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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-09-14, Page 7▪ 111,r•-• 0 • • 010, Car e of 'Five on Tour, „ inside -of the Casings: alWeY's weU .au.ete, The Proper care of tires is a Most ' ed with soePstene or talc. WhY."113lovieute" Occur. -.1114portantiterairrtaseartesitpiteeP.'Tbli driver should !examine the M careftilly after _every trip. arid promptly take Among tire Mantifacturera it is •• care of un Injury, no ioatrter 'hew recognized fac1 . that the lower - tie slight. A. trouble...small, at ilret, may .grride of ribber 'Used in a We the less lead .i.4P quickly te• a bad blowout, and time doge it. take to vti1cani4e or .euro • .then a new. tire. In order to give it to, the point of greatest serviceabil- you good .naileage, tires -Should be ity after leaving the -Wilding -Ma, watched eenstAntlY tind kept clean. chines. And in these "quiek cure" Underinflatioa is the !nest prevalent tires the adhesion of each 14yer of . and tire Mot expensive piece o .care, fabric; to the other and a the tread to • • lessnoss ef-the Modern "rnotoriat., Ride the tire carcass xs likely.to be ;web . on air, nab on the tire. walls. . • less perfect than in "slew cure" tires. •• An • Injury te either- tread. or tube Consequently, kinder the intense heat . should not be neglected. •COnflitionsof the Mtn andof road friction, SePar- ..., are aggrhvated with great rapiclitiy, .ation of these units is likely to Occur, • and before• you know it .either4 a.very thereby weakening the entire -stew-, erpensive • repair" or a whole new 'tire tare of the .tire and eensing heat' rnired Go oVerYour tires.. peri- blowadts. In the 'higher grades of odically, and take care at once of rubber .their natural tentgbness. and each injury. • .• . • .elastrroty seern to . resist,._or -telte ..Janer.liners ..sluthld. be used Only in longer .t� absorb, the vulcanizing or emergencies or to prolong the life ofhardenIng properties a the high tern- - a worn-out tire .• • Never ,,,apply. • them Perature steam twain this operation; ar. permanent repair, as they are therefore° requiring, a longer.. "cure" • Utterly destructive ..to a rip* tire... - and resulting in 4 _much, tougher And- '', :Where chains .aro used. adjust them MOre serviceable tire • in all respects, . °carefully. If they' .are . too loose they .; will eut and loosen .tilie!tread-..-4., OP' •• Long Trips Becoming pannier.. . . tight•lhey cut and bruise' where .they. OWners. 'Cif..autemehiles have„gain- areiapPtti Over casing.... • • ed So much confidence in their ma-, . , Faulty wheel adignrnent does intichfehines last. few years that • injury to tires. ..It subjects them to 'merest' novice :is no longer :afraid to . a grinding they. cannot withstand.- A start out on.a..long trip in. his 'car. • Slightly bent axle will do the damage. A few years ago a .mgn• would n.ot ab - It is•important t,o ,cleanse tires daily tempt an :automobile trip. of several • if possible.. Scrapenff mud 'and:sail. hendrei miles unless he was an eXs end wash.the:tires.with Water and a pert at the wheelliicaself or had. with .,litile soap of good quality,. 'applied hint a chauffeur Who ,he knew was , • ,itti•a not too wet sponge. .Keep the dependable. ' • s THE BETRAYER 1 in • person for having suspected him • lof being a traitor' like his ,son. He OF Migg AV• ELL mwee not a traitor, and I told h'un so. •"To myutter surprise it was the • 'aged woman who spoke first. She told me that it was not the death of their son that caused their tears; it STORY OF THE MAN WHO''P.UT was the death pf the soul of their only child that moved their hearts: "What shame for the dead. • What shame for the living ones!' she wept, :Roger de la Merck • Was • Selected by and, the aged Major joined.a Belgian Secret • • • ly. I found tnyself speechless:" . • Society • • As is well known, the father of de • • " Rode refused. te recognize . or -give The Inter-national News' • te • bis dead .,sors. whe' . had 'HIM TO DEATH. . I left them abruptly andawk ward - pablishes What purports to be a verb- t proven such a traithr to his country. 'at remit `of. the story of Roger de la; Three .or 'four ,others who were con- Marck: the man who -killed the spy, Meted With the Cavell affair else Nels• de Rode, Who , betrayed Miss' suffered death it the liana of the , Cavell •to'llte Huns. The neWs, .of. SecreeSociety.to which .de la. 11/Farelt Rede's death' was Published long.I belonged: • . • •: • ; :ago; but the details of the riffair. , have never been given ;sto the public . MADE'FUNNY.:FACES,' • before: The story bears the chara.64'; , '• ' o , • ter of veracity. De 14 Merck:was a How British ' Captives Answered member of a Belgian secret society .„ Si T. . organized ribesnten d for the purpose •of punish- I • . ing spies and traitors, and.; when -it t -seaptain Gwatkirt-Williami! has just became known that de' Bode was •‘a ptiblighed• an interesting account of -traitor and guilty of ,Miss Crivell'ssl the eineteen.weeke spent ,by hitia-and death, he was selected to carry out the stirvivorsof his crew as prison - the work of vengeanee.. 