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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-10-17, Page 2• • - 'WOMEN SPLIXDID ItIMIPONRIt TO • CALL Oe RIR COUNTRY i • .4.0.1.11111.140 UbeTh.r, Wiese Sister*, tee Wu. area et Fraser Volunteered For Mi Branches, et LAW. A whole Vehane Aeuld not be enough to tee siagee nuts of every day Nie,wre-eniv iu tee: French we - manes response to the 01,1 of her 4 •courery. At She very fit.., he'l foe mobilization Feench women c-- sea gee ", FAMETI IN HIS/10DV airouitaneously meth the ie re e l'ellee li A II " and r.ot onoe have they felled to r„ "carve tal" sine that fattfui August day. Women- of all railh'l and, of ostashe HACK TO .eNeet-ENT oneeee . every orermation responded. Front! - OF ROME the very air of La ilsile Fr flee they I had alesorhed UK truth that every wo. . ... 1101.01.1 nui ----e g• ----ii -in ex er - -- - Wan 4111 easoisiag o D 4 irstits girls lof ththalsamod sat ae bor to tha Rua. To 11414 is trails ammo el greatly is the efeeselea we* at the Woassia's Boolotisa. The spirit si Freela sow 1* teeir attitude towards the WOM411101 Commies of the Hague -which met in April, 1915. Not i single Fete& Sueitty sent a delegate to this Pacifist meeting- The 15 feminist associations and the 80 suf freest soeittice refused to accept th proposed program. As long as tha spirit survives, victory le assured t the Allies. MAN 1111110 REVOLT ARM t 4 e ....•••••• This InterestIng teen& Town Vona. deareet and of herself for defence of -with German colonial methods, arid le • NA,TIVEll HORRIFIED AT IDEA OF RETURN TO TEUTON RULE •••••••• *rim poLoe °Akers become frailty of awl+ Wows, aad that mash offonsmo are notimaiebod by the courts of law in a wey that they ought to be ac- eording to a *ens* eif justice to the natieee." -- — * - • - - THE BIBLE AND THE WAR British sad Foreign Bible Society Ileittoistribueed 7,000,000 •CePies. - British Report Cite* Evideeee Dr. J. H. Ritson, of the British' and Atrocities la Hun Treatment Foreign Bible Society, *totes that the of the Aborigine& actual combatant* and labor bat- in tli° DesPerate Sougee With A report on the brutal methods em- telltale on the field of war speak 72 languages. The British. NM Foreign „ilea buer.nuutTniblilitationt, plow" by Geneeny in, the udminto. Bible Society was ready with ver: 1?,- --1E -.one I* Proving. * tration of her coloniea in Africa, re- ei°1-4 et the 8°44W" in ell these mighty ally of "white man" sin the cently made public by Edmond IL L. tongues. It is a remarkable feet that great fight against the enenues of or boatile„ the civilization to which the red men tutes the British Government's reply hntle C4dIvibevnmerateelnyt pufrtiebnincirrances in tliel since the -et -pee of peace were emoted terQuirrge, Uihntocritinolft SSeouctritetA-fanrriel, telleensitili: have subscribed in these later years to the ;Assertion of Dr. W.. S. Se way of replenishing and maintaining toe the Weet. on the plains and in the rocky valleye German See t f St t 14 the htocksi of Scriptures for the sailore, ' soldiers or civilians* in, the battle - MOS IN !OCTOBER 31, 1914, litiffiERN WARFARE AN HEROIC DAY 410•1••••• PROVE A MIGHTY ALLY TO THE WHITE MAN "MOTHERING" THE WAR CHILDREN MARKS ONE oF THE „slept/KIM FRENCH AND BELGIAN WOMEN CRISIS OF HISTORY CARE FOR UNFORTUNATES, a Aaterlean Indian* Are /eat Ileroen At the Find Battle of Ypres the Super Valor of the tieritisli Sol- dier Saved the Empire. It NYOS the 'obstinate tenacity, the superb apirit,..the refusal to acknowl- edge defeat which bas ever animated the-Britisb soldier, that Salir the come, try through those desperate hours on October el and November 1 1914. Zeolite Work of Rescuing Youthful Victims From Starvation or From Sievere. The manner in vied& Belgian and French women have been able to nether" the childeen who have be. come victimo in one way 44114 another of Bun cruelties and atrocities is no- -thng short of wonderful.