The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-01-07, Page 7.• a • g ;wolf •• se
lot
tarataallwasaairi4,0
111,E SUNDA Y SCI101 $1110Y
1
°I INfERNA.TIONAL LES401.1",
1 ' J"tit..,NUATVY. P.
ll:$sson II. Debiloralt dud Barak 1)(4,
iver Israel.-11idit. 4.4-23; 5444
- 'Golden Telt. jtsa, 84. rt. •
.1)clIral1-wae•a nuiriedlNialan.. tihii
'Verse.el, The wiff of LappidOth.
Naas a wife in the home, ond, Wi-
chhibtedly, the Mother of children.
, T•his., la -a; vorp:early -evidence-that.
gr e.4 Icadershshiti in tlie state is
•not inconsistent with, wifely -tAil
motherly faithfulneas and attentio
te the aiities of the houte, •U11°1'
11$s
been said a.bout the particular
sphere of *Vulva with 'the imPlica-
tion that this sphere is Clio home
an. No 'wife or motherhas,-the•
right to negleet ,either her husband
•
\
':. 6, Dweltunder the'nalna-tree, of
Dehorabbetiveen Remit and Beth-.
e1 intbe•hill-Ountry o Ephrahn..
13.e.„',41nie, Of, ,tbe inentsitine, of , the
anaanites, it was no 'longer safe
for the I.sraelites to have 'their seat
Of goverdMent,', as it were, or, ra-
ther, the place Of iudgnient.:.ia the
northetietern part of their b\ordove.t,
aid 'hence they,, weak on.,intor'tne
Itill-eountry-Of Li/brawl. Tlis-judges,
sat in 413 01)04 place,. usuallYAutider
the •gat. Of .the ei.ty or .in tho' leal''
- ket-Plate.e,.., where tnany peoyleeould,
-h.e-ga4liered tbieiliVrTfor ipeciar art:.
• noimetreents... "The •earliest seats
of Isrel's WorShin the earlicet.ral.:
lies to her patm,Otsni, Were 'upon
Mouut\L liraite• (Geork,,e .'-Adani
Stnitity
6, A :she:sent andel:41'Pd Barak.
:.--Debo all atw- very quickly .*hat
the greatest need o Israelwas, and
she LLISci' discover --that the tithe
Was ripe for a de isive ,bicier. So
k
elle Sett for. the Mon' On *hem she
thought{ vietory iYoUld rest, ,Barak
inebiliSe his '•troo,pli on Xount Ta-
bor'. ;I( desh in Galilee is the Old,
import.% t ' and. very i often mention-,
ed 'titY- , f the Old •Testanient.- Re:
feregice made to it in the Tel '01,
A arna, , etteis and ' in Egyptian
iiie0
scrinti' e; Other. -references in
t, s
es-Bibl l'are-Soh. s -, 7; -°1•-32
.-1-:
The inhe .itanta - in IL C'.. 734. *are
'captured 'nti taken' way by Tiglath
PlYser;-' csePhaa says that the
city lay'etWeen a Mee' and .the
3.‘3riiin,:b der,' and that it .vir'a . ill
tli� bailda of -Jibe Ty; ems' --W11.0 Nye**.
co' tinuall 'fighting, iththo .Israel-
ites.- - . , ....
' *7 The war Kieh ' . This river
flowed at e*,.fOot,:pt. taunt, gannet
or her Children, hut 'WOUtftlitS e'Phere
any 'place of service 'which ,w111
help the causo Intin.01tY.'
' was Deborah's sphere. ••
.. • .
it. as o Mally ett led '.'The . war
ter Of. e iddo" (Su g, 6. 19). ,The
Xis on•W 4, Swift- owiiig, turhu-
len '‘strea ` ` •
Barak a!d. If,th.0 wilt' ..)6with
ine;'flien I Will 'go; b itjt thou -wilt
not geWit ,,me,,4 will mot go..4--it,i.%
stitr, 'ge:tla t :7. warrior, used to bat-
tlei Should lbe afraid go into the
car; ick wi 'hout' the prescnce .4? E ,
i
PF 0 an W i ,presiinar0 y knew noth-
ing ;about arfare.
