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Advertising
£ fcWonderful. ,P" New Medicine FREE f ■ r%b mm m KEEPS CX WL X SEND A POSTCARD TO-DAY. & L Tr*i> demonstrate the outstanding excellence of g jj) Kepwnak Pills as an after-din ier medicine, and e their greater suitability for present-day sick- ness, the Proprietors have arranged for a special distribution of 10,030 Free Sampie Boxes. N o Thus, without expense, you can prove for yourself Otis value of the wonderful medicine which, in a soothing V natural way removes THE CAUSE of ill-health. Ker-nak Pills purify, tone-up and strengthen the 0 liver, stomach and bowels. Free from the crude mineral IL drugs found in old-fashioned pills, Ker-nak is the ideal far bilious headaches, constipation, piles, liver v ciliil, indigestion, debility, flatulence, colic, etc. TO OBTAIN A FREE SAMPLE BOX Q *siid your request TO-DAY on a post-card addressed to — nak Natural Remedy Ltd., Jowitt Lane, Leeds. Be sure CJ Ration the name and date of this newspaper and write spur name and address clearly. This trial sample of (3 Kar-nak Pills is Absolutely FREE, ',č.f!;i); °' -r'" A y e¡ -m "< 's
x—■■-".—c LLAND&GLA.
x— — c LLAND&GLA. PARISH Cou.,i(;iL -ate were proteat. as a tuoesing 01 One. Osancii beid ia sae school on cntj 21s5 ia-o., Mr E W aJ.t,, junior (obairmanj, the Rs-v J W Taoaias, ,LVI.A.. (eactor),, gestri W flagaei, EP Robervsj K M Joaes, Hugh Joaes, and R Wiiiiamd (clock), Tae. W8. aala;aittal tm tho oocsidersiion ut tne Cjaacii a qaeationnaird for initial enquiry int > improved or adaifeijaai faciiicias (ligha railway or road transport) in connection with rural and indaafcial acaQ;aa<. Taa form oi etiqairy giving ctio pariioaiars was completed bj the O^a^jn, to be forwarded ro the Cjausy Offiass. Mr R Joues, Tafarn-y-gajQ, wai nLh-Ci- monaiy ciecteci to fill a vacancy 00 thd Councii, and Mr W iiaghes, Pens try Farm, wis unanimously appointed ti represent tha Ooaucil oa tha Laiatigemani 01 the day school, owiugo o the resignation of Mr MaediCia Jones, Cas-gaa-dictm. A Tote ot thaukd was ananiuioagiy carried oooveying to Mr Jones the Council's appreoiftdon of his long, valuable, and efficient services ro the welfare ol ih;) PISRINH.
-.-LLANDYKiNOa.
LLANDYKiNOa. FOOTBÅLL -An line; t)cclc(; Ciiatch took piece i.c ;!o uraay imo, wbaa Lianayruog COAUACE. F.C. ENTERTAINED LIANGY^IIAFIII in a uitQcijr ceaccii oo ciiejuotoaii groaud, near tiite vij Tao teams were iiaect up b) Mr J T Jones fina a ,ery evcuiy oou- tebU-a game was wiiite^ecs, ALILK imea gulkin beitiK vitited ia quick iucceaea. Hsit tica-i was reached a ciean siaie, aeicuer learn have iscurefl. To", second half pruvod to fce vt-ry muea tub tliss, Cut, Ocftoj* working istreuqoutily jos a wianiug pJinti but without avail, sad tiio ucore was :— Lianujtiug 0 Líangï(,q.2>(: 0. COMCEBT CUKIOCU EvixT.-A some- what Dn.quo eeenc took piaca oo F.Luay Bigtc lass in the turaa 01 a ooneers as cae Ichool in aid et the CocLraubit Football Club. The proj, co in itsei* wao a worthy one, bat many thingn were oeflaieaC, ot which, to ail appearances tha audience baa ne doubt, ana showed their reaentmeuo in an unmistakeable manner. A greas pit; there ware no better arrangement, as L hung io tte baltice wiiofibet au; d tha artiaies would poe(orm, ad, inGaed, some of them reinscic to co, Howeveri let as hupil that a goodly goai ws. aude by tha receipt, and is id to be hoped there wih its bette arraugetuencs WHO iiio nexs 8QDcen tot the same object. -Om kouxis
URINARY TROUBLE AND STONE.
