The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-05-25, Page 2T••• -•••••
• ..moorm.
OCE 'S FLOOR
CO,51P4NY-IPORMED TO BRING IT
1714- 4uargen.
.. Una. to the corner, , Going around a
A. Few Simple Relee. ..,..--.
The owner who Wants big tire mile e"r4`a* 11' Ilitgea ur tNircnt7 /niign 3311
•• " h l uts a fearful strain on the tire Sriallven treaSaire Must ' Have the
lige gait get it, and big gasoline nide.,
' iiige elong with it, if be Will observe, fitTem-Z,441731dIT),*es t.7.irilalt br7
isslinilt.
iPyOlean; of Wilma. Is Itar
lit t" Ilir"le Ili"' alni u -n" 9. th" working for the tire vantipanies, aln - hien Won't Seek It. '
WO important of these Ilea in the
tiltY he sterai and Marts his ear. Jut though he May not realize it. The
kiote ow one man me shuto is small stone cuts in, the Caeinht should corr.:et h44:1,4413iQ:031t5ti'eliextieCtISe.°Ifirtgbeti
. .
power almost a red away and just be kept filled .with some good tire _, ,
eeege uiy be- or 0-A0.-/.1.0 Boos a„---, ,, , n• , _ aa•wat:iime:
a oevalrrtlaibt=i1.1143)1vurara el, hats e Au geh t
'''''' oil, two of the worst enetPie" ° T doWn ,t0' innkeepers for 'beakers of
his tires and his ear all at mine. An- rabtle, and
other Man. will drive right up to. the ' - - • •
Put hundreds. of eXtra. .
t Wine '4;ifJthe Canaries -these are the
'tnilee on even' .easinz`` Oil will ru n spoils of acean that it will be .the
businese of 11 company that has been
formAin New Yotk--capital, : .$125,-
00,14' glares, 7 per 'cent., to bring to
the elides() ot.:avartn seas and pay out
ak.dbriclands to stochholders, • ''
' There.really is, lots et 'gold lying at
:tlik ieettetu of the Ocean -tette of kb; It
ha an -NAM hulive of gelleini0 that
eerie and then jam on . his brakes.
. ear will ,'slide several' feet an
in that one -time he pet triorewee'
and Strala on, his rear; tikes than a
Mil0a ordinary drw1u;.
• The matter o'aardna the car .is
a another important feature, if." long
Owear IS to be obtained from the, tires.
•Alwayti,.. start ,aavatt front the curb.
an inner tahe in,a week, Don't throw
the extra inner tubes in proniteocals-
1Y With the spare tools and oil- can.
WbetrtaePthen r get e„ liralgloYOVof . ine ci°thag°°4)(Ir
o
strong Cloth hage ter them.nn Rut the
real higjule of all le;lceep ,the Was.
blown up to the proper pressure ren
colinneadect bj the-maket A food
Just ease in the. clutch
an ende,.avvov tio way the heel; , Weenie gaffe' that te accurate
sheuld be Used, . •
Whee14. Ott not revolve uselessly two a If• Mater/at° weritcl .,dhser.:va these
or three turns and grind the rohhor few simple rola and aceatitenally read
' tread off Your rear Urea. 'Sildtle- some a the„ literature published by
a*ttag,ana i4OPPitig- not.. only the tire companies, they would fiad
Ord their tires would lea thent •
hole lot longer, and that most. of
theft tire .traubtle0 that We been
taking the ten out et" thelr trips
Would dieappear for good,
'hard on„tires, but it le bad Atr the
Who're car, • •
. • In gong eretind cornercare ghtiald
be taken to take the turns easily. and
•
smoothly, and slow down before' get-
.
MUCH LESS DRINKING
NOW IN ENGLAND
• TOTAL ePROHIBITION ;,19T1
• SOUGHT. :
, •
'
VeNNINNE•00••••.,
before the War Would ' never exist
,again.
"Among other a•erterans Why im-
provement is or should be eeey is the
undoubted feet that the financial re-
sults Of the preeerit system are poor.
Do ' not imagine that the present con=
,dition.is -favorable to trade -Interests.;
, Licensed:.honses are ,not only .too ramp-
Orostrona. the imitate order and, pollee'
point of view,. but they do not know
that they ate toe innuerous from the
standpoint of trade efficiency; and that
the same net profit could be realized
'd'Alberrion, from licensed. houses .redeced. In num-
Gold in the Lusitallia.
- bee -by. 00 el- 40 per cent. • . , .
' "Fifty per cent, less 'public drunk- ,. . ! • - - • , Not only the engraved' likenessesaf
enness and alitorderthan before the
, ' Trade Competition Evils. , the first fear, Georges lie down there.
.. . ,, ,
' ..War.,',', was 'lord d'Abertiene answer , -f'Aesaririg. internal economies in the The present Xing George, still in his
.
to the question of the reaelt, obteined brewing- trade to be accomplished, it prime and *Meg as hereviews his
by the drink. restrictions ' *Ili& the Nien.id, be meet easier to' effect the kind troops, is .there in the depths, nian.y
Central pivot , 'control .Board,,, ef . of reform's WIlieh are necessary In the times drowned. . For there was $2,-
•
which he the•head, had nut in force,: publieyintereet. . • The present - cont..' 000,000 in gold the Lusitania's•cargo.
