v - WHAT WILL BECOME OF ANTING RLE IF' THE ALLIES WIN? IF TURKISH CAPITAL IS. : 1 i jflnWMWWWXW.wMw ...m-... , . . WITH SULTAN FALLEN, HER PROGRESS WOULD BE GREAT i. - WAT.' i- is.- - - J -- . . i .. DOOMED TO FALL WHAT? Noted Historian Suggests the Organization of a Small State, Under Guarantee of :the Powers, That-' Gould Constantinople Instead of Being a Political ' ; I Occident-and-: the Orient Would Become cial Tie Between North and South, ie Between a Commer- - 7 , Guard the Straits for Commerce of All Peoples. CONST , ' ,, I i ' r . i s ill v ' o I 5 ' ' '7 '' 1 V i CITY, WOULD- BECOME CENTER OF A VASJ TFjADE The accompanying artfcle"" by Gugllelmo Ferrero 1b written on the assump tion that tfce allied attack on Constantinople will be successful. Withithisiin view bis suggestions .relative to the ultimate disposition of Constantinople are the more interesting. .- , i . : . .. .. . . 1 is notj eay to describe to American readers the stupor and anxiety raised jin Europe by the Franco-English fleet to force 'the Darda rielles. 1 For a month past nothing else has been spoken of nothing else thouzht of. Who pays any more attention to the cruel battles of Poland land Flanders? Everybody is only wondering if the English- French will gain possession of Constantinople I The taking of Constantinople will be th "most important eVent of those firsttnine months of war. It will be a' more clamorous event even than the battle of the Marne, that made such an impression becaus it de stroyed the illusion held by so many after the war of 1870, that the Ger man arms Iwere invincible. v. .. i .. 1 ,; The interest in Constantinople is not . to be wondered at. After Athens and Rome, Constantinople is the most celebrated of ancient cities Like Rome, although in a smaller way, Constantinople has always been one of theigresat seats of history from the day, 1003 years ago, when Con ' stantine fdunded it "jubente Dei" by the command of God. The! pagan status rif fortune which the-founder carried in .his hands in the solemn Christian procession at the celebration has never deserted the city, not even m the days ot most bitter strne. . . . i New Grandeur for Constantinoole. - Even today in the midst of thtff terrible war that is about to change so minv destmies. the world is looking with anxiety toward Constantinople already shrinking hot from the imminent ruin of the empire that for five centuries' has had its scat in that city, but from the new grandeur and power that will replace it. No one knows what this new grandeur and power will be, but no one doubts that the moment when the halfmoon will gink down (below the tranquil waters of Propontide a new radiant ,sun will rise from somewhere to illumine those shores, i What has reen the reason of the greatness of Constantinople?!. Why - did Constantine take his crown away from Rome, and bear it to the city that he called "The New Rome, on the shores of the narrow canal that separates Europe from Asia? Historians have tried to explain this act ' one of the gravest in the history of the world with many and complicated .reason; some i political, some military, the great number rehgiousi But they were wot right, because the principal reason was geographical. Th alfi-penetrating eye ,of the great emperor was able to read in that 'enigmatical' book the eartH's surface that on: the shores of the Bos porus was the best place for the capital of an empire partly in Europe and partly in ) Asia, whose richest and most populated provinces were in Asia Minor!. and on the Balkan peninsula: .. 1 ' The capital of the. empire had remained in Italy three-centuries, be cause under Augustus, Gaul developed so admirably- and became, next to fEgypt, the most florid province of the empire, so that the empire had im frnense interests in Europe and in the Orient, on the Rhine and on the Nile. Italy was in an excellent intermediary and central position to be the office pf the great cities and their outputs. But in the third century the provinces of the weM. and especially Gaul, decreased in poulation grew poor and began to be seriously menaced by the invasions of the Barbarians, while the Balkan countries and eastern provinces remained in muqh bet ter condition. While the west retrograded, Asia Minor remained- a land relatiyely thickly populated and-prosperous; and in the Balkan countries a vigorous warlike population flourished, from which, the worn-out empire recruited the flower of its legions. The center of the empire was then out of place. So Constantine moved the capital of the empire into the heart of that which was the most vital part between the provinces that fur nished him his money and the provinces that furnished him his soldiers.; For the same reason. Constantinople became the Metropolis of the Otto man empire. In the days of its splendor, the Ottoman empire was an em pire partly Asiatic and partly European. Constantinople by its splendor, its memories and its' position, was the capital indicated by history and geog raphy. It was a most safe and comfortable capital, because being on the sea it enjoyed all the advantages the sea offers for communication with the world, yet it could be as easily defended by blocking tip the straits of an inland city.i Constantinople has remained the metropolis of the Ottoman empire a long' time after the naval power of Turkey has only been a memory. t 72 hi 'v J i r ii i v i - Jr a ; - , ( . , -', - - si - . , - IV r 3 v t i J - - - . 