HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-08, Page 2*-9,1117"..7-9.er tree
•
-
ckled we could make it, The *Menet .
; Wert right and there wasn't &broken
dial aboard her. . The periscope weil;
•true. Ii was :only her ROO and her
rudder, that were gene
"So we started; back. V we picked
-
up anybedy 'on the wireless we lialeW
° tU SEIX TO J.!OWJ that they had work of their own :ta
do.- Se we drove eking under our
va !lower. It vas a bit ef bad sea,
but,wo ntado Tho wnvc,s- b;e1ce:
over the bridge au& pounded the one
bulkhead we had left forward.
°And so,-". he said and smiled, "wo
'Perste: home."
,
WITH BROKEN NOSE.
Stigma Niue end Suffers Greatly,
but Meth:Warn, Preientli
In a Oertain dockyard. i England
there is to be found a splendid
til-
btte in the proWeis of British sub,
Marinei and the skill of those who
• Man then". It is One of Om finest
of the British undersea -boat; Which,
with her bow twisted and hoot as the
result of a collisienTwith an enemy
•Mine in enemy Waters, covered a dis-
• tame of almost three hundred =ilea
own yower Mid arrived• safe-
ly in a home port. Through the
courtesy of, the British AdmiraltyI
was permitted to see this submarine
and talk with, her officers and crew,
write a Londou correspondent.
r. She is fti harbor, with heribow fee,
bag tern into: strips and two of her
torpedo tubes' crushed; Ile'r pia*
•• are =MAW', two of her bulkheads,
are broken Wei .at „the bow; • but in
her tabes are two unexploded tape,.
doe*. Their casing is twisted And
. staved in and the • mouth Of the aft
tube is jammed. But . the quality
of the high explosive in her torpedoes
, and the mechanism controlling it pre-
vented an exlposion, thus saving her
from total destruction. .•
She struck the mine head on. The.
collision :Meshed two of her bulk- ,fliay of the aloe brought .his 4,Ave,
• beads, .broke all glass aboard her and lunch With him. He banded die cook
seat the crew sprawling to the floor- n box of marcaroni„ which he instruct-.
of the compartments, ' But her tor* ed him to boil in water "not salted too
Pedees• 04, not explode; her engines Much." Then he took two bananas
• cild not stop; her Bala did not fail to. from a paper bag and said they Were
register: She; dropped to the bottom to be put on. the 'table. Joifre and
of the sea and .the Water flooded in Olemeneeau drank mineral water with
under the doere of the torpedo tubes their lunch, )ukthe ex -Prime Minister
•• aft; But within 'ten minutes 'after had, to forego his dessert, for the
• the 'eelliStOni She had been righted, General ate one of the bananas With
•• come to the Surfece and brined her such relish at he prgraptly offered
' 'rose 'toward home.- - him the citherK which was accepted;
When I looked at her lying there , Gem, Foch, who sometimes gOeS. to
With. her etposed taws shining ill lunch with his chief, always asks for
:the ennliglif and her bulkheads in a tablet of chocolate and two ."crois-
• titrips of rusty iron it seemed incredi•-• cants," the, littlo. horseshoe rolls so
be that all° bad been unckiv the coast beloved by Parisians, which they have,
guhavile met
made in in"hneeri.ndYthata;;nagd condition eQui
ndcondition'President Poiricares Present Ccouldnot been able to obtain ince the war..
JourneY Of. three hundred' miles; re4, has often cooked meat; for the
•. turning to a safe harbor with the ser as he used to be chef to M. Agee
forniation that she had been sent to obtain. And added to aid was the
cam-Lhon • the last French Ambassador
•at Berlin. It was this artist -;--for .
