The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-02-04, Page 7••INT WheelereStaft-aereeeePendentseifs
the Chicego•s•frileuzie•eaysetliatethe --- -
Kaiser's armies are new too far
from England, And thel, places they
hold'ere of too little 314Portanse for
their purpose, while the: British
.4reasdnoughts'ere able to form their
lines A sufficient distance from the
.tow•US of Flandera to be inviotble ,
• while: shelling the Seaports," with
great aCeltracy And with great jeo-
pardy
-eVetht otheer'mageraheneveyaln•amrrilie.arY3d,
whieh has been brought UP thus far,
'Oily in Mnalt. unite And with the:
greatest difficulty,
: If They cithld; Take Calaitfa • '
PO Germans gsky.- want ...Calaiet ..,:o
worse , than they have. ,wantekt JORY:,•
position since theystiffered tlietr
first Seebeck, If they could' take '
iSalais 6itiy.Nienport on the Flem-
ish coast and Dunkirk on the French
coast would remain in hostile hancli,
on this water front. With thee°
1 two citadels in its ,hands Germany' •
, could) eommand the coast from the
;„ NeOe'llat.i1411Wdosuldhappenfr°lif
tirtAll-iCaGialsrro*-43' IV. . 2
' dot this seacoast 1 The first stop
i'weald be an ultheatura, undoubt,eds
"Itt
*. xsate4r6elelatlnedt ttciiirglouvgehthtlleG;rheragldlitl •
frem-Antwerpatheeleffait •et-ee1aohe-
if,conceded; Would be tesae . the la, ..
vaders in a thousand different waYe-
• If liellead 'refused. ' Holland
•would he invaded. The GerMans
.
4
V
• cs,
FAMOUS RUSSIAN GENERALS
4
BRAINY MEN ARE LEADING.
' THE OZAWS FORCES.
The 'Grand Mike Nieholae Is a lair
Of the. Most .FOreeful Pea!
801111111f4
' Net muchis known outsideof
Russia concerning the generals who
-are '‘ieeeling the great Russian
armies, and the fee& eolleeted. bY
Byron Lomax in Petrograd and,•
Oeinhailnieetid- to the „Rhilidetphie
-.-Ledger are ueuatielly interesting.
Despite Popular igeorance upon the
patter, li.Ir.'Loroax says that before
the war the Russian generals were
better knownthan the Genii= fru'
trate, eoine of them being femme as
great authorities on Various branch-
es of warfare. The- 01m:04414ex-in-
e.‘lief is the Grand Duke Nicholas.
lieeause he. happens to be a near
• relation of the Czar's there is
popular iNtion that be oeinipieti his
present important position- by fa-
vor and not by merit. This, iii
mistake, for the Grand :Duke. has
•
been recognized Tor nieny. yeerisaft
•
ene„of the Meet .fereefelepersoheli• s
ties in'Ruesia. He has been a elose-
'adviser of the Czar's, and has been
a soldier from boyhood • He was
president of the F•coespiefttee that
con-
tr�lted 411 naval and militarereset
fairs for Russia, at, the time of the
Buese-Japenese'Wer, • .and
reaiembereig the Rtiissian, blunders -
in that war, this may seem no great
• ertificate of Military ,efideieneY,
here is reason to believe that the
chiefltusaian diaastersavere due to
, tee diaregerd of his adiiee
• The Grand 'Duke.
THE.GREAT. GRAND DUKE,
Present ,Oommander-inchief of ,the
Ritisian .Army.
If the Ruseian arniyele A MO
efficient inetrument to -day than it W
ten year& ilea it has the Grand Diet
Nieholen, ito peeoent eozieheri4er..1
chief to, thank. 'After the ,dieasteera
theejapaeeee War, the grand dyke; .4
ready well /mown as a brlIliant 04.
AlrY ehileer, undertook to reorgarde
the aemy, an4ethe event IMO: prove
that he reellY Performed' wonders.
speed. 01 mohilizAtioes agility of Pay
mOnt,aud, intelligent response teeth
stragetical opportunities of the cam
'Palma the .,Itessiase forces: :actual'
showd something that apPreaelle
iTY,M,theNhigh*-standard-nt•their -go
man. enemy . ,
Dining the Japanese War Sieliola
was given 330 PPPOrtlatibr UZI tlititip,
g13184 ,14A3803`; some •PheerVerit reelev
thae the Czar's : Jealousy of liis mor
brilliant cousin: had something to 4
,with that, • But with the eollaliaie
the other military leadere, tie gran
cluite's gbancegame, and no one ea
Seae suggested Or the chief common.