;, • ..,,writes a London : correspondent,' . ' ' :petition' for trade, which is said to The gold in the Lusitania.will be Bal-
.,. . Lord d'Abernon wasemphatic in de- account for mild' of the drunkenness yaged by the company if they can get
ilYint :that tate' .prohibition is -his whighprevails; would almost wholly at it There is lots of new gold in
, . ulterior sine. 1 -le made this 'denialin disappear, Again, it would be peg,. the wreck of the Titanic, AM, but that
answer to 'certain suggestions whieha-- siblela negotiate for a strider code is forever beyond men's fingers,' The
have heckafloat that the valise's rea'ark. Management and observation hi. the 'Manic is 1700 feet mnder the surface.•
'•etrietione are simply stepping •stones public: honsaa thenaseWes. :Those ale- 'But the Lusitania la in -400 feet Of
-
to Prohibition.• ' :The official 'board infLaperisible, for the ' Management, of the water and, her, location is well known.
wheli Ir-lerd- c4hernon is the loachrig trade would be able to aivroiteh' all The Lizeitinia, now that the tears and
Pilira 'Leek over control : of Great.°Bri-i such questions' :from a. 'very difierent tragedy of her are the better to be
u- taires liquor problem on May 15,. 1015.j. standpoint frontthat adopted in the , borne for. the: .flight of time, Is •really
. Designed to • affect areas such as nnf in that Hr.v.wnuli1. have a eat- a tempting morsel. : The tragedy: o'f
sunken ships of old was just as much a
tragety for the Mothers :of Wien . as
..
vas that of the Iandtanist. Only it
13'' PfrPOteci .11357., its :4C1S1°11S' ' 1,11ell :"It 'might. be: Made almost "limos- .was so long ego it can. 'be spoken* of
, . •
. board. possesses drastic powers, .even . ale ;for the habitual drunkard to ob- lightly now. • • . . • 1" - •
' to • the - point-. of • •absolutely ..closing, min more than was .good for. him,'and I Take the wreck•ef the treaaure Ship
..• .,
saloons when it considers ' their eels... the ' occasional ; dronkard ceuist _ahel„of•the Aievittda, Wrhich.,,twIluTtes2,-nf
r=a-,---",---'?-tenee' Preilldielei" t(12-thOiltere•Sts7Qt•lar&ely, eliminated if checked in time' Argyll have tried to raise from the
' - national productiveness..., . • • - . ton curative lines. • 1Very'littleais done 'sands of ToberrnotY, Bay. When the
.,, At pteaent saloons may sell int--9--ida'Ffer. the drunkard to -day. • I think he King ofSpain sent 1000 ships to con -
rating hailers only between the
, .hourss_haS-in_reatgrievance-These -are-re-roper ,Englanth-theafteetawas scattered,
:of noon and, 2.10 p.m, and 6,30,',._...endi . .
sults which might flow from the sup- 54 ships ever got back to. Spain,
p.$0 pan...en ,work daysa.ana on Sun-; pression of unnecessary ,' }lenses and by going all the way around the grit=
'clay's between 1 and a, pm: aacr 6. and, fa -0A expenditure. Intoxicating :ish •Isles.. Now one of the .hundred
--:.---9 15-xn'-'''-i4t4ii-01411mt6--At-e-4,)ro."-ibeilt-liquor-..needs--rio- artificial 7- pUSIliilgth• MP'S" that attempted- that -tong trip
, . • .
a se., or, 13•.aa e o o tle. iquors fel..
teem:nand •e 'steady sale and alnera, the treasure ship, with some millions
consamptien'off the premises; the 'pro,:t
• tive trade. :' The customdrs are there in gold aboard. When She Was Off
hibitioo ' Of selling liquor' an credit'
-; and, the number -of. those Who misuse the coast ..of ''' 'Argyllshire, Scotland,
, •and the absolute stoppage Of treating-
. eth0 privilege, of purchase is relatively 'storms sent her into Tobermory 'Bay.
• ,i,ii :admits, eirihser.,anat.etlierpiaCes-2. I small. , This small. miheriti brings The adriliraltisked the Scotch for food
,
, • JnerePeed Efficiency. ' .• ' •discredit upon and danger to the trade and Watea. : One of • the. Campbell
as a whole, • !: . . . ' lairds dickered with the Spaniards.
' -In ".addition to .the diminution. of • • olo
• "The public his noW .had an oppor- end. while he was on board it struck
drunkenness and disorder,.,Lord, d'Ali- ',
tunity_at•neeing what'•is, poSsible • on ,him :.that they were -willing, to ' pay
.„, erten Said orient the most satisfactory new lines tinder the board's . erderi,. rather high for What they .warited. So
rearilis. is the increased .efficiency and' and in a readjustment of pre-war cana it was that his • SCotclr nose smelled
.. - predirethreness of workers in-. inunia Clitionr4 we may easily find a• solution the geld on, board. .He claimed the
ation'aretaa. -.Continuing?: he said: nt ."1"nr of the - more pressing Pro- vessel for King James of Scotlana.