1 1 - - - - - !t I h k ' . - - fe- :- e-: . JSo-. JsV.o:- v. . -. v. . . .-, . : - -x-.-. . . v. 5- T ALONG THE . .V..'- H - -x ill 111 'V - ill 1 m TAmxs.TBrg.wwi'j. n jiuuiropitofc- bhsp BpMM"TnrTTTTnrinwiTTTTrTrii"Mi imiirniaii wi imiubi n in iumn uim NEW BYZANTIUM -WOULD OUTSTRIP PREDECESSORS HATEKFKONT IN CONSTANTINOPLE.' " EVEN UNDER TURKISH RULE MORE TONS OP SHIPPING ENTER THIS PORV IN A YEAR THAN ENTER LIVERPOOL, HAMBURG, ANTWERP OR MARSEILLES. If the reasons of Constantinople's greatness are the foregoing, must we conclude -that the ancient city is in danerer of definite ruin? If Constan tinople is the natural capital of an empire placed astride between Asia and Europe, occupying Asia Minor on one side afid the Balkan oeninsula on the other, so must a country having its capital at Constantinople be a country possessing vast territories in Asia Minor and in Europe, Or its capital will not be centrally located. Consantinoole cannot lonir remain tne capital ot an empire whose trontier toward Europe is Adnaaople. So there seems to be no other way than for Turkey to win back the territory that Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia took away from her in the last war in that way to, again-become an European power, or in the better of the hypothen even admitting that her last hour as an Asiatic power has not yet struck she must move-her capital into Asia, as it seems very improbable, if not impossible, that Turkey can again become an European power. 1 The Future of the Imperial City. J So the conclusion must be that the allied fleet in the Dardanelles is destroying the little that remains of the city of Constantine, and the day when we see Constantinople fall into the allies hands, it will fast decline into a modest provincial city, resting on its memories of the two empires and the two religions that within its walls dictated the laws to so many peoples. Clothed,in the few remaining tatters of its imperial purple,, the once proud capital can only wait till the Greeks or the Slavs grow powerful enough to make it the center of another European-Asiatic empire. That .It will be a . spectacle reserved for our will surely require centuries descendants.. - ! ' . j But they who reason in this way, believing in the ruin of the ancient capital, are wrong. Those who are right are those who believe in the eternal future of the old city. Constantinople is on the verge of falling tinder the blows of the French and English, but only to immediately arise again to a nev life. It can tranquilly await the ruiir of the 'grand empire, of which for more than four centuries, it was the mertopolis, because it-is sure of not remaining buried under the heaps of waste; because already for two centuries, while the power of the Turks was waning, and with it the splendor of Constantinople, '"Fortune" in silence has been preparing for her Tavorite city a new destiny of prosperity and grandeur. Now the time is ripe and this new destiny is about to be attained. The English and French cannon with their powerful voices are .crying it out, to the world at least to tlfem who understand their clamorous lan guage. During! the centuries in which Constantinople shone under the emperor aild under the sultan as the capital of a vast Europeo-Asiatic em pire, the Black sea was, so to speak half deserted and uncivilized. " The immense territories to the north of the Black sea were inhabited by poor, barbarous tribes. - - ! Crimea was for a long time the last limit, of civilization. During the last 200 years a great change has come about. Under a government nara and despotic yet vigorous and active, the population has grown, -agriculture has made progress, mines of all kinds have been discovered, new roads have been opened and long railroads constructed.