HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-08-24, Page 2The Storage Battery'. are several ways you eati overcenad
VY few days we receive, an in- thiS' 1*4 absalltelY 21CceeSa7i is QVcir;
ver
tory or two ottoolong our poation ate the car whorl:there is ral. battery.
One is to ha the breams free ef t
cernmutatot, and another „to dinefl.
met thekgenerator dive so that the
unit is 'let running when the engine,
oPerated. Welter is atnmblesoMe
and, inadvisable tbng to do unless ah-
soliately ueeeaSarY,
• 110terien.
, garage matt eta him it would An over -heated battery' Its one of
eat eau laapperi to a
•hurt the generator in this least to run tne worst: things tl
, car owner because if may incaPaeitate
his entire electrical system B Is well
therefore, ,to observe -closely the eon-;
thinon ef the storage battery before
Starthag on AtoUr, as weliSW to teat
y it Q"at31°11411Y elir°11te*
'• OVer-heeting' njaY ie caused•by
several things. Two of the most
the
causes are lack of water ot
over",:hargifig from the generator.
. A battery kept fult ot pure distilled
watet ie net nearly so apt to beconle
oyer -heated as one in which the solu-
tion has been allowed* „fo. reach' a level
lower than the top of the ..plates."'
When these pletes ere expoied to the
air, the oxidationwhieli goes On bul-
ges andwraps tiler% causing ,shorte
circuits mid, considerahle. damage to
the 'entire battery. Thi$ often re-
sult in the entire starting, lighting
and ignition system. being Put out of
condition: •••
• Before starting en a trip, the gen*
erator should be adjusted. tosupply
the battery with the proper amount of
current, at high speed, inasmuch'. as
the driving is generally,faster when
town*. If the• generator is not fur-
nishing.chrrent properly, it should not
-be eiperimented with, but examined
by eomeope whois competent to make
the .proper adjustment., Only a
thorotigh electrician Ahould be Wen a
So' with the geteeratton. .The hat_ jobof this kind, and for that reason
tory is there to receive the •• curentthe *Ward Company insists that
• generated and when it is not in con- their Service Stations be conducted
'nection year, are etbPeing the electri- only by experts who thoroughly en-
ema Outlet, without *topping the in- derstand electrical systems from.start
let if the engine is. ruernag, There td finish.
on the matter of running engines
having electric generators in comma.
Om with the storage battery is Ms.
connected or removed twin the. ear:
•SaYs Motor Ake, We have repeated-
ly explained that 46ing this is apt be
burn •out the Windings, but e. great
• many will not believe it. One xnan
even went so fax as bo Flay that
. Without the battery, and further. that
*ben the hatteret was off the car; he
even started the :engine straight of the
,generator, requiring no batterY nt all.
„ This merely goes to show be
Mae .a great many eeeriere reallrt Very
• • know about the electric:al system, for
commen• sense ought to tall ,thail it
would have 'been absolutely 'impos-
sible to do any sneh "thing. ,;It
-:..just Uke saying that he ran a steam
engine without a ,hoiler or other
Couree of steam supply. To Start the
engine you. Must dkaw the current
the battery in order to eend it to
the starting mote; g there.is no
.1mttery you have no starting current.
So !Mich for thAt. As regards run-.
rfing without the battery, let us' say
. 'plainly once-More—do not do, it; Most
• generators, are of the ShUnteweand
tYPeand being of that type of 'high
.. voltage is built up when there is
no Provision for using or taking off
• thecurrent that is produced. Suppose
you were to take a water puinp a,nd
step the outlet so that no water. could
• belet out Now, if you pumped wa-
ter from the 'Well by working • the
handle ou.wea14 be drawing it into
.the pump.; and pretty.soon something
would have to.break if theke Were no
way for this. Water to get out
BRITAIN IS
10W -WORKING
British Anti -air Craft Gun en a no* Truck in Salonilti, •',..
Range finders fit wor1s. in th'e presence of a British anti -air ;craft machinevn mounted on a speilally con-
.
. • .
strueted motor truck, in..qaloniki._ , ' • •
, „ • .
D FIST VS.
NAILED IIAND
•
BISOOP OF LONDON RISCUSSES
WAR AND RELIGION.
1.
Great Britain Is the Instrument of
• ' God in ThiseGreat
Straggle. ,
• Undoubtedly the most picturesque
-non-military figure in England during
these war days is a • distinguished
clergyman, the Right Rev. A. F. Win-
nington Ingram, Bishop 'of London,
says Edward •Marshal, an .American
writer: Hey„,is the church militant in-,
catnate,•and has been ever since the
of Great Britain; it will str„engthen,
it,. .• •
.
oTo use the ,words of a Scotch
preacher we are fighting for the
'nailed hand against the mailed fist.'
