HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-03-09, Page 7•
•
4
•
•
WHAT'S COMING T
ME REAT BULL
.AN ENGLISH WRITER ON THE
WAlt SITUA'11011.
tho Gerinan Bmpero'.1 Hopes
Por and What He Stare
,
should be loelted in deadly combat;
while IQ tho Balkans a million and •
half men eliould be lighting to ,decide
whether 'the Crescerat shali still weVO
o'er the minarets -of ,Constantinople.
Britain'tf Answer,
"Peace in the sprtig" meani that
fourteen and tt: half militant Men, will
be ear:gbtia.0 possibly the decisive bet-
ties 0 the greatest conflict in his -
Twenty months will have elapsed,
Ellice the day when the first
To GeL crossed the Belgian frontier.) the van. rencierulgs of this soriewbat doubt.
NM.....11.515.1,111111.1t, nav •
INTElliNA1110i44
MARCH 12/
Heroes and AItirtYre Ot Faithrrollek
-41.1 lie 12.2. .Golden. Textt,
MeV,112, 2: •
Yong 1. Assurance, -Of varieus
guard of a huge army, assin..ed of vie- fo wow -which (=nen in s„
"In the avring," the 'Heiser has tory by all the resources that forty os esubettuva7____,*..
heen hinting- to blki fire& people, ewill refIre'resolete PreParatton eauld- give' saggeste'd hy a legal use fonnd in
r4 I gt-
Theerman arm thefwas at
COMO leeace.„
The,,,words aound very comforting m
the.eara ;of his aoldiers, who, have Ile
• " onger the earne entlisiasm for War
that they had, sixteen months ago,
• wilen Paris seemed within their green,
•, says 4 writer in Lorateh Answers.
• They are* very, gullible lot, thee
4
Huns aid they forget that . ono,. the,
. debit side of the Kaiser's promises
are already heavily^ overweighted.
• They were to be hack in the deer Fa-
therland "before. the , of the
leavee"; they need have no fear, they
were told,* to a seeend winter cem-
Pager their; were. assured Russia
would give la vvheit Warsaw was ea-
• tered.
„ -" • Mahn(' in Hs
one the things has haPpeitedq.
Vet they are ready believe the
,Ainpoth words of the same Voice tell-
ing- them there Wilt be peace in the
spring.
Not that the Kaiser would not be
glad to have Peace;not Merely in the
• „spring, but any time between then
Mid now. He may be mad-, but there
, is considerable method in his mad-
. ness,
A geed chess player knows when he,
Is beaten, and does not go on to, be
mated, The kaiser looks ahead, and,
Y ** The docket or papers in a
!
zenith. ---alt human calculation, it •ghPrilel'offioo, hearilw ,9o, the poosee40.71
I when. Professor Muensterberg, . the j sesweeed etymologically to the. Lat-
stood to win. 1•11 il'"1 .6Pring ul 1916* of land, Nina Called DY thiS Word, 'Which
. friend of, the Kaiser, says ie. knoWs. , ,
i.there will. be peace, Mrin eubstantie,: thepavers osul2stang.
, certain, Get I
--2-iated" e' elaiin. Faith accordingly is
of
i.manYbeing . stands ahnoet as good a chance beaten as she did in August,' , the "title -deeds". of our promised pea -
I , I session. Throngheat this chapter we
,1914,' of ecinguering Europe for bar-
"barisrn. • ' • find. it describing the spiritual' facul-ty
l
made -niaby mistakes, but.. we hay. 0 Ntlh.hei.ett :La:le
art' iststill future good as a
Posensor to treat
s' We have been slow, and we haye
not present 'reality., when guaranteed b37•.'
niso done things well. „. We. •a -re GorisThis is quite distinet
spellbound by this latest German Plo :
'Ifrent prome. Paul's Ue of "faith" is trust, dr
WO,IknoW wh'at, indeed; ;the spring Jambes lestrnargin)., The Greek is elan -
bring forth. Two thousaee nd: Govern- 7. o ••eiee,19, ..,• Convietion-f-
rnent-ebntrolled war -factories ''', in chos, which ^became...a technical terra
Great 13ritain, working at full' prest, for the method of ; Socrates, who exr
sere)are the best annwer to the Ger-
mark mutt .. „, , • posed sham knowledge of creee-ex-
I h.ew, • , bef,ore inc l I tter .from
.a
amination. Fej,t.h is accordin
gly the
gumieratthe:front. • faculty which can sift thingsnnseen,
i and select those which are Year. The
• "When, the Germans worry us .With chapter is to show how the Men. and
their JaCk olinions," he writes, "we
send over ten to their one!"
•
Five 'to- One. •
•
• My friend may be exaggerating a
little; hut it istrue that we can com-
mand 'dOeble' the sheik that the en,
women of • the canonized past -im-
mensely. different in character . and
spiritual achievement --exhibited this
facnIty of verifying promises truly'
from God, and when verified acting
upon them as realized assets.
erny Oen, spare, and if the prephea of32. Gideon. thenoblest of the,. jud-
M.•Igillerand, the former French Min- ggs, illustrates verse 1 peculiarly. Be-
ister of War, comes trile, in . f°.r? the "test"of faith had put the
divine leading beyond question fie Was
spring or thereabouts -and there is
. though his- armies occupy much of no reason for the contrary -.--we 'should timid and hesitant -as a taptain should
'
• the Allies' territory, he secs only too. lep.ve five shells to every one of the be -who is to risk -lives on a forlorn
well that the tesk of holding these enemy's.!', .. • • " ' . . • hope: Once assured he ean tat hi
.„ •
enormously -extended • lines• must 'Do you .friow ..what five' shells to
contemptible little ariny asan als
i'. •
•provev-hgere long, too great a Attain every 7:14 of the .•-eneety, meani?‘.