:,•'.•
• fact that " she bad Made the VoYage Kaiser ha eferred to hint an an art-
A:WERE% APPETIVrVe
Conintander of 'French Fueeetils Fon
• • • of COI/agar ,
The chef of a faineus Paris restaur-
ant hoszbecorna cook to Gen'joffre at
his headquarters. • It was an accident
that • brought him in tench with the.,
faineus, General; Ho was mobilized
In the' ordinary Way, and Alen the
War Minister gave instructions that
as far. as possible men were to be.
emP1,0Ysituations . to•
those thy had occupied in civilian life
the chef became it'Coo,h again' • ;
' Unfortunately hs. is not satisfies
With hid distinguished master's
pal-
ate, Iihe Says the General' prefers
beef that has been healed in the soup,
to the fineSt • eullinrrY 'efforts in the
way ..of filets .of Bele eooked With a
mane sauce. He is also 'extremely
fond of cabbage, but at every meal
he insists on having -a salad, which
he eats with hard boiled eggs and
flavors copiously with an • Brigliah
pence. „
One day M. Clemenceau came. to
lunch with Genloffre, and to the ato,
HE SUNDAY SCHOOL
'INTERN' NAL .1.0E3301st,
AMA, 14,
e
4
SOWing ,7nd Reaping rtemperance
, Lesscon).7.-Gal. Gehlen
.g; Text Gal 6 s,i1
There la single thread uniting the
whole paragraph, the tight relatiemi
the ether• -man" (verse 4),
who belongs te Claristrau fanuly,
They are all Centered in tho duty a
using the microscope for our own
• faulte, end leelcing at the other Man •
mostly to See how We can laelp him. •
Verse 1. •• We seem to hear tho echb
of p boast° that they could nothe iolm
eziot. of "tx,?Oaseare„ • The whole
verse is reminiscent 'of the - L'oriPo
riconnter with men Who brought ,
a. woman' Overtaken' 'a• grieve:1S,
trespass, when ke bade "leek to theine
selves." Aistore-The.iderl of the
verb is that or pettitig something i.11
• circler se ad to be ,readY for -use agrriAy
like tumbled nets after a eight's fish -t
'ng (Mark 1. 19), Note * corros44.
ponding noun' in „Eph. 4. 12, Of tb:
"fitting of the coneecrated, for work O
sentinel It is God' work to estimate!
andpunish guilt) our only concern id
that one of God's tools ,is out etre- --
pair; and swi.t. Must see.it in working
b order again, Spirit -Neither „here
,.nor in Verse 8 de we use. the capital.
It is, in fact, unit/illy impossible to dis-
tinguish in such phrases betwen the;
Divine and the human spirit, .for tho.
latter is .the part oftnan where GO
dwell's. •In an "unspiritu " ' man.
(called nsyclileal in 1 Cor.
who, has nothing, highir than t e mind
In him, the psyche,. or "soul," being
in this context the titan en his imh.«.
•material side) the 4'spirit" is asleep;
.and the sleep may deepen.into death.
'geotlenes-Supremely seint in Christ
(Matt. 11. 29; 2 Oor. .10i 1); The -word
meek is an hafertimate• .rendering
there, for it now suggests a man wile
cannot resent or repel an injery, • in-•
stead of a strong man who. will not:,
do so. '• - •
2. Burdens -A significantly differ- .
ent word from that in Verse 5, where .
the '94 is that which We Must carry,
for ourselves. Here the :thought Is
of timeawhen •
„
'014'erte."
• ..
1
1••
,
•eie•"'"•-r.. •
In a high sea; that for tW.enty hoes, „
persens
were rece
sident rat
iefencelese, she evadd1. the enemy
patrols. - •-
`
hid heard ateriee• of German sub-
k..,,rnilarines sunk by a, single shot„ so.'
• askerarOrtifirdfficers hew,hiakeer
: had survived. ;the tremendous shock Of;
mine: exigosion, , ' •
Her `Strength payee Her.
, "She held because of her strength,'.'''
he aid.- "It '.broke her hoee and it
tore 'off -two of her 'Inilithefias-;- But
she held, The, 'efficiency ' Of -the
' pumps was net impaired. Within two
ininntes we. had them working." ••
Ile -asked me, if I would not go be-,
iow and see the marks of - the dire;
aSter. So, I followed him across a
-gangway. and • upon. the iron,
deck which already was beginning to
show red patches, of rust. , The hatch
. vvas open, • 'Relew 1 could see . a
. white eettipartment with brass flt-
, . .