. 9, Ands e Said, I •
with the Doubtles
3onsidera argument
cirali erak befo
,,gre..3 to (.,4 she: e nio not see more to the.4isiratiye4 Germane..
vhy Barak; bt: not Ito lead his ".1/.13,6n. deliartitre from Ostend
I had the satisfaction 'of an. -en-
irmy to vie ory.
-Naw-ithst -&--6-0-,journer_that counter' with' the
ill surely go
there, was
betNieen.De-
e she finally
,-
Sisera alighted from hi* chariot,
and fled away on hi* feet. i&
evidently W4$ a coward. Ile left hi*
men to their own discomfiture. ,-Ile
himself would flee to safety. This
fact relieves somewhat the axiai.
ne.7,5 of titer manner ,Nbitik110 Wet
his death ohortly afterward:a,. at tbO
hands of paraan. (Jud. 4. rif 22).
Ia. Blit Barak pursued after the
chariots, and •after the liosts,---Even,
the charriots were put to confusion,
so that the footmen of the Ieraelites;
could Panto the horses of the en- '
vniy, "Not a Man aeft," is the em-
phatic way in ishich the writer des-
cribes the awful loss that the enemy
Suffered.
-
„
DitiffINfi.:"TIIE-BI:VII4'S
, ,
•Baron Cletgleys TOP of Ms Exy
' citing Experiences. 4 '
' Baron Ciergleys,, who. has bdni
., . . . ... ,.
serving with 41Stinction 40 the Bel-
gian' Army, having Charge ',of the .
fli•st• armored car used in the wart
Iia just returned .-to.his home at.
Great 'Chart, near -Ashford,. lient,
rilleaud,•for rest and rektiperati6%
114 ibto:04 •bas had -Many. stirring
adventures, .and Was- wounded : in
threft:-Plaeess-ditring an' encounter, ,
• ti earwILilie:,* ' when i the -driver of the
oar, rinee Baudouin de Ligne, and ,
the h ron's cousin, Count de Viller-
(;,
MODat were killed,. For Iii bravery
Bar° 'Clergleys has been awarded
the hevalie; de l'Ordre de ee:-•
pold:. ;, . `.., • „, • , ., °
The baron- profiting by eip "ri-
, - 0 f -
otleas,' is now engaged in deSika g
44 armored -tar that will adequately-
prote,o-the chauffeur,: lie'ProposOs
Providing a Periscope (similar to
that used. by. sulimanines), also foot
mirror ,
'that will • reveal to , the
chauffen * the whereabouts ' of the
enetuy.' The , baron told 4f ilia .ex-
Perient .recently in --a. ,Loricton-
'lleVapil arias follovic- ' ''' : - -
tfWe 4 a terrible: time near
Lille •-cr ert„Prippe •1,..ouis - de ,- Ban -
douin wasf killed- We had three' ar-
*Ore(' cars',. and suddenly We found'
ourselveh in an ambush ' of 400" --of
thiL GeritarOin,fantry,: .` They fired
. . • ..
u On us; and we replied NV ith 9tIf
111 „ lible" gun and rifles, but the
ntkratior vfaalbo gi`eat. Six .ef'• out
party were killed otitright,,,kone was
'Phasing and siippesed. to 'am killed,
,and one _is recovering with tvicthel-
letslit:hia- head and, arm,. ii.t4ri .-1-
was' wounded in I the head', arm and
leg. My ,consin, ' Count de Vihet:
tnetit;', was shot 1 dead as he Was
Clamber/a into 'My ear. ' ,.. '
.`41147 gu waS,,, shots out, of 14
hand: hitt I lad' the .satisfa,Ctifon .or
firing the • a,s shothefore the, '
en-
emy finding, thatheir ambush had :
major, tOnee we- ,..were.- metering '..
failed, had retreated. I shot. the
from(Antwer to • ille, and sadden -
IS f4tMd.tt f .11e-chle *ogress the
road, 'toed ,to trees on either side. •
It Was, an ,awkward. tram.° The .en,
einyi. '. having • been , ue . comi4,.
thought that, we should have to
dismount fr,om onr arniored: •.ear,.
tOtenloYe. The rople,. and_thile. b .
-German -Sharpshooters-. in(Their WM-Protected; Isair • - -
is alinost-impoaSiblo- for thp-alliesIto dis1cd0 'these Ge -man sharpshooters who are- intren lied -belriad.'this spliriter-proof -sloping-w, lied:--
$
The *rain of •hullets from the allies' rifles is ,deflected.by the steep.ineiitie of 'the roof.of the she ter. The roof completely covets the trench.
