Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-02-11, Page 6111E1 AtEXAAAR 11.AXDRINGILIN TIM FAVORITE &ROBE OF ROYALTY. ° Was Istabarded. By Gerinaii ohipo-lt k Probably Wortk 0Yer $2,000,4069., M by eta, so ley air, the Geinians M$ a t.0 fancy the east eoaet f Eng. lanii far their abortive, if annoying, raids. 'The attack,on Sandringham wan ispullitrly`ozaswraiting-'-ast uc* doubt, it imoi intended to he. enema Heel was not only the late Nine' favorite resieleriee,Aset it is. Isis widow'sprincipal oriel today,. while, as =woad boy, hi x preeent Keeley Itie *mit more days in that seentriest of essuntry houses than be has in any hoinie in all his Derain - ions. It is enrious how little the pubUc generally iseeen to 'know *bout this favorite abode of royalty. The present writer had the advant- age sonse year ago of going over thie royal reeidenee, .and he charac- terized it erdiesitatingly 'ea quite the most charming house -we are, not talking of a pelece or otstatelis /Leak tor Sahdringliara is met the" a • • Yuan standing on high ground sod shoe. terece by aroodad and heathery hills - It leas fine 41*. Audit. ie kept ea - elusive., by reigen of the fact that the prices it eliarees for board, rooms, sexl the like, are es ateep as its cliffs at their eteepeet point. Cromer has ter long been f AMMO for it exile) fisheries. St) esenone hen it beeome for that that nearly ell trees, whether eeught there or not, are called "Cromer crabs." Loibetere, ae well as. crates, are taught in large numbere both at Cromer and also at Aeringleene, which latter 'Plage-is a rising Sea- _resOrt sorae Ave lunge wear of Cromer. -Riney. Lyn -Us -A -anther piece. where" the German eirmen dropped some of their souvenirs, is eitua•te on the hore a the WOO-. It is a great historie interest, its Aspenlai tore -orate privileges dating from the days of Icing Jahn, As "late :as ITV. more wine was import- ed into King's Lynn than Into Any time in England, with the exeee" tiems, of London and Bristol. Its shipping trade is stilleonsiderable. • IN A TRIEN01-Y. WAY's'e ° • - , ,, - , “When,i man ainft got a -cent:and he's feeling lited-of blue And the clouds hang dark and heavy and won't letathe sunlight through, eale,''' nor does it lay claim to any- ra-a great WM-0 rartrethrea,-,for thing of the ether -of which he hes ever nen- the inside. - . Sandringham Was bought by Xing 'Edward+ as Prince. Of Wales, in:the It makes a Mae feer curious and it year len, from Mr. Spencer' Pew:, maims tile teardrops Start, • A Per, :stepson of Lord 'Palraersten, And he feels A kind o' ilutteriag round probably the most- popular premier . the .regiene ef his heart, • r• - ele orte't look you in the oyes; he don't of the Victorian era. The extent • know whatto Say, ' of the eetateat that trineevanalhoue With your hand...upon his shoulder in seyen thousand seeres, but the late cs, wee_ my land. of •way,,, , , - Bing added' to it from time to time until •nsee its extent, le About twelve 0,, the world's a, e.:ainus 'e 12114(1 eine ' thousand acres. The :Priee-,the late With its-houessenet'eta7gall, Rine Paid ifor the -original .property With its eaves and little eroases' but a :Was ..,$1,100,000, but be „i eiseetiled ' goodaworld- after all; ° money on it SO lavishlee in. :the waY 4114. a good God musthaveint./.de.'it' leastways tbat's1 what e sine ° of alterationsaiiele improvements, Woen your band es felony seouldee he that is now -Worth- at least ,double a‘friendly:.kind, Of way." . that suree-if, indeed it is Possible e.. --S-,;-,.... to set a• inerketableevalue. on Ore- - -Pert)* which its royal owneee, have • CANADA CROPS IN 19144'. rendere'd link/tie. - . , . a fellow Just ta lay His hand uPOU slamikler 14, *•frien4ly aind of way, • se, • '‘.'"Fr.7'7'"wrkW•7•-• •41 11 .711PPRWISIIIrririrM What Sandainglana - Final Report .of ..the Ceesus ,and •tittletiee-0 ea- . late leiter inspectedeountlees . . states before isefo,Te, - he deOded • (n?! the. • Census and Statisties Office, 'C,ft- purchaSe • •of Slindringleen. And Aiwa" 'has issued its final repoeteon 'tie& reaill reasons • fillenSt 'decided ;the yield end value of fieldorops, in hine in feeor•Of what came; to be his , The • report ,sstetee that; 'Pe best-itoriel Fleet, situate, as maaltecteontreat to 1913., the season . • it was, ia.Xerfolk, it Wag re e long, nroeed particularly unfavorable to way tram AlViadiOraelathat he would ehe growth ,of grain. Persistent - net lbe too much ender, his mother's drought throughout the greater eye Wiwi' on his (ma demeene, nor part of the-Northarest provinces re- ' :Would there he any difficalty ofthe yield per acre • of the •4,444,1;) ofsettentforele, chief CerealS' lOiiea than in any seaa Secondly, ehe'Coulity ot.Nerfelkhae, son since 1910 send tlowee. than .the olventee been- farapna, alike ter .'the average of the six -years ended -1013. qitality and.loa the variety of its In Ontario, and Quebec, theugh-the the following recollections ef some gamee--and eXing, Edward-- - leosed• eropseuffered frOm-aadryeea- years' agoofPrittee Htssen shoof.14.13aSsing. welle.aitheugh he shn, -the, conditions were net so r most Agreeable...1F: • „ • .• The .Piblei? of Wake as Uis 03en Chauffeur at ,the Erma. The heir to thelesitesh-theoeeeisetoestay ateehe'hatelefroat in Teenee site en aide-de-oemp to; 'Sir Min. • Freneh. He is here :Jaen driiin 'is ownear, with Prince Aleeender of Tea, our future Goterner-General, as passenger. THE NEW RULER OF EGYPT FJtECE XUSSEIN $A1B WO RE FOND OF DANCING. • ` . • Ilas Played Asiffve'Pert Agrieid timid Development. of Orientals as rule dieclaine dance; They are eontent to employ. -Men, and more espeniallY. women, to dance for their enterteipment. These dock's are held in singularly lorW.tateem, • , • This will serve explain the at- titlide of Most, Orientals at , Euro- pean and Anieriean They veay,.„yery. rarely take part in the dancing theinselies. " • Tinder the circumstances,' it is remarkable, and. worthy of note, . that the new,riller.of Egypt. Sultan or twenty years in "close unison with Hossein,. *shenld • be. passionatery them' to increase the fertile 'areas 'of fond "of dancing. :And he is now en Egypt and. her -power's .of egrieultie• 'his, sixty-fourth year. 'He is :about. '''Te.11irdcheebiene . • - ' . five ifeet nine .ill hSii.ht,*'''Square , The newer generation of English shouldered, lithe, wiry, slim waist= °ffiaiale in EgYPP learaed t'cr' traat ed, sroaa feet .pd hands .o.lad .hii. hini, and by his °refusal to associate legs ' slightly bowed; as triese of a lahoself with Khedive Abbas in the lcAter'a • anailoeiaires ,. againSt the man who Was areeil•goined to spend meeie time in The oennee', • - - ' 'English- ail& by, restricting himself. A veteran diplomat contributes entirely and wholly to the Jostering of agriculture he succeeded in win- ningathe -good WilleofeLerdeleitcho enensoshile. 'the-, latte-RViar ,IleFifilli Pim:dee:46447e in Egypt. ' e• - • • Abbas, of the Nationalists., . the • has a ,i-Tght tq betreatedsarnentral foreign. opponente to English views eimpin because it is in fa.ct neutral. in Egypt, as well ihs the regale*, of SWitzerland has ateeeeded in 'main- Sultan:41;46d Hama, that he would ta, ining% her neutrality b'ecause of adope'a political role • • the peculiar -ceilforniation •-of, her • On the Ilaiihs of the'Siles- , Instead lie deyoted•himself entire- ly to the tprcatiotion.of agriculture, 'and eel:mm.8,1lY. to the exploitation of his extensive estates ia tiesper and Lower Egypt, * He assumed the • kesideney-ofethee-leheclivialeSooiety of Agriealtlire, which has for its object the eocouragemeet oaf : the adoption of ,more enlightened and• . of land. mHetilli,odaest'ieiriftateh;ittcntlhtiivsa.otoloon. nectiOn naturally brought him into- 'claae -teueli With Sir 'Willian:a Wills 'cocks, Sir :William Gentile, eiisl the Other organizers of the, new. eystem -of irrigation in. the Land :of the Nile; and so much raiztear. ' coefic1- .eneesandaresPeet..Ye.ra engendered that 'Hussein, rev, be said W-haT*0- been Working for the pase'eighteen 03%4S SAY "NICILI1Or WRITES OF ,TO PAM **410001110111Aoeir,* 10.010.16,10,10,40,10.• ' ipn the Farm owsoloossimaehowoolagetto Planthe balrY Barn Varefully. Incidents on the Battlefields and Expgionce has shown thet elabs • . in the RotsyloilItt:11:e-Jat.nieng the ceseery for permanence, sanitation, , • orate and costlY barns are not ne- Sister Martin Nicholson, Nebo bus the P;'"iuctli'n (4 4'3'4- n11114 eenifert of COWS. or COriVenieilee illi, is iii,..rstiterseiotiifahneexdelxtoll eTarai.;:t0,8 aststoforlin:w7, Xis 0:074..inzs:eed;oifn tehleahmoroastte a xbrairnn; log weenelod esndseee se ,weseeesw, ie, seldom recovered *lieu the -farm . nheeent es •- :•-• ' -e. - ' - • e elves -harms isennitienia-thereleetsefees, If I had gone to Itesseia knowing coilveldent and "'„ ilnPraetieat 'in *;11:14"?ttllaIu4geti4ilA,°IanYga4a::khis44iet°1e 04X iett'bteot-eaythat tho;•woreplanuo3,by" faiilit., piekeap. aabiteetS ltnewing little or no.htig , It would he difileiili to, find an of the eperetions neceesaler in 434,0- eq",uivelexie in English, In French ling CPWS and milk.' In bulo. ee ' it weeld he, best "tresseleted by elie sech beenS• display .and'„fait,eY :31/' Frenchnfenee eepeeseisse shrug of -pearanee are oitea tile. nysi-. QOM' the ielionleleno lesehe'vo 04pressos, aideratio.n, peigeet indifferenee. and , I heard .Ordinarily the building o'f a bane' t,hie word Ara on tae lipe of a Vesee is an evene, which ocears very eel - elan Aqh4e'r jaetbo fiz;st Red Cross 'dem he the rife of a farmer and for bed hienlaieed. to him that that it was vie eeeety esahifeen ee given 'befere ... bmPital• Whalsh*. • The &dor ,thee reason reat deal.ox thought necessary to eeke off hie hand., )4egiuri- in0,04,11ro.jicc. earbaul • "Ina/6W r the '40140 " ' :1%1,1= h6a,(1 *lame swathed with ban- 4 Por. gwntloto.,11 t11:133.°0 ..r_erdui:cldeagg.hatifQ,1;" ilpsTee. eot.imoredn, w-,barooloonnobtaeynotybeyond the gli.. • Miley mistakes may be made in nation. ..xlutd:_previouar 1,enricaamy these Is,uilding a barn and ireceu.entlys , are not discovered until itl , e • t(i )rti e.ceal ari7 but t ee' Kingaoan); oe ef rafbo. ilyarlauenogol-ea-eirsns ba"rmi ly1"; Vt. Brame. ,,Pn-ed3111 rlse great. gemb - the Russian soldiers breve in from Lode „and the work ese donek at a great disad. • vantage, day after day, year ia surface,. arid Belgium netia neigh orhood Was infinitely worsae• tralizataan has. been threatened, oeva The reason - wha explaines1 to me by eral times since 1830, because the a Uneaten doctor. eoantry, is flatsand easilyinveded on "We haeie to deal with worse everY' side, "• ' • ease13,?' he said, "because our men To preteot Belgium from -the Dutch, and stile more, to protect France,- and-Prussia-kaeta Many) from eaelesother,. the afore- said five great 'powers in 1831 signed --a:treaty-therte 'ROO= shall form an s independent • and •-•perpetually neutral state,- "and Anil be bound 'to, observe neutrelity,:tewards:all -other . • efatee.'" ." The first serious fdingee to I3eighim nentrality ewe threugh the annexation of Hanover and other. Gernien, sstates by Prus- sia 1866, but the storm blew Over, and lielgiatti neuttality 'was. ently was never, enything,_ approaching. the'Seeterate shot, that King George is. "Still, Under his regime, .the pheasaot shooting and .pattridge driving at San etinglarm • earne % to :mean shooting parties of the largest and pleasantest kind, at which the. elementeof the old personal 'friends' d . • . • - Th.t, a_ lletive area an 19144.,Was reduced to an or Was Pre emmalet• a soil nallu 4417,075, acres: Upon this tins area aPeearance d manner as h. es the • •ta, productfon of grain crops •eort. 7-- ringham is of the rather rate .kino Th.e Khedive'geWife. ' ein which both pheasants and part-. in. s 'was(' is hallows s Wheat, favorable whilst in the Maritime provinces a favorable 'Aeaeort result' sled in goad returns.' For the whole of Canada the area eStimated to be sown; to field, eroPs was 35,102,175 „acres, as coinpared with 35,375,430, acres 'irr -1913; but. owin'g to the drought .the total pro - tereatinga-and7amusing:campaniona !a -VG when he Was' wont to complain, in the mosenn-Oriental fashion of the exeravagances -9f -copdoce• and Of pine of his one and. only wife, the Princesaa Ain -El -Haat Hanem, slatighter of Prince Achmeti and who was quite •as ,Eiseopeanized in ridgea. ' 161,280,000 • as a ' 231;717;060 i11 It cannot he said,that Prineess st . 'letter' from time to time. • Ameng 951,800; .1)6. , e,,.' ' 197,500. ' against taaking„aci, 0,....,peeied, between thirty , - le' 1871 King Edward'replaceehthe, .1913; oats, 313,070 pa against 404,- ji3ie6eie, v,v, as ,a ,veil doireted wile, 0A -some es-ses----seees with :she preeent 6 . , , • 69,000, herleYS ''.- 0;e0,(100-:.--i!Tgaliiw and for her there waa n each.. l'iis , in,ffee ageinsts2i-.. as the captivity of an Oriental; haa Elizebeehan .briek and stone, struce 48,310,000e eye : 'ewe, • and he largely added bi-. the 30000; peas 3,362,500 ,against, 3,- rem;, which even in t,h, °se days --I Inn . other -additions is the hugebellroom 793,300; • '., lino Wheat, ,S;62S,000 , Viiere it has been said , e 0, , , gainS 8,37a,000., mute, grams, 16, - "al h w Cid en-, -11, - , s . 