HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-01-04, Page 6amalk 401111.1.1e
HE
'Veda sad Trailers. do not attaix' k maximum results in
ree old Ronan reads, weeeh are een.. country running. If you eraP107 *
,
Meetly '4/erred to in every effort nuin to °P°r*t° Y°43x truck' it °light
*Ida
4 -meet a general iniprovement 4.1.1:4 * 1 t° Lt",.....,,,ev° savel...m.nuce we P1141,14.1)4
elzbo
- ill the highways of thig gee °thee -A am spe......-.y
:, semelatias, art not brought into cora.;. never ittsater *fa twenty miles an
. This ' o to prevent`ac-
"ri'm lista". /11117 w*r° *1'147 "d cidents that would inevitably Occur tO
't. 114.4.1 las nal" ebicau" tiwY g".._° the truck if it was operated at high
NIL *Mr /MU 04. transportak.son to!
2peed when carrying a, eepeameee leen.
.
up trams sax * in
4atiftieh el it geese peeseo, Trailers -Useful laymitagie. _
4rerognens were the first to figure'. Trailers, aS you know, are practical-
=Itsigitthe eitY sad country could be I ly the OUtCorae Of the peat two years.
into the closest and easiest! They are built in twoewbeel and. four,
eeanien.h.atleas that a general pros.' wheel types. Some of the two -wheel
perity would inevitably accrue. Of models cowry the load directly over the
axIe, but in the eenintrealer, the lead
ie carried forward, and rest partly upon
the comuicting rod between the trailer
and car. The good .quality of the trail,.
ere and they are made from IA. ton to
If -ton capacity, is that they allow the
dieteects. This being true, there m pleasure ear, by drawing them, to
aow pi doubt that a further step in carry* a tull complement of Vienna*
being taken by progressive farmers and be free fram:braisaa and.$"tallel
M the purchase and maintenance of incident to the actual ' handling et
trucks and trailera, in order that the freight. It can 1* stated, in a gen-
"et a tranePortation neey be brought era wela that if a trailer is ettacked
down to a rainiminn. A good road le
always a well -travelled ono, no matter
*hat ease of vehicular train* is popu-
lar, but if in Canada we can corabine
,
good roads with minimum tramsporta-
tien charges, we have gone a long Way
towards a motley -making era such as
never yet has been, enjoyed.
Motor Track&
course, they always had the Mee, of
war in tke back -ground, and knew
that when armies could be transported
readily, success was always elosest at
Jana. The paramount though, never-
thole's, was cosy access to outlying
Motor trucks are being used, it the
present time, by many farmers engag-
ed In the trait, dairy, creamery, cheese
and allied indWstrieS. Sometimes
to a truck, it 'will drawahoutrehe same
1044 as it carries itself between the
capacity of one ton to five tons, but
• many trucks of We than one ten cap-
acity', Will draw a tralleg,with a heav-
ier load. Passenger cos are is 'differ.-
ent proposition, but it will be very
easy for you to determine just what
sized trailer a passenger car can
handle iny experimenting a little on
,the roiV... It is folly, of course, to
draw E. trailer with a load that is too
heavy for the car, as damage, through
strain, may xesute to the mechamsm
these trucks are purchased new, direct of the automobile. Therearea few
from the manufactarers or their points regarding the trailer Minnie
agents, at .reriess ranging all the. .way tion that are Worthy of your attention.
from 4760 to $5,000, but in Most cam On muddy, slippery and sandy roads
the machines are either purchased an automobile must, of necessity; re-
iseeond hand, after having been remise- duce its speed greatly when drawing a
ed by new ones in city work, era pee- trailer. The reduction on good
:tenger automobile is kali 40W1k4alid a roads can be safely egtiniated at about
,. truck body placed upon the chassis, 15_ per cent. You mast remember,
Both systems find many advocates, however, that a passenger car heeling
and both bringnettlegrees of sat. a trailer,' and so lessening 'its tweed,
isfaction. If ou have never used a will .neverthelesk deliver twice thetruck, it might , well to go slowly at quantity of goods that might otherwise
Eryi -.
first, but the system that we suggest be expected without the' trailer. Trial -
would be the purchase of an old pas- ers are attached ' t� Passenger cars
senor ear with an ohlolete body but through a drawbar -Web in tura is
1 -an eagles of standard make and an attached te buffet springs that. take
satisfactory running condition* You up jolts and vibration. Therele one
an either remove the body iritaet and Other point that we Must emphasize,
place a new truck tinder on the frame •- and that is the ease with .which trail -
or matt* the !simpler method of taleq era canbe loaded. If you have .fr
Mg off the rear seat and building a: great deal.,:of healing to do, and tan -
platform instead. This will leave thee -got see' your way clear invest. in a
trent swat for the driver end pnssengn truck, it: may pay you very wed to
. en 'Such a step should provide a ' purchase two trailers, one of which
truck of from 1,000 to 2;500 lbs. eapad can .be in the process of loading while
city for from $600 Op. . Theta are a 370111! passenger automobile is nelivere
, great many, arguments in "favor of iegthe ether to, any destination. Iron
hard tires, but We believe that the tires are used Ons trailers 'where the
farmer will find that the pneumatic:'goode to betransPOrtect are an tin sense
'tires give greater satisfaction, as fragile, but if your product is subject
they do not have a tendency- to com-1 to breakage,. in over bumps and
municate stiff jara-and jolts to the rutty .places, . hard or pneumatic •rtib-
motor, . Hard track Urea are econo-f her tires must be used in accordance
' Weal where the pavements and roads with your requirements. -Auto in
ire very' smooth and even, •but they Farmer's Advocate. ' --. a,.., •
. - , .