- With reg. /tIveevzstiotohlzirei2e. the trench who rows of their own sufficient to war. rant 'their spending the remainder ;If Colonies. that Germany ''would de- 67"--14 "'"" 11113-QRe-cc4c-t7 War seezris the natural business of Such Lord French's comnient on their lifetime, grieving, these laCiblEt • peace conference. Seripturea among these involved The story of their participation in The .Ifint Battle of Ypres, little pressing need 'of rescuing these chit, the First Battle of 1:pres. ,wornesi xergot inand the return of her colonies at the hes distributed more thaneseven mile the Indian. . in the great struggle; and the Bible the war for democracy is a new we knew of it for long a'fterwarcls, dren from starvation or slavery, die- fl- salional ever iesued in connection 11. ousts' still remains oven at Berle; :Odyssey.' From Canada they went enno• Budapest,and even 'Constan form in grous. number* to Besot wawa the oveivdeaS expeditions, and there • V' home and country. First of all thee, ed Part of the Dowry of considered as an indictment of Ger-. like the Spartan women of old, hand- ed to each soldier his shield with the , • meseage: "Come hem with if or on it." Then they turned to the pen or s the plough, whichever task they could two great canals with the Somme, wdo best of all those laid 'down by eltese one leading to the north -and tenpin departing soldiers. Because . she Ise" the Sclieldt, and ;the other flowing always her husband's compardin end south to the Oise. Thee this centre comrade, the French woman is always , of the cotton and weiden fabric thoroughle acquainted wlth the hush.' dust ry has direet water connections nem side of living- with Antwerp and Paris. Known in Itomau dines es A.ugusta Managers of Big BUnfiteeSee. t Man fitness to rule the natives of • Mary Queen of Scots Africa,. , The evidencee upon which St. quaatia ezeloye the advantage the report is based ate taken from of being situated at the juncture of ".• • Veroniandueem, St. Quenin Te- lt was not difficult therefore (ex- valved its present 'name in honor .of cept for foreboding and anxiety and, G I Ch official German documents at Wind - hook, from sworn statements by ea- fighting forces-two-4=de of these tive chiefs ,antleby Eturtipeepstamiliar being with the Allies; and thousands with the country, and from the writ- ing ;,,,e„,„,,,,„ if fee eeneenene nee "ref 'MSS mew, free from the restrict. ings of Governor Leutweins who held etro, :We -re- aqiih-g-eh-e.-11-1117-T-esTe-e op e. Men face to face With death are searching the .Seripturee Or realities as never before. Between 800,000 and 900,000 Jews 'are among the office from 1894 to 1905; Dr. Paul Rohrback, Dr. Carl Dove and others. inent for the first tnne. the report refutes in detail Doctor Solf's assertion that Gerniany's treat; The County and the Countess. . merit of the native races ton for her similarity in ilia sounde or certain the moral right, te be a great colonial words often lead to einiftleien, The , as put o Power, Secretary Georges says. reel terror) to assume entire control Weekly Teleeraph tells an interesting of shops, Wes, and even' of farms, dtttili here in' the third century .The natiee opinion here is uneni- case of that kind. At a.party the other w e. preaching ehe ,doetrines mously against any idea of their ever evening a jroung man was introduced running them to the benefit of the being handed back to the tender leer- to a lady whom he understood, to be cies Germany. Auy suggestion of the daughter of the Countess of Ayr. whole community. Fields, vineyards, and orchards were tended, erne crops • were garnered by the women with , scarcely a hint from the government. French ,women bectIMC managers of ,Chrietianity.. Four centurie: later his tomb became a shrin‘ and the advent if many pilgrims served to .magnify the iraportanee of the town, while its' industrial prosperity was materiallY advanced. . during the - big basinesses, and there is a long Middle Ages by the introduction of . record of women who are 'acting as 'cloth eumufacture. - , mayor,s, head teacherselpost mistress.