When the present ,War broke out. Nci
only itt• be authbritir the field; n
MO else hoe 'e0: much influence wit
the Czar., Indeed, hianositioa in Res
.ala fe-daYA4 'said to be alteoet. that
' dictator, erithoyethe teitpseage., of th
• a
s • In ,ereseiAtlie itahd. duke le a :strik
h:
8,
curls; • now at fifty-eight their Is no
enuele• bate left, eadathat". haeaeurne
grey. His eyes are blue ithd yet
heeu, his nose is prominent,: his mout
determined a' little- etueleleaex
pression, .and; his chin strong, -01
personality Is so Much more remark
able than*.tbat of any of the descend
ants Of Alexander . is himsel
.the son of a .hrother, of that monarca
-that -bee alwayS had to belt
swine iiuspicion and dislike.: both from
Alexander III and :from the presen.
,Czar Nicholas Ira It is because be
as ma e tO tr:
Ing guree be. stx feet and six in,e11
es h'e liefghte spare and .a.ctlko; "wit
the delicate feature:. and gracefli
bearing of the aristocrat. In youth hi
.11.ead was --covered_ with .short. goldet.
•
Nicholas • desired to take charge
• iof the iiia,nehurian-eampaigna-but:
••the Czar olajecteci on -the ground
•;that defeat for htni: would bring re-,.
.sponsibility for disaster too close to
_the House of Romanoff. Nicholas
said ,,that the chief vreaknees of
• Kiiinpatkin efenerve, that
• he could not bring himself to fight a
gieeisive battle. He was replaced,
therefore, by. Linieviteh, who had
all the eesihdence of the Grand
but lacked his quickness in
seizing an, opportunity. • Absolute
• -confidence themse.lvee has been i•
-characterietie of most great ,
diem, Napo of thene had InOrn th&n
the Grand Duke. .At the outset he
made it plain . to his staff that its
function was to'itelvise him and not
•decide things. He is not very Popu-
lar with his officers. He tieate
them distantly, but he loves the
Russian soldier, and • is in. turn
loved by the peasants. While a
' 'soldier may abjectly address a lieu
tenant as "Efigh-Wellborn-ness,'
he will seak of the conerean•der-in-
chief is "Father," and the Grand
• Dukeeieaturn speakaofaheseoldiers
_e .s.e.Lesese his z!erehildren
. ,
A teal Fighting General.
,
--Grand Duke Nicholas is, in fact.
•
:a rather rough, tough sort of corn-
- mender, . choleric, but warm -heed--
. •ed When his ..generals blunder it
is said that he gives vent to his Ono-
., 'Vona by, "chssingthem out" More
thanonce in the course ofthe pre-
sent campaign he has had brought
before hien - privates soldiers who:
• have distinguished themselves in
• beetle, and has publicly kissed
them. Ile. plans his campaign some
:180 miles behind the fighting line;
: :and as soon as he has come to his
a decision he goes to the frontin his ,
automobile. Several times he has
4teeneattually tinder fire, to the
latter monarchthe as. risen o
power at lase • . •
-No one was of more dervice than
the grand duke in restoring order and
conadenee 'after the humiliatinghreak-
'din& or }timeline-de:at at the end Of
the Japanese War. No one could ac-
cuse ,Nicboias,-of being anything but
a believer in the essentials of Russian
autocracy, but he is tad to have sup-
ported Count de Witte against the re
actioeitry party at that time, and it
was hiss ,arguments,. so .we are told,
that finally Persuaded the Czar to
sunurion the first Duma.
The father -Of the grand duke was a
man 'of very , dissipated life, and the,
conduct of the families not been above
reproath, yet he his an tintellect, an
ambition, and a:pitrietliem that .would
not, let hini wholly. Waste his •life in
Ignoble ways. in blood he is half Ger-
man,' for his m,otherwas of the ducal
house of Oldenburg.. As a young man
he recouped the family's'
financial
fortunes, which his father's eitrava-
gances had brought low, by a inozga-
naAic marriage with the rich widow or
a Moscow tea merchAnt. After her
death h� marrted-the.-Princess Anaa:
.asia -of-Montenegro; who Is deter -ot
the Queen 'of Italy. Both' princesses
spent much of .their girlhood in the
royal family at,_P,etrOgrad, anti th
Grand Dulte is said always to have
been peen in ,love witirhis*present wife,
•„
GET FUN. OUT "OF A FIGHTe
•
British Take- 'Hardships and. Death
' Lightheartedly. '
Nothing more olearly showsthe
excellent spirit of our brave sol-
diers than the light-hearted manner
n. which hardship, .and' even death
fself,••• is faced. The man who
marches' to •action .with a rollicking
song an his lips; • who finds nick-
names for the tery guns hurling de-
struetion at (him, •and • who makes a:
a jest even of his own sufferings, is
a hard man to beat. •
First and last, Tommy 'Atkins -is
sportsman, and even when en -
great alarm of his staff, but the
'e..Gtand Dake seems to delight in the
• thunder; of the great ,guns. • It is..
