HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-09-07, Page 6',111,111PPrirrl'"
•
•
TR SUNDAY SCO
o Econemy t ve Teibrieation.
• "The c5r &eller wlio takes pritle in
taller; how Ile ecerceed 19;39,1509
or 2000 Miles on a gallon e Rioter oil
Is practieineP, falee ecenoray," ea ye the
Moneger of% big Corporation "The
great milezs. reeord h beeste per -
gallon of oil may teand impreesive
but While such tin owner is saving the
price a sgrerai gtaions ot on, he is
liettnig, ere a wear in the werking parts
Of tlie water which will eventoally
cashmere to replaee then any asneOrst
of oil that Would have been used.
"Motor, oil, no matter how good,'
loseits lubricating qualities after be -
trig in the meter a certain length Of
'tree, eepecially 'in hot.Weather.„ • It
distintegrates, leavug. Qu1 a reran
. -
met of wha't 'was Once good mot* 'Oa,
awl it has no valise•uS fareas lubriose
.tion s concerned, '• -
The •wise owner will drain alrthe
oil from the crank eaei of ' hi$ car
every 1090 milee 'of ,service, regardlesS
hoir mueb, on is still there at the
tme" Re will thet replace.with
peel, freshclean In doing this
regularly he will prolong the life of
his car indefinitely. ' • '
"Allethereplace where 1ac'i ot lubri-
. • cation cart do damage Is in the ,rear
oxle,and transmission: ' Forhere the
action- of the gears has the, Sallie, e -
feet ipoi grease as the action of
working parte ef the rnotor hasen on.
It robs the; greaSe in time of the lubri-
cating qualities by the process•Ordis-
integration, • • -•
Lt the ower 'will bike pare in add -
ng 'fresh, grease every 1,500 mftes-
it is not necessary to replace the suP-
ply 'Aida is in tho rear axle and
tranemon et the tiMee--he will saVe
Many a dollae inthe long rare
"It ie enCitnat recogniSeel that
luhricetion'is the life a fkmotor car.
It is a fact, too, that many owners
keep enough oil and grease in then.
cars* Kot the freelmese of the lubri.
cant requires attention and,. is of
greater importance than the Oaritity.
'4very gouror *pent by the owner on
rQ.jr lubrication: savesten dollars
atlier expenees, aside front the An-
noyances of poor operation go.d the
delay's due to trying to SnOte. a gallon
Of oil or a few pouniS ef grease per-
form. their • functiona when' theY be-
et.= "peplesa' from too. long service.".
Testing. Steel's Hardness,
Nia.chinee and devices ler testing the
Materiele that go into automobiles erre'
being, constantly cieveloped and
preyed. A netable adVaote is the new
4te$ •Vesting Machine-
Iutesting a piece of steel it is place
ed in. the machine and a small steel
balle greathardriese is. pressed into
the pices to he tested, BY_the Pres -
sura exerted, which is indieate' on a
guage and by the dimensions of the
impression made on the piece, the
operator is able: to make eomparison
with certain' standard figures fold ar-
rive at the .eact harclnees'of the Steel
tested.
This method of testing steel has
-
largely sunersecled the old method
whereby small steel balls were drop-
ped on the test piece and the height
.the rebound indicated the hardness
of the steel. - •-•
• •
VERDUN COURIERS . of "He had scarcely returned from one
these perilous. missions.," said his
- , captain, "when he pleaded to beeent
B, OF HERS.."tagain."
Another, lterall.' Addled by .
frig-
AAD-. E • menta of a shell:that .had burst in his
path, had dragged himself back, al-
though unable to rise to his feet, sa-
luted his colonel and Said : "Colonel,
I Aln chine for, but I have got enough
left- In me to give anaccount of my
mission," ' He •made his report, and
that was the end. of his service. .or
his country, • ' #
The "Urgent"' gnveiope.
.
In the Rear. • .The risks are so great for these
. . , •• , ,
. messengers that they are geuerally
Unexamplee conditions of fighting sent In couples ; if-•on.e Is hit, the
/ before Verdun have developed a new other may get through. Two of these
type of soldier called "the cooriers of men from the commanding Post of a
Verdun," says a despatch from Paris, ,
brigade crossed the Fumin Weeds ;
to the New York Tribune,* They are
the men, who maintain cominurfication they were alatost at their goal when
the shell of a German three-incher
• between the trooPs'.in the midst of the
melees en,d. officers commanding front"
,, struck one of them full in the chest.
, the rear. The b,attlefield into, Whiell'eHis comrade stopped and searchd the
. body. for the' meSsage, but found noth-
formation Is a desolated zone where pocket and the • paper that was in it.
, nothing but thick emPket scunetbees He made ,his, way ,hack to the post;
-'' black, sometimes. white, gives al)" ' seemed almost ashamed •not to have
peeeeme of -gm Except during the executed his mission and asked •
Mt) SE AN ATHLETE AND HAVE
• A STOUT HEART.'
• • ,
Keeps Up Communications Between
- The TreneheS and Generals -
INTZRNA" 'a"*. c•L LUSSQK
*SEPTBMSUR *01.