'11 ....\'"The fira stePloWard realizing the - "''''''
. • . .1alenii of the evihofaritemperance."- • Th Spanish admiral's ariewer was a
true conditions- is to appreciate the : . • - •, • , . ' • .- e .
lighted match to the magazine, and
-.:WOMEN TURN .MACHINISTS. - Spaniards, spare, .deck, Sottish' laird
and all went up into the air; as the
powder Went off With - a noise - that
"sounded like "bvintip" to the :astonish -
Public Drunkenness Has Decreased
50 per Cent., Says Lord
Railroad
pOonett4tAvitutyllt,
•It 1 tlirr' a?, eVI ;lieu;
4.itatilett19
Arena) ol'" the
'Clitelreland 'Wad -
•era 'For that rea.
non bie•tritiate to
the work of a th,
P; IL- Oficial; -is
vtgi worth 'ation.
thnia. That Warta
Itsiona;,' 'w1111kartl atils'. •
and 10"by 1 rerotedt
ro - Canadian "
raliwaa life as ,
atrythiag. Could r
posaibla be • !Meg -
Med.. liere is whfit.
tAorrifiliptlet.....Bell• has
say:-
John
Murray li t a, •
Gibbet', WAS beta
father Is What •
Scotohniara .110
fa a graduate • of .
xford' end. h
-brake. and nls irtentts 'tient to. ' the: a tit en etieci
bettoma Net that they ever tried to anusrsee
In
Oak a *old Ai% ter Queen Elisabeth . • belie ateariondl;
peeeded. every.flpani:At-pletie of money • German Univetst-
t;aenidd.ashorp.0;Rut snee. In:a White 'the time t t h
laer1eutiterieed,..piratea Poeta lay their ttelligidn::::doodiliett;rdtitir::
sunk. lir SaCidelft •pr the
Pfend: ''Priariarda- teliehect amatch: to ova . to ampules;
the magazine when they saW ell was on in the world,'".
leet-ative lonort • ,And the. gold -bare ' • he came'be•eh- to
Ile in 60.ftithom0 ottraindueent kicen; ,neditor
140.0:dollittido. wthat
Caribbean. the• water ate alveY the WelleknoWn
Oki .Spanish cannon, perishable as the trated netespeper.
fleelt on the one of the caVallere "Black and:.
that sunk .gently with the. shattered White."
vassel,:and whom the-iax.p,e0d fish at ndeaidlianinci. know h.e
first suspicioUsly.nibbled and then a..
as .
Veered. .A11. Perished, cannon, Ship much ashe
.
and men; but the Old did nob perish, :eagWantea, to know
let ark a reall- • 0
The bare and the coins. are as good Nation 'thittp4ame home to him each day as he .at at -his editorial desk. im •
to -day„ as 'etrer•they were, and in the ,resigned and went to Paris to heexime an art student. •
Crevices of Many a "rock among the . • Be lived in the fitmeus Latin .Quarter at night and spent".the AUL+ In
imaweed at the bottom of the At- 'Colar osat's . Atelier. Thee he went to itali and. Algiers, Japan and Chine,
lairtie lie' the countenances of Philip and to many other conntriet •• •
1/, of Henry VIII,' of all the Georges y Then one .day, an °tidal poettion with offered him by the Canadian Pacific
as 'clear-cut in the gold as the day. the Railway: . At the of forty-one he has achieved diatinction 'as it practical
coins Came from the mint. , , railroad •tnan, despite all these nate of preParation that were spent in pur-
suits ao popularly belteved to earn, a man teethe practical lite.
The busied Men are the ones who find the Meet time. In the peat twq
years; John . Murray 'Obeli' has been ,attending to hie railroad duties with
one hand, and wtth, the other hand his been Writing a • novel, which has
bet 'been issued by the famous publlshlng house of• Jahn' Lane 311 E and
and. S. B Gundy Toronto.. •
• "Hearts and traces" is the story of an artist it treats of the 'artititio
temperament as it saliles torth into the 'warmer- world from'. the Sonnwhat
unpromising entrikonment ot Scotland. , . •
.George Grange its found amid rather commonplace afirroundinge •
the first tel. Bees of the' novel. There his,Oharacter. or at least the
foundation- for his 'character, is being fornied. He never escapes from this
environment, because he -carries its effect with him wherever b goes.
. Delightfully true pictures of' Scottish Ideals are slietchedg
eent taint ti el r
tbapters,, end then With the first 'files at the biting satire wh ph rd y
filuniinates• subsequent pages, George Grange throws indite hts university
studie.s. Ho longs for freedom ,and • lite, and falling In with a lovable old
Character. a Scottish painter, lie- also learns to paint
• He goes to London in the great quest of success. and ,gradtfany, Climbs
the ladder by -discouraging and diligent toil; until` a come:Otte° waits upon
.him and Offers him a comroleston to paint a portrait of the king for a fashion-
able. club. tfibbon. draws ,a steadyandlytea picture of Atte intrigiitng London.
tinciety • folk -Whom. he knows• well enough -and occasionally he pays his.
respects to the itmerican "climbers!' in the smart 'set. There Is no venom in
his satire of his own people, nor of the foreigners, but he paints portraits 111
Words. that are carefully Chosen. and forceful.. • • . • •
HIS •hero Is thrown into this pulsating, . human pOt •pourri. and "keen his
skirts clean" up to the great moment of kis life, when he Mlle a victim of a
. .