t ready victorious hostexample of a
Barak is the same kind of faith, o
for the depleted manhood resonrees means that We •can . smash his most •
of Germany to sustain.: ; • , • elaborate - defensive . orgenization', e'
a smaller . Scale." Sams6ti., Whom. w
must not ;endear.' with Milionie gran
Before the, , of the Kai,ser sweep away 'his". Wire, and leave -huge
s '-•
passes the spectre Of his gretit prate- gaps' for. our Wonderful. infantry to deur, tells uhow faith could wor
type, Nappleani.,whoi within eighteen pour through. It means that, • as Or in a man of onetalent; he really be
. months of his entry into • Moscow, 'hien Advance, 'we can cut off' the Ger- lieved that his strength lay in th
was an exile in 'Elba. . Man.'reinforceinerits .frOni the. Main hair that syinhalized his •Nazirite vow
eirrte# of and -put forth that ‘strengt to th
,Pence in the ,spring would Alit the .body. byN. an impenetrable-
.
• Kaiaer very well., He could afford to fire. . • ruin of the foe. Jephthah,-mei
The Kaiser knows thisOnly too
-
robber captain, accepted victory as
• .
inssured, by the 'terrible price he ofr
well .he. 'realizes:the forees Against-
fered„• and never dreamed of, with-
Germeny that,. should 'ripen. in • the
' MOUNT CAVELL, B.C.
This mountain has been re -named to cornmemorate the heroism of the
British nurse who was put to death by the • Germans, some time ago.• The
peak rises to . an elevation .of 11,020 feet, and -is' Visible for. twelve miles •
from the. obseriration cars of the Canadian •Northerii Railway. An ex-.
eellent trail has been ma -der -giving easy access to the Mountain from the •
railway.
•
• /
'Rozn.:S. • "Thou wouldst not he rsaVed
tilone"--cMattheW Arnold's address to
his •great father• -•••has the wideat. pos-
sible application; , •• • • .,
12, •I.. ' Witnesses,r,Not -speetatorS, •
The. woriLia, attached-clesely to,. the
.keyword, of ..the last. chapter: The
- great names,,there heve received wit -
e ness, from inspiration that theymay
„ stand on the r011 of examples to man-
e kind. In:their. turn they witness -of
• the power of that; facility by which
they did. their deeds.. Lay aside -The
figere. of the . footrace' in 'this. verse
is a. link with Paul, 'whose ',perpetual
use .of ;it is . characteristic • of his live-
, • •
ly sympathy with •everything that was
•healthy. in other •people, '• The -.weight
in hardly supertitieus, fat, . Of, which a
modern athlete weuld think; it is ra--
.ther clothing,. which a Greek gyninast
•(as the 'war d*itself. implies) _plat away
altogether., The sin is similarly pi
tured Asa graceful •rohervithich ‘telose.-••
ly clings too•us" (margin.). , Patience-
-Rather, eedurance, • which ;should be
Substituted _everywhere exec* M
plaeeolike. James .5: 7, ?, where a. ,word '
describing "tong:mindedness' occurs..
Riff itnportant tekee.P. the close eon-.
-neetion with .endured' in von%
• 2, '3, Author Mid •.perfecter ---:For
faith. i-ebegiiii, continued, and ended"'
inhini -',Whose earthly *life was the
attiprenrers-teple-ef--it, and
• belenerous to the Allies. His terms,:
We might' be sure' woeld be particu-
larlY favorable taus,because rour Pre!.
•" . • .
paratIons have planted ' a wholesome .spring. He wants peacearefore. Ger-
holding the pi ice when the victory
' dread . in his heart, and 'because ...he Many is beaten. He wants peace while .was• won, ' Of PaYidic. enoughte:, say
, knows that we have it habit of going 1 the Gorman armies • still biveuac:. on that intense belief - in ' the. reality. of
•
. • on to the end, ind.that, though we be enemy...sole. He wants .peace.befoie .God's -_promise is ;the. one ,Charatter.,
gin badly, we generally - end .w11.• ' his _deluded HMIs become. dangerouSly istie that redeemed a Man Of. many
grave faults,' albeit of otivicins And un
Wenry of the incessant fighting;, and; eb •
GerntanY mord at Work. - • ' '
• 0, above, all, he Want pace before the limited lovableneea. He and,; Semite).
'.' • ' . . - .• . .
Ale° the remark:of the acute I'tal-
irai
economic s ion his people lheorties,-1"-dan the p.rophets are- a.eow.arid higher
"
toolitolerahle, . . ' • . ••• .,. • - . class, as the structure of the. origin-
-`12leaee. in the APring!!' . How • little. 'el suggests: Samuel is espeCiallY the
does .it .correspond with the; , realities founder of the --prophetic- order; whese
Of •the 'situation! Peace,. forsooth, whole function arose .frorn. the .'pes..
lvith the.pertaintrA'f foikteee and a -session of faith. (-h. • :. - . ' ' .!
half. Million men then struggling ,for- ' 2. .9. Subdued, dynasties,. like .Elijah"‘
mastery,..with the.,..advantage...for" the se.::.1Sainuel. as4inginak'efi-- *ought
first' timoou our side„:„ . s .. . .. ..' , --The integrity- ef . Samuel's 'admin.,
. . 7,_;,.,....;_„:_..4 • . • ' ..-- .- . ... istration (1. Sam. .12. 4)., and the.pie-
98 PER tEhrq. SOLDIERS: CURED. ture . of ' David's justi:reign -(2 . San. -8.
' • ' • • • . : 15) . Will'Alluatratec Obtainea-Preh6
Re xort .From eriean Wilieen.'.atibly- Da -Yid -again ii:L-ie-rain
,
Mind; "ThBritis
e h, onl s•win elle
Ian ofirserver lurkn unpbat-
ljasantly in his
• • lie in any war, but it is the last bat-
' •But -What the Kaiser .hopes for. and
. .
