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TWO
The New Germany As Determined By the Provisions
of the Peace Conference
'ERM A N °
°Brv»e/s£ \ Dresden
i \ C s f-» Breslau bsifojQuzburd
S *>Xt
Ay? ' yrankfort
Met *Sfi%tfk' bruC J H$ SLOVAKIA
F R- A H| 1,0 st to Germany
rass L,urfJ \ «2ggia«n
JSvtf rJ Internationalized
qm iif Munich KH Plebiscites
*-’ £ X '—' . 1 O 100 *OO
< -\ (*>_ J A MTT"f «■!' *BW aww
* 7 ° A Z i . '- -C STATUTE MILES
*/ n„- l ' r,r ' V DRAWN in map dept.
! / ~~ry *V . NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY,
j, /SwITZERLANIv / Washington , o.c.
1 A<% ( ir*A« Include Alßacc and L »rralnr S «<n aquarcmilaa. itHtor**<J to
Franc#. Jiupfn and Mnlmedy. 88? noil* re mil#*, r#d#d to flelglum; »>aria of
roe.'Jl. All#*.a and Went Pru*«l» 27. AM arjuan* mit«a, awarded to Poland.
Ictarnatlon&llsed arraa IrKliul#; D nrlg region, 7*9 snuare mtleg and Saar
Ha* n 7*H eqiii.re rnllia th«» Smut region to governed by a commlaalon ap
point*' l>v t 1 * League of .\'tM«un pond.up a ploblnctti* flft«•«n yearn bance.
Plebiscite# Pert* of ftt'itieawlg 2.7#7 arjimrr mile* (three mioneiwlva pla
T h e Woman Worker
“Study Finn’s Business Methods;”
Mill Expert
jHk VHA
fjf •, . *T',\.WmdJ>'» • SS5i&». ' "
With tha onlargrd Arid of opportunity for tha woman who wrorka, tho girl
araduala now on thr threshold of bosln as la apt to Ihi in overalls llrrr alto la—
railing up bar alaavcs, ready 10 tackle I ha Job
Mow writ am I qoaUAadf
w»»i do I lock?
What'a th# caati value of my achnohng?
Tbounnilt of girl gradual** amdtlng or
their Aiet tch arr today a.kiiig
ttotiiMlToa them vital questions a* thov
Ik* ooenmcncrmant to ilia biismr.a
World
Thaxr talent., wit, training ad ordlnarv
"h«a* aanao" at* bote* to*tad and
*ft.y of fhom or* ftndlng with oom*
l'r»DO<" mot i that th, to >* a
•M* |l| brttrot-0 what tha) arv ahlo to
doll vat torhmnaUr end what additional
•"It la required In th* worth whlla posi
tfnr
Itaapcai.-blhty for thli gap la variously
laid to businea* collrgaa tba general
•otwol aiatrm employers of a certain
•tarn parrots. and thr girt horarlt
Wberax. i thr bulk of th* blam* may
Tt. Hi* avcrag* girt on tha threshold
th* w.-tl,» •»< world 1* art to find that
th* human q’tai uaa which hark up and
round out technical rxcalleno# arr ratod
at a r -■ » • 'tan mm itmil
adi' of boaintar iractio* or »i>**d tw
typing
Tha attitint* of manr smployara, hara
and alaawht * * itnin*d up In thm con
awottoh In tha following paragraph* by
W a Owanabv rhu-' weatrrn iti.is
tan. of tha tt *otarn I'ninn Telegraph
Carol* uv. and employe if rxparf. in
aw-vr to thr t|U.- "HAT IK TH*
■ ATTni "|T,( r:t ciiki. oßAtn’*
-*
Moat o' all »- lain ad riwanaby “wa
want thorough.!, at . ally ambition,
tattattv* and Wat ortt.natv 'navvy ‘ —tha
fctuuai ant moral qvn.im# which too
•
many schools either da not or cannol
leach.