R MAKES LOVE..
'leeerien XI, The. Arreet of Paltil--e.
.•
Acts gl: 1749.- Golden
. TeXt..-Aetetegg.
• .
t•r,
Verse 27. The seven dayie--X phare, einee our Jewieli, alr,•Ire
oritles iMply that a Waeirite Yaw
WQ414 last thirty days at iSeet,
6, 9 has same similarity, but •our
knowledge of the ritual usage is' not
exact enough to clear up the, pant -
The' Jew, froM Who' would re-
copies:, Trophiraus.
. 28, IsreaP.1-' CoMpare Whet Wee said
last Week on 2 Car. 11; 22,:' The, AP -
peal le made to Jewa who really heye
at heart the' sanctity of the temple.
Against the people -This count Is ad-
ded to that which had proved -fatal to
oteplien, (Acts G. 13). It means that
Foul 'was alWays liheling his own peo-
ple, indorsing- • he •nriiversar Gentile
verdict upon them. We Who have his
own letters know what to think of the:
charge. . Greeks -re -The gerteralaliz-
ing plural, The story that Paul' p
been seen with ene Gentile could be
"relied• Uper, Rath defiled -The
lienee is changed to the perfect, which
implies ,a, permaoent profanation.
The yerb qthat of Acts Mt 1.9 Bug •
-
stroyed. • SEEK TO !11111.,131P,IN
gests that, the teraple"thus beettme
'common," . weld aloofness dee
29. Trephimuse.-Sed Acts 20.. 4.
This E'phesian wile a very intimate
,friend. liowever little Paul now be-
lieved in "holy places," or in any dif-
ference between Man and man beforo
God, be was not likely to • trample on
• religious sentiment by doing such a
thing. Supersitition is never to bei'
stroyed ley insulting het• : 1
30. Doors were phui-For, ef 'course,
the intended murder must not be ac-
complished in sight of the Sacred
auy 'more, than the "price of
bleed", might be pot in the treasury
within. it (Matt. 27. -6); The, priestly
conscience is always very patticular
about technical sins and never more
se than when busy erith.crime.
31. Seeking to kill -Here clearly
"set about killing"; •the beating had
nothing less in mind from the first.
This passage illustrates John 7. 1,
where no Mere plot ,is suggested.
Came up -To the fort Antaia, built
so as to command the temPle, during
feast times especially. How
iating to belieeees in region to read
so'fteii history that the civil pow-
er must specially , watch against•
breaches of the peace at times when
men are Offering epecial woiship to'
God; Militah. tribune • (ingegain)-::
Literally, • "commander of a thous-
and;" ten times as many men as • a
"centurion." Of coulee this like co -
If 1
An Officer
Sergeant: 'Oo do you think You
• RAW Recruit; No; of 'course 'I'M
Sergeant: Then don't talk like a
-Net. Yet.
'are? hefficer? • °-
not an officeV.
bloomint idjutl--The
•
same Gad wes working upon both
tempests. Spnice unto them in the
Hebrew- lariguage--Not the eld biblie
eal Itinguage, which was eXtinct for
spoken 'use, ,but „Aramaic', wich Jesus
and t6 disciples usually employed.
• se , al wit ordors or after n- Ing;
.t e shell had carried away the hort (margin); id a- Greek term for
a -Roman institution, and is only ap-
proximate. Claus/IS Lysias.• (eee
Acts 23, 26 for his name) commanded
. a division of, six *hundred, men er
brief period of an -Infantry .attack, It, eColonef, give me a duplie,ate .of ,the mor,e. . '
Is .• to all appearances. deserted ; the messaels !" He received a pint or 32. FOrthwith-FOr . ' a. s-ufficient-
„ • . . . , . b
HOMES IN FRANCE
PLAN - TO r'ENPOUR.A.GE MAIte'
RIAGE AFTER THE WAIL
...•••••••••
THEY DIED FOR
MIER COUNTRY
SOME • BLUE BLOOD,ED, HEROES
OF BRITAIN:
'GERMANS.
'LETTER WRITERS' ALL TRAYE
WijigN THK 'W„OUNPEIP. ;9011,4)IER EXAD1111410, IiIKN AND WOMKX.
••••••• Wall.„GrtgAT CARE.
FiE'PEIVE0 HIS ff-ETTPI,
Levere. Find Relief From the ''ane"
of War in Puttlking
CH
, an Paper,
0, keep. him safe whin -e'er be he,
And 1)44 my true love henae to me.
The old-fashioned .air floated out into
the gerden with a. plaintive cadence
Mad mingled' with the • mote of '
mer,
The garden. gate clicked, feet ertfach
ed the grevel, the song in the 'house
suddenly eeesed, there were running
foOtstepe, andthen a quietness eettled
d9Wo. • '
Up the short lane / Watched the
post -girl continuing her round, and SAW
Iier turn in by. the little" church that
neetles on the edge pf theeweod,,, writee
an 11111001i correspondent.
