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LEARNING. \|U J/ 111111 l VUI 1 111 '
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BY BUD FISHER MU.
- —— raKrA
» ( >“/ I j 1 *~ Hwmi»».w«.e»»«) tr,
Big Still Destroyed
DALTON, Ga„ April I.—One of
the largest and best equipped illicit
distilleries found in this section of
the State in years was destroyed in
Walker county Tuesday, by Deputy
Collector Camp and Police Chief
Bates ,of this city. The outfit was
found in' “the Furnace,’ ’and con
sisted of a 000-gallon copper still.
With it were destroyed 4,500 gallons
of beer, 35 bushels of malt and 20
. bushels of meal.
T ’, 1
PELLAGRA
CURED WITHOUT A
STARVATION DIET 1
AT A SMALL COST
If you hare this awful disease, and 1
want to be cured—to stay cured—write
for J
j TREE BOOK.
giving the history of pellagra, symptoms,
results and how to treat. Sent in plain, |
sealed envelope. A guaranteed treat- ,
- ment that cures when all others fail. “
Write for this book today.
CROWM MEDICINE COMPANY, '
Dept. 98, Atlanta, Ga.
1
I
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i s
Don*Send
a Penny"
A skirt value without .„ , i.i.m, ■ , 2
in equal—backed by an
imazingly liberal offer! ! c
-end no monay-not \ t
v penny now. We are f .
positive that thia won- I *
ierfuUybeautiful.rich . ]
.nd Inqtronw Bilk non-
in skirt bargain wiU
%n itself the very
nomentyonseteyes
’"icand realise the Jlit gHgg&S Ic
■iperb style, beau- i&iJt-Wlf IjB!!S3WA. -st SffltSg i
: till me ten al, §s®
remely bandsomete Sfis ’iSeSstsSl® t
1 esign. highly ■gS igwii f
stic finish and
>erfectfit. >»»' * w g&Sgt t
Therefore, we ASifl^iSsB F '®iStltySSv, JjfiSfSß t
■.ilip it abso- 'raw ST UA- wi ; ?<v ;A,s)i ®H
utely on ap- ■ 1
oroval for you .
. □ examine and TJJjJ? ffflßß
.ry on. without S c
a cent in ad-
vance. The op- a?y : >
portunity is al!
yours —the risk ' A
all ours. ***s*l™*? fSfflffiH -
Beautiful wOfl <
Silk Illi ft Wn k
Poplin
Maleofsplen- A j
did quality rich :
silk poplin m 3^..;£|ggg,.
this seaeon’s >®a£ sFESgigt
most stunning i-SgSg'
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fully designed
lines becoming
to every type of
figure. Hand- ffißjlwßS n
some draped :’■; I .
natch pockets. , L
ornamented 1 ;WO<3 ' ]
s’nS i v
Rocket ends are , I
trimmed with fe§K =
r »iik fringe. s
greatly en» fegat I
beauty of this
*
’round at waist I •>
line, with separate,detach- 'Sua® s ‘^<i.isi s
able belt trimmed with i c
pearl buttons. Your choice of a rich, lustrous black, t
beautiful navy blue, or stylish taupe-gray. Sizes, Si r
to 40 in. vzaist; 36 to i2 in. length.
*.A ftlmarV Don’t wait until this wonderful '
MCI IsUW, skirt bargain has passed—send J
for it today. No money now. Ju?* name and address
on postal or in letter. Pay only 54.98 for skirt on ar
rival. No risk. See, examine, try then decide. it r
not perfectly satisfactory, retumtousandwewillre- ,
fund your money. Order navy by No. BlsSs;black,
No.B1586; taupe, No.BlSST.Statesizewanted. s
LEMIUID-MIHITON &C 0„ Dc?t6o2o Shicsgo c
Az _ i €
Jusl Send Os
IfourName and Address ;
Costs You Nothing I
Wu will gladly send you
the finest style book, the ~gsgfc-
meet beautiful assort-
meat of cloth samples v - <
and quote you the lowest \-- -rs ■lfr,.