e said that it the 'Russian raiiks 'a
howeaaliapositionet'
all that is necessary _to turn them
into walls' of steel is to, Send.: the
7....ythisPer alppg. that "Father -Niche -
,lars" is eomina
A Student of Warfare. •
•His chief of Staff is a Young, map
of • poor physique and unmilita,ry
appearance. This is Yanushkoitit,ch,
a -Prole. He is net the fighting man
that the Grand Duke is, bet a scien-
tific soldier, who studies war as a
„• menanightestudy it, game of -Chess.-
'aradited with sh-eirig planned
• the present plan of campaign, al,
_tiles-CW=4 Dake _has...Di •
Some; his Suggestions. He and
•'‘• the contitander-in-Chiet are to•
have.. differed- radicall§,as. regards
the invasion of .East Pruesias Nish -
',obi's!, however, had a political motive
•in view.. He ordered the raid which
• , • penetrated as far as Konigsberg
•and Allenstein' to relieve the ares -
sure upon the , in Flanders.
I- t.aohitived this end, but one of its
results was the,,disa,ster at Tanen- m
-gageel-Linethe-the
gannet _forget entirely the pastimes
of peace, as witness the following
_incident- One ofesaerebetteriee was_
firing at a building occupied by the
--
enemy, and our lads in the teepchie.s
watched the proceedings eagetly.
At the 'third' discharge the tgeget
crumpled up like a, house of cards,
and a prostrate, Spectator flunt up
his • arms excitedly and 'yelled :
"Goal! Hardy himself ---coaldri't
have stopped that one:".
Again, when at Mons ithe long
aedeaUf retreat, beeeteme clays. of a--
vance for our troops, jubilant Bri-
It- .• • P-48-1' '14,343::_pjf,iiatiTi-
=teit:gly t!Half-trute. Change -
over.',' Another football etithusiest,,
hiving painfully away frona„-the
firing -line, answered a sympathetic
inquiry with a smile,' and the ex-
planation, "Got fouled: in the pen-
a.lty
,That ine,gidficent bit of ...awaits-,
ma,nshipe when H.M.S. Iiirreiugham
shot away the periscope of a Ger--
at sidtmartne, was aptly described .a
.s.wwwisaawsw...r-v. ergr,
. •
• The Mitraillenee
The pietuee Showe the 'arhie4 Car WhiCif has heee so often mentioned inewa,r, Cables. Thee° eick-firing
and swiftseunnitig engineS de:41741,km are something new in this war, and the haveteed them•
•
with great effect.' The pietism eliewa Frenoh tare on a road in:Eastern Franoe,
. •
•• .
MIER ORS!, SIA:RY
„7447.
LAINEAMIIIRE'S • Mg141.011it*: •
AlliERIVAN•WAIL)
11 " FINEST.FIGHT FNElt IVAGED.
When, Oxfoide 'Weft, ritteh stgain,et
the VeriblilOt
„ • - "7":" -• , • ,,
o Britieli Pente4 *he; It OOlised
Pantie() heCottsni
Dietrtete.„,
eThe Lendon Express hae a har/k:
hack to the history Of the war of
1860 to 1064 in -Arne ries,- with -a-,vivid
application' to .ponditions to -clay
that is edifying, It says • .
The toinplaint ef the president of
the U,S. •that American. trade is
suffering hee•alIse of • British inter-
ferenee. with American exports in
nential counties of ponteabrend
oods destined for '<kap- ianielea
to the retort that .Ainerica, cauped
far. greater hardship to Englaed
her interference with- the English
cotton supply during the Anieriea,n
Civil War. . • e.
sAt presentetime -there. is._ ho.
evidence that there is any. real stif-
fering in America on account of the
efforts of the British Navy to stop
.contrabrand goods' from, crossing
the Atlantic but there • are thous-
ands of persons England who re-
niendsere'llie • cotton '-friatiiimit-: from -
1860 to•1864. ' •
• •
A. Lancashire ..111emory.
, In Lancashire it hiethe grimmest,
inenaory of those who were Ohildren
50 years'ago ,for the famine of cot-
toneneant•a 'famixie of work and its
consequences privation, starves
thin, the death of -old -and young
'fpr lack Of peciPes food and the
breaking •up ,and Ideeoletionhome,of
• .
That all arose because the North. -
'ern and Southern. States felt thene,
_se liree- eisihpelledetici -fight-re/a Other
-regailees 0.-t the heterests of ilea-
,
In these days nearly all the raw
cotton eame from the United Stites.
letecashire lived on America's:ram;
cotton, When the. Soath began War
on the North, the North did not
hesitate to try to cripple its enemy
by Strangling its trade.. The North,
ern' navy .established -a •bleckacle of
the Southern ports, aud the cotton
lay' rotting on the -quays of Charles-
town, while the La-ncashire cotton
workers were starving for the leek
of their raw material.
• Blockade 'Benders' Work.
British •traders tried to smuggle
goods 'into •the Southerzi ports , and,
to smuggle ootton out, and for
some time the blockage runners
ma•de a rich harvest. The goods
were first of all carried to and from
(Lande:the-Behames, arid -
were thee rushed. abross the short
spa space between, the Bahamas and
the Southern ports.