URINARY TROUBLE AND STONE. An Agad Man's Reooveify. I aava- thoaghb to be as wall aq I am now," aaid M. tt. Gaigar, I inbh B jrsiad Bsreer, Bogacr, oa May fioh, 1914. Two, eara ago I was dUngaroaaiy III with urinary trouble and s'oas in ttie bladder and seeing rb1) I wm 84 year., eld, ofra oaslo ik was very bad ladeed, Tha pairiB in my biek and in the bladder region took my screugtu away. I made no headway at all naiil Baan's Fiiis wars sried btio chis sreiooaan i gradually led feo my compljie reoovery. "A qasnrity of gravel cams a1V", the atinary flaw increa-Aed and liha paina lefa my Isack ai'd body, When Jater. Doaa'o Piiis iellsved me of a large uriu-acid stong, I goD abous sgaio quite cured, ¡; My cMe han causad a lot of talk and ICOMM hava called feo examiae the stone. Dtt.: a Pil;3 have oeeu rjii frisods to ms and is is ?cileiy to them tha^ I owti my obwlat# freedom from ail sign of kidasy Sroabla. (Signed) O. Uai^er."
6 Years Wetl at SO
6 Years Wetl at SO On Jan nary Snd, 1918, Nir 01.jr said ;— Though I ahlial be 4iLii,y iaFabrmt-ychts year, I o-ia-itiaa in enj ;y.-nt)cin of the healoh I gained through having aged Doaa'- Piiig eis years ego."
Advertising
Te ensure the same rssulti as Mr Caigur inutt upon the same Kidney Mtdicing—LOAN'S BACKACHE Kit) 1H1 PILLS Snld by all Dealers or 2i Dill a bottle jrfJm Foster McClellan Co S Wells St O:rffJ"ä lit London W, 1
NBW HIGH SHERIFFS.
NBW HIGH SHERIFFS. Mr D F Peaoano, Nsacijr*, vvbo is 8^ well known ana nighly ecseemud :tn thi. aistricc 11 first on the iise of nomination? for the county ci Flinc, The nes-Ii smo ara Lieut-Coi H B L I-lagues, Ktnmei Park, son oi the iase Mr H it htugnea^f^r many year? Lord LieQteaano oi filosaniret efad 4ir W Buckley, irlavod, Mold. Tae Denbigh nominationj ars Co'onoi John iflaward Melior, oc Tac-y-Dryn, Abar- gele Sir Albert iilirjarci iicroert N»yior- JLayiaau, Igsto., ut Nantciwyd Hali, jRainia Mr Joon Frodtficic kaeouu. oi G waynyaog, Denoa. _h'
LLAaU'EBKES.
LLAaU'EBKES. OONCBBT.—Oa Tlhtriôl Noweiabor 20UBF an enuersaiu-iieno Wt\ girea in the diailoold the oojooi being Co proviae diaiic watches for ovif sailors and otaleld. Ic proved to be suocessfui aad a goodly aan of money was reaiUed.
Å PICTURE IN PAiMT OF Â. PONY.
Å PICTURE IN PAiMT OF Â. PONY. Having had he pjriviiego aa4 pic»3a?e of aaeing a OéHIlUai piosare ot a pony, by she aeleuratea painter ot animais from lite -Aiifoi, Barosu, of the White iiaaas, Liagi- dyrnog.-I miart to expreja so her my deep graeicude for hai kinases* in sao gullowing iins*:— Whas a brave and noebIs grey pony, How beauaial and ao^clear airuaad, Hid tsusera ate oiean, he's a b<tausy, Wiouoaa bovaitu auct pedeJdy fiùwnd, 0, now I aduiue, him acaudlag do cool witn tis eye on folle aour, He loagd to be oaa on 612d cansering, Pernapa, and to toil ou.-fluor, His gcokceiui long Lail haoge in tscdrila, His main ot brigno anvar oe'r oht-atid, To a can Bell by obe ahhpe of the uoistrilti, Wheu an aoimai is ptetty well bred, A horse is a faltftfui companion, Ofigaieno oo ride &Llr¡o drive, My i eada, Ii, if in yoar pobeessioo, Kememaes hua wmie he's I'll give yon a blinple auggeauon, If you love no be geaule aad qmiufr Ae once have your favotn-ioe and champion Transpoaed to a Pi-jeura m Pams. Taua LOVBB OF Dcau ANXMALS. RlJi .I\£. "t.