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Your Own J »H®
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A reel genuine perfect !fa ■.iljSHjfl (
fitting made to measure b &i ;dl !>l USry I
suit, e beauty In every re- » Jt..;«IHRi;: WOjA
spec* and far ahead of I <
ordinary tailoring. You 1 Qjf rafffli ,WH '
simply wear this special RW:. IC 7JK I’a
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take the orders thatcome t lie |U<qWSC/- KfJ >
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your swell suit get the UI ", fA
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er card today. Remem-
ber every thing freeandnoobligationonyourpart
Tbs Paragon Tailoring Co., D®pt 678 Ghitag'
GUARANTEED FOR SOOO.MILES
Spaulding Tires are sold to give
service and satisfaction. New,
* rfA *,-Sk enecial process of double tread
f/fiA i '?Qi ry-S makes them outlast any sim
f tire on the market. Remark-
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'IIII VCi P See exevpliOTal prieer.
Zi// C 6 C 6 RELI?reR FREE wrra EVERT TIRE
’IB CO Site Tire Tubes
|y .0,0 30x355.50 $1.60
ll' 30xy/26.50 1.75
11 fW 32x &2 7.00 2.00
31 x 4 8.00 2.25
Irt 32x4 825 2..'n
ll //aS? 33 x 4 8.50 2.50
\IV/XO/ -75 2.60
P V/W 33 x 4’A 10.'» 2.85
\vy/W 34x4$ 10.50 3.09
V7 W' 35 x<s 1100 3.15
36x4511.50 3.25
Xfl? 7 37 x 512.75 3.75
ALL TUBES GUARANTEED FRESH STOCK
j a erderinx, state what kind of tire vou want, atraicht
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every tire sent ent. Prompt Deliveries.
SPAULDING TIRE <Sc RUBBER CO.
15M Ogdon Av. Dept. 114 Chicago, BL
THE ATLANTA TRLWEBKLY JOURNAL.
O u D
New Questions
1 — Q. Is there any special reason
for the arrangement of letters on a
typewriter?
2Q. When was the wheel first
invented?
3Q. What are the leading daily
newspapers of Paris?
4Q. How many cables are there
across the Pacific to the Orient?
5 Q. What is the art of reading
a person’s character. By his hand
writing,?
6Q; What is the weight of a
standaiu silver dollar?
7 Q. What Is the origin of the
name “Miami?”
8— Q. Is steam visible? 1
9Q. Is the earth larger than
the moon?
10— Q. Did Luxerburg at any time
belong to Germany?
Questions Answered
I.—Q. What is the most popular
town name found in the United
States?
1 — A. The postal guide shows that
there are thirty-one towns in the
United States named Franklin. There
are twenty-eight Washingtons. These
two names are the most popular. The
names of ancient cities are used
quite extensively. There are twenty
eight modern Troys in this country,
sixteen named for Athens, and four
teen for Rome.
2 Q. How many millionaires are
there in the United States at the
present time?
2A. Senator Gronna recently said
in the senate that there are about
30,000 people each worth $1,000,000
or more in this country today, while
before the war there were estimated
to be about 7,000 men rated as mil
lionaires.
3Q. Why is the sea salty?
3 —A. The salinity of the ocean is
due to the fact that waters that run
into it constantly bring salt with
them —salt that has been dissolved
from he earth. Then, when the wa
ter is brought back to the land in
the form of rain ,it is pure, the salt
having been left behind in the proc
ess of evaporation. Thus is salt con
stantly brought down to the sea, but
none of it is taken away and the sea
grows steadily saltier.
SUPREME COURT
‘LEAK’ CHARGED
IN INDICTMENTS
—i—
WASHINGTON. April I.—lndict
ments against four persons were re
turned today by the District of Co
lumbia supreme court grand Jury in
vestigating an alleged leak in the
United States supreme court’s deci
sion last November in the Southern
Pacific oil land case.
Those indicted are Ashton F. Em
bry, former secretary to Associate
Justice McKenna of the supreme
court; James Harwood Graves, for
mer assistant attorney in the depart
ment of justice; Barnett E. Moses,
Washington lawyer, and E. Millard
Mayer, Jr., New York stock broker.
The indictments charge the four
men with consipracy to defraud the
United States of its right of secrecy
surrounding opinions of the supreme
court prior to public announcement
of the court’s decision. Embry is
charged in the grand pury report
with furnishing a “tip” on the court’s
decision whereby the other defend
ants were able to sell “short” 500
shares of Southern Pacific stock at a
profit of $1,412.50.
“Reckless Bob” Tyler
Captured and Tamed
By Fair Atlanta Maid
SAVANNAH, Ga.. April 1. —Robert
D. Tyler, known as "Reckless Bob,”
dashing cavalryman, movie star and
all-round adventurer, at present
chief engineer aboard the Belgian
motor auxiliary schooner La De Dix
mude, which is docked at the Sea
board terminals, has at last been
captured and is now a tame man.
