The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-12-02, Page 6•75,11Ferale'rePrere''''
et.
""r•
'
The Kuonehner Neust Nachrichten
INiluti sither meterials required pices f melt
in tbe
Nay* kat the ruinoue re
'production of beer, "mirky compel the
brewers to eloee down. .According to
wAn, ALL Nion FoR thanlieurolvinernmLort Aunee4ibogeurt tthoe Prissizte.
MARKET OPENING. comperetive orclere intended to atop
the emote of milk end cream. The
. Government else will teke the butter
hoe mete Ape Women, as NMI as :teierket in hand.
chilaren. ewer for &Idler"'
Leavings.
In. spite of official aSSUrailte Of
the German Government that it is
abletoecope with all probleras grow-
ing out of a shertage of food supplies,
neutral travellers declare ttat the • Brief Story of Smile Famous British
food -critiis- in Germany is most seri- Sea Battlee,
one, save the New York Store The ' There are no more thrilling. stories
. shortage in necessary articlea of diet .
,,,e, tin naval historY than those a great
ie acutely felt throughout the empe-e,i sea dews, in. which one . Alp Ilas
and riots of grave propeetione are ifolight Another Until, With shattered
ec. miring in the leading eitws. These eteeraehe, the beaten vessel's ensign
statement* are borne out by the Ger-leae fluttered down 44 algnai of defeat
I
man newspapers. 'The ' Berlin Vor- • Snell te grim battle. was that of, the
waertst -the leading "gall, a the .50: sturdY little , frigate, Phoenix, .evith
•eialiete *ape ,;‘In Berlin- tfloOsellee .e.f :Francere-promlest-vvarshipi-Did-one.ene-
persons% 'ere liattlieg deily for a, sfnali August day in 180. Thrice, the Pl--
• quantity Of meatand lard. It le,p, den . vented in he shattering broad -
battle when Versolie. are compelled ea ewe before ••-e single- British- - gun
expend time' and strength: all.tbr'ngil spoke; and it was wily When, the ships
the damp, cold autumn night waitiog kiwung parallel, a pistol-ehtit -apart;
. for a scrap of meet,' .Xet whee hap-, :that the gallant little.Phoenit oPened,
pens to therthelMandS who they by day fire, and broadside answered "'Impede'
wale outside the shops in the municl- aide,. sweeping :the- decks with w Or-
iel. centre- for the sale of meat iuld eade• oflestreetion. • : ... ,' '`.„ . . ,,,
fat? Woes of, people crush toge- When, in the Airy of conflict, the
. flier long before the operunghoue of '
. ' „Plaeee. , As aeon as the markets are
°Oiled they nearly 'tear, the: 'cloth*
.one another's backs in order to get
the coveted treasure.- .
.• According to the Tageblatt, the
comealeeeriat arrangement* to supply
the German treops at Gallipoli Wu
broken lown hopelessIT. •
NO QUARTER,ASNED.
^
WAR HAS BNi)EARED THEM TO ITA IAN PEOP
11,
'
• . • The Icing:, of, Italy Is • at the, front... The queen itg e -e117. eereteheeett part az, hospital •
Mirk and ,Oqierpaitriatie eirott. • The lonAge, PrheceeTheibeerpt teeeletleYe WAS tOket tte the war, zone, .
two. veseels 'crashed,' tbget/IF ,a244. • endearekthan. ever to the 'peoPle'by' their.
akither-- could being her guns to .bear- , . • ,
on the other, the'Plioenbanien drage-
ged their aftermost main -deck cannon
to the Cabin, and, through an qinpro-
vised portinile,. swept the Didozi's deck
again and again. •
Thus for half an hour- the battle
raged, fiercely until the Phoenix at
last broke away from the deadly ern -
brace a shattered- wreck her -Masts
gone, her decks swimming with
'whore heewes. pennitted to, -get glim of- l‘b.0 Eg; otjtatV 114-114C9146:.
01411,vgaott., ,14tetest* ^Vut..1kAtimuz '
• , • .
Sample Episode.
"The Crush' at the corner of Eltlena,
and Thaer streets is tremendous.
'Here the municipality sells lard,- fro-
zen meets and fresh mutton. Numee4
oas women, though repeatedly knock -
REGAINED .THEIR FREEDOM.
•
Brktish Prisoners Of War Cut Barbed.
'Wires and Flee.
