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, - 1 — r SOUTH s m * MZS 81 N 0 ML — Making Tomorrows — World - - - - - - CO— tfUm V Om NOT PEACE, BUT A SWORD r • Aden, Arable.—Steaming across the Mediterranean eea, the latest view of Europe was of the Italian peninsula and of the Island o f Sicily, where Mes sina, earthquake-overwhelmed, yet lies In ruins. Three Italian war vessels lay at anchor In the southernmost harbor. Coming to the coast of Africa at Port Said, Egypt, northern gateway to the Sues canal, the tremendous contribu tion to the prosperity of peace, which the Frenchman DeLesseps gave to the world, the first objects seen were a dosen battleships of a French Med iterranean fleet Thus runs the Euro pean continent to haval display and all the expenditure that It makes nec essary. Blocking the path of prog ress by water Is the battleship, barring the highway to prosperity upon land the army stands and even the air is heavy with the shadows of war bal loons driven to and fro above the earth. Europe is an armed camp and the seas around are roadsteads for the navies of many nations. Europe's War Fever. \Shall we perm it the Mediterranean sea to be a French lake?\ says an Italian cabinet minister, and he pre sents to the new cham b er of deputies a bill for 120,000,000 for naval con struction, four superdreadnaughts of 28,000 tons each. \W e must not be eclipsed by Germany,\ declares the French m inister of war, and promptly th e senators and deputies, amid fer vent appeals to national patriotism, enact into law a m easure providing for three years, instead of two years, of compulsory m ilitary service. / In Berlin a Zeppelin airship, built avow edly for military use, explodes, killing many persons. The war lofd gives a m ilitary funeral with high honors to the dead, sends another airship to float above the capital that all may see and orders others to be construct ed with all possible speed. The fever ish struggle between European nations for the largest and strongest army and navy shows itself in the articles low 45,000 in 1908, and are now 64.643. The British navy numbers 146,000, the German 73,171, the United States 67,- 907 and the French 63,596 men. Profits In Armament and Coal. The Krupp trials in Germany show to what lengths in bribery the great arm a m e n t firm at Essen, through Its directors and managers, went in order to obtain contracts from the German governm ent Indictments were found -against the Krupp officers and agents, largely in consequence of revelations in the reichstag, by Liebknecht, a So cial Democrat. They were charged with bribing members of the military and naval establishm ent between 1903 and 1913 and the disclosures at the trial proved their guilt. More than this, however, these disclosures gave publicity to the enormous profits de rived by the Krupp concern and showed where the fines from the tax payers' pockets w e n t The result Is to strengthen the cause of the advo cates of disarmament. Patriotism , which bluff old Doctor Johnson called the last refuge of scoundrels, is shown to be in naval expenditure argum ent the first resort of thieves. But w ar vessels m ust be operated and maintained as well as built—and here the pwner of coal mines—and, more recently, since oil is used for fuel, the owner of oil properties—is, in various ways and for his own per sonal ends, a zealous advocate of more and bigger ships. A dreadneyght burns 40 tons of best coal every b r a t. British landlords draw royalty of 30 cents a ton for coal mined. Every British dreadnaught in use, therefore, m eans 3200 a day to the owner of the coal royalty. The “Naval Holiday” Proposal. \Perhaps that is why,” said Keir Hardie, the British labor leader, “some of the peers and their friends in the house of commons are so keen to in crease the navy!\ Perhaps, also, it is one reason why the nobly eloquent appeal for a year's naval holiday of German Battleship In Harbor. fn the press, in the debates in parlia m ent, in the talk in the street, in the uniform s on the roadways, in the ships on the sea. And in order to give him self war-fever, which keeps him exhausted for other and better things, the European patient taxes himself to an alm o st incredible amount. He pays his money for an irritan t unto trouble th e while social progress lags and men and wom en, and children suffer for lack of opportunity to live. Upon the navy is today's largest ex- jw n d lture. Navy leagues are formed, som etim es as in Germany with impe rial patronage, in