'designing woman and loses all., • . •
• ' Again Scotch ,pluck to the rescue. however, turd he goes to Paris. Where
many' of the scenes are doubtless somewhat autObtographicat, • It is the Latin
QUarter.lite et reality. Not that Musical•comedy ..eersiter which we ton often
-mistake' tYr-tire reality;---drer =Veinal that tencinatin4--lite skachett--Sie in-
- Wilily by Henri Merger, .ettileli did lnore M. popularize "Latin Quarter 'life"
than any of the . pictures ever .painted there. But lite on the banks of' the
_wofteireledee, it_ts by the students of art and the girls who, know :no. other
... Sometimes these pictures are gay, sometimes sordid; but they are never
e, vulgar. Through- them ' wove manycharacters. with .whom the reader has
become acquainted in the. earlier effepters. Amid these scenes, as in London.
and later-in_Germany.antLItely,_,George.Grangetneyeaa&the_moet_imaortant
•• tiger& it is the adventure of a soul. And each adventure is traced with a
' canny knowledge of lite as It is,• rather than as many -writers would like
: to 'believe It should be.
And it Was .written by a railroad Man! : Still, there are- enough examales.
of versatility in the art world to prove that such an achievernent is potent&
•A merchant of Russia composed inuste that Is non 'sung in the, (mere houses
of the Vora It does not teSsen Pad irewski's abtitty as a pianist because he
fs a hotel ',keeper in •Warsaw. • John Alden Carpenter, . of Chicago, lea "bust.-
ness man," yet he composed "Adventures' In a Perambulator." which 'caused
the staid Mask `critics -of the.'country to prick up their ears in the lain two.
years.' .Caesar Franck was a school -teacher; even when he was writing ,his
most famous symphony. •
•
munition. centres and 'eaanel!tot it. has er percentageaf profit out Of a 911011 -
gradually extended its Scope of opera-, er business because of the 'economies
tions iritil 29;000,000 people are direct-' of management. • ,-••
, • .
• -
'factthatinthe years immediately pre-
, ,oeding.-the ,Outbreak. of war both con,
:.Surription . of eiColtol and the number
Of' CenaictiOns far. public drunkenness
.. wereaSteadily ' going up.. .„Iii the,past
.....geed•trade has. alatetts coincided with Overalled, leather-aproned;. capped -ed natives of 'TehermorY"BaY. '., • ..
,..;an. increase et' alcohol • consumption, and : goggled: -displaying riCaertheless . Argyll's Quest fer,Treasure
, bile it is disappointing to .realize that , a: woman's ' gerilud for makineherself •
Not many years after the lords of
.' ' in 191044 iricreasa taxation • of itl- AttraWve: in whatever Working guise, : Argyll started to recover the gold,
••. toilet the teniperaticetiro,pagarida. and --a-Some .18. women are being- traibed- , meri
were sent down in diving . bells.
. - the lieensiag ' ragnlatioils in foto tii " the Notting . Hill Gate, Englando, From time to time akulls and rusted
: avbieh 'resulted in. ap. aririnel -difitiriu-' avorksheps- ...of, the tlfornan's.,, Service caaknen balls were -raised, but rui geld;
..tion., of :• about '1;000" hcenso. a year •Bureaa ill the 4ilied engineering Wotk. The . sand Creeps in. se quickly. It
had not been 'Eniffieieec 'to ,e0-tikeebale of welding . joints •and : :. fine . flange.; has :already limt...naeat of the galleons
, 'aside theaitilleenceattf:grietiLtraileaand 'socreta'Odeded fdriAlie constriction t Out of reach, ' by: the way, but it's a
•:high „ wages. •'.; - ' : •'-' . • ' • • - . ';•,. :aereiiianCo, , •''. ,. • • , - ' • • ,I•eiean: thing to Say;,foi• it only disceur.
'. "The.second.point• ia, the' feadinasa • AS fest 'as :theY are. trained the wo- 1,aaes men and *Iv.ho .knoura.,....therP may
--_,....•-•:-.:•.:ith 'whieh-31i#,..,p'obilejlas eorffni1110 man ,are Riede(' -..iii. -:Govertimentrlais- . be invented aome, day soon. a plow
' . t6.the rliiistie ',regulations WWII have tories' N here*the " re 'el e th' • • • • . . ,
Receive the Sairie Pay As Men in
British FactorieSt.'
• boon . via duifits, the . • - , that-will•turn •up the halderi s• eeds,
meri. T -he women welder is • n ewg s } a op ,gpecie
• Month& attribute this attitiple anothei Instance 'of- woman's. e.dapt.' when they, were. torpedoed. guns encircled with iron, and • thes
Charles ' Dunn cense uentl is had been abandoned by the defenders,
tUries paseed. , receet methods of slaughtering for, food, hi!'"
cen
; . A, SECOND JG,NAH.
A British Sailor Savect From Four
. Notable Shipwrecks, -
.. .1.....`
. The proverbial • cat with nine:lives
,normal the complete - emancipation -
'cannot &tint' More honors than one ato ztehpep
use
enbeif aenaducemdmAYa*stA
which a cataclysm had, produced . in '
against evil,' the latter is not fookeeThis guri, which was duly guarded by
nc.dpeanstgunteamin
which etininninicetion :wititl.Tudwa tvaa • r
CharIeS Dunn, a seaman; though•While Peril. - Finally note that the Decree ,
the former is regarded as a Chaim' have been much diserissed in London.
poncernS those regiona only through -
upon as a mascot, te the Ships lie fey.. soldiers, was intended to terrify. the -
'German& - 1.regeler and free. ' •-•-•+ -•
ors. • - • • -
. 29:- Thiegs. siterifieed-1 Cor. 10.
