The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-03-30, Page 7• A ,
11ANS AS IIUNGRY 44)-InV 11°917 feltQw)
•,:1,1 4,10•aftertsards:-Ve deal eetile 0, . • . •
hc was GEN PETAIN• NEW •11111.SUNDAY'S
from p.n. to be laughed at, 110 1$11371
AS THEIR'PRISONERS
them fifteen sounds rapid I eaid - FRENCH • ---, INTERNATIO' NAL L
HE110
• 'Indeed v`e elen't' be - Plied "Then
And so westlid, afteSmiard they „
'ITaVe Xle. 6 preellfmg. I. thee(011,- ' An ' .. .
k •LAIICH-CORPORAL• Wills • 1...1(1 AN'S, the eannoasna -the •Gerrrian• Empire w4A .DiliTetet.) PIO. .1f.ila Ratitile 'VrOat: teaa."
•A, . ' ' EXPIMENCTIL • tiring upon ties. • ' • ' •s-
this, that :41,iit's,' Itut and Autoraohile-ss
"X Untst saY " all the lime ,
we, were in•Germany we never hist .• • Ile Lailha 14,110',Colott '
„WesisUew.,that...Posittlia :Walla •-•:-.. - ----- - •--•:--sZeppelits..• .. • •
. ,
•-•;••••AirriTall-fioldrifirwaih liWkil'110314- -•E'i'gn C.ome out on top and 117 WAS rare:good , • . • .
. . .
tles.04 Prisano:s for -news to -be teld that conscription hal'. el'eal a SliVIIR 4nre , rebIll in a
. ..
-Bread,
• .
, ,. • .ippe Petain„ the new here of France, to make them
. ,
' • to 'Lance•Corportil William, Egan
! ef A "Totality" Who. Iltas-VecOlne: Vitteal, headquarters, 'says that u...ntil a wee. Is. Thi (1. hi.gh Priest-Caitiph
..
" • the Royal Irish. Rifles , Who :is a suss - • • - . -
'... vivor of: the. Mena retreat Ana WAS -
sceptered. by the Germans at. La Baas ' • One et the roost re.matitable p.erson. the. Rermali. bombardment began the
' shine gun autonsebile. Prom the:tune •
ago the. specters home was in • e roes AtkhCeepi.t 311:11:1.v1:4141.11.1b;Al(c),a1v*Viiei:eaArttie.i.olft4Ai-ftz.ba.
ea .Of British ArtnY. •
• • see in, •Oebohers 1914. .• 'the- felloWillg• alities.*that the Wiir has disclosed in
\ is CorPoral Egan's .own, Story: Of . ).lis th i British. asnny is that of Sir Wil•-• slept in Catnaps while raciog about in ..•
general has. not used,. a bed • It has 'ilnisetial deetee, the high
Stinhetirin had,. jitisdiction
•eXperleoeM, ' It. .efaltahlSc. ar.*• Will 'PO li..Mit R..."Ttetierte04; Wlio, ia neat chief, ilia 'Motor, • ' . .s.- in- fereign cities °le the s
•- /10tieed,. Interehting (Walla , regarding•• of the iinperial ' general, ata, und,
$ir Rept CaSentent's'atteropt to. •ins. ea reports'. fon Lendon.. telt us the
• ;ince Irish Prisoners of war te enlist most infinentia. man in -tiv. mlutani.
- 'in the German ranias..:. '. '. ' • • 2, . or gaoizatien of -Great , Britain; Lord.
• "When we 'first hrthied $0 Ger- ..Xitchener by n� means excepted. Sir.
• InallYs!' saya-Corporat Egan, "we Were Willialirs,h4 long been a valued
simply . half starved ' sind . I remember to to • whop merits Ida saperiors„
• • my ' comrades: and:. mYselt 'picking Oa ,'were' citilte• alive, but it is 'Only' ,within
•
potato • peelings • fterd . ' the swilltubs- the last 'year 'that pther lands ' . have
, Where they bad been throw.n 'by' our heard his halm, His •career is esises •
••••••••••,•
2. -
SecOud 9uarter. Lesson
of Saul -Atte [4. 11,-41...
Text: 1 Tim. 1:
1, LITTLE GIRL IS
JREGMENT'S DARLING
IN'I'El',ESTING /INCIDENT 01.' THE
•
fIREAT WAR.
COeYereiell'.
45, Wee Waif Adopted by British SO-
. come in." peasant's •cottage, Geis !fend Phil.- Verso 1. • 'fltreatenings 1
"rivingi mht.0y prisolier of war _ h h f ileds_as • ".7s
is4.ct tins,. the (srletailmeve ufia
v:irst741.n.s5,. (Acts 11) laltlferlatightt,taet
rgatory," aciording• •Vitt WVIAX"Atil= Lt. ii{Ohly'R'sf..I4),,,
description of these remarkable Passage suggests he gen
iy which he • • diers I'layed in Safe& on
ishisphense" •
s••• . Parapet. . .
:ZilY•witt,i)itt 1 3t
11ritLIT,eil iirreigbi4inelribtlebhalr lieuedn')it3toli("11 by aa•
e /toluene seldier back from the front to a
,z_tlsn;Iftc)tit
::h:we;viei.yprielot:hiseieeesln
2.nl;ciiotinptii:(xli,hlady:iesanao-
over 'IOWA "Aliont eight month s ago," he. Saki;
Aree eXte;et "the C'emptiny were trudging aloes for
It it not easy to penetrate the 4s thy had Jeri s
hionlet a a few hundred • ins -More fully "the
. : of Geri," • "of salva
GRAND DUKE. [LUXURIES'ARENOT
JWKOLASPLUCKYI WANTON BRITAIN
*
.41•14P
ALTHOIXOp THE COUNTRY ;AS.
rgespEnovs; '
Removed :Front •Ceatro of, :Stage; He
Has •Carriedi the Stage With
%B
• ias •Or Built a New •
, ,
•
• One, ' •
The Grand Duke Nkh�las*Mae-
laievitch is the man that deserves.,
'credit for the capture. . of. .Erseruin
al.:14,-thessitivoneasofsthe-illtaalaas • in.