I do. not knowwhatI expected to
stint -14 but When 1 Stoodin this com-
partment couldsee no traces What-
•soever of tlae;„c4tastroplie. .DireetlY
-• in front. of ri•te: the for. rear doors of
the' torpedo, tubes, ,painted a 'brilliant
White, •und, to my right and left the
great Shining: torpedoes were clamp-
ed in . their. fack% '010 thewheel
• controlling the. be* 'incider was nbt
• true. t; The slender 'brass rod Sup-.
porting it had suffered from the" vibra-
-`,Thig was the Only mark made by:the
, mine of the enemy. Not that it was
tole eatintated as minor damage, for
the riiddera have their part to play in
the riee-cifid dive and it was. neces-
in sidewalk lights are other common
receptacles for thole dangerous fire -
starters, -,pedestrians dropping stubs
cuid inatches regardless of results,
Stile&
le
arid efg
ed.mat
Where,
smoke
it: pub
places
o •Icedethe lonch for eighty
n- tile allied delegates.
t y the gueets- of the Pre-
th6 Elysee:
•
GE 0113$ gROICHNS,
ious Eires Directly Traceable
to This Cause.
re tire responsible for many
resHgong-artY.--streete-ragar-rantares over the Marvell°
tette stubs, and partly burn- ractsagttgialf;11113sugiee- vialtreyre
13.) Orchards and mighty tidos. (0) Autoraobile tauvoller is never out of sight of blossom -Wen orchards. (3) ,Four hundred miles
Of blossOm-epttboath,red highivays. (4) This 'tree has a record of 32 barrels cif fruit,
famous not only for their quantity but
for their fine quality. Every, fernier
lie Bile long, -sheltered valley: raises
thia delicious fruit, even though he
does it on, a small scale. . There are
seeree of orchards with from 200 to
1000.trees, and the largest of all, locat-
ed near. ;Kentiille. col:amine 20,000
trees '
" I• .. -
The entire clop •of the .valley Aver-
ages between 700,000 -and 1,000,000 bar-
rels a year and nets the growers any-
where from 41,500,000 to $2,500,000 ae-
cOrding.tO size of crop price,- and other
conditions. The greater Part 'Of this
outpzit-4--the :British' markej.
and the apples froth a blossom-C.Werf-
ed -re° Which particularly attraCted
the adiniration of a June bride last
summer maY later have reposed in the
cellars Of Windsor Castle, Or been die -
played in the sinew iyincloavs of Sonle
Landon -fruiterer ' •
GraVensteins, • Whose- pare. white.
blossoms are .the first to reach
perfeetibn, are a favored product
Of the Valley', and Baldwins, Red As-
trachans; Greeninge; Northern Spies,
Bishop • Pippins, King TomItins, 'Non-
pareils, •Riliston •kippliM., Golden 'Ram,
!iota, gen Davis and Sweet iaouglis,, \are
.among other popular Varieties raised.
•
LOSSQM Sunday"; have you e•Ver. nittY have an opportunity to share with
heard of it -that Sabbath day of the orchardists themselves in the rare
beauty of .the landscape in .King's and
Annapolis Counties. Large numbers
patronizes thee° 'excerskine, especially
from -Halifax, the capital. city, and
many find a double •pleasure in wallv
ing through the. petaf-carpeted orch-
ard,/ and highways or viewing the
"Igtrielsa:t (Mena of twhite.'from the Pearly
Apple culture. In the Aanapolis Val-
ley, through which the nor/ faliiiine Do-
minion Atlantic roe, now grown to
stich immepse proportions, had its In-
ception Couple; -of -centuries before
the horticultural pessibilities of
nia. were even dreamed of... The
irst apple trees were planted 'there by
the early French settlers, about .1633,
and there are still existing trees that
are thought to date backpretty near to
that tithe. • In a long -abandoned arch.-
Itrirtirthelovely-Vallertown-of-Para--
diee, notolong.agothe writer saw sev-
eral gnarled Apple frees that. Must
have been at least a couple Of hniadred
years old-. , •
From the' smell beginnings of the
Peaceful Acadians his developed One
ef tne,largest•and mostprolltahni oap-
nle-:grawing industries on the ntin-
, enchantment' and ;pcletry in the
land Eitangeline in early June, when
Mile upon mile of freitf4l. orchara-
'lands is white -and -pink 7rith
lOse milltone of apple Meets, and a
fgreat-seventy-mile long valley is filled
from end to end with InteXicating fra,-
igrance. that'recalls the orange groves
•of Florida or -theL, gleriatis ;heliotrope
of Del Monte? • ' .2. •
•:.-.
