. {ean certainly do a better joh than|iNE them mercilessly with . a ghort | had run for Lotjnz | the- aeciden asts that the dahger veloped fthere hus been an increase | been-done in this direction in the past. | ol rld just | President Wilson did -when he made | WIip; next an old crippled chieftain, | recelving a - th the st . of Americans . killed i | T el ;“"3’ P e trowd i | BiS, mighis. plea for America to elect | Alexander by mame, and a quieter|michines béfiind had been S?pped by W Mexiéh dnd fhefe have been made| LAW OR CAWLESSNESS. ‘”"’ e T tho tide. Tt is purpose | democratic congress. A man who | £ lt';’l({'-w:““l‘:"‘:}'lBih “ued‘:seloned lmin boulldegs:cm? tl(:)eurga alnldtzlé | charges acainst that eouhtry which | The: dilling ‘of ‘o federal Sratid jufy | (hat phts pép fwto Jite. oo ‘many SRIOT B 100 of coal WIthAHt | )" iiath s the tactrd. pley: Mon. | machibes RAR. o 1t it be so that nipe-tenths of fhe eannot - | in 1, sessioll for the, pirpose of | people, fatier thenisclves - they are | SOTUING hall OF 1 b coralily Ao | oy futard, formerly with General| ~When. the chief of ‘the tribs had Tale tecdify 1‘3‘? ggresd fl“fl“ the Hon todny docs ndt. hiife ertirdly Hh. | inv ng ' (b6 ‘conditions. ju. (ke |good when they should e conscigus | fiote SRR IS SnUEe AMCFICAt OUL | petain in France, was being held un- | fully . pefsuaded himself that the au- "e“‘hr'hefi;{oé( W?‘s em“’“‘_'! zed gn Jenkins, If ft did it would e | v, willi ulir,_referefice | that they should be good for So President Wilson surely did find the|til the American general would return|tomobilés were American and not part | HUc ot ¢ course, - chara £ ! b ¥ L i by diversity of view, émphasis af yt greatly Sa sl o thin What s (hé use of becoming| . SRR Fe 2 and. vouch for it as American. The|of .an-.Armenian attacking .party,. he b freat b the dction ! ion of the Leverfuel cantrol | ongcioys of the pewer of Chyfst if (190 was a big one when he ran up |5 i 00 0 e cll finy party were | restorsd their beioagings and et ther | terance and keennest.of;persunal ré: !'-xi:ln has taken. cven thoui § et una the Sherman anti trust Jaw is ;“e e hot believer in it 48 & dmme eun oé £oonnei o emansi o] e Tnrormad thol Hicy o e SRR e g Al ere | fection. doubt. alf. wiil o & i reed to it. But there 2 | - | Lloyd George sort in Europe. Secre- X = = S "¢las they sign—New Haven Jou: The charg, ve ! the tederal .u-hbrnies de. batrong i whatever e cssays. fo do. e e r:_ Drécarious milltary mtuation, Gt the| <™~ problet of getting away from| Theé Fall mver strile has bésn lbout the r he to “find ‘out.whether this is The troublc many people. have int this o o i - St : Y d made this necessary, though i 1 hot easy. Shamil Beg said|tléd by i' port being: “If the American people 13 ¥ jefore ti S sovernment of .law.or of a group of | World. is due to their hali-heartedness,| e £ the: T He ipected to be a subterfuge {0 iy must spend the night or glse bemE wpnng to ace €nd the cour the evidence micns" & : fo théjr negative mobds which are | Understood this treaty they Would ¢ | got” yoscession of the peison of Gene- | obed of thelr rifies by s own|1% 15 per oent. . . " YA bt of 4 2 pis s tumbling blocks in their way. Peo- |against. 1 ral Harbotd. | unionitroliable men zlong the road |t to Work to " which thes sed. Upon these |’ Cortaty of the ‘miné 164des have [oF tmosphere of doub: invite| Those are his alleged words and | . i i 2 With the, coal ) :}lnrg;e extent ,will, depend ihe | on the chnruo of 10]:1:-”’013‘?0“:;} Prtiar sl gt BN makes o, | have never been gontradicted, . Lioya| After much wrafikling and argu-|after leaving the camp. But at dawn Vith - ¢l fitude of the country toward iex- | 5. impossi Wake up! And get} lion, it was agreed that Chiefs Alex-|proceed. The, .automobiles sm.rted. Deople by their throdts on acco; ico. up and get somewhere! fo get rid of the much talked of four- | 2nder and Rizo would i- ir with the | Shamil Beg riding in the lead to guar- | the n}ture of their produet.