HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-08-02, Page 6t tf•.t.
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A, I
4.: 540041 School •that
:he still live* and takes an active'
cont.* over the, world. ; Vies ter,'
.Lesson g these pagans have pot known this true
. ••, [thein, ,.(2); p.4.4111101, States, the diffit
j.Gedil, neW he is being revealed to
Wbieb mn.4 ibia*a CCcur ti&orke
Lesson ,:),..1P,11141, In a 'Whoarrie% 7the' gespelto the., • .pagAns,
Paan..ceen.try.! Acts ..1414 1140;•WhY :"iy:a•s, "ski' felm, ju; h- ging
Ati),deki ;`-re'N't÷l know bth Piow to thenn this• tree t1'..Tbe antwer,
be abe40;' and 1 kni how *(),)0011,tbeatkistle, Nes 1,p'thet teere-
a.belip-d--14Ph11`.74* '1Z
ANALYSIS Yet *it Arellgb
1. TII •MIc Tusr.,A;;$43, ' IlturoeU, Wit„tozt ' wit4c4e
10'ing uta.tdity-ov.ViruNtro.sat,.Iiii-v.A.,, 47k, l'sliakt 'aent • 'them ie, and
..tOntont.mtIoN-4-Eighty,r4iive, , reM Ix Wes; ,a
ettet,frotn AntiOch..iitns..fe0014.744.4tlitTed .for pe!eple ,
.47.0'qextuOnt.43TIPAthleiNig41k1 Ic'4•14C '•°!P;'3P74 "cr-44-1‘
:.' tfie next centreof U how
prpecItiee.,,as %sunkkS fellows
legogn'
.',S)Pe, calitiiklitt-incul.'xi.dteee,'.Galtstian&For e
results that , paa.ny. :Awe „Mid „Greekisi reell! end.. pear*u_bas conti'ntit,d; 'le
„;.,„„koli.avp, Uowever the Jew isix ,nrid: with8u-
itie
'
were not cottvinca..414, ttW,. asy,:wepe„sek* trout the fact that
..4401.1.b.liPOSitixiii..'''.413.0.,ehriStiatiLTim°thel*.a7,sizurtiggle converts; One
•,gril*VOntinues...fot,Some time, perhepai,7kfc „4.1 PO_ much
f9r• the ehureh. in
.;sevoral-months, tifl'the-W*1e- citris rafter ears.0- Put: ere. long enemies
.41107i64:11y, ths new:presshing; and the. fromntiocn and Iconium came •and
citizens aro diviclost- into -two parties..;anwerteella draeord and the crowd
. "woos, tto,441150, the,ciu 0E1 which a abort' time before had , fallen
the 10Cer.'magiStrateS,;--and when .theldo*Ii to tiOrship these preadhers.new
•take up stones, to kill them, and Paul
• thriPtiatislearri-Of OW impending at-' .pauumiti*.ponabas crepaiurom 'dragged Out of. tile citytti on', dead,
' cltyi,Intending to return when dthe' • From .14stra. they go, to Derbe, a. iitnrbene-elia6-SUbeldeil-eofficientlY•Ir°4tier tAwn: fiftynulesaw4Yf Here
They now rinto A district
ha.ye.no unusual experience, and
''•,pai, miichlth°37''
tless4thickly populated, and the aftr•-short visit they liseidP to leave.
in their have : gone back ' by . the
.....:13:eople, were more ,promitive
habitg. regieti abonntlAs-evaii,lhigirkaY net' led from -Derbe to Ter:
•; joined the ranks .° the apostles; nand"
,foundations are. laid To7t'atnall
eepanninities, • ,
. • -•
-I: THE-MIRAVLE- AT LYsTRA,.8-13..
,‘•^4Te'S.-LYStra.ivaa etovili_efrthq eburohea.and appointing elders. And
way nd was an important COrnmer,' fie, they get 'beck to Antioch in Syria,
ginVindlifilitAtr out-post:"‘Thersznall, aria relate -to- a deeply- interested
-.-4.T4PUlation.consiated ef. Roman soldiers ebnitch the.great . things which God has
and natives who Made use of the Lyca- dene-threugh. them, and how be °Pen-
, enian„ Among the 'beggars. ed.the door for the Gentiles,
:probably. !near...the • local.] • ,
;Wei..e..11P9T-Sritole.
,
32 onservatives - •
-:..caoitg:to one .of the oldmanuScripts,
'•
Iialfalreadrtakeit' lilt -interest' in the . . •
" .a -proselyte.- ,
an , Five -Liberals
•
+Heard, Pen' The cripple. was
•.greatly .attracted.„ by ;the new preachr; •
• mg, and sase•Paul, :Spoke:ie. wonderfully • , ••• Elected. at Coast
lot -Jesus; he' doubtless • , ' .• .• • ,
-• 'felt that it-wasjhe -very hind7O1..,sal. • • • -• •
iration needed,'.and .Y.i[Clor'a' Are Leading in Four•
ON'Aight,41.4..hol# began 16144* Other-.