• -In Order to step this the . North-
ern States captured ships between
the. Bahttmas and England aiid.
pleaded that although the cargoes
were transhipped at the Bahamas
they really made a "Continuous
voyage"e-whieh is the British com-
plaintat the present Men -tent About
contrabreed Wach America ships
to varions-•nelitical-poeteaaltbegh.
every one `knows 'the goods are_go-
ing tesGer
,
Inet8a0e4,howevea'Great- Tfritari
recognized that' the Nerth had a •
right to cripple the South's trade,
and; issued no protest against the
terrible injury which the notion of
the Northern navy inflicted on Lan-
cashire. .
It was estimated at the.time that
the cotton ' Workers of -letneashilee
lost $60,000,000a year in wages., and
that the total loss to thetradeWas
200 000;000--a year while the block -
bug, where where the .General by orie of theerew, .who fenterkede
Saniseneff was killed, and nearly
feel' army earps 'Wiped out of exiss
on „ Pollen ande_Bresiau wnot
twice, becau•se the., Mairi tidvalice
_
ready. After Ali -battle the thief
-,:ef• staff , offered' his resignation: to -
'the. Gterid Duke, but it was not'sx-.
cepted. •
' .
• Two Nitted Generals.
• Cleneral Alexander Brusiloff, who
. edit:Mends against the Austileil
..fitink on the slope of elhe Mid -Care
•°pa•thiansaid, said to be the coolest,
• boldelit, mid' most unsparing of the
Russian generals. He as a believer
• . in the frontalattack, which lie holds
• toefeee•oil the wholte less•costly 'then
• the more plipalar flanking. assault,
. because it is over quicker and re-
'•quirealoympscp„Intime_otpean
e is. &W.W.I/0 -art -and poetry.
•• ' Itutakie 'the eonqueror of -
the most popular of the Russian
generals. He is the picturesqUe,
'ohifalrous figure, Who issues nota-
ble addressee' to his troops and fires
• them with 'fanatie,al "zeal. •Before
••• the War he was oonsidered "a Mere
' theorist, but its such' ,occupied the
highest. rank la Europa, Ile has
• proved himself a daring tom:1%114er
in tini field, and ik credited with
having triOrt3 imagination than any
of his tolleagues. •
• A .wite• physelith Sometimes flat.
ters 3.naii by telling bish • he hits,
trairt fa '
blest took the hail
nicely!! ,
During. the earlYdays of the.:war
the,....se,argity,,of-blankeWasi-as-4re,.
.`
quenttopie in the trendies. hea
there'll bo be a lot of thaps-withont
blankets to.night,". said one "Toni-
riiy,"' NO sealer had he Spoken
than a. perfect hurricane of lead
swept overthein, "If we get mueli,
of this there'll be baseeets without
mere thinking,' came the grim
s• • •
A private in the tretiehes, raising
hilaselif to get a. glimpse of the foe
hhcl his Sleeve ripped open by a bul-
let.. -"Well, be darned," he
said, quizzically Another, on' being
told by his ..pal that, they were fac-
ing 'A million of the enemy, took
-eareful itimesefired, and. -repr
'N�, ;only -000,v0p,v •
-Two riflemen were distaissing. the
mioneoue. aniotiht of lend usect
daily, arid one suggested the possis
hility ehortage. "No, fear,"
said hie thins. "Lead's 'Cot:mom:104
stuff; yeti %can Make a• go
long way." It wad an Irishman '
who, on hearing that the -German
soldiers have aft aversi011 "COW
steel.," .promp.tly retorted., "Shure,
then; we'll " pot make it 'hot,;•for
them." • •, •
If Seine Men had thelr 'lives to
live Again they probably Weuldn't
lease So many dollars for . their
Veir's .te ,serhp ()Vet', *
de lasted.
• . •
FORETOLD BY ANIMALS.
'I'Ifil't Ari Many Superstitions Con -
fleeted With 'Them.
In the ease. of a lion, it is believed
that the wearing of tram of this
animal will bring great strength.
