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THE INTELLIGENCER Bft&BLI&HKD 18?. Published every morning except Korday by 'ibo Anacreon Intelligen cer st 140 West Whltner Street, An derson? 8. O. BBM?-W&EKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays ?nd Fridays " (rn . . ? . lt. M. GLENN.... Editor and Manager Sutored aa second-clans matter Avril 28, 1914, at the post offlco at Anderson, South Carolina, under the Act or March 8, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRBSS DISPATCHES .Telephone .821 *"* KOBflCJUFnOH BATAS DAILY One Tear.83.0? sys Months .?.a.co Caree Month*.1.26 One Month..41 One V/oek ..10 SEMI-WEEKLY Cine Year.11.501 Hz Months .761 The Intelligencer ia de?v?r?? 1 Barriers in the city. , Look at the printed label on your] super. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice dati on label carefully, and IC not correct please notify ns at once. . Subscribers desiring the address o! their paper, changed, will pleas? state ; in their communication both tho old and r.ew addrosses,' -, "BV> Insure, prompt delivery, eom : fdalnt* of non-delivery tn the city i of Anderson should BO r?? 4? to the i Clrr-ulatlon Department before 9 a. m. . and a copy will ba sent at once. AW ohecka and drafts should be | drawn to The Anderson 'Intelligencer. , APfBBTISIHCl ~; . ; Statte will ba furnish?! os awlico* m moa. No tl advertising dlBcontma*d az sast on written order. ' . _ - . . ' 11 lu - ii 'rn_ Vh& Intelligencer wtll publish brief I and rational letters on subjects of[ general interest when they, sro ae ? companied by tba names ana ad dresses ot tba authors end ixe not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous sonununlcstlons will not be nottcod. Rejected m&nuccripto will not be ro . .; turned, Sn order to avoid ,delry* on aeeonnt ! el po'sBonal abaenca, letters to The j Intelligencer Intended for publication should not bo addressed to-any Indi vidual connected with the paper, bot ! ?imply to The Intelligencer. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 80, IMG. Stofanoson, tho cxploror, is the .Bicklost man on tim. globe. He .was in the Arctic regions.for a whola year und didn't know ,the war was going an. A find' time for n man to marry ia when ho gota old enough to . know nil about women," opines' tho York Nows. Wo aro astonished di Bro'. Bell. Doosn't ho. know that a man could! never qualify.to marry under a con dlU?n llkoiitmi. . ; , Tiio big Amorlcau bankers wore very dubious about that $BOO,000,000 war loan-until lt was put over on re inar kably favorablo to rms. Thon ev erybody scrambled to subscribo. It ! looka as if Wall Street fooled, that ? bu?ch^ot-'Britiai??ftnanelorB, ; .JJQ . ? y General von lWslng, military ? goy . ?rnor-Kcn?ra? .;ef?Be!sfoiu, bas iss?od a dooroo forbidding * tho ' artificial blinding ofcvi'ong birds. "It ls a cruel ty which I can by. nd means tolerate,^ ho says. Birds i probably bayo^ j more feelings than Belgians, still, it there had been a fow B?ch decrees in behalt ??t$;tbe natives a year ago last sum morv -o ..Tho scientific hygienists Bay that) rats and fleaa are far greater do ll troy ero of life Utan tho war. And tuoy uro superior to human tain gs la that they don't destroy their .'own hind. Sumo day mon will learn from .h.yl ?xesp enemies, and'fight them, instead 'wasting combative energy In mu* fy j- tual slaughter. "There ls such a thing ns being too] - ' proud to fight," said President Wil &on. ob a certain memorable occasion. ? There ia siso such a thing as being too tired to fight. And lt scoma to ba Gonuahy'a policy to reduce us to tho requisite Btata of tiredness, by pro 5 Oracling Um submarine controversy through an interminable exchange of diplomatlQ not?s. ' , . tegarditi?-iae question.^stlllwarm ly/ di8p?id lb many states, whether women -would uso tho ballot (ti they had lt, H Wyoming woman risos to ro ark that th**women of her state st 38 per cent of; tho votos, although lix**'. conaUtbt^ only 32 r?r cent of thc adult; population. Maybe that'll bold tho "'antla*'; for a whMo*-rand miiyb* lt won't Women are skilled in ' con ^^l^irig ntebi bbt it's awfully hard for H f?