• Santa 'Barbara:- has a .Flower :Pesti-
Tal, and: the happy •dweller's tn the
Santa Glare Valley revel in the beauty
and ;luxuriance of. their; " nettch and
Trona blosboms,nut only in Sena Sce-
tit there an annual feast of blos-
emits that is worthy of the name.
The..tourist in Nova Scott, linger -
fug until mid-Septenther, °es into
•01711,5_,g7. colterire,-
lizes the
e he has
in early
-to Sun%
indeed, , when it.,1s spent In he Anna-
polis -
flee b Wings *here 'smoking is not. Weekend excursidzis cir 'arrangedailoW .
d;-•ditip -their cigars- ow': the bY. the railroads, in order that the
dwellers. In the cities and larger:towns-
st4.1:ir .On the, flees of the corridor
. • _
or effsiblY in; the elivettor,•'wherti • - 7 -
the ra.,Itito
lien of awaste paper, and dause• a fire. -
or eigarette stubs and 'matches into •
.eve,- 7. feast of color' and ot fragran
es may be seen mime:di IV
carelessly thrown aside 07 missed by not being there
s. carelessness occurs gun°, What so areasl'a da
to and office buildings, bueitrss
and factories. Men enter of -
ayroll to the bottom ale. aata%elae....
ONDERFUL WAG S
vator Tito possible
FOP . WORK PEOPLE
Others forgetfully throw their cigar
the Wastepaper basket. If the basket
•.
is of combustible ntaberiaethe sinoill.; •
define stub will eventually buret into WHAT THE WAR HAS ,DONE FOR
flame. • BRITISH t.A.pak. - • '
.Factory milking is another Bernina
hazard. Whilst Most 'factories have
• • •
. .
'atrict rules agairist smoking, it 13 a man Are making 210 a Week, and tcl *5 in a weekThe average earn -
Office Boys!' Are Seventy • ' Ings for this• partieular shop are 45s.
•
bot„- for Nova Scotia Apples today are
• . .
• .
Young trees, begin to bear .five or
sit year's after eetting'-out, and one
farmer has: peeked 32 barrels from a
single tree, The Orehardiets here fol-
low the most approved methods ap-
ple cultivation, allowing about 30 feet
of spade between' the treas,.plowing up
the grounk.an,d spraying on the most
modern .principles. ,
Some Of the fineit Orthe, Nova Be&
tia•orcherds are situated at the east-
ern end t: of the Annapolis, Valley, in the.
vicinity of Kentville, Wed:Nino and
GrandPr,' so that the You ground
which Evangeline and Gabriel are sup-
. posed to have trod in the happy days,
5 stippled. avitli-thera*In+1
blown petals': and the mighty curren
oftzthe tide -vexed Minas Basin bear
thousands of them over the very
course of the vessels that took the hape
loss Apadians into exile. '.• • •,
If Evangeline could only' return to
earth. todarand- thincrher:arbilefor the
-
first week June, *hat .a new and
strange. Virden of loviness she would
behold. ;Even in these ancient -days,
when "The Sunshine of Saint
liyed. and 'loved in Grand Pre; a fopt-.
• path:led through an orchard wide, and,
disappeared in the nioadow.7 .
girls picked up the work •so quickly them. Last Christmas one received neard4of pay -15S, week-' to boys.
they "knocked up" 10s. a day. presents including an oak ray,-
: And this place is by no nieans ex- hot of eigare. Oilier Cigarette caae,•a
ceptional ' There is another in which .large photograph in silver frame, . and
a number of Stottien lasses are mach- a gold Watch and -cizain. Even: the
'cling the 'copper bends . On ehells-qt. manager of the swine works, got onlY a
task whieh involves some labor, since silver tea-servieel • ' -•
email projeetile has to a'be ' lifted leo As for real craftsmanship in general
position and lifte51 out again. Now engineering shops, it has certainly
the 'champion" of the works has never been so remunerative as it 13
turned nut 1,614-ahel18 in 11 shift, or an new. On • the- same Saturday two
average of 101 an. hour, and has earn- workmen in the • same factory drew
"215 as, 216d. • each, the highest ,ever
earned by a journeyman in this par-
ticular establishthent • '
• In fact, there is hardly ,any 'manual
industry in which the•earoinga are not
unexeampled In BrIstql • and other
towns boys' of seventeen . pea nevi
Make.from 25s. to 40s. a week by
working on horseshoes.•Nottingham
lace -girls, noted ler thei4l high wages
and smart Tess, ;haveh
energies .to -mttnitione, and are revel-
"Mighty love cloth cleave in twin
The burden of a single pain..
