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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1919-05-01, Page 2
WORLD'S , ViliTEST DANUR MANY NATIONS ARE ON THE ' MARGE OF FAMINE. Ob. 4•11.1M1111 414 W -fir Breeds Anger and Anger Beisesisollteeolution as Seen in Bolshevik Menace. 'Hunger is to -day the;,prime danger of the world. America has enough foal and to spare; Britain. -though suffering front shortage of certain food -stuffs, and trout the high price of almost every- thing eatable, has not,felt the pinch of real hunger; France and Italy are several degrees worse than Britain, but they are the allies of Britain and America, and will be looked atter promptly. The rest of Europe, to go no further, 1s in various degrees on the verge of famine, with Russia at the head of the hunger list, and Austria, Germany and the Balkan States little better. ' A Vicious Circle. • Now hunger breeds anger, anger in its turn breeds revolution, alid revolu- tion in its immediat* 'sXect, at least, is apt to breed poverty, and poverty spells hunger all the time. Thus the world hag got into a vicious circle ....[[ from which escape seems- desperately The question is: Can the world get out of this circle, and begin to stake real progress? At present the ship of Progress, 'caught in a maelstrom, is being whirled round and round, and is tit peril of being engulfed and last, says an Engltalt writer. From that catastrophe we must save it if pos- sible. There is no doubt, for instance, that Bolshevism. the Russian virus which seems to infect all who come into con- tact with it, is spreading rapidly. . The Red Army is at the moment of -..►as.. ..�.vY f.,�1.- .-q..,7-1 ♦-- .1 e. late empire of the Tsar, but there have been startling signs, -be which the Spartacism of Germany is the best de- fined. that it will take all our wisdom, tact, and statesmanship to keep it there. It is a snowball which gathers bulk as it rolls, and where desperation rules savagery is a matter of course, and a Red Army moving west would be a very serious menace indeed, strong through the Allies are. What does Bolshevism feed upon? It feeds upon- hunger. In fact food, mere sustenance, the right to remain alive, is the weapon. which the Rus- sian 'Bolshevist authorities use to hold the populace, and to force them to ac- cept—at least in name and action, if not in principle, their peculiar revolu- tionary tenets. Recruiting Methods. The Russian Bolshevists have com- plete control of all food supplies in Russia. If a man would prevent him-, self and his family from dying of star- vation, he must join the Red Army and pry lip service, at' least, to his masters. At present there is nothing to pre- vent Bolshevism spreading through Germany. It is, in fact, spreading at this moment. If it does, all hope of settlement and lasting peace, of which we talk so hopefully. will disappear. You cannot negotiate with hunger - maddened revolutionaries. Thus the Treaty of Peace, which has been so laboriously framed, will become an- other "scrap of paper." The old adage which speaks of the folly of cutting off ones nese to spite one's own face is applicable here, if anywhere. We may desire to punish Germany. We may say she has brought all her woes upon herself. But if by punish- ing Germany we punish ourselves --if we bring her woes upon our own heads—what better are we? Vengeance is all very well, but it is a poor cure. it is up to us at the pre- sent time to stem the tide of Bolshe- vism, and the only way. is "to feed the starving populations of Central and Eastern Furope. There are arguments for not raising the blockade. We all know and can recite them. They sound perfectly' jilgt. They are technically Just. deed. But they are certainly noevi►tae, not to mention merciful. We have always prided ourselves 1 upon our hatred of including women ' and childreh in the category of ti'ar'a i victims. • War is war. and the results ! are deplorable, and involve suffering i ort non. belli�a4a. u t;►u. Let us be wise in time. 1s al- ways dangerous, and it never mors dangerous thaa now. If we withieold food much longer oar bpunty will ibe too late to save the situation. Whilst we, are talking and 'coercing