6 . ' 0.I ' and thirty-eix years ago -had be- ' . terta,laa "the.whole tolinty'''. at a 382,590 -against 1.5-,7q,2;•00; 'flax; ,a,?.„ '.°°nee es mere figure of speech, as faee gale:. set ndringettea; indeed, 170,000 against 1.7;039,000; and.' cern ,...,a",n'telleer.zreat tadieg. of Ett'YPt: were her b- 'is almo everything eo Sa for 'husking,. 13;924908 agaiiaiSt, jti;.4 7 --1 le the taste O •severybotly...•,,A.04 768,60,0 bushels. . , .essee„...._,. fie • She_. was ineSteefsthe tirne , aWay• - • o nb-: Who. has 0 ii. sta v - there, • Peralfer-chareeeof the pi e, see The yields per" erernewereenienusn that fiviilie. the raging -men fee knowe .clee of gardens -or teaf- hi is not called on to Pre ,eitina, the garden lover. and the collector knows thatit- is no s . ,. . einabset •en the.. e %On . 'the neeritS of raceheeses or the pedia grees el 81,iorblio.to8." ,,Such is the, • atsteephere . et ' the geneioue 'English --Iii•ro4...A.vb;eli the leeiser"e merry wee ;.lieve. -dews sheer -futile best" to 'de - ere melee difficult to kill, Om Bel - par oat. Mists.kes Arley be made in, • . the loeationee the alio; in the plect ' • ing doors, or in the slimensions and platten:es, ' utters, pessege. ' '•ways and alleys; and the'loeation of sliers .7are. the . hardiest in the' Posts. • Tliese detaile ehould all be oeetes . _eeseedeeenees- eferiehand Ana Ruch 'I was inclined to believe him. Lee mistakes avoided. 'me take the•ease of aewosanded Cos s The 'cost the harp aho ilk' be 24. sack -with whom 'I e-becand very keeping witeethe valiesteOze and friendly, • Near 'Lodz this man was inoome producing oapaeaty • of. 'the/ shot in -the; lege, His linQUIld 'WAS 'farm, aed within the bounds sane - hastily . badly dreseedelay tomrade 'Who, tioned by eonserV.Ative bus iess in his:hurry-for all the ante lie Was manigement„ •.Moriev-invested inv a, ander fteroe, Are -tied the bandage: dairy learn should he required:AA: far teee pay at at least ten per cont yetires The weended ,seedi!er remained on This is necessary to cover interest,' the battlefield for eight doe in -the deprepiation, taxes; insurane.et ad; bitter cold,. the bandage euttieg These if $1,4013 were. invested le- e -staengtheaedaascl. cofinned„. by, tha, „harskinto his Wound, After is fen' berneese house twenty ogees, $100 e strong: Eitta,nct taken by the Glade eyeethere-Wasi• the sectded agony of year would ha:ve "t4.1be rtharged -for stone\ Goveeinnent at 'ehe,timee.and gangrene,- How be lived'wee enir- wan. rem. This would amonee to to Germany,. eseseesene °slier bee •Thaseien eel:lid:have en- ,I51..°a°vIreargellep.tticlie. If mfinifktet sold deittto iirhi)ch the other great powers, inado tome. I . do not think any 841 '. "ceded. , r A 'eVAle2elliESTION." s Is Geoid Britten 'Juggled in hig for Belgian Neuteality? Posterity is 'etre teeleeld the na- tion .that. svae..eeppensible for this, the greatest and most divastatipg. War. known to history, in great aba herences and it is for this reason, that, the German " 'Savants have leaned their special plea.. on behalf Of the •Xaisera and. that her Riess has (mine to 'their air in a staiperidotis endeavor to ,place res- ponsibility anywhere, so long • aS Gerniaay and her war 'lord are ex- „. Neutrality as •applied to ' nations, Means- the refusal if:a-third power to go to war it behalf of either Az twoebelligerent- net -isles, and though Things, 4-n f;+ qtto as the lawyers phrase it,- untie on 'the oetaht oauf yAuegouiesrt,..o14eolose;eGttroennshmeswilitiatrle;: necessity,” as hee.•Chaneellor• ex- pressed itesievaded• Belgian., well . knowing that: Frailee, depends ing• upon the aforesaid treaty, had dur•eed the agony; By all the lave per eallon, 33 1-3 gallons of • the of nature he seould have been deed v l'Qug 114°' . •-toiepldiyofi:eeanctb"Pen°1tvb::°sItli,allbwehijee:clhuilsrel . • ' Sibereahe eeesseees. , : The mettient he wiss brought Ante el•good business farmer seldom ; the hospital he was, feed thatheputs- more than $50 per tow in 41: . leg- would, have to he amputated: dairy barn. Good sub atwitter bares 0..imitto .forlify her posessions ,.011heinwrssertirdewlna'seensirheTavi17eon;:ere,f;tsth:fflere4rignr'ge.et werre":04Shletrea-ejsi)Istiolmt esinife'-huih1t bia7aS'e' 441:ing:tho.efesesee,ereernete4,,e thee 11., _1! 'which oast $1000 to $1,500 per soW. e • , -311YaSi\Ort of: Prine-eibiat e Icatai-e.S.**.