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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-02-03, Page 6V ▪ ••••••••• WIT VINI. rt• I Tie* manager Was in a" furioua tem- leass St Was a Swiss, or profeesed to bee arid or years he bad controlled the fortunes ef the big hotel with a Parked businese ability; and greatly to the satiefaction of the directora end Shareholders. But, matter* had not been going well. Trade had paesed beyond the stage of sleckneee, for it Was almost stagnant.- aharetheit, and the grim battleship moving moil the distant holism% As Maisie, neat morning, was are ranging her little trinkets, Ithakiette, followed by ii 'big St. Bernard dog, came acres* the eliffe. Khekiette PeUsed to piece something under * stone. The fir -haired sentrYsehenilIOLLAND'S DIFFICULT LOT IN favorite, Ginger -brought his , rill* promptly to the gala* Itheltiette tine NY'AR. swered the **lute and, eas She'' ran down to the lieus4 the sentry took a packet of cigerettes fronl under the Beek Reletes, in Guarded Language, Some Narrow EecaPes • • for Neutrality. . .Ever gime tit* outbreak of the . war the little state over which Queen Willtelmirra rifles her been an tbc edge of an abyss says a despatch from 'The Hague, ••• Holland possesses territory and Strategical poeitienswhich welsh! be Wet 'Useful both to the Teutons % and the lititish.. Scores of incidents have Occurred which might have dragged golland into the 'war. •That the in- dependent. Dutehmenhave avoided the many pitfalls and snares in their ol)naetbmilan?laeonkiRrhgeeel:tioQUcItilene., tahkoillFo°rf-, eign Minister of the Netherlands.', . Subject tO Pressure from Berlin On ,the one side and. from 'London on the other'his every imovement jeal- ously watched by both, surrounded by an army, of awhat. a story of 4 intrigue and counaav,aintrigae he could tell if his lip were free! • • • Some glim sea behind the Scene. Parefully shrouded in official lan- guage, are affordedby the Orange book which , the' Dutch Government has just issued. Itis significant that not a word is saidof the events which Preceded the outbreak of • hoetilitiea. The history of those critical days is still hidden in the archives. . There is a narrow strip ,ba Dutch territory which thrusts its way eolith - ward between Germanyand Belgium. It Was round that strip of territory that theaerrnap hosts poured into Belgium in tb; early days of the war. The invaders moved right along the Dutch frontier. , And something hap- pened, or is alleged to have happened, in that narrow strip, Did Germans 'ross?'" SO GLIMPSES REHM THE SCENES atone. s Ithaltiette buret into Maisie' e beds room like a whirlwind, She pulled hereelf up, and, grinaing the edge ot the table, •gazed. with wondering eyes eyelere owskeme he onetes even_ :atphetograyls in, a silver framei impudent cub! Ravi dare you open Geedneas1 gibe cried. "Wherever MY Private letters!" did'yott get this, Miss Ilartley? It's• The young secretary flushed. , Ginger!" ' . • enly openedone letter,' he said, 417°.4 must be *Ivr°°8`'. dear," said oft' came to m -with the rest of thesMalnle" aWa'inst the *4°0°14 of a correspondence and I opened 445' -s Pure Accident, It was not addressed 8it 'telt the eninr rising in :her ' to youyouperSomilly, but to the ane* Rhakiettee big,' 'Slier eY.P.s gerse Mss 4 • •were watching her, and eltddexaly they "And 1 stipPoSa you read it?"' asked -sTsultled Int° "bngitter" f •ss '41 knew, I knew!" she cried, "You're the Manager, with angry eYea. ' •"Yes; 1 read it," answered the Secres bushing, Miss Barges". " And Ginger tarilrietil' z' l'4)U8t.447rI.likeit,hetterhr "Then go c44to all the boys together. It's and•eleer out!'" blustered the maise isn't. it, now! :7 I Sh411 tell agar- . tkskside by Red, if ,X find.' you hull•Tcsori!-bere". hanging essesee the Pike fivesiesuitee , "If you do, GladY,P, I shall never . from now, VI use my beet to you! Do torOve Year' said. Maisie, her face yot:IL hear an • seariets • !.'Mr. Hepwith deee'not Want „Fred IlepWitkhad his hand on the to Yn°11.: 1.1nYthing, .about nus.. knob of the door. 