Atiatio Turkeysttlie greatest success
that • has . come te the airns .of the
Shortage or ships Will Require Pra-
shibition of the Impost of
r-raaelltfig- Cirdessia-ConneiT, -
which will totally prohibit importas
alliea since the capture of Przemysl 1 tion into the United Kingdom Of a
and 'the Carpathian drive • alums • large Inanb.er of articles which eosne
year .ago, wich
h, was also, en eered undet•tite.general heading of luxUries,
by• thejlrand Duke; N . • Will be ISAtled •by the Btitish Governs
When the Grand . Duke ' Nicholas. ;:nent at an early 'date. .
was reinoved from• the :mar e eet-4.- Among ,the things whick WIII• ' ha':
awns Tin., way .the first line of ttenclies wben one 2 Mend of Russia's land • force nd sent placed under the ban will be autos
ay of the 1.•Aord, l, the men --his nanie NVLIS Philip •Impey :te the Caucasus last' SePtenlh r the n°31-dles for private' use, musical • l'in
k-
•.., sentries, .wasbing 'sthern, "and" making.
:a meal of. them, .We • , wettld• have
, . ;eaten ,anything.,' . ' .• . •. •-'s- '•
-:. ''Wheri the -paroles began to . ar-
.. • rive from. thesOld Gauntry our.
-w'ere .themselyes' being 'Put • on :. shi?# , For . Sir Williem has 'literally yiaeri
' rations and they begged us to- • glvo. from, the. inks With 'nothing 'except
. them some- of our brad, lnit . we -re- his own merit to recommend • him.
membered the swilltobs and we refuss. Without any advantage of -technical
, ed. We said we wanted it all for our- education he has- made himself per-
• . selves. 'Sometimes they would take - haph the. greatest authority• in Eng --
'up our food and leok ab 'it eagerly, land in the higher. and' more diffichlt
but they• did not dare to touch it. What problems of Army organization and
. field.. strategy.. , • • ', , . .
.• Ha began life, we are toldsa .s either
a butler or 'e- feotmans...on that point
intereating, fpr it thews the •
opportunities that lie open th• capaeity •
and faithfulness even io an -organiza-
tion as fupdameritally aristocratic, as
the -British army.
they did, out of. spite was to. give us
our pateels last., •Everybedy else in
the tanip: was .served 'first. '
. . •
"We often dismissed. the war with stories •differ.• Which'ever it was, •Sir
•, the guards. Ats first they thought if William did not long remain .content
' would he a . ivalkever: 'England IS in that statien of life. He came up
kaput' (finished). they \ bold ;us. There .froni Lincolnshire' in .his 'twentieth
4iljeht geld' 00 'gold) and 'nicht year and .enlisted as a private in a
' • essen' (nothing to cat) ,in England.lcavali•Y regiment. For eight years he
Afterward they changed their • remained a .trooper, although he took
e,very opportunity to improve his mind -
:and. to study the lore 'a. the •profess.
Sinn he had adopted. lie spent • al-
most money• -•.a British cavalry-'
1. • man, „gets. fosusteen..perice day -L -in
11They theughtsveshid a srerY .small b•eaks,' and there is, a story .thilt when
army at.firsb, but toward'•the.ead they, -he was ••busy , grooming his horse or
• knew that we had greWri int:6 a very cleaning lig, equipment he would get
•
big -army. • The last .feW -weeks I was-! a comrade to .read • tp hiM•irprii some
.. theta they were greatly worried over elassie.English author or froM a text-
book on war.
• Almost ell• British officers are mien.
ef familY Who have, been edueated at
• - ed the Germans -were Ortairt that the military -cellege. et Sandhurst, but
• °- they were, going to win,. Ad. 'you.; private' who has thejcnowledge and
• .,--sheirld hit v elreardstlise-sinling-iiikrthe•the-a.afavber-cm"'gc°sf°11141Y-OtAlr
rejoicing and the yelling of 'Deutsch- commission by passing a stiff examin-
land •• uebor,A.Ilest"We shall. have- etien.• • •Irenllg Robertson got such .a •
.-. peace.* Christmas,' on e Of the. aen- commission in:, the Third • Dkagoon •
tries lipid the. . . • " • -• ...Guards at , the, age of twentsc-eight;
, . .n ere •
and he seen showed so 'much fitness
. .
"When Christmas •-e-anie ••ti'd th
Was no 'peace our .sentries lost their- for. the highest sort of 'staffwork that
• cocksureness and 'told -us that 'before he -,was attached to .blie intelligence de-.
4
ions arid said •England has :`viel, geld'.
(Medi gold) and 'vie' essers' (much'
te eat). ••• •• •
••Worried Over :Conscription. •
• conscription, and I noticed the Ger-
• man papers were full- o‘f references to
it. •
"At the time Warsaw we's Captur-
• NAPOLEON
Baby sWho, Disturbed. in 16•2
° Alive-.
,again. • ' . „
`. when. he , was eppointed commanderS
• Napoleon Bonaparte,' • once'. -.lost,
• "You. have:heard Of the •'•ettempt • years toscome, ong may judge ,by of Verdun, •sbaff offieers atthis head.: au s and the symbol. helps. the
ges--------------------------
• 'A remarkable Man, only •filtystive. ants still left iirthe cOniznunity ,L ossessed by Ananias, would p.ass t : s.s11-V N ..GA VD Y' .i.1 I 111) 1•10.I"SEF, _ - • - .•
the air of vigor. and of physieti fit-, onarters . replied, in .cffeet.i. as lellOws:TVelonment,,bf oppropriatiii
: that Was Madeto term German Irish
• ..German Irish 13,rigede. • . 'earsof age noif W, and go d fos many
' •
• • • 'Questioned as to the ultimate. tate g
S' 1
pianifestly. .