the tide of Bolshevism is rising, and the flood will sweep all before it. even the civilisation for which our lads fought to the death. Even our Army of Occupation is concerned about the state of the people they see on the western side of the Rhine.' We know that their state 1s blisa to the state of millions farther east. We must tighten our belts for a further bout of self-denial, even though we take' the role of being Good Samaritan to Rusaia, and Germany, and Austria, and the more definite act of being the friend and helpmate to half-starved neutrals, and the ruined countries of the Balkan peninsula. Now is the Time. And we roust do it quickly and ade- quately. The world is to bo saved, by food', and in no other -a ay. Open the gates wide and let food flow into these stricken countries freely and plenti- 1 fully, or at least as plentifully as the world shortage will admit, and the dread figure of Bolshevism will be first scorched and finally killed. Its main prop will be knockedraway, its leaders will lose their authority— which rests upon empty stomachs— and the word will begin gradually to emerge 'from 'the 'Hades of misery which to -day is' breeding desperatian rind ,eventual ruin. 'MY 'COLLARI A London Tommy Describes a Deeper- ate Bedroom Struggle. "At last I murmured to myself as I stepped fo'rttt from the Crystal 'Pal= ace a demobilized titan. "Now for ' 'some civvies!" On my return home—after a -minia- ture 'reproduction of the battle of the Marne on the Tube—I hunted up some • old clothes, and prepared to change into them. pre-war days upon the bed. It was a nice shirt, with a purple stripe in it. Then socks—yes, not thick, coarse,t khaki socks, but thin silk ones, with clocks on them. Time had not altered r,thefr faces. Then I proceeded to hunt for a Gol- f lar, and after a long search in the chest of drawers I found one. Now let me say that from the mo- ment I saw that collar I did not truss it. It seemed• to have a cheeky look_ ; there was too much neck about it. Well, everything went splendidly un- til I started to put the fellow on. Then the fun began. If that collar had not "British make" printed on it, I should have thought that it was a Boche. One thing I am quite sure of—if it wasn't a Boche it was most certainly a Con- scientious Objector. At first It behaved very well; . it.did up beautifully, and I commenced to tie the tie. It was then that the col- lar started its tricks. The front part suddly remember- ed something that it Had forgotten to tell the back; part, and with a swift movement rushed round to the rear of my neck to rectify the omission. I was in good spirits, and, keeping my temper, replaced it with great care. Then I recommenced upon the tie. But the collar, evidently becom- ing ecoming jealous of that innocent article of attire. and being determined not to be ignored in this way, sprang up without any warning, and hit me in the lift eye. just to claim my attention. 1 made It praiseworthy effort td be calm, and merely muttered "Bother " and again replaced the wanderer. "Pet hal±s I am -being too rough," I thought, and returned to the tie, this time workingwith great care. 1 But this method only served to en -1 rage the collar. which, with a sudden growl, jumped - clean off ipy neck and commenced n series of python -like motions round the leg of a chair. I rettle v ed it, and started off -once more. But now the collar had really lost its temper, and with a grunt of dis- gust'leaped clear of Me. and committed suicide by drowning in the water -jug. 1 I made no attempt to rescue it. I; did not even glance in the direction of its watery grave. Instead, i sent my young brother out to buy some soft '-T 0 •t MM.