. Behind the quaint gray stone, ivy -
clad churclx there was a glimpse of a
white -robed weinen, on whose 'beeast
was emblazoned. the Rod gross. But
the post -girl did 'net make toward the
Red Cross matren. She went iostead
toward.- the great white cross *high
Otands in the garden, Ethereal - defined
•ftgalnet the, dark greenery ot the
ancient trees. And she handed a letter
to. a blue-gerbed man -teclining there
at the foot of the cross -ea sue -burned,
tanned young man, eemportirily broken
in the wars. • • ,
e the SoltNr'fi -Late"' ' • '
' '
Steps' Advised to Avoid Any% Further.
Cases of Involuntary
Bigamy. .
• Eugene Brieux, member of the
Aristocrats Have AneWered the .Call
of King and Country • .
• ' Gallantry.. .
When the full story of the war
Le written, it Will have no more • in-
ipiring_chapthr than that whiCh_ de-
scribes, the magnificent part' the sons
of -Britain's noble houses have played
in it -their devotion, their heroism,
their splendid deaths for the land
they loved. •
Academy of France, with a view to Aiready;although the war has bare -
encouraging marriage after the war ly reached its turning pointe the list
of .these heirs to coronets they will
fel' the purpose of niultiplying
never wear is appallingly long. Since
French hones, urges the establish-
ment throughout France of official the Master of Burleigh,. eldest son
of Lord Balfour of Burleigh, as gal -
matrimonial bureaus under the direc-
lant a soldier as ever bore the his -
tion of the Mayors of towns and vil• -
lages. Ile says:
,"Many young Men are willing to
marry moneyless girls and ,• many
young girls are willing to marry poor
or 'mutilated men,••but the Marriages
d� not accur because the men and
girls do not meet. ° Special registers
should' be kept at all ,Mayor's •officen'
where eligible" young people pign their
name. and give their -age and profes-
sion, so that anyone desiring to, marry
can And a life' companion without
difficult*:
' Extend" Legel Delays. '
• "Since we agree to-dayethat the
preservation' -of the race is the great -
eat and most secrek dety, it is neces-
sary to give all help to those inclin-
ed to build new, homes." • e • •
An extension of legal delays be -
of humanity. The earth is everywhere water, which was in those days the force was always kept ------------fore remarriage for widows of sol -
courier's greatest redompense, and • ' diers is being- considered in order to
the policing of such a turl3ulent .city .
furrowed by freshly -stirred earth,- but started tff again.
, •• • , avoid further cases of involuntary
no ore) sees the hand that stirred t. was no light task •
One courier presented -himself at the
Telephoeis -Destroyed.
Occasionidly a forma IS ''fieeo going soldiersMany soldiers who have
over this desert land Something after. :
been reelerted as "believed. deed," be -
bigamy. Some legal circles advocate
commanding pest of a colonel, pant- 31 The reason why Lysias put him
nig, covered with mud, and bleeding instantlyln a donble set of irons ap- an extension' of the legel delays until
freely. He had passed through the pears later on...A notorious brigand
zone of a "drum fire" that ploughs up .chief was badly "wanted," and the of -
the ground, yrard bY yard, methodical- fiCial descrintion'of.him cireulated hi
after the War for wives of mobilized
the -manner ef a-mbbiti benrulh*-In thet had-not-heen-,heard-of-for
eight put of the -herbs and above un -
on e enve opt coetain- Places, contained Sething
Ing the message,- "However did yeti which LYsias recognized in Paul,
leaping from obstaele • to obstacle, g • 9" k
•
.
. 1 1. There was accordingly the evidence of,
tram ditch to ditch, from shell hole to `COlonel," was the re r° "I don't
a prize, and the peisoner must 'be
know. I only noticed that the envelope
safely kept. , The description Would
began with name and age, and wet -4d
then mention shape of nose, .kind of
hair,' and :'especialy a scar semewhere.
It this scar was on the head' or faee,
we can guess from Acts 14. 19' (Gal.
6. -17) how Paul and the hrigand had
a -mark in common. . , ,
sg Paul , was 'very possibly almost
unconscious after the savage beating,
and unable teheep his feet as the mob
surged up behind. The rapidity of
his recovery reminds • ns of Acts 14.-
20. As we might infer from his sin. -
front ef the fortress ; consequeritly to
assure cornmimications liet1eten the Ireland It would restore to a .slight
Viving all that we read in last week's
ettent the -geographical union that
front ,and the rear is a diffictilt prob- lessen, Paul must have had an iron
lent, . Conimunicatioes by courier existed between theTo countries in
- constitution: his "there hi the
- pigeons are very Uncertain, au4 op. the Pleistocene Age, triousa.nds a
flesh" and the alleged '!vitealtneste/
tical eignals are insufficient for va- centuries ago. Geeat Britain and
4hat is -urihnposing figure) of Ms
rictus reasons, Nothing Is certain ex- Ireland Were then separated only by
"bodily Presence" are not in the leaet
cept the man hiniself, and to tra.nsinit a great valley. • ' It is proposed to - . . .
information and orders acroser that carry the ,tunnel from some point On inconsistent with this. A
86. 'Away with .him -A vernacular)
•--.--lteaton-ileld-r-saUiresenemetlimgeextra- the •-• oast - of-Wigtownshire-to the I
• ordinary in the way of man: He must nearest .point in Antrim or Down on 1 phrase found in a rude 'papyrus let-
ter, corripare Luke 23. 18; Acts 22. 22,
be an athlete, with good Itings, and .tho Irish coast, a submarine length
- above all, he must lieve a. stout heart,' • - • • and in a still harsher tense John 19..