• • .insehief of Russia's armies at the, bps f 1 'a •••.' sleep in 'Wittenbusg Ger;
-
• Often •so, --found the alid. in a .ditchshY thetaVerage casual observer sai e
don.' .
struments, cutlery of all kinds,' hards
heeozne . a .tech- roadside. No one cauld.go,back,
alone, appropri.
(insisted in and made her aa' comfortable es, pos-
pare' John
, exposure and running up arid
on leible. In A few dayssshe. hadreeover- a
ed :frost: the ill effets of the • WO and
the. . s•••••
Dukes
tt that 015s. goodpse i manyt endipriowouldf menihe, . Grandhlfla.ve.thet the
Pe9,1111
fit of sulks for the rest , of the Wars% „ . . ,
•
Walter Bunch:nen, President. 4 •the
and
d nio.ng
own the trench, the pet of all the :his
big a man to do 'that ' Hisreburtalyin h4nioqd.,i ociiiici of•
Trude,
in
outwit, the aheve,..
But Nicholas Niaholaievitch is tots • yirorkers Ntien Off, :
Goetr.aliprawntedi iBeicinri utdi:_selIfy:la dr:3.1 n• all1 ill'ic!olelusc IA. :Id, eaesr, c ioniwoe :it sal: 71.). j. vx . .
said there had never been:greater act4s
soldier's took the girl into the trend: tn. ' 1 .d. b '
2: .trirels, eli.nle.. tezi officers
,and man. 7 . , 1 . 4s hils4.1ttgaerkbaos4y794poprvtraion:hte-elystava ,,wages
the larger indastrieh, • that •
pa;t0noef .Cltahya tet•bnoainti.b nwehilardly, itihlalelnd eiiln'-moveds ftola the centre .0
were higher than @Vet befOrec
• obviously geant-major, asked a Man to we 'find that, he- hahscarried
meat had sieves' been: .so Olen in the ' ...
.11 c WoUld
It Luke
had that.tIte„Percerirage orntiensPluY- . •
had recohrea tram the shock
is due to see that the child wee. safe. They had
Toe ,geis '01101'111mi or•has built 'a near One, I.
,ana . you, like, where the eyes of the wprl,
are now centred. • history of the 'country. The only
which the left her asleep in a snug corner, and More than. any other m.ember • of trades relatively quiet are the build- ,
verb Inearia there they found her, still sleeping. , the royal family, Nicholas Nicholaie-
, ing, linen, and some of the litxurls- • •
vitch has devoted himself to the.pra.-
fession Of soldiering,
Acts, as -here, it has
nical term standing
ate' to., a religion which. e
pilgrim's progress to Go
true and living Way" (com
14. 6):• • -
,Paul's pwn story mu
fully' tompared, in Acta 2
26. 1249. The surface diff
bsitr, 1 ty v• ,
had been writing Betio -1
have had the sense to'. he
consistent. The repetition
the special purposes with
story is told: Shene-The
literally lightened. That
men knew of , nothing but
flash and peal of thunder
enough: it vlJa.4' only in
that they shaped therifselv
visiOn 'anda Voice. A. ligh
the brightness of the sun"
13) at noon (alto Acts 22
• 4. He fell, with. the ot
26, 14), who, however, quick
ed (Verse 7). Saul -!The fo
name is not. Graecized at
Acts 26.'14 the %voice is "i
brew (that is, . Aramaic) '
The doubling. of the nam
characteristic' of Jesus. •.Co
"Martha, Martha," "Jerus
ruaalem," and rather snail
ily, verily," "yea, yea." Me -
Luke 10. 10; also John 15. 2
5. • Who art thou ?..LThis
sisteat with the• probable
Saul had seen • Jesus on
joined in the 'persecution"
its climax on Calvary.
well fail,at first to see that
ious Face was really.the sa
ke ware, yarns, chinaware, :fancy goods
the other Offered Chocolates from Germeas..
a.lightning
is „ tikely- "The German trenches were about
150' yards ' off," and the level; open
hers (Aets
alail:.A..1.c's..ts.s.oe6.2.1'.... recklessly put his head above the par-
'ly recover-
rm of the
on the Germaa side. Cries came from
the men, throagh the periseope, saw
apet. One morning, to their 'horror,
the' child standing.. above, the trench
space between the . two lines wasn't
t_es „4.inbtenvaa
healthy. No •man who valued. his life
would :go there unnedesserily; or•
n the He: 'the ' enemy, 'but:they were not 'hostile'.
The sight of the. girl little more than
elapigauaggneit.:
an infant, .had touched . their senti-
mpare his -mental side, • mid she had offers of
alem, • j.s. ! chocolates .had inyitatiens to. go and
` I see them. • . • • ,
arly ,"Ver -
"After that the girl .went • over the
0:Co impa„.te
p. arap.etsquite tifo. She was -es-seafe•
in. that danger zone as if she had.been
•
earthi. and
fact : ctlol:' :1::17hehnei;,stilidneontc:enschh,e,l,y,ent Close Up
behind the, lines. ' No Qerman' would
which had.
112.1•1011111•1111MMINI.
producing trades, buts even in these
the workets have found employment
elsewhere; or enlisted. Longer, hours
are -being worked in nearly atI the
trades, and it is estimated that this
overtime repseserits increase of
43 per cent. in theranniser of persons •
employed. A few firms have had to ,
shut down, but.among the active Arms,
only seVea per cent. of their machin-
ery was 'idle during December. This
is a better reccird than for peace times. .
• Wages Increased. L
• About 5,500000 people have reeeiv-
ed raises, and the sincreasesin wages '•
has been roughly a million Pounds a -
week. , An example of the ''rise in
AelLe:AP.I'aYlebfeorsgeetnheinwtilm! chibsdayof got '‘• •.: -
about four pounds ten shillings ,a
• month and their -keep; Now they res.