*??e. woman *? ?onvfnce .unnthn'r> of ' thine. FOOLISH MR. FORD Not nil thc foolish things In con nection with war aro happening on tho other sido of tho "Pond." Amer icans, living in America, aro giving us sonio good oxumplcs occasionally ot how folks supposed to bo possess ed of a reasonablo amount of men tality may do ?onie mighty queer things. If reports he true, tho high ly esteemed potentate of tho auto mobile manufacturing world, Henry Kord, Is tho latest to glvo us a glow jiiK oxuiupio of ?j?rrow mlnuCdncuS In this respect. Sir Henry, lt would appear, In al lowing his hatred of ? 'ar get tho up per bund of his better judgment, and, Incidentally, his humanity. A dispatch states that tho Russian government recently placed with tho Kord automobile plant on order for 150 ambulances, with tho assurance that they were to bo used solely for the Red Cross service. Then Mr. Ford, so tho story goes, learned of tho dual auO vetoed it, returning tho chcckB which had hoon passed ns an advance payment on the machines. It's pretty certain that lack of am bulances in which to transport tho wo,mdod from the battloflodu would not bring tho war to a CIOBO. Am bulances aro not a menin; of carrying on war; they are merely contrivances for use in ameliorating thc suffering of tho wounded ofter ' war" has dono its terrible work. It strikes us OB about au sensible for Mr. Ford to cancel tho order for umbulanccs as lt would bo for the hoad of a big laboratory In this coun try to cancel an ordc-? for.a consign ment of ot Ii or for use. by tho surgeon? in tho war hospitals in amputating shattered limbs of soldiers who had boon wounded in the trenches. "No," says the hdad of tho . laboratory, "I will not furnlBh other for the sur geons in putting tho wounded sol diers to sloop while they saw their limbri off. I will show my disapproval of war by lotting tho wounded sol diers groan and wrltho 'in agony while tiny, wldo awake, lie on tho operating tables and have their anns and legs sawed oh., their jaw bones taken'oh' or othor parts ot tho body alarmed, hacked, sawed and repaired." -"Tho quality of mercy lu not strain ed, -, otc." ' %rf08E'OBBMAW BOMBS 'The arrest and confession of Robert Fay, tho self-styled German> army of flcor,"vtnid-Ul8 accomplices ~ Jn- -tho ? r^li?mo*^l?~1??lowJ^ mein chant ships, have revealed the most pretentious of anti-Amorican plots. And yet thia Booms but a detail of. tho great wob of conspiracy woven by Germub .influences and backed by German ***".*r7-_ , flubsidlsed propaganda hoe given pince to brime. And tim question of chief .tutcrostjn the American peo ple nov/ In, wottfef7 stich crimes as Fay's mun; havo planned and such aa ot hors havo actually accomplished have really been subsidized by tho German government and perpetrated with the jald/or acquiescence of tho German authorities of Berlin and Washington;...; ' 5, , FayVanahacnpiz tho'rest aro in thcmsVlv^/o^%tj^9' importance. ? The atjsaB^jn .whd shot J. Pi Morgan and pissed'ji?Qf?te. on Aniprican;ahlns waa of ? little''.Importance.. Sqch' moil cqb stltuto. ,W; grave h^^aca to . American life, property' " and. oat;-', \bn,t.'- ' they can be doalt with aa-:oUieV criminals ?re.. ??' . if, however, such erinn o are being directed from Germany, hy a sup posedly friendly government, they are aa; serioctt aa were tho Slavic plots against Austria - which culminated in the assassination of tho Austrian hair to the crown and gave Austria her pretext for precipitating the great war. \ \ Wo do not want war, as Austria did. But we do want to know whether it is Germany, rather than-Irrespon sible individ?a] Germans, that is blowing up our ?hips, and factories. . ? '? - '" ?' ? ' i ' LADT STRIKE-BREAKERS Ono o?' tho ? o trankest things about women ls tho failure of the "shelter ed woman" to sympathize, with her working sister. It ls soon in most household whore maids are employ ed. . it ls seen ta, women's treatment of waitresses and store clerks. It ap peared .in a surprising degree when comfortable Women" .''o? Colorado! ?tf fended tho starvation and slaughter ct' miners* f ami I s c s. v^era'-?fit''- ? new and striking example ?n a rubber fac tory at Tr on ten, N J. Thlrtyrfive girls employed tn this factory vent on,? atrit? demand a reduction bf their ten -hour nayj nor higher wbgesV.