And part it, giving half tO,'Ilim."
The• law of Christ -Compare especia1--1
ly John 13.84; A better reading,here
is the future, ye will fulfil.
*a; •
Something -SO in Gal. 2. S. The
man who thinks so nnich of himself
could, of course, not stoopto do What
in, Ind* celled "Coolie. woi1e!
his br flier, especially if he had, been •
ca t in 'some 'lapse. Those who
ve learned Christ's law from see- •
ing him. at "coolie Work" for men :
(John. 13. 5; compaie Mark 10., • 45)
will count it their privilege. When
he is ipthing--;-•In 2 :Cm 13. II Paul.
humbly uses this phrase '.(n4arly.) of
himself: Decerveth 7hiltitelf=Not
other people, who can ,generally take
tht measure of such men. • •
4. Prove -4T�' apply. a rigid arid.
impartial•teit to our own performance
is the surest check tO conceit, Glory:-
ing:-The thought seems to.. be that •
when a Man has really tested hisown •
-work he - will. feelne:-temptation tp• -
compare it with his neighbar'a achieve-,
of who have only just left school, and Ment: he' judges it .by an absolute,
that afte,r only one Month's.expeiriene from his "hinds" a large number several actually give such *beginner§ not a relative; standard. If then -he
as inueh as 20s. a week.; 0_therws_aormel.of
la.glories" in it, it will be with no sort
h Only with thankfidness to God, wile
obliged to engage "office•ti,ris,".
the few "regulars"
de
1°!°Qktfliennieyas: has helped him. paul very Often
for he knoirs; its au ,.i but •
'bTlahce.lcrele•gasr.'e', too,
,...few • . _
'sixty or seventy years •Old, whe.seepy uses this •word "%Oast? in quotation, •
letters lick Stairips, make, tea for the marks, as it'were. -
typists, ete., With exemplary care.
common 'practide for emplciyees to ,
•
"light tip" before leaving, and drop
• • Better Work, But Less Pay.
their lighted niatches;. these, falling' • ' • ,. .•Yeats Old.
the earnings of a novice are some
nian Thom he or she has din.
placed. TWO, it is claimed on behalf
of organized labor, is most inarked on
the .Clyde, where, ,skilled men have
id " t rt
chines and take up work which,
By one of life's little ironies, indeed,
am,ong inflammable • materials, later Prophets were two a penny fit the
arias more than • those of a highly
break into flame Manyt veninn fires beginning of the war; but did airy one
in. factories and. business Places may
be traced to this cause. ••
Open, gratings and breken prisms
' sary to: come op from the bottom of
'the sea. ' Net 'a siznple matter with
. the rudders not under control.
• . "You see," one of- the officers ex-,
plained to me, "we didn't know tvlia`v • Since the fire which destroyed the
Wad happened -the water was pouring Parliantent buildings at Ottawa the
' -in aft and .broken glass was , ewer_ Dominion Government has issued an
* where. We didn% know how much of order prohibiting smoking( :in any
• her was gone. We knew that every Vending occupied by the public ser-
•
• mad aboard had been knocked flat vice. , • "
. .
cm hie': lam- that •-tite•-glass off • the :
dials: Was rattling .about under foot ' ' :
•• ::13at We • didn't kfill'irWlintawn. 6 WT.:*
eozne of us. •
•
of them predict; that. in I a ,nliet.,;time
the workers of this country would be
ulinrecedentlY prosperous?. asks Lon-
don Answers. . ' • •
' NO; the thing was too. wildly im-
probable. yo,t it has come to • pass.
'To -day the toiling millions in Britain'S
hives. of industry are enjoying a
"boom" without a parallel. in histery.