The't,P, 4_ Lat nfilr.POW ,,lit running its entire-length-through-41iich-the. sh.arpshooters fire from -behind their-eta*aw-:hreastwerks: To send a slobt-
threugh .this opening from the rank t of the allies is'almost imposgbie. . .,
. . •
ItESPEZ FOR BRITISH NAVY
,
TILE MAN SAILORS DIFFER
• FROM SOLBIERS. • -
.• „
FeVerish Prem./rattan's Going Olf at
Rierkoi. Expecied
•
Battle. .
The Nei' York Tribune publishes
an article from staff,correspand-
ent, dated Gerthani, in whieh
he says: . •"**'
n A day with navy .see -
jug feverishrake against_ Pine
in the huge shipyards and. the irrtz.
perial torpedo works.; watching the
gun crews of 'a ' German ..Dread.
nought 'being- whipped :into 'shape
by enthusiastic "coaches" for the
last great 'death gam,
are reservists:, , thirty', to thirty4our
years cad, and need plenty of work
to take the kinks ont,'Of them. They
loOk. like n partionlri41Y. fine let of
men, and.went at the work as. if
they •werIi'playing a•kttae,
A first lieutenant, who. proved to
to a good American, accent, invited
the•Ameriean Yisitor to his forward
turret, Where he proudly,' put his
.tio 12 -inch guns through their
paces.,- "An •Englisli Dreadnought
is about 'seven miles away," he sug-
gested, then blew big' tin • whistle
and the gun crews 'stood at atten-
tiorii Alen for the -next tin mintites
pandemoinuni reigned in „ the 11 -
inch' turret -.all• inakehelieve, but
the Men went to it as if it were the
real thing,
Shot Every '20 Seconds.
•
• .. A ;toueli 'Of e'hliatii Vviti. 'added
one of ., the .12-ineh guns ,juttiz
-British (which they.Were all ' aure . ed the last desperate 'order, given
. ,was to come and tileY 'bcPed eO0u):1 'when the. whole gun erew has. beep
.?captured. -. The .tra.P.‘1114.: 464 81'C'.' witnessiug the final. tUning up of 'put out o'f action; •an...4 from below a
,..4eneed, aoetetreer.'1fihreedioCpftnwtian,suad2,11.:11,4.11t. rntbaerilpw..e.swthaOnscle lbaorsg jesehtpeeormmanan,sdneb; tlaelitli joeti,:f gutinerg s*arreed up to
tatitaround the tre,e. 'The rope Waa places. '`ii tan Afire. 4
elitl- 0,.iia feii tntci the ;road, anti we,
drove off 'atter•-•-gbring-a- few shotS
--------------when
nedand when •the lieutenant sh_ent.
;hoti talies-Csh II net be -for thine sevent. en ai they were riding.' in,
labor; for Jehovah will sell 'Sisera, before I hacie; adieu to armored
nto the hand of a woniari.-Debor. ear, which ' is well known to the
th calls 1,attentir to the fact -that thlans, who call it 'The Devil's
3ara, was leis great thauhe relight car.'
1;f,
lave eon, andt that, although he ' , 4 •
S.(11114 Win ViCtOrY, WOUld n Ot
)e his vietory... it would he the -vie- LIFE IN A BESTROTER.
f 0 b "I'll ' h il- -` '
e
lion.-,,lhis real. 1 . ,
'' :., , , B• attieshina; : • , • , lustr9on of . the new naval morale,
10. And Barak tailed Zepulun and . • • • ., . - - • ---' - - 'one of the officers_r.o. mock seri..
Z'aphtall tOgetlier .' to -..Tiedesh;----=:- A -Le4Plie'iliead,thige.iii05.•School-.- 8tiariesti scribbleiran4nyittition. • .,:kr!
306ui tribes were s very quickly • by, A...11. Tucker. Writing to his the :back of a !Pent card to tome
allied'i•for wereadthat. there went. ..forrner schoolmaste.r,:tells -of life On and take .part in . ija .little ilbitiar4..