natiiiNto, PM.;
Remarkable _Alterations in the Set-
• face of the PAWN. . • •
Correspondent otethe Geographical
Journal describes tile remarkable al-
terations in the surface of the earth
produced by flying dust. The power
eeee, of the wind to transport even moder-
" ately gearee reek, ke writes, is almost_
jneredibieeellanyof the broad'valleys
between:the eastern and the western
slopes of the great Cordillera are fill-
ed with such deposits to a deptli of
THE ORIGINAL wettAUFFEtnits.
Were the Frezieli -"Scorehers," HOW-
- lb Nen. e
,
. - .:
.. More than . a hundred years ego; in
the Rhenish provinces on the ,boeder-
land,. between Prance , and .Germany,
there flourished a particularly atro-
cious variety •of _bandits, -says-,- the
,Cleireland-Plaindealere .Theseetiespe're
addeeinade a.Preetiee of holding ' the
soles of their victims' feet is front: of
a fleece fire in order to force them te
reveal the hiding places of their vain.;
• hundreds of ,feet.. "The wind has n�- ables. • So they came to. be known AO
-thing lo 'do but blow, and the. sena . (iscorchers," - or in • French,:' "chant;
nothing to de but fly," is the wale .an feure." • . . ' • , ....
•
old prospector Put ite . In scene places ThethIst famous Of these '' thugs
the formation of a (lune many acres . Was called "Schinderhannes," which
in extent ann -several feet high is a is being' interpreted, .John the Spore
• Work done -in a:period Of te that is [cher. He Was captured :war Lim-
,
. measured by days . rather han by• burg. in' 1802 and executed in Movem-,
ti
We
. In many eo perativelY ber the following year.. The police
1 yt
shuritaread blindieg dast etorms bloat .luee made ain-- general -L-roundup - on
nearly 'half the time. The old ' seethe chaffeurs by ' that tir,ne and a record
H ern meil stage -coach line.had a . Ste,- Was made 'at the execution. -Twenty
tion in Ariz -one: that was almost un- heads were cheeped ,oll: in tweetiedx
inhabitable- On account of the flying minutes. ' After that the profession
.
dust. The 'men employed there fare- languished."' Napoleon I. was at the
' ly remained any ,considerable length helm,eanct_the_protagonists-ofezethis
••• -of Inner aeCasionelln" tat of .• them particular •brioul of brigandage ap-
eforild leave in a body. In northern peered to be discouraged, ,
i'aeseletie*tfineeftiteneffest--nerTcinite-,--ButWe it lasted it was a greet
are on an even.: .greater scale, and the trade. Bends of these outlaws . ex -
boundaries of the belts of scouted -Out .tended from Holland to .the Danube;
anclehuilt-ep land' are less definite than 1 they had a language of 'their own ' --
in the dry region of -the United States:, a jargon composed ' of, French, Ger-
At times the firier'cleitie blown across map, Flemish,and Hebrew.' They had
lowlands of the coast far out into lines of deniniunteki,tien threngh_llie
'tlielGiilf.:- Many a of --theeen-salieller ; enniitin districts, and the poste "•on
ettetuna Of :the WeSteilideSouthwestethoselinee.evere-eountey tavern, the
ate heavily overloaded With sediment , landlords of which Were ; in league
that is, or ' was,. "wind-blown duet. with the robbers:: . • . ' '. •
Years, ago a driver thus described the ' 'After a- century laid 'passed ' the
. Platte: "You viron'eltriew when you're .Freneli were in need of a term in np-
Retain 'doss it, •eon, for it's a mile ply. to the driver of an attomobile,
wide, and an inch deep; and ,the .bot- and with a certain historic huthor
ten* on top.", The larger rivers, . hey used the -.old "scorcher." The
such as the Mississippi, the Missouri *rill was applied in derision, and; of
and the Arkansas, are _overloaded, but en tee, Reis net closely applicable;
10 a les ..degree. As they cermet but it has .stuck. AM thoughe it- is
carry the sedintent delivered to them, borriatimee° whisperecl tat• pro -
they drop it and ilow round it. in past. fessionat „ehauffeues of modere time
Years the lower'lifiesissippi unquere adhereeta the oldtreditione-tbat
tiontibly flowed in every part of its they `iied:in league with the lendlords
welefloed - plain; turning Arkaiisae of rend houses and counteY taverns
Int° Miesissippi toul Mississippi -into, foe the detention of pasSengers--yet,
Arkansas, building it hod and banks.; no Schinderharnma has arisen among
higher than the .flood -plain level and! them and their depredations have not
then ebendiiiiing them to make a"aa‘vi yet demanded wholesale execution.
channel: ata lower level, ,
0: Coneidering.h.fa opportunities fie a
never wee- so thertified rny
'
• "What's the matter
"Yon know that little'gown I bought
for $16.50 that looked as though it
must have cost four tiniest that, and
was so booming to ene t never
dreinned anyone would guege its prige
or where bought it."