A" receet. case brought by the Act. For a similar piece Of Strategy we '
must go back to Frande-Britit-h ex- 25, shows 1.15 that meet „ from a
rniralty against Dunn at Liverpool for .gi sacrificed animal waa likely to . be of
to join his traristiort diselosed, peditioe to China in 1860.. A French
historian toile us that when the allied feted to anybody who went to inathet
the fact that the sailor had been .in sew or a dinner. Paul treats •this . with
four notable shipwrecks; and • though forces arrived at Pehtling they •
otlers-laid-soffere'd--a-waterriyave-,J-before-therrriurre-sniall-fOrts, Nera-tfldiffieerteee-he--fears-no-dentonerned:-
only • cares about net hurting tim, '1
he had come up smiling' On eabh, oces. soldier, was visible in or near therm -
,,ctinecidecee, But Jetvish 'Christians •
sion:' Bobh the ill fated Titanic and Day was declinin‘g and the Allies
like the author of atev. 2, ,i4, 15 clear- ,
the Errilyreas of Ireland carried -Dune though fettling an ambush, decided to "
ly retained 4-h; old borroa, though they '
oh their last voyages and he - also venture into the torts. : .They fund .
would not give the' same reason for it.
ser4ed on the Lusitada atid_ilolleara: on the ramparts two or three Wooden
'SCARECROW FOR ZEPPELINS:
. .
British Have Dummy Gun on, Chest
to Terrify Raiders..
Sit William Gelder'erevelatioes aii
•
SUNDAY SCHOO
•
Ii4TE1UKATIDISTAL
- 'NAT 28.
;The Council' At ,terigi'oent,-Acte 15•
145, '001den"rext: fi; 1.
Verse 22. Elders -The term ;Arne
taken overfrern the /ewish'church.
Is found no a name of a renegue. rif-
fle° "in pagan Vgypt, 45 well as for
Oeettler officials. 'Rut it doe not seem
to havo lost its Original connotetion of
AILe•--.09annift-4141.rate-Wor
In I, Pet. b. li It Is contrasted with the
!$younger." The word presbyter, com-
ing into our lahguage through French,
**the form priest, which usage at -
MAO to Sacerdotal functions. Some
of theMost important officers in the
'Presbyterian Church . are known Se
(lidera. • ]JareSabbaOr--Another • un -
:known prophet (compare Leo= Teat
Studios for .rilaY 7, Yertat 0. Silas --
Pantie later companion. 1110 name Is
tOroungly :regarded as .n contracted`
form of Bilynnus; by which he is
known- from Thos., 1. 1 and errha
'Where.::. The latter Is really a alma-
lar•seunding tannin narrie.'cliosen"like
Paul- as an alternative to Simi. We
cannot, however; explain why the Ara-
maic form is used In the narrative of
Acts. Chief men -.Or leaders., The
woad became later an a tecludeal name
'for ,church' '6fficers like leader in
litethodiamt see Heb.' 18, 17 (tendered
otherwise).
28. With therenderini In the text,
brethren, unto the treatren, we have
an attractive collection of like terms;
but the ,margin, the elder brethren, is
better. Antioch, Syria, Cilicia-•got-
ice how reetricted In local range is
thts Apostelic Decree. It was meant
for the special conditions of the coun-
try between Antoich and Tereus.
Paul's letters never suggert that his
addresses "knew of it. , Thus there is
no abstinence from "flesh offered to
idols" enjoyed upon the- Coriethians,
unless for the sake of a "week broth-
. • ,
or's" conscience:, ,
24. Troubled= -A much stronger
,w'orti than the Enesh. Thus in John
14, I; 12. 27, etc -,.dismay would come
nearer the meaning. Your souls --
Unemphatic according t� Senate
idiom,• and meaning little more than
you. To whom we gave no command-
ment --The church repudiates them as
no representatives of the Jerusalem
brethren .in any sense.
25. Having 'come --The 'unanimous
vote was a very wonderful thing, for
both parties gate) up a great deaL
Note how they inderse the teaching of
Barriabas and Pani the emphati
testimonY. as to their devotion, -and
then appoint actual members of their
own number to enforce the , same
teaching, -There is no half-hearted-
n:e2s8s.1.1.e.Tre. o
the Hely tpirit-This takes -
up verse 8:, the Spirit had ,shown that
he made no distinetion between cir-
cumeited and uncircumcised. • .The
combination and to: us aeems daring;
but they only Meant that their dent-
stan:-atirtia7--a-reg1st1act10ti-of one 'which
they clearly saw, to have been al
ready determined by God. Burdon -
For such was indeed the keeping of the
law,-as-Peter-emphatieally declared in
verse 10. NecessaryL-Why? The
answer seems to bit that all four were
to the :Yew taboos pure and simple,
tie-tO a loni-istablii-heci- belief that
demonic perils attended them alt -alike.
• Sexual inipurity was t trot banned for
morel reasons but just because it in-
volved the same demeitie activity" as
eating the flesh of An animal impra:
perly killed. . The • abstinence from
.these taboos - was a neces-ary coedi-
t* to be observed by Gentile ChriS-
tittes if they were to -eat with Jewish
Christianstheer would otherwise' be
infected, as it were. It aurprises z
that Jews who had received- Christ
should not leve'ontgrown such taboos, '
but they were in the Levy, and we
must not expect from men, whew
spiritual grewth Iniol bsen. quiet, arid
Sold a gpAttiltoe dealvo
'Wont ow Merl. erithefamiw
imiala.sommigummomm
LIFE-SAVING A CRIME.