People connected with cirOuses:
and. shows have a Saysrg that when
lions get, restless and uneasy either
or extremely bed weather is
at hand, and that when con-
tinually wash their faces cat -like
fashion they, are likely to have -fits
of ill -temper in the near future. •
Numberless are the sueerstitions
associated with the tiger. The na-
tives of India- believe that its whisk -
when,' -fin otoVern-lin'eld-tereltliaty
introduced into person's food they
will assuredly cause death. What is
known as "the evil 'eye" is greatly
dreaded in India, and to avert thio
parents hang the claws of tigers
round the tecks of their children, '
To see' a Wolf is supposed' to be a
good sigh, but if adman sees a wolf
before the wolf sees theaa he will
either beeopm dumb for the iiirm or
lose hie voice, •
Per ,a. hare to vun flows§ anyone's
path is oonsitiered a; very bad sign
an. some pats of England, beemase
in ,olden times it raW believed that
witeltes trateformed thenaselvet iit
to hare;ita 'Oder to bring ,luttl luck
to their cnenie.;
,
I
thillbeatPteeeflitarineelTitint iih4etwitrielnres
ie strikingly illuetirdte.dfin,e'•lette
from: aeaptsiia Of,,,the'52n4 Feet, en
Battalion•Cifordshire and Buolcin
hamshire Light infantile •Weitin
:to his sister he sari; •
"We were sent off te hap, th
Guards to hold up prewousr
held by 4, regiment, which was a:
most annihilated because they wer
, not dug in deep enough, • As soon
it WA'S, light the. Gerraseis Opehe
witilall guns. Lots of our men WCIT
buried in the tree -thee, hut we go
but into others.
"About three o'clock, I saw the
regiment on our left retiring. This
wee the absolute 'devil, as it meant
I had to get out. I was told to re-
irereandatereandssteenthes
g g pa a ee ain roa From
then on it was awful. AS soon as
]eftthetreneh•eesthey opened on
with every via and rifle.
anCI'Llte:jetoillifetitedgc4 athlICLerielvieOPctssmitIr
Things, looked real nasty, as • the
Germans were pouring in through
e gap and Ailing:the wood we were
an. Under th.e circumstances I
thought to do something unexpected
might upset their apple -cart.. So
.-we4xecLhayoneta'iand,.wont straight
in. Weliadethe finest fight that ever
was fought. We first cameon ecime
fifty of them, went straight in, And
annihilated them. We were very
quickly into the nest lot, and in a
few minutes we were shooting, bay-
oneting And annihilating every --
thing we came across. •
• "To eut a long story 'sh•ort, we
areve the whOle crowd back. I had
five holes in ir.y coat as a souvenir.
We went oh occupying this position
in •the trenches, which was vitally
important, for about three days.
The German trendies- - -eieere---only-
-tweiraY fiVe-eards• in front ohnse-It
was , very' ,ancomfertehle • having
them so close. Theo 'subelteens arid.
Wo -soldiers pleced-themeelveease
•skilfully behind ,a big hurl* in • the
ground that they saw the whole.
length of the \ German trenohes,
They then let delve with their rifles;
with the reselt that they stampeded
the lot and killed forty: .
. afterwards. took ae party •of
twenty-five teareconhoitre, and we
• found these-fortY dead. In fact, in
a space Of 150, yards there may have
been 400, or 500 . dead. I:, gave' in-,
Structions for a lieutenant to re-
main out 'with a covering party, and
went to search the dead to see who
they belonged to. I was just in the
,miclolle of the job when on looking
into the erelach, I found it full of live
Germanss' who at once (veiled fire.
How they miseed me I don't know,
• 8..8 a,lesolutely on the point of
stepPing-aoross-the.-trene
"The thing gave me knell a shoelc,
that most of ilie.Gormin.s got away.;
However, the staff are awfully•
pleased ,at usIaving, cleared theire
out at all: I don't think the Ger-
mans can lipid Out much longer -I
seeneete here. Their losses are enthe
mous and their men give me the ire-
eression that they itrx to get wound-
ed or taken prisoners."
New Deadly NVea pen.- e
-This (little steel arrow, about the
same size GS a pencil, is in great
favor with the 'french aviators. The
Flechetiee •as .itree:i§,,vpaloa, When
dropped'fromheight. Of SAO feet,
will penetrate a man trona his hel-
met to his feet. Meinhereaof.eth
.Eziench Aviatian ,-Gorps -leaave "Oa
been experiniepting with tint arrow
'for use against , dirigibles. Beeauser
Of'the easier inalloeuvring and great
speed of the aeroplane it can readily
soar over the .dirigible and drop
tlies,eFleoliettes on the gastag and
Probably explode the enemy's craft.
Superliamma Expen"s'es.
Father4on, 6414 .Yott pessibly
ent clOWri your college expenses?
Son -1 Might possibly :do. withot
any b.beks.
• ,.
If it were not for your melba
Y4Sta would be unable to 'forget,
SONlitY SC110314Sill
INTF,ItICATIOYAL', LESSON:
FEBRITAItIr 7: • •
,'•
,
Lesson VI., Ruth Chooses the True
•
God -.Huth 1., Golden Text,
Verse ThatRutli isifh-te6,-might return
from the country of-Moab.=-Nsonii
went out from Bethlehem -4\14h
wit)? • her hirsband and ,two sena
They were..6aliedIFaihrathites., This
is another word for Ephraimitesaie
found in :Judg. 12, 5; 1 Seth. 1 1;
1 Kings 11. 26 Bethlehem isapoken •
of 'as Ephratah, It was too '`.`small
to be Among the faiiisheset 'e THE CROWING 01' .p/ESA.R.