. • of twenty-four miles. One of the
shell hole as it approaches the front
line, at tiniea • vaulting,- at- others
• ,crawilog, and •sometinies'kept motien?
less- for .' considerable periedp`by
showera of projectiles sent over froth
' ..the othee•side 01 the line for his per
-
Banal •benefit, This is the messenger
of modern .battle ; he was 'lever more'
needektior more useful than at Ver-
den 'and the! type VIII, probablybear
the „name for -years to come Of "the
courier of Verdun." Not a 'telephone,
• 'hoe can resist the incessant heinbard-
'Meat that digs up' the soil and levels
all field work etong the whole line In
was .rnarked "eurgenr,"• ,
,
AN • ANGLO-IRISH TUNNEL.
May Be Undertaken • Soon After- the
, War Closes.
• It is predicted that the long -talked -
of F. tunnel between England , and
France is 'sure to be undertaken soon
after the close of th,e. • war. Mean-
while there is just now some discus-
sion of a tunnel between England and
, Dodging- Dromgre. . • great benefits of the 'tunnel would be 15. '
•
use the cominueicating trenches, hours. • It woield also help the Irish '
forty-eight the official description of.the brigand:
(see above) it would be stated that he
The courier of Verdun is unable to tic journey by -at least
where he would be•out of sight of.the knew no Greek. He Mast have cane
enmity,. beeause that line 14 •crowded cattle trade and the shipping of pe
from an out-of-the-way pert, for the'
ishable geods, especially fish to E1{- soldiers going to op frompapyri show us- that very 'uncultured
, the front line, with wounded being , lish markets. Estimates of the '• cost
carried back, with Men or the com- of the proposed tunnel vary from people in Egypt could write Greek..
38. The E tian-Josephus tells
rnietiarY. 'department carrying provh thirtyfivernillion to eighty million
us about, him. -how he collected, a
aloes to the men on guard. That IS too dollars. . ,
mass of people on the Mount of Olivei
dun : • lie must take his chati6es being to see the walls of Jerhsalem fall
,
.sighted and hit -above ground. The NAPOLEON rhs,,p SLOW PULSE. down, and how Felix attacked him, he
first' fermidable. ehstacle•to pass is the • " ' . -.-- ' escaping, but his people being niostly
--zone -that In beaten -h. - qdriont4e," -Too- -Muth, 4Itiete • Injurious in killed or wounded. - L-uke's-indepotid=
where 8 -inch, 6 -Inch and 4 -inch shells
' 37' ,Dost thou koftw Greek -le
that it • would shorten the transatlan- •
, slow' a route for the coarler, of yer- • .
toric name' of Bruce, perished in the
first inonth of the war, nearly. p.esssiensstion to be
what to them was
00" desired above all others hese war
peers •have lost the sons who ought days -a love letter
to -have, succeeded to their honors. ' • The ships' which pass to and fro
• These. heroes have, coine from ,all across the Channel are laden with let.
ters-nearly all of thein ecintain • mes-
grades a the peerage. One of them
he sages qf love, for some one, bet thet
was heir to a dukedom,' who, if
great majority are real love-letterse„ •
had lived, would . have been prender
duke, marquis, • and earl of Ireland. thLeiovers who in the old days found
paper rthoughts h so 'hard to express on divitlual bath house, and there every
Four 3,1/ere sons �f marquises, five hadlweedreeffrarely satisfied
earls for their fathers, seven • were wih and
who
bit of Clothing is removed. Worn&
arts, now sit are examined by women, men by men.
• Down the hill Went the post -girl, and
the soldier was left there with his let-
ter. It must have been a tong letter,
9r maybe it was a short letter that he.
read many ales, for he kept it iq his
hands longer than; is usual, and after.
ward he did not elip it iuto the ample"
side -Pocket of his eoat, but laboriously
he' undid the coat and safely laid. that
'letter in his timer pocket, sheltered be-
neath his maimed arm, and the side on
which he laid it was that which We.
like to think. is nearest 'the. heart
The song of the girl .within the house moved, front. medicine bottles, cigars
had started again, but now -----had
different'cadenCe-:-the plaintive tone •• •
are examined, some are cut •opere •
chocolate in sealed pee tangs is open -
had gene. , The melody was Wafted • " -•••
ed, the wrapping cl”troyed and half
over Meadow and reached the ears
brok.en up into bits to see that
°of the Young soldier -beneath the cross •
lathe..sonny little churchyard. - lie nothing , is lndden. Shoes with
-placed his hand where the letter lay. a new half-sole are open.