* Before the walls• of St, Quentin, in twenty-five years of vermeil rule in 'sees," Vn03 the reply, "but that's my es, and servants in posts by no mean outhwest Africa e as an. unbroken , devoid if danger. They have per- 1557, was fought one of 'the great P father." ` (Anent ba ' ' record of i d faith, private op - formed their work with an efficiency battles in the struggle between Henry Whereupon the young man rushed hression, cruelty, barbarittes and rob. IL of Prance- and Philip IL of Spain. oft and told bis ho t s 0 t s es ft the yeung beries culminating i , , n the lferero and lady must be quite mad h told , as s e • the posmbihty of an act ot this kind on the part of Great Britain produces the utmost consternation." Record of Oppression. -' • The report shows that the lint Be and by he ventured to ask after her mother, the countess. e • "M7 father YOU meane' said the lady, "No," said -the bewildered youth, "e was asking after your mother, the Countess of Ayr," t: that is not qualified by any charitable , • • The latter, having previously married • allowancee because ef emergence. o en ot re ellions, During the first Mary Tudor, Queen Of. England, had itim. the Countess of A.yr was her fee French women have taken over the the support of the En years there was no law for thee, . ' work ottrain conductors and drivers, glish when the seventeen the natives. Such eirotection as the ' eget fie nee' Spaniards, Under Emmanuel ,Phili.. answered the hostese. ticket collectors. Over 600 women. law eventually provides indicated bert,. of Savoy, invested the tewn. tons "Let me'introduce you to him He ie were empliyed as tramway, conductors The incompetent •Constable de Mont- eideratihns of, humanity, but the order Mr Smith -the county surveyet" , in Paris alone in` January, 1915, and to exploit the batives as laborers re- . '.. , ' . • over morency led, a French array to the ' 1,800 more in the Metro -tube. ..-----. ••••••••• in command of the garrison. The. When the Germane arrived they en, • First African Exfilorer. `, • ' ' thoneands.in the various banks. Muni- -6.700 v.vre,epaplayed by railways, taid relief 9f Admiral Coligny, Who swag Tneined. ' allies administered a crushing defeat ,teeeti, into agreements with the native Tile first White ,man to explor the • , • tibia workers are recruited almost en- to eeh the chiefs, but these scrape . of peppy and interior of Afelea a 'snd -rc ' . their frontethe ranks a women. Lace- to 1Woetenoeency, but the * besieged makers, dressniakeis, porcelain work- forces,inspired by the intrepid Col- • the: natives- were.te- feaueulently , de- previously well-nigh fahuloue Seaters from Lineushe embroiderers from 'guy, held, the town for 17 days Prived•of their best land reredos and of the eTigen was Mungo Pare, born le the Vosgestulle cutters, those 'whose after the rent . of their "deliverers"e settletserobbee them of. their eattle, :Scotlanes147 years ago. Park was ap- -- afid _eyes had been trained hands , This was the sante Coligny who 15 which was their only wealth, am the the prenticed tosa tergeoneand started MB the daintiest, finest work turned out . . 