"Well, did anyone”
"Yes. I wore it tor the Ora .tinei
last,night at a dinner daneentel there
wero jug le other women there with -
gowns exactly like it."
•
• handit, , we must be grateful to the
modern chauffeur for his forbearance.
„
••
Janaaese Make Dye,
The ciincic-witted Japanese do riot
intend to be caught by. another dye
famine. Under the' patronage of the
Goverment a four-miBion-dollar
company has:Vela organized to man-
ufacture eiyntigtic • dyes, taye ,the
nincinnati Times-Snir. atipaneee ele-
apatchee came; than :etch, has been
the finaneiat rehabilitation of that
country thet the stock for this dye'
-ternnany has been over -subscribed
severel hundred pee cent.
ummimansirma on di iumirbehdia
MU Lemma
Pi WAR COWL
WORKED AT THEIR TRADES UN-
TIL ELECTED IttP.'s.
And Have Kept tke Working -Claws
la Line for Proeereation
of War.
Mr. Arthur Ifenderson ie one of the
• five members of the new British War
Cabinet. Mr. G. N. Berries is Minis-
ter of Veneions, and Mr. John Hodge
is Minister of Labor, The first Mar
ed has no portfolio. And the offices
of the other two are new ones. Or,
rather, betweee them they constitute
ithe greeter part of the offices recent:
ly held il.. the coalition Government
by Mr. Hendersoe. Mr. Henderson in
that Governraent was Faereaster.
General and Leber Advieer to the
• Government. The duties which he
performed as Labor Adviser will now
be taken over by Mr. Hodge as the
bead of a separate labor department.
The coffin° of Paymaster -General ear-
thed with it the iMperviSiOn of pen.
shins. This part of the duties` of that
office will be undertaken by Mr.
Barnes.
-
' one, '
, The the
that t ree Leber, members
are in new M nistry,and
in-
deed, in that new t 'holy of holies," the
Was Cabinete sho ' s that labor , at
lasteni coining t ' its own in Eng-
land in regard to, official responsibil-
ity and. dignity. rt .all three of these
Rt Hon. Working en weregenuine
bona -fide working men.. They were
not mere "spoute S," such as try to
impress the wor ers with the 'idea
that they nre, for me occult reason,.
working :class • lea ere, although they
may miner•• have one a single-daY's
manual 'work in heir : lives. They
were real- menu I workers them-
selves. l
• Mr. Henderson, iho is 53 years old,
was a moulder in Newcastle -on -Tyne.
Mr. Bahian, who s 57, started as , a
little lad, to eerie iis living in a jet�.
mill at the age of 1. Mr. Hodge who
is 01e- was a steel ..nd iron worker. ,
-Inbar Par
Chairman. "
Alt three .have held the chairman-
ship of the labor party in the House
of Cominons Mr. Barnes Was chair-
man of the Party in 1910. •But- the
I
ass see a mg awe in mews see
Uri* amenala 41.4111011 yang Molt St
Mae with agej tie tie vele he *hi
ef Ramsay lbacireeeK Snowdon ant
Company.
GERMAN AVIATORS BEATEN.
INTESNATIONAL LESSON
JANUARY 7,
Sepremsey in the Aix Is Very Muck Lwow I...4am zue Life ami ugh
With the Attlee.
Ment-elaha 11-18. Gehlen
"In aviation the Germ)* have
to exist." This is the unaniniouS Ver. Teat -John 1, 4.
diet of military expert*, miae the •
London Chronicle, Verse 1. The Worde-The Greek
One need only stay at the British witgrd": tomaIs ltinQeendigpse"Ych asted
front one single day to be convinced ion that prompts it. "The word of
that the verdict is right. The allied God" (persooilled in Rev, lin 181 is
eeviators dominate the air. This is 4 feneraIlir the Opel- But while
phrase na longer. It iea moll a iogoirmay mewl 4 'Ramon," it ean al-
vtreliatribelas " mean "Igeieneeut
olo" 'Theo 'Evangelist taker un
,,, greet tem of Greek philosophy, which.
tet anerYwherei TheY illuee in seeking for the ultimate element
and dirszt the artillery fire, reeke bold out of -which ell thing* were made at
recann minces, photograph the en- lest cfound it in Mind. But he is re.
boemmybaprdosmnotroiligtorieelaenyue
nntafttreella
afterthecalling at last equally the Jewish per.
with grenades, and cembine with the (en. 1. tiAnec'efuttlibeor el" Pratiovv.°8Wpillurel
infantry to attack the German fern& "dm as with '3°4 ereatiaa; a"
for Chrietian thought "Christ, the Pow -
cations. .
er of God and the Wisdom of God"
During the first two months ,of the more than fulfilled these highest Ideals
Scilime offensive the British eeviatorie of Jew and Gentile alike. •
Covered More than 00,000 • Juliet in 2. The apparent repetition, is
the nir, and that in spite of the fact tended to open what is really a new
that for. a whole, fortnightthere- was paragraph.