'lie turned beck and Old he wouldn't have,. gone away with - faced the manager. • • • ' ; out IS word:Or A line; as he dia. And I • "Now, look here," Mi. ,Lugarde„." he 1!..,11,41 :ItRar nothing about , -1 Hep - said grimly-, "Pata British, and On lira,with," she added. ' tish. soup and ism about. fed -up with Fautkiette looked at ber 43retty goy- , some' of you aliens! / other ssess erness ;steadily, with her large brown ,that letter that you are trading hn.vry we.% Miss Hartley," she' Your awn , aecount, end. using the Mine of said, zat her outeaolten' fashiOn; "I Abe. 'firm. ,saw orders for chant- . don't wad! Only, if I didn't want to Vague. and stuff to be sent to Araster- aanro and it '1001,58 nahli labivoverp 'rat' any more about snYbndY" that's liot, the pOnt, The point is cheek Ina photograph away!" it, and raput,you in bed for a week ,Cine of the tires of the .colonel's for repairs!" motor -ear collapse, with the rePert-'ef As Ifel/with Packed his Dag later., ran exploding This was the he thought of , They Were in SecOnd Offence. The 'first "Parteture the sante boat, for " the little .firne, of had occurredthirty. miles away„ and iewel merchants who had ellePies'ed had •delayed them an beim or more, Pretty Maisie AS typist had cellapsed,. Now it Was dark. and shut their office on the outbreak of the war. ,Ilepwith was going to do the straight thing .110W, and if he had been sure Of Maisie he would have done it before. But Maisie had many admirers, end,llepwith was Very much in love!, "It • will mean', Starting the world over, again when I come back," he thought. "Perhaps. I'd better not'see her or say a word Yet. 111 come along At the very last moment, and ask her 'straight out.a On. the Wayto the 'railWay-station aepwith lingered outside , the. pretty. .hoeSe in,*hieh. Maisie resided with her AMA Mildred. Maisie was playing the phut° and •singing liepwith longed to open the gate- and lift the knocker, but he satisfied him - .elf by blowing a 'kiss at the lowered blind. Then he took a firm grip of the heavy 'bag and .turned away. Exactly a Month later, Private Ilea', with, in khaki, looking an inch taller: and as straight as a ramrod, ',SW1.101g. round the corner. of Ow same Street with a drilled step Then he stopped . aghast. ' A motor cal- Was 'clraWn 'up , before alisa Mildred's house. - Miss Mildred came. out, rvith some white; „ fluffy thing tied rouiel her hair, Then • came lVfaisie, wearieg .an opera -cloak and bareheaded.A man followed his 1iess•-suit gleaming and his far over-, .eoat anbuttoned., ' :tgalgarderaniuttered Ilepwitla• ' • The caa drove awes?' end lie heard Maisie laagh.. The •privatestiffened himself, threw back hie head • and that I'll take no ntore impudence , from You! Give me another word of Khaltiette jumped oet of the car. - not geing„te sit in this silly thing any longer," Miss Hartley," she said. "We pan walk home °yea the- cliffS in half an boar easily. Will you come?" Ithakiette set a rapid pace With her long legs, but she did not chatter, and, Maisie had 'time to, .think. She had not ,seen Fred Ileinvith, and she was Very angry with hint. If he had Cared for her at all, even as an ordinary. arietal, ale would net have :gone off• in that -cal:railer. way without A good -by or a letter.' , • . laugarde had tald Ahem that' Pia. With had been turned out of the hotel in .disgrace. To please her aunt she had gone to the theatre with. Lugardei but 1Vlaisie neither liked tite Man nor trusted him. • • "What'a.that?" cried KhakiettaSncl- denly. "Didn't' you see a light,one. qttiala•flasha" . .•esess• dear, I saw nothing,'!, 43tost be blissful imagination," said the -Coloperaatiaughtela "Dad will be sending the laeihnanariaind to lbek for Miss Ilartloy. Do you knew:, I got 'quite aeriaue this' morning, planning the future. I promised to marry 1100 bei0Ved' . Ginger when ,he became captain and won 'the' Victoria sees, who were actually joining the .doonbi, tpienas. 134i‘cts ed letters.the names of their cNeVertheless, ttve. Dutch ships in, large neW sect (compare Acts 15. 