His heart is already longing for
the little farm in Wyoming where
he expects to settle down and raise
chickens “an’ everything.” His fair
captor was, before her marriage to
him, March 20, Miss Bessie Baker,
of Atlanta, a pretty and charming
lass whom his friends say complete
ly won him the first time he saw
her. The ceremony was performed
by Rev. John M. Outier, pastor of
Trinity Methodist church, in Savan
nah.
During the Mexican trouble “Reck
less Bob” enlisted with the First
Virginia cavalry and was later sent
to France as a dispatch rider, where
he spent sixteen months and was
wounded three times. He wears a
two and a half inch silver plate in
his head today as a result of the
battle of Verdun, and his wife is the
proud wearer of the Croix de Guerre
which was given him for bravery at
the front.
Advertises for Person
To Adopt Her Children
COLUMBUS, O„ April I.—Unable
to provide for them because of ad
vancing living costs, Mrs. Estelle
Tilliman, a widow, of Columbus,, and
mother .of eleven children, has ad
vertised four sons, aged twelve, ten,
seven and six, “for adoption,.” Mrs.
Tilliman’s only demand is- that the
4 —Q. How long is a passport is
sued by the United States effective?
4 A. A passport is good for six
months after the time of issuance,
and can be renewed twice, each time
for six months, making a total of
eighteen months.
5 Q. What tribe of Indians are
known as the “cliff dwellers?”
5 A. This name is applied to
the .Pueblo Indians, who are consid
ered the most highly civilized of the
many Indian tribes found in this
country. , In 1910 there were 280
distinct Indian tribes in tlje United
States and Alaska.
6Q. Os the large bodies of wa
ter, which contains the most salt?
6A. The Dead sea is one of the
saltiest bodies of water in the world.
A ton of water from it contains 197
pounds of salt. In a ton of water
from the Caspian sea there are but
eleven pounds of salt, while in a ton
from the Atlantic ocean there are
thirty-one pounds of salt.
7Q. What are the two 'oldest
towns in the United States?
7A. They are St. Augustine, Fla.,
and Santa Fe, N. M.
8— Q. What kind of ink is used in
printing a newspaper?
8— A. The newspapers use indeli
ble ink in order that the publications
may be preserved for reference in
public and private libraries.
9Q. Where is the longest tunnel
in the world?
9A. The Simpson tunnel through
the Alps between Brig and Isella is
the longest ’ -nnel, being twelve and
one-half miles in length. This tun
nel was begun in 1898, and completed
in 1906. Another notable European
tunnel is the Mont Cenis through
the Alps, which was the first to
place France in direct communication
with Italy. This tunnel was com
pleted In 1872.
10— Q. What is the origin of the
American Indian?
10—A. His origin is still a mat
ter of dispute. Ethnologically, the
Indian resembles most closely cer
tain Mongolian and Siberian peoples.
It Is therefore believed by most au
thorities that his ancestors crossed
from Asia to Alaska and thence down
the coast of North America.
Federal Reserve Bank
Officials See Lowering
Os Present Price Levels
WASHINGTON. April 1 —Nation
wide reports from federal reserve
bank officials, made public Wednes
day, disclose their opinion that the
post-war era of “extravagance and
reckless buying” by the people is
nearing its end.
“A hesitation, if not an actual ces
sation” of prices is noted, and the
federal reserve board’s statement
summarizes its advices as indicating
a generally more hopeful view
the country’s business conditio J
than for several mont
While the price changes were
shown by the board not to be uni
versal, they were nevertheless re
garded as positive and of ImportaT.-e
as a basis for reckoning what the
immediate future holds.
Relief- from the high priced for
the consumer will not be completely
obtained until present stocks are ab
sorbed in practically all lines, ac
cording to the board’s view. Man
ufacturers everywhere, however,
were shown to hold the view that
the peak of high prices has been
reached an dto expect a gradual re
cession. •
In the clothing trade, particularly,
the board said there was a marked
tendency of the public to make old
supplies last longer and to refuse
to pay exorbitant prices. This
phase can mean only that an awak
ening has come, the statement said,
and that many people have arrived
at the conclusion that they are
themselves responsible for a con
tinuing high range of prices.