***P„JaPrig tha-evhblenee-i-eeae""ahslt--i-ee-eitseeer-e--eh-aeegee-1 the cow stele. itabandaasojournmr,--ni, eliwayseleokedeepootelialefiebts- Paris at e` or at one or AA7 els lae" far Wheat 21.41 Compar !with 28.19-in-1913;-sprixi ---Othee:of•-• -fashionable thert • -Alle-1,11-140011111.6titeli 77 Ailttlitt another Unfortified laea in • Xorfolk which WaS•fair•Ored Leh. the saeteot2One_' "Ple the, L. _wheat, :esneeneso e mixed" egeseest vete e.reeekeniseee . . • . . ,, • k*. seeee against - 20.81 • fall Taal. resor s of Continental Europe. eat, '15.67 against' 21,04; oats- -•She. wOuld..go, about entirely onve ih 1;12 'against 38:781 *barley) 24:/1 edeedieeenet hesiest, e appei*• at- aainst /9,96; rye, ;18.12- against, the opera and *levee, -eetertain- 19.28; ,peas 17,64. against 18.05.; meets Paris in the niost daringly . • , bear, 43;20 EigliiiiSt 17.19 ;• 7huek- deeellefe-efeereeses• , wheat, 24.34 Against 21:99 ; ixed •When his father, Thipail :Was de- pointed heard, bears a remarkable • , mg nations unfavora the• right The Napoleoeit were bloke' eep '• • „Lee e s. -earseeeree-teetheomen _eery'. really ef settee smell steeeessof- `", .., rope ;' mad •wheazthataW!ar.entied:'•:"A Kettle, the forces trent :thee direction' w.oulel 'Tars” never elegleeRreeise de these: buildings , woukl eaeh.eose.. &eh expense, of potZrse, makes it utterly inepoesible es; euro profits fro such deipies even With. the PiOSt econAmioal Methods of, feeding and management, , ometimeS too littlemoney IS in- vested in dairy- buildings, in - which, . case undue labor. is reclaired in taking care of, the cows. Work often doneat a great diSadvantege, as, for instance, ,When silage must ' manedb niter gOebgast'k°nt: Dal* be "eirried te the cows in ibaskete. everir. must be done- twice a arm vil1 do virt-h but rookotanee.- -slasgen'8Gwrr stbaredakednotIng'llorInder'oPht4IP::-FlitlicluAt2:tii-SIW* t° 4° Yar iieeeluotti Germane°i i7p o Al" 41-bo7r IC .1elibtnYhe men Is': a' e eea 4al:frPiarbfieviinic•?:er of waste 'paper, and thiie. 114 meta- by mistake the onli comment Weeid pehrieelly.' tore up the neutrality the inevitable nichevos papers and contempteously. geetter- eel-there to the four Winds of heeeen. A Siberian -these troops are the .foregoing Official , hardiest of the eot--was brought in- TheInenta and historic- dates Should set' 01:inetit'.tc3d hh°issi3iittarims!Ibtfiadbly°th•lhrabekget 7bily tie the question of 'responsibility fortb was tGh eer mwastne, 0butritigt this Bat _abroi40 :setts hourrtaaPtt the :all. ; ml It e:s sp•840.Akr littlespoke ta Int ahf ;- unofficial lassertions, • 'printed and scattered' loretteleadt ehriotighont the Meted States, "claieiiiig that Bel-. gium, between Saly 24 and'August 4; theedato oe.gerritan obeueniney of, Beiginm, WAS guilty of hostile act& justifeing • •Geeman invasion, .e CHAS. M. BICE; . -Denver, Jan: ig, 191.5, , the fight tor the Little Father," he • said, ' could gives aisanyeather in- cidents of eheltussiaee' ilidifterenee to .pain, but they: would make too gruesome. • The Russian soldier, with all hie_ hardiness, hasethe.heert. ed a child. ag-o-ineSeeewitheuterilisehing, criecelike a This -same luau, whoehaer faced ereat . • , . ee child ater when shewe seine little isi an old es hieteely,eskalser..0.frets_$.5,03.w for Hine, ilea'd o- _k_inan 4 T - Very easily, but never 'as a result of peins ' Thert -tears tares the. result -of. creep emotion -and ts combination •of hardness and deep feeling is surely 'one of; the' most. extraordi- aary (ilt:its-in the Itussi;iii. elt . the five. great piaWera that ,suceese:a ee\111 aeelied tool:Joni:mender Sameon- fully emerged from •formed. •,a, by his colleagues Jn the British'Naral Air Service, for the brilliant aviator, _combine lex' the future government, 'with lee -small, well -knit frame and Etieope, and worked out a new .,scheme . for the . surviying •sroall strite:e Whice evereespeciellyeirapore tont as :strategical ground from their geogesifilliehel fotation. . • reeemblancee to the well-known .sea gtainse 35.06 againet e3.3ed flax; Pesed and eeent to exiles Huesene . tantain of,. fiatioa. ilis, 'feats in the tt.'62 against 11„39; and corn . for took his departure,fr0lil EgY113. • presentawar • have so ' impressed,..the hUsking-,•-549- agaieet Aes30.. , = .. - . ., Itii:tt.kolk --ut•-- biereeeidenee•-aePeres- eraser- that lie oteered- eseeee re- ,x,,he... reason as .0,4e.,expic_..plock yea ovo., .. Computed at at aVeatige load market essieee he eeeses a, considerable pbal. , prices •the Valliea:icif these eropi, in tlan, CI fes .belhoridSaiiii, eve n - ,rtreebeeenn,.,„.. tbeesetwee.....f..