'to years later was one Of the first vie- law subsequentlylrevented the na-' :wandering Career in. 1192 as .assistant - ' •. shells idelt on a random visit to „n time of the Masenereof St Bierthelo- twee .fremepossessing heeds, of sepekt surgeon on board. the Worcester, an elee. workshop employing 845 women pro- mew, His body was thrown feint The natives were thus Owen to week. East Indieman: _Later the Scottish diiced butene. bee Abell among , ' • Ins own window and fell in the court- 4 ridiculously inadequate wages and ..e. , often Twee paid. : They wereetreated eAsseciationurgeen was employed by" and in jutut, 1795, he the African' , , 80,000. • Like their British sister, the French. Yard at the feet of the Duke' of Guise WOmd'volunteered urilmaitatinglfor one. of the instigators of the great . liee.slaves and theie women folk were .reached the Gambia. in the following the most dangerotis workEffective t e slaughter 'of the Hugenetee . e habitually mialtreatede by . the Ger-feteeemeee, ' accompanied only by two canteen ork was from the start the Figured In e 'War of 1870. ' ' 'mess -whey took them into forced con- • 7: ...ear° 'servants, he plunged into. the w , • idea of French woinen for their sta.. .. 6. the Franco-German War St. ' cubl!'iae` ' .. • ' • , . - unexplored 'interior of the Dart • Con - These , tors, and. lute, been Most ,efficientle, Quentin plaYed two roles, fleet 'sue- ' r,oaded twerehe natmsome intorebellien, in Britain,ewith the Proud dietinction e of the things that tinene A year later has was back ' • . niamiged. • •eessfully resisting an 'attack in' Ciotti-. - which ' was suppressed by ruthless of being the 'first naodern European. • BY eheer Merits women have ' won ber, 1870, buts three . menthe later : in the 6:e- , • &est place on egriculturel cinunittees. witnessing the siged defeat" of Gee.' cruelty, reealting.vietually The reach the Niger. • • . - : . •. • t, .. . , • • .. ' ,' = .- .' , There is record the case of a girl •Paidherbe's. armmtermination of the three tribes y be the Ger ans Berpros were reduced from, 80,000 te1 . • • -7.----9" . . - < of fourteen, motherlesi, and with under von Goeben, jug ten days bee 20;000 to I '. 17,000, the Hottentots from ' The Nearest. ' • three ;younger children under her foie the general armistiee was signed. ' tare. After her father marched. , St. Quentin is less, than 100 .mites .. . moo and the Berg-Damaras from 80,-.1 The four Mud -stained Privates had . away, to war this brave girl neglecs riotth-east Of Paris by rail tenches 171 '000 toe,42,800, Thies 30 per cent. ,,of e cone into possession of a month organ ted none of her .accustomed duties, Miles in an airline scratheast Of the tlexero people disappeared .and by meansunknown to all except one More -than half of the Hottentots and rather sore lion prisoner; .but managed her father's large farm Peronne. Betw-emnPerroue and St.' - so 17..i.ell that the Prefe0.' the -eked_ her. gnerititi .thb 8olnine Riverma e d ' • ' the Berg -Damara tribes glared their "06 ; seter 'aye the blOomin': thing?" . .. ' • , publicly. • In another ' destrice tvto wide loop -to the. soutli, with . the 9. , .,-..: fate. Governor 4eutwein Was meet.- - „ young.ghed, oephaus, were lett .alone town of Ham. at the hottorn of the seded by the tioteihius Governor Tro- • 'when their three brothers were called bend. The last -tamed, town will he ilia,• fresh' from Germany,- who Sup - up, ' They took over the dare of a remembered as the Place where pressed an Arab rebellion ,:in East sixty -acre • farm, With twenty-tNe Louis' Neholeon was held a' prisoner Afriea by.a 'wholesale. massaere, Gov- thplay somethin! .on it, and. e cows and Ave 'horses. , . . - for six days fallowing his abortive ' , . , . . , (tenor Teethe iseued an exteimnia- . the one • '00 guesses „svot ,the chime tion .order, . the terms, of which pro= is tosses up between the 'Sifter ami* '. The Spirit:That Will ' Conquer. attempt ti effect a Military upfle- ing .,in his favor • when he landed at - '.