.0 len thousand inen•-•aK•his7„feet:..a Britieb-destroyer. in. art interest- Int .prictice , during Whiph at leatt
ory o ore Iv was 1S raatnr- Raw the Mosquito • Fleet Guard% the
modestly osraid.ahe,,N1,V ai gOebeed, to, bag a
,•fLion'-f- " ,shot every fiVenty seconds -that. is
'414,''x)' -though he,,•would take 7a riruhtegntainnte veexrpY1 explained.
see°14.$1.' ih.';
hshei:tte:..,,,pt afZefiing....;_mid:c115r,wgeifhno,.°theyitg. , 'Perhaps most interesting of all
()veiling expeeelie.. , , •,... Wis. the torpedo practice, "under.
. !. - --'''' battle conditi ni,.." To saVe- time
Peking Fan at _Churchill, . • the water was not pumped- out of
13,nagm.g byt3,.e, two score or more - - • ''' • ' the.torpedo 'tube's ,before reloading.
, . ...
officers who Weri_:`..samPlecle"•liofl
n as in tPe";00laPra,citbieceb'ebut deep. Here,
ii"Plt4
e,e;-,
conversation, the 'piling ;Gi.mt
P4yresi
hi:itni aoit, sbuitedeoistse.s,heAdt .tuirtneitsl too, the Men were 'being 'driven
by
ileng' at 111:gh pressure,„ and were
'
undeniably, in high spirits.'ll aMocked' in.the last dine of .1l' fu
of whimsical henior at the expense
of the English.. -As: a signiffeant it.
minute 5 seconds for swinging a
torpedo down from the ceiling:
(where sparetorpetioes'were'fasten-
edN. ramming it into torpedo
tube and; making ready to fire:
Busy in Navy Yard:
•The correspondent was, also. per-
mitted to make ,a tour of huge
navy yard, where construction work
'At his feet" •ift very•picture.sqne
xpre..esion tc", indicate • the eager-
eSs Of th Israelites to follow the
ora,h and Barak. •They
s, telt here and were so
,046,r rite fraythat they virtual-
hicizfelit
11. Now Heber he-II:unite had se.
ar.ate, ittraelf f Oni the
'Ing fashion: I. ,
y Our. &Mei since :the war broke ,b ,
e; .v./01,1. wind and. weather per- is being pushed day and. night, 8,-
i milting.000 men„.workingby day and. 3;000
oat have been. to screen the grand * `We would not , think -
fleet againsit submarine attacks, ••
really does Appeal to anyones len e,..44 PifePig less, than four be- Ot was already dark, and
Of 'tinnier to think that •tliose nuts- gltuge • three IS already an old. the Work of turbine .0 and boiler
iite4,r-ey4witis-ef-England-are-ele-- story. 'explained ; slanil4ing ilud rOit13-'-Was:- behiit
Pendent_ on. those -little -black der nIflO1Pg that *as inetapho-
stroyerafor Protection. This morn- 'Ala& fo,•-r-Winston Churchill. •
New Subinarigte.
•
four English. cruisers or better will
5eeius t5 introduced -mg luy-,-boati. .
how if was that Sisera: (see others,.. escorted the, — into hat- .
else 14, couldfleaaway :to thelent "het, where she will '&1E11 And corn-
lete----witlic-tecessitratores-T--aad
IL And they • told Sisqa..--The Once Agathi Pet to sea. 'We • klek
ewS of: the inovernents among thesome weird creatures when. we are
a lites-nrirs----bitttg Ise in a sea as oe
ts-headqultrters histouts-. ' to the' knee, a long,. thick coat with
13,'"'Sisers gathered together, 03•1, a hood to it '• that comes over the
.chariots, even nine hundred bead which is made out or a sort of
material' like' blanket, only much
thicker, . woollen helmets, starvei
,
and nutte,ns, and yowneed them all
when you are %tea/1141g against tho
Wind sti- Often :experienced in the
tariott.of ; Were the
viol implenients•usecl, by the boa -
Len People. agkinst the Israelites.
[my were instruments .of torture.
s the fighting between the .Israel-
and•their enernies:was hand -to, North See, •at a speed of 20 knots
tnt1-4qpilletf is reatliTF-eeext how' 4141d- Often' tflorot,for--tilago.4-bOlt,tg Are
rrible'theseciren chariots,. which' built 3,1;,...0410 .011 can more..