-.60,:weee: .Beene, alive madeaa,• . l to inc ine-br a wbrinaled- Siberian: - tit" ._ ii, , They balled at•ta:"perpetual- nen- Ward to anyone whoavillabrina him to 4._ ..,,,I._ .., my: se,..,43._elia _ . 41.-8,000T.64*5#151-;811;000T15M)101 M. 1:41lit Ott P6S'Ziiii116; *..11_01.- i .41 France 4trld.Ertgiand; .eneoree eleirerepe•naval. fleets,. andea short G.o 1S on our ar•;-aralTwe' -like t ter L • • • 'The wounded found on the vela Of battle ases ustuelsr tying on their baokesetlieieefiteee earned heav tv°te' asl°311":: Wh°4'.$18 eensistingeofentiesteoTeitesies.-Aesee ,-C•thiiSaniter-Samscoaalsaairreaa.„0 maaseea.'1. $alla$7,000; de, a$1,679,000; peas, • d„f d h had- ' • t . d . t, time back he did =tell to organize the die, facing ; 0 an we are were verY. all a a w . into a treaty that •cer am esigna HIM S h ' N v 1 Al ' of .G eat it in adl hit lw thee 11 i $4.895,000 beanS,• $1,884;300; buck. treated With the utineSt kind- es) simnel motiotries slimed be wnleah is r Servicegeneraiy' recogrnized vi„.e ,t4y7 to ric feelexatr.}.111;1.2.,, a. t:ip 614)PP:etS5 18 tile Bee°11611:aigeSi ton 11 $10.759.400; flaX V4368/006, d at ea:anti, Norwich (where .tneit xor..o.a0r*Illfilagg aa-' the Foilboarg Germain and at. 08 000- br and L..,..................,..........„ mak'e the mustard) being. t e' arg- all field crops, ineitxdinge, root an fodder • crops, the total va le Made 'his. home, indeed, on the est. It .eontains about 52,000 peo- odlionnto •':.to $609,061,30%. as.....oiral 1 banks ef •the Seine througliont tbe le e ermarre, but in the . surainee . -whele 'Of the, reign Ot.IehecliveeTesse to ie .sereeteltein-eosiqueetbse every ei!lia.r• the most eilidinTin. wiaaildta-W1 ---Batore g `ng-,3e---Rais • • " ' r nt of neutrality, ed with this branch of the, serviee it day s te:- 'Germane. At fitst I Was ,power, and they united ineweet thee; the commander first became .associat: Brussels,• Arriving there the. same thiS population is multiplied -many' ' • tittles for, Yarinouth is the most popular holiday resort on ...the east coast of England. Ti has One of .the pared with $652,/71,500 in 1913, the Leered:se Of $118480,000 being,ehielle due to the enhancement. of prices,',' 'Which has -thus' more than 'counter- . 'finest beaches magma:Mr,- with: 'balanced: the,-• low- -yield-sof 4grain---1 . nearly., consequence oftibe drought. tbrzc ace and. two reteeeicahly -"Inethe three Northivest:roVitieda ,a,fina pier. It is •the principal fish-. of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al- - frig. port -4 Nqr.f,elli-a And its herring . hates the proilifctinn in 1814 , Of Delietat•.i14.4r-viarld-avide -fame, In wheat it placed at 140,958,000 .huah- tie year as many as 500,0004000 her- • els 'Compared. with 209,162,000 bash- , ringS Will be,landed it this one Nor - e, folk potts 1 , •-• The lierteensindustry at•Yettiretreth • naturally Ands 'employment for a very large number , of fishereaene Perhaps "something lete-teso Mees- e -lid Ashernieff live in Yarmouth it- , self. sad another thousand iii.neigh-, boring villages, weele seaeral, thOnd: and Scottish Ashermen • will -Come down 'and Make .Yarinouth •. their • base ofopera*ms during the. au- tumn "fishing.- 1;Th-a ming <4V ' rings is „if..• aubsidiaay industry, • which gives 'employment top thous,- • ands, Aimiially„ about -five, thous.. and Soottish lassiewill migrate to Yarn:tenth in the autumn tr>,"kip- - jr"-herring( and to turn them into ".bloaters." : :Altogether', in the au- tumn months "the 'requirements . of the fishing industry add nbout1. eleven tliousand,people to the 00/... ittafporailittion .tif the town. • /NI; of the other ialates on Which • the airmen (ff th6. "bahp&illeris". dropped bomb 4 are- Cromer and heringitim, 'both "-coif& pintos. tering pltim on -the fast coast, 411.1baasador. els in 1913, of oats 'at 150,843,000 boahela,. compared with 242,413,000 bushels, and of barley' tit 19,535,000 bushels .compared with 81,060;000 bushels. The wheat produation �f 1914 in Manitoba was e8,805,000 bughels from 2,618,000., acres; in 'Saskateheveist 73,494,000 btisliela ttromt,34s,300 &erea, and in Alberta. 28g8g9,600 bushela from' 1,g71,1.00 acres.