• • • videcl that no 'Hera%) min. woman or . . i • , • ' - ' . , child or 'babe -was tO receive merey • • ' • . ' , ' • , s einselfe It was done. The, Swlper trilled -up .. . . . I All over France it Was the Sante Boulogne in 1840.. : ,. , , , ' ' • •. story. Where the Hun pezietrated and St. ,Quentin was gi • .or quart_ er.. -., • . , • . : . ,, and clown the scale: , s •. • - • . 'yen to Maly' • .,. • sowed devastation on every band, ell ' Brutal Exeesses. Queen of Scots as a part. of her '• • eble-bodied women. wider -fifty, and boys and, kiris Of fourteen and over, ' to ‘• ekill every one of them,• take no dowry' ins, 1569-e' and *it continued pay her a eevenue, until ' the day or .prisorters;" he iaid, „Evicience that' were defiorted. to Germany as slaves. her death at the trerfibling hancleeof the 'seder was tarried out is recorded ' It was .the old 'women 'who 'set to • work •patiently to reelaim the land, e. • with the help of the little • cieldren; •They *planted vegetables emong the tuins of their burnt houses, ,anci even ' :tried to ploughi the down-tridden fleicis Mid' sow eiheis. Many sotieties • •of Free& women are undertaking to •help in the. devastated clistriets. Mane? , *Innen; Wive suridertakeie tli'Vvilt---in- ' dependently' „living with the people and 'abating their hardships and sox- . twat; Thousands :have disappeared. from these villages never to return, victinis'not of shrapnel, but of depor.- . tation.. Hundreds fell by the wayside, . . and htirldreds.hecame separated from - their families in the mad eiracuation r • k are fresh evidences every day of the Ongular ,important part 'Guist are playing in the role 9f scouts and in their spectacular surprise attacks., , An Exploit in France; One of tile novel 'storiesdhat .came out of Fran:ea feceritif bacil$ etalt a* band of six brave. young Slone, warriors whe one night' penetrated the Gernme lines to a depth of three miles. Coining upon a Ana old Viencir chateau theY found inside a great gathering of German army officers hilariously imbibing the varied menu of a French wine banquet. With the same blood.curdling warwhoops . that their sires hnce invented titre the plaint:men of Anaerica, the Sioux sol- diers ascended upon the chateau, =shed their , grenades ethrough the, windows and let loose a fury of 'rifle and revolver fire:' When the patrol returned shortie afterward intact to the lines the Indian corporal modest- ly reported: ' „ "Heap big noise inside; perhaps heap big 'dead now." . Of a brave Indian lieutenant who fell leading his men forward with the Americans at Sergy, a subordinate clfleer ' "Chief so active last three Menthe io tune to stay in dugout for the tailor to sew service and wound stripes upon his, coat sleeves. We . them" - • it has ever been before or since. The' country at large still under - buried 'him in his blankets without d. 1,6 stands fat too , e, about the .tre If, ever proof ,was needed that &a tle �f Ypree, and about its, limiter-, American Indian's heart was in the eble effect upon the whole course .of right place and that he was the friend the eirar. , of the white mars ,of America with. The critieal p'eriod• was between whom he has fought in every war two and three o'clock in the after - that Ameticans -have ever Might, 'his noon when, with the -Fleet Division and 'militant. eitieen lights, the- dramatie forced beck, the enemy Was coming activities 'in the World war have, pro.' 'vide& ample proqf.