Among -the first trades, to benefit di-
rectly by the war was the Whelesale
manufacturers, • Engaged.- solely on
khaki; tnany talloresses at Leeds drain
30s. a week, with as Much overtime:as
they cared. to . work, 'an& for. a short
peeled froup of girisioarned 705;
a week eac ?• •
sr*FITING- 40 -$,VX -4514.01-
h it
taught eats ers o nun-ce a n.ma-
though. calling for greater aid% is yet
paid for at a lower tate.'.
The new-domere are said to earn 25
or ',Re a* week, whereas the ."top
'notch" for the skilled men is only £2
2s sd Aod tte• is indisputable ,that
I there are some canes of this kind. Itt
one a man who was taught only a few
.1 'meths ago .has earned 'as much as
' £13 in -a week. • • • .
till more curidus .is it that maehin-
receive. higher. pay
ling in prosperity unequalled in the
history of the town. Workers at Shef-
field are e -pending money right And
left, and their Wives can afford cos-
tumes sooting 24 or25, guinea hats,
and umbrellas wbrth 50s. .aniece.
• Boys'are Unobtainable.
Ono of the mot cnrieus effects of
the alniunding nrc,sperity of manufac-
tures is the scarcity of boys for Office
and similar' work The high wages
I bl worksho s have drawn
, •
- GERMAN FAIRY TALES.
•
Late Governor of Cameroone .Told
. Wild Stories of Victories. •
The following extr. acts froin a tele-
gram addressed by Dr. Ebermazer, the
late Governor of the Cameroons, ; to
the German district authorities -Of the
Protectorate after the, surrender of
Duala to the allied forces on Sept. 27,
1914, are instructive. .
pel fitory. Compare 1 Cor. 9, 11 '
':5..FOr. his responsibitity for. this <-
work' he can never . share -,-he muit
bear it himself • hefore. God. • ;What .
then has he to do With other people's •
respoOsibilities and tha4poSsibly. ip-
ferior faithfulness.- with -which • • they •
shenkier them? • N
• 'A. 'Cornmunieate-,•Att.aniatelligibiC
archaism. It mem:ago shares ,
the ,"eateclinmen"--for• the word here
got e technical meaning before:tong; • '
'compare .espeCially, Luke 1. 4 --is . to '
share .meals• and Other: ,things with
im 'who has ben hire th
The doctor authorizes his; subordi-
nates tO s
e gos•-•
ay: . • . . 7. „Thei•e iit preltably no immediate"
.The 'Caber haa flret taken thaeneonihn;.
thoue4it is not far away, aa the return
,IFeth the previous vie: se, but the '
natives,.namely, pelgium, to Which the
try Which inflicted horreri: •
to it in 'verse lo shews. Selfishnois
, Congo belongs. We have occupied
•I the whole country and, driveh out the
King. - ' • - '
• Then the Kaiser has sent his , eel:
Iridin g tile ere:item; of a de h
P diers deep filth France - and in boni-
obta na e n
1 .
is -the "tow,ing to. the flesh." Gd is
not mocked-ThiS,,is• the cenierse of'
such Old' Testament conceptiOas " as
Psa, 37. 13, repreientipg .Teirevah .
barding %Ile ler est French eity,•witere dare .to defy hire. TI
• : than those placed le ant or y over of boys r • . s.
.erit wbUld never say th' I '1 't
itto-indastry-marY thein$0414
Y- W
he Govern() o the. French, live New 'Pesta •
rt nds and did odd ---'ffir.1 es-Prenchhave ii6lOpte-Firratr- • t I can „
Since those days numerous
"It was fine, you know, to see the Teuton:Challenge Accepted. to Uphold have been opened, spec/any fee ifie thent Bonin •ferenien, hoWever, • befie-
• drew. TheY got on their feet and at British. ideate, • manufacture of munitions, and at most I, fit:largely by the 'prosperity of their
of these terriarltably high Wages's:re eubOrdinates, who, When they aro.
their plafei before the comMender had
•- through -to the engine reenr,Arid the When Oermany challenged us, near- West of Londen, girls are nOw earning , • , •
• , •
who formerly ran e
jobs, and sec far It has been impossible
to replace them. • .