-' , AU they asked was that 'their'woritrponv ha mada more sanitary and comfortable. /?hy man would suppo*a that auch a characteristically feminine demand would enlist the sympathy of other women regardless of class prejudice. And that Is where nny man would fall to fathom tho feminine mind. For this ls what hnppcned: Thc wives of the officials of tho company, clevcu in number, marched to tho factory and took tho girls' places as strike breakers. Hov long will these women, unman to labor, keep on trimming rubber from 7 a. m. un.?. G p. m., in a room which poor working girls found Intol erable, remains to be soon. Thc ladioB in question aro dciermimid io demon strato that tho place ia sanitary. To a great number of American women, thoso strike-breakers aro her oines. To tho women of tho working clasB they aro contemptible. It mod ern feminism means anything, it means that theso two classoj of wo men must bo reconciled. But how re concile them? Class feeling ls still far stronger than sex solidarity. Wo men diger ulong economic lines just as men do. SCOUTS AW? "FEATS" High School fraternities have fall en into generol disreputo In recent years, and In many cities are abso lutely forbidden by'the school author ities. The crowning condemnntlon of them comes from tho Boy Scouts. Ono of tho eastern Boy Scout or ganizations has publicly expressed ita "unequivocal and unalterable dis approval" of thc high school "frats," because of tho demoralizing influence thoy exert o the students. In al most overy case where a scout joins a "frat," ho seems to deteriorate. His school work suffers, bis morals tend to becomo lax, his ideals aro dimmed. When it comes to a controversy be tween tho scouts and the "frats," the public.has no difficulty In'choosing sides. Tho admirable character of tho Boy Scout movomcnt is recog nized amost universally. It lum en listed tho natural interest and In stincts of American boys and turned them Into wholesome and construc tive channels, giving them a love for clean sport and fair play, building them up physically, stiffening their moral fiber, teaching thom self-re liance, showing thom how to get tho keenest enjoyment out of healthful activities. Tho high school fraternities repre sent a striking contrast. However praiseworthy they may bo. In intent, their results aro poarly always ob jectionable. The trouble ia that boys ot tho high school age aro not ma turo enough to be trusted with secret social clubs. ' Inevitably they make mistakes,, abuso their isolated free dom, lot tho fascination of lt inter fere with study and exercise, and de velop a class spirit inconsistent with high school democracy. Collcgo men, being moro mature and responsible, can be more safely trusted with tho privileges of frater nity Ufo, al thong even they'abuso it sometimes. For moro, boya' frater nities, however, there is no excuse. ( COMMON SENSE IN THE TRENCHES What would happen it the war were loft to the men who are fighting lt, Instead of to the kings and diplo mats, is indicated in this story, told by nn English officer:; The day before the big British attack .near. Lobs, In northern France, tt?evBrRi8 t soldier's Vin - thc first trench Baw a.board shoved up by the Gormans in Ute trench opposite, it bore tho; inscription: THE ENGLISH ARE FOOLS. Nobody tock the trouble even to shoot at it. Soon tho board w s low ered, then raised again with tats ad dition THE.FRENCH ARE FOOLS The English " soldiers ignored that, too. But they began to wake up When the board was lowered again and hoisted with Ute legend WE ARB FOOLS That drew loud and prolonged rp - ! plauso. Tho next time tho board dis appeared tho Brinah waited eagerly for lb) re-appearance, and burst into an uproar ot applause when they read-' . WHY NOT ALL GO HOME? For once, in ono UtUe segment of two thousand miles of trendies, com mon SAO se reigned. Tho nest day they ran buy one ta through each other's rihs. -;-i ... , .