• Beth the girl' in the house 4nd the e& • The searcher feels everything ..
soldier in the garden had received examines canes to see whether they
are hello*, opens umbrellas, holda
every collar up to the light to Se(
that nothing is written On the lining.
"After the baggage is exarnined,'L
said ..an American weman, who cross,
ed the border recently, "the 'men an
women are taken into separate mini' .
partments, about the size of a large' in
•
Alf Aleffleal Path. Provided. to Iteineve
. Any Wraps erc the
•„ `Mb..
•
• ,Everyone. Who loaves. Gemmel' to-
day via Warnermiende for Denmark
is stripped to • the- elan,. writes a
Copenhagen correepondent, Kars,
noae, teeth„ and toes' are examined to , •
Sect ;hat no infOrmation. plans' for.
the:enemy' are being carried. -out.",
Reie.)Astag Menibers, ,Wife' of officials,
•corre.openclents and laborers are treat*.
i'ed the same, An American groising.
the herder recently remarked,that be-
fore, long it woeldehe..neceeeery. • for
the inspection. station to he. built . izito
the 'Baltic sea aci that the *eyelets,
ebuld Andress on the .Gernian border,, •
-walk into ,the .water and swim,.to a •
waiting station .near the gory .• and •
wait for the clethes and. baggage, to ' •.
be examined andforwarded, by ganoe.
When travelers, leve the tilde they
enter smell, wooden shed, resernh-.
in many reSpects. a temporary
bath 'he-Use...at, en:American . beach..
Here the ..Paseotorts. Ire taken AWAY
and shbyied inte. an 'encitiseele room'.
where they are examined. h_okh •
ere are ,'.glyen ..neMbers. 'When- thk.
passport. of, a traveler is.'finishedhe
is: railed to• another reotif where he IS' •
geestioeed about the objects of his •
journey. nom here the • wayfarer .•
goes to 4 large room when' the bag-. .
'gage 'is 'examined, while - deteetives
standio front' and in back to see. that
nothing -1e sliPpeci by. • '
..„ - .
•
. Nothing is Overlooked. •
,• •
• Every scrap -of, piper or Cardboard
is, teken UhraY,' even 'wrappings. arid •
paper lining to boxes. Cotton is • re- ,...-
heirs' to--visconfities, and 29 were suc- down in trenches, in billets, in Y. M. C.
:cessors to baronies; • Six.. of them A. huts, in hospitals, 14 camps, and in
Were the .last heirs to the fainily the ships. that carry them away from
fionoes, and the peeragea. which the home land, and the words that
so reluctant to- express their
should have been theirs'are- noW ex- were'
fleet. sentimeete in other days now trip off
, the..pen-more often pencltet-With
No Heirs aft. fluency that often surprises the‘writers
themseleres. • :-
ExquiSite Lone -Letters.
Knaresborough, PlaYfair, Rilablesdele,
The "Marquie of Linceinshiree Lords
They, being men, do not always real-
Rosmead and Stanford have now -no Ise that their farther lack of success,
heirs U. follow them; though their often' lay in the fact they tried to 'think
sacrifice has not been po. great ' an or somethingpaetical and lover like have a map of hletz concealed there: -
that of Lord Desborough, who has "write, whereas now they sit down and , • , •
lost two successive heIrs•irr the• war jest write the blunt truth. ' • . An Alcohol Bath, ,
The seareher, went , through every
piece of my clothes, exsanined the
'border of my underweer and held, al-
most .every inch of, my clothes tip •tc
the light. Even the roses I wort
were examined petah. by, petal, my
`sts watch was opened hack anci •
front, so also my shoes, umhrella end
hat. I hid to take .down my hair ,•
-and my scalp was examined thor- , '
oughly-I• suppose. to see that I .
within nine, weeks of each other. , They 'Say- "I- lei% you and that is
• "Then my ears,' teeth, hencle,, toes •
, In this roll of honor, so far, there all a:won-tan ever wants to hear,. •
But • some 'else to more' elbquent and back were examined, • but for,
are comparatively- few 'names that •
heights than others -two years of war„ tunately -.I was not a Suspicious wo-
havel won fame in old-time battles
tfen-yeare of -the Pain of parting,hafeetioan.,__because .I. w_ae_natLwashed In •
such as S-riFeY,• Percy, Clifford, and-
-even-. to the girls *of to -day alpine of ' alcohol to .see if there were any con -
the most exquisite iove-iettera that cealed maps drawn on mY skin. The
have ever been. penned. -
a' long time, have since reported as Cholmondeley -names that recall,
returned from Germany. long -dead generations of warriors.
There is little, if any, martial strain'
in the blood • Of a Goschen and • a
Mills, a Playfair and a Robinson;
but the bearers of these and many
another historic name have, fought as'
heroieally as any armored }blight of
the age of chivalry.
Boy of 20.. 4 .
A• well-known pro:Andel editor, M.