no flying at all because 01 the heavy a. Through him -This preposition
Mist and rain. According to careful. Usually marks the action of the Son,
militerystatiaties the British airmen the Father being the original Source.
covered 1101040-411 a Heinen miles Without is the same word as
over
the f war.Gern lines in the firSt tw in John 15, it ;newt from no ye eau
y
do nothing."' Ram:there, "A,part from
The history of the struggle for nuts- lehp not 'even one thing came into be-
tery in the air is -very instructive. At nig, That which bath tome into be,..
the beginning of the war the su- ing was life in him," Note how often
Prenneen in eviatien•undonbtedly be-
longed to the British and the Front. anlievea:Ptieirseln;orpea*gaetinnigigqbuteleixtylltocl
But during the first year of the war life is always inthought, never stop.
the Germans, availing themselves of ping with one object; but passing
it -
their superior industrial organizatien, self on. It is Tether attractive to con:
went ahead of the allie . For a brief neck in him with the preceding aerie
Period, German nviatio surpassed not and. understand that "rtfl Which has
only the British and x aviation been born in tibial has this great quiel-.
separately, but both corn di .That ity of life. The light -Life and Light
Period coincides with the pearaztee are the two great words of this Gospel,
of the • Fokkera and the activity of anti the Epistle which accompanies it:
iniinelmann ,and other prominent Ger-- they meet in Love, which is the es -
man pilots. sence of God. '
• However, the .Germane could not K. Overcome. (margin). -The same
maintain their superimitya Toward .phrase in John 12. 35, "lest darkness
the end' of the second year, the sea-. overtake you": what _possessed our
Prennicy'faseedeto the allies • once„ translators to take the other 'eanie of
more. -By the quantity and quality the verb here,* and what the meaning,
of thir machines, as well as by the teak bee are mnstetiese Darkness
quantity and quality' of their pilots may goverceine" ,us, but never • ;the
the British and French now so much
surpass the Germane that at present
one can .speak ' of the absolute. 'au-
periority• of the allied 'aviators.. It is
not yet, a cemplete, (template nof. the
air; but the British. and the French
do' now possess a iiksoluteln
inc�n-
testabk• domination at the front.
TANK 'TAPPED HUNS •
Permitted Enemy" (0 SurroundTail,
Then Anmbilated Them.
•
ValletaristeThe rwi Immix nothwvartial's HOW A SOLDIERpor•hamo; ail of Gen is there, and
helleitely more than we esn ever snot.
nil -Referring to glory. The bruit
..
Ma ere itamellm., es Anw lure
edge of Greek vernacular proves.
Grace -Unmerited lovingkinduess,
HUN ZEPP. HYPOCRISY. .
Object to French Airmen Dropping
• Banibee-May Kill Women.'
German hypocrisy can go no :an-
ther then * recent attempt to per-
suade the French people ° by wear,*
of circulars dropped by stirMeu that
French aviatoneare engaged in the
pastime'et -murdering- Oerman. Jame
cents, nye London arcade,
rn a Berlin eireulan printed in
French, appear the following prise -
:west .
"Preachment Your abeam .with
re
theibombs helve killed, during the
last few, weeksa greet number, of
civilians, men, women, end children,
far behind, the front in Germany. At
Karleruhe, 48 nilied, included. 80 chile
(ken. n attacks on Mulhelm, Frh•
bourg, Kand,ern, Iloleen,Mappach and
aleitersheim there', were as many kill-
edas wounded. None of these places
are ef the slightest Militate? inepert-
ance. '
"P,renclunetil We know notYj with-
out any doubt whatever that l ;those
crimes havn been covenanted by the
express order of your Gdvernment.
President Peditrarkhimself has given
the order at the base* instigatten of
liarbarpue attlicke of this k
enplk griators, but if there i
0 tlia British.
"Germany makes. war up
d ,h7
• '
n the
French' armed forces, not on t
population, of °women and children.
We hope that there will be nal More
petition Germany, W111 be compelled to
take similar measures in defenCe. • •
"But you will know then, Fren
Men, that that, slave of Eriglande
• Polite:ire, will be responsible for t
blood of inzineent victims, and t
will he British baebarity, whic
ta,ve vemnelled us to plung• e
towns, far aWay from the. er'ont
mourning.n,
- 'When 'one •reealls the unpin
Zeppelin attacks upep centres o
e
at it
. will
your
into
'oked
pop-
ulation both near \Paris and in EMF -
land,. whia • are not of ,the shightest
Light,which in eternal. 'military value, and the • hundreds Of
'6, Theee three :verses', prepare fop non-conibatants victims Of all ages
verse 15, the repoit of the witness f* and 'sexes, the colossal effrontery
o
the sake of which John was hem ,: Note this circular is self-evident . :
. ,
-thatizethis ease tha.EOre4ininer.Watk
like "Ma. Lord,aithinin John iii. 87' doe .