Advertising
-<" RATS, MICE, MOLE3, COOKBOAGHES aad BEETLES greedily eat Harrison's Reliable" Bat Poison. Catli and dogs will not touoh it. Vermin dry up and leave no smell. Prices 6d., Is., 2s. 3d., and 32.,7d.. postage 2d.- G. W. HABRISON, Chenaist, Heading. Sold by Chemists. Agent to St. Asaph J. Emrys Jones, Chemist. Denbigh Harrison Jones and Co High Screet iuthia. Beuw and Son. Chenaisls, St. Peter's Square .L JJ-"
--FOOTBALL
FOOTBALL RHYL AND DISTRICT LEAGUE. DENBIGH CHURCH GUILD v RUTHIN TOWN. The Senbigh Chare. Guild Football CJub played their second hsoare in the Rhyiaai District League on Saturday on tha ttraig Road Ground, their opponents being Ruthin Town- There was a fairly large gate when Mr W Roberts (attendant at the Asylum) lined up that teams. The home skipper won the toss and elected to play down the field. The vkiton at once made tracks tor the home goal, aad sscred per Dick Thomas within two minates of the start. This early raverse enlivened the home team, and foroa time they pressed the visiting defence, and R Williams netted the nail but was ruled off-siie. They again attacked and after a few minutes play Ernest Davies. scored. Now eni to end play entned and Joel BsnnetA pot the homesters ahead with a capital shot, thus half-time arrived with tha score Denbigb C G. 2 Rathin 1 The second half comoienced with both teams playing an excellent gacaa. The homesters got possession of cue ball and ran up she field and alter a few minutes play again netted the ball pe., Joel Bennett. The visitors then commenced to press and ran dowu the ibid towards the home goal and the custodian bad to uavit a hot shoe from one oi iiClö vlaUors whish he brilliantly did. But the visitors were not to be denied and after tow minutes pressing they landed Cfce ball safety into the net, The homesters now got possession u: cae baii and made for the visitors goal, bat cne ol the visitors foaled aud a penalty was given, which .T"el ¡hnett seared. End so end play ensued, out b>th teams .aUe.;¡ to score, thus ending an excellent gams in a win for the Guild, the final eoore being Doubigh O.G. 4 Rathia 2. George VVmisaii, th3 aoaic ouside right, piajeu a capii.ai game, as aiaoui the borne oniicodian (H VViisuu; wà., was in good form. DNBIGH MENTAL HOSPITAL Y 8f AsAPtl. Wnen the ii; score re.4-is at fire goals to one the impression is ua;uraliy era-toe J thas taa gatne N¡U a uue-&d atfair. iiow ovtr, the tuaeoa placed oa tea Mental Hospital gronad on A^burday lcHi wiiei; the Dcnaigii Aen&ai HosplCal F.C opened their league fixiattss by enceroaiuing 8 Auph, proyoa aa ciotptiua. *dr Tyi;At!sioj,, Raehir, tinea up the seiajg as folluw Meneal iiospic»i.—0 «ea E/aaa, goal D Hajaej and Alex Jooe, oacka; J E Ibriiley, T J Daov103 and ifi E Jooea, iisiven E 0 Ofifdiiit, r G Joues, R E 1&nl. D WjfiiUw ana H viydaiegoa, forwards. G Asap&.