—] "GETTING COAL. Oiir_entifé® livés are madé Ub of Ltocn points, but they dia the job all |22tomobile to the campink ylace of antee safe passage. He had planned | town Press. good and bad habits, and the g00d |right. The first of the great (?) four- Just ui the vresent time the coun- | Labits preponderate. = In ‘habits of Lhodglt and action man is a busy The gcandition, of the world hows that In habits of. thought very from being,wise, and cen points was That all busine should be open and free to the people | ‘back of the commissions @nd this w: gotten/rid of fi The other- thirteen | followea in their order. The attempt ¥y fs confronted with a_serious sit- | ductc 2ation in the failure fo secure enough | % s0al for peonls to keep warm. to keep Industries #oing @nd to keep the rail- | roads in WHITE STAR C‘LOTHING HOUSE €0, opération. Tt is a situ in. habits of action 'M)Ih*‘cm‘e a vi-lto dictate to the world to assuine all | i ! n_oper I3 o si y & P 3 having much | ;ower and authority fooled Europe for | that By developed from let both” of aching about the - lessons- of the |y time but fiow to use the words of 3t the coal miners. n' the 1mew |year, but no unity of thought eor, acs Z trator dffer cons consumer | tion. This has taught' nothing | “yta)y hates’us, Frince distrusts us, Lot & < g i & 8 he conditions and the hat it way | that évery ich. dslk(:ns the Japan bluffs 4s and Englind uses u. 1 7_1 - o) that the miners should i the” operators dre|bages of history should mnot lguve that are unans fance of 14 per cemt with ihe miners through any |tausnt, 1 are sure, but its |, be I habits of selfighness and speculation TS ke fo tomé afe 4 Euilty . | lessons ma casily forgotten. Our n_lors witho ‘!‘nln_' thro RO\ e . are so strong that we march genera+ the public. For once théreforé ivell thdt the wnou,m" fier generation over fhe. precic nd fings “m have: dbeurd Hat the public [ Tie "eafefully inve | bice, instead of straight up the Moun- THe resulf j tain of Truth. ifect as the of that ting of a knat not y investigdtion ) and legal rights .to happiness are as defensible as our rights to gloom -or misery. Happiness is simply a matter of thought and feeling, as is also miis- indicates that no time is to be 108t in | ery. No one can be happy who thinks Fetting. to the:bottom of the maifer |he is not, never mind-how great his and in the méantime it i fo be hofied»gflssraslor:s,dhhow \Inrigd his talents aor ow devoted his friends. . Happiness is at either it will hive the effect of *}z i ot coal mined or clse some | ICAVEAIY, and is the fruit of Christiike way can be devised for breaking. the Present Folkup, The world will never have recogmud administrator or the government can-|that a conspiracy exists the penalty u6t make them work. We are thbr:‘-,n( the law.deserves to fall wherever fore Fetting only bétween 40 and 50! zuilt pér cenf, pfoduction In the soft coal regions. It is to be noted in this con- nection that some of the opeérators are prepared to give the miners a bigger increage than authorized in order to get eoal mined but as yet this appar- ent break among the operators has not 5 on le elephant. sent the miners back (o 1t ia |0uh[ be ‘welcomed by those-who .uv! Isn’t that a queer challenge? “Have| *“A (ozen thinking men” a0t what could be called’ satisfactory fnot involyed 'buf who. dre doing: their |you the right to happiness?” It seems | number left of th . 3 \ to either miners or operators but in jutmost . to. clear up. the deplorable to me that happiness is owrs by in-|up in Willimantic S5 3 i vy e = el agreeing to accept the terms the op- juation.. Tjie . counfry . has . suffered ?9" aees. and -hfltl“e ha\s a right| tarns are anything to go by. ’ Y 7 srators are powerless to mgke the|enough from _the . defiant__attitude| !0 all we cam create, ‘or others can * €. B.. MONTGOMERY. 