'what, the Kaiser . believes' he will get'
., etwodifFerent-thmgs 1q hopes
•;.•-far pence -ie. the spring; he prepares
for -greater: :exertions . than ever -••in
• the spring.' . • '
. - •
-• Gerfnany is of fair -words,
whose,.note is---the-reasonableneA-a
• War, Hospital. , • . Sam 7. 11,. etc.. • Stopped -David's
peace at the present time:the %lairds , -
. , . . . .
• are to ' hasten' the soldiers'. in - OW': NinetY-eight per Cent of. the,WOuna-
- .----. •,, youthful exploit Might bo referred
referred
.ttenelidO; and to inikees such -neutrals ,ed Soldiers treated At the: American.
.7. to; but the next chiuse shows that the
:as are .not,alert to German:guile.. 'writer has Passed 'on to 'the book • of
:Weinen's War HosPital have been Cur-
Gei'many is elect full Of newly -train- ed'or iniproved, according to. A./report Daniel
ar. • A . , '- •
ed troople'who 'e to make a last at- just ' issued- On ' the secoini .' thou.'s. anti 84. Escaped, like ?Aisles itif Dothan.
.. tempt, to break through to Paris: Ger-. ,eases •handled by,that' institution, T.he. Erone: weakness, like Benison for his
- -
:mien instructors are busy drilling ;.raw..hospital is at Paigriton, -South Devon list exploit, - War4--The. old . ,..' s .
• •
, - 'Fest-
German recruits, and German • engin- with .Sie • William Osier ,as ooneotingamentabound -in Instances Of a•
pers are fe-VerishlY repairing'gaPs • in. I thought' chissigaly .expreeeed in Pim
the line .1,11 re-establish railway - 'corn, • physician oid Dr;'--Penballow-ue Chief . 18,,,
. . The story Of the ,Maceabees rises'
.surgeon. • • - .
. . •
- z.,...,/,• _
above all, elmoit unique. in histeny,
niumcation between Berlia .end.•Coll.,. ..The report shoWs 'that of _the stir:. .-
- stantinople. The Neer East, .vithielt is, .di -dial enies • sixt•three,- per cent Were' ns a trne:4`holy war." • The. problems
7pereeet
onestarted by the :teaching of Jesus hild „ great .. Whispering-gallery, . :nor- !c,-ared. and •thirW-three peri -Cent ;lin-.
not lieeemei•ged, and faith could' work.
• murs: "EgYpt in the, spring:" • ' • proved. -.The.. •sarrib- ...age....ot ,
...The German mind. is incapable of cures and imprOvementi as seat :d upon the :battlefield .without mis-
,.
an honesty Wlien the .Gertnane talk ..in anedieal exiees. . In the:: thousand givingAliens-Philietines especial,
cases there ivere but fiYci delith'sr
• loudly of 'peace; if is time: to prepare ly.f Jonathan •and his .armor-bearet are
•, ...O'
folwar; when thehope Or pexteeP considerably less' than one -per dent ' In •rlind' • ' • . • • . '
- ,' y
eneknowS instiectively that they be- ,The promptness with virhiehr ellef •iS•Woesen•'-the widow of Zero
given -
• lieve, the • reverse. Will happen; ' • ' to :menon the battlefield _im.. . ' - •iiiliath • and ...the'. r Shiniammite. are.:
'. , . :i._e - . .
f #01,Ight-.bfr-.-.- Others -The.- alluaion
cUIJVVb of, the • Nvornan who.,•eaw • her
seven sons :martyred •for the faith : eV he ea 0,),' not .1tir his' own. ' .,• , . - . .. arisen also' amopg our own .troops. ,
siege •ef. the 'Anglo-Indian Army, fled
Israel : the Woman's' point -Of yie'vv.:"is -. . . .'. ....-,-..............-, --... , . - .• "Ileing., 'extremely jealous of his Some of our soldiers are said to eues- . ..
•a capitulation followed by a pronnae
an additional_ thirteen ,.per', dent.. had raccording y prennneet .he i e• also. . A: :, L. • ..,•. • ... • '• '. i ' . .1 !
• authority, • General 'Van Falkenha_yii lion the. possibility of our: 8,u:ice:A-on •
, • of eneort back to- India. ' The retreat
received this field 'dreosing' withi n. ' ite:.1 better -re,s•uxrection-EXpresity • Allud-• • .
, sii..1 TA IA% 'cRific0 RE9t)itti.•'' , keeps away .freni the. :ge
.-. . hex* - head.. 11- d' ' h ' "
• •
RUNS THE GERMAN
WAR MACHINES
•
'
BRITSSELS IS SPY INVESTED.
•
.Agenta of "Huller" *nage ta HeeP
, Themselves Busy.
So far ;05 vonsiderable number- of
• the people of Brussels aro coneerned,
the German occupatien constitutes a
moral as well a* a physical rnortr'''
demo •
A. private correspondent whose let.
ter has reached the.fingue thrOUgh 4
friendly diplomatic channel, sar0 that
the German szstem of ennonage has
reached such a. point- that the more
nervous minded of the people iv in
h state of perpetqal dread.
-4"There L3 in arniihere of more than
gfteen hundred spies," he writes.