- That which the ancients called "Scizia' is now one of the most florid. DODulated and rich parts of the! Russian empire that produces every blessing of God (cereals and met als above all and that has need of exchanging its products with the world. .1 ! ' ; l The Benefits of the Bosporus. j i: . lAt the same time'on the western- shores of this sea, two .little nations grew from the most remote antiquity the Bulgarians and the Rumanian. Qn the southern shore a people live the Armenians that are gifted with great quafcies, and who will make their way when permitted to develop freely. Now, for .all these peoples, and for a considerable part of the im mense Russian empire, the most rapid neans of communication with the world is to pass through the Bosporus: j- . Constantinople,- even under1 the Turkish government, for some time has been the largest port of the Mediterranean. In 1911 more than 20,000, 000 tons of shipping entered that port, while tiie port of I London counted 18,000,000. that of Liverpool 14 that of Antwerp 13J4, that of Hamburg 13, and that of Marseilles ;10. It is not to be wondered at. The world must cross the Bosporus to provision itself -in the rich grain stores of Russia, and in the fertile southern provinces of the empire that send their cere'als from the great seaports of the Black sea Nicolaieff, Rostoff, Odessa and Novo Tossik. The world must cross the 'Bosporus to secure the petroleum of Bakou, that the pipe lines pour out from the bottom of the Caucasus into the cistern of the ports of the Black sea. Across the Bosporus the products of the mineral basin of Dometzuno, among the very richest in the world, are sent. It is enough to read the statistics of maritime commerce to follow the rapid, economic development of the Russian empire and'the little states along the Black sea; to give a glance at the map to understand what the -future of Constantinople will be as soon-as the Turkish empire will have fallen, or been dismembered and interned in Asia. , ! , ! Then Constantinople will be the most important, richest and largest station in this great new road of humanity that the English and French warships are opening with their cannonade this road over which the im mense wave of men and riches of southern Russia and the peoples of the clack sea will pass to break upon the world. Constantinople will not then be the political tie between the Orient and the Occident, but a commercial tie between the north and the south. . -. . j . lit will no longer be the seat of an empire nor "a state nor a political city, but a great center of business, and culture, a kind of general capital of finannce, religion, studies for all 'the Christian peoples mirrored in the Black sea Bulgars, as well as Russians, Greeks, Rumanians -and Arme nians. It will not be an European city, neither will it be altogether Ori ental, but a mixture of the two, governed with European laws and insti tutions. Its task will be the marvelous one of uniting1 the principles of modern civilization with the most vital traditions of the Orient, too deeply rooted in history tcr disappear in a, few years or decades without leaving any traces. '..-j ' . . , j -. iThe world will then see a new Byzantium, greater and more glorioui than its predecessors, at least unless the rivalry and jealousy of the Euro pean cut it off from this marvelous future. , " I And what can be done to keep this from happening? From what we have said it is clear-what Europe should do with Constantinople the day it wrests it from the Turks, who have held it for four centuries. It should pot be given to any of the states that for some time have been secretly watching, the cupola of Saint Sofia. A little neutral state should be placed on the European and Asiatic"sides, from the Bosporus to the Dardanelles, under the guarantee of the powers a state like Belgium, that could watch over and guard the straits according to the principles of liberty and equal ity for the commerce of all peoples, and would take upon itself to make Constantinople the seat of business and culture when Asia and Europe will blend- Under, Ihei protection Vf a newly .renovated i Europe, that will give he the necessary safety, with the immense riches that the passing of the great' commerce will deposit in the straits,' this little state could do such marvelous things as the world has not yet seen, j This seems to be Constantinople's future, i And if such is to really be the city's future, the happenings which are now developing in the straits should be followed with great interest in America, as well as. in Europe The effect. of the change in the historical destiny of Constantinople willt make itselfifelt even over there in the new world, because when Russia will be able ta do better with her products, especially-with her grain and pc troleum,she will enter: into competition with the two Americas. IN THE TRENCHES 100 YARDS FROM THE FOE-THE EXPERIENCE OF HERBERT COREY, WAR CORRESPONDENT (Copyright. 1915, by'Herbert Corey.) you have ever seen a hunter on!a deer - . - t . ! " . , ; , I f . Kanle tne Engliflh mast re- hind me ' After that I watched mor VttSSSiSzrJZ K.ra?aBS HE VISITS THE GERMAN TRENCHES AT LA BASSEE THROUGH! .''