An interesting account of the es-
cape froin Germany of „pep, prisoners
of war, one a sergeant and the other
•ed down end injured, wait for hours. a pr,ivate of a British light infantry
blood. Then" she opened her broad-
Thitusands of would-be PUrshasera' sides again arid Peured SU& a de- l'egiment' has st "'colas to hght
through the audience granted by the,
mostly 'women, •remain, some fainting luge of shot that withiii a few min -
with. fatigue„ during -the whole night, Ring at Buckinghani Palace to Ser-
utes, the Didon struck her flag in
„braving the' cold And ,drenching show- .geant Birley and Private liAivorth. I
acknowledgment that she was beaten
ers„ On, the afterneen of Wednesday • -
and tau o no ,Inore. ,
numerout4 'women assembled to be in
EquallY gallant was the Arethinsai a
- good time when they opened Thurs.;
stumpy, `little 'British 'frigate, when
day mornitig,- • but . they were 'driven
she tackled'', the 'Belle Pottle, of, , twice
away by the police, and were not al -
her size and crew, .off Brest, in 1778
lonred, to assemble again until' even -
For two Ileum the .:Arethusa hung
ang. -There were. hundreds eupphed doggedly to. the heels of the French-
. , with stools and hissocks,•which they
_placed aloeg the. walls. Here theY man, who vainly 'tried to shake her
,, ,offe fighting every yard of the Way
waited the livelong night, , , •
. ' • , . • - until her masts -a
tumbled tangled
Thousands. Net Served. :' , ;wreck on her dealt,' -'
"The hohtlis 'were • opened and,:the ; ' It .whs Only \When the Belle Poule,
sale went. on mita ten e'elock.. :he struggled, like' a broken -Winged Iiird,,•
lene larva lighte,-4. ne, ek.„*. Vete:* e
the4me enteall* t laligh.t mrees.. NVe. orai,
. . S . Y. SCHOOL the sweltering heat, and get every
/Wow, eegineere and stokers t011.in
till, ette of t.'vie - sz,..:.ss t:tta t;/"A t4* • ' ounce Of po‘ver from the engines. All
stetharttlreealrt4 ezelretemillme:174.e,7,' .. IN' "EReD;AcTs.IIOLuE4NAL. LESSON,. wain' tseilresnta'nsdaveneuffolredttehrosbilsohf tohje the
. .
aged.to steer ee-te. Streuna 4-4-t4.. r,.:*
THE BATTLESHIP
IN OPERATION
EVERY MAN IS AT BIS STATION
OUT 010-$11611T.
Pletnring the Seneations Obtained
On a Dreadnought In
Battle: •
In the piping thrice of peac;
Dreadnought le an excellent vessel en
which to go for a -cruise.
In many %tee she is preferable to
te liner., The fittings. may not be• 30
nee the cooling so perfect.
But she Is very 01001404e, 'She is
large and roomy. Everything is plain
eild there for' a purpose; and every,
nook and cranny has that, spick -end-'
blisineoslike ap*art‘nce, 'whieb
Is the hell.inark of the 'British Neyee
end chunot he imitated. by any vessel
outside the. Service,
aght:•-Tanction-r-ia:
ha;
Cleared fet the frOtY:' sho ploughs
her 'way throng* the seasinileareh:
of her foe. She ii -stripped emerY-:
Alkioa OM is. not, -absolutely. enteete
Her. decks are deserted; -Eveier
Men IS "at: his Station, out of eight; •
the turrets* the '`gaie crews .ent,,
arhile „and '‘.-sleep, eieVer. 'ye -Airings
eiVay: from the -Minister weapons; and
ready for instant action. • ,•
• °fib; Fray:
and, to my rAinkthe t•T•„g At .leat. the eheray's 'fleet can 'he'
eenneeree••••
seen, away shit on the horizon, A thrill
the greateA Pet sem- • • • of emotten stirs every breast, from
gut the zn• 114..**42' fe•.*--tt425;a4*'s rrafe and ,fAune the commander to the huinblest sta-
ble, heart I seemed esestean.1 ..strezia, .4e alma: 20; 'Golden er.: The hatches are battened down.
Mat made en erciled • . The vessel is practically hermetically
; Prov,. .
sentey. wanosa lutoz zalswei•-sa sealed. The pumps which sepply the
. King George personally inie...e6cited, exit, free sn'eze: Vszn ena 'az' 'o•-z4fme- I Tee, r t, Ts elk Amer witli air begin to throb.
ani*.e. sea
-the two soldiers at great length re-, gest eentty„ as:lee le:5 icee-zsel rise Every man is at attention; •
Orem*, 2.40. : . Here and • there a face Is -deadly
garding their escape. The stiry tad a linft 0 Up7.--X,%.