- shuttle huts ressate#*g, e°4 the- w reek age lies feet high on either 1~ide of the road. Pitiful! We saw possibly two wails of soate twenty feet high stand- ing erect. Nothing 'else. No smoke came from the disused shafts except lu the distance, where evidently an el - fort waa being made to take up the threads of ordinary toil. The soil here was a curious brick -red color. Can one regard that as symbolical? Yet. withal, we felt great pride at be- longing to a nation that can give back these poor ruins to their owners, and no better epitaph can be imagined than 'He died in defense of his coun- try.' "We walked through Bethune, ow- ing to a puncture. The village wore a glocni} and depressed stir. Still, there are homes and shelter left there. Once in our car again, we turned in a north- wre,terly direction bark towards St. small quantity of paint and varnish, brush.gard look of the country. Our aven- new .nationalities will bo created in Pol. , With every mile we lost the hag - '1 a few hours of time and labor There are several good *makes in ofwill make it look the next few months. - �c t' 1 One thing, however, 'can be predi•t- ori mss OF RUINS TRICOLOR FLUTTERS OVER THE WRECKAGE OF ARRAS. Lens is Five- les of Complete Devas- tatlon—Vimj Ridge With Memorial to Canadian Valor. A V. A. D., now serving in France, has written the following account of a recent visit to the battlefields: - '•W a were:. two sisters. tour V.A.D.'s, and the girl driver. Going `up the lane' .meant being roused by a night V. A. D. at 5 o'clock, a nice hot break- -festal 5.30, and clautbering into motor ambulance fitted with hot pipes - at 6 o'clock, armed with baskets, of food, rage and as many overcoats as we could wear. So did• we set out at the 'darkest hour before the dawn. It was pouring wet, too. "Our route at first was more or leas uninteresting. We careered along the long, straight roads, flanked on either side by those peculiarly tall trees forming the endless avenues which are characteristic of France. We peisse thilin ii several -villages,.,. ap- proached mostly _by a level crossing and a board announcing the name. In fact, the growing daylight merely re- vealed the fiat, green country with its (occasio'tal ;woods, all very 'tidily' Oat o._t,..and the wayside farms. On our arrival at St. Pol, however, we began to do some thinking to the effect. that it was not .very long ago that the Ger- mans. were so far advanced that it was an easy, matter to shell this town. and a hasty e,av::ai:cz2. of ho.cpics'cs took place. Tricolor Above Ruins. "Arras was our next destination, and the moment we entered we realized the damage savage war e;I.an do. What were once houses are , now just wrecks; pile upon pile of f masonry to zvesaiss, ens soars it martini! Some storeys of the houses are left, the fronts having been blown away, and in one place a baby's cradle lean- ed dejectedly over the edge of a hole rent in the floor: We stopped more than half an hour .here, primarily to see the ruined cathedral. The remains of the cathedral stand—stand nobly; there is very little roof, and the pass- age.along the nave up to the high al- tar is perilous, being mound upon mound of ruins; grass has begun to grow between the cracks of fallen stonework. Great gashes are in the walls, but in one place two huge figures stand nearly intact, as are the altar -steps,' though at their head is an enormous shell -hole. Looking at the whole front from the steps out- , side, we sighed at such destruction. Then we caught sight of something fluttering high up in one of the arches, small. bedraggled; Fir. brave France's flag. "We went on toward the battle- fields next. For just a little way the I road was good, then the change began. 1 The road was now had, .our driver ! swerved several duties to avoid an obviously 'patched' parr. The country' looked rough,' unkept, trees had dis- appeared, and we saw long, winding ' lines in the sandy soil which we knew had formied trenches. We had not eyes enough to see all round, though for utiles the country looked the same, desolate and war -swept. Several times we passed a little clump of 1 mounds marked with plain wooden crosses, but we knew the sacrifice had <IEE : ME WIFE T..44b 1'M AT TH! r arc a !,`4' 4 P11E, T3 TELL: l'1Ek ',Jr:AT, i ` A'w 41 MEM I C. I T $ i� �..-.,� 1 n E •••....:.....''..