?"f ?.vs;s I AjzVyTSs X: understand.! ' nervous elasticity inhis pose. 7 f ,V".,UU O; - UHOOl-L- I I I I V V3 1 I on wJUn our pryUlR and peer J tw,BtInff turnlnJr. . Kxperiwic." ha! We. hd been walking through the - front trenches at La Bassee. . The day was hot. The- ditches were so deep that we could not by no possibility see over . the ' embankments. Under foot the plank runway was slippery with mud. . We knew we were the first party of ' correspondents to be taken into the trenches opposite the English positionnow and then we could hear an English - bullet whistle overhead but on the whole the adventure did not seem " promising. We Jested about a romp to the front as we toiled along In - our heavy overcoats. . Then we came to a man looking through a porthole. He did not 'turn to Took at our rather noisy party. - We had come to a part of the trench that was both wider and deeper than the approaches through, which we had been laboring?. There were more men In sight. Some of them were carrying flour sacks, filled with earth, with . which the- embankment walls were made higher. Some were sitting about smoking. .Others were squatting on the floors of the "unterstands" the timbered caves in the-trench walls in -'which they live and take refuge from bells and ..peered out at us. Their faces were on a level with our knees. They seemed quiet and rather tense. I got. an Idea that our laughter jarred on them. Here the rifles were racked outside the bomb-proofs. The men could seize them as they came out of their shelter. There was something about the back of that man who, looked through the porthole that held our attention. If Lime Starvation Causes Tuberculosis - The Medical Xteeord (New York) of December 13, isosv contains an article on "The Treatment of Pulmonary Tu berculosis, Based on the Assumption ; that the Dietetic Cause of the Disease is Urn Starvation," by Dr. John P. Kusseli, wao says: "The condition which is recognised " as preceding the active development of tuberculosis in the adult may be considered as due to lime starvation. Among .Inorganlo substances lime salts ap pear to be ef special physiological lm. portance but if the salts are not in organlo combination it Is r difficult to suppose that the cells can appropriate thean for food." Tears of i widespread use confirm Us in the belief that the success of Eckman's Alterative In cases of pul monary tuberculosis (consumption) r and chronio - throat and bronchial ' troubles is due in large measure to its content of lime, so combined with other Ingredients as to fee easily ap- : propriated by the cells. - , . Doubtless- this has had much to do . with the results obtained in many cases of these affections, which ap pear to-have yielded to Kckman'a Al terative. -, .1 . . - : -4 ' " As it contains no opiates, narcotics or habit-forminsr tlruKa. it is safe to try. Your druggist will order it. for ' ) ou or you can send direct. Hckmaa Ziaboratory, Philadelphia. (Adv.) We looked again, and saw that be was nestling to the cheekpiece of a rifle. He was watching the enemy through the eyehole In the port. His! orders were to fire if he saw a head. Our laughter, died out rather suddenly'. War had become a grim business to us. We knew now why these men i in the trenches watched up with a certain disapproval as we Joked. Death was too near. . I " ! looking Through a Porthole. !, "Ixok through the portholes'," said Captain Kliewer, of the general staff, who was our official chaperon. i The sentry saluted and stepped back. I put my eye to the slit In the steel port. At first nothing could be seen outside, except sunshine and bare. gray-brown earth. My vision was dis. tortea because my eyes- were Just above the level of the earth. Lie upon the ground some time and raise your nead so that your chin Just clears. You will find that things look oddly I differ ent to you . i ! "Do you see Mm? asked the teentry. There was no one in sight.- It seemed minutes the time was per haps to be measured in half seconds before; I found the thin line of I yellow clay that marked the English trenches. It was about 100 yards away. These trenches are three months old, so that the tints of the upturned earth have merged with those of the background. Between the-English and the German trenches lines of barbed wire run, and they confuse, the unaccustomed eye. I might never have found the English trench except for . a sparkle of light which came from near the surface of the ground. It was the suri shining on a ruie muzzle. "Yes I said to the sentry, watching vm." "No," said the man, somberly, is aeaa." x t t I kept on peering through the port hole. Then, suddenly almost with f a shock my: eyes adjusted themselves to the need. , There, not 10 feet away from me, :lay an Englishman,! dead. His snuff-brown uniform had so blended with the neutral earth I that I had to look twice to make sure. He seemed Just a youngster, clean shaven, with a kind, manly face. One 'strong hand was half opened. It seemed i to hold a small card photograph, t I am not certain. Suddenly I could not see. "He was hours in dying,"- said the sentry, "and we could not help him."i My eyes began to do their duty only too well. Wherever I looked I saw, the English dead upon the ground. 