5) be: cause- of the tremendaus impulse it . . Maisie, • laughing- •'Yeer slang is ships, were sank and others were sub- had given to the -great doctrine of the eelly.. dreadful i" to tell ane -aa commen private, mind ideoent bIpraoteersiatelda:ttalleics.Waj:Illi)Clieleletie. Lou- hereafter. "And Ruler'S-. The high priests. "And the 'beast had the ithpudence you-Lthat lae knew a giera jolly sight forceful. The Orange' btiela describes Bidets --Ordinary members of the the• tote addressed fo Berlin as 'Ian Sanhedrin. The latter title, (Presby - 7 Xing Peter, ,ot Sere*, is worse. Condition than the Male er the Belgians, In that he la rawithout a obutatm" the -Mleaalt being in Sole poorteesion. kaNC4. pow* %arra is some doalat as to tbe whereabouts. oe King eontempaateda 'Peter of see- m*, •ate hoe been reported te be,in Italy, but the. latest- 'news advioes theeederatrtobant Gas. .at Salonikt and speuit at a, ewe to What that soiesthingswas no Pen THE SUNDAY SC.I1001 is :yet alloseed to put OR paper, for • important personages were involved. Immediately afterwards an tlialanatic personage' arrived post '4nPortant 'INTERNATIONAL LtssoisTv haste from atritain. There are many who believe to this day that the se- .FERRUARIC .6. • • eret visitor was no less a person.than Sir Edward Grey. ` • The time is not yet for the publica- tion of the true story of those critical days. Suffice, it to say that a rumor, happily ill-founded, arose to the .effect that • Germans- troops bad crossed Dutch territory., The Prep.& lama On,s. captured German of- ficer which appeared to prove the as, sertion. This is. -the 'first incident re- lating to the war 'with' which the Dutch Orange book deals. -The com- mander-in-chief atalie Dtch army; General Snyclers, Instituted an *- spiry. The; result , Proved that Ger- man troops bad not crossea Dutch territory. That was ,the nest: danger safely passed. . • •- • - Subinaaine. Patient- a 7 - 'German submarines -were-,a Prolific, source of anxiety' to. the Dutch - the earlyalays Of the war •on ean- niefee. The „ Dutch arda practical people. They were the first to paint Lesson. vir. -.The Boldness of Peter and John, Acts 4. 1-31 Golden , Text: 1 or. 16. 13. The scene is the Sanhedrin and the inquisition is. in the hands oethe.Sed-. ducee artstocracy, the "high priests"; that is, the ale who by grace of the Roman' governor was reigning at the time, Caiaphas, and the living ex -high peiests Haman the father-in-law of. Caiapa'as at'their head, and members of "the kindred of the high priest" who might at an Y time be appointed to the pontificate. 'Luke represents their special 'conceal+ at the nemesia which had overtaken their judicial mullet of theNazareneNow Us resurrection proclaimed .lay .reany wit- nesses and attested by • undeniable aniratclea, was himiliating them in their standing debate With the ,Platari- p het . Marched oa, but his iips were a ...t. a, -'.e ' ' ' ' - emphatic paoteet "' lead' adds that the ders in Greek) •Was taken' over" from 1" e A dark cloud' drifted over the m ' n ''.Jews -who'' . ing.• • ' - ' farThaeugh_tha_ltatehea,41.aistu-- _07---, -German Government was asked- to theaashared it with hea- state Whether the series of a ad s re- ,h -----ben re gmns, as the Egyptian -by the sea, Paint of tightttaellthle.,dlike presented a change hi ,pailaya name the Christian church. See• Acts 22. 5.• IL - aster.. Then Maisie staggered in the 4 gloom,. arid nearly' fell. The. cry of it came about that the attacks, both 9. We -Emphatic, like ye in verse•e from under the, water and the air, n-ielmaein wloirdkefyooruarpEr7immiinnaerrd-aiAnquteircih-:,. Ehaltlefte nursed one' stint* .black- 'terror that rose to her lips.was frozen' . stockinged leg, and glanced approv- there. - A dark shape lay stretched at .cefieed a's,suddenly as they began. ^ • the Sanhedrin. must naturally begin ingly at Miss Maisie Hartle:at hes' new their feet, and khakiette stooped and * •• •TheZeln3elins. with a fishing inquiry, for it was' not governess. She -was,. the , colonel's touched it. . . • t • The constant •passage of Zeppelins easy 'tci disaiveta a crime in "a benefit • daughter, and she; ad_ arrlyea at the "It's- a- -said. -hoar.selY: away -110-m-a--0-a--faear-tensaluieltafaom donetoa sicj5 maiia". . The work of the mature ,age, of twelve: The colonel "Graciouil It'seGingerta . • attacks on London is another subject Holy Spirit is seen in the akin with himself c• alled her ',gild," but the The lad in Khaki ley on his back; dealt with' in the Orange book. 