"These are well paid, but they are
'Paid by remits; they live extravagant,
ly, and when•funds are low. more vier
time must be made, There rite' spies
of every grade and; species. •
"There is the society woman, sutli
as that relative of Yen Bissing who
succeeded in forming a little ciMrt
of her own and who herself atteada
llig.PRIS, ENT WAR
Nov TIIE SLIGHTEST TiaCE HA' sl
pEgsr. mwr WITOR „."
' •' „rf •":/-1 "*.
•
Fate of •Sth Norfolks in Omniannlielf
the Higgeet Mystery of
Preeeht Cnflict
Battalion Qt. the Oth Norf011es. in tag)
The Zstfl"-Of PartIO*1 111071•147. -
abandoned Dardanelles ove-TatiOXIS
Will 'Ma as the \ biggest mystery of
the war: Rudyard Hiplineth' weird
story, "The Lost -Legion,'" has been.
Matched, for Colonel. Sir IL Proctor
Beauchamp,. fifteen ofecere and 238
MOtillitime absolutely disappearedlrora
human ken., , •
Sir ran Hamilton 'has told how thek
the society teas in Private hopses tchliraoroggeclh''otbve-ueinare,YEL•Poos4ti;onia•-lvtloosedoi
iann..dovdaetrthtoe, exercisefasiohabhl%rco.06epeitoinoangeres.
wood beyond, «pnshing on,
there is the erie4titne factory aged the enetny before, them." The rest,-
Who ; taking advantage of. hs pre-war is rheardii.eonee''"othituaem,7They ohr;:
6rweh'w0nevi.' •
connections, worths*.himielf Into fin-
seened: Into the forest,, and were, lost to,t. •
sight. or sound. Not one 'of thein:
evercame balk:" • • '
- The ferest nto which they charged:.
was 'scoured through and through the
• net daY • hilt not one of.thiebend
boulevards, and there .are men in . heroes; d'ead,, lawn")
inindreds.'who penetrate like ants' into
the innermost recesses of private life.
"The letters we receive from our
dear.; exiled friends 'we may neither
leen nee ..4.11PWer, for a .domiciliary
visit rearbrinade at any moment,
and on the slightest pretext, or none
at all, both men and women may be
hurried.. away to the kemmandantur;
and thence to prison after a intickery
of a , •
• "Two days Ago I was reading the
war report posted at the corner of
•enexal and industrial, cix:eles; there is
the ,offiece's .or 'professor's wife who
frequents middle eldss" coteries; there
is the demi-mondaine who keeps an
eye on the theatres, the cafesand, the
the Boulevard Botanique an the Rue
Royale, There we were, a silent little
group. A man joined us and began
to read the nevirs alotid, with painful
slowness; almost spelling out • the'
words. Coming to a number he read
'seven. thousand', 'instead -of: seventy
VERT DIFFICULT, HATTpR TO thousand,'btthe ohaerd.7rds. appearing on
• .7
MEET THE KAISER. He got no further. A m
. an forming
• • , part- of the gronp 'placed his hand on
this shOulder and dragged him along
Neutral Writer Describes Control i•to the Kommandantlir. We were
• luelsj-Ao-eseape--arrest-i-for havin
heard him make the blunder.
"In the tramway eat from ffrussels
• to Tervueren I saw a men arrested
Hehdrick Hudson, IC neutral becante he carried a parcel wrapped
who has. returned recently to France in a copy of a London paper, the date
after a prolonged visit in •GertnanY, , of which was September, 1914:
has coritrihuted a very interesting f "1n the Hire ,de Flandre I saw two
article' tq the • Paris Temps, `_.froin brewer's men being marched eff ds
Which , the' subsdquent Pass,ages are prisoners -.because, after MilOading a
quoted:. • ' . Iheavy barrel of beer, they had re-
•, "General' Von FalkenhaYn, 'who Was marked; "The Kaiser himself could
.plaeed at the head of _the greet:gen- I not do it as neatly." • •
•
eral staff,. when Field Marshai Voni .."I could cite hundreds of astonish -
Moltke fell into disgrace immediatelyj ing facts, but it wouldbore you, as b
after the battle . of the Marne, is it they are all more or less of the same h
the present hour the \most powerful category
Exercised by Gen. Von
Falkenhayir
Though there have,. been reports el
certain belongings having been re-
covered, there has-been no verification
of this. Not the Slightest trace has
been -met with, despite • every effort. •
They are the Lost Legion.
. A $quadron Disappeared.
In the ' late South African War
there was an instance of a British. •,
force apparently being swallowed
Into the grognd. , An entire squadron
of the 18th Hussars galloped intothe,
darkness and • utterly disappeared:
Nearly a Week later it Was foilnd the(
the squadron had been captured by
the Boers, who had lain in -wait for
the too adventnrous body.
;Mere_ 7ere several somewhet
lar instances where large bodies of
Men were captured without leaving
any trace. Here the parallel with the
case of bhe Norfolks ceases, for the ,
,Only Men known to be captives in
the hands of the Turks are one offi.; ' •
cer and twelv «en who_fell_hefore'
the wood was reached, when'the full •
body consisted of s.eventeen officers
and 250. men, , , ;
In the earlier South African: War;
in December, 1880, the 94th Bat-
talion left a station and disappeared,
Many Weeks later, -little parties . of
footsore and rigged inen wearily'
Crossed the Natal frontier' . bringing
tidings of the Lost LegiornAccerding
to the tale of the survivors' the bat- .
talion had been surrounded by othe
Boers at Bronker's Spruit, and the.
colonel, with Et number of men, 1iat
een put to death; the remainder 'ad -
een disarmed andset adrift on the'
-man in --Germany. In regard=to-his-r- -
antecedents, one knoWs that Von Fill- '
kenhaye, while a young officer, was .
SuICIDES IN GERMAN ARMY.