AN INDEPENDENT ARAPI
dares that he was born and came into
the world that he might "hear witness Free it Lest FrT-m_Turldeli.DO
.. , .
to this Truth." And He to whom John • • • . Oen... • - •
'•"liOre manage, is,,Iiiiisielf the Truth. :. :
, S: The oegative'Veiintatenthestrong ' - a new kingdom- Of Arabia is :one
and repeated disclaimers John, who hike tli° new "iegdelil" °I :t°1an in
that it 'ierilite is an indepeziden ee-
evenelimteafter his death wee dill be
Messiah (Act
The special ".correspondeat. of the lieved to have been the a tabliehment, whose people Ole
gives ell' amusing description of the I.
' ,.9., Conking into 'the world refers to'11°''
19, O. • , ,. • . ... . :. _ _.. emancipated themselves and reto niii
tside stiterain,• Stiyii the. DtrOkt
Paris Journal.; On 'thee British front
Free Press. ,The 'liberty. they njoy
exploit of one of the tans,, .. He says:. Itne light -(compare again -18:.. 37).,
' "One of them, christened 'The The universality of the Light is here iney be transient, .but it is genui eel ,
Devil's Deli. ht 1' 'did marvellously at iexpressedlnoit etriliinglye . Every hue ' ' Arabia andePelezed are i that
• . _ • man being has soMe.glinuner ef the-dieY -will /56-nibli-t°' 'exist in(reii 101'
:Beaticouit, ';' . Plunging f .b
a huge elephant, .he der -IL -1%y dda'sftIchei;e1 True
Light,- and that Light . is the ite political' entities only if the are
Word: i
1O..He •• Th ' ' ' ... '
- • . . •
e. masculine pronoun • , under the protection 'of 'smite s rong.
pciwer or powers.. . . Thee. are . ea Sing
ahead. of the; waves Of assault, . ,'And .
look up, a position at the entry to the . .. .e.was-- --; phenonielia • born of abnorniale • orld
n this 'verse comes' in to tell us that. conditions '' Poland never willeg in a
reined Village. .. . - . ' 1 • • '
"At first the Germane teak to, their
heeler, ‘"Thei0-agiek ''..,,IeY ' enind one stiscusn,Light,r,at ,3?_extion-„ .1vicsreilyeiis -.1-e- wfulitliehe,Adleiliiepe:_,2„!?,itauitionfia_oli.,,fiexoiititnliciey.•
the rk ' the • " - . ' ._1:0,siiit.;-fildellt;,6tite itte:ioehaeno,tkilitew. dthlieeiinghtto, Ithliie,. ,._,..;
..lay: one. Machine . guns, grenades was in the world:. the statement that
rifles, mortars tried to 'bore ' holes , return to vassalage of ooesort or '-an•••'.
throughout the globe will presage.a. bone., ; The shell exploded with a fear= .
ful concussion:- ;
he. was „coming into it does, not :mean'
throUgh, his. double, shell, but, all _...i'n that he then visited it far the first ti ti
--m-fother: The age is inimical tO the. er:•li . Had he known the truth an instant
nide. 'Sitting,.. Well" Amin
haunches, the.. nitijestie tank. eek his -it is n new and fuller manifestation eistenee 'of small ,. 'powers ' in Asia. before he might have said to himself: ,.
"Look -look Well; -gate attentively
.41000, of "that whith •WaS from the been_
, nine, Krieve him. not -There are two
. an an Persia suffer from progr , - •
tBaleehdisptan.is :swellofwect; Afgheas iiveee
even on this desolation, this wildoeuin,
it like.Father Neptune. e - , ...
' ';' - '. . * . . ' ' ' - . 'mergence. and their end is, cert in. this. poor broken ;Village street; even -.. ...
"Heeeinutionsly „; alknred himself, odic
words for know, one fol. -having knowl su
(as in 2 'Tim. '1.- 12).e. the other on this preposterous 'little .stone devil
to he approached.. Some sappers tried Arabia Can revel in no dream of the .
to piece bombs under-him:1e Noe him
upeeeTheeefeW7inside ley :levee .', The at foregetting it '.; ''TherW.iirld'eouidlhe
(as here, and in Phil; 3: 10; John .17:.
c restoration -even, in: a :modest,: ' f evitheitssinsolent-eyeseeforetliete- are e.
nip hawivell..Zutgsgeeed" ' if:iirs:-..'.:.
Germans grew holder., Tin, twenty, :not be blanked fel,' ignorance:' its • cope .. But liapipli • it does not folio* t ati'beimighe i
gleries' of - the .aneterit• 'call ha e.. '.the last thingsyou
thirty soldiers armed with lifting i
demnatiOn• was that it . would riot re- A.rabirk must fall again under he shoulders and smiled. • As it was, .
set him But what could even • twO • • •
cognizeits Maker... . ' ., , • , ,,
11 His owntoniPare° the patable dition of 'abject vassalage. If the flung him savagely against the atones; •
lifting jacks 'and niallete• tried to up, _ yoke of Constantinople or into „a, on- . when the blast caught him' fell gia : .•
battalions do againit' this Minable • . , * •
• , • , . of the wicked husbandmen. , • As a na-allies win the Ottoman danger w I. be •
he knew little .save that the veil was
e - • , . • • .
somehow torn. his hands Went quick- '
armared. mastodon? - ' - ,• • ' " • • • . ,
- - bon tne dews•rejec e eir
i d th • Messiah, • • ' ' • :
wiped out forever, , cause , , e. t 0- . . , . . . ,
'be the t '
ly, pathetically to . his face,- There
eight shots with 'hie.. revolver at ,
"A colonel , mad .. with " rage ''' •fired,J.,1T of • and the Evangelists almost invariable
e "the Jews" as a name for the man power will be a thing of the est.'