- , At a time when it was tholight that Germs* wanted to get is foots' hold in lifollancl Diamp,rekl&mi the Thiteh Ambassador stood watching .review of the y. As a well set up body Of Meat Marched past the ArahassadOr said t -"Fine Soldiers, button short." Then eanie the. IdGeentolieee, heeeseeh six' and teVela feet tall; neitertheleas the Ambassitdor's commenb'. was. the Cromer and Slieringliamk t same sa before "Pint Soldiere,, but. too short," • "Tat, doe your 'your • excellency Mean I" siskedjlistuarelt. . ‘‘/. mean that We can flood Rol. is former the moat iftakonahlefland eight tent eleepe" reekr the • fik, took •fadvantaga of:his . sence finin Egypt to. eacoOrAge all sortsof stories to his detriment? -re- zaidiese hii4 k.4:144gepuis _ tlearafintrioeS"4_ • _ this viay Hussein WAS able to keep his. skirts entirely clear froni 'all intrigues in connection with the Arabi- insurrection, thee- broligh about. the bombardment of MUM- driaa and 'England's military occu- pation �f Egypt --intrigues in which se many 'members of the Ithedival family', were incriminated, and -in which even lebedivo Teetfik himself - was So badly involved, that Lord Randolph Churchill repeatedly in- sisted in the 'House of Commons at Westreittster on his deposition. Not until Abbas Pasha succeeded to the throonetthtonTeivAk's death did Hussein r h eelineepermanentle in Egypt and tetume the ooatipenty of his palace at Cairo. Taeght his experieate of *Rat had virtually been many years of iforeigi! ' exile, and realizing 'flee the English were In Egypt to atity, he determined to refrain from antagonising them in any way. Ile knew that it was with- in the 'power of Lord proiliek • to send him out of --the emintry at twenty-four hours' notiee If he alloWeal liiialaelf in ani way inimieat to the prezence of the Briti5h..,41or ton,. ttiloie4.British Methods: of tt.dromia- 4, So lie„;%itide ttp Stibelete refrain In the very atrieteet ',Manner frail ,politiel. Awl to kresist the'. Pring invitations Of his nephew) Khedive 4.44,114141144, There were nine such areas, no a erect ea ypex s e. 'Tht wounded , . . in . Europe, covered by this ereety,.. a •blue -papered docket.. resting . in a ot ere 0 prieoner'sand rater sent eistoamongg .thein Be•lgiuinoin 1821. Lux-spigeonhole•at the -"Ad...iraity. a a, to the King's. Palaee *Which had 'beeiletiireed info a hospital, to look hetet. the German evoneded. The wounded Overman' is far more hig Britain's shotee from Weston by diffibult to aieal. 'With ..,:,s...re;th_an 'thef,PrV:r6rh:-Pfrt°il-:' thehotiIeait:raftsaiYell:teeinletiigEngTlsh The Gernuee breaks down -Very easi- 44 9.4 a •emheixg, Switzerland,e_etee pawing: in at differetre dates later on. The great significance' of •.these treaties is that they indicate a defi- wee .ettle neer, .Yeer. -Agee and ,tiola the British seaplane Service le a solid bulwark between Britain and its foes. etiget ,dey itamembeesorre guard- • "arena of war. do with this rapid growth, hi ss. .a» • An . • . organizer arid ss 7.S . 'rettleAS -wheteeetiffering„ ' The Tleiguin, teeete, was supereed? ,tion to being a , ciaver :. -ed- by a later; one, hearing. date -al -a, commander et men,- thie fameas naval The German soldier iseasier to 1839, and eel were in 'fill force nest man is,a. bete Byers and few men aari ha:P;(11 than the dersnall offfeere who effect, when the Present ,great war thandle tie great 120 horsepower sea- eseofight against, an operation and, began, ,The chiepurpose of theet !planes. of the naVy so skillfulla. These sontetimes beeoraelepitiable object. f: • nee. machines weigh over elie ton, and they • * s: , , eese--;-ege•-•-e ' agreements, wee 'tee tetitoee the have to be landed .on Ocean rollers itt. • , - . Oefeetive.Vision. sibility,of .tiny eine nation gitining at ' l' S. aug Or advantage ovet its iseighbor' by dea a etieed 111XtY miles an.h°nr; 'C)n She was of a Somewhat h h stroying or annexing a region in which other elowete were interesely -interested, and hoe so mete to pre- tectt the weak nation from • - • • This system of .neutralization was greatly strengthened by the second kague ,Conference in 1907, whicb. adopted a doter- on "theXt,lighte and bulk& of Neutral Powe," and the firat signature to this Was by a distingnished• official representative of the German Geveronient, Each of t,he signatory nations '(and .this include s (4reat, Britain), .gained' the right to demand and expect that Malt, of the other' powers would vio- late the' neutrality of anyof the dates enumi erated n tho otreaty in ease of war, Each Agreed to keep "hands oil" entirely, so that the others might have no excuse