Obliged to. give up his • military ea- . •
reer on account of having run scandal-
•
The Mystery Explained.
• A troop of ' the fOth Hussars once.
disappeared when out on active set-
oualvrnto=dah=I- ——i.-..- Rigorous .Measures WiH-Be- Takee_tn.- Tice- in -
Spirit the one. power that can pro- Where he obteined:enipioyment .
•
•
• Stain') Out the Evil. . . days of 1879 the troep, went. into; the • _
w• • - - bitterly' cold -night, not a man litrur ,
duce it in us. Hance thettuntin name '-eortirnereitil Irbuie. -'. . :. 1. Frain e german. prisoner the ntili- to tell the tale of disaster: Except
Jesus,: for we rti:er to realize the Un, . •• "When the expedition against the tary critic of. Ranineye Oath) Pro- for. a riderless horse which galloped
seen as he did in the days of his flesh. Boxers was organized, in 1900, Von fosses to . have received a document back to camp, no intimation Of ill
The lesson- of Calvary here is that Falkenhayn was perniitted to re-enter of great iinportance. It is an order- was received. . -
the joy of our. Lord, in the present the army .sex -vice, because Of his Vain- of the day, bearing the number 2197 Long afterwards. the mystery, was
neality a redeemed: humanity; a :new able knowledge of the. eountry in and *Med by Field•Marsha) -von explained • by the finding. of forty-six
heaven, and a new earth, ,emilowered-'. which the military operations were Hindenburg to thogroUp of armies un-
. him to endure the most ,appelling tor- „conducted. Sine.e then he las risen der .his eommand, •Order had evi• grave at Jalalabitd. It believed,.
ure. maae fiendishness eir,-..i..4evped, I steadily in eank,, but he has not t3een dently been Caused liy the preValefice.
bodies, which were builied in one,
- Pot:sdamis. Biggest •Bluff .'' InediatelY after .they are Wounded. is -
I probably. to the fine story in 2 Mac -
brought ont :by . the statistics.' of the i .. .
.."Peace in the • spring," is",the. big-
. rePort. • Of the total wgiincled caises
' geat bluff -that •Potsdam has yet per- . . ;
one-quarter of -them had :ree.eived
' pebrated: Mit deceives the German imniediatefirit aid field dressing; and
• 'people it....dope. not hoodWink•.the Al-
' lies, 41i0 'are just beginning'. to • get
;into their atritle. in this war.'". • •
' .. So .far'fium there', being peace , itt
the' spring, the Most. terrible fighting
' Yet witnessed in•the campaign will,
talteplitee.. rAll'the' signs point M this
direction. .
, . Germany is 'saving. her. Young men.
. ...tor &great offensive in the•West, and
• - . • 1S itsine• . her- 'th ird.elaste elderly troops
good- Wastage, R
• '
•
. • • a e men o the wrong road,,
,eontenipt_With_ which Men- ;regarded ''r tion.- --' •, *
an to treat as nothing the scorn arab. able .±o ;Shake. oft' his previous repute; of 'suicide among the German soldiere
, which seems -to have -aroused great 1 -..an impassable -par
• tit
and' tried to ford the:Kabul-MVO at.,
.. O.— regding
the Sufferer, , Every example or,fafth ; 4axixiiilialrfiarden, the Well known anxiety in their commander, This is files were Ex -Wept away by ths. rushing,
recounted In the last- 'chapter is. only I journalist, was uttaParing in his. ,eriti- the Field . Marshal's measage;
it .1;rpli.* , light of ,him. Note that i dein. of General Von Falkenhuyn's. torrent, the others .fellOwing. Until ..
the supreme 'agony of the eress, was :selection us Von M•40,tke's successor. reasons for -1,-ha increasing
"It is for us to compreheed the .
number of every man had been swallowed up ,
by the swirling waters. - . •
the ,"gainsaying of sinners against In his publication, the ukurift, he de.: seidides- in the Russian ranks'. Their The Bailie country' provides an ap-
themselves" so ,margin, -beyond, •all dared that "it was a bad policy to in. soldiers recognize very Well that a
question the right .reading* -the trust the fate Of GermanY- to a gam.' cantinued,resistange on their part will 1849 an .army of 21,000 men, under -
- paling example of a Lost Legion In.
knowledgethatmin for whom he died. bier, even .if he were a good one at be Absolutely fruitless, because' 'the, Sir Jahn Keane, entered Kabtil.., oTho.
weuld, not let him sanXe them. Se ifthe game.' This bald utterance caus.- „Russian• arms, as well an those -°-1.- Story of What followed le' too long to
tur.-r-daspiseirShelne f-- was not theotigh ed the suppreadion of the Zuktnift for France and England, are already now relate in detail. It is sufficient that
proud indifference to nien's thoughts. a whole -week. -Virtually defeeted. 'However, it seems there were nuissacres of high -placed
of him. It was for their sakes that , •
. Bose Of the ,Keiser. • • • as if doubts 'about the final' issue had B - h • i e days' •
ritis ' officers, a. s xty- ve,
, , a fronts an to believe t7 at we' wink .
., .. , began in seVere Weather,- and of the.
' • quarters ell persona whom he sus- 'tit be 'able to preeent the Russians -16 . - •
- • .
5r- •ve-i will b.e. remembered that in the- (lAYS...1.*„..8;la...h. '-E.. dna!, .Pays ' Tribate to Eng:, pects of trYing to gain the confidence from • (1•. ' ' • • . ,500 men • whO set forth, •onlY one
:per cent:had been treated' On the. field land's' Efforts ' W ' '
of Elijah runt i-Elisita: the, hereafter. „. • • • o ' ie . aiser, Many court • officials
Within; .one hem! of being' wounded, was. still 'dark, and nothing better ..': Centliming hie oerieg of ithereasfote, have-. on .different . occasions 'tried. to
while a' 'small remaining ..:pereentage
than a. -rettirn tothis 'life. could be. 'este ..on.his• recent 'sojourn in England -get -audiences • with their so4ereign,
. , .
were 'treated 1,vithin a few hours,. and I.