Robert Miller Shot;
J. 0. Nasworthy Held
- ABBEVILLE, Ga., April 1. —J. O.
Nasworthy is in Wilcox county jail
here charged with having shot Rob
ert Miller at his home on the Dixie
Highway between Abbeville and
Fitzgerald, Sunday night, causing
Miller’s death Monday morning.
It is said that Miller, who has
been making his home in Florida, on
leaving his brother’s home Sunday
night, took his brother's gun, saying
that he was going hunting the next
day; that he went to Nasworthy’s
house, told him that he had come
after? him and invited him out on the
porch. Nasworthy said that he could
not get out of bed, but he later
cracked the door open, it is reported,
and, seeing Miller armed, shot him.
'Hie wounded man dragged himself
to. the road, where he was picked up
by Albert Dicks and carried to the
home of his father, Joseph Miller.
Miller, in a statement before he
died, took all the blame for the affair
on himself, it is said.
boys have good homes. The wom
an’s husband was killed a year ago
while felling a tree. Other children
in the family have entered the homes
of brothers and ssiters who are mar
ried. The mother proposes to sup
port two of her children, a year old,
herself.
WILL FAVORABLY
REPORT PEACE
PACT TO HOUSE
WASHINGTON, April I.—The res
olution declaring a state of, peace be
tween the United States and Germany
was ordered favorably reported by
the house foreign affairs committee
today. I
Practically no change was made
in the text as introduced yesterday
by Chairman Porter, of the com
mittee.
The vote ordering a favorable re
port was 12 to 6, with one member
voting present.
The resolution fixes a date for the
end of the war between the United
States" and Germany, thus setting a
time for the termination of restric
tive war laws.
Chairman Porter will present the
majority report late today or to
morrow and the resolution will be
taken up in the house Monday. Rep
resentative Flood, ranking minority
member, will file a dissenting re
port.
Milk Maid Quits r
Cows to Elope in
Ford With Lover
Up in Hall county three lonely
cows stand in the family barn, moo
ing vainly for some one to come and
milk them. Outside in the yard,
two shiny tin pails lie where they
were tossed into the mud. Beside
them is the three-legged stool,
deserted.
For Bessie, the milkmaid, is mar
ried now and never again, so she
told her husband in Atlanta Tues
day morning, w&l she milk a cow or
feed a pig. To'which he answered,
tenderly, “I’ll say you won’t, honey!
We don’t care if them cows ain’t
milk till judgment day, do we?”
And Bessie, the milkmaid, admitted
she didn’t care.
It all happened between sunup and
noon Thursday.
Bessie—her full name was Miss
Bessie Norrel, she is eighteen years
old, black-eyed, brown-haited and
red-lipped and she lived with her
folks four miles out of Gainesville
on R. F. D. number four—rose with
the sun Thursday morning.
She donned her blue gingham
gown, her silken boudoir cap, her
shoes and her red velvet coat, trim
med with real fox fur. She slung
the pails over her right arm; she
took the three-legged stool in her
left hand, and from the Norrel home
she set out for the barn.
Tripping onward through the dew
—or possibly, the red clay—she en
countered rushing toward her, not a
gallant charger—though surely it
should have been—but a Henry Ford,
driven by young William P. Latimer,
just past twenty-one and in love with
life, also Bessie.
“Where are you gqing, my pretty
maid?” asked William, or words to
that effect.
‘ll’m going a-milking, sir,” she
said.
“Where are you going?”
“To Atlanta,” answered William,
“and you’re going with me. Aw,
come on, Bess! i’ve got the license
in my pocket—bought it a week ago
at the courthouse in Atlanta—and
there ain’t a bit of use for us to
wait any longer. Let the old cows
go and be Mrs. Latimer!”
So 4 it happened that, after pushing
the Henry Ford car out of the mud
two or three times en route to
Gainesville, Bessie and William—
gingham gown, boudoir cap, ft-ed vel
vet coat and all—arrived at the Ter
minal station at 9 o’clock Thursday
morning and bumped into Mrs. Payne,
the Travelers’ Aid agent, whose
duty it is to keep a watchful eye
out for people in trouble, also lit
tle girls In gingham gowns who look
as if they were running away or
being run away with.
But when William and Bessie were
taken to the police station, and when
William exhibited the marriage
license, everything was lovely again,
and before Justice of the Peace A.