.toith -Paul seeMithe "faith- VIs.estert- •
tbet-thiS vote' a case, in. '' • . ment .in, : .
T
,:-*.iiieb..•.he:niruid-.4se, his special, nOwer • • ..• • ••• •
Christ 'ONLY ,‘ -ONE: .LAg,O.R1TE
• -.4.:,effitealing...,..The, 'Saltation of
Auleantitc,i,inclutleeyeritnally ••. • • •
• - as the kr 'Pant commands " Vaneouverz=The. COnservative. • par-
': line to 'atetidupraniHie-inenediate4 viCtOrious in- British. :Columbia
obeyed. • , • 'elections, had :elected 33 ,membere. on
.Nr,-1,1...,TItegotle are CPult ?C'wn• Tne the- .-baSia ,nf • returns Mrallable..
people,.are- filled` With: airia74inent,and ddition .. they ,were: leading tho.viiio
In
rualy, felfie":Conelii-SiOxittint these must 111. constituencies. constitueneles. . The
Their -explanaz
•-•ttoir.*,a,little,4riorchin,t0lligilble as we Ni.rbikeral,31.4- had elected 9' ineniberd'-'aiid
••cOnsider .thet,• famous ere leading In two ridings *here re,
.Greelvinytli connected with thisvery tarns 'iiiinja‘ ineoniPlete: Leber. elect
, and Hermes, -had come ....d.texe in hie,. A Corti .raliiing 'district.
di.striet( tienottling'.4to-which. ttve. gods,' ed 1, inenalsr; ,Theinas 'Uphill; :In. Per,-
distruite..eridladgOne. c01411-1
are 48-Peets' in. the,:!,,egisiature. .,•
ne. simple Peasants seeking in vain.
4or food.ana Shelter frorirthe kir and, In ..the doubtful : Oats' the -
.great,-,till:.'atienCtheYfolind -It the wereriiiiiihig-Veryllebei'0, R. Cooley,
lturnble-house Liberekls Mitchell, Con -
These' unsophisticated, and supersti- Pervative, by41-'..voteS, with three, Polls;
•
be *Within the oriderStanding *sof these
people: (1) He reinlade: then that God
te the:creator of heaven and earth, and
. • Th.!. SISI.EX HODDLESTON
' 44 kinds ' of•,,cats,, in all kinds. of
ittitudea.-Were, behind , the beribboned
and. betiowered,, bars. They,. were . the
terir-14.4hrhit'stici';t1twhne's1"itiztidereart1)?r• nt4at.
'One is altimst teninted 46 ,call .it • the!
clata' teagne of 1 Nations. • The abort -
haired.: and the ',100.64.0,1red: v4rieties:
led: with ,each '''other, , ,1`..iie •ettiliked
and Ow blottlied.• and - the 14inglecol-
'Med Cats. were. aide 'by .side. ' .fliaelt
ate ttrellv,Iiite '•Cats end!•era,nge, vas
find OttiOise-sheli:. cat, .. Persian, gate,
with •SuiniitUOti fare; 'lilniiih gray An-
gora. 'cats' in . their .eliitY mantles,.
siumese. Cate:With Ciose,*tosey. ,coats
and bine eYes; Man ms .without, Mile,
atid:Veriona..kinitAalled, Cala, Cats from
'•••••:.-kor7.there:'iiii.'dt401-g,-,..40.' tinTivereal
'differti In the principal lenguakee.. 48
. • . - -
and its 'variants -in batin, hi...Greek,
as. the•,Cat. Its • very ,neme.;.*searcely
far back as .etymologiats...ean. trace the
huniantongues they find the. word. cat
. . .
-.Madagancat and! from the'Velay 'coun,
Arica, cats .fronieV,.eri•continent.:,,OeY
''tere.. Ol„l'aseeinble,d: here. '''-' '....:,,,__'•,,,,.
In Old, ..clernian, ' in,;',Geolic,. in Old
French. ,. In ancient Egypt the 'cat Was
domesticated, 'and In Europe the • wile'
eat Is almost: extiuct.•
. . ....
."..As •I . let* at these- cats in
their atiges;, I 'wonder . why 'men. took
the trouble. to Jame .ari :animal ' that,
unlike the, horse and file: dog, servea
tio. practical purpose ,Ahat preserves.
a, proud 'independence, so- that if,
Bnifon.ceuld .*rite of the.htirse that it
Is the noblest/ conquest ,of men, he
Might well have , written of Man that
he. Is the' noblest conquest of • the. cat.'