Many firms ara.offering hitherto tin-
• Ahnu...to ..ortiethpyr., tbere; _iiii_tuto., The London Times publiShes the fel..
• • the rule, and. not the exception. ,In: al throwing raeziey about, do. not orget
WITI-11 CfitA.NADIANS IN' FRAINCE—
putoi.were gob*. , - But .,,,,,h-,-thr we tly two yearra-gcr,•-t-o-unitold-with-our_frdM2 1.6s.•a week; notwithstanding:
te i.ive, 4 accepted the .challenge, not . Wholly ignorant of ;the work.• -Gi•rla ,
• tO be seen. - • .. . _ . ,..:_______H, _,. ._
. r engaged j n another branch of the same
-.--- -*Then thearthrevr-inthe-levero.-We Out_of inaanesS, nor tor glory or gam
, • /... fectory, make up to 42, 16e: a week. I
- --Waited.. That 'Was- a bad minute: but te make -goes tnoae profeienina, ;nese, too, iiiicWrycilliSkilleti"-wliett they i
Then the broken glasi b.,gan to.rattle Sinde then the all len and otri. st --te 0: . - • . -I
'
lowing -by -Rudyard -" • -Certain -section of one, situated in ti;e 1 , . ,
' minfites the Order to -rise had gone
lives the ideals by whicE-Ile professed ihtvt milY feW ni6i1V agg th°Y- *en' Trz"ra—.7"--••
were' going to rise or not remained •
• around under foot 'again. We Were Pire havo -fought that they and all , fligh as their lay is, many of their
-, moving. ' We weren't long in getting the earth nifty. be free from the in- male fellowworitera fare much- better. '
uff.-,-1Ct tinynime theie's nothing iike,tolerable domination of German ideals. some •are taking home -,-or. should be
wo did not see, or foresee Iii.e gize•--toting-hems,-as-an:a0-as E ta a Week
,
coming up into., the air and sunlight . and in exceptional eiremnstancee, even.
after You've been Linder for a bit OL the task when. it opened; SVC do
13ut this •was' different. -Yes, this not flinch from it now, LOI* Months hen, for hiStance, four of them !
was a bit different. So wc started i have schooled tift to the full knowledge
, went for their pay not long. ago, the
and haVe tettpered•us. natlonally and cashier WA short of "small" thange, '
lookirm her over, for the drainage.",
r. Thought Only ,cii gis' ship. individually to meet it, . i and consequently f,:ave onera note tili
The nationo within the Einpire , divide among the Ict. It was for 250 •
• This was how be tom me the storY have created, maintained and rein.: -..g 12 10e. a man! And this amount
Of the black interval when the ie of- forced from their best the kreoest ; bad ben •earnen by working merely ten
- fleets And the nArl Of the. trew waited; ar ies which they devote without and a -half hours II, day!
• submerged, at some 200 feet below *-qU'estion to • this issue. They have ' ' -High Wage's at Weolvolitif
, ' • '
•`*:. 'water level, not knowing whether or emerged, one by one, as ,•,- pouters Iii,00,eeinnterit. and other sritahliele,
not their bulkheads were destreyldi defiled with power, through discipline roentS, 01.1 sbnlinger haVe 'molted
-Whether -their -instruments--were- ir- and sacrifice, Strong for good* ,bY ifY,leaps. , 1.1g- ltettP4is. Tile ilTio fiSP
, repatably damaged, whether or •not their bitter knowledge of the eVil 00 for ,y§ Of 10xteell a Wooviou
(hey would ever come up again inte they ate Meeting, and wise in the un- ArSeaf4 vett stsy rroae O., OA- flrf• lip_ft "
the suidighi, It Was his ship that lie purchasable wiadoin of actual aiiiieVe•-- P•• Welfs (.30z• llig I° W- 6 PPF I'VeY 'i‘rt
. .
seemed to think of above, all other ment. eagaP Ort a* Pr Op , wor ci pa .
.. onto, p . irthful ktNrs tiromt its
titivo, , Knowing', as mations, what we fight
t Theyllopisti iitilliktilliaellItike ..14inse_geolil
• e found out what we'd conie in- for; realizing, as men and women, the
to," he said: "Then it Was whether tesolve that has been addeil •to tip, py rt oest.iti a (3 , q tory On t it
we could make a port alone. The whot each has endured, we go forweil lotb twos l'a ,or ID sheiproxacp, , 4.