.teen ininutes. Another tvirent ta more than . once:in that' stark. It ,•••
.. . • • ' P, 71 . ' man, Dr.. Bryden, lived. to carry the' ••
. -"Such doubtS„. and to some extent ..,
.. dismal .• - General Sale. •
perhaps, the undue prolongation of 'the tidings back to at lalalabitd. " ' . • •
war loo -are msponsible for the caees .•
. .
a very few _after a idng delay of f r
• • ( reamed of. Not till the gospel came - °ran, ,e( y5r of the Milen only to, be invariably rebuffed by Von of suicide which have occurred recent- ' • •
( .
fully 'know 'but -such glinips••• Falkenhayn, . Sometimes the refusartramong our. regiments. -Happenings A House for' Inc Perin Butchering.
ti -eight and •seVentkAT!''huurs.,' • •. rThe Iluglish, like the Italian .peo-
. men
is very 'Cult ungracious. In,,other of this kind ere a cliegragato our: glot • ' .
'eS 'Et§ INTL P. -were -cau•ght.hy the',
Gas -pais onin,g• one .•of. •the •ore` doing -their duty.' So far .the • •Farmers' for home cen-'
Pal ehtiSde-Of the ex- treated and.l. . Pa A t mes • . • - • ' u • 3 aTe ' °'
lateSters''of. the 'Old Te73tArireritr 'Price '-nelfairt 'hit's' • id i - initanees • diplornacV: requires •• that rious..eohntry and the do bt •
e ty:p old Ifen- hdea largely '
.. . , , , . .p 101r1 is Aot usuall &she until. '.
W ,
• quite cold weather, -.It is generally
. - .. 0 r. . -eig ee triont s" .. • • •
The chief' et .staff. ,then'. Use:illy in- the contrary, our latest encomitere.
• ,. ' ••• UI iii4i1:44 .tbnor mous armies', and is eel, there were seven tiaSes: Me :Mini': ..°".eit I `the. thought ' is . , apParently' •Illealtned .got together a vast, vol ante ry
Ca -, lliag up ioutits; who *ill be twenty-. i
ogr: of amputats. ion•was .- fourteen, ; turning to new • fieidarnl
s of illustration i -i -four million ditizens, . drawn forms the Petitiomw 'that His Majesty hive 'ho; our that in spite' of r •nfi-: done out of doors; and itfrequently
happens that the day appointed' is
. , enc. in 1917, a. year' liefore their thne. which, &Mai/tering the number of: :seri- f.. The 'supreme prophet, lereintah„,stip-: 7!"1 elliOr ciaas..enrolled of.their ewn is just., getting ready to depart fOr morical inferiority we are Sure alwaY; ^-1-4 raw, and snow -squally. .In had'
'',.Stxty per cent.. of the. poPtila• :another front,. but that he will grant to get the • better of r • the Bussians,.0 `-"a";
Jiaean 1' t'. mobil 'zed . her industries to, nue. .• ' • • • - • t' • 11 f ''. Oleg this •versd. with • comnieet from acePrd•
,"weather 'hutchering. Out ' of door; in
Aeses, it/43' aneseep lona y • aver -1 , - . ••• ' . " • •tion •capable Of bearin , ' ' r • o •
....,:_supeie I lp nii lobs Bussuin troops ithie _showing., _i_l___ . • .'„_.::_,. .....___ ' ever, part of his -tragedy; - . -• 1. : • • • -
' ' 1 ' `ii• • 'n,f ' •
' . • • . -ed to the appeal of•-tbei" eacilln° e" nd- . the. desired. andience. on his return to thanks to our methods of defensive
. i stielt 9 seeetae e, inxieuer""periums in • • • '' - • ' • •
This promise, hOwevei, tattles and strategy!' .- 1:ijvell'opl: -1466*..oairrsteert4.,Zio: ;76..larik;a:u.hitli.,t7..".;
. 0 e Kai A ... . ' 4
' 'With rienitions of which- they stand in k's shoWing• the different awsses of '• 37. Stoned-,-Zeoltariali,, on 'of ;Je,-1 ...surely a. ,..„, , - • •-• , ._ .headquarter4..
• • -great ,nooil-,-viz;,, „leitlea •_'',,and_r_ beaVy,-.0thisa itdeohy -a: -.• .° . ' ' '. • ' iietiadtV4A the -special e;tityriple.:tsee 2. iC -'• ' :T"")•-. "41'; .''1.1 -110"..4 . iA, ft#,00.-4-tept -•• • It lc,' by suelv widen- SI - Then fellow- ie ft- eulogy ' .1-tif -K ' 1
e xe acI10)1, tne follow, •
dreaded. I am , of . the
,
. gims. • . . ' ... • . , ' nig percentAge's• wore given ori perfor-: chr•on: 24,-".0-221 Mutt, p.. 253', -Our ;
. ,
the' "Ehl's bistof)-iA entitled at Any that Count 'Augus.t Zu •Eidenbere er, laying.