'Theie which fley redirce their peaseeutors to amous o regiment called her alilialciette." She his eye& cloied, and there.was a smear , f • aircraft never ass over Hol- futility and seize theopportunityt wore an amazingly short , skirt of pleated khaki cloth and a bleuke: to .match, with a big rosette of ribbons. just love Soldiers, Miss Hartley," she . confessed, "and 'specially " the "crutieil khowsthene all but, of „course, kiPE.t. got my favorites. I could drill Mean -just as well as the Sergeant if they'd 'may; let tricaaWetfraatatba, • • • Wt.; Of emir -airs /-cialidn't do that, for it isnit lady=like: But doesn't it Make 'era beek up?" . • alailiaaglatteed.atalter--putA-vee .,anuch amuse , but lather startled. I niade threeabu &st sq's7 :hundred Of blood on his 'forehead. "Oh, Fred, Freda" sobbed Maisie. She .sank upon her kneesi and, lifta ing his head, pressed it against. her breast. • kliakiette still stooped; but she was not looking at theta Her brown eyes had suddenly become fixed and eager. A silYer. arrow of light ijerced. the.: slarknesis dole to the -Th-e-Hagua and a freshaexpresaion• of They -had dootned'him-tuthse ei‘bee Ter huMatravondereworker. -Theactnnearia-ag' :w e - r g et hum Berhe. g at 1 at 1 1 .), an now sop 0 always•be ranembered, Madame Patti, ! • " oR LONDON. ATF verge of the cliff, about three Irtunired . yards away., " e -r eat k 4. • f • f the two stories malms us rpeog- a_.----.: ze afresh that both 'signs" '& '."•' is an assiduous - theatre -goer and 1. land on their way to London. The exalt' their living Master.in the most reason is simple. As long as they do convincing way. By what means - not Pass over Dutch territory the Gov- Margin "in whom"; anticipates the in there.' exists no ilifferept"(compare Gal .1, 6) "mime under the sky than this which is God's gift' among men. that by its peteei we eturselvea--,Wet the privileged people of God-anest be saved•if, weaareta-b44aYed at 1.3 Ibleatneda-The ward constant- ly us'eal in the Egyptian PapYri fora ReMedY for Knocidnir Meter. One of the +mat things with which the autoist has to contend mechanical-, levy Iiisn here40 a;seeilitonto g lulnaqt tub ()of pessisrohonteri rings, filling and short-circuiting the spark not trouble sooner or later, writes C. I3roleew, • , There are various reeeeni for the accUMulation of carbon, such; as poor gas, defectiVe ignition, insuffieient Ip4revsesuarsesiegnuclettwarsonga mcaixutsreo,fbteiatirown 'trouble and knocking a too high eala indet -compreesion... • Too • high cOMpreselora occasions ; Inteavehtheorf the knock onrgreirialyreasaseisaingend; cehdalamibthei.44evirtaitiutta:-Seihz aa.`eintboornap jests/1104 ,siee -te get a certain compression in pounds per Square jamb, the nearer we can get to the Rola • 0f4 preignition 'without •actuallY.reaching preignition the More •Officient will the engine be. Preignitima, of cetirse,-would Imam ,a knock. • , ; theAeognilenissalonnY'fi.nigatilret4ltucetttiraesrhsigtakaas they dare, with the result that when the carbon forms; the size of the com- pression chamber is reduced awl the Fessare is 'raised to Snell a degree that it will cause pre-ignition and its resultant knock. When a monufactur- er riu thathis engine is preof against -carbon and the knocking oc- casioned thereby, he is pi -oh -ably try- ing to offset more serious "knacks' the ear is receiving from disgruntled users. A friend of mine has a four - cylinder engine in one of the later models of a tvell-known car of high wed and power. On several WA - Mons We have been out driving in and 0 • o Por the citY Widener about ltgO we seemed to alWaYe have trou I. with knocking Jo, cliMbing kills. OR, one trip my,friend bad the carbon ' burned out carefully heferusitlarting: About the time We reached the end of the. journey the engine began to knock enthe,., hills from the collectlen -. of .carbon. On our ,.eturn to the •el.tY he had the carbon Inwood out agape and the knock ceased, . , ° • , -, $ advised biro- to raise the cylinder i etnefourth of an inch by 4 fibre IMO . ket under each cylinder casting, thus ^ increasing the capacity of the eylin- dere and naturally lessening Om con" • troika, lie also had fa) adjust thta .Water connection and raise the valve pooh rads; and a few things of that sort, When I lost saw hire' he had run. the car 2;000 mike since UMW the change, and it Was Ptat beginniaig 'IF 'alma* alfras •of kneekiAla Under Se- vere cenditions, iiiclicatipg that th cylinders-needed to have carben. reIneYed.'" •" ' • s .