order to stimulate interest and create a public opinion which will support larger appropria tions. The press is used, whenever possible, to give publicity to argu m ents for more ships and to stir na tional pride by statem e n ts, often un true, as to what other nations are doing or intend to do. Staggering Coat of Navies. • T h e figures showing the extent to which the taxpayers of the nations of th e world perm it them selves to be fined for their navies are staggering. T h e naval expert of the London Daily Telegraph—all great journals of Eu rope have naval experts, sometimes only in the pay of the journal—fur nished the figures showing the total naval expenditure for 1904-6 and the total voted for 1913-14 by the princi pal nations of the world. They show these expenditures: 1904-5. 1913-14. G reat B ritain.$205,310,375 $235,108,180 U n ited States. 100,901,550 147.494,335 R u s s i a ............ 69,749,530 121,247,270 G e r m a n y ........ 60,520,000 115,195,920 F rance ............ 61,912,165 102,238,815 I t a l y ................ 25,000,000 60,789,230 Japan ............. A u stria- 10,510,740 49,304,060 H u n g ary ... 13,077,300 30,032,755 In the cages of Great Britain, the U n ited States, Russia. Germany, ^ F rance and Japan, the totals this year are the highest recorded. The figures for the personnel are also the highest on the list, with the exception of those j of Russia, which, after being about i 70.000 In 1904 and ISOS, dropped be- ■ ■ ■ u H V W inston Churchill, G reat Britain's first lord of the adm iralty, an office corresponding to that of secretary of the navy held in President W ilson’s cabinet by the distinguished American journalist, Josephus Daniels, fell, in many high European quarters, on deaf ears. Mr. Churchill's words are worth while quoting again and again, be cause, however apparently ineffective they are for the moment, they mark the beginning of a revolt among statesm en against the enormous ex penditures for navy and army that is growing to large proportions all over Europe, however concealed or belittled by the so-called \patriotic” or \jingo\ press. \The proposal I put forward in the nam e of the British government,” said Mr. Churchill, “for a naval holiday is quite simple. Next year—apart from the Canadian ships or their equivalent, apart from anything that may be re quired by any development in the M editerranean—we shall lay down four great ships to Germany’s two. Now we say to Germany: ‘If you will put off beginning to build your two ships for 12 months, we will put off in absolute good faith the building of our four ships for exactly the same period.’ ” That would mean a com plete holiday for one year as far as big ships for Great Britain and Ger many were concerned. He recognized it would not be possible for either Germany or Great Britain to do this, unless other great powers agreed to do likewise. “If such arrangem ents were reached, it could only be by agreem ent contingent upon the result of negotiations with other great pow ers. But supposing Great Britain and Germany took the lead, do you not think there would be a good prospect of success? At the end of the year you would have all these great coun tries that would agree to such a pro posal just as great and just as sound , as if they built all ships as at pres ent designed. Scores of millions would be rescued for the progress of mankind.\ j Mf- C h u r c h i l l s a i d he was q u i t e im p e r v i o u s to th e o b j e c t i o n s t h a t w o u l d be raised by the great armament firms of England and other countries. \They most be the servants,” he said, \and not the masters. Some people will try to involve by suggestion the naval expenditure in a cloud of suspicion. Let them mock. I am convinced that a reduction of naval expenditure is necessary for the welfare of civiliza tion. It la a question that does not only affect governments and diplomats but concerns parliaments and the peo ple. We must not be discouraged by a want of success. The time will come when the present expenditure and competition in naval armaments will be a thing of the past and when the great naval powers will look back upon It with feelings of regret” The significance of these words in the making of a different world tomorrow comes from the fact that they are the carefully-considered utterance of the head of the navy of the greatest sea power in the world. Finance Against Increased Armament. O ther forces are being brought to bear, though as yet vainly, in favor of lim itation