for laying hands, on I But, independent of all treaties or Hague Conven- tions, the tight of any .state to re. Main, ileatial ha9 eVer been reoog- lilted throughout history. estate 1 through the reflection, \ of the waves,. misjudged *the drop to Wtitet and diva ed underneath it, • The force of hitting the.water at high speed ettislited him against the engine at Ina back, but, though stunned by ,the fail,, heentet- aged to lighthis way 'through the wires and struts which threatened' to strangle him and ' reaeh the surface. alive. His past training' ati V4 gaiter bag resulted fit the tomeenider developing. hate a typical; "handy Man." In the early dayS, of the War he forsook bis flying for a short .vithile and'Ildok 4ott- Viand Of , An armored' Motor -car. It was tide vehicle 'which Succeeded jn atelleilating,a lirteggide of Getman cave alry • by dashing into theta at a Ireat speed, mowing many down with -the ear itself, whilst the gunners behind theshot-proof walls, aecounted for the "Atithengli Ih• rded, i. sea id hi, tile ow? uthiptioor fo considereti to be the 14esi type of aviarr,..for. •tlie reeldeeetrieee Of youth in It etiee Is leavened by the /*pet* • eaturee and, being on a' shopping e)cppdition with a friend, happened to catch a glimpse of• aequaint- once see did not' wish to recognize. . "Let us go this way past the silk eounter, I pat Sir* sOMeene don't care to. meet," ' "Who. is she /".• esked her :friend, who did not See anyene near them. "Ole some horrid woman with a -genre' on her- face. Of'eourse have only & bowing Aequaintanee with her, and although hsr epee is fame.. Jar I tennoe reinernber her naine.” 'They ,finished. their shopping and the two .wonien found thernseleee at the Caine point where one ot them had scee 41if.a.groOill)ie acquaint- anee, ;• , "There 'She le aguire • 'Why; •do 'believe , glee's been here .all the time " she iiaid lielliting to the per, 17 quention, woolen I eliheineee ratites; that's yoast..,lf you see in the mite eet thehe j" , • 'day eaery day in the vear, and at. - slight fault. in arrangement meet mead eaarge amount of extra work in a yearrs time. • Stomuy Days Made Useful. Lnetead.sofespendieg: the '.st,orsoe day in loungingsebout,aad ns.pping, -ateuttenealse-theefererieremae ' • a day of profit -to him: There are broken Pieces of harness or leach:St-. . ety-that needwatrefatioilii-.,r- ness needs oiling, eone sick .stick • niaY;iiiesijghletOring, The aternra- day is appoetneetylenthis work. - We know a, man who has built a • toolhonse for sterme slay .4 • , Here he mends harness, :settee:4 ie -• , • arts- for ineelriteery, mentrfneteres - new double and. single trees ed. re- '• • nleee . the broken Dees. Oftele`• he, - ma es some e'lietreire coev.enieei78"1"-Y- . • hop ' heme.a. ii"Trares. aa pa often-eunitone-oieieeeoe- Wee than the stormy.daysniee-eim, , • TOWN IS' SAVED. Bat RABill. • _ , en ral That Pod sio' Would Be Good. 6t'own from eant.rii*c.:io:bner:°byl: taltie:Ont!--"1 ,hiterests of the aerman goner- „ mans. Some of.the inhabitants having. al:imagining-that alliiii.Fa'aere seversi, mord traltore, Ihreatelied to burn the been found guilty a espionage in the helm, a sma own ne of Alsace, says the Ilebrew Standard, has been- instrumental lir skiing tee - The tetrer stotrinick.aeht tillgetellrsacpbehallperipilipebaelrgteortaheetlesrs:1; end ,spare, tbe WWII. Attired in. his canonicals and wearing4iia 'rallis and ' • Tephillin, the Octogenarian rabbi ere, ceeded to the general's quartera and Offered himself as a' heataaattortlio loyalty of populattoe. lin renilne. • ed the geiteral .ef 'God's proneeesto Abraham that sodom would be• spared • If ten righteous ;mini could be fowl; • The generat. atas touched by, the rabbi's earrieatnesa. that he deelded te • ahanken his cruel intention, •at o same time .reftislag ,to accept' the rabbee Offer - to be hostage for the 't5wiispeoPle's geed -conduct. • . . 'When n, bit of -sunshine hits y After passing of a cloade • Arid a fit of laughter ,gits ye, ' AA' yet spiiie 1.5 f-oeline proud Don't forget to up 'and fling it' ' At a. soul that's Iteeling bins, Poi.- the niinu te that yeti iling it - 110/•g 4 booteetteng to you— . • 4 "You. claini . that you love tine,' said Gladys..t, "Affd ci / do," re. • .spowled Clarente. fervently. " "Do you love ii -4' enough to die ifor ave she continued. litirdlst, that," said Clarence, "heeetelet „ mine,•you 'see, ia an love. k. • ss 0 • 4