1•
by ;Sergeant Birley :was pa•reieularly -rtii'tt-n trees& feer 1.W ysel#, • . • pale arid twitehes., .Near bY ay man
interesting; !tare ,ezola get tAe.' scat ed e4-eter,- Gave triTAlfel-See Kings is clenching -his fists so trey that
"It took us just -fear deys and fs'ee =41113117"We =Ca 2$14,-amEtktty as 4. 24 IV. 25; 2 Chron. 17. Il. Part the nails dig into the pa s of his
nights to get free of `. German • sag.
after we hadoncebroken 444 -,Q",1••• *,22.r
prison Westphalia," the sergeant
said. • "I. went to the front Ircitit
'regiment, the First Gloucester's, ,as
soon _cis the Nirge broke out, and was
captured On .October 29, 1914, near
y... .411.4;e:the' harbor, Y.:Y.P-r-0,e---9Ethe'w.IY the
police let the people -thnoughthehar:-
Arethima eut •,:awaY .; her .eaPP WeStPlialin*-n- were Weft"-
. Tiers.; hafthes. . :At ,9.30 there. ;Were: • that .: the
about a euttnre4 posens. in the wreckage, and and dragged herself re- roughly treated. One night ,fifty,
heaths., . No one ,is alIored„de after iuctantly eray from her prey, -,. three of .Us were locked in a church'
.. these have been. a*Ved:'' ' About ; a As -long. as the British flag flies, the. and had nothing to eat, for more than
• _ eiii,useme.;sem fame of Captain Broke and his stout, ...twentY-foure hears. At last they
emPtied baeket' of- hiciiihlihreid:On
linfortenetes -had :waited Vain Alf Mee Shannoni
*en told ns that for three or four ,Oloaapeeke;:meerice.rs
in e ,etreet. Numerous _woe alger far their Yiet°0
nighte theybad been, waitingepatientin -
ly for the doors to epee, but.' 'could ser,: off Boston, earie,, peel . three of us vere crammed lido a
When .Broke- -challenged 'the Oheia-: railway Van for fiftisieekhours.
finest war-ves7 .ter, Ourjhe. theZtrain journeY fifty.
To the floer hnd left ue a becket-O$ WC-
inelilneirt;ds.t.Orgoert,:roo.uolie.
; Over the
•
tieve'r•get.t"w4rd The 'had Pealfen-tePtainto cemeeut 'Of hatbor
EtYthoeneeef erfe'lwVe.
ht ' him; ".to the death,' the
to go-horee ea& tithe with empty has, t.irta g
kets. They complained of tiM- unfelt-. 'American.,.skiPper -Iiimpeci at the-inee. 'We-hatlesome• scraPs--ag.beead. .
ness of the methods',employed. dig:. tation„ a smile Of aniusenient at the „ `:',At the Carefel" Made several plans
.-- - Thirte,en Minutes After the first. snots able opPortunity... I managed ,to 'get
• y,r("ep. Fell 1n milting; .-; were exeltatged: the 'British fieg, was Myself transferred to •ahether camp
"In another: 'strict in the north n flying over his ship, and he was ' a -and there hegan to .malee ;-•rey plans
rirt ofrBoxlvi 76611eZ -the-vrea mg dyirierrikil.--" • . • . .• • -nhzch have • succeededSQ welh
City," thereAlso have been establish. •At the first leaping into . flame of. • "It was not an easy Matter" -The
• ed selling places for haeone„-hain., fat the Sherindi'a side,- her .-rival's deck eemp was,of eQliTSO,, euerounded by
and lerd,•-• At one of these-the.creveds. was ;shattered ;front' stem to ;Stern; a high 'barbed -Wire fencing, On each
gather early, though they are refused hundred Men !weremeln down, and of its four frohts,a, sentry was .poet-.
eritraiiee„entil 5. &dock. ' Owing to the her boastful captain mortally ,wound- ed and At night four powerful acet„!---
;length of time they eare obliged; to ed. Then began such aninferno as .;
• welt women collapse „ori the pavement the seas bad 'seldom looked on; In six
. and fell in failing fits. .When ' the crowded minutes of the'nethertegione
:
doors aee.,opehed the :Multitude sime the Shahnokwas struck by 158 shots,
ply, stampede; to the -stalls where the her rival- by 3621: eaeh vessel Was
• fats and lard are stored, like a Wild ".shattered tesplinters."- Theh, with
• mountain 'torrent. The other day It 'a folio* me rho can, "Broke leaped
-was ennouneecl.,.-thatetheesale-eWOuld aboard-the-Chesapeakee.-
take place Only...at, 7 o'clock in the •Before the .sweep and thrust of 13ri-:.;
morning. Most Meet Of the iveniert in the tish, swords the American sailors fled
• district did not know of the _change, panic-stricken, Otte leaping- oVeie
and. assembled at the usual afternoon board,..others.ruthing below, no man
hour. Therewere hundreds of them. pnusing in his terror to. obey his dy:-
",' ,
They *Mild' not go away ;although itig 'captain's order: "Brew her up;
...they, were told Of the change in the blow her up." In thirteen iniriales th
- 'hoer. Thus Many malted all through' battle was .Won, and the' British -flag• -
the night. In heltee hour -every -was' flying proudly over Anieriea's
.serati..of bacon and lard dcsap-' 'proudest warship.
peered from ; the. mArket.",
• ; . „
Leaving i of ..Dinners.