"The mere fact that we engade in
such a• battle, raising for theetisk a
volunteer army representing, I be-
lieve, a greater proportion of our
male .population of fighting age than
ever was represented before by vol-
unteer fighters (save, perhaps, in the
two armies of your North and South
in the days of your Civil War, before
you fonnd it necessary to introduce
the draft), is, I thinh, proof positive
that we are not morally deteriorating
through the effects of war."
BRITISH WAR SPIRIT.
An Anterian Praises Steadfast . Pur.
• • , pode .to Win. -
James- V. Beck, former Assistant
mach less thatCmade them. Now mu- war, began. • A great novelist Might,
Attorney •General of the United States,
"titian making le some form or -6ther make him the venerable hero ofone is in France, where he lute been in.
has extended well Mgh to every, con-. of the most fascieating psychological vited to visit the French military head:.
siderateto-t-e-wA=itieepe -etee -studiesol—warlborn ' emotion ever quarteree Prior -to his -departure from :seutici-0 Ephesus, end in early his
to ierkeae
Could Have Weekly Battle- ' England Mr: Beck made •the follewleg tory much mote important. The eld-
bers of villages„ . ! •., written. e
"Weetan now produce in lessthanEmpire to the fighting pitch, sending
He has stirred the. clergy' or the 'statement,: • • .
. . "What I have seen and heard in Eng- verse 28 are called bishops. In the
, ers or presbyters (margin); Who in
. .
-
4,000 PLANTS ARE BUSY' MAKING a, month as meof tete lighter shells hundreds .of them, most of them as land during my tour weeks' stay has
njr
tilted me with admiration, Nothing firstecentury the names were 'hetet-
• :MUNITIoNS: . whole year of •:1914-1.5. Itt, lees than decent classes love him; sham; clerie• solute
be finer than the quiet' but re- heabl denoting the same work
as coulhave been d . Mined out inthe fighters, to the front A
' ll creeds and
purpose of the English people Icanromgcliffee4ab paint of View; indeed;
a fortnight we can niehe more heavy di]: or otherwise, inteneely fears lim. •to push this ' Vital struggle for the they are . hardly technical titles - et
-shells
than. 'Ne4 could have done. be
, •One sentence, as he spoke it to me • basic principles- of civilization to a all Yet •Those ;who "watched on be-
. ,,,„.../NWa-r. Supplies Produced monthly as the year 1914-1.5. We can new turn in les oeio residence, ..still .rings: in , conclusive mictOry. ', Their steadfast half of smile were called' veriously
• . : . - ' • , -
out in a - week--far-olorezthella,- filled
. . .
and complete than were used in the ifty eais; more 'because of the meaner poise IS reniterkable.. They are neither' supevintendents ' ' thishoPsj; seniors
Greet' as Was Turned Chit First
Year Of War, • - ; whole battle of Loos, which extend- of its speaking than 'because of , 'to elated with victories • nor depressed
defeats orBoth te.:, (presbyters), servant's (deacons), or
,
"eddies il eurergeanrtdr icalsi '
ed over a fortnight and they had beee imbeetisiveness of 'wording. He did :1;1'
When. -the liritise forces In France saving' elninunition- flit that battle .for not cast it fiercely at me at he some- . . . . ,. efrr-leadere. A stereetYped. cOnstitetion,
.p i l'I't d with n Monarchical "bishoie" ...pet
began their great offensive bombard: a month. We could have a battle of•timesthrows ' • w • • steadily movling . to its ap e e e
, meat on. June 27 and for. days. hIpied 1.03gs every week -now, and it wouldn't' soldiers, but ' thrust it at me very' i wide. ,- . . . , , , labove his "fellow elders" (gompare 1
bete the German. lines such an avalqOuch the shell'reserVe stoat, . ' '',"In- a year they eettippen an army of Peter , 5. 1).. is a development of 'the
'• :niche, of steel and .lead' as the World "Regarding our present might -Mete than 4,000:000 men; and yet they second' centney, ' Pravideace ordained
, bad never. known before; evee. the for ' gun. production. as . compared capacity griPt13." very solemnly, as if, it
be sonieWhat, of. the nature "of a new never beast of the stupendous aehleve- that the authoritive books Should have
• of, England eXpreased weeder with the 'capaeity of June, 1914, be declaration of faith, made necesgary reent nor -complain of the equal bur- e .
no nxed , . government,
that it should have been possible to tore. the • war, we 'eke now Making in by unprecedented tiines. • den of expense. I heard few, if any,
, So that "aged 'might be free to deter-,
fOrm of churCh
• :.
assemble eti vast a. store of.inunitions. the case At the lighteet .gens;:. over, ' expreSsione of hatred for the foe. -
The stony of boW•theee supplies were ten times what We were. then, in the ', . For Freedom of the World.