•• • . -, . . . Where" the knock Js .caused in • 'ilifilt''' • way by a slight compreaeleat iocreasel.°, it indicates that the manufacturer hadi put the Pressure as OA ,as the's en- . gine, would stand, and the only way to cure it is by raising the cylinders or. lowering the pistons by having short, ' er reds cast. The gasket I have OS- Cribed: is the sleepiest method. The chauffeur and the auto ownet whit learn this remedy for knocking, due lo 'carbon and high eompretzeien, will be *aped a lot of we -try end be en- abled to cure the engine's ills, or have it done at the shop. But that carbon accumulation will cause any of the, Ass high-powered engines to knock .' and N ' the only way to curelt is teeleslon the , i aamareasioa. Also thea Only simple way to lower the- compression is ate . a'aa' raise' the cylinder 'With a fibre 'gasket: • a , PURELY PERSONAL ••••• , 4P Chatty Paragraphs About Some Human people. • Lord Knollys has a collection of thirty-two rings given. him by differ- ent Royalties. Wince Alexander of Tireelttwearst a man or woman who cannot wade,. geld and enamel wrist -watch which These academie persons affected i'airtioiniitthPereTeseanrt. to his Royal Highness regard Jesus himself (John '47* 15) and his disciples as Mere illiterates, gomyedilnlee•s0D,..uisse:onw, .,hacetiPnrgi,naesesssectatrayrays TOok-kaewledge-The imperfect tense in. the Geese suggests that the reeog- •itt)ectelyre" 0R00Yvaelr Highness. 'The s Vah(laPy.rineess P.i.tiam_ of :hia theughts stYle.4ePt UJu preSsieg itself upon them throughoilt Thesilyer inkstand in Mr, McICen- the address summarized in verses 8-12: taeee'inrotlosalo abty.th.feolartryi:tfisohurTicebeasnureyeub6ar.: 15. How did Luke learn. the stab stance of this consultation behind of the Exchequer. It was presented to P'itt When Chancellor by the•Otthinet closed doors? In Acta 26. 11' we have the confession of one: wha voted th'ere. -Mr. Marconi bas rain in his posses - the apparatima with • which he 'Notable miracle -Or -la known: Welt verse 20a the deed Was recognized ted frem made his first experiments in wireless sign." • The word is Tepee telegraphy. in the garden of his la- throughoiat Jeruialent as ne aged of ther'e "masa* in. Italy.' 'He Was then fikteea years Old. . ' ' • . man, tint done by God three& them. -17,' Spread -Like alfinteetio-0 dis: --Sir Guy-Lakingathe•King'a•Armor•-• ease.. Threaten-TWo' important ef cah hiesh:aweotr thorities reacia"witlethreatening,let u,s au- ethr'ehfi4fsteiennthitic ePnnstunie.sysitnynhi $10,000.. , Only one other helmet' of th threaten," a well-known Hebraic /a is the same period in perfect condition is idiam, for "threaten sternly." known to be in existence. - quite likely that• they are right In Prince Leopold, the eldest son of the this limbs -They will net 'mention the King of the Belgians, who is. a new hated name thenaselves. • The next pupil at Eton, is one of the best gyne, verse does • not contain their actal'al pests • at the school. He began his words as this doe. alai speak in the gyaitiastie training at five years old. nazne" implies Primarily the actual ,pronouncing of it continually in con- "neetion'with thathini and. healing. A people whose instinct taught them to see deep significance in naines would quickly atalize• that this was sane- thinganere then a new,"Joshaa"; the resurrection gave "Jehovah is salva- tion" a new metalling, , Hence -the re- fusal of Jews ,to name hint. In the .Telread, he is generally indicated by •opprobious•allusion.. . • 19: Judge Ye -e -The pronoun is net aliphatic; 1110111d wean verse ta; the whole. stress lies. on the choice that has to be made, not on those who have to make it: • - • 2L The renewed threats were futile enough now, but • they 'remembered that fear Of the people had kept them' their movements po , rto delay 10. In the name-,- See Acts 2. 