'Uenrrnlly glrla applying for lobs ara
all light on lhaory and lachulquv. hut
mann of them havan t boon taught dis
cipline. bualnraa stamina and a funda
mental understanding of whkt blstnra* la
about and what pnrl they ara at pec tad
to way In It If they To to aucueed
"Tha avaraga graduate aaama to faar
roaponsihillty. And whara there a little
responsibility there a imla pay
Most huatnea* cvdlagea ovei stress
apsad at tha expanse of thoroughness
i Cxmaeqaratly. as often And tha fast sat
worker actually tha poorest and must
Bits of Information
In Trinidad there ara spider* aa larga
a* a dinner plate
Man M the only living thing that rear
sleep* on Its bark
Polling used to be a form of capital
punishment In Knsland
The laud crab of Tuba has mors speed
than tha horse or ostrich
Many waiters in New York hotels earn
aa high aa list) a month
Sugar la extracted from M varieties of
m )un
Wet roll ts to have a MAAOAO apartment
house in which no ehddlaaa family will
obtain quarters
The falluiea Is th* first quarter of ttl»
biacitea In throe areaa aa Indicated) and boutheastern third of East Prussia.
6,785 mile* .
COBlly—too often a brainiest machine
pounding out errors Par more valuable
it the «irl who works thoroughly und In
telligently with moderate speed.
“Schools should teach pupils that dissi
pation Interferes with good work and pre
cludes good pay.
“1 recently had to discharge a girl—
whose pay 1 had raised $5 per month for
several months- because she stayed out
late at night and got In the habit of nap
ping at her work. She lacked loyalty.
"A girl must know more than text
books can teach. If she expects to get
anywhere in the business world. \Vh» n
parents, girls and schools recognize this
there will he a fur less costly re-adjust
ment period between the time she gradu
ates and the time she can command a
good salary."
The h«*ad of one of the largest voca
tional training nrnools in th* country b* -
i . >.\ i that no hut ln< is ■ oil* ge gi i
should be encouraged to accept a lob for
li*MH than IHO to S7O per month.
“Tell penurious employers to look else
where.' is his advice.
“Another great .handicap In preparing
girls for a business career is the failure
of the father to concern hlmuelf in their
education. It is a grave mistake for him
to leave the cultural and practical devel
opment of his daughter entirely to the
mother. He should constantly give her
the benefits of his own experience and
observations In the world of work.”
In speaking of the “rouge evil” this In
structor says. “We make the girl student
drop the up stick or we drop the girl.
We arc not catering to employers who
prefer a ready smile to sound business
training , , „ „
“It Is deplorable and an indictment
against a certain typ* of business man
that 90 per cent of our girl students leave
school before they are .quipped to work
an«l earn a proper salary.
Wherever the fault may lb the busi
ness man of good Judgment Is demanding
better qualification than the average
novice worker or Job seeker la offering.
THE FADING LIGHT OF DAY.
(By Request.)
“Jennie gather up the scraps, and Toddle
bring the broom,
Sallle push the kettle back, and tidy up
ibo room.
Now’s the time. twUt day and dark to
clear the work away.
For the morn make ready by the fading
light of duy.
“Come my boys Firing In the wood and
split the kindling fine.
Fetch Home water from the spring, and
feed the waiting ktne;
You'll not need the lantern, lads, the
twilight’s clear and gray.
Haste and you will finish by the fading
light of day.”
Thu* the dear house-mother spike, still
hu*v all the while.
Helping girls and cheering boys with
gentle words and Mnllea
Till the tasks were ended and the sons
and daughters gav „ , .
Gathered round the fireplace by the fad
ing light of day
Scattered scattered, far and wide, In
distant land*, and dead.
Long the grass has waved above the
gentle mother’s head:
Hut at nightfall even yet 1 seem to hear
her say, . . .. - .
“For the morn make ready by the fad
ing light of day.
Wiser now. rnethlnks therein that hidden
meaning* lurk.
Teaching* ere the night shall come
“wherein no man can work”
ICvery soul b# girded ready. Ood alons
If our eves again behold the fading
’ w ______
What They Left Him.
It wn . on a chillv morning at Camp
Grant that rt** soldier trowe to find
his outer garments missing.
“Has any one seen my blanket?” ho
asked In a chlvery time
He was informed thov had not.
"Any one «er my t-t-t-trousersf
Vo one had
"Wbll. anyway. 1 c-s«>f a n-n-nlco.
warm pair of uj-s-aiiMpaaders," he
•aid.— Raleigh Tlrusa.
Push and Co.
"Tier* boy." said I*o wealthy mo
torist. "I want some petrol, and get a
move on You will « ver get any
where In tho world utilr-n you have
push Push Is essential. When I was
young 1 pushed, and that la what got
me where I am."
"Well, guvnor." said tho boy, "I
reckon you’ll have to push again cans*
we aln t got a drop of pertol In th#
place" - Roaton Transcript
were fewer than In any other quarter In
II year*.