Even if the war ends in A' draw, 1- here 'Caine a great star -pricked' blaeknese :
elan range, If he could have laugh,"
; Lent's' enernies is the presentation of ,•i a Small, 'likelihood that the En ente and 'then oblivion. .. -
When he awoke . to ..consciousness,
. .
ed,' the tank woukl have 'burst . 'with
glee. But his. joking ki of a mere the fact as it stood 'sixty yeaYs a r
the crucifixion. ' But; Isaiah's ' c. I Turkey of any territory she has 104.
;Powers will permit the, recover by .
heard yokes round his bed, and open-
glee.
•sort. 7
.".nelinying- the crew annihilated and
'
trine of.the Remnant still held and
every place Paulvisited.. 0 sought. .
, •
, •British oversight 0 ma as
, Arabian peninsula' 'will' be a 'nil ural : ' ' hi' f mattcis ' ' the -en his eyes Widely to lie nothing
in
nothing, he knew all. . He had gone •
the -Men t disabled,*- ' first for these 'true Israelites''.1
long quarter . of an heur's silence the '
I" s. er !- at the 'end of -- - - • - .- ,• who ' 11 • ' •
could rec9gniiii,4114-iii•e*Vtlieffir-
__„.ic xisequence. _
of cernplete Englieh as.:: through nWithout, a scratch, but the
Suddenly the portholes ' ;opened,:
.Gerrnens. closely i . surrounded him.
ins, ese ves,...ei,ys.aGreeks", . or.
1 both J na (it . '
2. A -
many
:ItIl right, or .Privitere, -11 o- be -
"T: . Y ',.' in'. [tension of thee present_Englishe .45pt . : -:, •
. lung cendency in .Egypt, and 'a logica ex., veil Was gene''• - - "
i would be tiS far More tolerable hi
, hold in , ,Aden. This • develop
14.., VVEATHEinn . EOFECTO-Neen„YAttee; • '''
. •
teed, riddled, sle -a reargiant in „ e„,,„, „
and the terrible -east crushed- flat- •.'-i4e• ch l'
chine gunk spat' fire from both sides, ; ele% 2°'
"ship. u t -2 ae,•,neerie or •eite : . - - - -
ren-P,er. thc. natUrv.... SOfl- 1 8-11- • tion for • the Arabian than the 'rill
f the Ottonaan7Turke end it might Well :
of • .' '
' e. _,. ,,,... • • .
,mild`..; is the .Friend . of the • Germane .
ee • e-_,...., ... .,.., _ .... ... ,..
Action, -grinding th .deadetrader - his.-- '•••-•-• —
d lc •th eineeereneereelt, and -0U be-eeeeeptede-wittregoofti-aceeets. ' iit-the Fighe--/ - -
1 -
• . , . ; a. higher plane. 13eheve on-eTrust • . eh e
• '
FIRS1 KNEW FEAR
ALWAYS FELT THAT A MAW,
VEIL PROTECTED WMt
Sensation of Immunity From Physical
Harm Had atecompanied Hien
Pram Boilleed,
Ile hid the -curious, 'ineiplieable
feeling, long before ea experience of
the tiring line, that he should go un-
wwserunoodevrthtthibreou bait whateverportinfineries ,of
Thie seneatline of immunity- fr(tra
141Yalcal harm had giecompanird him '
ever Since the days of boyhood, when,
as an aPPrentice in the machine shop
of a big British engineering and WON
building firm, 'moving constantly
*Meng huge lathes and craw and
whirling 'Altera and belts, be ran
few more risks of accident than hie
friends who chose to take their pre-
liminary views of life froln the safe
elevation of en office stooL
duEty7bnIn e became first
tetelei Loaf 2fm"annttihnO. ,
bore charmed lifeeThere was hard-
ly
a moment when he was not -aware
of what he had come to regard -as
his birthright -this soft, invisible,
impermeable garment.,
The sun had risen, aid in its pleas-
ant warmth he sat on a heap of rub-
bish by the north wall Of the church ,
to rest and .eat a moesei ()flood; but
he felt somehow, queer( • .
• A Little Stone Devil..
A level glow of sunlight illuminated
patIresa:nctlienngt"ctahre7ectionsvtintelotriggrioylneni, 117
devil with horns and an arrowhead ,
tail, on a pinnacle above the church . •
door, it seemed to watch him Mali-
ciously with its hollow; evil eyes, and
he shook his fist at it.
theAlvtehilutahddubreienngwithtehr hwihmoleanaatraks
still there, he knew, for the !first time, ,
fear -cold, horrible, ominous fear.