. , "Only when the Cavell case or the
mine his purely egininistrattve matter
'created eonstitutek one Of the most case of 'medium' eveight guns over .2()• Lutitania massacre- are mentioned in their own way.:
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
, INTERNATIONAL LESSON
AUGUST '27.
Lesson IX. -.Journeying to,Jerusaletn
—Acts 20: 16-38: Golden
Text—Acts 29. 32,
Verse 16. The decision to take a
ship that would not touch at Ephesus
illustrates the immense importance
Paul attached to his offering the gifts
Of the Gentile Christians at the time
when there would be • a large con-
courseof 'Jewish Chrisians in the Holy
City. Still keeping up the praetice
of coming be. worship at one of the
• the great feasts; if ne more,they
naturally,chose Pentecost, the curch's
-birthday.
17. Miletus—Some thirty miles
-" "1' believe, that God is on the SI does one see a glitter in their eyes,' le. Lowlinesse-Till1Christ Made this
Impottant chapters_ nt the hfStory 6f, times, and *in the ease of heavy guns•
British achievement duiAng the war. more then 50 tiraes., . •
of the allies' and that 00 struggle is which is more significant .than any!
a virtue, the • word- •Suggested only
rds I am `..persuadee that even if
• ANELEPHAWT FIGHT
Arieription of a Bette.tietween To
Help Beate. .
There is eemething etupeiadone
about a fight between elephants, saY0, , •
,Sir ItobeTt Baden-Powell in "Memoriee' 'I..
of India.' It le 4 very Usual form. et !POUND TO BE "LESS THAN ,FIRST .1,
entertainment for rejabs to Offer their REPORTED. '
giteete on ,great oceasiene. Picture a
deep courtyard ainoug the oetlying
walls of 4 native palace. The to of
the Wails all round are lined with a
crowd of onlookere in the brightest of
garmente. Tine arene is eitalelY an
earth -floored couetyard With a email
mound at one end The monad Isjust
largo enough for A, ellopPtat to Stand.
'1/4
on. It le the "eanet ry." The animals
understand that wh one of them
teles refuge there he must net be at-
tacked. He has acknoWledgeel defeat.
rreoptly the great doors are open-
ed and u'dirty gray Inoneter comes
shambling in, flapping his ears and
'moving in..tin undecided, leisurely way
across the court. Then a second. com-,
Want comes shuffling into. the ring.
Wegglng and enoddieg •their heavy
heeds, the two animate approa.elf each
other at 4 shanthltng run until they
collide in the middle ef the ring, fore -
heed against forehead,with a mighty
thud.
Fora nlinute or two they mill and
eieave ; each Wee to Shove the other
backward, and their respective trunks
twist round constantly in•the effete to
get a grip en the other's neck or fore-
leg... Then they drew back a. pace and
Anal themselves 'forward in another
dull and heavy shock, - Both have
tusks that have been eueoff to about
two. feet and ferruled with ornamental,
metal work. In. the erash„ the ,col-
lision te greet bhunk of ivory flies off
one of the tusks, and it is soon evi-
dent „that .the elephant who has 'suf-
fered the 1DSS recognizes Its benefit to
him: He. has now a sharp, jagged mid'
to his tusk, and he does all he can to.
take advantage of -it. Beating down
:with his trunk any attempt to "clinch,”
he tries hard to, stab hit; enemy. .with
the new weapon of offence.
The other quicldn. appreciates the
danger, ducks his head down and
round, and does all he een to, grin the
aggressor in order to save himself. In
a few minute's dark streaks glisten
wetly on his face ; his head is gashed
and bleeding from the assault. He
presently gets a firm hold on elte op,
tionent's neck with his trunk,. and,
low ng himself to his knees, by sheer
weight forcibly drags the other down
also. The fight then becomes a wrest-
ling match between the two moristers
locked tightly, in each other's trunks,
each endeavofing to twist the other
oft his balance.
Per ten minutes the Mighty struggle
goes on between the Tithes, now on
their feet and now on their knees.
Then they break away for a minute
with lowered heads.; "sharp -tusk"
again. lunges forward, and"blunt-tusk"
turning his head to avoid more gash-
ing, receives the charge sidewise, and
gets swung partly round. His enemy
is quick to follow up his advantage,
and plunges into bilk again. He gives
groand, staggering, and jest saves him -
self from failing; but he feels that
he has had enough. He shambles off
toward the sanctuary and. clambers
wearily on it.