There t* a church tn Bergen. Norway,
hurt entirely of paper
Prraidi nt of the Wench republic arc
elected for seven > ear# and .'annul be
re.alactrd Kew Id's served the full
term
Tha Vatican palace at Home la the
largest bunding in the world, rovering
1J 1-J acre*
lows » th* com state. She gr w I at,-
HT MW bushels P If It filinol* was next
Hovernnwnt Mr. re* shew that New
York Has ove* 1,000,00* prison* who do
not apeak l.nghah
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THESE 2 U. S. OFFICERS
UNPOPULAR WITH HUNS
Coblenz—The two most unpopular
American officers among the Germans
In f'obian* are Major George Cockrell,
- rrprrs’ial, and Captain
orass alone jjfift
Concentrated Feed Neceeeary Both Summer and Wlntar.
[National Crop Improvement Service ]
UTTS7 HTI.E one would nntural
ly think that farmers
” * and dairymen would un
derfeed their stock, if at all, in the
winter mouths when feed is high, it is
a fact that the greater part of the un
derfeeding Is at the time when more
or less pasture is available.
I “The practice is to turn the herd on
pasture about the middle of May and
then along about June the cows come
in with their sides bulging. Their
mllkflow picks up. We look at the
milk pails and the paunches of the
cows stuffed with the new grass, and
say, ‘Well, there’s no need of founder
ing them. We'll Just leave off the
feed from now on.' It is left off and
It stays off ail through the summer;
all through the dry August weeks
when grass gets short, and clear on
until frost drives the cows Into the
ibarn.
I
“In consequence many cows go
Into winter Insufficiently nourished.
Grass is but wet hay. And while
farmers have an Idea that It Is an all
sufficient feed they would consider
anyone crazy who would feed cows on
,wet hay alone in the winter time,’’
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will be gladly played for you on any machine you wish
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Theodore Ft Kicker, in charge of the
blheting office which must furnish ac
commodations for something like eleven
hnudred officers and thousands o» sol
diers.
Major Cockrell, whose home is in St.
Paul. Is in command of more than twelve
hundred military police and five to
twenty or more Germans pass through
says A. C. Palmer of Indiana In
Hoard’s Dairyman.
The natural function of the cow Is
first to maintain her bodily strength
and to produce merely milk enough
for her young. We have made an ar
tificial machine of this cow, and it is
an unnatural function to produce milk
In large quantities.
“Green grass," says Mr, Palmer,
"will furnish the nutrition for a cow’s
body maintenance, and Its appetizing
and stimulating qualities will encour
age milk production. It Is true; but
all too often the stimulating quality
reacts, and by encouraging greater
milk production when she does not re
ceive a greater supply of feed, her
body makes up the difference so that
by the end of the grass season—even
a good grass season —her body Is
weaker than in the spring.”
Mr. Palmer say* that in 1917 he fed
his cows until June 10th and, like his
neighbors, gave them pasture alone
until September 15th, when their
steadily decreasing milk flow made
him hurry delayed feed shipments.
But In spite of all that he could feed
them with rich concentrates, the dam
age had been done, and the milk flow
decreased until time to dry the cows.
And it is so easy to have one. Just pay a few dol
ars down— that’s easy enough. Then pay a small
amount each week /or month until the machine is paid
for. You’ll scarcely feel the money, but you will quick
ly feel how fine it is to have a real REGINAPHONE in
your home.
SUNDAY, JUNE 22
his office every day on their war to jal!.
So among the civilians who buy stolen.
American food and who try to sell cog
nac to American soldiers and commit
other acts contrary to army regulations
Major Cockreil is a most unpopular roan.
Sometimes he receives threatening
notes and also letters in German with
skull and cross bones at the bottom of
the page but they do not frighten him
in the least. It's all a part of the job,
the major says.
Captain Fieker, who lived in Chicago
before he went to war, has been going
about Coblenz for five months selecting
choice billets for generals and other
officers and for the soldiers too. And so
most all the civilians in Coblenz have
had a glimpse of Captain Fieker from
time to time and they do not like him
one bit Many of them tell him so,
in a nice way of course, each time he
comes around.
Every house in the city has been listed
In Captain Fieker’s office, and he knows
just how many members there are in
each family and when there is a spare
bedroom or two handy he takes it over
for a general, a colonel, a major, a cap
tain or a lieutenant, according to the
furnishings and the lecation of the home.
Being unpopular is incidental to the
duties of the billeting officer. But the
work appears to agree with him. Since
he came to Germany with the Army of
Occupation Captain Kieker has gained
ten pounds.
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