.but if wn Illa-udrefi:leig1".(44-rin-ge 8441412tileam mirs. Fr -province of aleY'SlePt Igildistul‘'hed
Ily
Smith). Bethlehem as is well • .11is, Loudest Sunniness
known,, is hus-
eoifiEiguhP:r63:andlif :ad• .esi; band'stc and' Eta --her e rs3coffee, re:4 1,‘ .1Pdve -'ehn is ei :141hydee x. ;epona4. u.
t ir
that- the ideuntry'• was exce'ediegly
"Lehem,"t meaning "bre The ilia titre binaBS augers Shelooked
ges-
fertile. • •
ture, she pushed hack talc!, sugar
Jehovah uati visited his people.- howl and faced reeeluteiy.•
This is tt common expression in the "I can't stand it any loner,. Hen -
Old Testeineht to denote the bene- ry,". she said. “Somethina meet be
fieence of God (see Gen. 2/. / ;.00. done."
24, 25; Exod. 4. al ; Sam. 2. 21;:. ; "Can'tatan4,Aliatli" ,iie; husband,
peeesieeefees eeee'se-4.---e`"-°- -.iikez..-tre Wee a peacafile Mane and,
7. • Went. on the war to return he had a faint hope the trouble
unto the land cif Judah. -It was might 'nit be. What he knew it w
customary for the host to acoom- "You know what -the. Bectma
pany the- guest it-titirin dietineci poster. I never heard such a Craw
•aloxig his way. Doubtless Naomi in kitty Ile • begins at; three
thought. that her two daughters -in- &clods; smile keeps it up at haters
law wauld go with her for a distance vale until seven. It's. all right for
and then would %return to their own ..rea_tii •say thing, -you
homes., As the next verse shows, sleep right through it, -but I can't;
'when they had gone with her as far and- getting eompletelY worn
as she thought they ought to .she out. •I'm ,ge.ing over to ace Mrs.
said to them, "Go, return ,e,a011 of, Rebodumt,dintd.,:ha hifternoce and speak
you to her another'e •hease.' She
• ty"*otlir'-e":allirlioa- Fraley said, 46131u-Yi.
• 9. She 'kissed theme -The __vise Was I'd' put up with asgood deist ,Eiefiere:
the "Oa"' gmetinieitt• MeetiMkaiict- I'd lrave- an with the Red-
Parting- It iseetill"-thoe-"Yttali°11• Merida: They're.. Mighty niei.
in the Orieni among men as vvell as 0 k
-
---- Quickly Regied:
Chapped hands andlips alivays
• comewitlf 'cold' weather,' but
„ 9
Tradcmzrlc
CAMPHOR 1:CE
• mad. in CapadO. .
b• CrhiinicrengsuerveraldlySuPeeee4d4asIlt,
smarting• • enr pnhnew
wr hands. l cfiefiortco.t,hokrh:poldu,ge.ht;at,d04..,.
. scribes the "Vaseline" preps,
• rations. A postcard brings n.
AVOID SUBSTITUTES. Insist
on ?Vaseline" in original pack-
ages BOUI*Gartr 1414AeNnairreAl.CIICTESURE:.
CP,,,.Coesolidatecl. For sale "
• at all Chemists and General Stores.
CHESEBROUGH• MPG CO.
•. (congealment)
esiat CHABOT ,AVE.. MONTREAL
womah •, (see Gen. 29. .11; 31. 55; ; .../1 they're such hi.e•peopte,„ his
Expel. 4. 27). It was a mark of wife retorted, "they ought, to be
friehdlinese. . There are two , ih- williug to ,rt rid of a 'poster that
stances where it Was mad: for f°1i'l- .tortures thear neighbors! Anyway,
purposes. TJndet the guise of I, •ri a., , „ . ..
friendship, Joab kissed Aniesa, and
,Accordingly, after. hipeheon, Mrs.
thus taking him aniaw•ax-e's, skill:Cd Frailty went upstaihs_to dress ,for
him (2 Sam. 20:9). Another in- her oaapi- Just as she was putting
stance is the '.well-known one, of, on her hat, however, the bell rang,
• 'end her `maid annouzie;eil Mrs Red-
• 10. Nae, but we evil' return. with mild. Mrs: Redmond's smile was
Naenn. After the fervent appeal rooster of ours. i've•been so 4fraid.
daughters-in-law, it Would seem, 41 came °yea -to, speak to you
were determined , to return with, about Caseate:Mrs. Fraley -that big
thee Unto thsepeople.-713eth oifi,it1hae, thea,lf:inosturessied; half apxious.
, ,
of Naomi, as recited in verses Id ezinciy, you, vvith that ear.
•Oepah 'weakened in her deteranin- piercing croiteof his, You see,. C93 -
Abell to aotoznpany her enotheain- sar is a prize foil, and Mr. Red -
law, : but ' Reath (verge '14 "clay mohd-paid a big -,. ride feer'ishin bu
Unto her '' The_friendli•nessece-Ruth-swariredrteha m two days before
went far deeper than that of Orpah. I began. to worry aboitt lis croving.