„, to get between the lines again. , She
was taken back and \Vas not allowed
the. little dAtighter of the compa-ny
The eight 'days trench • duty ended;
S•
cs.;,,IA:.t'' "y men in the engineering bradea; work --
i ing overtime, have earned from fie
'
*cei've between eight and 'eight pounds'
ten shillings pes )nonth. • Ex.cetitional •
taken charg•e cif by the company • to ten pounds and over per: week.
•hat bitter . was
.e.:,:' - ---"OvAlk-flItl-tNIta's saighttly=:41•Mults.
. jstoreleoepeis :Who had children of hit A
6:.:11:::::. ,:, 1 One toohnake.r , in Co_vent,ry,.. by ,g,r.p. a,,it .,, , •
• -,--• ounds-in - isreek„ ..-----••-s- - • - :,••••-
.:Zrolas.,_ 1 effortss . -made.- -snorts,- -than:7-sissteens.:s.-.----- -
nan s on
•:.:000,U.. 'A '
skill:. in .diessirig and tindresSiag the
tpdratirig
le might
the glor-
me as that
one "marred% beyond any 1
• whiCh he had leokecl "with. a
trinniph" so lately._ • • •
•
Words are' expanded by sinco
sseis.na • h,s. paw child • -and. hts _ strictness about 'the ," As'a .youth of"2.1.iir the war 'of -1577-
ays ef darkness
mining beth.- Alf the men . made a, 78 with Turkey he went witb his, ta-
•• Must -It is fuss of hers and she of 'them. • .The the',. who . bore the ,Saine nante, to the
at this great boys. in' khaki are' her phonates arra Danube and •the Balkens, where • the.
she goes. up to an'-Tomnly with a: .elder Nicholas -was • command • in
elsad, follOWed
ul`e •aear• life' Smile Of...complete- trust..
, his owls commentary r
• in his ,ewn svithin the d
and heart-seatelting.
deeply . higitificant th
little ,word 'begins pa
.Even as persecutor'. h
pertinent of the Indian establishment. the able_Fre
forming any definite • opinioa _ of • the t . , nehmen.. whe issia...sharge , what he thought to
•
to compare the Enslith and the Ger- busy; days learning every Indian clia- . , . • . . • . • .1) • •.• .Iter of the s•;inee of God.
'of the defence ef Verdu 3, . _s 126.9):. ter him trillYTh
•.prospecta of the war they 'would like Re -strait' 1-t-h1-.-S13,'•.e moments of' 1..ds.. :
.man papers They They 'could : see that lect he could master, andmadehim,' „- '' • ., .. • '-, ,. • ..- Iconcordanee will striki
things were not 'going as well at. we're self - thereby one af, the. Most useful nalsitants where resides:• the Verdun.' the human life Of Je
Pictured both .ftorn. the: absence or. officers in the Pei -vice. • • • " , . , , general staff," says Le , leurnalsr.from first. (Luke 2.• 49
coin in the• -country;. the seeteity of . •
He came, Out of the Chitral :cam- Thiek mud covers, roe& torn up • by 17....q5, •ete.) by the Ma
'food, the .continuaI strelim.'of:•wounds thousands • of auternobiles which:pass! • 7... 'leering the seta
paign with d se,vere wound, the Dis,:...
•. ed returning...from:the. font and the tinguighed --Service 'Order:arid the daily, and every three. paces a. . gen.. LThe nourt is ilia Same a
•
rank
, ,neVer.ceasing demand.'for fresh •drafts of 4aff.'etilgaill."' After a tour of duty '.dartne demands to see .enes papers.. • 4, .but in _a different case(`
.
for the firing line. ' ..• . ' • - -- at home he went out in the Boer Wet •'All the. houses in the village , are this context . is : signifieho
.. . -"At .fitit We saw :fine; physically de-.
. ..
where he wen fresh distiaction, boa: occupied by efficeit.. The memhers of thought it had thupderad, "
veioped Men about the camp, :kit be- .
in the field and in, staff duty. Mean-. the .general staff are installed • in cos- ' Multitude in John 12. 29. -•
fore i came -away they • had all ,gorie while he had - learned • French and ' Ger- ridors and. baros. fleadquar ters its s 9. Three days• -Till She •
to the front, and in their place. had Man and studied carefully the -array self is.. situated. in the town hall, With time a resurrection: -
' cersie anaemic looking clerklike ler- ' systems of the Continental' nations • one stern dar e on ;uaril at thej•
geo m , .1, . '• 10-43 hold, I -A literlo in
Behold
doer. , . • .„ -. -. . • . . the- Hebrew idiom, 'used"gY L
"Nearby there is a sordi& peasant Isis . fondneits for Old. -•',r
General -Petain, •
. • -,...•-s.ss....„..:ss,„ ..,, .,' .. Eiris s..yrirent ,for.Weinens • • „.
'., It` it estimated that ,the number of ,
women Whce have been substituted for .
meif in the Metal trades is 77000., in .• ' '
the leather trades 14;000, and. in • the - •
. . miseellanemis. trades' 274,000. s'Besides.
•,, - • . • , ,, , .. , • . R : officer in a husagi. rpgiment and :wee
ehief.?of the 'Russian fOtdes in Euro.: -theses mariy ate in • the Government
e "steen datighs: -'••••• • -
be duty (Acts ' . ,....:: Pet in, the Hotpittil.: • '. z•-• nealisTurheY. He Was thea junis.: •
A, month after ,she 'wag found. the on the staff. Of. Oerf.,' Iliidetzkv: .He employ, an incteasinSly .large body
men .thotiglit ithat she ought to have look 'part in the campaigns of Plev- are in commercial houses, and.a great' .
ngly. show' how
" :The (Greek)
1 p Impel, Who found. her, ha, Loveha, ad the
• came th 1 h 4' 't 1- •• • • . . .
horseman and . ekpert. on. cevalry • nsats. ef • work which,. is- not too . heavy'. for-
• Shii3ka -.pass; . re-
t onil'irriiatraarend6,nin!o.ay.gedricihnittileal"dP'Silf"teirbkii. ''''.•
. •
sus was , retest :a aarae` 1:1°
was,rioas dead and they gave her -his, eeiVed the Crisis . of .• St •Geetge• for • More AVC{men . are- needed -badly on the .