• No °more loyal ,on in strength. trenches of France and Flanders than was Brigadier -General Fitzparehee, stoke, , Atthiswthiiiiaolinitohmeanhte.rao the scions of the:redskins. . eaeed the daes. " . • ' • • The. fitst Indian kiiled' ; with the Sir Arther Conan' Doyle, in his his - Canadian forces wad Lieutenant Cam- tote of Ithe wise,- gives. to; hide fine eron Brant, of the Six Nations,- a, soldier, Who was Medea few daes lineereesceridant of Joseph'Bitlitit, the later, the credit' of • the initiative in Indian 'genius .who fought with the the .vital movement which led to the British in the War of .American Revo- capture of Gleinvelt by the2nd•Wor- Intim, thereby wiping out a score cestere. ' The lattenswere not under that reached Sack more than a cecn- his orders, but be saw the ,urgent tuhyteard quartee. The first Indian need of filling the gap of 500 yards to die '-vvieb the, Ainericen forces was between the northern edge of the vie. John peters, a Mcnerninee Indian, lege and the South Wales Borderers, eervine.with the First Engieeers. All who had not ietired. The Wereesteis of them are embued with the spirit were in reseetre in the south-west ef the Indian; wife evil& asked how 'dormer of Polygon Wood. • .110.aused .anily Mein one of the U.S. On being called- Upon, says Sir Oar - 'cantonments, according to the stery an Doyle,. they maile, a btilliant ad- vance under Major Hanker. One coni. liany (A) was detached to guard the right flank of the advahce. The °thee three companies earee on for a thou- sand yards, ,Atone point they had to eross 220' yards of, open tinder heavy shrapnel flee. One hundred men fill, but the momeettue of the -charge v;•as never ditninfshed: Their rapid And Accurate fire drove hack .the German infantry, While their open order 'fat- mation dinfiniehed. their own losses. Finally they daelied into the:trenches and connected up the village with the line, cee the Welsh Borderers. It was a , fine adeence, at a critical Moment: The struggle went he, but‘ the de. fence made by the vastly outnunibere ed British Army ore the day of 0e - ember 31 turned the tide:, • • - merited the passage of the Erapirerhonor, or an orphanage without goar- and -I" tin) world itself' Aweigh ,one leans. The war of 1871 OtartCd th ei thue,etiereme crisis .of history, says Free& women in the week et caring for the child victims .Of that thee, the Lenclon Observer. ' ' We canLow marl: not merely the From infazieste through school age, day but the fery hour which deeided those beys and girie viere guarded ' whether the Germans • should: Weak and guided so that, theylnight become the allied line and •Teach the' French worthy citizen of France. That $0 - coast or recoil in failure from the thin 'dotelm-we as the "Oeuvre de la, . • bee_ eneeeeteaee_eeaee.e__d ...weetern Cheussee du Maine" has broadened chivalry. We can identify the man into. inestimable -factor natiomir , whose genius, thrown into the trembl- life. Dating back to pre-war timee, ing scale of Fate, turned it to the also, the the "notternal canteene" and side of eivilizetion, neVer 'again to the "Goutte de Lait" which have let the 'final, though far, issue be ens greatly increased,. their aetivities dur. • .compassed with doubt: . ' • ing the war. When, General seetzelarellee sent Romes foe 15,000 Children. the214Worcesters into the. line at . the right point between two, and three But quite apart from the' three so - o'clock on the afternoon' of October &sties named, and springing into ex - 31, 1914, be euenee the current Of war iseence solely because of the uepres so that- it never s.again flowed back- feaerdee,nitoedooboririgtoaollitzyaiolofoHoluirinrithwweor: 74BrUdi one directing act could thus men known as "IlAccueil Francais" bear upon destiny, it was because the wheel: sole object is the care of ail- ; valor of. thousands held the tense dren belonging to the inveded dis- balance up* vbhich it deacended. To tricts. Madame .Mangor, the secre. give the name of Ypres its meaning tary, has managed to find honiew for the British , Army poured forth its 15,000 such children. If one but • • blood as never upon any of the fields pauses to recall the poppiation of which enehrined its elory, Here • it well known towns end villages it be- , was that the Walsh soldier of tra- views pessible to realize' in fault dition fought his greatest fight ad e degree the task French women have., sealedshis teatimes?. taken upon themselves, -rememberieg , Emphasizing the vital intporeance also that the number • .of 'deserted of the battle, the London Times point $ . children in Ode dietrict runs into. the cut that on October 81, 1914, the Bri- hundred thousand. s 'Madam Vitale], tish Empire was in greater peril than -wife of the Governor of Paris, became " president Of °L'A•ssistance -a la Mere e: et l'Enfant," Which was forin,ed char. , ing the 'first. 