The .. inieglischee Rundschan
"Can nothing be done to mid the pite:
furspectaele of which the Berlin. milk.,
'tory depots ;mid -baiyaelcs are Oen-
staiitly :the :.tterie?' ' :Towards poen,
-day afteirday, a. Motley. crowd asSenci-
- hies at the aocirs composed, -not of
- •
Soldiers"- in add grey, but -of shame .
faced drahmen and, women., ,ancient,
shrivelled, little -giende
• mothers, old- men,- young- women 'and-,
- With the most gra-
•' etesque receptacles. TheY :whit.pa;
.tientlY foranbeer and a half, tome-
• tinies in a, ponies ram, until the cook-
house • sweeper . appears carrying
huge tin saucepan -containing the leav-
- ings the:Solcliere„dienere,,pieeee•ef.
fat •meat and .bone,. bread, vita -tees;
• _tied table 'beet of MI kinds; an :un-
apeakable; sloppy
rhern-Pudenc.-e-...on or escaping, hnt-neker-, got -a -favor-
,
we zozta zn *-he eXIMW4d7312M*.. POI!' a t4e• tribute whieh the .Anuthenites
: ?mg the nietit a. celnps-ss vaktch't irad ,...„,„ Ts_, .. . •
22S 2 mal itlie2d. ' " ' . "''''' amen Wat evidently •a eight to
, ...me -6:4y reed we. bad a•aa. a tele pastnanre his Cattle' in -•tere Ampionite
histaits andya little ehooaste When- cOulitry • (see, verse 10). .
9.. The corner gate -:--Probably t
he
ever We came near a farm the retch
dogs, herked. In the nights. tilleAtifo61-
g.,;17..tevahtortehe4-ienonrothrtrlieswtaiath;plyel•vo;
lowed the clie alwavs_e_Melt
_ __ , , . . . — .
e'lt:1
we were :etealing Apples m .the •• ore e. Valley o mnom see 2 Kings._ worse than the actual fight The
The yalley, gate - , reodein
'The I- b •.' t'
Chards, For three days -we had no 14- 13)- ' ' - : ' ' . : '
. raves feels his lips and,tongue grow
other food but apples. '. . - , . • hot and parched, his heart throb,'
• "It wasnft safe to travel by dey. Al- .felinta" gate which leads the: Valley; •thid -xhi•
of Hinnom. • - s blood become And dull e
,
though re had plenty of tobaeco I
had -laid' it .clown that there -wae lot- ' 10. -Built...Towers---e- Pilmarily for
defense troth Marauding bands,„:
be -.no smoking:day or night until -we :
were 'out otethe country. ;The 'szn.97,1 - The wilderneasseeTo7the shut)] aini
hands.
But these are not Ogee of coward-
ice. Every boxer .knows thesuepense
of the momenta before the mimic bat-
tle pf the ring commences., But when
there is nothing to do. but wait for a
real battle the suspense is terriblel
--Thoseinterminable-neinittee are' far
Boom! The. roar of , a 13.5 gut
ectoe,s like- a thunderclap:- The sus-,
pense is over, - • '
southeast of Jerusalem extending Gun -answers guri. The afinnunitimi
of English ' tobacco .reight .. easily 'put
.an inquisitive' German en.cair track, ifrom the Western 'shores 'of the Dead hoists rattle and whir, the breech
See toward Beersheba - - , . meehanism glides softly; to and fro, a
"When •ive actually crossed the , omehes-pause,-therleaLlaciarse. voice
-frontier into =Holland. we wereqii. a!. . jfewed out many cisterns =Reser- gives an order.
.pretty bad eonditien, •so cramped with I voirscnt ;IMO the natural rock and. '' A belch of flame, a deafening Crash,
'gelling out in the Wei- and our feet covered et the top except for a Small
• • t• and the :shell goes shrieking' On -its
swo en and bleeding we could- hardly , aperture. -These were for storing.the
sthrict-,The-"first Defeh farmhouse $ rairifalL7.'731111iy. remains of such are ArrandloLdestreeti.: ...