) 0 last listike,.
n51,1 (riial.gin ,....i. I approach to Philip., ...After she „had of hii present high repatation as ' a
3001.11 -finis as s the nearest, valor, and -established the foundation I be •Use&iit the southof England alone. ,
farms. Two hundred theusand could :
_,., , • . . ..., Spur:note,.
' beeissix-months with the .coinpany.the • 'Women are performing every- kind
s veice,in v.esse
- .
..Whieh. in ;eel geantszaajor Was ' "weunded-J-sind teks 7 . ' . .. ' . . \ '
. 4 .o, pi e in England,- The After; that War ' the' ,
t. • 'They .
go. came .a, . n and taS ro e by c egs ees to be cbminand.e.'r :
1 • • •ith • hii Id • s -"ed in • s ..1 . • their strength. In one firm . they. are •
lc .i
. .
: .. . torso as. , secure y , an • as •
segnnent, carnaiGar:dned;D,4hk.: • 'Making electric . motors; in, another ,
like • th
, .
. ., , osp tal„ toe, the pet c.rf patients and a hussar
,f ..r•they are .dping all the weir . .
arl'Pi!Itc"• ' • She has. now „heels taken by her t A 1 f i 1 sr: . In
.. . ,. • . spec ass enera -.0 c va• r spite n menu= •
, .ruil•se.s. , • -... . .. . •. • • • .- ' ' • • ' J. division ' Of caValty; • and %finally' ; ..n.,t- facturing two inch hoWitriel. shells,. in -
1 .
doting ot
uke front
estament the rc in t ' • • •I ' . '.' . . •
'',.• .. • .... adopted 'daddy -th sergeant -major.
;Woman's care hild :441,4 'attached to
s, -to e foid, wheii she will have," e nes s 'for stirrups rathei. shorter •than
most men Of
of 'hia ininiase- height an his hi ..f d •
his size •wonld seleet . he
,
g len - . ' - .sits a 1 • • 1 ' d • '
• • - 1 . • . -' The'parentage of the mild and.'how .gradefully.ts ..ali but the. •yery pick .of army . -gradually,. There will be # du-
i a street . she came to. lie deserted ' in • -the ditch. European caval "yin •• ap.pearanee. 'of '-oVertime work and a ••.•
` straiglt t • at' La BassPe 'relnain art unsolved inyL •
knits with spectacles,, so thin that. you, antisin 1910 ' this- self-taught • self-
' could- blow them over with .yotir- .ti•Ainect officer, who • had . no gtound-
breath and hardly is tall. at their•bays wosis 'of regular academic education, cottage, • is e 'sea head- I • . •
'onets., • . • • - • • • .. ° * • .: ' - was put it the head of the Army Staff.. quarters.. Here• resides' the,. general, I . ii. •
...T4 Sentries used to ask mg 'Whe.. College, an institution that, gathers'
• . . • who is the sou o the Vet sus defence. .
• '. 1 f . • Straight-Thei e .i.S std.
.- ..- :
:He "came there a • week ago' and in in this ancient city sts-nien goes
tiler all. ours chaps had Maxiiri guns,' the .ablestsoffieerg • in the artily , .for .
.because they said our... Are . was 4;;, instruetion. in. the higher branches of -spelled himself in a small loom, -bake 9.11;°,23•11.LfroT the e t ' .1 •
erept.,for 'a 'plain is
and seVeral:-several anYevetigs;:%.'afoapv.to°P.e-
sdeedly ;They had shei•fect horror:al-war. • He ;distingulaited him -self there . . .
eluding the 'testing of them. ' •• '
Whee Peace Comes.
"Oil, the return of peace," said Mr.
Runciinan, "the men will leaie the •
t stery. She was too young to know
Mlniiter of 'Wet durint th fi
- . • reduction in the nurnber of hours • of
e rst • .
Work, whieli will call for the empley-
in° , who ,was • •
Jewish "
. her name -.or t9 give .any acedunt. of .raaatbg
ths.'ptesent confliet, th • ment, of mere people. The whole (mei-
Cran 1 Duke. did not -in 11 biers hing.es Jaz ge y the res atoll
earlir• JP herself. Thei•e- is a suggestion of
c ens. Th a oom is withotit heat or •. .
. .
the Ypres front: and. slec ared • they. again,- and was in charge of 'outfit- ,
light: th * th • that supplied b • • 'I. ' s . e pew
to - ..
Cli 't. 't • •It suggested to, the.nund ..., . - • .
ri iani y. . . ., tei ioi stiicken file . in the fact tbat
• r • t
would rather be. sen.t anywhere than ting and supplying th .. n ,, y. is_ss.. ...Fes , , .. g . - , , 1 . • .. f . 1 . .1, A an le met. Foi .
er ' an "' :' ' °I- • it doe, amon all sorts of people! . • . . . • •• .
t•esss •e °to guard Hassle's' 'Westein•
e. exped't' •-• • °
i io arthe war With; japan but •is held ' '' c'age-
•
"We • beard that three Gentian: sof- 1914. -Sir Jelin French' Made hint his •
air • eon "bUt if a Toninis.' • • ' • • '1 ' • that a ithit-." •
• there. . . . • • ' ! •force 'that went ever to France in '•".`",,,P.. . - - • . „ . .... .