The fight over, the gates are opened
and a crowd of. men arnee with flame
ing torches and long spears •comes in.
. and drives both elephants .close again
'et the mall of the arena. From, the
top of the wall Me mehoete , step'
lightly ,down on the backs of their
respective. animals. The mothent ther
have got astride 'their elephants' necks
all possibtlity of trouble leover ; the
great beasts are at mice amenable to
reason, and ' shuffle. demurely pff to
their stehlee, ,• •,.
PROUD ;OP THE FRENCH •
,
British Officer Writee of Anne's De-
• kermin'ation te "See This Trough.'
years ago there 'we'e only three- im: supplies had- meant. the creation Of ' We are fighting; not for our own
' 'England were left to continUe the:
,•. At the outbreak Of•hostibtles =twat- . "The produetion Of trench :Warfare a holy.one. '•• ' " 1 Q • _ _ , 'fineanneas, - grovelling;1 -- Tears—Of The . --- _ . ..
, ?portant Goverttiment. n- to factor- an tndustry, of - Which there was profit, net for the extension Of the
contingency, she Would go go in a 'tare' self-expression of an Easeerner's. British are Vividly', in a letter from
dogged characteristics of the
struggle alone , an almost unthinkable joy end sorrow and' anxiety, the na-." -
four Alioneend;.Gevertainent.controlled country: Now grenades are beieg public or the Russian :domain or for a British officer, and whieh-ha,s 'just
_ieselet-the-Brintsh 'Yelp- - To -day some Practically no experience in . this British Empire or of the French Re- spirit of 'to. the last Man and to the emotions We are: by 'temperament
firms, semelqtegi more than -2,06.0,000 rtade in backyards and in all sorts augme.nted power ' or territorY for anY of discussing • the- Mines of the war .
last penny.' elaving had Oa privilege legg demOnstrative. e •
. . • - ' been, reteived in New York. , ' This
• Officer is attached to one of the }lead -
quarters
quarters Divisions in France, and the
interest ettached to what he writes
lies in the feet •that it reflects un- '
glestionably . the atmosphere , of '
thought and sentiment along the fir -
i line. The off•cer MA man of wide
eworkers. Ate Ou'Lang 01.tt virtually all ,or smat sixoPs, ae well as in the bi
. . 'The. -P-rganizzlt"'n '4)r, this great. hr-' been the supply and.•the distribu-
. Awe! new= lerittish ktiiffiers. 4ie . Labor Problem , • "At this late day • I cannot discuss a desire for an inconclusive:peace to deepest personal conviction, it meet
, •One vf the most anxious problems
. teriets 'which tithe gone to em.dp the are being peeduced: Weekl
of ehe-trenzeligthis =meant of war ma factaries, and ,harldieds of thousands
field: •
. .
g one of our Governments, but for the with most of England'e public men,
freedom of the weed.
he
causes of the war's beginnings,",,
e wen on. e reasons w
"Th h' h keep ihave not heard even an intimation of describes an appeal based Upon, the
•
eI have been specially Ampressed e • -
greatest tragedy in history. ' •
end the -stup.endeug horrors of this- be :caeefull'y diseniguighed from the
21. 'esti ying---; is recurrent word
' similar word bea•d witness 6f what one
'e.' :
. • • ,
d
_ 'aut been aceoncOshed in a titm of skilled labor, There was nod n us thrust into it, determined upo
• with. the • omen- of •E bad seen or herRepentance=
la d. • To us . „
4:11101111:354.11,1511111101F1.111rom_ .0111110..41k tilaware,m,vims•tin,,,-4,9c•Qmsvitait,ifim.
' • •
• .
II) I 2011 4. I LC -1.41 i WA POMMY/ 0 IN I IN Yi I V VS ors
• isfrY. Of . Munitions, 'which was lestabe This' fact -Wee recognized by , the be, are so very, clear to ma that.
•••••••., tin.-er the leader:: trades onionsc. and the .Government cannot think that any `intelligent AM-. borp one row,born. work. side by side ' •„22. Bound ley the spirit-eromPitre
I 'smiling. theetigh their tears.' High- God One fortnerly at war With him.
'.. lislied In May, 191s a
. slilP et. David 1-1-0(1Georga- ,13:f the'i" les reeeleed -tbafr. hearty aSsIstance eriean can fail to understand them. f in democratic comradeship • : Gentle Matt 5. 3eetc. '.The "poor in Spirit"
tinie eVery aeatlable resource Of the throsighnot 5n the ' distribution of • , s f . .. -
have, o,utv:ard Wealth, but lives as
' millet*, bas beef,. -built Mr the Prelim- 4 -killed. "In the Minds of many • thousand natured wonlen tekCtheir turn Iii,the• may
Bon of munitions: . ::, ' , ekteed Meer 'with unskilled. The in- "
. . • j213cre '2'6 IP the daPP t)r -Enelislunen is the conviction that our shifts of the munition factories. : One i
' ' in•the if he had none. The "bound in spirit"
will"tell yon she has three , . .