•
. When the Guns Bark.
eves a godeend.".'• • - . . . • encountered by the pranellexelh Pales=
• . ' -• - , - 4.-„-.- - !`-` - .tine, to-daz • " - ,...--;-%c' ' '. - ''• -
Ivniiiing.: stiew, for ew... °waled: . --, the ekee-m4-...ee...-- The eeeeeetene •, alai ... The -Dreadnought rockS and shucir
the suirsi Village of Chicidingfold,.
ing made for the wounded weekly in
Over '21,000 walking sticks are he-
. hits of Judma.and the sen Presently,
the Jordan on the plateau of 1.1:' .th .. '
The plaire_7:Th.9' rieh grazillg. Jana find their .mark, she reelsand quivers
. . . ' presently, when the enemy's gunners
dera With the coneusleion of the guhs.,
o stem to stern as the • shells
. ' to the est of Jerusalein between tie
England. .tighty ' persons Are em- beyond
.. :. T p
hurtle.against her armored sides.
plOYed On the Work. The sticks 'are ..„ t...e ..
.The turrets are veritable hells on
Mostly of bent chestnut wood.' •
, IL Ris weakness (versed- 1.6-21), earth. : Stripped' to the waist, the men
.... - • . , . . ,
swelter in an athiosphere laden with
"ge
,
• DENOUNCED AT "ALTAR. •
. . .
Englishmiirk Protest at A Gernian.
_ .
.. .. - Service._ in.. Leneon. ,.
.
• .. 'There :rhea scene.in. the. German
pliiirch. in MontpelierPlaCe, Broinpten
:Read, London, thglend,. one, Sunday
evening: ' TWHile' the., organist Was,
•pihYing the erolimtery, an .tnglismare
who, with .several friends, was seated
In -A front- pew, eotee....eurile eddressieg.
the eenitel standing in'fierit, of the
Altar, .said ., ' .; . , ...
`Will you eqeduct this'. eerviee in
English?" - . 1 ...,_1..__ s '
• "The paetok replied, "Ii1O, I will not.",
„The .Engliebilieti,-!`Will you express
regret Ter the Zeppeiin raids and re-
quest the 'cheer -potion tie vise :.with
you as a -*sign .: of regret:, foe those
outrages?'" • .. ' ' '
......:The paster --..," 4`hto,, 'I will -hot do
. , Butter and 'Egg Battles. ' . that." ' .. •
' ' • ' The Visitorthen' left his pew,. and
Further details ofriothig at . Aix -la- -
ceetegieveat .. ce.ibrrre, cohleil. ;mid ,Itanding by the. altar -With his face'
eongreggip.neaide,9, John.
Treves: are -litihted-,irr"the--Itheinisehe.--y").t,A4
Englishinin,
"e;Weetfalisehe, Zeitiing.-'' We vial& no .!aY
'hereby deziounee tliii-Gernian Eire...-CrOi•
'.ni3Ore batter -end -egg ,battles 'such as 'ae it blot *on civilization arid eh out -
have • diegrated e the publie Iniirket-
rege op Cltristianity.". . , . • -
place in this andient Ithenieli city," . Ainid Murmurs of dissent from 'the
the newspaper says, onotwithstanding
. chtfgregation, . another. 'Englishinan '
the proirocertion exeessive : prices of '
. food 1110 ',cause the average hetise-
the party . then' left the . Church, e, virice l'• • .
supported Mr. Johnson's 'protest, and
' holder. At the pressent rates, butter .
:arid egg
q are placed- entirely booed with a ,Gerinin accent ebouting •after,
them; "Yoe - pught' to be in COlnee•
- the reach of the average ' eitizene A
Batch,"
.. woman flung tome butter into a; deal,- The .seryiee• was proceeded- with in
' • er'S' fetee, thee .opeeing the „; battle.
Gerenate while outside an indignation
- . Seizing horse eedislies-• and teen:es, meeting wa§ held. A crowd of nearly
men .and women, salesmen. and cus- 800 People eollected, and as the .cork. .
. iotner'oi bombarded' eaeli• other -With: gregatiepleft the ceowd .eane "GOd
"these Infosiles %vith such :forte that PRINCESS DItPSSS SMART.
. blood Ilegot to novit„, solo et the save the Ring." •
-•
, .
ei eembatente danced 'a War4
. dance amid, Prime's, 'dresses have a el;_areciii,
„. haek eta •• of eggs. A horse,. harnessed ..Willievsl"Pratialm- emelt, appeararice„ eel although they
. . , . . .