Outside no sentry • is Visone, but in ell tirne-the.pashagesOf 4 slualitYs-the . khaki :and becaPped soldier she -border si,n1...possibio: attacks in
.. •
• • diets who* had been told ' off ,fot the chief -ef
. . . one remarks little , steeps of 'tetra' lo,ii•niganfitt .c.afarior ajog. nnei_f•51,:iten to . - atio.thet. ' his
an • ec I .1 t t' "i. . pits directiOn. He •was made commander
staff, and Ile was in time pro- '
,, . • . . - • • i.service men in -civilian. clothes. whose n sae -as A 11 r% A . ftWitV • A .; in
chief duty is to 'prevent the general .of i te'e victini,, as iibn6- ttil:ten.‘1•,Tystit.Urtielboe'ef i".-fae,,lirel ra ° 1 6. ,..,,, .2 ,'''' -- - - - '
• a pesition: winch- he . was• • holding
Wa..estern. , froia ,c6rinnitted-. sslicfd.e. meted .from that pas . ,
•
t to the head of ' '• . .ef the St:Pet° ersbutg district in 1906,
..- They had no .heert ter • "facing. us „•the- geiiera ,
' 1 staff in London. • ' • • ' • I the. Scapegoat. • In this • ce• it sug-
, • - • ' ' from. being annciyed• bY atutiouSpeas- . I ' ' . , • -
• C o'f Mir ex,pOrt.t'rtde and tonnage
. • .
dei
d
•
,;• •• .gimung of this' war. ••• •
•
g 'faiths gongsters • Xvoid Shelter Peinted in
. •
many, -all aceoiint Mr.
• Nicholas Nicholnievitch .was born
Munainger of Howeids Kansas, .saVs
•brigadeby Sir Roger. daaemerit • Out ness that dittinguishea t is .." `Nobody:can say • definitely, ••• •- ' Sauls-Again• the Arabs* for
. 'Bright Colors.
., •
s ovembet. .4836 but he is.- at • •
ndurance which has • • ' • •-• ri •correspondent',ef the, Pittsburg
..:*af. 2,000. itishmenstifeY'.got -fifty.one that power of. e . pease our adversaries are 31a in •
. • patch • a. ina. tom ma la,
: • ' a' ,had. Ants addtessecl hint : • s tartly- as vigorotis • and ersset•as ..W.1)61
't" ••• f • d - . •
• •
I- people w hes built hand- ht „a s d a. lung s aura, grant o
• to . consent to . • jpiit, • and aftet•ward„ enabled him to ive sixteen hours' • • -1 • Y g verse 5) •
•
• their. . • But. the trick has not- been
•
-housb;4•811(1 aneolt at Waterloo catild• not keep
sdresied in -a gitiy. tiniterni •With golds
work th the dily, eh he:haa• done more 'taken.' With mean i 'Napoleon. awake 'all the for
s n er orsto their's Painted •thent• hussar. . • • • • • • ••
;the end, uf, thor_mnemifi: I ot184, 'Sea. 1:s...4:: iLuhe's same
' • theit bayonets ,just.like.offie,erS,, s' • . • rsaries 'cannot
„ "One or tsvo tried 'their capers ' Mt "Is
rednesS. of . t•ed. tape. He , inedest
talks, little and , listens ,patieritly, and
pet: et -all inipressed With the sac- •
itely. and our admirable •ti • •
confidence. Our adve
re • t tl i • •i i '
pea le oi g na e orts ihdefin- . • •
;soaps „ -ha ed by ' the HOY' gPfrit, 'and he rAcags 1( them A e. berth .andhirnsell -taught the , prese C
nized hew wrong he had been in op-
nnnw Christ.. . Was haptized.:--An-, N
refused'to i2e.c(?me •tenants ••• --fiist i I 1
. is n o ...1 emoyec
eXt •yeat Make Vie- house' s ,out .straddle a::hetse:••• Theo. Grand •
, -low to • 44. ' ; • • '
peke now 10a years •of. age, .ance kept t.s.
battle... But
. zar, his.
aririe that (Mee tor long perieds in 'his life,. we tonne. As mot. csn:ns his pytysiest, y 1.7n .s,ontte wig tft coley have The qrand ituke • hirnself is a • fine
' yatrptting. in to see us their hands on
••• 'sew }Serpa worked :on it; they
Like. most auccessfill generals,, he tack.' 'Let us await developnient, with
hate bi•oken ' long Prepared at- i• eyea.,•bis spiriptni being was inamina•t.!.1.177. sJ..sapeoin et.- to iinti that. ihe athlete, a. Iseee• hei•sematt: • and • hd„ home.. dining. the , ..fte •
is • said, to ha- ve slept ;intermittent' v trit
ouie
. • •
.me,. Wtthey gat their aritweis sharp.
I said: 't wouldn't be after being •
traitor for all the money in the would'•
: They answered: 'YOu .are net a real
Irishm ri •
J one that *came:from' Dublin.' :I said;
qtrhat did you .do it forr -They an-,
Swered: 'We ire* sore to: win: Look
• at the land -We have taken.' i• said:
'What do you mean hy, we?'. There
• they were arrying on if they vseini
, real Germans; At Ones I lost My
temper and felt like striking ' them,
. but:after trying me three times , they
.:.gave the sip,sts-sshad.job,.,.
"I r_nnatay that, the •fiftysone... fels
lovirs they:got for the briga-de • were-
abouii the big.geit• rascals that I have
direr Seen in any army'. ..They • Were
' not soldiers for the love of Soldiering
or:because .Of any Pattiotism,' but ho..
cause they tepid not find anything'
•elso to:.do, and I date Wager 'that . i.
• they give as rinielt trouble to •the•-Ger-
• mans as they give lo..their
• men& they will not he long these: • .
told that they had' been
.proMited that they mould het he tent
against • the British or • the Prenels
• at.bat ligaino0 the itiisoiani. .