88 thne. eranneet subjects telegrarus re- him of verse 16. • a from laying hands on Jesus -for a Glorified Goda--Compare Mark ton. A. large number of Eeglish ideath will hasten? The •wi f wines, end his home Ladies are at the -hospital, among than France are goodn " of hours. So far the Dutch have and also verde8�,�i Christ, the title 2: 12, the. snaaaiilar sequel. of a similar being Lady Elizabeth Keppel in fertile Normandy was pleasant" found - no solution: Every fresh of- the ;assertion of which 'would anger miracle. Anything less wonderful• The Bar -amaze . . • . _ f Met with • a f esh protest atom•these Saddtteeee_" • nct-an• ythin .hav;sr Ina& them pratsa' the . Cederstrom,sar, He is else a good rifle shot. • Lord Xitcherier is never called in the He was patient and old ' and • tired. -moaning; he awakes regularly himself Perhaps he, too, would have been glad at 6.30 when khas his,private letters...,of sane one to cheer him up. He was and-aaeup-of-teabrought to him. Ile just -one inore-territoriala-trerlch di 'rises at seven o'clock, and retires; if ger and sentry and filler -in, Ile be - his duties at the War Gin& permit, at came: for tie the type 4 all: those midnight • • faithful, plodding soldiers whose first he Earl of Crawford, who is. serirs strength is ,spent. In hilt was glith as a private in the R.A.M.C.ais a ered up all. that fatigue and sadness' collector of walkiag-sticks, Thelatestiof nien,for 'whom no glamor remains., addition to his tollection is a heavy "War is easy for the . young, The rose -wood, ivory -headed - one; - which- bofialtlieris-Villinglintrake any diii) Lord Crawford found in a 'captured his last if' it Is a good day. It is not , German trench. • • a ' so with the middle-aged man. Ile 18 Lady Scott; the Widow of the ex- puzzled by the war. What'he,has to, . piorer,' is a, keen motorist and a first-. struggle with than bodily ,wealca• rate driver. She is new driving a Red ness is the malady of thought. • It thola Cross ear at the Anglo-French Hospi- bloodysbusiness worth while7 Is therel MI near Chaumont, in the Marne Can- any far-off divine event which Mal' " THE MIDDLE-AGED SOLDIER, IA. Plodding Man Whose First Strengthl • • 14 Spent: , •• e • • "•I saw, him first, my •middle-age41 man, one .afternoon en the boards of an improvised stage in the gand dunee of tielgiuma' writes ,Aithur -Gleason, in the Century'. "On that last thin motvspaitptiajedaria.noei yfisdittaF;Hretel ;es beher;ea et. voicelaeneade d Belgiansitl ngdemwEng- lishrei n g 20-minote dialogues with himself, rades. With shining black hair and man,g lg ml.34r ellsweda.s .cHioeecroatiffnrar:iseiu:ap. :3ahnFinsrademenowacmhozza.. • ' ped layed ap manyg htparts,ae men, bully and .dandy. His audience had come in stale from the everlastieg spading and, marching. Tay bright- ,, ened tribly under his gaiety.. If bei cared to makethat efforkin the sad- dening place. they were ready to re.• spend. When he dismissed them the lastafiash- of hitn: was of ua-smiling; rollicking \ improvisator,- bowing hime self over td the applause till his black ' hair *as Wel with our eyes, • .."And the next day as I sat in my ambulance, waiting oeders, he trudged by ain his -blue, the 'color of. heaven once, but musty now from nights un- der the rain. His head of hair, Which the glossy black wig had covered, wa gray -white. The sparkling, .pantorni- mic• face had dropped into .1k/tinkles. ce P Yt> 'Are her the' name- by- hich- h - will irrefutable sign has • proVed that ni• Polar Conceittrie Londons Make , week nialacaidelialliaana " • • chea..ftetnalesaand-aleaelled-thelaineone---:-•-: ' . "A }lard -lob. .