..
to a Market wagon; was .debberatellr -: • "Of eorirse," said Willie'e, dent,, look well on sliteht people, they are
• -emeared all over with butter, Lumps beet Er, pointing ,h iniiral, "when you particularly adapted, with their lone„
highlribed bead*. :Were- stuck hi: share an apple with • your little` broel'gr awful I i neat: to stout htvras. The
Ole' riotere'itt the hate 61' weli-deeesedther you tieveretake the largest half, one shown herewith ia Ladies' peme
• ierOthen who had' eethe to buy that .4.0 you'?" •"Meetassuredly not," re. journel Puttee •• No.: ftrrii, is inlet-
eamineditle 'with ;erica that:. e'If we plied Willie.".."There 'being but two trated with V. (i,1:frhi.rist fee ed. Pat-
- t -
aro 1111aOle. to at 'i bette and eggs', halves to ith apple there •can be no tern No. 0149, e 011A isting of a melon
'rieither .ehall, rote' I' • • -tt , lineal/0 s -mug, collar • and het The dregs' is
• 15. • Marvellously helped -See verse sneekelind chotteg :feree-s.- -The -heel'
Is intense. • . ' •
16 His -heart Wah'ppeetis
A piece of shell may put the alit -
pride becaihe strong , pump oat of action,- and they 'gasp for
. • .
breath, as, everie Moment the etracie-
- 'TO haill iniense.4.- None but the
pliere-gr: • - -
priests- were allowed to celebrate this' ows-vvoric•
rite:. Hence Ilzxiah% transgression
(verse 18).
,Azariah the priest -The ;high.
priest . (verse 20). .•
With him fourscore priests--UzZiah•
doubtless had a large retinue with
Jum_Azariah, -therefore--;-takes• -a
.• • :strong following, to withstand fizziah
'Witlivforee if. necessary. ' -
-19..The lepreor brake 'forth in ;his
forehead--,Gehhzi w.ai them suddenly
efflieted (see 2' Kings 5. 27)..
:20, They threst him out quIcicly---
l :
!ieiaalas
sowwnintenhe otehnrkliyoo
uet,'himxeums
out, for
7; 16._ 31736). And they wanted, to
get him' away from the' incense Altat tral/* ' •
. Another fragment.; :strikes • down
one of the .gue's efer, and the -sickly
smell of blood is added Id the:nor-ism
of the turret. • .
But the gunners have,.at least, the
satisfaction ,of, knowing how. the en-
g_agement is. 'proceeding. They _see
the coming of the. victory or defeat.
• Down amongst the engines and
boilers' nothing...is known until all Is;
over. • The engineers are tierhaps the
'greatest heroes 76f all: At any ,ino-
inent, and withoutthe slightest ;warn-
ing, a: „torpedo May send the Dread-
nought to her doom. :And the , eee,
gineers g� with like, rata in A
as quickly ae so -ea -to escape
-theeperuilty-, . -•
- , .
• • •• • ,
DECORATED -FOR TIIEFT..
.eSe. the,-;fight..proceeds. •:,MeetES: and
fuerielS*Aye be 'biowirranrat; -Great-
jagged rents apPeat in the hull and
ec s. urffie guris..still thunaer
un -
, til the, victory is won -�r the battered
Jioldier • - rhelkoidereli.a feiriliiiiiieliefore-*Tai
Itieked ,Life -Steel •-•Orders. .tw..0,,tneeea. _pelyetrek. eadaeaget; sie4s
: 'Of Eneine-• With -her 'crew-oflieroes to the -eternal-
.
.Some interesting sidelights on the peace of the 9.ec..aa•-be.ilbond!)1.1
An-
;:.
]etter toiriends in -Surrey, -England,-... • — .
by sI)r.• Charles .t.-• Petter :of. ,Thornton ' '
,e.,.,i•;ec:o.
.:...-:Bti,vhiisnow the;feres I:g -ASPREDI!, A,.7i,S
itrine.Rewl4esi.iart:: N, ,
"The senior caltan is it dretr from ThatChoPin,s Is OWiip::..c ..
of
'Brixton,- Vdio, evidently prefers killing . ---.:-..: , Safety in. IVIti_scer.. ; .. ..
to Curing,..cishe is, a . fighting man, .
._.•,
..,.. .8er:0.,e"-iho•Rnsi,a;..lft.'W„nrpa.wgeavingatdedh6tei10ientk.mr..i1y4niaw4;ft6:th:tiY:it.stiis.hthercill°nas4..knows;6or_rt.irocloi8ie;hd,1iiit,cfiinwiicoougbt4deiochelocalitYaidninwhkh had h' ti lekbt:-i:e4ii
.
from:which theeernereeet the-vcriteirebe--; L.