Presently he heard a familiar
threatening -iil'oUnd; and -knew that
some sort of news had reached the
enemies battalion. Weeks 'ago they
had registered!' on this village, as a
Precautionary measure,, and now it
was lost to theta their chance had
come' •A couple, of -shells went over,
bursting far down the roughened •
street Where were the. ether fel-
lows/ The silence was strange.,He
did not know (nor did those uncom.
fortebly accurate gunners) that the ..
message had come to retire till night- •
fell, to leave the place witty, unoc-
cupied by either side, since no fortie
fication or entrenching could be . pro-
perly, done under the .eneiny's heavy
fire; S6 he moved- clese to the. wall •
and ..the din. gtew,lenelee.eVery
mm-
ute. • • '
. Theireil Torn.
He heard. the .• cream of a ellen
thetseented to via a thread or sound- .
straight. towards the spot, where he - •
crouched. . . It came nearer,:pear4,
er; it struck the doorwey fs the •
churet. The little stone devel • fell
at his feet, grinninge-iii hes face even
•
fee„t,,, . intellectual acteptInce lrea4Ga
• nour later .when th3 • main •In' • • • `
er part of this. His,name--0 • • •
znilitaey resources.
posii:lte •Iflo1111-r lAeafieople ..without gr . could riot be better illustrated than
st.1 lher influence of vvetither otV war
Rt, Hon., Q. N. Barnes. body of Brsh iroons were Wile to '.
'gelation of himself . A. man was ' • in receet reportsfrom all the fronts,
leach Beaucourt, they discovered
numbers Of -
VL
a Mere lapel, as with us: it was. ,
f the erionality and expre'ss-J • •
I •
• •
I BRITAIN'S MEATLESS DAY, yeaoyrsk Etheera.Pid.a.ri.s. edition: of. the :New „
'•
reined the: straeded tank a part o P , • , ,
ecarileg toe much in the ascendant for
extreme win'g „of the Labor 'party. be -
dead lyingin heaps. . The tank
• Of all inflictione that can befall the
fh 't t the point" ' • ' t n.e d in
rebruarinotethre fellontingesteneneandie
his liking; he resigned that epee in speaks hittie a e P ., Jesus. Chtiet is a contipie e 0
ed charadter. The name of the Lord -
War saviegs committee Appeals to , seldier, yaie ie by universal eoesent.„
e'Iteih;". wrote a French
Mr. Itatnaai Macd011aid Was abRolat.7.1, . "-reagion. . . , ,
„THREE miLLicix "EA; -1;seilfeemplyingenvery h n
. 7.`" _ aetist-private- whose • letter's Were re- -
n reationne ware zavings uom-
•
ao,
•
(
ed in his stead. Mr. Henderson was - - . • • ' 43, Who were negottere-eAn inter- , mittee has•issued an' appeal directiug
cently, reviewed, • "a punishnient of
elected chairmen of the Labor party, r
tn, the ',loco or ,mr.,,,RA/;),s4y. atanion. , • „,,Line,•ANIL,nhareee. ' esting enelent reading is who wasp.: the attention of the . public .to the which civilians can torm, no idea. T,
e hardships and difficultieti of
o .„
For • RailWaYs in Rear of ,Fighting
-.,-*- i.,igotteywiniplying•the nkirdetil'Oriti,firth.i ftant iniportance Of greater `eeenomy sleep ill a tfarielf:fall''afliii4ar haa no
supplies; . weather have been greatly. increased
eldee-wlei, Was at VarianCe With Abe yieeePresiderit Dell.'.IIenrei, of .ti ' But it cannot be right .er itewould .in the censureption Of "meat, ie ofiiM.' e<11,1,r1"lt hi' Dante"
"
the ,-
) i. , -
the new wiapone of ware '1 he
.
larger section of line Laboi. narty as .1.,,tindio.o Northern Railway; he dit•,. never have diaarrpeared.. John is here 'ay to limit the demands On shipping;
to the v;a.r and itfeauses-on the Oirt- cussing the•call for the 'fairing, ef ...4 anticipating 3. 3..a. Thos6 Whom the (2) to economize national
break of Wat- Ile had Previatiali been railway line back of the fightingline Lerd Was, "not ashained' t6 call htl..0)• to secure a mote even distribu.• by
eeuld have been no wed before the
bad
Party from- 1908 to ie •rrance and nicoiders win, ht nen . brothers". must be bern, like hire, of tion of • the etippliee available; ten
in ' Period of heavy artillery to compare "
'chairman Of the
, the No Man' Lund betweenthe'.6
.06Vart nicht in May of last 'year,. Mr.' Hee ,tees.
1910. When- he-'ioined ihn ecoantioneineeiee-ihe'eutting of ahout,tkree mil_ God, • ' 'John's Silence about the inerst: (0 to avoid a further increase
, . • e...• . , . , terY of the Lord's earthly birth is ac- price, says the London Times. $
counted for by the next verse: The At. present rate's' the, conSuri t•
of i liheS Of entrenchthente, init._ Os° the .