Bilden is lard on the cat.. He calls
it • an 'unfaithful, denies:tic ;„. he insists
on its falsity; its perversity, its cruelty,
its : dissiniulatioa; • its • legiitisn: • But
even Bilden, admits that , the 'Cat ', is
•gay,.t.playful, .arauPing; .:adroit,• ...clean,
graceful... Nobody 'Oyer. wrote". so. en.,
thrtainingly of animals ,ea,Iluffon, hitt.
he IS full of *prejiidices.' ; Chatemibri=
mid; one of the Most .inagniikent raas-••
tors 'Of, the French -language, Arlo& t�
'refutii::Baffincl. to rehabilitate 'the'
Cat., "I would: make of. the' :eat;",. he
,Wiete;.1"an animal a la mbde.!!, ... •
. • AA, "_.
Certainly this ambition .• hs . been
fulfilled.;- The, cailie_tv la 'Mode. t'ash.:.
iotiable. Paris -nee gone le: gaze on the.
cat,. and -everybody is lend In •pia.ipea
of the the. beautiful. 'creature that was
'the .pete, nOire .Of littiffOn -.We adinire
the aristocratic cat, but this .year we
also admire' the Plebian cat. • :kelitie
,denioeracy• has:come into .114 :-diVii: • - II'
.the cat of the. rich ..and the 'noble,'
lying, on satin :Cushions, Is admitted:
,to 'this •show, SO ,16. the Cat Of the, Peor.
-and the vulgar -the cat of the. gutter.
Here are the disdainful 'princesses :c4
the cettish race, and here, toe, are the
'cheerful,. iicleinieria ',Of Perla, ';:with
tii '1 -f ill ' - '' ' ' • '
. • . : . . , • . , I.-
ii9Ss, their= drollery, their .Caticiness..
..1. rove...all the , cats, the Wild 'and
--thelgentle; . the. col -ninon and the- exefid,
those which'are clad .iii• rich robes 'and.
those.tliatare • clad in, heinely broad-:
:.cleth....I...dO.not really ask whY despite
the deinerita . Which .,11uffon •eritnner- '
'at,e's with such:gtistO,',ficiankind'adepted
this, Charming least.' . it haS, p,ptui6d
.m.Y. heart as it has caPtuted the heart'8'.
of millioria.ef my-felloWs., I haVe •had.'
.sairege cita.aret'careSsing. Cats,. InXiiri-
e.us cets and • plain/ Cats,: cats- which
. .. , •
boasted: of their :high'standing and
Cab ' which 'Pnrailg,..from the Pireet;
and they ,haVe: all been.delightful;.,ulii-'
expeCted, ,fanteetic! ,.:capriCtoils„; and'
.bes...ittiftil.,,'. ' :.• •.., • . .., , . .
,, And f think. of the eats which, other
men ha ' -e .a mired, 'Richelieu, 'et. the
. .
height of his. lieweri, With the weight
,of Europe . upon lini,., Sitting .at,. his
desk _amid a pile of documents, dia.
posing of . the - tiestinie,s.'of nations, i
Would.have. preferred: to have cut off
. . .
•a. Portion, • of his'. scarlet gown rather.
than disturb the slaniber' of Ragan or
lVfoiissard-le-Pougueux or Spiimise .or.
'14dd-de-le-Cruel. : ! . • • ... . ,,_.•,.:: ,..,
'a, The". successor o! 'Itiehelien ..today is
.M....i!oincalre, Who. is generally Pic-
tured -at; . stern, rigid, grave. • But M.
Ppin.calre , twenty 4 years. . ago, in.,, his
Cabinet had .a, 'Iarnspe cat, ,Whieh has ,
perpetuated %its species, and. M...Poin-
care Is as fond aS ever of. his • feline
friends.. He ts net blind to their. faults,
but has expressed.hiS pleasuipla their
society. • ' . ' .:. .
' '''The .eat," he says, "Is .Witty,k he has
:v,er•Ve,' he knows how. to do, preeiSeiy
1
the right thing at piediselY-the"right
Moment. Ile -is' impuleNe and facet'',
•otis .and appreciates the. :valrie of 'a
-gelized; probably by: natives, .'whO had Bus 'thmugh the; alician Gate, 4.• dia."
tance of one hundred miles, but they
felt it necessary to confirm the; faith
of these converts, and in spite of the
danger, they return by the same route.
by which -they came, organizing the
tiOns„,llattY..es afAtyetra th.ink that this to report in K i. loops:
.old story is;hoing 'repeated, en they ••
'identify -Bernabae.-with Jupiter or - • - -Returns Delayed
Zen& and- -Paul with. Kercqr-e.r. THer7.
mos,.. -the .eloquentineeeenger of the
• gods. All the titiF they • eniyieo on
'their ‘cOnireiFsatibii in the native'
thatthempostles-werignerarit
-of the strange- situation „ivhich thy
-'had.brought.ahept.' • - •
V. 13. The city had a teniple
• Cate4 to flie"WorShip' of ,Jupiter, out-
side .the'lvalla.,..he ',spriest, who Was
--in iMportant .personage, was told of
'the,Dccurrencp and he, proceeded to
prepare a fitting sacrifice. He hur-
ries. off to get thesacrificial bull deck-
ed with -gm -lands,' and proceeds in A
..• so emn procession to enter the gates
Of the teiriPle to offer this trilOth of
worshiPAO these men., ,
,IL TI1E DISMAY OF THE APOSTLES, 1-1-20.