A. Owens, in his office opposite the
courthouse, they were made man and
wife, and left, shortly thereafter, for
William’s brother’s home in Easley,
South Carolina
“Bessie, those cows ain’t milked
till yet!” grinned William happily,
as he waved the reporters good-bye.
“No,” said Bessie, “and I’ll never
milk another!”
Turkish Leader Has
Declared War on
England, Report Says
LONDON, April I.—Mustapha Ke
mal, leader of the Turkish nationalist
rebels, has declared war on Great
Britain, a dispatch from the Constan
tinople correspondent of the Morning
Post said today.
Tennesseans Disabled
2,200 Not 22,000
MEMPHIS, Tenn., April I.—Earle
E. Griggs, field officer of the Fed
eral Board of Vocational Training,
here in connection with his work
among disabled soldiers, said he had
been misquoted at Nashville yester
day in an item saying he had stated
that of the 55,000 Americans ren
dered unfit to resume their former
occupations during the war, 22,000,
or 40 per cent were from Tennessee.
The badly disabled soldiers from this
state, he declared, who arc being
trained in various vocational schools,
numbered 2,200.
THE WILLY-NICKY LETTERS
(Copyright, 1920. by the Chicago
Daily News Foreign Service.)
“Well, European observers think
that it could be managed, that the
Zar could make the expected ‘grand
acte’ by going to Moscow and as
sembling the no'bility and notables
in his magnificent palace, speak to
them, perhaps beginning with a rep
rimand for publishing letters and
addresses sent to him, which is bad
manners and must not be repeated,
and then proclaim the reforms he
has prepared for his people as far
as he thinks fit. Not the promise
of a general legislative assembly,
no constituante or convention na
tionale, but a habeas corpus act and
wider extension of the COunsell de
lempire (imperial council). No lib
erty of assembly or of the press,
but strict orders to all censors to
obtain from any chicanes hence
forth. Further the Zar would let
the hearers know what he has de
cided about the army—in case he
thinks it possible or necessary to
go out himself—to tell them and to
exhort them to abstain from all in
ternal quarrels till the enemy is
routed. After this the Zar ‘entoure’
by the clergy with banners and cross
and incense and holy Icons would go
out in the balcony and read out the
same speech he held before, as a
manifesto to his assembled loyal
subjects in the courtyard below, en
circled by the serried ranks of the
troops ‘la baijonette au cannon le sa
bre au poing,’ (with bayonets fixed
and drawn sabers’). When you would
tell them that you—in case you
thought It necessary—would go to
share the hardships of their broth
ers and relatives in the field, who
had to go out by your command and
to cheer them and try to lead them
to victory, it is argued that the peo
ple will be deeply touched and
cheer you and fall on their knees
and pray for you. The Zar's popu
larity would be recovered and he
would, gain his people’s sympathy
besides. All persons who take an
interest in the Russian events are
unanimous in their opinion that ‘a
la longue’ the Zar must not remain
in perpetuum in Tsarkoe or Peter
hof, but that it "is sure that should
his first appearance be made under
the above mentioned conditions the
sensation and impression Created in
the. whole world would be enormous,
which would with bated breath lis
ten to him when'he addresses It as
his forefathers formerly did from
the ramparts of the Kremlin.
“This dearest Nicky is the sketch
which I have drawn of the Euro
pean public opinion with respect to
the events in Russia. In the begin
ning I have given you the reasons
why I thought it my duty to write
these lines. I once more crave your
pardon for having taken up your
precious time and in case I should
sometimes have been too personal
in my report. But as your loyal
friend I am a jealous watcher of
your ‘renommee’ in this world and
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CHJCAGO SPECTACLE HOUSE
Dept. A-134, 3302-04 W. 12th Street, Chicago, Illinois
MAIL COUPON NOW SEND NO MONEY
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ten days’ actual test. This free trial i s not to cost me one cent. And if 1
like the glasses and keep them, I am t o pay you $2.95 only. But if, for any
reason whatsoever, Ido not want to keep them (and I alone am to be the sole |
judge), I will return them to you without paying you a single cent for them as
you agreed. Do not fail to answer the following questions:
How old are you How many years have you used glasses (if any)?
Name
Postoffice
R. RBox No., State
I wish you should by it be rightly
and justly judged;, and that is niy
duty too to inform you of the opin
ions the world forms on your ac
count so as to enable you to correct
them by your acts if you feel so
Inclined. At all events ‘Honi soit,
qul mal y pense.’ (‘Evil to him who
evil ‘thinks.’)