Renaude, estimates that during 1915
there were 7'0,000 French , soldiers
who. as prisoners in Germany have
been unable'. to Communicate With
their faimiliesin France, • He deelares
that ,it, is Germany's fault if soldiers
reported as "'believed dead" return
-maimed ' to France and find their
wives remarried . ' •
• • Involuntary Bigamy. •
. • ago, had plenty of fighting blood
Germany' does not allow prisoners his
veins; and proved himself a
employed fortifications, trenChes
worthy descendant of his ancestor,
or transports to communicate with Sir Johnghynne, who won his -knight -
their families because of the knowle s o valia tl on 'the field of
Young Lord Weymouth, a boy of
20, ,who died So bravely a few weeks
'edge' derived in the, course • of their m ii) -
erice imposed en the, prisoners- it now • : i es er ay,: of• any friends in Berlin. -Only
life one June day last year, had in • Travelers who return from the re
ed .as dead are claiming to be rein -
his veins the blood Of England's he o, mote interior of vast countries=Where kind can be taken out no matter if it
stated as living citizens. In the cases
• Lord Nelson and also of that •gra d i telegraphs and railways ,are precti- ,is the most neeessary .ariiele, Not .
Of bachelors such official errors are - '.... - • • '
eta sea dog, Sir bamuel Heed,. Ad. i cally unknown will tell yeti of the as- an mince of rubber leaves Germany
note of -consequence-and
. i aronhe-Bitre---.,- ' - toundine-svilftimes with which new9 ---- .
to-daye
gerds the .married prisoners in most Lord Spencer 'Douglas " Compton, travels, despite the seeming absence -
cases their wives remained unmar- on of the Marquis of Northampton, of facilities, says London -AnswerS. . e • . -
lied, but some cases have occurred
who died a year ,ago, could look back Away in the wilds of the Tibetan .. HEAR BOOMING OF GliNs:.:
where Wives have reniarried and, sud- to a Icing array •of fighting ancestors. border, or in. the Mongolian. deserts, . . • , --- •
dehly edeleci,'decorated, amputated after enerati - the two blithe journey -* • ,
Generation g on, o m from civilization Sussex • Children Can Even- Distirti
'or mai . ed husbands turned up. I-, , were a ong the doughtieit 1 and hundreds of miles from the .riear- ' guish Calibre Z-tarnion. -
, Charles Legoffie, author •of the well "Turacul W in
warriors of England. There Was A 1 est telegraph wire, the traveler will - . • .
Compton in every battle in •the Civil' pereharice hear of Some niomentOns " I'. D. EYri3* write th.. teinden '
knewri account :0 the Dixrnude fight-'
Mail 'from Pramfielti Vicerager tielilt
. , • alcohol and a basin of water ' with •
Many a lover Who resorted to -subter-
fuge in Order to escape ' writing the towels were there, and on a shelf I
noticed a bottle of aromatic spirits • •
ceinventional rove letter now finds fee ,e„.8.nunon.a.
1 arid drinking water for
lief' ta ,Putting hiS thoughts oir paper, w•
him' the days Of' rdmance were over ,
atien but, in every way' the women
those who might, feint ithdpr exeMine
many a husband who thought' that for
'courteous and gentle."
now writes leve -letters to his wife., were
-There are few. women in:Great Bri- AfterIthat was ever the passengers
tain to -day who do • net cherish. love- were --permitted to board the ship, but ,
letters of the Great War-they.have there they .soon enceentered a 'score- •
never had so many levelletters in their of spies who watched. for every move .
lives. Wonien for generations past and who listened to . every remark,'
have not redeived the homage that the The Germans take no .Chances with
,girl of to -clay reeelees-in. weiting
. anyone:
and women level° see it ln'elriting.
Articles which are taken away•dur-
.
COIJRIERS. ing the examination are 'Wrapped up
before the eyes of the traveler and
usse tire), more. :than _three ceri- "
work'. Owing to this obligafory sil- M• 1 •
tunes and a half ago. Lord Brid- al is carried at Average .Speed of -posted- back to an •address he gives -
port's heir, Who gave • up his brave 90
happens that many officially reckon- port's
articles are confiscated.
••At present no en ber ;pods of any
•
• '
• ing calls . attention. to the case. of a
g otious . French § e " tou ht So bravely for -their 'King at incredibly short .while of its happen-.
ri 0 War _including the ' third Earl, *he event in the outside world within an
• field Sussex En land: • '
turned enanned and utterly dis gur-,
j gabnbury arid in many
ed and who out of a sentiment of de- .
'figitey to avoid a meeting wit hi
_AI a itinijotoliredr Ab ratthdoe;
-.Hay, heir to his bro-
family; refuses to disclo,se his yen -
titer, the Marquis of Tweeddalee who
tity, and repeats, "I am deacl.'-'• • I
• I died in the, second month of the -war,
had one ancestor who fell On -Iflodden
ITA-LYIS EYE' ON SWITZERLAND,„!Flelci, and another who .eoinmanded er orgameation that _ we have ever
. .