,,re-ariartgett-With tgeth And other Alt the time we are at Sea, day
arp pretaheranees, appeared to and night,: there is 'always one of
o raraelitett.: • - the glin%reatly for action, With one
From Tiardsheth of the Gentiles, Of. the Crew closed up around her,
tto the river Itishog,-Thia was and one terpecin tube, too,, It
e far-flung battle line •whicli w(Itild °n17. rria;tte14'6t f6* 866-
tv.threA,,,, (Art, reaohipg,frpla mount, onds for the whole lot to be fully
(bpi' Over, to MOunt• Carmel', al. manned in ease' 'Of' .8lelting ti,le
wash. ;a .640 his fovea eneimy, as we are trained ,up to. tie
,re'..Mitseed at the River Iciehon.;
14;e:-/04,-tiehortth Ala ittatrzitriti:- in -ttie -ea-0151111e, -YOTI
0-041/ebdrah-Waa-Oldfie,-itt411-0-eide
144ralti AS Barak evidently was.
pending; entirely. upon her. ir4
area 'Oen alto c6111:11andS. His
triittand, lloWeVer;.:b rings the ten,
otteend Israelites after • •
18. Arid tTeltovah discomfited Sit: -
Israelites were/ fighting
t Jehovah, they Were fighting int.
said*" under • his leadership.
hen &battle went in favor of tho
aehtea, it was betause they he-
azt.4, Jehovah distomilted the
enly erVid011eatt how
betWOett the
•, 11016!
r.dih- Waif
The whimsical invitation was ac-
-
4L4.4.114T4W.41.42:414,d:A
titer did not perinit;"' a very thor-
otigh;linspeetion 'was: afforded' of 'the, ,
.,icWe, watightrattrine ,
01000 1,000 tone and near-
ly 299 feet -long, it carries a_comple-
ment Of 'thirty officers and men and
six. torpedoed, , '
Afloat* English Navy'
earned on by the light: of only .a
few small; lanterns. The 'Itiiser's
navy -yard -and- Imperial' Ma.
jeaty'frkWorkshops remielded one
stronglY.of London by dight and
,
•
It•iiiitiS,Partiettlarly striking, how-
ever, that among the naval officers
and sailors one did not find the bit-
ter hatred of 'England-ancttlie
which-. one :so invariably •ineetii
among, army •officers and soldiers;
in the field and IandeMen generally;
The official Gernian.report of •the
destruetion of the 'Audacious,: had
just become known in Kiel, but
there was ino gloating:and no cele-
bration, liquid or otherwise. Tice
officera.at once recalled that the
Atttlitelous had' been • a member.. .of
have all -classes and creeds, andyet.K.kei„week Julie: "a 8ILendid
they -bienirterfetlioilIke-a-beatitittiV-11t1111;--,-Iyitilthite- --no'-:other
oln-
ly Controlled maphine; •ment, • • • •
The destroyerj am on is §sa feet. A lieutenant' commander sOid to
Tong, 7 feetheani., has a,,,spend,of...31, the Tribune eorrespondent': ' "We, -
biota, and is fitted with three of the ,consider it an honor to fight against'
latest patent 4 -inch :guns and. tWo. the English. The ,English navel of -
21 -mei torpedo tubes. The weight fleet is always a gentleman. • But
Ofa 4-inchPtclectite• is at ltith., and the Yetps-trelterotis, ytgloW
of -A 21 -inch torpedo .,about a ton, -Nat let oto ono& -0:itne.. We have
andthe head Of it,r:ligia 000 iha- of no use ftir theni. 'The English, the:
wot gat -cotton whit& is prero.h and even tite kneeittpo
tIndt44 t°1/t111°d°`°°. anY6114 014 tan respect as opponents, htit not
gives itt Vanstatite; Of 400 Ito, to the the •
sans
quare Incits One of tlieSe torpe-
Tuning lap it‘servisfs,
citted traVelift, at a speed of 45 knots..t
Our boat has a ereW Of seven e1/106ra' A visit was IleXr paid to one dr
and tevent y men, and burns oil mi.,' theithesf dreadnoughts,. the Stark.,
tire*. gra, All the gun.orews were being
driven at tor speed, 60010 in panto -
house is flavor .41, Ulm ttnicag blitIOIshadow practiee, other,s with
the Ina* Sod the woman are .00M, 1'044611$. Abottt five hours's,. day
rade*. of gun drill„:48 • many of ;the me*
• , ,
,kar,,.0.0364
4
1
one was Opt surprised when the sii•-•
perintexident said that the lack of
illumination was a _precautionary.