—W Elvot;do, goal; W.nne Robuits dad it M Evans, backs; 0 Af'-aisag^, E L A Jenizias and David Jonei nalved Haga Rooerss, J Doherty, G Humpbre^s, ii N giobt and Ed^ar Ptioe, furwards. TG6 ball was set rolling afi 2.40, and the homesters took pos*3«sion oi Que bail and worked down the fluid, Taa 8s Aaapa defence soon proved their mentis and clearect well. Tae game wAs cransfofrad 90 the other end where lille visiciug fori-irds oontiaaaily molested Cbe Hospital's defence ilaa lor ooze wiine riiere was bo na excitiag play. Ia che melee a toul was awarded St Atiaph wo converted from cae ensuing penaisy, per Winne Ronares. This avaaa had lis aesirea wlieoj on line game which optsc,ol oat con^iaeraoiy^ boon defences buisg called into in 10 aoeton. The Hospital were chiefly oa title offensive and kepo tba ieatnar ia their uppont)ats, territory. R E?aas go3 posae^sioa, a a J wica a asac raa cus Oabti for cue Sj Ax;pa (jL..¡ nos ceaefic from the canjre iiiok. loic ciia noaasOdra wero UadliULtaCL and daring an exoarsioa op rilo &<mx it Eirans again scored jais uoiocd tao inturval. Si Asaph opened the aeconi atage with vigoco«s piay ana things looKeu sarea^en- ing in cae tlospiQAi quiiiefi. fa 3/ foraai a tag kick, bat tae homesters' defence aavea cue situssioa. In taeis 4alleDy she ,wiaitors bad can oat oi tiaiiii, positions snri R Evaas, taking fuii advansage ot ebsolear course, ran lip and l asted ^ith a m&gcii fleune drive. 6; Asaph now showed signs u £ lasigue vain tbe rasuia t'aac ctkjir ae-ecce was oonucuousiy in aoalun. Tbeir boitile pia,) act a stirring garce, t »<ring the situation oa several occasions. Ihe Hospital keps up caeir astaoks, and 11 Myadictun R E?ans uezttog ooiose the wnissie blew. Tbe final x"a :— Mencat Hoapitai 5 R5 Asaph is DENBIGH JUNIOKS F.C. v RHUDDLAN SECONDS, ;On Sacaruay lace the ut;wjy iofiaed teaitt known as Denbigh Janiors F 0.. o.'Bbi^ting, 01 eleven joaug placers, ca^fciy Goal" Thomas GHtlhne, oauks, E Tbouuas Robercs and Hugii kiugtkett baives, E Cai'twright R Oeen Ruuerts and Davio T Jones or war as, Martin Rush, Eiaest Joueu, Kocer& Piercei J Wiaiams and E Pierce j t & itiendiy m^ccb a^aiuji. Rauuaian Seconds at Rauaui&n and tion; M good i o^cectett game swere victorious 5 goats ..0 4 &o.i' 'l\.a. tire open ou ISit-uea^ya to pisy trieri..Aly uiaccues by i»ppij;iag to their seuteuacy, Mr xiicbara WiiUa^s, 16" Paaton liali, DauG ga.
Advertising
^SIBMASA fi You should take Mother Seigel's Syrup if you suffer from stomach and liver troubles, because no other remedy has such a bsnencial effect upon these organs of digestion. The. Syrup will restore your stomach and I livsr ta healthy activity and save you- from the miseries of Indigestion, TAKfr MOTHER ——— Are You Prepared for Dances and Christmas Festivities ? XTTIIA r ;i pity to miss ail the fun for want of a PMlT VV ^r'pc^-? Sach a small sum wi^l buy you the /1 uinljpjl ■ ■ dainliest little livening Dress if you choose it at /A vlr (''» DENSOXS. livery accessory for Evening fi\}m jl| Dress, Gloves, Stockings, etc, are ready also at /S\\ii(i (if Dl.NSONS at most Moderate Prices. Call in -VVM/rij' M there to-day. 1 1 ill f"" "1— ■I 11 Mil ikjll 111 U. MW It is not too early to think of Clnx?i3afc9nn?ia Gift3. A host of I suggestions <iwa\,t you here—Furs, Umbrellas, Handkerchiefs, Gloves, Blouses. 4 Fanny &oeds, ets. fi „ DENSONS, m< !m!)t! 'i The Fashion C DENBIGH, :51. 'J. J »
------_----------_._-----___-TRY…