, sof in. the' Church -of tire fItily: eiriss
the Germ'en trenehei eritete.. • .' , ,
many thnnn. hi... ho eir.ept out 4i,,t,•er, there little° 1840; • It henew 41,4. iklaeo
ofsafete, at; Nollovir. Slieller,s heart.
• -dark .--aed crewling , on hill 'fii.QMaeli.. wa.s aisa..pr(fael,eeft In a caakef, ',when.
under the limbed Wire entartglemente ,
.„• tris pOet WAS (11`.0WrIett. ON Leghorn in
he hate reached the Mermen trenches', ieee his ,body . wao . cremated, by Bk.
leingeundee the parepet, and listoninsr
to their epeech. ••Opee,-.Wheti dittedvere hrgan'yeetai'ritghi:ceielueteltdmthe.e4riled.Teittttwnele
Y'saesyd.
ed, he hurled a couple ' of hoMbe to ..th, tilefereteted. . . . , -.give .t.hem eoinething• elee :to thiek , e,,,hea. King •Itiwart /31,.00. of .seate
:About, that: crept back to safety." "
The isanie "fightipg•doctere' the let-
, , •ter -tette, Wort the military eroest for
alai' .,, Knatehing h pocketbook from. the edge'
of a deiman trench', rliere•.its owner
Fur Set 9149), . • ,
The peekethook tonteined imPortant
. , had 'Aid .it, while lighting -Ilia ...pipe;
novel and attraetive in its diagOntillY. itistreetiohsto Gernian 'troops'. The.
cut waist fasitened high ht the throat lett 'Ake:. tella of the •.youngest sub,
et
; and „finished by -deep ,tiate.evet -eel- in "t e writer's trent+ ereepiter te the
i
lar. The sleeees are long arta tight. German linett and "ertptering" a boerd
Pattern cuts ill Sigeil 34 to 44 bust on which was writtee, "Warsaw is ta-.
mertsuie, size 36 requiring. ele..yerds (fete!". All 'Britieh ti ootte are Whittle
, of 31i -inch material.- ,, • • for the Word to .go forward arta lobe...
Patterns, 15 emits 'each, ewe be Our- eig for tee.he geitit p'risli," ,the letter
chased ,at your local Ladies' tionte eenclildes.' .. '
. journal dealer,' or from The Rome •
.4. •
London'ii seven hundred and forty -
!is. miles from Berlin bY Mall r9t.10:
lend died in• 1320' hle•heart, tao, wee
preserVed in a casket. , It Wine given
to 'his friend, Sir' Jamee Votights, to
he buried ie Jeruselem. On his way
Out to ParestitinsiSir .James 'Douglas
fell, fighting against the Moors in
Spain, and a&h� fell he threw the
t1t-00100 relic 'before hint in,' • the
battlefield„.rolrig• out,: "Now vette -otk-,
wai:d• as thou wert wont and Douglas
.will folio* thee oe
•
The heekt was foetid next. day by
SiteSinion Ugh, who brought ifback
to. Seotlaed, where it was buried in
the Monastety Of Melrose, &Wend.
Four out of ItIO lest •nitie Crate of
Itesela have .been assassinated; •
I Pattern Company, 188 Otoege Street,
1Toronto, Ontario.
•
•
LIMB FOR BRITISH SOLDIE110).
IN TON TAMMUZ% .
•
Many Funds Stalled • in England. Ex-
pected to Reach TataI;af
$8,000,000. •
Santa 'Olautt is malting Wady for a'
dizzy whirl tiri the lines of the British .
soldiers at -the. front. Rio thousand
of agents in Greet Britain are Welly
At work now, Accumulating the things
Banta will leave for the fighters on
the battlefields, writes London cor-
respondent. - '
He starts his. gigantic trip by,
ing on the, soldiers in Belgium, and
from there pies on through to Franco
and :the "Balkans. Ile won't skip Any
of the men in khaki, ^ •
.Chrietniati JO the trenches is to be
the biggest.. thing--Britai'- ia".nalc
it, A score or more .4, organisations
are hard. at. it, getting fends with,
which te buy all manner- of things to' e
cheer up -the. British Tommy end let
hiln,lino* the folk at home are al.
ivairS,'Oiahiag., of hini;,
Newspapers are runnieg.christmes
funds, arid and the public reeponlie lute
been heerty. AlreedY": with the funds
scarcely two two, weeks goingt aPPrOcie
.reetely ,$150,00Q.. has .been raintedtPutt•
a tremendous lot More is needed 'to tOq4
complish. all that Great 'Britain wants
to deer& the soldiers in the field. It
is calculated that approximately
$3,000,000 either in money or article
contributed will be .needed to round ,
out a proper. Christmas.