111.)
... 'wireless -won working,* That is, We under the proud banner of our grtefg 010.0 oi it. el' fain. it 1 90 t 0
could send; we couldn't receive. We and losses to greater ellott, grei4er nitatlIp6 Ott t*ItitiA qa-rdlittitsbt114. Mo,Colliyk
i took a look at the bra* facing at the endurance and. if need hal, to heovr
4 to 41,0tits, ago, hall never oven goo
bulkheads. They 'looked pretty bad, sacrifices an equal sponsors for the e- a preleetile, ere rIOW making nell.tly
hanging loos e in strips.. But we d'e, livei.trOce of mankitd. „,, 1 , ' 414 a week eatli.' bi many ceded,
•
An Interesting teene °showing Canadian! soldiers preparing meals at
. an outdoor kitelieu at Abe Clinadlast hese. at 8t. Cloud, in Eranee.
d idi ' •
plc u e ran er eg 0: (Rem..2.4)
The Kaiser has captured General despisirig the patience which ruants
Kitchener, whom the English regard-.
• e •
folly Mistakes 'for .importanje., Yet •
all. the -time wild oats are 'Sown., by
God's inetortzbllaw wild oats ceine
-up -aid-are intrveffilartralM-IfirKow,
ed as their !net aim/If-ander, together
with lope soldiers. Kitchener was
itideed ihe'werkt--eriemy_of
hammecian blacke„ and took a whole
.country -from the Great _Salta.• _ •
Be many English shipshave -been
'destroyed 'that. the English have now.
no More than We have.
The Englieb werinot--zitrongeiniegh-
to take Dualai but 'had, to call •in the
help of the French. We have; mere -
over, only surrendered Dupla because
there were so many white women and
children -there, ,towhoniiceprdht-tor
the law of the 'whites, nothing . can
happea if 110.fightipg takes Wee in
a town.
The black soldiers of the English
and French have already deserted
them in masses, and come to us to
fight on. our side, beciase they see that
we are e:trongeir.
•
3,000,000 "Ciessack Hoots.
er has graCe to pull ri and sow
Lanether7tardy-erop• -in ;he ad edilcd:.
8°181: les:h Is the ..
-anfitjilesis..nl'
'spirit,and includes the whole of ho
niairifitirle -When GOA :is IC ifTialt, just •
as spirit is man'a kigheq nature in •
vital Union with Cod.' Corruption- -
'"What 'are 'meh better than sheep' or'..
goats ?"-destined for nothitig but the...„
'graiteif they deligiiHately. starve the „
one immortal.part of thein? . •
- 0., - See nerenlitilse
Two diffetent words app.ear for "the
gocid": here what je,..seen 'to be ;good
has the emphasis, in verse 10 the oni.:
phasis is ..on internal, quality. , ihte
seaeon-Rebuking ' inipationce: • hat. •
Veit eannot'corne 11 ''znenth.after'sow-
ing.
• Three hundred thousand Eiteers will
yield up their hides to make the tte:
000,000,,Coseack boots Nat ordered in
Lotidoit tech pair of legs takes nine
feet of leather and each -pair of fronts
two feet. . ;
After the Argument, •' •
Sudge-Now tell what, passe4.4e-
tweet yourself And the complainant.
1)dendant--Vel1, your hoilotf, There'
wuz two pairs of lista, ' one turnip,
, seven fireLbrieks, a dozen ,assorted
' hard names and a lump of coal.
•
10, Oppertunity-The same Vora
its seasett,-. The .marginal While WA
have seems preferable. gousehold-
An Afierican scholar has lately 'Aug-,
gated -that here and hi Matt. rY. 47 •
and i Tim. 6..4 there is an 'illusion
to a lost proverb like our "Charity
begins at home" (which' in Greek was,
"The shin. is farther .off than', 1110
knot" - •
steadfastly declared the' little eliap,.
"I ean't 'read, nor 1 caret, write,. riot<
t 'caret sing.J. so 1°4 like to ,know whak
good.I'd be at schooll" •