%''..,4 _4A dollars. • O gracieus dream, and gracious time, And gracious theme, and gracious rhyme— When hyme--nhen buds of -Spring Merin to b?ow In blossoms that we' used to know And lure us hack along the ways Of .time's all -golden yesterdays! • 1 not been in vain. " 'This is Vimy Ridge,' said our driver, and the world seemed to stand still. Only a slight uprising bit 06 ground. and yet how immortal. For- ever, surely, will the maple leaf and laurel mingle here. We got out'and looked in silence upon the solid mound of bricks topped by a plain white stone cross, to the memory of those . who 'went over' with 'nothing but the 'will which says ,to them, 'Hold on." We roamed about over 'No Man's Land,' fell into small trenches, stumbled upon a howitzer base dump (we dumped some into our car. then!), and.explored an old dug-. out. It was difficult to think connect edly while walking about here; such odds had. had -to be surmounted, -such difficulties overconie. Lena and Bethune. "Lens was our neat stopping place— at least, what once was .ens: It is best described now as about five miles of 'the most complete devastation. To imagine it a large and prosperous coal mining center is '�mposeible*. Not a 1 i' Making the Old Car New. or get shabby, but holds its spring - Many of us cannot afford to buy mess until worn out. A brush may 'be cleaned by wash - new cars now, but there is nothing ing with gasoline or kerosene, but to prevent us from making our old e',o clean it thoroughly turpentine cars look like new. It is not a difli- should be used. A brush used fur the Five Stars of Southern Cross. cult matter to add many dollars to painting should not be used -for the value of an old car, and with lit- varnishing. the peace treaty would make over tle expenditure of cash or effort. A nice set of brushes for painting, looking car when a few brushes, a and one-half inch, and a tv!,,o_inehi again the map of Europe end also that Why should we drive a shabby- a car consists of a one -inch, a one of a large part of the globe. But nu one could even .conjecture how many DENMARK'S FU( 1 OLDEST IN EUROPE RED,,WHITE AND BLUE APPEARS IN. MANY EMBLEMS, Australian Flag, One of the Youngest in the World at Eve of War, 8ers it hes been, sa.lil, ant! repeated that ues appeared again—the • roads im• With the excellent paints and some paint manufacturers are s e- i ed i e that eac:it of these countries proved and the fields looked cultivated brushes now on the markets any per - and in goods for this trade.,will have its own new flag. - lis,very- attd little farms and houses spoke of son who can paint a Alonzo can Remember that, in paint, as in'body ^•,!d entire the encs n' :-;s with • freedom and renewed>epergy. Then , cure pleasing results in *tinting a. back, getting here and there glimpses' car. (?f course, more patience is re - of Hun outrage in the ruins at Etaples. quired in finishing a car than is used Finally our own destination, a hospi- in' painting a house, but with cars at tal which must have been d' refuge for present prices. we Can afford to culti- niariy of those who have enabled us .vats the• necessary patience. paint is thoroughly dry it should be bring into notice a little known t.tet to say: j covered with a good coat of varnish •the oldest European flag is that of The most tiresome task connected to protect the luster. Denmark. " 'We that have seen men broken, with making the old car new is re - We know man_ i8 div e;' "One should not attempt a paint or This flag has a strange origin: It ut moving the dirt, grease and old paint vanishJob during cold weather, for 'se are to believe Doltish ,tr:iditi..:,a it from wheels, chassis and ,body; but frost will cause paint to either ,, A REAL LEAGUE OF NATIONS.:was suggested to ILing Vl' .de:taar of it must all come off, if we are to t chalk or .to flake cif. Right Denmark by a virion vf- a •eros$ -aP-:' British Empire after st SprtriK rain is an excellent peering to him in the sky at a par- sandpaper, ies Unity, bays Vlscount,''Mltner, A cloth 'dampened with kerosene time to :fihisit a car, for at such s ,eeulct:.t3. critical moruent of his life." • The transformation of therelations will quickly remove oil, grease and time the atmocpheze is gra tieally dirt. Steel shavings, emery -cloth, It is over seven hundred years since, between the ,United Kingdom and the sand a er or ,other abrasives can be free of dust. and the Danish flag has through ell overseas dominions . is almost nom- '`�� cut the old lean I An old coat of pain,.