- they onlY gave him:thereby' the steik :inlay the "things 'which Jesus did". makes 'a habit of a. regular -theatre I- - Ma the- •-• - - scions' seritrys a e. ie.n came a • . , allathealatestaphaye ------ ''' a - ' la'arda• Yesterday. ;morally," went ssie drown cry of pain, .arke the' guard his canparly wes..wearing 'a nice new- 2-• 23,-Whiall-ls --iaa&Tro-ailia tlia`taaal- g- . Khakiette •• ihreie herself prone- on • ° ' TI One .afteanoon in the treriehesa an to fila throne. Of Nazaretha-The (JanTe6I• 2-6), " ii-jje City. eenung up specially. frem ,Wales to ' • London, the goal' of congeest tarp 1,,,ri..tild.a.e.,tiashiatudlizione._ spheosssissseeese that 0, a Greek adjective .here is that of Matt • • ' - V * pfs _ wiifiesetlicesiesitanrset-everyssz- eppehiel. What" -Tommy Teld. , monsieur Paul Cazabon, the Prerieh • evety Uaboat and every other Teuton . • t ts d•d • e Mark 1, 24; And may possiblY denote 'bag of rather Moist iseidsdrepS. "Gin- • , • Ito ge_t hold of them as te at, , 11 Psa 118 22 tookaa very eon- 'ea -Aar Mre. Graanlare • • _champion ofn the Diplomatic body in hub of an empire whose centre f ' the 'coloilers daughter, holding. out a turned eut. • • pair 6 oo Zoir 1„ata. dor to Britain- is -the•-chess ' has eet-hts heart` and eyes Is truly th ';•• • o itst gee just steattiedathb.rille for tile, hut arm glad didn't' kill hini viousty. "Well," said his friezad; • . • • • • . , • • naa,spiethaus place among the -Old Testa.• Mrs. G.: "Ys, Tothany. sonietimesaa :London. Working .aet chess probleme very bigness never co* lie didn't 'teeny bold it. -Rifle*• al•e• said Ithakiette ntirsin One o's' her 1, stole. -----------1' of the trelast night, ses to 'attract k10,0r hoot attaigatawitbourt =iv:ilia:ate.; lafaa, is. ha, did'? it ...1 1 • me" • Pat became thoughtful and thatAewing their Uaater; ... .... • . Voinistir: "Yea wouldn't' go as early' recreation,...1. and., after :: a hard'.aa).a • But wIde,,,, • . the lea 4..4a:1:irate!! .. • _ . ...is the penular•;diplontatiat'S. . fay:oakae_ attention oioffitb.fi,lovir:ro.l.a.. fm.northenteoins?..7 Mean.? aslts th tt./ 11 • • '.h.ella 'Ginger i,s suell:a Mee ese.! He,' • eAGeam..la spy, ilesifig as a awias,..f night' diaappetared: Early next inornSI •• 12- ..selvatiOOitthe ftrea'SiOnic). 1.f 'Sr°11 were niarrjed ia IMF 13-a• iy.014 werl'''. 'at. ql.e -•EitTbaa•4Yrhe laill aften• eit'datai. 'de.. yap' e a I kike**1.15',4hayAOnfiLeall- ' li_Ossessereisleiessestsugsseses -y0„...k. .. ' - Jstrenelea.: '.,..c.s.triingiLi.:Iiiii;„Tof.sjiallitiSealVation and 'tes'ests net •• the sable II'S: G -Pr' '"Olis.A'On'inirt :Yen • farinY. rhee6 'Pr°1?tema.,L 4.. ,,,_ • *. ': 1 .a.. , 'The inner-I.0.114cAlittwone,. -r:s-i..-Ii.44:-=;..iieli,:c*i . tk. _... 4,i-,i.tliii_ • . ,i 1.1,-ig,4_silii,-,--,_---, a -Riot. ear Nis- aeaaaitate setaiaaaaaa; ;woad 'as that re-ndered- midi whine in o , -1043t-f f3` '- ' •-. -' ", ',--7411§-;-eaaeigiati-na;.--yealow-aataaaa-yele thealfiiit •coarits of law in the world; .' lire. i verse al. `lahrist catneta redeeitiallie, 'Taira taa-aeasa*artr':pa" told rny rpm tlishotrof London, ti .0 lives ...it-Hairip-:. hi .--the -citY'-'of-Loridon-,--wfrose porAliu ,, ftr! .. freclillOd .MY Pens, fel. tate, and aGerniant'eruisee. tio 'you 'know a rut "I've Ild the hardest leh ') m° I. whole mail bale and'eouLi The rest .(hat if he' were ..-etir husband bead. ton (curt, is interesting herself in.the tlea la dirniniShing. •It :has noutates; • - *-1 miaae, •.hint jest .eieine."- :, • S r• a hit proud 01.you, kidre • ., '. , Had to kilk• e . ers.. , . t . , about fifty of the blight ' ... 1 of tile verSemay be parapitrAe.e.aar_anake yea :at ep._ • . , . .... . ,, work, of the, wow aatruisaatan ad. .4ean.2,9,990 persons.. - .... -,-..•. - .-..- , ----Meisieeeve,erhegirseittfr,stisitettee'ibets '''l "Then, •• Ohl slear."-sitid leheitiette. befera -1.---mgaa- Pah" °;'•At- rile'''. '* • lark heavy, !Set tisesis kids, but long "Tege„ -though Ate aleaeaved it 1114 Mmallielly ra elman lalt/II--mentalw°440'llsedableat4K4P° • Ought to, he •an onlear, And / don't kid," aleetv4"ed.tha.eoloner, ela10.•• staggered beck into the, salVaiion,'' as in John' 4. 22. Noe 'hat yeu?" • • , , up far into tae night solving intricate Street 3Ournal, • • a • . the Pretty,:inotlierbss +valid had -been "yen •• antuat it is You're awful ; • • rtnitabie inaaernent dzsiened to. keep a Ou1ak10 of it is eceleatesticala Lon- . • • :restraining haral on oris.whose octu. dona diocesan London, so •to speak ' .hating too.. aatzell of ate 'Oat. way: . rieh. anti Whela the afar is peer. I want -•:. The colonel had needed "aaeorrapanizra you to find 'MY' lively old Ganger ' a- far hi a *laughter Mete than -e, highly- plendid it 'siivatioao , sthat ' he (a - t4.10 ', ' • pVitieh liOir,0 m the neighborhood -of war -: rmehe is ohe of the ableat Then eo e. Swo. .traea the county of London 4 men hitiorines el' the day. - ' ' . which hail .4;041,685 persona 'in ,it . O% Whieh the Bishop -rides. , , &seal:Med governese.