14-20.
:y. 14. Bent 'their garments. When
the -pestles* learn of . whet' has hap-
' Veiled they'.are filled with.diSmaY,'and
rendtheir garments' as a sign that
they . regard' this as an ,act of blas-
phemy. , Read the Steil' concerning
7-2-..the-higiti-priest,-atirthe..triaLotjeaus,
•- Matt, 261 65.. ,• ' :
V. 15. They addrese!tbe' multitude
' in thf.g.r.00c tongue- which would be.
familiar to, acoaf-ef tho
, All .commercial and pul3lic transac-
tiong rpnauctedYin that language.
They assure the simple folk that they.
are -only men in like., Passions. ,or na-
ture with thernseleves, and then. Paul
proceeds to give an address suitable
, to the, capacity or this pagan audi-
ence. . It' was quit different from 'the
sermon 'Nyhieh..ii4,/had delivered to the
Jews at'Antioch and ;shows howPaul
:suited, his words to the underst,anding
of his hearers. 'Three great riligious
principles are mentioned which would
_ .
MUTT, AND , JEFF—Bud Fisher
The other niliSTfig seats have Many
*Wed polka., • Spree • „of these will.
have to Come in by gas boat, and
may net be available for some dayS.
The absentee vote" also served to:
delay . results- where the vote ,wao•
oles. Commercia.1 telegraph, lines
'were :congested' with these, following.
their counting: 'EaCh Returning Of
-
flew.; upon to wire‘ those:
cast In his constituencies Over the
Provinee „for Which., they ' were cast.
•
Old -Mauretania
rea s'secorct
•
New York. -Another Veteran showed
speed to the' upstarts. when ,the'
21-
year:old. SS. Mauretania steamed .into
[port after tnaking the -3,160 -mile' -voy.!'
age froifCcherbourg to New.,-Yor16 In
fivedays,- three hours and seventeen
Minutes. • . • • •
_She' broke her • Own..., 'westbound•
record, established In 1924, by three
tours' and seventeen 'minutes arid-
niairitained:' an average. speed of 25.63
knots 'an hour,' '
We.thought we would Still. get
another kick out of the • Old 'girl,"
Captain S. G, 'S. McNeill gaid upon
coMpletiOn of the run, 'We knew
she •ivas' not tlrough by -a long shot:.
• The: 'Mauretania already holds the
eastbound 'record:
A NEW SCARF. EFFECT
•
This 14 the: latest note in summer
sports fashion " trend. The Scarf of
Newport design is of pussy wllow
,material. ,
well-turned ,pleasantry. ; He extricates
himself from the raobt.dillicult watt..
tions by a lIttle pilfouette-_„. To how
many timid a'nod esitating 'persons
could .he. give useful lessons!. 1! have
never seenhim' embarrassed.: With
, . .
an antentshing promptitude'he chooses
instantly between .two .sointiona of a
problem,,' not merely; that which, is , the
better from his point of Viewand in
conformity with his interesta,,blit,aleo
that which is, elegant .and.ki•ecioue."
What a wonderful' diplomatist the
cat ; wonhi.• have.: 'made! ,,One detects
.a Certain envy in this eulogy of, the
• Ca- Xadtirct-tatime,
.Wher% In . the *Olinnee , of. 111:'.Poili-•
caire'e Meinoira, how'
kindly he speaks of M.. Briand in cone -
:paring him to the cat
,
,recall that When' 41. Gleinelcean
.went to an important Conference it.
:London. he.boughca eat and named' it
PrtidenCe. I .'do not know whet has
beeping of it... But, Ceprge •Montorguell
has. Made the laPpy suggestion that
.well-kaown Men and women *who are
lovers' ;and owners of cata ,ehottid
wile their' cats , together, :without re-:
gard to pedigree, or competitive points
TIiIs In tact, was done a year ,or two
ago in Paris by the artists - and writorS.
I would. like to see :the .idea carried
out on a greater scale, with presiden-.
tial .cats,' and ministeriaL'eats and
:theatrical cats: -.a regular Who's Who
-ef cats -displayed for the 'observer!e'
delectation, •• ,
Artiste and ,writer e are partietilarly
'fend? of ...Cats,. I' ,never 'tire of lOolcliig'
at the cats which_Steinlen drew' so
lovingly with such a icleft pen. ..I like.
to think ofIlamilear, the; guardian of
th'es. city, . of Books, which- Anatele
•Irranee described in SylVestre Bon
nerd.. There was Beikis rhih
Pierre, Loti named 'Withgreat': tiplalli)
and eereinonYi. Victor :Huge was the
proud possessor of Chamolne and
Michelet the. historian; Sainte-Beuve
the "critie;. Nierimee, the y novelist;
Gentler, the poet; MeupaSsant, the
sterY•teller, . and all had their .cats.