AmasIng PinishMent Inflicted byli.
Gannett Authorities. -
The weird and wonderful taws oi
Gtrmany, which .render the eiltmle• j
cialltan'e lite it miaery, " have often!.
been dilated, on, het the Most imaging'
of all punishmenta infitcted by the tun,
thorities of the Fatherland has yet to...
be related. .
This dire offence was cOmMitted „
a toten in Alsace where a schoolnaaste
04 Who had eaughteramp while bath
Mg, was yeacued, by an •Onlooker, abj
the risk •of.his life. The German aul
theritio decided that did' rescuer hntij
committed' the unpardonable offence
of bathing in a prohibited, place, in
hnposd- it fine with costs -
In Vienna it young actress not long
ago ceinpaitted thee rime of Wearing
correct uniform on the stage. For '
this act, which was held to degrade,
the dignity of the Army, she was fined
aum equal to $8. This must seem
strange even to the Huns, wile .de- •
mend that, when a uniform is worn
on the stage, it should be correct to a
batten.
A more justifiable punishment, in
the opinion of many playergoers, was
imposed in the neutral • country of ,
Greece onat lady, who had to undergo .:
feurteen 'days' iricarderatiori for ob-
structhig the view of *a guardian of
the peace by wearing. a matinee hat ,
at an opera in Athens.
Strict laws have, however, their
comfortable aide When you are anxious
to get trite prison.
A. somewhat curious method of ob- •
taining this end was employed by a . •
destitute workman of Strasburg, who; •
was desirous of finding shelter in pri-'
son. The-representativesof the law
refused to oblige him to the extent •
te -wanted, so he rejoined -with a vol-• -
ley of insulting expressions concern,
Ing the Ktiter. That did the tricky --
and he was rewarded. with •asentence
which kept him in "qued"-very nicely.
till -the
•
• ,-TRIiIMPH' oVER MAN.., •
, ,
Maehinery. Reminds Him - 1"hat His
Powers Are Linritect.
The raiost striking fact demonstrated
by this war is that. man's,. power .,is • •
limited. Mach.anery haarevenged it.- •
self- on mankind, says the' Queen . of
Roumania in a• recent al -tic -V:6.7 -Th -
• Men believed hiniself the world's
master, but against him hai/ risen -
up a power of his'awri - -
demonstrate to, h'm ,that his little,-
aess is such that he cannot' detain -
'ate Whit he creates, ' •
, .
,
Flesh and bones cannot. ov• ercnin
the .annihilating force of the weapons
that 'mints vt-vari brain devised for;
destructien pi his Ow -n kind. How-
ever brave, however strong he may be,.
the machine ite has evolved. waests the
humanitarian. victory from las gia,sp,:
and the eternal ,truth has been :man -
bacnight. hoMe, Win that his pOwers
are limited •• • .
yearsth D k f Argylle
•.• the testriations being regarded ;le war ability:to-Work - believed to be out
, . of• in earned to recever the geld. lie*
.,, neeeksities.'and. the -realization that in. her previnee. •Ta.,'he bends over an oXY'''' ap 1" . nil '. '' W e'
p lances a processes er used,
a great` Crista., persenal .conyenienee •
fleetYlene blowpipe I'. vith•a"'flaino of ' and after iiis ea -h, two years.ago,.his
.;natiSt.' ghie way to riaticnati effieieney. e
ie,000-Fahreneit that yea make Steel . nephew, the 'present' Duke, kept, at it
........ . Thi&patriatie vie* has not V2011 ac4,:i:,4 tun like, sealing . wee:. - Though' her ;' and.'-coefieleittly. 'expects to. recover all.
irdtVto- the 'eoilsnroer'ind to ' the. pup"' oyes Aire protected .:,:hy goggles if - . e. ' .. •,. •••• • ,. ••••
It ha-, been:supported by sOil the?. eetered:gitio, n:.rain of. ,hright aptaike ,t.. ... 1., .,„..,, _, ,•.:._. .. •_,,,,,,,a • ,. ..,:. :
• ; better, ratinters ot the trade.. , ;dahlia ' on her face o -.4.4c1 -neck, bit - • . • . . ' 1•: •••• .
- aRega.rding the restrietten of hours, she h-eed„, ' them.• riot; Car olialoas- -£kS REPT EYE WASH.
nicifirfliVtigennailf viantou exiet.SVflltral‘ d ea a....
