Wo ore Headquarters tor all Ultids SBEDB Flower and Garden Extra Choice Variety of Sweet Peas, all Colors and Nasturtium A. V. ALLEN Branch Uniontown Main 711, Main 2871 Phone Main 713 gok agent for Baker'. Barrington Hall Steel Cot Coffee, ,1 i GERMAN EXPANSION (Continued from page 2) a certain group of foreign political writers would like to make a Ger man bugaboo to frighten Belgium, as a matter of fact, is not seriously contemplated in either state. '"The situation is the same in the case of Holland. Holland also does not produce any raw material which German factories could nse. Holland is a free-trade country, whose tariff v dependent upon financial, not pro tective considerations, and inasmuch as Germany can derive advantages from the markets of Holland, no tariff-union is desirable. On the con trary, German agriculture stands in great need of the tariff wall between the two countries. Holland is an agrarian country which imports grain and exports cat tle. Unrestricted importation of cat tle from Holland, which is now pre cluded by German sanitary protective BMasures, would drive the East-German cattle from the markets of the thickly populated West, and seriously injure the agricultural interests , of Eastern Germany. "Several years ago, when the boldly conceived canal project of the Prus sian Government, which designed to connect the East of Germany with the West, was submitted for approval to the German Diet, the strong con cervative party and the other repres entatives of agrarian interests suc cessfully fought the bill, because they ii;.it ei-h watrr-wav would favor the influx of agarrian products, and . thus impair the agricultural interests of the East The same objections, in a much higher degree, vc-id militate against a removal of tariff boundar ies between Germany and Holland. "It may be argued, of course, that, in the absence of commercial reasons, Mrs. Fowler's Free Lectures At Astoria Theatre beginning Sunday, March 1, 2:30 p .m., God's Plan nf Salvation Was Written in Wan from the Beginning," to all. Phrenological examinations and ftcalth consultations given daily at r. Unt.i (mm 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., till March 11th. Her classes en the use of electricity to cure dis- case will begin March 3rd at 2:30 and 7:30 p. m. More than two-thirds of your life you wear shoes. Did you ever think of that? the Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoe Was built to give your feet comfort two-thirds of your life; the rest you sleep. ThelW, L Douglas Shoe world-wide reputation. p to date. Wear GIMRE "REET. ' -os. s, ban. there may be political reasons rend ering annexation desirable. Under 'existing conditions the Netherlands which at one time were the classic fighting ground of Europe, are no longer of strategic-geographical wars, and its armies fought side by side with the Germans against Louis XIV and Napoleon V, the Netherlands were the inevitable battlefield. But those times are past. Even if con trary to all expectations peace on the Continent should ever seriously be menaced, the Netherlands are completely out of the scope of the probable battleground. Therefore, strategic reasons are likewise unten able. Is it then, to be supposed that the free and independent Netherlands constitute a political menace for Ger many, a menace which Germany log ically would wish to anticipate by annexation f "No sensible person in Germany or the Netherlands believes that any oolitical combination could be con cluded, which, in a European conflict could force the Netherlands into a coalition with England or France, directed against Germany. Only to tal ignorance of the condition of both nations, of their racial and historical relationship, the interests they have in common, can presuppose that the free and independent Netherlands can ultimately, or eventually work a polit ical injury to Germany. The initi ated know that Germany is assured of the neutrality of the Netherlands, and Germany requires nothing but this neutrality. 'Moreover the person who persists in attributing to Germany covetous ness in the way of annexation, in re gard to Holland, or Denmark, or the German provinces of Austria-Hungaryin spite of the fact that the hist ory of German politics constitutes a monument to the contrary totally misconstrue the spirit and purpose of the constitution of the German Emp ire. Germany's not a federal state into which other states can be read ily incorporated. The , individual states, forming this federal state, are of greatly varying dimensions and importance and consequently are re presented in a congress of the united governments, the Federal Council Bundesrat with a varying number of votes. Prussia, the largest of these states, has the most votes, and thus retains in the Federal Council(Bund esrat) the historical leadership which it has enjoyed since the Empire was founded. Uoon this Prussian-corner stone the Empire is reared. The re lation of the states to each other forms a tenacious, but complicated eauiDOted-system, which, through beinst thus complicated, assumes a certain rigidity. The introduction of other states into the system, conse- ouentlv would not be a matter of small moment and would not be nearly as simple as the casual obser ver mieht suppose. The introduction of such a foreign body would lead many of the individual states to .i.ni rpnraanization of represen tation by votes in the Federal Coun cil (Bundesrat). Such a reorganiza tion, like every decisive modification of a Constitute, would at best be a most difficult and hazardous under taking. 