--v: ? is s A -Nsw Genluw .-. A famous botanist, whose ' oxpori ! t?ceis told hy AUB were, found a plant that he did not know. At that .tho-: ment, .a ehook-headed , lad strolled along tho road and, stopped to gaxo open-mouthed at him. M?Wl"' called Uie botanist urgent ly. "See that plant tb oro- that paie pink one in. the corner?-De you know tit" MOh-huht " said the country boy /briefly. /. '?.?.; ; "What's ita carnot Do yon katnf. what family it belongs'to?" . The rad; jerkin? ? crabby thumhr over ht? shoulder toward a little cot* tace, ?aid teraciy, "IgginscB!" i ' v; V ?' ? V ' . . ? , . \ Weather Forceust^-Falr Saturday and Sunday. -o Mr. A. D. Oliphant, assistant sec retary o? State Charities and Correc tion Commission, stopped over in tho city last ni?ht enrmitn from Walhal la and PlehonB to Greenwood. Yes terday Mr. Oliphant inspected the county Jails and convict camps o? Oconeo and Pickens county, and at Greenwood will inspect the county jail today. He reported finding the Oconeo Jail in splendid condition, al though that Pickens Jail waa well kept, too. A meeting of tho members cf the Anderson Association of Lifo Insur ance Agents will bo-held this even ing at 8 o'clock at Hotel Chlouola. As is customary at these meetings, din ner will bo served, 'otter which tho business ot the occasion will bo transacted, lu making the announce ment yesterday of tnc meeting Presi dent Dickson asked for a full meet ing of tho membership. TEUTONS ARE TRYING TO TRAP MAIN SERB ARMY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE.) London, Oct. 29.--The Austrp-Ger maus and Bulgarians completed the first phase of tho campalgu In Serbia by Joining hands ? in th*3, northeast ern corner of the'couP'.ry. They also enhanced Lins military advantage by procuring of free'passage down tho Danube. A flotilla of steamers, it IB said, is already waiting TO transport war ma terials ,and if Serbia can't lntA'foro with these arrangements the Bulgari ans' ammunition shortage nhould soon be relieved and her officers' powor greatly strengthened. The progress of tho Bulgarian!troops east and northeast of Nish) threatens the city and places tho^fwrhlan army In an Increasingly dangerous position. The capture of Nie? -^??ld make possible by the establishinent of the railway communication : ;> through Belgrade, Nish and Sofia' between the Teutonic allies. ->??v? .; .. > -'..{/ > * Tho 0armanJav;a-s?^Au3trmh3 oro" ad vancing over a wide front from tho north. Th? front tiona from Valievo in a broad course.sl?ihtly^aoiitheaet' to the Danubo aVKladovoi ,whero It joins the Bulgarian Jrtrfb? whig.* ' ' ' { Rumor continues vW^oscrlbo* to ilho .Greek g?verom?nr Intentions hostilo to tho ontonte pdfcyers and' oven goes Th? inactivity jfnarklng Mo situa tion on tho woswrn* front for som o timo IB still unbroken* - .' . In. the east Hindenburg's attack In the Riga diatrict dhters'no new phase, to tho entente powere nqd.ovcn goes BO far as to gay that Greeco bas an understanding with Bulgaria and at tho psychological moment will . fall upon tho allied troops landed at Sa loniki. No such designs are really credited to Greece'in London, but Eng land and Franco continuo to watch tho political situation at Athens with Ill-concealed anxiety. Slr Edward Grey; foreign secretary, said today that tho Greep ospousal of tho cauBo of tho Germanic! powers was an impossibility? Similar assur ances, come front authoritative Greek sources. \ f ,>? * ?* > - London, Oct. iD.^rvjutors Athens oorrjospondont Ifchrns from Serbian sources that the ?F^c?n>* op?r?t lng in the Stiv.imitsa rogion. , have. occupied the heights of Valandovo,' Rabi.ivia. and Tartar Lizoire dominating Qtru milsa. The Bu?garla?B?are not ex pected to hold out much longev, Thero is no recent news at Athebi, from the northrn Serbian .front* it ia reported that Turkey is about to yasclpd ita de cree for the confiscation bf tho prop erty of belligerents ^wlcfi?o oithjroat of . the entente Owe?, to confiscate German property In the bolllgoront countries. . \ ?. i ?i* ?' Who Lo ve th J?i ch. In certain villages of H?rault, o province of