7 Miners work and of course the fuel {manifested and if it can be shown |Produce for us. Our naturdh.moral| ppeeo, Dec. 4, 1919, 4 3 Sunday Morning Talk HIDDEN RICHES This inner life is a ity. 1its very mn:l‘nh the realpess of the realit of the richest heritages of the child of | God. The outer life is only the sc folding; it is only: the husk or shell. is' foumd. . The. special .session Ladies’ Suits taken place. Where the greatest progress seems to be made is in the taking over of the s0al mines by the ective slal?s\ and operating them with such help as| @n be obtained. With the people suffering and the demand for coal #teadily ingreasing it is certainly time for action. When Massachusetfy was onfronted with a serious situation anly a short time ago Governor «Cool- idge acted promptly and effectively and in taking over the mines of Kan- s Governor Allen has likewise acted or the public good. One got respect for law and order and the other is get- ing coal. His example promises to be followed by the governors of Mis- ’llri and Arkansas in which states Wany volunteers are ready to go to work and in their efforts {6 meet the nublic needs they should be given ev- *ry possible protection, DUCKING RESPONSIBILITY. How little effort is made by com- v'unlues to do their own thinking is well fllustrated, by the = situation which has developed in the ¢ity of To- \éae. That city has beeh having fts toubles with thé street railway in- ts for years. Trolley franchises l;nd service wété open sores and when lncrnaed cost of operations made it ssary to advance thé fares the tunnon Decame evén worse. _The result was thit at the sugges- r.hn of the mayor af ordinance was by the counell ordéting the ny to stop opérations. It was a atter that had to be referred to the ple and by rather 4 narrow margin voters of that city’approved the inance. Understanding that it had n ordered out of the city the cem- obeyed sooner than expected and wed its cars into Michigan, The EDITORIAL NOTES. Whether Jenkins says thumbs up or down, he will have a2 good deal to say about Mexice. ithout any coal to burn in some sections this promises to be z great coal saving winter, Jealous as they may be of each other, no city can be sane that tries to outdo the crime wave of another, Santa Claus is probably as much in- terested a8 anyone in studying out the problem of meeting the high:cost of everything. Constantine claims Greece gained nothing by siding with the allies. Well, Constantine asn’t ‘mich * to brag about for ng to’the kaiser, The man on the corner says: There are those whose friends find that some of the Stuff they drink these ‘days kicks farther than they expected. It is for each one’s interest that the advice of the postofice department about securely wrappiig' and tying Christmas packages should be follow- ed. NS e With Crown Prince Edward telling the people on his return that everyone ought to see the United States he looks like a booster for “See America first.” Toledo hag had sufficient experience as a trolleyless city. Though ousted less ‘than '3 month ago- arrangements have afready been made to get them back agam 5 - Even the raflrnad lenders are hav- 1t wag that everybody had to walk | ing a hard time keeping their men un- patronize the jitneys. ; One g jcern there has been p.ymg ” 2. day to transport its Help. and |‘n be no_surprise whefi t 1t declareg the city to be the laughmg of the country. Naturally jitney service er control. It's the constant. demand r more by the best paid that does wiost of the Harm, We don’t believe that the people will b§ dny.better-satisfied- with. 21 to has not|25 cent sugar even if they can get all tisfled and arrangements for the re- | they want, tdfn of the trelley service have been wgds. The people are annarentls, Gunt L i o to' be | earth. | deemed so necessary is not to be found Christ properly until it has discovered that man is not the cheapest thing on This martial