• if free from, the centuries been such as it was mads plate, Viscount Milner, secretary of away paint.y blisters, checks or s.rstches, can by Waldemar. times a putty knife is ,useful on flat sometimes be livened up by a Boat - On the eve of thee' war one of the' state for the colonies, told the Man- surfaces; but ears must be taken not' of sometvarniF.imes Many c•ar' ori by T t • .� - .- cheater branch of the Ca I^sSi- - scratch the wood or metal with ; u „ youngest amp:: r..E i-ag�-e•< ,•� tute recently- Lord Milner said that used -car .dealers as ciernonst'-'s-ors• i was the Australian flag, the stand:�r�1 the sharp corners of the knife. have received this 'treatment .to add the Dominions are entitled to look to a Everyt> ng considered, steel shavings of the Anzacs, which covered itsel% future in which they would be great ; probably give the best results. Neve tt pt paint varnish powers. They all desired to remain in f The selection of good brushes has toil and Plcatdy the empire, however, and if this de- • very much to do with success in car sire was fulfilled the world would see what it had never seen before—a num- : painting, for :there is an almost' and ruin the finish. The best place ber of great powers under a single ' measurmiess '' difference between a ' for • such an operation is in a clean, good paint or vttrniish br:-tsh and a' tight, well -lighted room. haAd. It would he --WAS - in fast a .- ..... - league of nations, but possessing a _ Awe- Tea �o�. vl 1i�sa 'Xi1 u,lk Aa 3x011 1'33 the f-t:tislurg Coat t9 , r moral unity which the league had still is sealed so as to keep the paint or , thoroughly dry • it is a good flan to Befor the war "there existed but to acquire. varnish from ' getting into the' sponge carefully with cold water a' two flags where black and whits were bristles at the topand looseningtime or two before the car is driven. allied. They aero o the Prussian fl 'rt This was the actual situation, but the realities of the case were some- them. All good brushes are solidlyThe cold water process is reeomi- 'and the new C'hineso flag Since then what obscured by antiquated forms. ' set in cement inside a leak -proof fer- mended by the makers of many high- some young repubTfc s have also 'The department which normally dealt rule, and a " row of . brads are driven ' varnpricedish. cars for it tends to harden the, adopted black epu.,nt; their colors. with the dominions was the Colonial in at the of the ferrule to give ,varnish. Black, combined with ted and fellow, with added strength and to prevent hairs � A good polish sparingly applied was the German flag, and has al:;o Alin out and scatteringover the . and well rubbed ih after each wash- long been displayed in the ting of But the- dominions were in nei sense ► g �' ?` under the,Colonial Office, whch was I work. A good brush is smooth, soft • ing will add years to the finish of Sarawak.' •t i► lett; the f most simply the channel through which the • and flowing; it does not "mush" up ' almost any car. brushes, the vheapest is seldom the which countries lilts Pplan.1,-.11 e ..U.k- best. Be sure to get a self-flowin raisin, Lithuania. Finland. lite e'z-�clt- paint—that is, a paint which wilh oslav territory, &e., have designed for set even and leave a smooth seurface themselves national flags. free of bristle marks. After .the It is in this respect lttt:,!'e (•:g to Possesses ,aa ..Moral B'e "chalk"- a " good results in the finished job to their youthful appearance. with glory on the French plains of ..S is 'attempt a ain. or v • job outdoors, in an open shed, • barn •This flat;, which is adorned with iiia or other place where dust may arise five stars of the Southern Cross, befits. of course, the union Jack. upon a flit 1 • of bine. _. Bias.* Seldom Appears. real paries, • who were the govern- - — -------- PLENTY IOF BOUNCE. 'I Itod is one o ao co frequently on the flats. More than nineteen countries are counted whose ments of the dominions and the gov- LONDON'S VILLAGES. flags show a red part. • Among, theta ernment of the United Kingdom trans- are Great, Britain, France, the United acted their business. That al'rrange- . Scores of Hamlets Are Incorporated in How Engineers Test the Relative States, Italy, S!