' ' Heart. . •ence of josephus is well seen' hire.
are 'bursting With formidable: explo- Tho • latteit 'whirs to the Mount --of
'Mons, seeding ehowers of sherpnel • Care of the, heart-, . 'Olives a horde whith in one plae,e "he
over the whi)le zone. In going through ,
- ifilirthil enifir6r Opes everYwhere the 'Rave a c-ar4. eee.„
Den'tilymik too fast. eetimetes et •thirty thousatel; hut in
,, . epee:Mete of death, stumbles over , , in anothorat no more i/ein one thcfae- Since the publication" of the royal fathers, ificluding' that Upton who though the means of tommunication
And don't work 'too hard. . . decree eXtending the retaliatory and einiered himself with glory . at: the hy rail. 'and telegraph have greatly
earPses, sometimes- runs into "a eThiel , - ' and Lykes t•iltes• :out into the desert
i ou can. malie te ,te yauriieii. hostile, rneakikes eeeeeee. egainsit .siege of Limerick ender the standard developtd • there of -late, the bulk of
or pcistm vapor beforq he has eroased , :: • _ . Pur thousaed nrecriieed cut-thron't;.e. the interior is still virgin to these
-„The tee) enisocles in the otof allies
svaorf of our Third William. .
. oh;ef'f• cerrer. are . evidently dittinct. . ' a , entemjs,;.' ainescI••ding . or course' ' '
b•rial.yr4,4„,-: ,A,.ttioniiiiie at t_hertbotginantitiiried.
in an
etiemy
All Young Men.
. ' 'Chine still maintaine what lies been
it ; trice thrpugh, lie Is wlthin ,range 113" yeur pl..1:30 JS 6e after a ,slow
--:2---1-lieven-otion-S--ef•the "fereignede
f Ile.. Prnelior Geinnan guns end the-ht-fak.---.:--- , . .
q ei . . r,,, , . ; i ta , f • i • .* er f ' .
Thr ,,vil0e..1,,e,e.---Conipare Mott 24. e, • th h been oo end of But among all theho. brave young etere time jmnaemorial the most Ali-
• a eign. or two Mile?, ;Warding to the ho it will he 78. .
inr4 5310; referren te do$eonns toils ns
, Assassins-7'in n...no 'q.f• the .c'hap- r.unminnoln.s1Wro' gac"." c
$4 dingthe xect, etattet of nobles Who have given ' their • lives
ntry,
, there It• ih 'to,* 'mainly controlled' by the
derful Cornier. Fielwice In the world; .•
..i,,lie it. run on a hot` day arid up ' 2n-
• position, his, nerves are at the leghest 44
di ' 6lati ns lietweeh Italy and Ger- for their Xing and con
. • H ' 't d ?
There is really no mystery about it
Thia rapid •transmission,of news 'is
due. to hymen, not Superhuman,
agency.. It is the work of ' natives
employed in. courier services of high.;
• . "For twenty -months past thesonnd
of , the' artillery • at, the front. letebcen
. So familiar and conernoriploce... here"
that even the little:children' in the-
. parish school' cao- identify. the partie-
niar weapon , that causes the explte; •
glens' they benin This. is certainly,-
tiite eaey •gtina, Itewiteeri'•
naval:•12ein., and. so 'forth -are firing:
This phenomenon. probably' arise!, -•
febeeeeeeertaje
There are, for 'exanipiC, ,viliteres
Rye wheie no gunfire is 'hened.".
a regiment at Marston' hider and dreamed. ' . • . *
and -Viscount Templetown's China, that spacious land where dis-
Fears , Little Nation May Side With Preston;
heir, Who died on Mey 9, lals, had tenet is measur•nel•hy days„ not .miles,
: Germany. Some Diiy. -among. ;the-best--exaMple. . Fur, -al-
..tehslote with hi; min on the end of it to 140 or 150. . e r .
• of enieditti found Cyan leriselem .raany. were none.. braver than teed Desreoed .chitiest• Pae', -Office, find theinileith,e
• lids Mission ami at the P4ttnf4 °MP 63 Sey 'your puiee reee dic to the min-
• ,the' df.:e'rarlee that are' Multiplied c;fieli aid heir to hi brother the f
' • lotitant iU his path. Some cf .thebe '1 -• 3 - :et 71 1,140 v;eet ebent witharenreele4 ,
• re.re -.141 cernmittra iriurder
reached the atUpciujous. figures ef 120, -
Some people maintain that ti secret Fitzger • o . the • corner lines has recently.
+Ito 5..incr, los-13, 3 xi 3e a ...ou
couriers get thrcuri unteuched, fintne, ''.i.vtini4'end 81 ,standing• • me
4 t 'exists between ••Switzdrland -sixth Ihke of I.,einster„. whose death
1 ed The word, here used: --,,the T,atin
, end Germany to the effect thee eeetratta ...few weeks .ego es. --so .11ndely ...t. de- 000; or irlIont five anti a half thire oil
. crawl hack" to be 'etarting point Temperarrient -has mech. .to do i - •
war on Germany; Swit- '. plored„ Dying at the age of 27, Lord eiree.effeeeto of the '.. globe. By
road, 'river, und tratk; ricliattfig-frtan
hrttised or reatited. flOtiie rieter 're- with 11 Napoleon and Wellington 111,21 :learsilie-is derived frem • the Italy ',declare
tefort. . - • • i nese, about 50 to the minute. 29. A possible elternatit-fe Trinetne..• '.h'rittild '3"trild be in duty bound to 1, DeSinond had aIreocly -written hie
the capital of Pekin, or Other in`i.