7 "One must therefore ascribe to ignorance of German conditions the attitude of some chauvinistic paper of WosL-m Europe, in deliberately at temntine to undermine Germany's reputation, particularly in the United States, and to inspire with tear tne Danes, the Bohemians, the Austrians, the Hollanders, on the ground of a possibly-impending union of their crate with the German . Empire, a union which in Germany itself even I if desired, would encounter wellmgn erable difficulties. T certainly do not believe that fqirv-tales of annexation origi Holland. Their w0 - to be found elsewhere ' safety and assurance i these two states, in .sting conditions, has in j the other, and logically ve, is exemplified in the close .,n sxistina between them, 'i , Wnme traditional. The closeness of these relations is guar anteed amply by parallel interests on both sides and, by cultural and mental motives. "I believe the importance of the mental clement in politics habitually U to be underestimated. Depending upon the racial divergences of differ ent nations, these mental view-points may manifest themselves tn various directions and in varying degrees of Intensity. In general, it is safe to say that the peoples of the Germanic race are less swayed than others by momentary moods and by the elusive sentiments of the imagination; rather are they moved by a certain placid, historic continuity, a kind of loyalty to their own history. Their develop ment is not fitful and arbitrary but calmer and more direct. They re fru'r from violating the traditions of th. '" history. Germans and Hollan ders, independently of the racial re lationship of their sentiments and their characteristics, possess com mon mental history. In spite of sentimental longings for the South, the German artist ever remained aware of an abyss betwixt himself and the Southern masters, an abys which even his sincerest admiration and most unswerving devotion could never completely bridge. There s no such abyss between himself and the ,. Hollander. The atmosphere which they brethe, and which per meates their very souls, is the same. This may be of no importance in politics, but it serves as an illustra tion of a general unity of sentiment which evinces itself in every phase of life, and which reacts upon politics by far more than a materialistic age may be inclined to believe. "Upon each page of German history are inscribed the annals of the Neth erlands, comhiemorating the same inquenchable thirst for freedom and independence that inspired ourselves. The mental activities of both nations have in particular been closely allied for centuries. The philosophy and literature of one country reacted upon the other. The two nations worked hand in hand. "Politically, the same conditions prevailed. I will not refer to earlier hitorv. the assistance of the German States during the Spanish occupation, hich the Electors of Brandenburg rendered the Netherlands, during the wars of Louis XIV. The history of the last century also perpetuates a similar unity of political interests and actions. The existance ot tne new kingdom of the Netherlands dates from the sorinir of the year 1814, when the Prussian troops forced the French to beat a retreat from Hol land and Belgium. During the Con gress of Vienna, when the Cabinets of the four Powers which successfully had combatted Napolean, England, Austria, Prussia and Russia, planned reoraanization of European attairs which had been out into such sad dis array by the French Emperor. These four Powers determined to establish the unified kingdom of Holland,- which was to include Belgium, as protective measure against a pos- sihlv recurring French desire for ter ritorial aggrandizement; and it was then the Prussian king, acting in ac cordance with England ministers, who desired to make amends for the loss of the two Dutch colonies of rVvlon and the Cape, by increasing the territory of the Netherlands on the Continent, served the best inter- it. rr Tlil. Iii,urli-b Inrkt fine line of completion we wilt give . hnir nmind Ghirardelli'a Cocoa can full of silver dollars (93) for the best line submitted to complete It In case morY, than one person submits the line selected as best the money will , vu vs i suvsa s vr a . , J ' " ' at I t An. mn ftjintl man titiitliMli Aft thfV wUha ttt I HO limit The correct answer may be sent In any form, but we prefer that U be . i . . .. M.! J. 111. written upon the back of a label taken from any sue can m unir. :oa. Answers must be mailed on or before April 1st, plainly addressed ii Montgomery Direct, oan rrancisco. Said, "Cut it out, KkMat Here's the "Limerick" A sickly jrwtM statical al Yato Tried to ttrMthM aimaatf epea tie, But rlM Loin Said, "Cut h out, f Si m (Lm Than a Cent ft Cup) Is made with scrupulous, conscientious care and old fashioned attention to cleanliness, purity, goodness and quality. No Cocoa at any price can be better or more delicious. Your grocer sells and recommends it. the victor at Sedan, they would have forfeited their independence. "However, I do not wish to over emphasize these matters, which be long to the past and to a wholly dif ferent political situation, nor do 1 wish to advance the claim that the Belgians entertain in regard to the pacific France of today fears similar to those which agitate them in the days of Napolean III. Affairs have undergone a general reconstruction since then, and even the liveliest hist orical reminiscences scarcely would restrain Holland and Belgium from giving a different direction to their apprehensions, if there were any legi timate reason for so doing. Never theless, the recollection of the inti mate association of the people of Ger many and the Netherlands and Ger many and Belgium, during the past, will, in the absence of every legiti mate reason prevent , these nations from imputing to each other enmity and illwill.but will promote instead an eminently sane, mutual cordiality, which, even if merely a matter of sen timent, will have effect upon their action and affairs. , "I can only assure therefore that the baseless fear pertaining to a pos sible desire on Germany's part to annex Belgium or Holland, certainly . I iL. I-. 