Melanie; against a possible visit. Of
hostile airmen -"though none has
come so 'far," he added, -
,Iltandst eionificanto can be- at.--
1441Vd t
work is not being pasha on those.
fighting ships' under Construction
which could not possibly be finished
under a year. while the main'effort
is being devoted to those which Will
be infighting trim in three months
or less.:. Ha. ve at Sea. 4
"The English will find Gtermao
warships in the North Sea n w if
they will go in and look for-- t em,L"-
one officer remarked:
"The Britithl.nuine.rice,1'su erior-
itY is Chiefly in the smaller' :ilia,"
_another said. , Dre,adn tights,
we are not at such 'a. -great disad
vantage. BO there superioiity in
tonnage and metal -throwing ability'
will not be -the deciding -Tie -to
the great- battle. ` We, Germans do
not fear this advantage of --the
Rrit-
ish.'' But. none Of them Would haz-
ard a guess as to when"the ,134 bat-
tle" would take .place.
,
r .
Had Heard of Them.
Wey
<it,0
one
warho
`WC in
in the ou .wars between England
and: Scotland dogs were, need'by
both combatants. for . pursuing ,and
killing'Sugutitree;•-after a defeat. I
' :It is related that Wallace- and
Bruce each:had' elope- escapes- froth
.captitie by English 'bloodhounds.
'Bruce. is, said to have' thrown the
English (tog off the 'Scent -13,Y the
now known expedient of wading Up.
enough to baffle hi
pursuers, and Ayallace evaded the
hounds by having recourse to 4
•• DOGS IN WA.R.
• .
Used Pot Pursuing pad RBI
-
log Fugiti-res. • , „
sof war" is a ,phrase which
APAPIPIIIIMAA
•
. A
FRO nIfilL 21111A11
NOTES OFINTrREs
.t,311 LIP%
it b atilt %Going On in 111.6
Vie Loulandi et Auld
Scalia.
lot j,17,1.‘v Benue:golf ar re :itsrit501311):u11;rointloa4dt,
of '870.
ahere hoW 888 gratinate%and. „
students. of Abmieen•-•Ciaitcratk
military service, .• ' - •
• A, prominent :West Calder Mer-
chant, JOhn 3.1cLindon, Us'. bean
.1411cd ftetion in Belgium. ,
A large government contract for
the army haS been placed with the •
Ni1r,pindicr liosiery Czempany., .
Carnwath folk have opened Wide
their deors to receive some of the
poor refitgees• from; , •
A 'reiv.Coal pit, that will give
Mpiciyment to 4 great many. hands.
h.o•A,s,b'teixectn, 4.4..ndnolsze. 4atkor,r.iesetos;ipagiean,ughea,ve
been" selected •to • aet, as .-ecnstables •
urtrig the, 'war ',and 'have heari:7svrn. In. -7,‘
All the .4•L'aealelnig'
0110, are working
., week.
On restricted,time, four lays per
,. ,.,,
eant -a thing as real,as the,
e. Poge.b.ave played their
titLles'azia
•
Lanark,i'Own Council has ,ap-
proved of a.icIpme IQ make -an ad-
ditTon'te"theirAireeetit Fever- Ties.
. • ,
The death oecurred' reeently at
Rdiirdic -dr -Ta-a-ol-Biffiell,lin
'dian,411utiny Veteran at the age of
.3.3 Years. -
'East' has agreed to forin : •
a Ideal Citizen Training Fore, to ,
be affiliated to the ,Glasgow Train-
,
Kililyth has lost its -Oldest 'native
by the death of Kr; Alex, Aber- ,
Vilidiraa--111,St died at the
.age of years.
An Edinburgh dernonstratien,
over 1,2400 strong, petitionettin-'
fa-
vor of probibitionolthe liqUor'traf-
ficduring the war.
.Information. has .been received in •
Peebles ef the death of Private
Philip tart from wounds received
at the Ifiont.
Lieutenant. the Earl of. Dalhou- .-
sie;--thewell-lenown-gelfer..has been -
wounded,!while serving with the
Seats, Guards.' ,
One hundred: wounded 'British
soldiers; belonging- to 'various- regi.
Mints, have keen brought to Dun-
dee .
:from the. front.