1. . opinion that on every farm reehere '
t , Lerd'e allusiota• ; to the stoning iq 1 itate ..io . 6. . eol„c,ti - • • • Grand All_awrs'ih1141.41olf: ft,h,),781evel,a1:4111 orIth,ae.1,14n1.8a4_a'pem'ea,_'
sileelal Stress MI his great;:•?t:'nr; ::3aY
• The Ator factories of America are nun ''i„,..,e s.,.. h . • •
is . . , g 0 .., e remit, , ., .per evil ., .___„.................. • ........---- .. . . , i I • • , ., • • ‘
,1 12 ' 'numeration. . -
ie muell• butchering to be dent,
-' ..:".pottrieg 4.-tonstant stieam of mu 1.. shell,„2 per' cinit..1. :Mill-et...3P vor.detit.; , pi opneks- may. -wen • taxe •in ot ier irt- Strange* eil q11411, what 16 irro's1
a •rPallect, • Yetr • - a • . r e • mpe la - Courtini i ry g T11136w •ati. an e
ag,: 1890', ',has • been prevepted from:.seeing,;• el all the vieteriee won. by the AnstrO-..
.:1„til_..,n. mei. noon ._,:the_, .e,2„......,ibe e buildingon pa ,. . •
' tia.n7-inia itilistea fa -i -Eastern base -1--, '1.enta.e, T''' per cent. In Outface • tailet.: • Sawitr.,---Sotth":Wair-7:11140-. "AW ii114.4t411'-hi:...44.•fez.-.P.i4t1S-11-nrinY--froltr-thii-'-'EnIP '.6
. . . _ a . _ . .. . , . .. . • • • ther should" r '
nierak pobil• bt.' vieW, .
nainely. Its coin, The 'isolatidn of the• Keiser is. an he.. thief cOmmander Warns •Of -the seYere ' P°''''''''''• 11* -80°.i. --writeilu Miehlkau* •
Lii)a whiql tin, Brit . -lab menition 'effort . wounds i„he percetiiitge .of serum:lei in_ skin, the ' Martyrdom,./ of , tsiiia.h. -
'• I
•
•
-t-'"*&•::• fetiches ' ;Ls fullest ' :tempo and oar • • Te OW- • -It 'h rd t tli position of voninteerS instead of 'eon. ',' t • f t . • f h , • int t d • • tfFariner' It shOuld stand As near the
jury•. greater and of .balle,t, injury . . a 0. escape.: . e 4 „ , poi it . °Ito or , le, p plans o te
. mins en a will e mete. out in
• • • • te.1-wouni s•-•••
TITHi-Trurrrir-flibile 111 s
• ,Av• • hall Ile able.,; With the supplies
froth 1101' 111 nnil America: ;to equip
any n, niber, of Ressian troor up, :to
• '
• 111413- tOnstantly rip
eIr.sse's to the!'colorS,. and • long before
-• - • the rspring flie Serbians, whom she is.
to i-cer.11 anil reviatual, will . provide
200.400 el the bravest. and:most see-
• Famel 1,;•(,ops in 'the Balkans,. -0--The
Belida:11 army, drawing: newforMa-
tioaa troni the classes lecently called
tip, will be even more formidable y• the sprite' Franee is calling to the
h
colors er lads Of eighteen. and nine-
" teen, and • passing all -ahle-bodied
lorenclunen into her at white
Britain and the Colonies ere making
feverieh'offort to hhave te •Bnipire
represented by angthieg between lour
an live Annoy men,
y the spring six million men- •
• three and a ball million Allies, 'two
And a half nitilion flermans--sheuld
be -facing one tinotim u the Vilest, In
the Past, live million men --,three
• *Ilea Bus:dans, two thllh1ot Metro-
Gernians -should be at grip,, On the
AuP
stro.Itallan ion t two niullion men
••
•
ingg adapted .• .-the Para- ...ste:-,11'1,'•eStYlIf'el'eltt14-iit.f1.11'irm..elittr.'e
• • • cent phrase: SWord....rFrom Elcialfs folitr41 the 'Italians11 ttt
-
, • •
• - •• • •' 1: -Eines' 1.9' 10; ' Compa•re al -be .1er. ,•years• chl; •the • oil threok. et
chan e in the Greek win gi.
ve- s't
'',4re English Spelling. ,
, . 26. 23. • Sheepskins. ---.The neer,Oti,W141', '1:11•01101.• W1'016111 • milita0
" A reader ului.,:vais!..ikrtiused by the peisifiel • would • be -the 'sikiii..weirn 1)v ; .11" P°'ll'a41°°°." .14111-1 v
artaele, in whieh the , :verieus Elijahs adopted •lxy I.ater times, us • A'Y'.1211-11 II 20 wlio•tnrif.°11.
pronixecietioes letter ."imgli" • Ititid, .if ...Clerical. garb: CQmpare.7..geh, '1.4n.u.:11C;'1`41, • : " " • •• '-•
•mg Proof .of the fact that the:English clothing. . But the reference .,in• not:. •• •• .. • •
One setiiid in a :liente i,,titiy0 rke be quite . generat—III•treatecV.e-The ,•.
v,.e,re• illetitrated• sends us this ' atriust 113; • 4 • :Or these wolves sheep'
Hove Own •
. . . .
length:go, is as versatnf ile in op8il, is 1ling's yery satiefactory,•aed •the *twits may „,%." IICF
•
• len en y and vtere yu‘rifea:
In prononncing one .cembinatiOn of
lettere after Ix dozen fashions; .
• "Mr. Hughes, on hie ecin HugWs
cruise, took to booze when he heard
the news that be Would lode his dues
and gain the noose if he Mit .net use
bit olloes in the el -might) to take. some,
vjeivs of the ewee, and also learn to'
make his u'e and tea and. spoil
yott's and (mono's and who's and too'
and to4 and two's.' • • •. •
• However, we must protest against
riming 'newe" with mboozo" or'lose"!
lea Min ever becomes eitilized
is through the intluenee o eeine .qood.
woniii.n. •
Don't
In to :- 1104T my, awn way in every -
word reters- lieh. $1 :an& Mb, thing," "Guess you -don't." "Indeed
I .That's the hergii
• • ii.