Franco; <* surlous and touching custom has r'?wu up since the great war besang cays The Now York Evening Post. Tho villagers write upon tho doora of their houses the names of any members of their families -who aro fighting: for tho de fense of their native land, and after each name they set down tho glorious or tragic details of what has lm**, pened to these loy&a.qneajfg^ There you learn thkt'the son of the hour.?, is wounded ; and . ? preener, there that the fat ho:-bas nesn decor ated, and a lltttft<iat^r '^oii' that the son-in-law has been WUpd. Upon one dotfr '-ii ?ri??r-by found thia eloquent . and pathetic Inscrip tion; : v^ean Musir?, mrt??^a has been mentioned for ir?l?antry ?in army btv de?. The past ia no moro. : T forgive him. May ho borte "t?rtrio again I x will welcomo him, with open arms." . -...i;.;. , ? Lover (passionately, )~r?lr, I love the Very ground your .daughter walks on!" Father grimly? )^'l^iJottbt you do -Wa wort h$200 a iront foot. "-rTovrh , ' ; , - vyO?i: i Toplcc- __J_J^^. neSs fronvthe ^^S^i^ district seems to be o?V*? - > - - HTHE B-o-E and bc shown; our sale* AMERICAN NEGRO HAD CLOSE CALL I? FRANCE "Niggah John" of Boston Tells of Experiences in Champagne Where Foreign Legion Suffered Heavy Losses. Paris, Oct. .8;-^-(By Mall.)-The Foreign Legion's Avaorlcan con tingent was nearly wiped out in tho great Chatnpagao advance. One of tho few who carno out whole was John ? Frederick Brown, ordinarily kaown as "Niggah John" of Boston. I saw him In the hospital here. "Where are you wounded; John"" I asked, ufo. .??..?> !> Vi?.;? \i ?.!.-.' j, "I ain't- wounded," 'grinned John; "I's Jes par'llzed. We waa goin* up a slopo with all binds of things corn in' down at us an' a groat big Oer- I man Jock Johnson hit me right in the middle of the back, and 'lawzy mo, m hi tah! I sh o' though ma days was ovah." Tho Jack Johnson, the nurse ex plained, only bruised John's back and probably deadened his legs, may be temporarily. John used to work in aa automo bile house around Warre nand Tre mont stroots, Boston, and it seems Buch a long cry from there to a Champagne battlefield that I asked him why ho joined tho Foreign Le gion. ? t ' . "Lawsy, mani" said John through his parpebaal smile. ",I guess I allua did have mo c'uoslty than intelligence, i>J ^ j "Still, you Baw tho big battle; that'a something^" "Yoab bet it was something," said John. "When. I loft Paris wo; wont to the Vosges first. Thea they sont us to Ch?injrag-ue z?f the B????. We started lu thc fight from, a place Just north of Swipes (Suippes.) "That Sat'day tn?win* we started off in cloris fo'mation. Uko the''.?>r mans, and we was all mighty wor ried 'cause if any ono of them- shells had hit tis it would a wiped out tho whole company. "Well, yre ata*ht?d up; a hill that aways, j Then I say out loud .'hopin*, tho officer would hear me, 'why don that man spread us out tin a ii lour -that'a what tho French call ? skirmish line yon know-but tho '?* fleer didn't pay no 'tentlon to me. When all the fellahs ata'hatea say ing the same tiling hut tho . officer didn't change his mind till he. ; got good abd "ready, "But after ja whllo he dfe? order us to1 spread outran* wo -?hob obey. For .coming down that hill was a whole arsenal tull ot machine gun "bullets aa' cannon balls an' chunks of - dirt and every thin g. *. ,. 1 "The officer told ni to entrench and keef, our heads down, but ho didn't lites to-our heads lest na? chually ^xagrcd all by -.their owe selves. : . , ; ."Ever* .: ince and a .while we'd get up an' ruii .fo'w??.rd. Whee we got,tb the top o? the hill tho. Germans got skeered an' beat "backward? -Wo. kept after theia till finally we got caught in a pocket where we ; bsd machine guns te front of tia* ?a .on both sides an* shells - bustln' in the mid dle. -. .. - - - '.;, . "That'? whero s ? got ?nine. : They told us to lay'down flat an' keep un der them mitrailleuse. bullets that*?1 what.,the French ?ali a ma? chine gah-'but ? Jest. wanUr say yuh simply-* . <t??n,t;r.''d???t/;- tthem ;.-' bullet?; they seem. to. kinder hop, skip and jump along ttva ground. : "When thai; Jfaok johnson: hit ma lu the'hack. 