1 1 went from port to port, and the story was the same. Some of them were hanging in the wire entanglements. ; Often thej had beed , shot standing. apparently, and stooped forward slowly, until their bodies were caujsrhf about i the middle by the wires and so were held. One man was ? seated, his back resting against a post. His mouth was open, as though he had been shrieking as he died. AH' the other faces : thati T mw THE PORTHOLES OF WHICH HE SEES THE BODIES OF ENGLISHMEN WHO WERE KILLED IN FUTILE CHARGE." 'He is "He wore a look of peace.' lDip, but U is so. It seems Incred- I "There were 500 dead men on a front of 500. meters," said an. officer. "We counted them." ' All the Pioneers Killed. The English had attacked at x3 o'clock in the morning, 10 days before. i or an hour or more the artillery had been - playing on the wire entangle ments the "Spanish riders," I as the Germans call them, with some mediae val, significance that I did not under stand until gaps had been torn In them. The wires had not been cleared away,, of course. They hung about in loops and knots. But they were no longer affixed to the posts. The pio neers were seht forward. "They always die," said a soldier, as one stating an obvious fact. "All of them." . It seems likely. Their duty It to prepare the way for the men who come after. They ran forward with planks with which they bridge the tripping marls of wire. They cut the wires with great nippers. They drag the posts out of the ground and push aside the movable . entanglements, when these wire-wrapped skeleton roll era are used. They rarely reach the trench. They are not expected to. "The officers tell them to fall for ward when they are shot," said a man, "so that their bodies will cover the wires and make a bridge for those who follow." It sounds brutal, inhuman, preposter ous, I know but I believe it. They do things that way in war. Upon a given moment the English fire upon the Ger man trenches had ended;, and the Eng lish ran forward yelling, i As they came they fired at the German heads that rose above the level of the trenches. They had but 100 yards to go in ths race with death, but 500 of them died on the division front of 500 meters. That is almost a man to each frontal yard. Forty men achieved the incredible. They did what - humanity cannot do. They forced their way through those wires in face of that blasting fire and into the German' trenches. - "Two j were , wounded and , surren dered," said the Germans who had been in the fight. , t ne otners died, une takes that zor granted"in trench fighting. The man who hasthe desperate valor needed to charge a position that by every rule is impregnable to' leave the comparative safety of his trench knowing that he must almost surely die does not bat tle his way into that other ditch only lo surrender. I lis plan is to die, but to die righting. That is way the 38 Eng lishmen who fought i their way into that cut in front of La Bassee were buried beneath our feet. Those who did not . reach the trench ; finally flinched before the firei They gave way. taking their wounded with them. The dead were left behind. That was 10 days before. ? Throucb every porthole, as we looked out at a barren, : gray-brown landscape, : dead Englishmen could be seen. Three hun dred of the 500 who had died on that 500-yard front had, been buried by night. Mostly their poor, broken bodies were dumped in the great holes made by shells. It saved digging. Some were buried by the German sentries who move between the lines at night. Others were Interred by their English comrades. No truce was made for the purpose. Truces are not being granted In this war or "being asked. ' "The : bodies which ' hang upon the wires cannot be touched," one soldier said to us,!- In a matter-of-fact way. "The , others would hear the wires twanging and would f ire.So that we only bury the bodies we can bury safely." , : That Is not inhumanity. It isNvar. dnea rail Xdke Beer Bottles. As I look back upon this afternoon's experience in the German trenches in front of La Bassee, one thing stands out vividly. That is the way the mines looked as they were tossed over by the English mortars. They : fell , clumsily, end over end.: They looked prepisely. like beer bottles -quart-sized bottles some one bad heaved at us for a Joke. They fell no faster than bottles would. Men ran and laughed and hid themselves in the holes in the trench . walls. The mines shook the ground when they exploded. But my memory of these things is al most muted by my recollection of that uncanny, slow tumbling. I This is an unashamed narration of a personal experience. Nine of us shared it, all correspondents. We were the first' newspapermen to reach that part of the German trenches i which front against the British. ,We were shelled the fifth of a second in an automo bile's speed would have made this story an -obituary we weee watched from tpstlle aeroplanes,, and we were sniped t by. English riflemen. The important feature of the episode is that, so far as we know, we were the first observ ers from neutral nations to 'see a mine throweiv or a thrown mine In hostile operation, i Perhaps not one of us ever pent two such nervously stimulating hours or wants to do so again. I We