A further contingent of recruits
recently left WraIlerburn for Glen -
corse fb await.' orders for remeval
to training quarters.,
Lieut. W. R. Burn; Callender, of
Presionhall; Scots 'Greys, has been
awarded the French Legion Of Hon- '
oi
esti.laceitnn':t;niii.olii;satY:ii9itantge-itel:°estbek:i:11111;112iningn'ta.hile6dbihligwsse"1 As ber:1;71:°.;:,dPe,s-41:1;1- .selfl lig 1 tviofilie 'se‘ho °-svrelalvi treal t 11' :I
deenshow a decrease of 892.. ..•
• Messrs. Beveridge, KinroSSvhave
received another 'contract feem the
War Caine for 26,00 ,biankets,
be: supplied at rite .vate of 1,50Q per
path for them ..to eome upon, The
dogs_ finding a body, 'believed that
their task was, done, . and discon-
tinned the
In. the' history of the 'wars 'of 'the
middle ages one finds referenoe Ito
the use of b* dogs' against cavalry
foi the purpose ®f throwing fhe
herses into „. confusion,- and not
alone fof: causing panic but ca.snal-
ties', for thele fierce •cartine •parti=
• NAVIES' CASU A LTI ES.
i • • Sea Fights More Destructive to Life
-- 16'*as- ‘`maPa•nY fie14411'14.1aig'• sans,Were clothed in eoats gf mail
The--e-aptain .saw a young. , Than 'ForrnerlY. '
trying -to cook MS:breakfast With a
soldier Studded with 'spikes and having . That the inneense armies of to -day
scythes Med to their harness. - make War more sanguinary than at fire.' Going to ,him„. he .
Insta,nces are recoMed where war any 'other authentically recorded' era .
showed him how to make. a quick-' otthe world's history Is the cOatensui; '
cooking .fitn,, saying: . . .. , dogs with firebrands fastened to
Of ' inifitarY expert °Wilton, _Whether ,
their•cotas'of mail lave been Set on
"Look at. the time You are wait- ,, i
I often heti to ,hunt !" y breakfast. 1 uc ve*,ttegag .. g , p! .
p- with destr ti ratio of casualties to the umber-
ing.• When I was on the. West Coast xi ene17-1 s cam ed is hi her than. 'in the rttd.
resultsHenryIII t h
. .enry , Puts aye when the nintkets range was 20d
found Wigs useful in military, way yards remains . to be determined,' When
used to go .about two. miles -in :the
-- heaause_in_an_tiegliah1bistory-it_is, this war is over_and_there.,is _eppor, _
jungle,. shoot my tOtid-S
,--- written that he offered ,the use of tunny te /study the official returns of -
luck It, thenf Cook and eatiit17.a:ar
d A 056 war the killed and wounded, bnt-the loss
.'
40,000 auxiliaries an ,.
return to the -camp under thedogs tot King ar_es half- c v.. .e.s iUhiet me may be, safely put down as,ex-
. me may
the world's past experience
to aid that monarch,in his war.with ocre war..trAic as that experience has
Then be unwisely. added :
,* "Of course, yen have heaid, thel.
Wist coast 1", . •
' "Yes,sir,?' replied the. Yining sol -1.
dier, "and also, of Ananias and
Baron •Munehaugen,
,1 .
Francis -I. '
. Wen.' 'Mbil'ern -war, whipli'-'reentiiii';
In the reign Of Queen .Elizabeth, armies of millions, may be expected to
.when the Ear' of Essex entered Ire:. slay its tens of thousalltle where War:
land for' the •purposesuppresiing a6 It *es' one handted Yea;rs ago was
contented with its hundreds. .
insurrection there. his army *pp - What is trite of war on, land applies
ae,compapiefl by. 1;0 bl,00dhount
ds. ar 1 at sea, although the -hecatomb.
I am a doetoz::'1__ “Tf you _el:, a . , .,s as cotispicuous after :a nava
q,afin, bow do --Tr h p.- . 0il ; 41. 1,t+. battle as ofits-r-_-.oneito-ngh-t on terra'r
. firma. he rnberibt er s lost by:
Toinpkins%died from' heart trouble mei, ana,
%Oleo yen, were tr.eating him ,foi;. *Tengts_Imbgelf,serin-,itv.,
JtlJI,Cd
liver trotibleri "It's a lie: When ' - . •
I treat a nian for Hirer trouble, he On Slily 7,'in the prefictorialeity
dies. of 'liver trouble." • , of ritlehowin in. the. proVinee of
s.wangsi, on na, tree iten,
acctiaid of tritne; says the Christ -
Efj
LON —
•-•
:ggPS,
tyttre, e
I arty:
411
N6it
,
?.?