►:tin. Denmark, Sweden, ment worked very -well under ordinary the World's Largest City. Switzerland, Portugal, and in' the circumstances, - but it was anomalous London enshrines scores of villages. enemy's camp Germany, Austria and Tgrkey. These are only the_largest countries., as, fer instance. valiant: that the department which really The only trouble is that they are so - [governed Nigeria and Hongkonk completely enshrined that it is diffi should concern itself with the domin- cult to tell where the village ends and , ions, which Great Britain did not pre- and uoticeci that they bounced hig;herai Sets la and 13eiglint late also red in the town starts. But, for all that, their flags. °Tn�eed, flieW Grec c and oft hard flint stone. _ Lend to govern at all. there are innumerable relics and signst I This lac°t is turr:e;i to usefi -account Papal flags -:ire tire -only ones in Europe Hardness of Metals. Most of us remember how In boy- 1i0od`s days we tried -the rebound --et marbles off sett and hard ptf'6'emetits, a JERUSALEM'S WATER SUPPLY. neya of the old-fashioned village in such'. y engineers for testing the. relative places asWandsworth,s , , which have no red. 1 Chelsea, Put a hardness of then numerous metals and 'illus is also much in vogue. It British Royal Engineers Have Estab- ey C'rouch End Chiswick although alloys, where it is -highly important to figeres oft the I''resch Tricolor, On the s' in others, like Islington, Edmonton, know if the pieces are suited for their union Jack and on the Stars and fished An Adetjua sy;tem. + Jerusalem at last has an adequate and Battersea, the village is almost work when built into motors, aero- Stripes; and, with 'white, is, the only water .supply, and this blessing has wholly submerged. few villages1 f planes, etc. But there are left n • come with the British occupation. In mere than 1900 years from the time when Herod established a water Park, which cut it orf' completely from! system for ancient Jerusalem, nothing the town. , drop doown inside; a glass tube: • As flagQ green figures. It is seen friss in 'frets been done: until the beginning of Another quite isolated and unspoiled the diamond tfp strikes the txletal to the flags of Mexico. , Bolivia and the present century, to enlarge or village lies on the other side of Rich- be tested. it re►ht leis t:p the tube i'ctrsia: even keep up the Herodias system, mond Park. This is Petersham,.in again, the height depending cn the The ell ,w color ttryu: es un.the flags and it had long ago fallen into disuse.hardness of the material. Lines mark- c: iTt1yfuni. Spain, nulesn, itoumangx, many ways a mode: village. It COn d .t�Spain, sand tde: '':its .. ti ': The .city .depended largely on private, - _ ed og the tuber: a1�i_a tberm�gte� 1.-� >^ .,�tt tains ifle entrtt�t:e-gates an�'t:he state- show the result. - ,,..j '.!tens well known itttgs are' entbel- cisterns of rain water, and it was con• ly avenue of the Manor In good, old- To get the hammer up again, there : !tatted with white, viz.: those of Great fashioned style. is s, pneumatic -stiction device, ' There is a curious village left al- � worked � Britain. France, Russia. (;seers. finis. 't•tn any. ,Serbia; :t?tlna, Switzerland, most untouched on the banks of the. by a bulb; this sucks the hammer to -(le the top 'Of the tube. - ;.Austria and the Unite.: State+. `Vandle, near Garratt Lane. It is A test of lead stakes the hammer ! The combination of red, white mid rafted SOtnerstown, and is the abode mainly of glpsies and hawkers and bounce • up only to the figure 2 or 3. 1 blue is after all the most importiint in showmen, who make pilgrimage to the. • color ou tie flag, of Greece. In the hardnes?