Barbey .d'AUreVilly With, ,Dernortette,,
COppee with Isabeile, Baudelaire With
his feline family,. haveloved the cat!
And now, in Paris hey .are celebra.t-
frig the centenary of ilippolyte*Taine,,
philosopher and historian,and It is
good to rernember that Table; who
was not often moved be poetry, Wrote
tWelve. dolartets to his three cats -
Ns and Eberle, and Mitorine.'
have .studied " he confessed "many
philosophers and . several:. cats: the
wisdom of the catAls.vastly superior?'
That.. wisdom he discoveredin their
tranquility arid in their ;meditative-
ness, Without effort, the cat,.. gazing
into the fire, or. smoothing , its fur,
puts into practice the Precepte. of, the
sages: '
Commander. : Byrd!s •party,
will eXplorethe antarctid by airplane
will weer boot's, handinado to accom-
modate' five pairs of • heavy woolen
socks, But can they property be call':
:lad !balloon boOts?"
"•'
oewenstein ?oily Found'.
V:7::•-•/1/ '"
1111.! ‘1,11.e.g." :
ncL
Belgian Financier Really Dead
Mystery Cleared Up With Diseovety. of nadY;.4.1 the
:Eiiglish Channel -By FrenehT-Fisherrne,n.„„
WOUNDED TOO
lanadian f'diai)104 . • ;
BoUlogne-sur-Mer, Fran ce4,-;-The •find-
ing on 'Thursday .last .of the of
CaP4itli. Alfred' •LIN:fetletelt4.:,•TieSing.
Belgian millionaire, -cleered., up, tunst
di the, ,grim inyetbry ,OUrrounding hip
dIsappearanCe.. from ;;a CrOst4haunel,
aeroplane oa July -
...PrenCh '•and authoritieswill
haVe..to ',determine' Whether cap'-;
tein TAiwenSteln neeitientelly. fell from
the Piano, as it liew 4'000. 'feet.'ovor
Wrenched open • the exit door and
.PIntiged; to his.: death. But the ugly,
rinnors that • the:financier had Pero°.
trate4 n'gigantio heft; .and, was still
alive were definitely set at •rest. by
the 'finding of the bp dy.
The battered' body: was found. fleet.:
big face, downWried • ten 'MIMI Off Cape
Gris-NeX by the 'Roulogne,',.:fishing
sack 650; apts.in Jean Marie.' Beau -
grand, . and was •• readily, identified by
a wrist watch engraved "Captain
'Lowenstein, 36 Rue do la, .Science,
'Brussels.'' Otherwise the body was
tinre'cognizaiiii3; ' we's :in 'ai('
vaneed .etage. of decompOsitlen.
The bOdy, was clothed, only in n
ndeerdraviers,,,.secke tpe
latter bearing the name of an Eng-,
lish maker. There was • severe,
wound in the ,abdoMen,•anci; both foot
were broken. ,' '''•
L.;0Bw2ENSTEI T.. LAST
'.11% THE DOMINION
• • . , .
• oOttawa-Tho..ge'Sture, .towards
„Canada, ot the „late` -Captain ,Alfred
‘1.:4oeWenetein, whose • hotly" :Wes given
un by the British Channel 'ett Thurs-
day last was a triendlf one 'destine&
to help Charity. • ,
• Before leaving, Captain teeweiistein
flOW to Ottawa and 'dined with„Preinier
King. It ,le learned that before. start -
Ing for home Captain Loewenstein for-
Warcled his cheque for $2,000 with ,the.
request that it be applied to charitable
objects, particularly, it is understood,
soldier welfare work. .
The wishes" Of the:new 'deceased
capitalist Will:be:carried out. • '
•
• A Modish Frock .
,
Charmingly graceful is this at-
tractive 'frock, having li. tunic . at
i each ,....sicie of . the ,. slightly flared
.. skirt.' The bodice has gathers .at •
the shoulders, a veotee and seal-
, 'loped collar.. The long sleeves are
da.rt-fltted, loose,, or gathered to'
.. wristbands; and a wide ' belt Is
' finished 'with buttons it .the front.
F. No. 1651 is., in sizes 33, 38, 40, 42
and 44 inches bust. If the dress is
made or one material. only, size 38, '
• r.equtres 3 yards 39- nch, or 3%1
yards T16147;inch material. Views A
and .,I3, size'. 38, require 3 yards:.
39 -inch, or 2% yards '64-inth matej
• Mal for the. dress, and lik 'yard!l
39 -inch, or 1/8. yard 54 -inch contrast-
ing. Price 20 cents the pattern...
t '
W TO 'ORDER PATTERNS
Write your nae - and address plain
1v giving number and :size of such
pat{terfis as you want. Enclose 20c in
atainps or coin (coin preferred,' wrap
it carefully), . for each. number and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service; '73p West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by return mail. • .