1 -i a I the continent, serveu mc v -idocS not emanatc from Belgium or ests of the Netherlands because of .,.,, but from .ome D,accSi where of needleless of this dread of an nexation, is the fact that the German bugaboo is not made in Holland or Belgium." but is a strictly imported article. Lens's Family Medicine will fire you a dlgwtloa that will permit you to cat good things Instead of "bealtfc foods" ef various sorts that arc aa palatable as 'bay. Certainly Would. ritr Uau fto TlllagerH-Woulda't II nnen vour crea If you were to look across at that lot there and tee one of our city skyscraper, covering It? Vlltam Man-Waal. I Eneas I wouiu. set'lu' as I've got twenty head o cattle main' tli. noliemun. Constipation, or irregularity, to very often th eau of alck-beadaohe. Lane's Family Medicine la the great preventive snd cure of headache. Druggists sell It for 25 cente. the traditional friendship which had existed always between the two na tions. In the year 1830, it was again the King of Prussia who gave the French to understand that any at tempt on their part to annex Belgium by taking advantage of the Brussels revolution, would result speedily in war with Prussia. Thus independ ence wassecured to the Belgians. At that time the Powers made a treaty, declaring the Kingdom of Belgium, which had been separated from the Netherlands, to be a neu tral state. The object of this was to protect the little country from falling a nrev to the territorial covetonsness of some other nation, the case being similar to the episode of 1815, when the Allied Powers deemed it advis flhlc'tn strnncrlv fortifv the Western frontier of the Netherlands. Tn the sixties, when Bismark was hard at work on the unification of Germany, Napolean III repeatedly offered the great German statesman tn withdraw completely from inter ference in German internal anairs, in return for Belgium. This proposi tinn Bismark never even considered Nor were the Belgians unmindful of the fact that, had Napolean III been CASTOR I A for Infaat and Children. Bs Kind Yea Hats AlwafS i! Bears the Signature of An InoonsloVeL System. "Why don't we take an eiprees trslnr asked the tweet young thing of her escort at a subway station. Tbla isn't an eipreM itatloa," ex nlalned ber escort kindly. "Uow tlroeeiner excUUDM tne t. y. t Tbey ougttt to nave exprsca trains at every ststlonr-New xoro rreea. Vor himself doth a man work arO la working evil for snoUier.-Heslod. Tha Rama Old ftlane. "I tee the depot signs are more bope fnl," observed Mr. CHIman. "Uebbe so," replied Farmer Field. "But thcouly ontc I saw said 'Beware of Grip Thieves.' "-Kansas City Times. persons, unacquainted with Germany and the Netherlands, blindly believe that the big German Empire simply must be possessed of an ambitiop to annex its two smaller neighbors. "It is possible, that after the war of 1870-1871, when Germany, powerless and torn by centuries of dissensions, which all Europe had been accust omed to consider a quantite neglige- able, suddenly sprung to the front as a powerful, unified realm, some Hol landers, and Belgians, viewing the unaccustomed situation, began to feel strange apprehensions lest the mighty young State would-abuse and not merely use its newly-won strength. These apprehensions, however, soon crumble away, and disappeared as a concomitant manifestation of a transi tion period. "Today, however, the home of such apprehensions is neither Belgium nor Holland. Several years a bo. a erouo of writers, inspired by influential poli ticians of some powers of Western Europe. Started a virulent campaign for 'a Holland-Belgium Alliance in dicated to be the only means of sav ing these states from threatened an nexation by the German Emperor, It is possible such oohticans promul gated these views in trood faith, and believed themselves to be acting in the interests of their own countries, by holding up the German bugaboo to all the small states and frighten ing them into seekinff the protection of their own altruistic and less dang erous friendship. "At all events, the best refutation A Mttspher With a History. To "know a hawk from a bernshaw" ia a metaphor wlib a curious history. It is a comparison drawn from falcon ry. "IIeuKUl!W', la a corruption of "beronsbaw," or youug heron, a bird which was a s;ommou prey of the fal cons. To know a hawk from a bern shaw Is therefore to bo able to distin guish the falcon from its prey. A fur ther colloquial corruplluu crept into the phrase, "to know a hawk from handsaw," a form ufted by Hamlet iu one pluce, I'osrilbty the distinction be tween a hawk and a hernsbaw was found not to bo strong enough for the purposes of the proverb. Manchester fiiinriiM 1 I O SPICES, o cufrfctaifcA DAMNS POWDER fixaiinci EXTRACTS Creator SrmJh.&&wMiikfricn ClOSSETaDEVEH5 PORTLANDS OREGON. ASTORIA THEATER 2 Nights,' Commencing Sat. Feb. 29 F RED RAYMOND'S SEMI-MUSICAL MELODRAMATIC COMEDY SUCCESS ., OLD" ARK AN . : SAW WITH ITS WEALTH OP START LINO AND REALISTIC SCEN ERY AND EFFECTS I ' Have You Ever Seen That Eccentric Old Man - With the Funny Laugh, JEREMIAH SNODGRASS? A HAPPY BLENDING OF PATHOS AND COMEDY SKILL FULLY HANDLED BY AN ; EXCELLENT COMPANY Musical Numbers, Specialties, Singing, Dancing, and the Famous "OLD ARXANSAW" Quartette PRICES 25c, 50c, 75c. ' Advance Sale at Box Office.