'Oh L&wdy,* 1 ?old to mahsef, .'I gue)? S ?^ittV that cent o-day air right KOW, but the futuah looks mighty,flatc." "How many days were you ia the 9 stocks are ready a >ys* apparel the bes 3 are also the larges its for men and young mer extra value at $10, gi 5, $1 ys' knee pant suits; maxiir ce; handsome watch free v ?re. $3.50, $4, $5 and up ts for discriminating dressi every taste. Stetson's nt , $5. Evans Specials $2, $ Des that offer you the ha le, comfort and service, rchandise. $3.50, $4, $4.! fight?" I aslccd. "Jus' a little po'tion of one day was enough-to hold me," said John.'.. "What other Americans wore in" tho battle wltli you?" "To tell you* the hones' truth MIstah," ?aid John, "ah didn't have time to look ; around and sec. I was fairly busy koepin' track of one fren of mine from Boston. Just then the nurse came in with lunch. "Dat am som? food!**' cried John, wrenthon in smiles. "Jos' smell dat bacon! If Gen'ul Joifryll listen tuh mo he can end dis war In . half a day. - Jes' set a million plato of dis bacon ?long the top of do French trenches aa' . the Germans'U Jest catchally crawl ovah an' beg to sur render." Of tho American ' in tho Foreign . Legion, John finally remembered tbat. he had heard William Dugan of Al Albany, R? Y., and Christopher' Ch'arles^'of Brooklyn were missing, as were severalv others/ and ' ?that Jack Casey,, former cartoonist, of San Francisco had . beeb wounded m tho foot. "In the Legion," ho s*.id, "they iiav^-? all sorts of charms to - bring good luck but I reckon the left h'nd foot of ? grave yard rabbit we Am ericans nso ls about the bes' of all." '.? "Waat makes you think so?" I. asked. I "Ah'm boah, 'ala't ah?" said j John.- - - -j "Docs your boyjtak? kindly to farm life, now that ho hbo. finished col lege?" "Oh, yos," Topltbd Finner Cob-. . bles. "Ho Bays that after tho streu? uous four, years ho's been through lt's ? a pleasure td loai around homo and watch the hired mea at work;"-Bir mingham Age-Herald '. Wi -.: ?' pplp nd right; men's it we have ever it in our history. ' % %$?& . :-" . i; a liber?l percentage 8, $20,. ?25; ^ *.. tum quality, at every /ith each suit at $5 or to $12.50. 3rs; styles and shades 3w features at $3.50, 3. ppy combination of They're truly B-?-E 50, $5, $6.50. Conscience" - . Germany's Weakness. . (Atlantic Monthly.) There is a residuum ot truth in the assertion that dermany during tho last "generation has overreached her self, -writes Kuno Froncke. So far as this ls tho case, she bears her part of the guilt of having conjured up tho present world calamity. In saying this, I am not thing or Germany's consistent ipoiicy of formidable arma ment. For I fall to see how Germany could have afforded not f.o prepare tor war. so long as she found herself sur rounded-by neighbors evory one of them anxious to curb her, rising pow er. What I am thinking oV, Js a spirit of superciliousness which, bs '*a very natura! concomitant of a century of extraordinary achievement, has de veloped, especially during tho last 25 years in'the ruling classes of Ger many; ' ' '; Tho manifestations of thlB .spirit haye been many and -varied. In Col man dorpesttc conditions it has led to the growth bf a capitalistic class bs. snobbish and .overbearing, as it,1s resourceful and intelligent, counter acting by ita dncompromioing Herren moral the good effect of the wide and provident social legislation-inaugurat ed by Bismarck. . It has lett to 'ex cesses of; military rule aud to asser tions of autocratic power which have embittered German party - politics and have driven largo numbera of Liberal yoter? into th? Socialist ranks, as the only party consistently and unswerv ingly -upholding nar Haran tn? ry r ig'j ts. ' In Genna ny'?r loreign relations it has led tb a policy'which was meant to be firm, but had oh appcarauce of ar rbgaue and aggressiveness nd ..easily Aroused susypiclon, /Suspic/on of Gor maba led to her Isolation', ?And -her isolation has. finally brought on the war. ?\< \ ?ii ; l :- \ I . i il . I I ??';??? ? . " ' ; ^3WiERlng:: el ; ^rbara. 'Worth*. ai M?$?fee?3ay, Kov&sber 3, '. '