HO
• / Too • Many., a tletraps
. Toronto Telegram'and: Cons.): The
highways are to -day littered up with
automh
obiles the engines of which
run after a$ frrehion, 'but. which have
been detained ioo' long in reaching
their place upon the scrap heap. Cars
Without ,lights, cars Without effective'brakes., Cars with engines that, Cannot
accelerate When acceleration is neee8-
sary; operate the highways as a
menace ,te themselves and to every-
body' els•
e,
•. '
Here's a Brain Tha
• -
teat Actress
-Left ,Recioest,
Dame Ellen Teri Passed Out
Quietly,: at Little' Home in
Kent Where Last-„Febitrary
She • flad•••• Observed .-the
COniink :of Her:80'1:RA:
-
day'
LEFT---LAST-MESSA
An interesting Article ,Which
Appeared in the Current
iSailee,the
• •Dificial ..the:NaYY,-;
,League .of Canada
tifainarda.. Parade,, .
thir'WOM 'in, tOraon, • there'
It Is a
tatuo of
untlmely 11 Yearg, ii•g0,.)40t '01j10243.4,
, . .
tfni of theea
Out of. a AO-le•iship!'s .cprapan37.., .
,
,twelve..survivod to toil 'their ghastly, '
experience. •of ,..how/ • the• thimPshire,".
hound . fer #4ere• Kitchenor, •
had ,a...Missioa;,'Struek three GerMan,
Mines and :'reundered,,,41.„,
''nilithtes.Ofte she .
bit •tho death engines.; No assistance
was fortheruning: in •tinie -to save the' .
crew OT; its. great ',war:ford. passenger.
,Twe 'destroyers whiCh. ;accomPanied'. •
the .Iiiiiipshfre 'were unable to keep,
.pace- with "lier, ..when ..the •gale WaP '
'strtick in, the Atlantic off the Orkneys.
; 'One 'Of the Msurvivorswhose vitality ,
and endurance assisted • him to reach '
the Wild .ilore"P; 'gime to 1;:niterio. 110
worked aanight.Watehmen in a Iittlo
,1.4M.hering; town ,on Georgian Bey.. His •
nerves shattered, the ,ex-Rritieh .
dreaded to . talk 6! -fa day
In June, 1:916; . When .thiS '
fetindortid... lemeinhered liis last
glimpse erkitelibilit-ganni figuro
Striding behind ;the :captain Who 'went
4Ong.the7,depli;ahead Making way got, '• •
his- fiternassonger...••,..Soon after, he
'Was floundering the -Sea With his
lellows apii;Enanaged, to esCape death,„
efra raft, ifogge(i3! intage cold iroin":
,e3t,poSure, .
The the .116ile" 'ariartle,. •
ridi.r,,pcalls..the story dh
eit
•-piiinted-.44-4helynews.,,co,
• ,..?The-2.;mOrnerable,•6th 1916,
was storini and 'cold. Although early
summer the $itb 'of Winter 'wari.:irr the ,
• Small Hythe,,..Kent, png.-7-Deme.
Ellen TerrY, Biltish actress, beloved
by playgoers the werld• over,, died
Saturday morning-, in a'• little oaken
farinhotise„ 'ticked away- in "the vales
itent, where sheluid quietly. spent
the• last ;year's of her lite: .
Death came at 850 'a.m.' after an
uncomfortable night; during .which she
sank. slowly to the end.' .'When, clawn:..
appeared • the doctor announced., the
patient was considerably weaker. She
Passed away-,- peacefully, Surrounded
by her relatives . death marked
the 'final ported- of her -hepelese
struggle against a combination.heart_
attack and cerebral hemorrhage, .from
which‘ she had been sinking .slowly
since Tuesday..
There had been fears for ,soMe time
that she whose. life Was the stage,.
would. not long survive the definite
wilhdrawat from it Which her age &Ora-
pelled., She , celebrated, let eightieth
birthday last ,February.'
•
.Always First' Nighter." •••
• Unitil ,twe. years agoM.les. Terry
never failed to appear,- ate-the•••"`:firat
nighte in London and the tall, .qneen-
ly old lady in black. W.lth .h1.8.P4 1,0e
scarf draped over her .silver hair, was
al iv ronsiy, a on Mled when
she entered ,her.hox:
Miss Terry's daughter, Edith 'Craig,
was at the bedeide :with the actress'o
son,' Charles Edward Craig, her
brother, • harles Terry,. ,her •favorite
, .
niece, Mips Olive.:Terry, and+ her corn-
._
panion, Miss -Barriess..
.,- Her Last Message
. Terry kept constantly hand
daily, reading a 'little, worn Copy
of Imitation of Christ," by Thomas
a Xemp s.