While a fund of $8,000,000 may lools
`formidable, it won't -be' 00 difficult to
get. The newspaper funds, it is esti.-
mated, will produce well over $2,000,-
000 of it, while private cash-gonations •
to the various organizations, togethei
With contributions of articles that will
begin: to flow in within a mOntli's
time, will Make up the rest.
Queen Alexandra, always aloft in
't.everY.- move in'aid-Oftet -cOuttryniele"
.is patroness of one organization thief
is devoting itself to accumulating
articles of wearing apparel, Such as
stockings, Mufflers and haediterchiefs,
badly needed hi, the soldier -in the bit.
ierlY cold weather. This organiza-
tion, of which leidY.Paget is a inera-
ber, has already. obtained enough to
fill 10 carloads of stuff for Santa' to ;
carie alohg with 'hint.
Other organizations workingalong.
the eame lines. have the suPport of
the Duchess of Mainchester, the Duch-.; •
ess of Marlborough, and many other
wives 'Of titled Englishmen. When .
the final accUmulations of all of these
aides te Santa Claus have. been Com- --
pleted it 'is. expected' that every sole • -
tiler in the trenehes will find some
useful gift of wearing apparel deposi-
ted in his dug -out on Christrxias Day.
_Thatje Bury -§0 e t
the front is -to ,get a Christmas box
with these things in itelialf a pound
of tobacco, two pounds of candy, .a
phim 13 -lidding, 100 cigarettes, an a
box. of chocolates.
'It may..be that the boxes will be
even •moreetilentifully filled. -All de- -
pends on, how much. money is forth--
ioniing.' ,The Christmas tent as plan-
ned now costs each donor $1.25, That
is the rock -bottom, wholesale prime'
to buy.the same thing at retail would
cost $2.25". The wholesalershave put.
the figure § dO as their share of the •
Christmas fund, I' of them are!
ziviiit handsome .cash dohations be- '
:sidtistmas-. 'feed matinees are. •now .
making :their appearance at the thea-
tres, and a geed deal of money is th-
tabled in_thatTh
,way—e actors. net,
only, give their services gratis for
these 'matinees, but aresending along
cash contributions as Well.
Sfr.1.1erbert ,Tree heads grime of.
.aetor4rianagers whO are :helping the
Christmas project. Harry Lauder is
another. In sending his "bit" te ,the
fund 'the -Scot& comedian *rote: "If -
any Britisher this Christmas deserves.
a good Christmas, it's our men itt the •
froht.ir
Churches throughout the British
rslee arehaving sewing -bees and tak-
ing Up colleetions for • the various •
Christmas- funds. Business hduses,. .
departnient -stores, small shops--4all - •
Are helping swell the lior of silver
and gold to •:buy the huge stack of .
gifts -for --the---men-_gliting-for -the '
colors, • ' • : • '
'ted that:. to assist Santa -
in getting the Many tens of thousands
of -Christnias boices; to-the-ttenchee-
a-Mikhail- Mid steamehip Thies .
to -be :put- at his diapOsal.
se it is said, be, started to the Rai-
kali§ and the -Dardanelles Within a
few weeks, so Will find them all '
thei-e, ready to drop into the'tretiches.
,
FEARED SPROUTING RORSS.',
. •
lilitt,Y-FoUr Veers Ago the Japitpese ,
. • •
Avoided Mille , ,
": The first Japanese 4(114l1s
lie,with-finitigivirigs leat -hieee,„sprotttee- _eeeeeeeee
horns like a,,,erriv. That was 54 years
:age. The man that • took ;that. big
chance is Mr. Esulaoi. To -day he is
leor.3encoa. rsand absolutely free 'from
h
At that time Mr. Tsuhoe was an .
apprentice. Ile became ill of it dis-
ease that,baftledake skill of the 44-; •
panes° physicians, so hismaster&di-
ed` in Doctor 'Rephtirn, An American
physician' that bete&in that. district
half 4 century ago..'bactor liepb'urn •
prescribed milk, .one hOttle to hi
"ttilteh".every Morning. The pear' .
boy, believing that the growth of ,
'corns was inevitable, if elle drank .
'toweemilk, begged his lifialifer, hot to
Make him take the •dOetiteg-prescrip-
tion, but his frantic pleae were
There Yes considerable. difficulty -
about getting milk theft .hceauee, AS.
dike was: no demand for '•
• greater port .of the population sharing'
theboy's 'belief that its ,e6netimptiort
was sure to raise horns -there Was no
detity O1 MillcMeh., seine Wee
Obtained. *Olt la Ittpantse Who 'tarok
for a cove ltepl'by a foreigner, • • '••
• . • ,