spirit which is i in the conduct or preaching -of -the | Saviour, who demonstrated the power of truth was sufficient " to - produce heaven upon earth. Man has made it necessary not only to live in a state of apprehension and defense, but to withstang fhese shocks of ‘terrorism which have cost the world ten million human lives and indescribable agony and distress. So long as envy and dis- trust mark the conduct of the nations Jjust so long there will be wars of con- quest which are campaigns for the subjection of peoples and the theft of their territory and wealth. Abuse of | power anywhere is a crime. Theré is no doubt jabor is coming on to a new basis with this new era of the world which is. just dawning; | ang . those who employ labor should | recognize that old systems of employ- ment are dead,-because man is deter- mined . {o get upon a better footing, The bolsheviki are the prodiuct of the old-world system of keeping labor too close to starvation; and the ease with which they convert our own workers ig because. we have net fully recognize the rights of those who serve. Therg is no greater truth than this: Those who employ labor must respect it if they would win its respect, a thing which they cannot afford to ignore, 2, Labor should be shown capital is its | ¢ 1] s t i t i p 1 il friend, not. its oppresier; and then the | 50t conflicts fym which the world is now |== sufféring ill come to an end. One of man’s commonest. faults is verbosity. Man talked too much !on% befére a parrot disclosed the peril o it} . Long speeches, -long . editorials, lonz sermons, long prayers are npt the things handed down to posterity, or recorded in. heaven. Humility and simplicity are Christlan .graces; .and the little child. who prayed the Lord to “Bless all the world and me,” had all one could embrace in a peti- tion with ten thflusand ‘words. . The man who said: ‘“Holiness is.not ‘the way to Christ, but Christ is the way to Hholiness,” > preached a sermon.in iourtee‘n wc':;lds. Wl';en DanieIlOGOn- i ell said: “No g is politieally. right | ¥ !}ch is marg}n wrong,”. he sent a truth finging down the ages: - Brevity {1 lends force to theught and presetves it for future ages: . The greatest mistake the average man makes is in allowing himself to maka 0 many fool mistakas The inner life i due to vitiation of the inner life. withering, complished. through the forces of thci outer life; they begin within. erful inner life when body. erlergiés upon soul. of his nature and the insp: presence. will perish. Prayer, which God pours his golden, streams into the inner life. or woman is:when there only Yet the inner life goes gradually and secretly; of _it. ber that as long as God is in this inner no thief has ever yet been. able to break the lock of prayer and trust and divine wisdom. spares? the reai building; it| s the germ-hiding kernel. All moral and spiritual defeats are | The'i § blasting and uprooting . of | he soul's choice plants are never ac- AT LESS THAN COST PRICE . BIG VALUES IN ALL OUR LADIES FUR AND CLOTH COATS, ALSO IN COATEES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION How can we possess the rich, pow- mird andd oul afe constanitly exercising their | the vain, . perishing hings of .earth! We must take time o ‘cultivate the unseen fields of the ‘We must, consiantly stand face o face with God, drink in the strength ion of hi If we do not, the inner life meditation, ng—these are the channels through vitalizing The saddest moment in-life to man & a discovery | life is sone and shell is left. hat the the inner outer WHITE STAR CLOTHING HOUSE Co. 147-153 MAIN STREET no one has ever been robbed Let us ba watchful. Let us remem- ife there is security there, and that N'S DEPARTMENT Gaaé As‘scrtrneflt of “Why will ye waste on trifiing cares he life which. God's. ..compassion While in the variotis range of hought, the one thing needful is for- iy £ 3 %fi CE GUM SON &/CO. New York |