1113 .Conl 'learnt
•
..,
drnia all the blood away. Thingl.
s ' A few mi es of prinative construction
;shunned like the plague by the uperi. • , a
'' .' '
stitious sailors, Naha , have on occa- had been laid around them, and weis di ideawas tliat the
stens flatlt, refined to sail with hail, l'aineve4 by the Preach engineers. ',stopping of the breath retained with.:
'
and his lack, in this -connection , has Dummy gime, as Macaulay shows in tlf6 body 'ill kinds of perilous influ-
proved his gratiteeir misfortune! , : ifs.: must have been erripleyea by the .•otices: ' It 'lama; InorcoVera method
Dewlelf in, the bat-: of :hillina whiett retained the blnod ;
. There are many Similar eases. : lorceS, of •Surajah
• :A. remarkable eeinciderice that as ,Ile et ..,1:11asso5r. 31:1.-O Nabob bad With Ferniestiati.-2It .tar a good iliestratien
out a sailer superstition ' occarrad Iiiin 40000 infantry Arnie& with fire f the. wriy in whish rintunoral-talions .
seine While age .4 Belfast • 'A firm: ioeks, pikes, swerdsabOWS"-.and iraows, -worked .ent mere] z teforrnS. There
built a ship -that left Relfast lantialv--"TheY--..-:were-,•-•ficeeinpanied-L-fay-Aif-ty•--Org-in11.11.y.e.icetnplee.of this werking of
or im ve re ipion n G. rezers
". hoard.. hasaseught t� tonfine. 'the con -a, at 4,..5 fit n (.1 h• e • t 1 AI • ra I is 0 li• st let' rna A i• ; iii•Y.. I d Was subsequently voreclved. A nieces of erdinnitce ef the largest tez..
ft s, es n arn .1 1S S ee , e pi en a ;•a st c in • " 1.. t "P h " •
sidaptitin . 6f alcohol.' te: thasn, la,".il,
--"" and ' the ' Women a elders' workshop • i•' ' . .• et.al Common Pritetteee.- - •second ship bearing. the 'same ' ;tattle •eneh tugged'hy a long team, of white,
31. CO I ti ( si. I
_..,., riso a 2ri ' in rg. n, ex ottaa
ec urea, . syc e s a , .
aarti_ell.„_._gaan_flintetleiat _With_ tlietioa•harfi4.44,44_,,,,,c4t4„.4,4und.„,,a,,_.4,4.04,,,tn,,, • . 1..z.A.„_,...„1.,„;.„, ., • ,,,,_....,1,„._ ,1',ffat.4.„,ille _tame. Ate; ,21144itilcioi•s . oceri,. and sineb.;,nnsbeti_4:441,- :014._.b.e-= ,.
---racii, .6F- il-RAFr iffeailirageme-iit.--nlii`'
• ". nig dAY. and tvh ch ecnn alit beat w I
-' i Ohm ors of metal., ' hut the nervea. of. .".' Warnms- aga fa”,e.b-a, Dakar ,bithit then gave t'lle Immo to a third vessel hind by an elephaat.' In the cannon, • • .
a 'Verl, in verse •82 'is the sante. ,
- ed ' ro' lilt:appear ti tithatre oecurred in • miss ...wondv.,,,lrri, ;the , principal (iv:. ,,ti,, . ye-ploll.. bothersorne ,bits af aliist • rrbe FIlip Ultifri4oly left the Lough aasisted by. a few small Vrench guns,
• •
-hOurs• Pne 1-InexP9et" the *mien Welders aie tmarik,ted • of uaing peiht .er • ride the attillety of the Nabob, tli ugh .
y had cre;ated.: . ,•
32. dth arra ecla-We ean harMy, ex-
• I, aaid searoei5t any eaeautioria• aggerate the e eet of 'such enlihten- .
marry cities, that. the redtietion in. tho. itt•••re,., that inane 'et theee ' wainer' " al•Pd" fr.enl• tJle 'eYe, Dr•• amt. his never teen heard. et aince
• • Price, pn saya, it can tip more
r•VilthPt Of 'co,ravictions for drunkennOss 'Who have never clone manual work:1)f..•,.._ittirtitie,,i,b,0 he- 1nitt1cI- fitethrt_tiyiit
!
. , • • - fore, find their. work "a,nerve , : , •• • •
• • - •,-nn(t hagkage„. i.einaitied.. in the ed .iestrin o -----------------------
-mins meal
'wally' representieg lie i d i a 1 a
' - -`) ' -e.' - r'<- ."-1,'" lend that headaches. are let :,t at. n ..
'.. oeult-Aatl beeh ever? greater than thal. , • • • •' "I 11 l. recently Seen -utiefill •Vis'en
• . •• , , . .4.... . " • . . • ' • . • - • ,
in a previously _geed' eic rierroancht-
. reduction in sitapie:drunlcennes.
. ,.. mama a raorc inar„,!
• • DitchD E I • '
,' . t'y deitroYed by aa itieffensive•a litidy
..! ' ' Wrinte Permanent Rehire! ' -. °'•' .
. ,, ":. : . • A Preneli soldier with a. taste 'for, as'. a piaee 'ef Fiewauetr deelared lier;
„lif YOU ask MY general conclusion 1 , 'statistici has "ealeulated the arnaiint of, rifled, ."Efeil't.' tab ' the, injured, eyd"
.should 'nay that the Ceried has been teo; soil thathas been moyediri the work' he. urges, "for thee the fore*. gar -
',brief :ter .any flint opinion to be ex.: 'of trench making. There 'are about ticle' may heroine inibedded 'fb.: tho
. pressed, but that .there ca#, be no: five; hundred • _miles of. . litst,line Omer and celiac acttial falarY.!' '
' deilbt ;that there is' ample ground for treadies, Stretehing all wey from] ManY. of •.the PaPular 'methods'. '01; Prenchrohn di 'his tun and' "wit u.11(kior
belief that a vast improvement hag the North "See to Switterlaild; ..aridi the laity, such as sneeataa, • rubbing Shoat to shoot the horsewhen he s'aidi ,
boon achinied, Thedrop. in Publit in there ere five Or si,x.' lines of. trenches rfrorri•one eye to the other," "drav,ving "J31.1t* It
you would .Torn4 .i5hoOt.• Your . .