-
15. 'Behold thy slater-Ai:Fa* is I told William I linew it rinist a,nnoy
_we_ ou --hav
have massed troops within the last
ten days. all along the- Liuter'fron-
tier, from Essehen .to - the .• east
-
Bruges district. • .
With thisaoast in their- poslession .
the Germans would. try to establish
, Calais a new submarine .base.,,
from WhiCh they might .prey,on Eng-
lish shipping .of alt kinds and piek
„eee tees Ilvtigh_DOaadnorights ‘.one.'e-' by one before bringing their ' •
out Of Kiel and into the North Sea
and the chaenel. for a ,finish fight.
-Bigger -Gun 'Ordered. 7.
.
To Maintain a base at uateie or
Dunkirk or ., Oven • Nieuport; • ii
would be necessary for the invad-.
lega have.'eiege. guris_thet eould •
cope With the armaraent•of the Bri-
199
."4:10 CALAIS" INE IRAN
SEiCOAST TOWN NEEOEP^' -
WORSE 'THAW /WM
rata of the Derain/AS to Reck
taloa Is the Mightiest rnderw
'Waft.
•D'weasing the future plata 4. .
ean2Palgivof the Germens in .Elen-
deo and northern: Frani*, Clierlee
toth mciLvileadines• atuwgheetin. Cgs
11 is twen ty-
-aiu and Do-
ver, The forty-tweeentiineter guns_ •
are not strong enough to match' the •
3aeivL. guns of the in
,suela70 in-enequnter. • •
TbeSlermAnilias.siraply gone'back
to t-lit'tfolCr-a--guirrliPil 411-thag:b, 1w-243111 Isgihvotienli?It---:1:...
least two-thirds Of the way aeree
the, chanted and ever' More, PosiefilY
eighteen miles. Essen is now niak
ing this gun. • It is a, fifty-two „
metre affair. The Germans are try-
ing to get it across Belgium and
behind the .German iines-An West., 2
Mender -a; ready tea be pushed upto„
the coast 0..,S soon ea the shore may
be defepded properly for this; Opera:, .
tion.• "
New .ZeiWelin. R4se• •
They are a,lso shippiog their SO -
marines by. Eisenbehivtransporting
them aeross the open country of
)3elgiure, and 'idt fat from' Ghent %;
they are now constructing. a new
Zeppelin hanger or base .•
That is why no one, not eee.nethe •
Bel •iaase21ho.Aialieereaareeperiaiet4.e.a.e
to see Antwerpjus now' end-
• ,
have not been so-permittect for--the;H"
laet ten 'days. If Mee waate to
gone bacic unto her and un- th i hb •
people,
-to her god: return.theu after. thy
sister -in -law. --Even After Crpah
had gone, Naomi ;insisted 'epee. Ruth
going. She wanted to give Ruth
every opportunity to go back, net
only to her p.eopla but to her gad;
as it was believed among thelsrael-
ites that the God of Israel didnot
.have power peer the people of other
:nations. David 'atone time pleads
that he he not seni•-it-wiy-froin
own ocirntry and .11V -3m theotece,
tiaMhe-G (
20.71-7-20). • , se
. II
16. Entreat me not:to leave thee.
-This' and the following verse ex-
prgss so .emphatieallyituth's desire
to remain with . Naomi that there
'eoiale'be no other question__ •
,Naomite. mind as to Ruth's determ-
enatton ,ancl steadfastness. • The
beauty of the language of these two
Iverses is_Captivating--and• eshows
that "put of the fullnese pf the
'heart' the month apelike -ph," that
beauty of forni is associated -with
beauty of thought and, conviction.
(See 2 Kings 2. 2-e fora similar
epi-
sode17. ?)4.1eltrallalE)..1difo4hsoAil4tOP4mSell,4)0.;ii
'more also. -This iS a 'common forth
of oath among the Israelites And
among other people who 'Came in
close association with the Israelites
(See 1 Sam. 8. 174 14. 44, 20. 13; 2
Sint 3. 9, 35; 19. 13; 1 Kings 2.-23;,
2 Kings 6. 31). •
18., She leftseff iipeaking unto her.
-It is An easy play for the•irnagin-
Mimi to see these two women talk-
ing- in the road together, stopping
as they frankly and firmly express
theirviews one to the -Other; but
when the -matter is settled, going on
their way with 'gladness. • •
-i
' Some Army TmReelet
ers .
An army.,. corps: is on small
scale cotople;te army in itself. The
strength varies from 35,060 to 45,-
000 men. A division is a body of
horse, foist and artillery of from 16,-
000 to 20,000 men. A brigtsdesis
force of infantry. or cavalry. An in-
fantry brigade 38 froiti ,4,000 to
oo-stroaig, ind a cavalry brigade
from 1,000 to 2,000. strong. An in-
fantry regiment fo from 2,060 to 4,-
000 stroong, .A: cavalry , reghnont
from MO to .1,000 stOpfio., Stpiad•
ot14 ofCavalry consist AA io to Ora
men. In the British and French
ArttlieS a battery ot artillery has
obt Prig 4114 about 200 Men.