'year of the war list unit- • ' ing several societies all for lennedi- ate, week in 1914. In thie way over. ' .• lapping was avoided. , Two English ladies long resident in Paris. have render4d ;valuable flehiCn In the' dare of Orpliiins of the Army ' by co-operating with Free& women. These woinen visited Anierica in 19,Ia end collected enough money to care' . for 50,000 children. T -he plan pursued • leaves the children Fiance With . • e • • . the* neatest kin. ' zealously has es : this works -Men cerried. on it is pree-eee !: '- tic:11V impossible now to fine a war • orphan unprovided a 'home.• Do •e e • what they will, no one 'in France, of the Whole Werke for. Viet. in atter can s over dispel the daelneloud that hangs over France -the tragedy thou- sands -whe can never, return, those • who bave died by the weyeide *116 . forced to flee from iteine befeee thee : oncOming hordes of Germans, or who .could not surviye iri that slong and. shameful pilgrimage :into' slevery. , Worse than death. Thousand s 'have '+:1„isappeared.liecanSe separtiteci frm their families,:and vats will: le(reeerle:,' ' • ed et. trade theirwhereabouts. '• , • s . . . „ Saved 300 'Young Girls: • .The Womee's. Societiee in _Freese: ' have taken over •this task, which is • far too heavy for the geveininent at 'present. The National Council of - • Freneliworrien have -656 „peopl'vfork.- . Mg et the •Ilead office in •Paris eo- - erdinating With the • Prefects of the.: Provinces. -and the • fernieist societies-- ite every district. In. Fronce. So far. •• theirhave mit% over. 400.000 investi- •.. gattense and have trared over 50,000 eases. This same society. euceceded. , at last, by appealing to the Pope one , to thes King 5f Spain to tntereere, in' e • getting 300 young girls who have • •s; been deported to Germany sent back . to , their himes. member is it • • . "Mies drop, in the bucket" but -it i8. nevertheless ,encouraging to : the Closely related to this onestien et• tunate relatives. -who have beconie the children is that ot, their imf er- refugees. "L'Etivre• Parisienne has . • ever hospitality in Paris to over . 1,000 free of charge. They are 'housed ' in blocks of Model fleet with evert conveniencereverything done for their .• . comfort and happitteae. end emploes meet tolled for those able to work, . Their children' are elso cared or, if , neceisary. .• . Frien of the Wiu Men. . mendous importance of the first bat - wailed private .Ebenizer- Moggs• ((sur -.1. told by President Wilson, answered: inirned the Swiper):. " • f"Too much salute, not enough shoots" "slime •• 'I knows," roared another • 1,1 every war activity the Indian is bf the tmuestained combatants.. "Let VIriting his name large in the affatis of the world. Red man and ealaite inan -allies in the eonimon cause -are ell goo.' Indiatis together, - , her doUsiti Elizabeth's headsinan Ilargewoinen. "• in the story of Governer , Trotha's , groora, who field he was ordered 'to kl a young. Herero woman. He re - fused in? disgpst, whereupon a Ger- , Hot Air. :. . - '.'"Well?," queried, the inusielau,,when It was somewhere in Fiance, et 'a, he had finished. • ' ' * ' base commandant'., where casualty One• private eugges6c1 "beer, beer, reports came from the line, A War - glorious beer ee hut the Sheper shook i Weary Tommy, coming down for a kis head. , , • - , • . i 'breather,' was accosted by a lease. "No," he said, ntigits not in it; but eivallah" with the rematic il C. • you're the, nearestand s,o Ylnl. Wine. • 'How's everethieg, looking` up The chune was 'As Petits the 'eart for there?". ' '• • • Coolin' Streams.' " ,' .. • ; ' "Nothing to 'worry about," replied • •• • • , te--e--.