Not Dependent, on •U.S. " ' ; teeteeeekee ct tite6-20.4abor into the nation now is being used as a weep- weal e no chains, but acts as -if a pre..
• A staff of 5,000 'people has been re-- gem ef•ti-Exo.d Datfic. la- a ks,runec, of on in God'a hancig. •Thege men and army, and ye _nothing indicates: the '
anxious • heart,1 nder the Mattingly. af.' soner already, The spirit is that
tilirdd to supervise the enfle • At the.,
. 4•-nled, *:..ab,"... to ,ive.16, no ' too itigi women know that the nations which 'fable mann' r. I have met. society. part of 'man in which the IlolY Spirit
, . •
era of • this 'staff and responsible eirt*.e eta be *ed. 'SW:12,A men have. sank the Lusitaoia, which betrayed' women . Who are serving as • parlor has his throne:: , ' • ' "
, •bely to the Minister of Vitzdtions has :14-a.54'itd ' . a--
ml, foaetrattea . utskto aid ravaged Belgium and stood -by-eine:ids, nurses: and dish. washers in - .-- ' .-. • ..
• , 24. Course, or race, Paui s favorite
- hem!). a man Whose ortanizing ability workers. er...d an, lbereseneee etig, ease -e While $50;000 Araieniens were done to hospitals ' ' •
figure (compare especially 2 Tim. 4.7),
, death, would . not have done these ' "While .bereavements are . general
has been aCcerded wide spread reccgni- laa're 17..1111 41'AP' telvIve.d frnrn *Piece
One of many links between the Epis-
lion:. He is Dr: Christopher Addison, Itfek ',co 4.27.",g• Wiitt, he l'er'''Ilt mat things bad they not lost their fear of • there are few ..:Signs • of mourning.
' ••research: work Dr Add , ng . - . ,1 ,, ,,, ,,r„..,4,:„A
- °I`e and their faith. in Ged. To those who Soelal life
• . internationally known for his medical . ;mei 'Sart-0 sme.Dsr Weges tile -v ,proceeds as usual as the tlea and this report of Paul's great.
- Moil duri 170'02'''' tia'''T • -4* " -
._ .an'Interilew With ..2. reprogoiltatty: of at pletseleork. • . .. . - ,. • , , .
. . . '—' l'Ad' "r4T--- .----".""--"''''', think, this . out faith b '
. ecomes more
:feel_ tragedy. The Veda poSsiblY,'hac•i- 25. Luke- obviously knows of no
,. ..
best antidote to- the gloom of a, colos- Apologia wh'.ch they authenticate.
• The Associated, °PreSs, Old as .roueh -The Pesido= ito-s'irsndrere'l A-. -
t (ere desirable gum ever.'
• • . • • •• never seen anything •approaching the •:,
. ,
e nappY reversal of this' strong' present,
-of, the tory of the create:M. of 41112ePlt-b7., alk fat thi.Lt' maty.41.`ned. i
"..," said he, a man P -stoical. purpose Of the Men and worilSil 4. ..,.
'4 sof ' eace and a •
z and unleiis Acts was really
:Industry is .could be ;made. pebble at weetiberc • crctv•de4 APItf) 'fb,e arinyBiehoti of,: tire God of •Peaee; regerd , of, an the belligerent eetintries, as they amen
written immediatelY after ' the "two
. ' 31°-e. than 4wA 133‘t•17 0.s.l'z'd i'vcsr-k". this war as wokity and. as necessary- continue their' life,entedeath struggle." . .
!tag tline. • ' • '- • • ' • ' .- , - e -
.At the outset he disposed of: the ' me1.1 h's•Y'E' 61.110 Pecn 1411,tdm„alv (91. . "The Man who Jong. • has been .a ; ,. .• . ,.....,--e....e•
. . .- • .. years. (compare Acts 28. 30) and prim'
' statereent ' which has been 'made in 1/311121Pfals work." . . . to a release and, new travels (corn-
s •
America to the effect that if . it were. .. ' .. , , -; ehristian, and stiddenlY a ' rts' out to . .
. - a c es re : e- pee . • , • • • '
M t h A R di d: ' •
pot for the milt:MUMS furnished - or°, . •. fight e righteoug ;battle f eling that . . • 7 . paee 2 Time 4.• 20), we may be; sure
' ' '
he ii' a weapon in Goti'd bands, will e . Matcdheasrweleich have:once been pari. ,there•was nene.