had ; walked through long - ap proach trenches, ; and were . peering through the portholes at the dead Eng lishmen, who poor : devils- lie : Just outside, when the Joking Btarted. This is literal! Nine of us furnished the low comedy for a trench filled with German' soldiers. We gave them the laughter they sorely need. For one, I do not .grudge them one single caeklt? of mirth. I can remember the . cor poral., with a fringe of beard about his face the corporal who field his sides and was only able to spout. "Ach, Oott!" at Intervals with a feeling- of positive comradeship. To tell the truth, we laughed ourselves. . ' The Officer's Mysterious Order. "You can send up four," said the of ficer in command of the trench divi sion in which we were gaping about; That didn't mean ,anthlng to us then. We saw two men pass along the trench grinning from ear to ear. Each had. two cylindrical objects hugged tight to his-breast. I didn't examine them closely, I was not interested. But I remember they were about the size of a beer bottle. Other men grinned as they saw these things. Still we didn't-understand. , We must be- a peculiarly innocent lot of reporters. Our minds are impervious to suspicion. Down the trench a bit, n a platform cut out of the dirt walls, stood a rusty little gun on a rusty tripod. It looked more like a bit of worthless stovepipe than anything else I can think of. It was of peculiarly- crude construction, so that the levers and things about the butt were of raw Iron, which seeming ly had never been polished. Hater we came Ho know that abandoned bit of ordance was a "mlnenwerfer"--or mine thrower the purpose of which Is to gently toss bombs into the other man's trenches. We also learned that each side resents this form of amusement. It Is an almost Invariable rule that the precise number of mines thrown isre- turned by the other fellow. We saw two men puttering about this depraved little gun. Pretty soon: "Fuhwhoosh!" it said. f It didn't make a bang like a real gun. . It went oft with a wet, powdery FRECKLE-FACE Sun and Wind Briar Out TJgly Spots. How ts Remove Easily.' Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-face, to try a remedy for freckles with the guarantee of a reliable - dealer ..that It will not cost you a pnny unless it removes the freckles; while If It does give you a clear complexion the ex pense Is trifling. Simply.: get an ounce of othlne double strength from any druggist and a few' applications should show you how easy It Is to rid; yourself of the homely freckles and get a beauti ful complexion. . Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. 'Be sure, to 'ask the druggist for the double strength othlne as this is; the. prescription sold under guar antee of money back If it fails to re move freckles. ; (Adv.) sort of a sputter. The soldiers stood In attitudes of attention. Those who were at the portholes watched . with eagerness. Others who could seized the periscopes through which a watch is kept over the trench embankments and gazed eagerly at the mirror. There was. a - bang behind the English trenches 100 yards away. , - "A good shot," some one said. "Per haps it went in. It Seemed Zdke a Joke. It seems Incredible now. but three more shots made no particular impres sion on our minds. .We took this mine throwing as a part , of the day's rou tine. Anyhow, we were tremendously interested. We were looking : through periscopes at that thin line of yellow clay behind which deadly Englishmen sheltered, 100 yards away. We were looking into the unterstands, where the German soldiers were sleeping. We were examining the devices by which the trenches are drained. We were watching through the portholes that grim fringe of dead men that lines the trench front. The noise of that sput tering little mortar did not arouse our curiosity.- The noise of the exploding mines in the English trenches did not tell us anything. The Englishmen were firing continually. One explosion more or less meant nothing to us. Then the Germans stood about, grin ning, waiting. "Hier kommt elne!" they veiled. At least that is what it seemed to me- they cried, my German being very fragmentary. - They all . looked up at ' that jStrip of the blue sky one can see between the trench walls of yellow clay. I also looked up. I bad a mere ly academic interest, I didn't know enough about what was happening to be frigened. But I looked up. A longislVark thing, like a beer bottle, slowly arched up from the English trenches. At the top of its flightit may have been 100 feet high. Then it began to descend, end over end and slowly. " '"Run!" said some one to me. I do not know what is the German word for "run." But I got the Idea. We all ran hard down the trench, push Ing each other and scrambling and laughing. Soon we came to an angle these - angle protections against en filading are only a few. yards apart and we jammed against each other and under the shoulder of the trench wall. Still I was running ignorantly. I had