„
e ne g ore and sh Id I in a
daye- on -as to 'take•thencesi on ••• '
„„te getaid him. Then Aunt Ellen
3
came.. She is very.' deaf; but the
first •morning she. came down to
breakfast perfectly radiant. • .
• " 'Oh,' ,she tried, (What de you •
-think has ha•piaeried 1 heard your
-rooster crow! I haven't heard
Oster crow fee fen years.. po,..you
know, I just cried Over it. It setra-
ed_ so_weialeeful-tee eheier-serieett •
t_ ceme throligh .ear
-t1UPPet : • • _
looked, _at Inc; and
Elea,- -what that Meant. And so ;I
cerrie over to ask you if yeti Ceeld
possibly endue& Creates racket just
While •Aunt Ellen isewitieha: Could
you I" , ,•. .
Fraleyle.-3.-s---were • watm
with sympathy. -
egiiiu en ean-do so
e thesee-
gettingtacrois the frontler into
Ger-
niany by way of Herbestlial ••and
*end& via Aachen and- back to
Maastricht or lhaale in the little
strip of Hell:arid at that pisint,
Whe*e Battle Must Be,
If Germany ig determined to go
to 'Calais at all hazards, t•lien it '
o-hersr"--1
itilsefefe'edinabier---Nitiffert
"Indeed- ; can!' sthe1 cried.
s.'When I hear him crow, I'll just
• -think howayear Aunt Ellen is en-
joying i. tan
enough to do When sk hag. to miss
so Mitch!' -
So Cesar crowed =molested.
And; curiously enough, before Aunt
Ellen
sho could sl•e•ep undisturbed by his
•loudest 41111=16ns.* ' ,
• s
Some p.eople as:slime* they can't
havea good time by, being good.
•
' •-• • • 2.-
tios-CettiSeeeeiTheleelhee the
i1ehiiafnnght Ate-battlethat,
will affect the entire eandoet,of. t:citt
subsequent war-, if not prove tbs be-
ginning of the end,.
German troop* have been -pouring
into the district 'behind Yiseezand
eteliesethelierth rine
dere for, two weeke-e-freeli troOpi,
from the Fatherland.,
Do Horse's Like War?
A eaveley horse, in ,most cases, ,
enjoys & bat,* quite as much 'as its ae;
mastte des, i and while waiting for
the order -to .he green to :charge it
wilLstamp-intL.chata-'--lawatictilatly:
•NN hen released • it dashes forward
madly, and on teming•iiitoecontect •
with the enemyerears and plunges, ,
etriking and .biting the Opposing •
horses savagely, Often, after • Ile
owner. has fallen, a horse will con-
tinue thecharge riderless.
IlltrIBRITAT.INOIMIC.. IMONOttiTIRT .
INSTANTLY. RELIEIE1).:.....g..,i!0444411ozpsr..!-
NOrrilillAACCUreillEVerre&Sel---t
, !Ono; it does the rest safely aniL
,
-TreeKtd--1,5y Calarfhozone
Catarrhosone can't fali to cure Brim*
chide; lee so healing; teething and
balsamic that, every traeo of tine'dis-
ease dies' before it. When you, inlittle
thepute -piney valor of Catarthozene„
you send healing medication to the
spote that aro eiserised•and Oros • •
!stet it ratline' to Apply medicine
where the disease exists? Certainly,
and thatt• why Catarrhoterie is o
successful; it goes where the' trouble
really is, g ete wherea spray of °int.
anent can't penetrate. Par the relief
and complete cure 01tronebttte,.,
.CVarrii, throat trouble, we
guarantee •Catarrhozene in every
ease. You don't take medicine you
don't take drowsy orugs-lust•breatlie
the beiloanale ePeueeti • of tatattbep
. .„
• • .."
"For three 'years I W/3$ Serionsity
,bothered by a bronthial r- tough. At
night / would awaken with ti dry
ii-
ritable feeling in iny throat. 1 couldn't
tough up anything, but very teen
eouglied niy throat into qinte an in -
named condition. °nee I got Cattier.
hozone Inhaler I Was all right. I took
it to bed, tied if an attaek -awakened
Inc a few minutes use of the bibelot
gavo me tenet. eatarthO2Otie haa
cured roe and 1 strongly urge every.
one with a weak throat to 1180 It regu-
larly.
(Stgned) S.'0. „to:auto,
. iterating. '
•
bttatilldkohe wilt. not disappoint
you. Get tlui cOMPlete $1.00 eutilt"
it's guaranteed. Small elgey 0e;' trial
cot saMple° ewe Ze.. at dealers
ovetlivbere'e •