, Aip Sorry Per That, '
, •
'for :I. would dearly love to piit
•°'•hityonet thtoogh one of the tenegade
, • blaeltgUarda who ' disgraced. Such a
• tine regiment mine.
' "The sentries oeonsionally referred
• Co the German Irishmen. They. said,
they are traitors to. griglarid it is
,lust no likely° they Willhe traitor a to
(40ritiany,' and I .diSn't thiak they ate
far ; s • • •
"The Pleitsanteett,Memety Pt the
'war littV0 is of,Lit BROW% where we
teacie the Oormarie .ratf like. r
,
and 'retiring, and itindifferent re
op-
portunities'' ef .'self-ad'Vertisdinent. Ile
is, they say, proud • of One thing only..-
.
ing• Tommy,". and that •Within thirty
years he made himself the virtual.
head of the ..B•ritish. army. • And of
sthat he has tin unquestionable right
' to he ,proud.
• • •
• • 7,000 'LOST' THEIR I'AitENTS.-
_HoMeless Children . --Platted;
• • - ; - ins Asylum:. •
. •• - .
'The sadileht. 'result of the war. • hi
Serbia is :the . lasso; number of chits
Oren who Jost 'their parents, a corres
apondent writes •frsitn. Nish, "..Neiu.ly
scoop „thetisand• .araits, whose ages
range 'fromna Weelthl to fourteen
y.ears,7-have •been •attlicroct'ap by tiles
Alistro-lbansaidart Bats
tartan troops and are new talsert care'
of • ifs hospitals and TeMpoSaior :
'hung, • ; , • • .
The • fathers' 'and Mothets of .ninny
of: the Bate One& . are stedouhtedry
dead, • but a ,Majority o2. the children
streplY 'Were Seperated ' freest .• their
parents on sthe meniitdiris
of 'Albanie. • " ., • . , • ••
..•Nearly six' hundred of •blie"children,
have died lit the.. camps and -at yltniis
15 whieh.tilgy tOiliAr temporary homes':
•• Man riteals...,-no
Matter what it IO -he will live to re..
gret.' Wife-"Puring •otre
Ship you used to: ki8AeS frOM
MO." ITLIOSA114,--JiWelty 'you 'ltea'rd
what fsaid." "
•net r ve- old ..;01,, pa was _ • .t Tedfs 'Napoleon -fi•om • slaepiags: •
are hid hi. lo„.• he Piqo g
Tfia \yell tb Cr. jAitilife( .`W COSS '
cent . enderivor.'," • , • , nei symbol the
• poss'Iste like that of the woo( • '
niArnistatia,'daughtet of: -the preseiff -
• ; :is sistet. Ot leriblarg. °NapolocM, ea the in qv, „
Mr. •Munsingor watsa baby
ossoffitsfsose - 6r. . -ess-os go-usissa's- ; Tfot them- soiae '11011.. eolnr, •••sis •nearly -
Gen. Petairt jokingly' Says ,of • It' •`"! Unconneeted "with lhis tempera teat
• ' .
believed Intti RUSSittr . Th , -vast. •artitY• of „tlie..., 7
a. e Ms usa - fourteen vinint„ . PeoP e V to • wete . specially taisceptible • l• ecaY°.<•,: !•ree; l916 .YeUr labors Win." the " Queett Of Itels: • It was
1
•
leers in two months. - . tO Stich appeals.a the 'external. "Even Tem suceessfals Mertins, !Ss) .li- love 'Match, and the' • "Grand . . .
French pasSed ,•throngli, itten; ors,
• • • •
• I ok..
;have ,w.vc.„1.1." .... . ..
and .. , bitiebisds partietilarly:ihike• is said to be devoted .to his wife. • wliel'e a iarg•e• diVIalea • e the '''''.11.Y. '
, . Pen: Petain was tibmit to retire: as. amonr:Wa•s•tern * PeePle . theY
ess; and the contin4 tilit°07:iili,eiTi.eiti:e-it.;e8:iAlin frt. 01;1:11',,(:sci,:s1. ,Il'alt..;g11)ti, tiN,v, inio:(11s;• li.ie. iltili . BuSaia the.. Grand 'Doke - is
,. Isss- chinned for the night Napole..a. and
rip; erelhoinseel b.; nwihaefirl...•ttibliod.,s.s:brii'iitl.,;.,klie i• • ote..great,
tied Ilse of theinjustitiea itself hy this i '
effect:leen
ho..111ig.li es ,r,-(srITYltikls.egsias,:,, as" .01ire.;:cosi' about..,tIi"1V.iffitle;, iliid11;11it.;1,11.()iika;'..9,.;.(„,,‘..listi,..11..iiti.:11.1.:.11:..
cbui.leioi. riatreet . Gen Joff -• • .
. . &iv these . to whom- rhey t. Postifl, de . 1,i• -t, V: , thfSse ill .••••••'' 'llad'• • 11'• ' !Its 'i tilliciAwli:ctliria'ts• 14.lisii,..a.ai:it'i :ii,‘,0 1., • il'ali-:e .gta• tie, se ecter the lal ge hew c.f .-..ltr. • AI un .
mended hies:and •ii' ftet-t;:arel nittecieelaili1111.; '..qf t(l'e.1;1.; l'inliP.I).: a 1 'ill'a• this PurelY pil''(°"' ‘Ynods••• . i I. ssis ...-i•-•-••••• • • s
. lilivg.eeiill,eara. (iiile,fist..1,g.a.adi.tc:1,••• nX,0,.tayter.i.1.10:10. isal1.1,14.41.itti(e)taltvit'teitaesetill'ielfneres•tel:inritgin'ifitt:11:(a)11',S.ii tai7;.11 Ilij;Sillkl;;)1)117S" 1141113SOS."11rijI(I'StW17.11111141t,t 111:::itilliit ;,..(1(i);itiltIllt,t;i1;.:8t1.1 o•fi..."11111. .11:tir'atl;P•iiiii'11110iNaVtill18%'844iittlt...8!".M;!.'s3ofilalill'Ilieiiii. :M.:4 il.g... k:1:. ''. " ills.'" .