tittle to 'tell: the story ,Of tliPle heroic., had 'pulite; remarktibe for their 'illovi. WO (1 161. -"tkrrel..", ,
1 •••••:--'.........-------- . 'tien (see paraphrase connects in. iisied411' bworit,h :her powerful Teutonic : name lartge in the arinas of the gal:
• i, lint Irish Guards. In ‘the severe portant • c'entre:ti, leg•ioils of vent -ices
:Ili° 'eotriere of Verdon maintained - . - - „ -, , , The Italian Geteral •Ste.ff has enor. I lighting during the retreat from -Wins
A eleiriory of Ratieban. •
'are spending; withou0enelirtg hY night
I Why Wateliee Are Irregular. Cilieia with the next clause; .. No
. , -,-, men) ei t,e--iperetee men q a-innlinr-.-nnnt 4 tnonnlY in cfeaeeel the def ensive-werks- :- htehor•eeldenself neckebrevely .....4rronr."tala liy....,finy;'to almost -every, 4ormir or
5,000ona square reties of cone-
'conimurileatioa from the rear with the The reason . ior, variations in • the
of le,arninft. a'nd inAiifled 110" eit!xens! on the.Swifte frontier. The remote _ the brakree and in all the lar fight- the .
t. •
•
Commandant Itaynal---who held the later] watch have been the subjeet of velde it fen' here.:ess, as was his father. eerteCd into. a war •ttgaink Italy
possibility of- • • Switzerland, being ing his comage s reek ess con..
Is tempt of dariger attazed and hhipired. • 'The couriers ere all gtalivart mere
heroic trooPs under the ordei•s or .timcleeeping qualities: of a well-regu- pride in her, • Citixen emnlietici he fry which ferre the Chnieselempire,
. regarded as. one •of the reagens Why , ranks, • • ' •
' Fort of Vaux deveral days against' inetatigetion by Seieritists reeeritlY, hate:re him,
' especially etteeleit for their physique,.
Overtelielminge numbers rofr assailootg, , The .popular theories that animal
they were all volunteers, selected•from ' taagnetisin god 'bodily : temperature
.4 Considerable number et. men who eV'
! are causes, are denied by inveatiga4
fored themeelvee for the dangerous;
„Infaajaae otio. ovaa a VOr of tho &no tors. Hather, different rhythms of
• tingoot of IfYlai or childieh aspect, whell Movetrient tut well ae; the angle at
littrY..tiiiite Voltinteere were tieked rot! will& a 'watch hangs aril gvio AD
. 1514.010..firilt mist to the trent.. ,. real eansea for irregultirities,
40' "I° dnrin t'ho' man..turning Geri. Cadorria ha8 always refused to. Fie was .twice severely weunded,
t'°'-f°P° th.° 1.°91".tha non•rlY (lone fiend an expeclitionary"eorPs to aid but he nlaughecl at *minds. and
for him,- eorribined perhaps with tie- the Vreneh, , longed only for a 'day when he coticl
tbnielinteet et hie rink' roily from the ' ' ee. -- • retiirri to his men, attl it was a cruel
state to -Whirl/ they lue3 redwood him. I e otir motto tied your stroke of fate whieb, by the explosion
A great eileriee-One thinhs di? idle
"grbht calto" in Mark -4; OD, • fhb
pewees otendurance, and owledge
of routes. They Work in •relays, eat
as they go along, and An SUPPOSed
riot to stop Until they have bonded, the
mail4ittg. to the next relay, ••,-Ark neer
-
guide .nyul you will bo gainer In Of a hotith,tit Calais, ended a. life e0 epeed et tenets, lapos a ddir
theend• .full of acineveMeht and. Promise, . • often Inaintained. • •
i . .
•
• They, Needed it MtIst.
regiment was •
church 'parade in the barrack! sqii'are
but the Chinch. was' being repaired,'
and :it was fOlind that it ceuld only '-
field -half 41 them. "Setirgeant-Maj,
ir ordered the colonel, `.ttell all yphe
irien who don't want• to go to churele
to fail 'but!" A largo number quickly
availed iffeinselVes of • the privilcga
"No*, Sergeent.majer," said the -col.
onel ,"diihnise all the nien who clitt tint '
fall. oat, end- the, others to
"ehureh-they ',need it •triostr''
British Elided Arab
-Lake •Tangterty4ca, near whiph `iltif •
British and German-gfricen forces .
are now hettling,. is &lid te tteica'.
as hig Viralett in siren/and to lie ' •
zb'ountry -of ideal' Climate, '27�l) to
5,000 feet above the sea, Living;
acme,- the miseionary, discovered
Tanganyika and tritish power ended ,
A."tah Alava trading -in the region
•about .38 yeare ,re,„•
.1