Not long before' she died the fol-
lowing lines of verse, in•her.own firth
hand; were fauna Written. across the
.. •
fly -leaf: • - • -
"No funeral gloorn,..,iny dears,',when I
, inn gOne• • • 7
"Cor'pse, gazings, tears, Kacicreiment.
' • graVeyardgriziniess. •
."Think ofme as withdrawn' into . the
.ilinaness--. • •• • ,
"Yours *kW; you.Inine
'Remember all ,the beet. of 'ourpast
• moments and forget the- reet.
"And, so; to Whe'ie I waiti'come gently
' on."
• !
• .
• I3elow was written: "teh,ould wish
my children, relatives and friends to
observethis when I die." • •
• •Aitlit. •
the' ThlMoiltli titt'36.
miles an hour ; BY eiren- •
ing . it . had elliftedto N.SV. and blew
That day Kit-
chener find
Duke at Scapa Fl�w, and, at
bade adieu to AdIntraia,,Jegicoe.-And •
Madden., a.nd,, embarked- orr the' Tiapit-
shire QIL a .special 'Mission to Russia.
4i...the.ganipsiiire passed the,..magnia-
emit' cliffs ot Iloy She ,pent her.:last •
signal: It •is\ inhospitable coast
wifete sinall !beats.. gait-, land '
fine
• '.'Ahout..twe miles off Marwick Head
itt Briaay.Parish the Hampshire struck'. :
the flrst,..inine:11-d-eitplosion Was I
heard' liy,People workinghi the field's
at and . Shealy after -wards
the crui&er was seen making for shore,
.-iiielsTo" i TOT To rav
• • • .
warship Wan..then.-titeaming very slow-
ly, With bodoWn .,aird, propellers
niost out if .Twentkfive.
minutes -atter/.the-,..flrat!..inine •:struck
her the .'llunipshiroT'aank.' in. deep
Water."
,
o Failiarnent;
Kingof EgypTSiispends It to
.'Ale,xandria, 7,Zg7.13tDegrees „Sue -
Vending.. Parliamentfor."--three
,signed.:, by King .Fue.d,.. were ...',hatided
the ;,.Presidentshemib,rs' of •
,
De.putieor and Senate. .
. . .
1a(ldre-qsod to King 4.'lebnih
g tstaetmernineingt
d ;
try was Made, public.," in' explanation
Of "the MtniStry's* reasons, for -advising
tho,'rissoltition., Thies set, ioribthat
only • by- dissolibig Pax-Hail:lent :could
-th,e c.ountry berid et-fikatOzial Politi-
-cal...conflicts'. and, Ite.y,o,.time 6.0 settle.
.dOwn,;., relieved .of the iiienede Of 1:101`.;
.x.rianent. antagonisins. •
• BelafionS Viitli:breat • Britain. Were
'net "inenthineVIII the -.'Statement; but
in qliplorritite elides • it was believed
that -the. ineve‘was, Made pnt Of defer-
ence• to Great Britain :because 'under
tho presort • i,a,rjiame.ntary ' regime •
.there ..Was ,little 1101)a, that WI agree -
propaganda tn-EgYpt,, nt
ail executive 'meeting; resolved 'to, de-
fy the ban laid dow,ri by 'ithe.Crevern-
Merit and to hOld a meeting whiCh
had ..been. prohibited' t Tanta. . • 4ti..
Al
• ' ' British Officials Silent -
• Londan,=:-. DritiAt official .."(eirCleff,
flatel.Y.' declined JO CbtriXnerl.t •On the
tirn oJ events: in tflY!;:ie.: inV,OlVing -a ,
eopension Of „1::aP1'ameht...,,,t91- :three
years. 4Acia;rdgig to, Clic Lon,Oon Deily •
itcq'400,131:1,- thle, refusal to CatilInOtit
idrierely em 111 'the' fatt • that
,iiritaiti 'had nothing' tb, 10with :the
Uspetigron • measure, which 4.is
esco'itev
iltfailLeay.',,,.m, atter.' Egyptian,
Ono. bas but to think of „the Vast
nuMber of titeel traps 11$e(1 thretigW
,eittth.e 'country, fp 'get in: mental
lc-
ttIro jottfm pahr.recked and oiti'illated';'",
creatures WItoSe Iaiit • hplits, erten
tr4Y?f, tire S'peil't in: a torment of sat-
-tering that...beggars deScriotion, iThine
?lay the itimPeakable cruelties of
reetlitid of &Otero will be ioriiidden
4atiery.lookler ,.;of titese
:verk-OCeatleit 'that
otters tM'.waiten finib1ie-42,14rn,s0 ,
itgainet. title ,,areittrUelty he will tifAi
..h.a.stenlnir that day. • .
QuirG 'so! °me-)
.
OLD 14C -Ni WILL
4A -re i -t
.
.
evEl.\i,
_
r---56-fill-,B.seouS....cILLY:., ..,,;__.
, _
tf'• N ---
DWI' NC -C -IN ANY
INCuBATocaS.
ALL .t." wee-lz.
ts evg. OLD '
.. .