• the 'Gaited . States Great Britain ' . .
would have to quit the war. RODS TO WARB .orF . Bp ,. , pot. become irreligious; the nation as ,ly use , carefully . gathered in , 26. •Peobably .Paul was • thinkicineg
''f . have heard • thnt '.' statemea
' t:X.5' ' :1, a "Vvii6le has felt a fkliklity- spiritual Tepee aril- .•redipPed in phosphorus. most of the solemn passage in,Eze i
....• made,".said Dr: Addistni, "and if la ughinlig .shicid,0 Reoi :Function. .kx,_i uPldt *beck Meet help it,.not degrade • The industry has grown to. such mag- (33. 1-0) where' the "watchman's". re-
, -
* • preposteroue; Of' co-urse. 'The ',Mated , • . • • . ,. • ;e.t. • War ntitver •emphaeizes the forine nittitle that A large proportion of
- States' has .10/tithed, and is furnish-. . , P .. • Y . P :of religion; to Worriers fighting for matchee new sold have been lighted at
" Ing Many raw rciaterials which we . Tho' oid.fssikioned :Elea. used' - *Jr. be the right the substance of religion least mice. Recovering them from
.,
are anxious to getefor the mantifae."thae.lightaing rede 4.•ere si.u.0 an; n mint 'fiipyit.01„), be ernphasized, lia-f.' streets and eating houses- is an in -
tare • of .. munition's, but ao, Mr es •the.t. house as a: sort or shl•eld ' tor ceta : ete „via: win . net , wo.aken the:religion .. du stry a' the 'poen
'actual production ,. of ' shells, goes; the 'descending Charge er eliecArleliy e. , ... ,- .. • -•
T:ginini to the Manufacturing ' of seat sdeptific Vieir le baseel. urion the'
. Vithich we. have used." ' . , ' Itself Irani doing tbie tlety: T4t. pro-
. A./Pei:Ica has provided' ui.. with only front the-eleudS 'and lead_lt ifatelY•linto' .. ------..... :.- ----------.---, --... - -:--- .e. -.. .' •,' _ ... _ .:,_.
• a very •small percentage of those -the erre:nit Geus -sparing the bonding:,
. .
ar" :i*u'raMbrigalleWM104,410/.01/;W:AW 14friiko
- ,'.. ; "... 49-7 -,,,,,,,....449.440,,,,k3i4,47,r,,,.,„
•
. .
......._,L, Ware 41,44-11707-1-:. •aW.di' PAZESSZE41'
........ .',..s ,...._....
,
,
sponsibility is enforced'.
• 27. .Th e whole=Warnings as well
as blessings, irksome duties as well
as. privilegee, ,our
peace," if we. acceptiit
• in
•
,unitione le, Ili% country, he :•contiteI idea that thereVre Ire: cirdpd•aiTherge -
. , ........._ , e
, ued : , , ,.• e . •• ' 1 of electricity (positive, we. Will sayi ;
•'.0
- Every ToWn Helet3. • • lid the ground there Sp a i3eese of friece .".
Were '. three impOrtant . munitions .• - C .:
`..:. 4,4 Ilia* beginning of the war there trieity f ni.gative, ' v....e ' will , •say j , , The.
onlydharge above andthe harge belo*
...P.': , 'i'T
in'
'A- .e" w
..4' e „e..,.„ — • 0.
"farttriss the -.United Kingdein, In ,are trying tO ,meet. •
,
• addition, '; there . Were .g nu:mber The 'charm! in :the ground percolates:
" • • •, -large. private inabitions and 'ernaditteat up Into the.befiging and. saturatee the'‘
At 'the start :relianee • was .bunding .its effort' to get teethe
• placed. plainlY:IP thesa-paticipal fac.• .eharge above the. cloud. ' If -the:
terieseahd. experiented firms, and at bending. eieltigit enough and:the elbuct:e
thee, dine they w.ere fell Of brde.rs, enogh, and eenditioes.' are, Just.
in :the early ,stages of ehe •eineflict. right, the charge bove nd the •ehaege
• More :Attention' Was pale. to field gene bolo* will came •togetheela the elec.' and:their :eqiiipilient.,; than to .iieeavyettleally eatutated; hetkileg, Now, the • .'