of naval expedditure. Some—a larger number than the ordi nary news-reports of the day indicate —a number, too, that is growing in extent and influence, would substitute a peace policy for arbitration by the sword and thus make unnecessary, ex cept for police duty, the army and the navy. Among the “pacifists,” as the advocates of world peace are de scribed, it is interesting to Americans to note that the European press class Woodrow Wilson, the president of the United States, and Champ Clark, the speaker of the house of represen tatives. In Europe the financial inter ests of the continent have been more effective than the eloquent advocates of peace in preventing war. It is an open secret that two years ago these financial interests averted a general war on the continent. They are now becoming aroused to the evils result ing from \the mad rush of increasing arm am ents.” Disarm am ent Sentiment Growing. Sentim ent on the continent of Eu rope is changing toward a saner policy of disarm am ent and of arbitra tion as opposed to increasing military establishm ents and appeals to the sword,- though this sentim ent has not yet been able to express itself in po litical international agreem ents and legislation. The repeated strife in the Balkans is only an apparent exception in the general trend. The raw, un disciplined peoples of the mountains set their neighbors' houses on fire. That the conflagration spread no far ther was due to the self-restraint of more civilized Europe and to a senti ment for peace, which was non-ex istent a few years ago. All this must be w ritten with some reservation. The millenium of peace and inter national good will is not imminent, but, notwithstanding the portentous figures of expense which have been quoted, there are signs of the dawn. Supremely suggestive, perhaps, is the behavior of European nations in. re cent crises of International disagree ment. Fifty years ago, twenty years, possibly ten years ago, these crises would have resulted in war. Today they have been settled by conference. The recent treaties have been written with the pen and not the sword. They smell of tobacco smoke, not powdei And not what a man says when noth ing is happening to him reveals his real self so much as what he does when something is happening to him. And nations, which are but collections of men, are, in this, as otherwise, like unto them. They are many men, but with the same mind. Church Influence for Peace. The powerful aid of the spiritual group of the church in Europe is cast for disarm am ent and peace. The church exists under many names and with doctrines and deeds much at variance. Set aside the large section of a so-called Christian church which drills soldiers in Ulster, inspires blood- ritual persecutions in Russia, blesses statues to Moloch in Germany, and worships Mars and Mercury, m ilitar ism and commerce, everywhere. Unto these who call themselves Christians Jehovah is a man of war and the Christ came into this world to bring— not peace^—but a sword. They, for consideration of temporal .power and afternoon teas and fat livings, are helping him to this end all over this continent of Europe. Verily, they have their reward. Are they not chap- la ins-in-ordinary to Mars at a good stipend which enables them to dress in purple and fine linen and fare sumptuously every day? One meets and hears them in all European lands. It is another and different group in the church, in mosque and synagogue, in cathedral and chapel, in m onastery and mission house, which, increas ingly potent and numerous, pleads for peace and spiritual, as opposed to merely temporal, things. Almost or entirely a paradox is it that the trav elers who look below the surface, who go in and out among the religious leaders of the European peoples, agree that the spiritual forces are reassert ing them selves in a surprising way and that, despite the blatant m aterial ism of the European world of today, the world of tomorrow is to be made by and for the things of the spirit. In this fact lies large hope for the advocates of peace and human broth erhood. Even amid the throbbing of the war-drum he who listens may hear “the still, small voice.” The m ightiest of the spiritual leaders in Europe is his holiness, the pope. To an American journalist, granted an au dience at the Vatican, said the kindly old gentlem an who is the head of the great Catholic church: \I hope that your great nation will spend its time in strengthening Itself in all good things and refrain from war: wars are fatal to the progress of mankind.”, Uric Acid is Slow Poison Unseen in its approach, hard to de tect in its early stages, and cruelly painful in its later forms, uric acid poisoning is a disease too often fatal. Bright's disease is one of the final stages of uric acid poisoning. It kills in our country every year more men and women than any other ailment except two—consumption and pneu monia. Bright’s disease and uric acid poisoning usually start in some kidney weakness that would not be hard to cure, if discovered early, so it is well to know the early signs of kidney dis ease and uric poisoning. When uric acid is formed too fast and the kidneys are weakened by a cold. Or fever, by overwork, or by over- indulgences, the acid collects, the/blood gets impure and heavy, there is head ache, dizziness, heart palpitation, and a dull, heavy-headed, drowsy feeling with disturbances of the urine. Real torture begins when the uric acid forms Into gravel or stone in the kidney, or crystallises into Jagged bits in the muscles, joints or on the nerve tubings. Then follow the awful paina of neuralgia, rheumatism, gout, sciat ica, neuritis, lumbago or kidney colic. “ / don't know what ails me.\ It Is but a further step to dropsy or Bright's disease. Be warned by backache, by sediment in thekidney secretions, bypainful,scant or too frequent passages. Cure the weak ened kidneys Use Doan's Kidney Pills —a medicine made just for weak kid neys, that has been proved good in years of uae, in thousands of cases—the rem edy that is recommended by grateful users from coast to coast. Doctors Couldn’t Help Her Gmorfim Wmmmm A lmm tt Ceee Up U> O aasair trs. safer* Burgees. Teoeo*. Oa.. ears: reive years ago I began to suffer from lunatic trouble and Sidney disease. Doe rs said my system was fllled with uric arid ilsonlng. The kidney eecretlons yv.-v-.d g . The kidney secretio were scanty and too frequent In passage and bothered m e greatly at night. My back got terribly weak and painful and there was a bearing-down sensation through my loin* As the disease progressed, severe pains ran from my her* and neck, down through ray shoulder* In my right side and limb. I tried alm o st e'v o r - v t K in o - H it♦ n n t H i t t v H#>1 m m stwmn ■ ,eIte cmivi » iittv sa, VI v/ vvi l vati vris» as aaay wnuvsivivi sseaw m y righ t sid e and lim b. I tried alm o st e erything, but nothing helped me, even six months’ treatm ent by doctors brought no re lief. I was In despair. W hile In this critical ennSiHnt.. i hegai - —.n using Doan's Kidney Pll>“ m lrecjlcos.By Byhe the tins all indltlon I b end th e relief w« _____________ I had used six boees. a ll the left me. That happened four I Saw never eu/ered s4ac*“ ___ t tim e th e ailm e n ts had •W h e n Your Back b Lame—Remem b er the Name* DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS Sold by afi Oceton. Price 50 cents. Fostcr-MBbum Ox. Buffalo, N. Y, Proprietao HIS MIND ON HIGHER THINGS Scholar Unable to Sit Down and Rea son Quietly on Matters of Everyday Life. A monument was recently unveiled to the memory of Henri Polncalre, the famous m athematician and .physlclgt. who was a cousin of the president of France. The occasion recalls a story or two of his rem arkable absent-mind edness. Almost every day Polncalre left his money lying about somewhere. Final ly his m other sewed his purse Into the pocket of his coat. But one day, when he had dressed in a hotel, he put on his overcoat without the coat, and left that lying on a chair. Need less to say, he never saw the purse again. One evening he was looking in a closed bookcase for a manuscript. During the search he set the lamp on a shelf In the case, and In a moment of abstraction closed the door of the cabinet, and sat down In darkness. After he had pondered for a time on the disappearance of the light, he came to the conclusion that he had suddenly become blind. That seemed to him quite possible, since his eyes were weak, anyway, and he groaned at the thought of his deplorable condi tion. Suddenly, to his surprise, a stream of light appeared, coming from the adjoining room, and he remarked, with much satisfaction: “My sight seems to have come back again.” Not even then did he think of the lamp In the bookcase!