run, merely because it seemed good to run. . Just outside the embankment and in. the' rear the mine exploded with a nasty little thumps It sent a cloud ot dirt into the air. - The'ground vibrated. Panio When the Truth Was Realised. . Then we knew what had ha ppened. But we must seem ft pet of fools we didn't fully comprehend. We had not noted that the Germans had fired four times. - We did not know that by the ing I had rny lace giuea to a port- taugnt tne soldiers how to closely ntl hole. watching with fascinating inter- mate its probable landing place. Only est a long line of dead men draped in those nearest it ran. The others told unnatural attitudes over the barbed each other jokes about the newspaper wires, when the second went off be- men. t General Joffre Is ; Kin of a Cooper Trench Commander in Chief Traced Back to Ancestors of 1479, One of Whom Had Barrels. , ;i Parts, May 1. General Joffre, the French commander in chief, is descend ed from a eooper whose name appears in the parish books of Rivesaltes as early as 1479, says a dispatch from Perplgnan to the Paris Temps. According to Andre Llouquet, a for mer keeper of . the records at Rive saltes, where General Joffre was born, there have been several families of Joffres in that locality The founder of one was a weaver, another was a baker; while the general's ancestor, was a barrel maker. ? r German Holdingsin England: Estimated London, -May . 1. The estimated value of German property In Great Britain now in the custody of the pub lic trustee was given in the house of commons this afternoon as In- the neighborhood of $425,000,000. Russell Rea, who, on behalf of the board of trade, gave these figures In rcHponow to a question f rem Ixrd Charles Beresford, aiMiured the qucBtloner tliat "these German assets will be available for such dl&posal as seems proper on the conclusion of peace." Ixird Beresford's! suggestion 'wan that Englishmen owning property in Germany should 'recoup out of thin fund and that $500D dally should be confiscated for every British officer subjected to ill treatment while a pris oner In Germany. Spain Expects to Get German Dyes Ma a rid, : May 1. Marquis ede Iema, Spanish foreign minister, announced at a meeting of the cabinet that Francs had consented to permit the free tran sit of aniline dyes.1 oxalic acid ani other I chemical products tetwen Italy and Spain, . The stoppage of Imports of these articles from Germany brought Span ish industries virtually to a standstill, throwing thousands out cf work.- Th action of the Frenchi government "thu r moves one of the principal causes of economic dlstrees Ini Spain. The Home Beauty Parlor 6tf Deity Dean i -Madeline: To make 'your: too-fat figure round and Just right, dissolve 4 ounces cf parnotis (from drug store) in ltf pints hot water. When cool, strain and take a tablespoonful at meal time This is a rational, harm less treatment and gently dissolves the fat without leaving the skin wrinkled or the flesh flabby. The parnotis treatment acts differently from other reducing methods, inas much as it restores the graceful lines of the. figure without dieting or exer cise, and when the weight is suffi ciently reduced the treatment can be discontinued. ,r "- - Betty: I am certain a daily use of this vegetable cream-Jelly, which Is easy to make at home, will soon elim inate your wrinkles, and clear the skin or local impurities, leaving it smoom and velvety and give to it the pink and white bloom of youth: "Get from your druggist and dissolve In H pint cold water 1 ounce alrnosoin and add 1 teaspoonrul glycerine. To . remove the wrinkles apply a Httltv of the cream jellv lengthwise of the creases, leaving over night. The starved tis sues quickly reopond to this treatment and assume tneir correct proportions then the skin will wrinkleless. The b smooth and almozoln . cream- Jelly Js especially good to clnee the skin of pimples and blackheads. Diana: Your daughter can easily protect her skin, against freckles and from spring winds by using this sim ple lotion: , Dissolve 4 ounces epur max (from drug store) in either 'i pint hot water or witch hazel and add 2 teaspoon fuls glycerine. Apply spar ingly to face, neck and' arms and rub lightly until It vanishes. The pur max lotion is superior to powder be cause i one application lasts an entire day and seems part of the nkin. p"r max makes ehiny nkins. oillness, pim ples and other complexion blemish disappear quickly and It is a benefit to the finest, complexion. FIoj Yes. it Is easy to kp your hair fluffy and ttnft! If you arc very careful about what you use in sham pooing. 1 always ut canihrox. It will quickly remove all dandruff, exepfi oil and dust, making the scalp no ek-an and bealthv that the hair grown heavy and lorns, . I prepare such a head wami at home at a cost of about three centa a shampoo by dissolving on teapoon fut of canthrox In a cup c;f hot water. This keeps my Iwifr; so lustrous ani fluffy! tJiat it seems much heavier than it' la. (Adv.)