- • the warriorAnd then, as if he had - : He Wanted ' It Decided. . euddenlY remembered it: ' "Heard "Mal Mal bawled Freddie; as the about the new gee .Fritz •',1s sending live, entirely on board, looking after i-pcnt,,s in the report- it ,11 eiecret •eire, Usual morning -Wash wag...going on, over AQYfr. he asked,: \t,._.._, ing the lock, as well as looking after 1912 to MagIstrates, in. wbich he e- neck?" . • . . • , very bad?" , - • • , . -f\ engines, 'steering the bot and work- : meat sent out be 'Governor Belt in "do my earis belong. to my lace or my "Noe'erepitecl the base wallah.. "Is it theif cabins and cooking their own -...fers to the. desperate feeling previa-, Ma Semen:eked. s e r, . • "Rather, asserted the warrior. ."So food. Usually four girls have charge en't ameng the natives, "The reason," • "Why, what is the matter'?" she bad that it gets through your pay -book of two barges; one motor or horse- he stated, "which is given fbr this asked. . . . ,. and kills your nexhoftkin." barge being used for towing. •The fact is that the brutal opccesses of . "I want it decklid ticyw., Every beiges are used wholly for food Europeans against natives are alarm- tune pee tell Mary to 'wash my face : Prunes ""and toasted barley bread transpert. e . : ..... . es, • • ingly inereasing. It is regretable that or my neck she Washes my -ears, W1/".''' r" are, good supper dithes. • ' ,Among the latest innovations of man seedier earried onf the order and war are the bergewomen who run the then held the dripping hayonet itt conal service ., keeween Hayes , and the groom's face. . • • Liverpoel, some 300 miles. The girls! One of the most significant docu- ICU XD csibi3. es or tbeIx firma I etell-efihleS 15 FIVB DoLeAres, I WANT 'IOU TO CAI.4 AT TOWS oFfit e. littp "Mite If lei OeT To ialeeli r. Janet 141,4 Alattin'ANh aszt IN Itvioougor wr.„,. .0.1.- -Do IT --...4.- . oh•rO 14114 •b 6is ...4ff ,-tf• t'.40" .•1 • '•- •_. .1. 4.A.: •. , , -t- 7.- • , • • • Paining It tip:. • _ - Mr. Coldfax (viewing the Niagara catarttet)-"Whet a tremendous urne of water! Can you tell me the nuiribor of tone which go over the brink each second?" - ' The Last Hackman -nee eyes ain't what they tuied to be, sir, but you an count 'em for yourself?" ' • 4 / ..", -----,-. - • • JilsT As 1.71400414T, ..,.........-.............7 ./.// THeRE Is A l'IS LUNCH TIMe•-• ' 14aLTOM‘rOLD Z401 rlr M). . V144 -•les_- , '-'•;"!? vel.R01,44o4R,d. ,. Haxvs iok). beam -ro . Cacy- 1 VieNt- ., MAN -ro, ei :sees*. rm., Heove. LO e sg -tut404 1E7e f . , 01.01-opeAAIRI 4,1' 3f., Not) MithOefi • ' To 7A R114 ai Rkt4 TO - .*•,',' ato• HIM. i N 4..\- !'-?!•:( • .,.. 4.....,, Trick .Flyirig. • • - - "Why is trick flying or 'stunt" tying • . . necessary?" people sometimes ask :When they se an "airman apparently gambling With his inveleable life be mere joy tricks in the eolith, loopleg : the loop, doing stalling turns and nose diving Aerial gymnastics are essential; 10 - the work of alt aeouts ot battle White, ! because when they go over the lino atid engage Oneray alreraft, they are eompelled to do aerial gymnastics. The ---"joy flight" that the' eivilittii watches I at home, with sometimes a leaven of :Melees disapproval in his admiration, ; will serve peplum's as the life flieht • of that airman when he mcete the thin over Preece �r Menden: avid perhaps ° • - as, his enemy's death Meld. • o • , . ens, -• - - .4 • ''''"•aa.:".,"",„'M'12,153,-tam..... • • • 1 ;*