SerTt NG KEN,
BUT `epos -spot, •(ou
WERE GotMG (Sr
rtte llArci-timG 4
'BUSINESS. o.N Pt
e
L A RGe seAc •
. ... , -
Mu-rT) i LIC ENGLAND . .60T ewetiG14
SO' WELL T'UC- bed 'bet, mom6y-ye laUY
to Vt-PH liC-Re Anit• ONE l&ICUSATokt
Co IgTo TI -16 ClitcKe.4\) •
RATtliiNG BUSINeS3
,
t• •,
.--A
o
e e
If
$ kl. .'
OA - ,
our
6-00 EGGS
• AT` A " '
,
TO ,• @e/r'''•.'4 --*
/*
d ;-:
*/ 0
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OM+ PIAL.,1
,..._„••4 . •-••••*,,,,,.. I °
..,----
... ,
,
• •Aitlit. •
the' ThlMoiltli titt'36.
miles an hour ; BY eiren- •
ing . it . had elliftedto N.SV. and blew
That day Kit-
chener find
Duke at Scapa Fl�w, and, at
bade adieu to AdIntraia,,Jegicoe.-And •
Madden., a.nd,, embarked- orr the' Tiapit-
shire QIL a .special 'Mission to Russia.
4i...the.ganipsiiire passed the,..magnia-
emit' cliffs ot Iloy She ,pent her.:last •
signal: It •is\ inhospitable coast
wifete sinall !beats.. gait-, land '
fine
• '.'Ahout..twe miles off Marwick Head
itt Briaay.Parish the Hampshire struck'. :
the flrst,..inine:11-d-eitplosion Was I
heard' liy,People workinghi the field's
at and . Shealy after -wards
the crui&er was seen making for shore,
.-iiielsTo" i TOT To rav
• • • .
warship Wan..then.-titeaming very slow-
ly, With bodoWn .,aird, propellers
niost out if .Twentkfive.
minutes -atter/.the-,..flrat!..inine •:struck
her the .'llunipshiroT'aank.' in. deep
Water."
,
o Failiarnent;
Kingof EgypTSiispends It to
.'Ale,xandria, 7,Zg7.13tDegrees „Sue -
Vending.. Parliamentfor."--three
,signed.:, by King .Fue.d,.. were ...',hatided
the ;,.Presidentshemib,rs' of •
,
De.putieor and Senate. .
. . .
1a(ldre-qsod to King 4.'lebnih
g tstaetmernineingt
d ;
try was Made, public.," in' explanation
Of "the MtniStry's* reasons, for -advising
tho,'rissoltition., Thies set, ioribthat
only • by- dissolibig Pax-Hail:lent :could
-th,e c.ountry berid et-fikatOzial Politi-
-cal...conflicts'. and, Ite.y,o,.time 6.0 settle.
.dOwn,;., relieved .of the iiienede Of 1:101`.;
.x.rianent. antagonisins. •
• BelafionS Viitli:breat • Britain. Were
'net "inenthineVIII the -.'Statement; but
in qliplorritite elides • it was believed
that -the. ineve‘was, Made pnt Of defer-
ence• to Great Britain :because 'under
tho presort • i,a,rjiame.ntary ' regime •
.there ..Was ,little 1101)a, that WI agree -
propaganda tn-EgYpt,, nt
ail executive 'meeting; resolved 'to, de-
fy the ban laid dow,ri by 'ithe.Crevern-
Merit and to hOld a meeting whiCh
had ..been. prohibited' t Tanta. . • 4ti..
Al
• ' ' British Officials Silent -
• Londan,=:-. DritiAt official .."(eirCleff,
flatel.Y.' declined JO CbtriXnerl.t •On the
tirn oJ events: in tflY!;:ie.: inV,OlVing -a ,
eopension Of „1::aP1'ameht...,,,t91- :three
years. 4Acia;rdgig to, Clic Lon,Oon Deily •
itcq'400,131:1,- thle, refusal to CatilInOtit
idrierely em 111 'the' fatt • that
,iiritaiti 'had nothing' tb, 10with :the
Uspetigron • measure, which 4.is
esco'itev
iltfailLeay.',,,.m, atter.' Egyptian,
Ono. bas but to think of „the Vast
nuMber of titeel traps 11$e(1 thretigW
,eittth.e 'country, fp 'get in: mental
lc-
ttIro jottfm pahr.recked and oiti'illated';'",
creatures WItoSe Iaiit • hplits, erten
tr4Y?f, tire S'peil't in: a torment of sat-
-tering that...beggars deScriotion, iThine
?lay the itimPeakable cruelties of
reetlitid of &Otero will be ioriiidden
4atiery.lookler ,.;of titese
:verk-OCeatleit 'that
otters tM'.waiten finib1ie-42,14rn,s0 ,
itgainet. title ,,areittrUelty he will tifAi
..h.a.stenlnir that day. • .