• f Lb. • , . I 'AO haft lxceri haented by n rrOat;
The :Amenities of •Wer. • • • • • . • - , .1. bash -tee& Sale° 'Iowa lidd told thant
The veuehed for,hy. • . • 4' • • ' •L • .j •it God-given I,aw without 'which....thhy
• . ---
,, • •• .
Millernd: fernier • Feerich Min.ster of ; Solved. • I could net be saved: .Eyea• Pala ;could
• • wet; 'A trench aceut'eanie suddenly ••• Johnny," 'aftiti -the: toaciler;i:not altaisotber dila, it.' 'But .Intlas.'
one thy upon it German Omit. The ,"siiiipose you Natinteci to build a $1,0001 and Silas: coming' offiCially froin °Teta-
;German kyi*E4 atanding. by his dyi g' house' and lied $100. what wonld "aeleM 'th jud rit f
4 • I o ale er.
inquired t'he F.renclimen. -----nave 4,11' 'Speae haVo to, marilt. a girl -their doubts at rest. and so ",,iit,rength...
41 '4.
"Wily 'do you net atioet it ''..you do?' til I •• .1. • a I s.sonot• Te us could: set all
no Otto]," replied •the other. The Worth $1100":":eneweeet the -young fin.,
... • ••
' IM,htlit be Worth. Tryitfir:
i ' • • •
.". teraperanee and' ,of 'e011yitions •resUlt-;.; tei each side. A:total, of ten lints of Otit With '. shill; et. re.W.i'beefeteak," and. 4wrt'h°raP;. 'And' he detl. the 46tPeh to '411.s. A...,...,Hoctor, .1.0 there ...mt.:thing
' • Jug' trona it whicti,o.ccurvd in each overt;; treadles Woilld gWO about five thettad ethers are 'replored by Dr. Prue asthe.„Gerriian,, who. grattely bewo4b hot
in the thiirirY that 'reit eatures nye .af..
•direetly the &dire were Mit in toree, ' end miles,. 'and this';'accerding. to. :diet Nth ,ruaeless rind • harmful."). Tears .hie herse and et tri" 'tack and, .feetti by the, ,f6(,id, wo 6.ittiz „
Iii, been otpedily Maintained tilt to a•alealliting° soldier; means a total ex-lare. the ;heat w
eyeash known to110i. ,' i ' 1 ;1 11 •u) aq , '.' . ". : ' • ''.1)pc;•tor,-.....011, yes;" that ,poiat. has
,aete. It ts, often;saidk• 'Alea carirrot „(ivatien twice • that of the. Panama' One°, be deeltIrea4 Pad lab:Avian.' free,i,,.,,:..,•,!*, 'F.i ' ... .A.s' . i been :roncialed 1)+, the iii,:t atithoricx.:` •
. be made ether hy."tet of -Parliament.' i Canal. \ And it hire all .been (10110 b)' 1r often wash ont the irritatien, Ile • : ""","')eu• ' - '' ,' . : i• • MCA. A.'....-Ther'i I think l'il,'•get it set-.
,Ilatt belief isql•i'tit und.er it xioullit ,effec- hand. labor With Military shtivels; 'and reeeinMenda cold appilocas to the in- . /ea BluntShallwe.get itattried ? ; ting bee .4iticl fetal. niv 'little bay an
,
P10 at
l ayaten't of regal:10On threarlotirtlia i•tritieli of it-urider fire hy rnea1.'who:htld lured OP0e, to seethe. and Prevent' in, ' Miss litight.:.,.,/ shalt, What 1011 do; illo e. •Ile's the most ' reptle
tiviss
, . :
' of the' dkUnkefinsine owluoli peevailedi to *ark 1,elfita ,lying ,on their Stomachs, ilarnmattsin. ' J •' . 'ii of ,no iriterest'th me, " ' ' Child i ev..er. stivv.
. . . .. . ,
, . •, , . .
h t• faith.• .
•
• hell I innate.
"You owe me $40,600 Whieli You any
yon eat* pay,'" sallounted the ilnan.
tier. "Why deli% you Marry that
eldest Knower( en•l; worth twice
That amount."
"No, I can't do that; but you might
Anarry.'her yourself tout pay inc the
dil'forence," 'replied the yoeng Atiorthi.
•
IS YOUR WAGON
LOMED
Have worit mnde the
•wheels all Out Of seat? You
• could 'lave ..oteVentell that
.conclition-and you. cat) situ
bele it ante • , •
The mica does it. It Misled
worn- notes of th, axle.
-gum. -ICUs irtetton: •
• At Dealer, Everruhira
TLe-Imperial -OH ConVP,--
• thiltea.
MUNCHES , IN Mi. (311E3
tiathiji ry
WheeloCk Engine 150'
J.P., 18x42, with double
main driving belt 24 ins
• *1
mac and Dynamo3OK W
7 ,
belt driven. All in first
class condition. Would be
sold 'together or separate.,
; also a lot of shafting4
at a very great bargain as
room is requirediopedA
ately.
S Frank Wilson Sorts'
73 Adelaide Street West"
Toronto.
•
. :
o without gouu ro3ui
•
4