ERMANENT BLIND RELIEF WAR FUNDWILL GIVE PENSIONS TO CRIPPLESXUiProIt li customary to 'tbo rolcn of ihe Crow: with a certain amour? in essence, if not I Prince la already on credible a belief thai want war aa that ih rhe Kaiser seems tc yacht to the U-boat, 1 appears to have chos timei, Juat when tl j Psychologically in fa I a matter of records i [mains that Germar jby the aenUmentH of The Kaiser la a rerc ia harsh reality, anc jsplrit of the Prince only at Verdun but i bu*g line and in the and his U-boatage. urged on by the tho the Crown Prince, vihis father seems toregrets for German offering prayers for virtual and peycholo man whose attltu hardly bo underetoo jesting analogies to ^Vaite-Critics of national with Germany* whlc | earth. and false t•■F:x II indulge the fond t many is false and b |J| jtlorm Involved in t irood. The dlfferer and the other natioiip[ the others went to ■ was Jn them to th||| j the rear, France -jpj inate its national )e\juess of defending it- ~~ Tmm\Above, Left—Mrs. B. Valentine Webster, honorary secretary of the Blind Belief Fund, and Sergeant Major Bobert Middlemiss, blind soldier-lecturer. Bight—Mrs. George A. Kessler, seated, and Mrs. B. Valentine Webster. Below—Residence of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Kessler, Avenue Baphael, Paris. Copyrighted by the European edition of the New York Herald.ob-undue delay Englan snobbery and sclfls! | (thrusting forward Itcivilisation- In our * just begun to let i national life take t talk* stock jobbery That la, where the o ceeded In fighting * Germany has taklt; worst.The consciousness acy has not escaped nervation of Germa not Goethes and £