1 with the mug of to -clay, when not only
Hodge was appnit:ted acting chairneen ' A large Portion •of these could be
behind ! theta-. is Ploughed and. ie..
et the general -election of 1303,r when pedal that the operetiona noW'under - • 14, Fle.sh.-Peu use hia term f of this consumption is due to the hab-
of the Labee partY in -hie Pla'ee; ' supplind. from the terVito.r.y Stfrve.yed dtkrine of the heirnal .Sonsh'ii has, Of bee,f, mutton; Pork and bacon
Governineat all 'entered Parliament north' of Lake -Suppeior. It. Js: ex. the Incarnation.
The' three- Labor members of - the by the &radian Northern Railway eclipeed nue. questien ofethe manner, of the civilian population amounts fel mn.th'Y f6r scuno miles on eithet side •
1 ' ' . t ' valae ni close, On. $500 000 a day. 'Much
,o . .. ploughed to an enormous depth by .
the Labor pttrtY first became formid- way on behalf of the C.N.n. win re- hurt:minty as it sis-r...iolin goes hostic. to it of eating meet in one form or. an.. 'monster shells. It it through a mate
able ." at; a Paeliament entity. Mr. stilt in the peoductioe of a subetential 'Creattefil, When it was "verY good e dile; three times a da Le . oe lakelets made by shell holes ; in a
,
en erson and Mr. 1Ioclge hoth had loco tonnage through that stretch of like all God's work. Renee when Paul ..erend be eaten without .detriment to
hacl previous mimicipal training --• country between Sudbuiy and Port declares the Incarnation, he says that health Or efficiency. A reduction of
the former as a. councillor and Mayer Arthur. ' God- sent "his own Son in the likeness one -seventh -,the. equivalent of doing.
"ofebarlington, and the latter as a The prospect of buildiug up of of sinful Awl" o (Rom. 8, 8), It is without meat of an' kind for one day
member of the •lipinchester • City towns and traffic in what vas
tamed „wildernese Aye years" ago is
now considered very promising. Apro-
pos of the present scarcity of paper,
it is stated that in the country
through which this new line runt
there is sufficient of the raw material
to aatisfy. Mit the linligry press of 4
metropolitan paper for more than two
hendred years. , • •
With the Proeincial GonernMent,
aid Mr. Hanna, the Cariadian Nettle-
eonneil for three years. •
The discovery of Mr. Hodge's abille
tieo .was one of the surpriees of last
year in Parliament. Side -whiskered,
with beetthig brows, mid of burly
lame john Hodge tooks4utit what he
it-- the British 'workman, capable and-
aigressivn •Whea the Goverenient
startea to put the blame for the Conk-
POratively slow output of munitions
in the early part of laat yeite on the
drinlop,g habits of workmen, halomn will undertake to locate oetiaera
talked back to them in a very ,effec- in these fertile' agrieulturel lands
tive way, contending that, they were aboundieg. in mineral and tinnier
I
Siandaring the woviging &men to wealth. The railtvity aloqp will pur-
cover up tliCir OVIII, elacTinese. Aeaeet. chaee all the railway l'ins produced
fag 'chairman of the tabor party, he ertelriyear4 ,.. ,
'„....-41141...k.aremeedirelesee.e.S1111.1.1111111.11111111111111111111L1111111110Letere............denieee.......Alkee.......e..:s14 " •
John who uses the strongest phrase
to show that he whom he is always de,
pitting as the Very Ood, was Very
Man like' ourselves. Tabernaeled
(iiititgin)-Tlie symbolism et the tab-
ernacle is used. by New Testament
writers to shoW that the Real P4'0301100,
*goee about with men; like the tent in
the wilderness of tho wrindeeinge,
. never limited to "holy" plaeee" or
things. We beheln-So 1 John 1. 1.
atliat the writer claims te be an eye-
ia the ceutral detain, Without
which indeed the peychoinge of the
Goapel ia unintelligible. An only be-
gatteer from a father (inarglineenlineen
.there were two or More Sons, each
inherited a portion; an °air eon itt-
eee.,
in, eachweek-would mean a saving'
of $500,000 a eveek, even it prices did
not fall tie a resultef the emaller de-
mand. The motley Saved could be lent
to .the nation foe the war. ,
Itis. Possible for nearly all, bY sale-
stituthig other foods, so to, rearrange
their meals Id to reditee ,the amount
of meat °Men :by; , at lea:t '
senenth. , •
The 'committee specially appeal to
those not engaged in physical toil • to
limit their use of meet as fee as -pos.
ot ahime, that our valiant in-
fantry have to move. As Harold
Chapin wrote in one of the last letel
tem of his heroic life: "Armies the
Size °femme ere fearfully - weather -
hound: 'Many a. man who 'Went West'
. . . would be alive now if his
boots hadratteen 80 tithed With med.
. • • . Oh, this ctuel Mud!"
dne of the strange fads of our of-
fensive tint SOMMO, has been the
extraordinary pereisterier'ef bad wea-
ther.'t IS' hardly going to6 far to
say that My Douglas Haig and Ian
noble atine Vert bad to fight the wee,
thee as well ae the Getniana.,'
•
sible. A limitation of demand oritheir••
Dry, All Ingle,1
part would help to Set free aupplica "You came front a dry town', didn't
for those who peed them most, and 'you?" .
.
would tend to realice'priees In favor aDeir/ Why, their won't even anew
of the poor
, •• • the eaepentere to Niti epirit letelo."
.