TRY THIS FOR PILES. Fornter sufferer gives the simple prescription received from a Harley Street specialist. This has avoided hundreds of operations. Ii you are affl itei with saoh painful debili- tating and nerve-racking physical calamltie9 as piles, hastnorrho ds, prurisus, ebc., yju not only want) raiiet from them, bac you want the relie quickly-not to-morraw, next day, or week af; er next. Moreover, be pains and dis- comfort are njt the only things to cmni ier, You must) remambar that delay ia ad iptia^ proper ireaotnaac alwiyd rendara the cara more difficult) ia the end, aod ia some) oasas ddty may even prove So ba downright suicidal. When piles develop to a poiao wh?re the bifl3a9s rupbure a.ad bleeding reiult i. there i. special danger of iafaocioa and blood poison- ing. To keep the affected pares asopsic or surgically o'ean is praodcaliy impoasible. Bacs of pas form and eat cheir way through walls of the intestine, until there ii a false passage. Then yoa have a case of ft talei 00 deal wiDh, or even sumour, uioers. caacer, and obber complicatious. Maay of tihesa are in- curable and defy even ttia bei5 surgical skill, but the simple piles or batmorrhoida froaa whick they develop miy be csred wioh OJD1- paracive ease. All joa neai ii a cubs of Nemolin, which any cbeinsS oaa suppiy for only 33. id., inaluding a sp oiit appbCAtor for in-ecual piies. Taa in-AiufAcourefri of chn remarkable formula, waion was originated by u famous specialist in rsabal disorders guarantee is cj ssop all aching, looting, and Duraiag wiohin oaa h :ur, aad so r duce I swelling and luffa noutcioa wnhia six hours Time require I for a oompleee cure, ol cou.ba, depends upoa ctia savensy of t<h > pile-s, buo one haaiing acsioa of Nm 1110 ia ess emaly rapid, and One tube is usually SuiMjient for fine average case.
CEFN—ST. ASAPd.
CEFN—ST. ASAPd. SCHOOL APROINTU itNT. -Tile new head- mistress appomoaU eo iato SetioLpi is Alias Irene Parry, daughter of Mr E d tarty, Sandrlngnam Avenue, Rhyl, and Mian Margareo Davies, also of dandriogham AvauU Rhyl, has been appointed as her assiscan < teacher.
------_. LLANFEiiRES
LLANFEiiRES DIOCESAN INSPECTION, The school was exjiaiiodi ia roiigiou.-i knowledge oa Tuesday, November lthn, by the liav tiauaer Lewis, dio3j-.aa ia:pac or of the schools. The Rev Job:. Rj3a, reco" was praieat. All the papH b ÜÀai., H with the exceps tm at ODe child gaictci oerSitisstes which refloccs gr3t1.1 praise and congratuistioa upon oar jad-4 as^isiang teacher, Aiva Aanie Davies (Uie ot VronsfssfUSa). Taa following gained oartiflaaCes <; Grean-Irena Baeoh, John Hamphreys^ Lnwreuoe Hsunphreys, John B^rajuoagh. BitioiE-LPIAU ollins, Thomai Wiliiatos, WiUiam rnoasas iiiwards, Elvya Jones, Gdorge Ivor Jonea, Vara Bsaa-i. Blue—Rjoars Edwards, Eiward Paters Oeoil Haoapareye, itdrGio HUirisori liaaisa Davie?, Frances Brown, ftlariei Bfow,i3. Ret—Rufs Edwards, 3lo-swen VVoodlwaid Lj jie ForaYnouStI. Violas— Miria<n Wlliiaaii, Hjnoa? — misio Fa?nyaoa^hJ Joha Hisrison. Pjiz«—Alared Robares 1.-
- ABERGELE
ABERGELE BEB SMITHFIELY)J -Ue RITIITRD Paarelp *spa-?9a »•>•? yloaJar aa ease/ oi 136 cattle, 40 calces aid 200 sheep, Te-sde, and cleavance were very good tui round. 38 d_b, 00 W8 to li49 10a. 93 atora cattle praabically all Qlaae1 to ,£JO 5J. Extri- ordiaary demand for calvss to £ 7 15s. 103 fat sheep graded to 71s 31. Skins lis, Oaly 12 fat cattle gzoa<ied to £30 4; 6,i. Sales every Monday at 11.15 sharp.
-----------A NEW POWER-SAVER.