-testing instrument Vivi-Hug of Ht•a'Til is mostly gieen. tact. Such a village is Roehampton, a miniature hammer with a diamond Rely. liu::gary and Bulgaria are .t e between Putney Heath and Richmond ^olnt to withstand wear is allowed to only European coueti• c's on whose_ sidered an event when the Turks, in • 1901, partially restored the work of Herod, But this restoration. as the British found, provided only a small aqueduct and pipe line from the Pools of Solo- mon, which also supplied water to Bethlehem. In the last six months the fairs. Though the tramcars clang British Royal Engineers have restored *ithin hearing, if not ' ithin sight, and improved the Herodtan system, this quaint though squalid village and Jerusalem now has plenty of good maintains its own life. its -own ways, .water. while off hardt'r,ed steel it jumps up as high as 110: . - First Indian Peer7 and all its ancient houses and quaint "If the heat mon is an indite., his to Domingo. ,_ hostelries. ' race should be no bar to any position • Another isolated London village in the Government." That was the . -�� To Assist Canada's Bakers. - stands .at the corner of Wimbledon view on ATH I Common, just where it dips down to Sir S. P. Sinha, Under -Secret: ry for the world. •It is found in the fing:; of ,Great Britain, France, liol-l.thd, Liberia. Montenegro, Norway, S' rbia, ',!r.ada, Australia, Smith Africa, the united States, t'uha, Chili. Panama, ('o: tit I::e:a, Hayti, 1':.rsgunv and San- , Bakers will be interested to know that one of a benefits instituted .by the Canada Food Board under the licensing system }e to be continued as a private undertaking. This is the educational side of baking, in which an effort was made 'to improve the standard of bread -making by applying latest knowledge of processes end methods. Mr. «'; H. Linn, late cblet of the Bakery .Section of the Food Board, Is now consulting ane! 'a4visory baking expert at Ottawa. and will deal with any trade difRculties, I Ht PE t 4,11' TO THE THEATRE CEF©Qt, EYEkY (1.1E.t3 GONE once e+xpressod by Lord Morley. HOW CZAR'S FAMILY PICT n Caesar's Welt. its cottages face' the India, on• whom a peerage is being Stripped and Subjected to Grosscat I common, -and are all very old. With conferred, is, however•,'tho first Indian I � � Indignities, Then phot. + them goes the inalienable right t9 use to receive a post to the Rritieh ITotho •• tprivilege which 18 wail taken advent- The son et, an obscure Bengal vii mu" Otlki"r of `,ill 1 ry District No, age ot, for every day Hundreds of gar- lave landowner, he was educated at a . 1, write has rt t ••hell l,rn:doa, Ont.., menta are fluttering in the breeze, 'Mission School. A succession - of • alter 1.1 en'Un; t�:o %•it:),ner on duty in seeming to point• to the fact that the scholarships enabled him to get ii:t:, ii;.�rlu, rc�, ivcd fir,, !t:.nd froiu r women erre not above turning an college, and without influence and ''rn:rler • from O:n :k. ;t at,►ry nt the honest penny. ' backing he rose to the foremost prrsi. tniiA r e,; •t'hr e•\-(::: • • r.:' 1 7is'i:i t[n(l -A _- t tion at the Calcutta bar. ITn is now r,.- me ml1e•r e)f ht:f. f:fund'•. . A pretty good test of 4 good farm- cognized as the, cle�vere•st nt:tn Iniita 'flu' rorri' r 1,Fa;?, �,. ,t ;� trtt:n;,cr -�:1 er is�the good fence -14 h13. ' has'produeigl. • sm•iil'- pieces of je elry and etit^r i trink'e'ts, tt-hlrh• 1;e c 1!t t�•.1 to itis•: h p1r•lfM troth ttte--tt:4i-- i•.t i rtr• ;tits. •',t' uliic•-ir7hei i.c*iihh.9-,,r ei•,• i ;vrabris ,."1 . lrho Royal House lee! h.,••n *burned.. Nic•ltc;las :,tial Itis fkleiiy t,cru • c .•,r- r► tined for days in t!t, ,•ell:et• of a hint' 0,---- - the ssetrter.teal "1'apt t'• weer, ::fld.n'a the day before tl;•,!r e1.• ole:; els tt•est•o . strlpee,d df cl„thin,;:.ert•1 :il►j''.•t•'ef to the g o srst t'digt:itie� 1..'Th;• •wt'in'n - were snlij,'c t to .f, -41.i ,�•'•il 1-;t:t:dit fes; ' nt:el h'It�•r :;ll•we•re• , ,:. a►e•:I cis,`t,.tl.ied up a►;?ii'1-t :► trail ..;ill h 't. tin- 'of Hca le, (...--..!...,,3,. ahs t'',: , , r e'l its 1 ;cr. e - le 1 her brains hti�:i.t( 11 ,,!tt P•itlt th,. Mitt et a rifle. 1 , the commqn __eta . a dry in.g-grotinti, a Government.' t''t.Trt: - 1 3*. c':ct t:1:;�r" .'",entor Ord -- MOW • THAT MONEY Oa -LINO SPEAKA - FOR YOU- I WANT ori EEN4LISH: • -ATO E PLA;r Tele. OPERA YOU S A w f r7,----1. - TOTe►�,,ty�' TO ME --t ' �`/ j 'ems ' • • -2 !' t -le>- i .` 1 i -III —r -r- I -. 1 �.... • . 2 , Very Promising. They had just butene' engaged. "'What joy it 'Will be,""tilie exclaimed, "for me to stare all your gti,efs ind a "put, darling," he protested, "limes none," "Perham Viti now," .she answered, "but whet► we are married you w11j . bare. •