—Youth’s Companion. Hard Luck. Two New Yorkers of some experi ence In travel other than by the rapid transit lines of the metropolis were telling hard-luck stories. “About the worst 1 ever got up against,” said one, “was buying from a Connecticut Yankee what was repre sented to be a pullet, and by gravy! it turned out to he a hen so old she couldn't lay fresh eggs.” \Hard lines, hard lines!” signed the other, who had a red nose. “But think of me being marooned for a whole month In a Kansas town which was so teetotally tem p erance that even the cows had gone dry at Uie last elec tion!” CLEVER WIFE Knew How to Keep Peace In Family. It is quite significant, the number of persons who g^t well of alarming heart trouble when they let up on cof fee and use Postum as the beverage at meals. There is nothing surprising about it, however, because the harmful alkaloid —caffeine—in coffee is not present in Postum, which Is made of clean, hard wheat. \Two years ago I was having so much trouble with my heart,\ writes a lady in W ashington, \that a t times I felt quite alarmed. My husband took me to a specialist to have my heart examined. “The doctor said he could find no organic trouble but said my heart was irritable from something I had been accustomed to, and asked me to try and remember what disagreed with me. \I remembered that coffee always soured on my stomach and caused me trouble from palpitation of the heart. So I stopped coffee and began to use Postum- I have had no further trouble since. “A neighbor of ours, an old man, was so irritable from drinking coffee that his wife wanted him to drink Postum. This made him very angry, but his wife secured some Postum and made it carefully according to direc tions. \He drank the Postum and did not know the difference, and is still using it to hie lasting benefit. He tells his wife that the ‘coffee’ is better than it used to be, so she smiles with him and keeps peace in the family by serving Postum instead of coffee.” Name given by the Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Postum now comes in two forms: Regular Postum — must be well boiled. 15c and 26c packages. Instant Postum—is a soluble pow der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly In a cup of hot w a te r and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage Instantly. 30c and 60c tins. The cost per cup of both kinds la about the same. \Tliere'e a Reason\ for Postum. —•old by Grocer* King George In France. During the visit of King George and Queen Mary to Paris his m ajesty will be present a t the annual spring review of the Paris garrison on April 22. The review will be held, as In previous years, at Vincennes. The review is generally held in March, but out of compliment to King George it has been delayed this year. ^^kjMagmflceni ' r ECORIW Crops in d \ Western C a m ' Albert*, have produced wm derful yield* of W heat. Oa BLISTERS ON CHILD’S FACE North Bend, Pa.—“When my child's trouble began his face broke out in watery blisters. It he scratched his face would get scabs on it. We had to keep his hands tied up most of the time. The child’s body broke out in watery blisters and itched so badly he could hardly stand It and he scratched It so that it made sores and burned like firp. H e jjid not get sleep day or night. The only relief he got was when he was sitting on the floor and he would lay bis face on the cold oil cloth. \I took the child and would wash him good with Cutlcura Soap and then I would put the Cutlcura Ointment on. I would leave the Ointment on about an hour then I would wash him off good with the Cuticura Soap. The trouble lasted about three years be fore we used Cuticura Soap and Oint ment. We purchased more Cutlcura Soap and Ointment and used them two months and it went away.\ (Signed) Mrs. Wm. Prob'st, Apr. 14, 1913. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card “Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston.\—Adv. 1/ All parts of the Province* of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Barley and Flea. Wheat graded 'from Contract to No. 1 Hard, weighed heavy and yielded from 20 to 48 bushels per acre: 22 bushels was about the total average. Mixed Fa In* may be considered fully at profit- ’ able an induetry as grain raising. The ' Die an indi ’ excellent i the only fi or dairy purpoeea. In 1912, and again in 1913, at Chicago, Manitoba as grain raising. 1 full of nutrition, are ' required either for beef 1 carried off Poor Henry. Heck—Do you play an instrum ent? Peck (sadly) — Second fiddle at home.—Boston Transcript. W .L .D O U G L A S SHOES M e i s t i S S l i r a a / L Womens H| M isses,seea.Boya,C I SUM SI. M I h ildren I.7 0 S 2 S 2 .5 O Began Business In] 1 • 7 8 ; now the I largest m aker of 1 i 6 0 . $ 4 / • imi g e . 