A NEW POWER-SAVER. Transmission of power is a constant problem with the engineer. Whatever wastes power, wastes coal: and coal is aii item of importance. Roughly speaking, power is generally transmitted from the engine, or prime motor, to the place where work has to be done by belts, by electricity or by compressed air. Bolts and shafting have only a limited application. Electricity will carry power to great distances and round any number of corners: but it has disadvantages which put it out of the running for certain purposes, as in coal mines, where a spark might cause explosion: indoors there is always fire-risk from the overheating of wires, and there are occasional accidents from shock. Compressed-air, because of its safety and handiness, is much used in mines and for rivetting: but it transmits power very wastel'ully, doing well, for instance, if as little as 90 per cent. of the original energy is lost on the way to a rock-drill. An entirely now way of conveying power is by Wave Transmission. This is based on the discovery by M. Constactinesco that water and other fluids are much more compressible than the text books say they are. They have, in fact, just elasticity enough to transmit waves which will do work. These waves were utilised in a very .striking way during the war. Messrs. W.H. Dorm an & Co., Limited, of Stafford, who hold a licence from the patentee, made "interrupter" gears for firing a machine gun in aeroplanes with such precision that 2,000 bullets a minute could be sent through the revolving propeller. By this device, airmen were able to lire straight iitLid, instead of having to manoeuvre side- or adjust their aim for a giir. placed overhead; aid the re -u!t was that the once famous Fokker of the Hun was conquered. But the future of Wave-Transmission is happily in the fields of peace, and particu* lady in saving coal through its great economy in power as compared with com- pres-ed air. Dormans have applied ir. to rock-drills, hitherto driven by the h I-ter, and to rivetting and other in;.chine.Wave Transmission may be briefly described as a mode of conveying power by a series of impulses, imparted to a column or pipe line or fluid by a very .simple generator coupled to a steam engine or other prime motor. Those impulses, or waves, have a varying wave-length and travel at the same speed as sound: and they can follow each other at any desircd speed, exactly like the phases of an electric current: they can, in fact, be mono-phase, two-phase, polyphase and can be "tapped" near any point in the pipe line. Whero they are tapped, they give back the energy which created them, and it can be used for any work that is wanted. The great advantage of Wave Transmission as compared with compressed air is its economy, which in the end of course means saving of coal. In working a rock-drill, for example, Wave Transmission delivers 80 per cent. of the horse-power indicated in the engine-room to the motor at the face of the rock—round any number of corners. Compressed air transmission only delivers 10 per cent. of the power. The difference represents, roughly speakin arr.economy of 70 per cent. in saving of the power A like economy is effected in other work, and a Wave Transmission motor, which is light and of simple construction, can be used perfectly well under water, for cutting or rivetting plates, for pile-driving and similar work, d Evidently there is an enormous future for Wave Transmission, which will count as one of the big engineering advance- casate of the early twentieth century.
---THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS.
THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS. ITS PERILS AND ITS PROSPECTS. By HAROLD SPUXDEtt. | A whole vear has now passed since the | Armistice, and the League of Nations has not | vet come into actual being. Never so long a g travail! The wbele of the first six months | after the Arinisliee wa-s spent in framing the | bare skeleton of the new government of the | world. The second six months has been spent | in waiting for its ratification. During aul that | period the enemies of the League—all the old | and new friends of militarism, all the vested j| interests that still cling to armaments all | those highbrow people who still talk in to,¡ c'.arikina armour and wave mailed fists-have I been conspiring and colloguing to thwart and to, defeat it. Perhaps it was better so. Perhaps it re- quired still this further year's agony, with its twenty-three wars on the top of the Great I War, and all the sordid tragedy of Eastern | Europe to convince mankind that the old | fashion was outworn, and that if humanity, | was to go on existing at all it wou.d have t# | seek new ways and new paths. | At any rate, this interval is now over. X<Jw, | oil the first anniversary of the- Armistice, g the Treaty of Peace has been ratified, an<t | all those mysterious delays of official persona | are at Last to come to an end. For, with tlio ratification oi the Treaty, the League ef I Nations, such as it is in that Treaty, comes | into instant being.. 