••gues, ,bet. as •thtto went on the ,reqeire. enoderie conception Of the- functint.,of
' inieuts reav'y,-thelis • .greatly In: the Itglitning. kid. that it acts ati. a
creased. Jurie,...19.13,.,ilre made ae .drain .pipe.. to drain. out, Into, the 'at -
inventory of AII.ther available' Machin- MosPhere the .,oleetricitY", *bleb hai-
cry In the Country arid' it was eVident' seturated the building, • '
that it wee- tirely. inadequate •ta If, :you. . stand beside 'a 'proPerly
Meet the dethanclee There were, howe',ded• house in the •night time during a
great Mane •private. firms lIttInderatertn..yOu will s6e..stireirins
etnild. be 1j -relight' in ia Make 10 • passint .. off: Into the air .•
:mealtime • and D vat; ::,ditetod '...ft.oat entis . of lightning ratis..• if •
thent..• for ;tiational gelerlee: • yeer hotise; is welt .dratned in (his way
eider- to 'de tbie' we. !ed to it • is not • likely to. be struck .hy 'A . •
• Oreanizetiett • embracing. the entire
genntrir. : Thoilsatidif ,-Ot• firing ita-ve
been te'4*, Of • *hie'z.
'Wet neve?, Gest). .bodY,
or 'a grenade, Oi' .6, hi..1de 'befere,
.ellarga, 'of • iighteing . from. . Maud.
'rettotree let if it le stelteit,
iifii'g•wiIi ,Seek the:reds and will travel:
down trite the .earth....evithoutinjuring
the house. •
•
)"
•
(-144,1
AA*
74.444' UV;
4:0
' Ofur
ficial Picte of Mainete After Capture by British.
one, thoroughly acquainted with Ger-.
Man -methods. • He writee in part:—
"As you 'can imagine, I 'rejoined: the
immediately war was declared,
and have been at the front, since the
early days of 1914. I was about six-
• teen months with the artillery, but
latterly have been attached to ead-
• quarters of my division. • It has seem-
ed strange in some instances where
have entered towns here in Prence
as a soldier that the last time I wag,
there on b.usinese for you. , . But what
change„ • Nothing but , battered
ruins remain of what -previously were
flourishing towns. "
• The , Machine- shops of course have
been shelled to bits and it is painful
to see the scrap heaps of what were ,
Once fi'ne machine tools. • But such is
war in these days and it 'certainly
pay's no respect to property. Any-
way, we shall see this stunt through
right up tie the jag u -di and yeti cat
take it fretame that someone willepay
and pay dearly, before we are through
:With it. The thought of poor little
'Belgium and the atrocities, committed
there, are quite sufficient for us and
'we shall Wipe it out in our own good
time, , All peitee bludder is idiotic un -
OA las leen done and most de-
cidedly the British. atiny will not have
finv'eatigation 'by Saporta Shatters
' Stories of People Going Mad
by WhOleeele, •
ThO Wer has not driven, madso
many pemons no Was anticipated bt
the early stages. Statistics thus far,
sheer that the best reportsof men go-
ing crazy under the infernal fire Pt
modern artillOey were exaggerated. 1
Dr, Dumas who has treated all
the eases of mental trouble en one .of
the Trench armies, says that his datk
covering the first .ten months of 1910p
agrees with the reports of Germafl.
dectorh concerning Madness awing
combathatO.
He finds the cases of insanity caused:
direetlY or indirectly bythe war In
France are quite, as few in proportion,.
as those 1,n Oermanyr, and offers the
figures Ile a refutatidn 6f the •theary
of. German [medalists that the New
• tonic race is showing greater' nervous
resistance than the Latin.
Vector Dumas' report covers 1188
eases of derangement, of which only
• 31/4 per centetevere .cases of general
PahralYais; Ville 111 Pleat asylums in
time of peace the Prepertion is 15 per
cent. This he. Mime., as eonclusIV.
evidence that the fatigil and-conu
MOti(MS' of -war have no Iz*fIuence
on the developmeet of this Mem of
insanit
' General. paralytics, howeVer, when,
they become delirious, rave 'about •the
war,qhe same ite cases' in which the
symptoms are quite different,. and
Doctor Dumas ooncludes that the life
of the combatant °nee simply glveit
a War eolor to% delirinin that would
have 'existed under norma* circum.
stances, but in a .different form.
Fits of 'Exaltation.
Horror inspired by battle scenes
sometimes works directly on the ner-
vous system, develbping symptoms
such as hysteria, speechlessness, deaf-
ness, loss of the sense of feeling, fitis
of mental confusion or paralysis,' not.
always accompanied by hullecinations
or delirium.
•,Optimism Of the meet exaggerated
type' is the dominating note in the
hallucinations of the paralytics, and
Doctor Dumas considers it a wonder
that officers do not in' fits of exalta-
tion give absurd heroic Orders that.
lead to disaster. •
In one case a lieutenant Who de-
clared to •the. (Meter that he bad
"cleaned out a German .trench with
two machine guns that he had carried,
on his hack from a Point several mile
iii the rear" had' reMained iridintaintiet'
of his section until 48 hours before he
was examined. A few days later a
captain was brought to Doctor. Dumas,
fresh from the command of his, cone
pante suffering from ateeeually radiant.