6 0 shoes e 1,006,270 ir&TJi/lttiFw.L. D«a«laa tkett la Uli This Is the reason we live you the same values tor $3.00,13.So, $4.00 and $4.60 noiwlthe'xndlng the enormous Increase In 1 __ __ learner. Our standards not been lowered and the | that W L.Douglas shore are abso lutely as (oodasother makes add at hlsber price* The only dltferenoe Is the price. TAKE NO SU B S T IT U T E , jewelaa wtthoet W. L Doexlae’ same itamped ea the bettee. IfW.L. Deegiee ehoe. ere no, for eele le year vicinity, order direct Item factory. Shoe# for every member el the feroily ni nil price* poetae. hen. Write for lllnet re ted catalog showing how order by mall. W. L. DOUOLAB, 110 Spark twee*. ZrackUo. Mae* The A rm y of Constipation Is G r o w ing S m a ller E v e ry D a y . CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS responsible— th not only give relief , — they perma nently cure Ce*-> •tipatwa. Mil-, lions u s e , them for Bilioeseeis, Indife.tioo, Sick Headache, Sallow Sid*. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature am unexcelled tor throat affections of kinds QUICKLY RELIEVE COUCHS SORE THROAT, A HOARSEMESS vho wishes to farm extensiv investor.stor, Canadaanada offers thehe biggestgest op- ler.tl lively, or the j C offers t big op portunity of any place on the continent. Apply for descriptive literature and | reduced railway rates to erintendent of n migration, Ottawa, Canada, or to J . 8 . CRA W F O R D 301 E. G e n e s e e S t . S y r a c u s e , N. V. Canadian I Government A g e n t I FIREPROOF 7TH AVENUE k 38TH ST. H O T E L 300 FEET FROM BROADWAY i l W ■ fcsfcw GRAND CENTRAL STATION PENN. R.R. Sta.. 4 Blocks CENTRE NEW YORK E OF EVERYTHING 350 ROOMS BATHS 200 A room with bath - - - .$1.50 Other rooms with bath $2.00, $2.50 Rooms for two persona $2.50, $3.00 C U I S I N E ( a I* C a r t e ) M U S IC S E N D FOR COLORED M AP OP NEW YORK EDGAR T. SMITH, Managing Director. Y o u C a n ’t C u t O u t A BOG SP A V I N ,P U F F or T H O B O U G H P IN , b a t MARK IUG.U.S.PAT OFF. will clean them off permanently, and you work the horse same time. Does not blister or remove the hair. $2.00 per bottle, delivered. Will tell you more if you write. Book 4 K free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured Muiclee or Ugamente. Enlirged Glands. Goitres. Wens. Cysts Allays pain quickly Price 11.00 and $2.00 a bottle at druggists or delivered. Manufactured only by W.F. YOUNG. P. 0. F.s 310 Temple St.. Springfield, M am . LEARN TO DRIVE AN AUTOMOBILE OR MOTOR TRUCK C o m p lete in s tr u c tio n on all types o f m a c h ines. Thorough u n d e r s tanding o f t h e a u tom o b ile business given in th e larg e s t a n d m o s t reliab le school In the country. F o u r weeks course. G e t p a r ticu lars by w riting fo r B o o k let W. WEST SIDE Y. M. C. I . AUTOMOBILE SCHOOL 8 1 8 W e s t 6 7 t h S t r e e t , N e w Fork C ity Horses For Sale f AT BELT LINE CAR BARNS, Stabks S and C, 437 E. 23rd St.# New York 300—HORSES & MARES—300 Must be dlspoeed of In next $0 day*. These are- the last of the bones used In the can and con struction work, right out o f bard work and ready; for work, among them several matched teems boo for work, among them aeveral matched teams and Several mares In foal: also several pavement tore horses and mares from $86 onward; matched teams from $126 upward. Trial allowed. Look at these horse* before bo jlngelsewbere. See Stable Foreman. AT THE RAILROAD STABLES (No connection with any other (table) 347— HORSES AND MARES- 3 4 7 most be disposed of In the next t t daffa These horses are the last end beet o f our stock and have been In service up to Iasi week In Dry Dock, Wee. St. and Hast Broadway branch Unee, which have been replaced with storage battery ears. Among them are several heavy matched pairs that were nied on construction and repair work; NO up to rju All horses shipped free and a trial of 14 days allowed. Bee foreman, etables. Telephone Murray HW6a»-a»M. 312-314 E. 49th ST. NEW YORK Beautiful eiadlolOT no Bulbs sent postpaid for $$00 These Bulbs have wn wonderfully satisfactory reeall mtry and look all ~ ' \ IF YOUR DOCTOR HAS FAILED c o m WOL CO. C lifton , N e w J e r s e y TH K CONTENT CO. M o r r is tow n , N. J . P A T E M T S S a B F E ^ E I.KAK.N T H E A C T O M O B 1 1 -E B C S IN K 8 8 Head stamp for p e rtiealea te MX *1. t r i t e , I . x. potato* cutter; beau font men. entting for hand or SJ^F tV S fintl ■^p?i?Tm,twhTJoerij“ Nj.ca Pet tils Eve Salve RELIEVES’ SORE EYES W. N. U , NEW YORK, NO. 14-1914. / !