, • . , ,III• „ bala ond. tiny • oniaelo erne,'
inands an arthy and hi. cixceecied ' • • • " . in ospecti‘ e tense yather than: • he had . antiounitiou, On ".1
'116 (1Vit fang Los • • • other h mil Inc 41(4111.14. • •t1t•• h 'op hini te-it-Y,"-'-eut s•-•.is•••sv---
•
. • - .. • . • . Grim(' •Dulce did stet know of this: as t°: 'eeg- file -"Pt' ai°• ‘‘ u1efuI. •
. . , •- . . • , ssoplitiaNo
lit.s-• rea'ans I •-eotil:(1 •rtsi! • • . •
, • - the great 'Corsican. dM net complier.. •
• • s • :slic».tage, clad they aver that but 'for , .
. Althooglt,•tibmis.t t Gets iletain ' work Whete there's- elliklrets - ^ ''• " "Are."" g°ing t" 112's cori•Option -and Mel,• ieney io Petro.- i,ceel!). n.'t that time.
'4' 1 ".1 */ • n •• • in ile.• •scipo eon ease. ht ,,e. , iota ,...
is aronderfUlly vigorous, His men love -Madams-But we adVertisod• for, sti•.,-
hfirdships.. In Chsropagne, reeently het,..•APplicaot•-0h, oadiirst and +eh, When the. • Minisingss es's\ •
f .•°(‘''• • a..•1.t.A. /vita. ,whis•it 411..1(1 iorigkwerclueor, ' the iwk.11,41611. .
him because- he 'shirks none of their istirl ,:wlio understood Children.. . „ • doe»ii.iii,,itt.cioTts.oteitheit 4) Jong t•etreat • er s.
0.1,0..w„. to boviiood rimy.. a
Ied eelniumY .ael'ess tri:nesi of , nia'ant, ThaVsswhy. wouldn'S• V-orlt Ye .1- f • • , )1 •1/0.‘. , 0171p ryv;dr.
rough ground at rlonble• . i , whe'se flie*y aye, . • • . • n.: t Si4011 tt)C. "
By the °Visit mid to lihn by I'vvst.
dent. Poineare he hes been reeegnised.„. ' ' •
oftleitilly :es the •,saViotit Of ',Velkluri. I
. •:•Apart front the indefetigimble
_ergy ivhith :makes. hint appear, to °be', •
everynthete n °nee, Geri.. .,,Pettain's ,:•••
Chief cheitteteristle is• his aversion "tie
being photographed,' His .excuPo lot
tofusing to be apAli73)10ited. '
. ."My twig is .too much like Coatit
. •
•
' • • ' •
• • • .
Dim Statilght a•BleSsing. •
It the entire Natilt .of heaven were
eovered •with ininimetable Strata of:
istaren OW behind the• Other, as:With
Wideepread 'Starry eanopy, light.
were tinditalnished in Ita pateage
thrash. %pace, seientiete say the stilt
weuld he distinguishable only by, its,
spots the Moen would aPpear
(lark '
•
tittle .related the istoi•s or • th;11
(*sting night that-N.111)111..0s- s'est
.1.10inses•s', sat-. tin -ole ; • .
•l•n••
Indly.Cemels1 SPeeil..
oyOtt filnlinge tit 4112i frITh'il 1.1.1d i 11 sst.
to short si -tone • 1
j) iig11
•i cphed thc nth( 1, • •uP,r,,i".Y 1 The r..mpre, Ili, ..;titit
time i (1(1.r our 1.41W htfl5l\ '101(1:ties , ,
Zi -1/d113)°11'... • • 1 51111e;•' •
T101110(1histin'. 11(.:4(1:1124.*'4. iti*w
•
•
:
i. 014 getititattn.(propo.sir,g Che :hellish' • ''' -•' • ' --• . Itial,i" it. ; :F. 'Vit..
. .. , .. . . , .• la.
01. 'tile nappy pAlr, at the wOddina 1 , sk street shrsossst,.: s.•,,s . ti , 0. ..' • ;
broakfast)4.-"ArAl As for litS briite '1. ow.‘won. of th s• . nee s• eh .c.„ ,',_ .
groom r on speak .vtith still ntere.s1s,40,, fsoloss" he said,. ; 14
coniiiionto of hint. . for, r NyttA.ptesion i this S • 17,111 .b.nto 1(1 1.11,P(.114or. ..1s1
. . .
.li . liti. 1118 "ellriSsteiliiig.: 1: Vf„tis p1 I)1 qttfoilly fini. 2;11.(4, base. liven • rt.:•. :.:i. "1,•
, .
- '.• Alm ImAqubt . iti•imt, 111 I1?I101. vf his ,,I;, 0E0 .(4,1Y".itAit,..1' Voloy , Slie.a.
'Ilse Army! the Army! I'm fed' up ...with the Army' illfist if 1 ain't
, co' ming. of Ivo. tvnbl, pr.osmit L... • to. .iottlIng-',to 116 pugs:0;101tio• !,„;...,:-1,1; ..
&ccii6etin' 'any mfmite.ft,Mile eld litlyll tette along awl- arsk me. 1\r,hy Alt" (1„y, R.,,a,.i. ti.,,,,t I may Iss 'fillttl .1 to. 6411201-0 v.,!Aft tO., n)t111r. •.:01; tii ,. s„,,,,...,
thee in Ithriltit' 4 .. '
„ •.• , . ..•• 'be 'present. at hitt l'oneral," • ' . •t•st sS., oils ,:„2•1A:.:.'1;, ., ,
•
•
_.•••:JIN '4111.