EGi
tuot
Peoltevt
IkS•
tRPiV)1;
'4440,444,v
inn Herald..vere stripped hall nak-
• ed, then dragged alorigthe narrow
streets, through the city gate to a
place outside the city wall:, Where
they were thrown into 'burning pits,
-and ,after suffering. indeacribable
eaagor • in. the 11.777 we.re. riddled
with 'Millets ind thee eteiered with
'
eritne,,Charged against them.
was of four ,soldiers,
wito; the officials assert. were sup-.
pressing ',ganibling in the country
districts when they, were _killed bk.
"a mob The re,port current among
•the .People was that these soldiers
beeame. involved hi a quarrel, and
three of them were killed the
melee that followed.. After the exe:-
'etition, •ordere,were issued that the
entire Village should be destroyed.:
Suidiers----were-.sent-freita4OU'ee--
fiouse and arrested many men
as-they-coulatrii14, and ilicn_aet fire
to the village°, The Prisoners were,
bought to the ci4 for puinshinen
and nine of thorn were led Outside!
df ; the city 'wall a nd'ilidt "on Ale
ec-
eution ground. • •
. this., is an isolated ate ..of
cruelty. We are glad to'•believe,
for -
if in the non* of law the Mines"
officials are. going to resort to the
barbarities Pmetisect in the. Middle
Ages,- it will bring the name of the
new republic). into disgrace qiid put
:ftiv distant the day whewelyain COP
be wad t� tivirization.
' Got
'neve yotty", said the ilippant
youth. "Do 'yeti. geb,lner
4',1146; tto not got you. Wouldn't
haVe retOrted the 11008161e
girL
the mowing- an -of . foul- 1)rS1C--'7-
cruisers Aboultiri :cre_asy, -tug-
exceeds '-
hundred the total castualtieS sustained -
by Nelson's fleet at Tritfa'.gar. As
that the Gernlaa fingehip
(.1
„,.
-
•
Seharnithrst was sunk with all on
hoard in -the recent battle oft the
lands, she carried down with her More
than eight hundred officers -and men,
a number of victims 'almost equalling
the killed arid Wounded. Of the victors,
of the'battle of the Nile, respectively
218 and 678. -To get the clearest Idea
of the .Contrast between, present and -
old. time floral warfare, it nittet ,be
remenniered that Nelson cemitianded
twenty-seven lighting ships' at Twat..
gar and fifteen at the '.Nile, The
woes: et, the VOna:000 tileSa•-tWO:.
battles ortinntit be 'WM Ott-
but-)theY would naturally be '
heavier than those of 'the' vietori,
more especially as both, the Prpttett
and the Spaniards'. crowded their
ships with men. •,
The inodern-battie fought with fleets
and vessels three cr more Miles apart
offers •anether opportunity fcr heavier •
logged, in .the titilicaltY attendant' on •
resoling the crew of a sinking Ship.
It was easy enoughlor the Vietora iti
old threes to get rescutngo bottata Into „
'11W Watet,-.blit-now.rvven;„*.ifit;;.s, tenni' ,-:--
lannclies it may easily be too late' to
succor men_tiesperatelY',Iatillikivitli
the waves it- a • distance mot to •'
passed .witheut oft_ eopsuhipeon ot
considerable time.. *.• . •
. •
1101y Carpet's Eseoitl.
•
:In its travels to and from theliely
City of Medina and McGee, the
Holy, Carpet id accompanied by an
4sort of from 800 to..350 Men' from,
one of gib Egyptian infantry regi.
'menu, well amted, and -about In
mounted men. ,Thi is in erder to'
prot.eet the sacred o frOilt lull- •
Mi
g nto -the DAIWA of fli' Bettinkt
tribes, .through whoso- e(ml(-r2.' t°
must' pass, had'who are on -the lowc
out for itt as the ,pariint. Nicottit
fine fausom.
On *10 aWity ;vent' Mp
but, it Inv give yen *way.
4