“■With sincerest wishes for the
welfare and future of your country
an house, and best love to Alix,
and the wish that God may bless
and protect you all believe me dear
est Nicky as always, your most af
fectionate cousin and friend, L
“WILLY.”
Two world events of tremendous
importance are reflected in the let
ters from the German kaiser to the
> Russian czar published today. The
first, dated June 3,190 p, shows the
' kaiser advising .“Nicky” to make the
’ best of a bad job and conclude peace
' with Japan. The kaiser proposes
( President Roosevelt as mediator. The
second comes immediately after the
’ visit of the kaiser to Bjoerko, a his
’ toric island in the Malar sea off
, the coast of Sweden, where the czar
signed the secret treaty with the
kaiser and the latter felt that he
' had completed a great step in fash
ioning the new “groupment” that was
to include practically all the powers
’ except Great Britain.
In the first case the kaiser wrote
i Nicholas immediately after the Rus
! fleet was disastrously defeated
! in the straits of Korea by Admiral
, Togo on May 27-28. The kaiser saw
, no hope for Russia’s extricating her
, self aftei* her military and naval
blunders. The kaiser’s letter is
t dated June 3. At that time Presi
. dent Roosevelt had already acted. On
June 1 he conferred with the Ja,p
--i anese minister, Takafira, at the White
. Houte on the possibility of opening
negotiations for peace. On June 2
he conferred with the. Russian am
bassador,- Count’ Cassini. On June
7 President Roosevelt sent an identi
cal note to both Russia and Japan,
proposing the opening of peace nego
. 'tiations. This was accepted on /Tune
10 and the conference at Portsmouth
August 9.
President Roosevelt says of the
pekce negotiations between Russia
and Japan in his autobiography:
“During the course of the negotia
tions I tried to enlist the aid of the
governments of one nation which was
friendlj? to Russia, and of another
nation which was friendly with Ja
pan in helping bring about a peace.
I got no aid from either. I did, how
ever, receive aid from the emperor
of Germany. His ambassador at St.
Petersburg was the one ambassador
who helped the American ambassa
dor, Mr. Meyer, at and
doubtful points of the negotiations.
Mr. Meyer . . . rendered literally
invaluable aid by insisting upon him
self seeing the czar at critical pe
riods of the transaction, when it was
no longer possible for me to act suc-
SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1920
cessfully through the representatives
of the czar, who were often at cross
purposes with one another.”
The signing of the secret treaty by
the czar was William’s master
stroke. It meant the building up of
a series of alliances to offset Great
Britain. Both the czar and William
were defeated by Sergius Witte.
the czar to repudiate
the treaty. The czar’s weak char
acter had given William his oppor
tunity, but also had lost the game
for him. Once turned aside Russia
floated into the British orbit. Nicho
last was an autocrat,/ but events
proved that even autocracy cannot
save a ruler who is not master of
himself.
The letters were copied in the
archives of the Soviet government
at Moscow by Isaac Don Levine, staff
correspondent of the Daily News.
Time for Peace Has Come
“Berlin, June 3, 1905.—Dearest
Nicky: The kind lines which you
entrusted to Micha’s care and were
given me yesterday have deeply
touched me. ■ The memorable events
you allude to are all clearly graved
in my memory. and remind me how
the years have gone by and how oft
en since long we two have been
brought into personal relations. The
natural consequence of this is a firm
feeling of mutual friendship that de
veloped between us both based on a
perfect understanding of each other.
These relations have flourished
through the long years for the wel
fare of our countries, to rule which
we have been called upon by provi
dence. They wei'e, and I hope will
continue, to be guarantees of peace
and welfare . for the two countries
as well as for the world. I well
remember the moment in the church
of the winter palais when you took
your oath on the glorious tatters of
the old Cossack standard, amhl the
breathless silence of an enormous
audience of illustrious people! How
moved your dear father was when
he kissed you after the ceremony!
How long ago that is! Now you are
in his 'place and have to lead your
country through one of the most dif
ficult phases of its development.
How I have been feeling for and
thinking- of you all these last
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months, I need not say! Also of
every phase of Admiral Roshestwen
sky’s progress! The great stake
which he represented in your hand
has been played and honorably lost.
He did everything in his powers to
come up to your wishes, but prov
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defeat bravely serving his master
to the last! My fullest sympathy is
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o
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