'fit of "exaggerated, optimihine" •
. Doctor Dumas reports 1-7, caties. of
what he calls "reasoning madness,' in '
which the fatigues and commotioee of,
war have heti no influence, ;but- in
which hallecinittions previously exist -
lag were applied to the war.
The mentally debilitated are largely
represented in .the statistieg. Of 185
cases 110 were sent to the rear as .be-
ing peemaaently Inapt for further arm-
Iserviee lend 55 who presented
,symptoms 6! delirium were internee:
Several of these, Dr. Dumas. says, owe;
their •mental condition to fatigueh and
corinnotions' of war, and all. of them
derive the themes of theer deltriam
-frent their experiences at the front.
There are among them Messlehs came
to 'finnoneee the final victory,. messen-
gers designated by Joan of Are to.
-show- the eva,yete success, sPiritnalists
who have acquired occult knowledge
0! the plans 'of 'the enelny. "
Cases 'of Alcoholism. ;
• Alcoholics were: numerous in the
_drat mOnth of the war among the' de-
ranged soldiers', but hive since been,
remp,rkably few. August, 1914, 131'
'eases were brought to Val de Orace,,of
Which, 31 were suffering from alephol-
ism ; in another%hospital there were .
88. out of 65. Of them) 69 eases, 18.
ers who had exaggerated their. pro- •
pensities during the 'exciting days ,of
the mebilizatione • -
The number dinfinished rapidly, af-
ter the first ' month, not a single case • '
Of alcoholism being reported dieing
Septemter. from One of the most fortie
fled places.nnd.only 16e developing in .
an entire artily during the first 10,
months of last year. All of the 162
were reiervists' and In so fee as their,
history could be learned were old
drinkers. Nearly all of thein resumed
their service %after taking , the inilk
The tendency of the alcoholics was
Mdream 1'
of battle and to see Germans
everywhere, Ono of thene took a de-
tachment bf his comrades- for the.
enemy and, ehared them with flied ,
bayonet
The proportion of eases of mental
ng -
depression amothe 1188 was
There Were 224 In .10 menthe, mostlt
(Akers with tesetting•notiotis of pro-
fessional shortcomings and difficeltiee.
The majority, of thea men realized
idly about it, though unable tb over-
conie it. .
• Mental Trouble:Se .
"I am no longer able io give an or-
der without' immediately cancelling it";
Bald one'ollicer, cane( t 'befit weigh. •
.Ing to an 'exaggerated extent, every :
eventuality. and many imaginary con-
sequences: 1 always foregee the wotet •
possible issue to every •movenient—am'
paralysed by• the anxiety to do the
but ludedsion and conertidiction,"
• A Man whd rose from the ranks to,
,
the grade of captain was haunted by
the thought that he was-unequa)te his '
responsibilltiee and pleaded_ to be re.
Eigieffed. Melting eases Of this
kind Was a malt who reproached him-
self for having reVealed Important „
erillitery secrets and who was haunted
by the prospect of. being Court-mar-
tialed for treation, .
• any of it, •APd .1 know I Can say the eight thing and have become- nothing. ..., --
same oi otir
",The Trench army haft ought Magni..
ficently under prodigious disadvant-
ages ande't is a;pleasute to fight along
side it. As rent* .the„ Itrissi
•
you know ail. Much,aboat thein as I
do, for I.haVe read only thi newspap,
ei. reports. . •
• "1 .saw. American ambulances, a
whole coneoy of theta, sometitne ago
. ,
• and they were doitig great work with There wero 848,. cases, between
• March,. 19I5, and January; 1816, troubles considered directly -of
. the eters' and stripes flying in front. . mental
Sure it did gladden :kir hearte to see .due to horror Ot. .battle SCOTIOS ftIld
commodore prodpcod by bombard*
meets.
tally debilitated' have the mania of
A considerable' Unither of the inen-
,
invention. • '
•
eun. 1 remember them also At the.
battle of N'euve Chrippefie litet year
endthe bravery of their men In com-
ng to the line 'during heavy bOtri:
haidmentn, was 'seperb. They didn't
waver ono instant and Were tie cool
st cueumbers. 1 should like to have
shaken their hands." '
lteaVy pork is not wanted in the
markets as in yeere' gene by. . Piga
weighing teeth 150 to 200 pounds top
the market. In 140rf1e Maritt*4 lighter
porlt than that is nought for, ,
ARE CILF,A11
Nc
STICHEESS
ALL OkAt.P.1.;
tt13
pArinirao'4