•P"' • wortnY-'"'°' it• 411 25.6at "v" •
torn the anyon remember rtold You he proposed
ikonselotistieSS 4if this yh- MA in. row .boat and itoketl •If.
•worthinesti which Prompts. the 'Weil& rd. fi.oet- tht(?oli life "With, him. lost
to be.crtiellest to men and ;women fay ;that Way?'" "Yes,. but 'What's that-
• above own standard; • ; • got to 40 a: with it?" "Well, he' ivas
• O. Witriesi.barne-The . Weird Of -
verse 2, repeated, at the end tia a thea- :,r°"" hat.1. 44'4 64`°1114.•"."
. • •
es that le now proved', Received not •
he'
....Tor the best is always yet te :bej• TRoden% lire$:
Only ,imperfect religions 'place their "Your ;laughter . andherhindiand
)1;4:Aden age in .the pesL ' seem very. .
happy," . ,
•
40, The thought thet.we never &in "They ought to bb . Pa and I. were
be fully blest till We are all Mewed married gp yearn before We thought.
tokether Inspires Paul's magnificent; Of putting on half. the style they're
picture of 'the destiny of creation itt„ atarting exit ' •
t t•d:
•
'40 rn A fhiligi .,••,...—Virsaneem*i
'learn any• more -of the real "sittiation ,,.:Iiere in :how ,the 'order. reads ,on this
. • • autottairtz :ii: eeaoprtspstruteuctott.us.rep.lare, into, h.e,
and 'events Olen :General Von Esilken...!_iiniet. ' „ ' • .. . • -' '
my ..father bnitt .such 'n... one, in
haYn de'sigq Cu let ilitn 614- Nvil.1 q't h.6 til°'t . r-igermis. measures' iii whieh we qOuld kaki, dresa and ctit
Bain II. is to -day iteftially the 'Piina.; fact, ..any• nvailrible' Measures Will be
,. ,
. ' taken to • Mimi) •out this: •Suicide eVit,,1 up our hugs, auk.hn 'warm and. COri'
•fortable; even oil the soldest•cley;
. i4r of hi!: ,own military.ettinerilla....
I
• • •
• . •
• ' •,, '. to 'pull it uP. As- it' .Were. by its Very .
• end there :Was 'a Chimney, e. big
.'.• • • , .
fire -place, and erane; that watild hold
• rhots. '. t have given • orders ' to' the ' one
• • • ' corps of surgeons and PhVsiciens t° two big
. •
• .''' A .'51'41t. Ymm. iiTil.r., ,...•. ' . :',':':,,t.thile.lriitvit..":°0;t..thskc,11810. i*ribter3imaingy . try710:30vnass teettidaoTeofh • itthrtarourch, othetidflioongr ltioaritheel
• • . rkettles . far heating water. ••
• • • •Bleginn'is . is ;no,•Ado.nis„ And ; his t.c; fan theit4elveA: A
•aqn,per, is. in direct' ratio to Ins tack - . -
, if „the 4141inquents .
!ground, in 'order to innke it stand
f " I I • fT ere they will be deprived • f .
. . _ . ..,. c nu s their rank and tried hy eaurt-martlal.,: flainlY, with . the top. leaning against
else is:Tattler peppery at temper The 0*.reasda for the. efforts to goO, the platform on *hit+ the hogs Were
and is •.rather. incline.d. to "get l bpSit"
la hdi, buot.ma .ii,:riii; the course .0.1 tetttlitirbeisys �f tar goetwohdueldv-batitektuvieriduelisihs., dierr attachedo.Th0.4a"61/0.f. t;i.rtioreilai Livid' 70171; :
a (Marko). . . - .• . . . ed .01, their diihotorahio sok, poi., hanging up the. hoge, that &Mid -be
, One. sticli ' alternation bad; been had thotiotco, / wish to notify an toilers used:ref handling large hogs -fit the
the other evening, : but things' Ooen hoinza,netion tonoomoolt, aulowo; that scalding barrel.' The . building . wuti ,
'cittrted de‘ , •Itt6in.lifs 1"4 -re" their t1011101' will .inacribed on the VII and • also used ' for cutting up the • hoer.,
ga nett his. teinPe anti '.theurht his; Roust. of. the gonlan tietnyi*eheer trying nut the 'lard, es well 88 wash:
INivbifde4tahtvaeled!on : BIC he : .,. d; ,. rwivesigh. ba. and c.hlLdrenand
p..rivite.g.ez sildosavnyit rtotivo4.11. iintifoeliot4hiled.i.:Mpttplakilinktinsscilizpr, 1)1;3.611410,4,g ttOird '.
• title hod been Playing, with lifi. int- "twelve the least allowance. (it ,es.iise. • eider for apples butter an nunee pies,
ill:yy:ittouotlitsobilaite:Vtie,.41,„ e";,E0.'vseci.E.4"Itti.,,,,, ,',I.., • :arra etem. ..imy, IGoriton at.itb, oritteti.:”. • : intoio:ikl,',44 (rid ;71-4 iewieluitt;
:"Well.," Said his wife, with in mg. • . : 4*. -
limps gleam. in her ey#, 1:it may not gnieeliew' ani.•eriireged Ottge !MU...." enillanrioIlelldruhichPAI°PtleetIVer Oilitil°Cvekantel;' .
be Matetly polite of luthY; hut shows ilnyi think all the insane people am ..- I think the boss vms afraid - if. It
he has 4 sense 'of horror."'
. •.. • , in ssylume. • ,,. stayed I niight get ido place;
:.,•:
•
5' •
•
t •
•
•