• and 'Maisie hall . pee**. Misllattleit'., ;Is at talinfas • . - deaave.::ea the advettistinealf. , .;. • aa?". ' . '•• . • ....- . litavaes only :a .temaarare aiteelet- . “Itts 046iirobs •tip;•kid.," answered the • •.• sacii4;. for *hahiette:70uld hm.le to re, erAonel. -"Stirt 'as • a gun'"--Londoe - .. turn to taliaoi wizen the rggpMent te- Ar' i-'-' ; . -C4 114cti mai•chinif criltit,;.:ifat a was a • ' taleasatat •valit..••• for Mn-,oi aaa ' the • •••• caitoael'peid handsonsslys• . . ..ell don'trata the hid worried Wit •• ' Mta. 'ale:len did tat wiall 10 . sof- ' ,!-...tesS0Pa-alasa.al.0.1aa-Mit.14tart. .... 1-liter7.4,:/e7-ekie1ez- ' '. -•• 1 01.0...co/onel, S.,SisSell,..lesve ple'rti ;o ' • ".101ix." ste ehid t4.0 'thq man „sere - '4i.irile.tet atittal: ' latay aatea aea• le.r a •,..L.kaz, s'eae :Yea '1lp4. ottt; "avithatat : ; t ea' kaaaat arai 1... ,,7,..)t Ify toep -G14,..e.fr :t_4!e c5.11:. -71le.hor tile tinned 1 . r - t . . awkb ets. er,til the !oat: Ti;.•.? 'thesallitt'on..7is;ill eat ti last dght? Yee , a c a Vie aloga•arti . oral 4,) two.; 1 ,...Let. ,...,.:,,sh .pf., ilea 'aer„, becauae i 4 laa:e. : ; Rave 0. gos.it 'atio ti -,:ay 1-.; aVe eaten it; 'tit d Oen she ; ':' •: , :'," . • ‘-..-617.),4' feel uttenraertaale,'" aade.i the" : 're . ‘,4 1,--4h1001,i' 130:.(St', fillti, .gf,fia ,..2.,:11,,,..4. .. .,-,:itircp.. teal traalaat If yOZI pleas:ea Ma -am," •reialed „ *. i • lalltaa t aia...1 ' 01:9?4,1 •VerCe.seivaritp. ne the liter, ‘stiss.esee.0....t.ok hug enter; tba .it411.ji4to Ltiii': anal ealt alie had the stlened seilensse; end it Via 11'..-1.43 t:3 My'j eetrecestel-reeei eh) tkl imagines' neytteingr to 110, you' eouldn't make ;s„.)., CV.: EiiVe 00tit.In1f)* end gee. her feel ens, mere skeeetefeetesee then.' essip seStsit the reepi drillfag and. sitc.3.-19..!!. , se,- • • Suffitieetly , Rumbled, , 44% " •. win is the tic,t spe,aker ow, mi., against i the ,total of 3,811,82t, person; ...fatah 1101154 of CainnlahS? Fer !delete in the 'bilthapiic. argument', Mr.. /Wealth; for fiery .inv. In the next outer 'Unit, the eihninal ' • •aloe. aar. Liotal George; for sarcasm 'court distriet, there are 6610,031 a • ter'.4. ieeentivei Mr, latassaten Churchill; 8malia That makes lour eotieentrie . for tx,(4,11foi _t#nd .etanging rebuke, ,Mr. 'DM: for; eleVei • •aseteli 'e1e. ss, • oiCr.•;'.1e.; • 18 ' • " at At,lAr4 tieiPa atiseriela fel gel/ •HAFX0ai. nnn 53 t4 t11.0 vr,the of the kaiaar',a teei,Fant alaroT-0., 1,-C.CZ,TAD,,0---; ti. t•s, - ./ fa, axe,' tr.,- . ., IP 1 (7- % cl, , e , , . 4:, 1c ' P•n•-• r •,:£-ir,,,,,TO:ik tEnce•ratt feregaa truancY3 12.:p•si tha atae to 4'..P:,::?:.,.....,.rb t.Lips tb .4i...4.4t, tele. .4 00.ea'ia a•40 ae (tataaata 07)Lps, a.......altaaea tee t'sesselers2. tirss sesssi.en sosegges e:ra fivh•si: p.izta.„.,,,..z)....p :..1.1.cp 4r: ,.,:.1,t7 Tos;I: 10019:te", (.13:7;',.*.t.. fturAfx.els'Icf tf?.:0;:xli!,...:79 ill) c..11,itt.,ep 01:(../.: t -041:0;:c bl,"-_,C.''.a • • ^", .' to ttly,:t owncrSi Eetes es:steal 421-4..1, .tta Nalb ozil if.0-.14.1s A:zatZte t.:.4 O`x.1.,:;or ' . • . 1 • - afattniething"Deeilet. , sold an inieres-taag mo tiler hsr firetstern, "40 you knew ae,Lat the daYereree `kRweon body Ara wall The toulsray Phildi is what; • you lose the Ledy earries you: •obese This is. iyour hely," taarlanie. tho felaow s shouhla; "bat yoa tendons whesia radltia is tethere t • 'ClinBuritilgouCt"a5n8d• bey • en'd that life are. • thosessapialy- growing subtrrhan senitir"- whew location the ihner London hate • not only (Ivo, taker' but is helping ste;'; fill up with aitonishieg rapidity, •'., Crofter London late an area of 090 TFitilani:r-o%rteleirietqlmarl'hi nag l2a,71-6it108,0% 15 nn1e, reakine, with thors within, a grand to - t1 e,f 7 254.0;83 • • - • .; , • • 4,11cro eomethine ii*".1"1,;;.af,43.er,.i,.z•ii,iaaall,.an,.::•:;:•,.1,•:-;:ltall..•1..e..tigngart when: . 11, 4 I 4;1: orl.g4;:;,%;::1 hie tiwir.horn whom 101. o.I.J.P03, 1e ttic. c 7. ic) . ••• • suppose itaaunturtil •for'"• :cyti40.• "tit'm nettle! e'hirt." ,11 'Pr t, ,