1 For, after all. the League of Nations is contained in that Treaty, and during the next three weeks it will be found that the League is not, as so many seem still to imagine, a. shadowy phantom, a vague and empty dream, fcut already the core of a reality. nomers tell us that in the process by which the suns are developed from the nebulous gaseous haze there is a moment at which tha Mrst eddy of gyrating ether forme itself into one infinitesimal solid. It is a small thing, but it is the beginning of a star. So it ie with these first clauses of the new Treaty. They are slight, and hesitating, and vague. They seem to come into being with" no lan- guage but a cry." They facei the Old Woild timidly and fearfully, as if abashed at their own claime. Still, it is a beginning; it is a atart; it i* something solid. Heaven grant that it may be the birth of a New World. True, these claifse3 do not utterly forbid armamen18; do not completely banish war from the planet; do not put the final close to the caprice and self-will of sovereign warring States. But they make war more difficult by delaying it. They open the road to new com- binations, not for war but for peace. They plead for disarmament if they do not onforea it. As on a hesitating balance, they tip the scales slightly away from war in the direc- tion of peace. True, they do not create an international army, nor do they destroy all existing armies. But they suggest a new use for armies as police forces. They plead for a new spirit among the nations. They point the road to a new order along which humanity can tread. They are persuasives clauses, threatening little but suggesting much. It is left to humanity to follow alon" the track. It ir, up to the statesmanship of this twentieth century to take these clauses and to hammer them on the anvil of time into something actual and abiding. The outstanding peril to tins new order, Ot course, is that the League of Nations as at present constituted is little more than a new form of the Entento alliance. We have se-en during the last few months how this present scheme works. It is a lop-sided League, with half the world left out. The result is that as the months move forward the League finag itself dealing with half of Europe by one method and the other half by another. II) the West it is dealing by compaet and agree- ment. In the East it is still dealing by the process of war. It talks to Germany and Russia still through the mouths of guns. It has no other real contact with them. It has mo other convincing language. The weals point of all this is that the Wiest can longer afford to feed the .guns. We are throw- ing in our la-st stocks of ammunition. France still rages, but sends no troops. America debates, but holds aloof. The way of war proves to be disastrous-a new road to ruin. It becomes clear that along; that track West and East must rush together to perdition, and so even alreal v we are using the language of persuasiveness, trying to get Germany to blockade Russia. while we block- ade Germany itself, talking to one group of Russians and fighting another; reasoning and 's 11 11 1) tbuffeting at the same time; exhausting our last specimens of war-hatred, while at the eame time slipping and sliding into tones of peace. Is it not about time that we began to recognise that these two things will not com- bine together? That the world cannot- be "half slave and half free"? That war and peace are like arc and water, and that we must choose between one and the other? Already in New York and London a more reasonable way is prevailing. Perhaps the most striking thing of all is that Labour, hitherto the dividing issue of mankind, is now proving a solvent of discord. In the Labour Branch of the League of Nations, which is now already sitting in the United States, there arc Austrian and German dele- gates. In the Fight the Famine Congress, which is sitting over this week in London,Ger- man and Austrian delegates are also attend- ing. So great is the compulsion of necessity. For in these spheres-tit,e spheres of food and labonr-it is tfbvious that the world is one, and that to continue dividing it in half is only to prolong the agony. Yo'u cannot even beat your enemy unless you consent to meet him. Make no mistake. A great new epoch is opening to the world. Within fifteen days the representatives of tbirty-two States will sit and invite thirteen others to join them. If a two-thirds majority vote that way, our re- cent enemies can be invited to join the League as long as they accept the principles of the League and agree to obey its regula- tions. A new Council will be formed to sit at Geneva: a new world-power will come into existence. More than that, it will be a world-power with actual territory to govern. Within fif- teen days it will take over the government of the Saar Valley for the next fifteen years, and will have to elect a composite League Authority. It will take over Dantzic, a new free city under the Treaty of the League. It will instantly have to undertake the govern- ment of all the grea.t waterways of Europe- the Rhine, the Danube,, the Elhcl, the Oder, and the Niemen. Last, and not least, it v. ill enter upon that scheme of world government invented by Smuts and established bv Wilson —the mandatory system. There will be a permanent Commission to give mandates for the government of the annexed German Colo- nies, Asia Minor, and all the unassorted and undistributed fragments of misgoverned Earth. That Commission will give the man- dates and receive the reports of those to whom they are given. It can both srive them and take them away. Such are the possibilities of the Situation. But everything will dr-pend on public opinion in Europe and in tlu »o islands. Everyone wha believes in the League should join the League of Nations Union, and help them in their great crusade of Ihh autumn and winter. For we str"nd at t h" hi It of a, new, :icmc for the better government of this planet—a ■scheme small in its beginnings but vast in its promises, and depending for its full accom plishment on the spirit of peace and good- will among men. IVatelinaajil. wlHtt of the night?" Is it ke (lawn? So may it he.
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