1 -le tells howl era of the Senuasi in the :Libyssi de - he Wafted at night nearthe residencei sert'' after' his ship .was, torpedoed by of de Rode's pareets and ..At length a German submarine "in the Mediter- .: Saw the traitor approaching: • - lranean. : '‘ -, • "In two minutes, I wee face to face !,`Faciai expression," he says, "a.P. • . . . • . , with the unfortunate object Of my pears to be -very limited among ;the night vigilanceArabs, and I soon fell into the spirit : ."Standing. within three' or four 'feet of the game by doing my 'tricks,' of food, the t . . : bt ricks, 'being no of him I informed hinv•of what I was 1 suppWhich .generally got tis mOre liberal about:to:doI toldhim if he kept -silent I would. :•give him as many More than aistiming an expreasion of minutes as he wished during • which ..hauteur,. supetethouseess,. contereptor, td-. make. his pence,- with hiS Itraker.Iyanity. These caused : unfAiling yells I"told him that, se long as no one tap- I of latighter•and,had to hemany times- ' proached us from either- direction,- sol•repeated ' and- alter disPlaying my • o ' . • . long would I permit him: to offer Ins 'gold tooth, tattooing, medal ,sibhon, • prayers. - , and diary, Ahe show was.considered. • , sete4med A:tr. Rop., _ finished and we Were •getierally re- - . - ward • ed .with dates and. milk," , • . •"But....I had scarbely finished iny • Th-another.place,, he says -the proposal when he began to screens at Arab discussed discUssed retnoling lifsihead as the to of his yoke for help. • the best way. of getting • the gold "Even thenfholding my revotver at to -6th; "Cieilized dental treatment. his breast, informed' hini. that an .alWays araused great interest in this entire army eould-not -saye his land. of perfect teeth, and I well ie - and 1..again..urged ; • ,membernii Occasion When Lieutenant . "Now, ..from. 'this, distance, this • Tanner, put the • Whole .of .eiir 'Enards. • act 'of. mine seerna to me rather reek- to flight by Opeoing .his mouth and ..less. -..1 Can ascribe- this .apparently letting fait his. upper plate ef 'false foolhardy •act of; mine to-,my...utter teeth." • .tiniidity; or Perhafs nerVOuinegs.: -Here is his description of the Arab net, however, receive • its three was younger than my 'victim by fiv.e. etiquette , of eating..dates anstr`yrilk: rows of .taP6 Until Ifter the ,death -of years,.yet he looked juSt'at that .'hor-• OThe.large'.wooden bowl of milk \Nelson, when some •means Co keep: his ,rible Moment 4.,;raere , 1 goes..frolti hand to hand, and you may more-famOus victOries. alive in naval had never taken the life of fellow .anly drink• it with. a loud, indrawing' mind's' was Sought: • :-. ' At the outhreak ••the..wats" I: of •the breath; an exhausting•process, .Someone had a hapPy,thought,*and Was 'even under military .age.'," FM's* lint:equalizing the anteeot .you all the three rows. of tapes -one for. the, ther had never in all nit/ • life held set Victory of Copenhagen, When Nelson - a revolver' in triy.hands' I'did. not 'even "Dates you eat as. fast as you can, I disobeyed orders. and retrieved a lost know its mechanisni: ' • " stening them'. with one hand, all thq fight;'•the second for•the Battle of the „"All that I knew, and oil 'twit was time; and if is de rigeur to throw' back Nile, which saved Britain from inita- necesSarY for me to know, was. to the debris iii.the bovil. I ,:broke my eion by Napoleon; and the third for pull the. trigger while. " aimed •best tenth triring to eat the Battle of . 'Trafalgar, when' the 'muzzle Until -RS .dett.th-dea,:ng 'isms for mythare; but never had a chance hero smashed for ever Pritain's.rivels • SAILOR JACK WEAR BLUE? AND WHY HIS -NEAT COLLAR HAS ROWS OV TAIT+, • •000,10,00 That Ile Isn't in Scarlet Uniform Is Inc to the Merest ' • • •Chance. . 00007-0, • The faritiliar blue serge platform of the British •Navy is known and re- sected in every _country in. the world) yet few, even =long thehaindreds. ef thousands of itneri Whe ,wear it, know whence it was cleared. • It was only by the merest Wince that ..theaallor was not clad in a gold-. lage-bedecked • tunic a scarlet ploth,- with tight ,blue pantaloons, for, at the time when he was eensidering a 1.10, form for his 'as. yet' inotleyscled sail- ors, King George II, had decided' en, rig -Of, this character. •• Already had the patterns been „approved,. already •Were the tailers hard at work on the Brit' siit hundred .u.niforms,-Ldestined• for the Men Of the Ring's own yacht _When his Majeety, taking a rd .in Ifyde Park, happened to notice. •• the Duchess of .Bedford riding M. a habit that for neatneas and general spickk and-spannese, Would be hard to heat, says.. London. Answers,' . • • A. loose blue -coat - blouse,. • with .11 white' V -piece Mt in at the neck, and• a flowing • skirt of tha. same Material was yet it :immediately struck the Monarch as about the most sirnpie and • suitable?, design it •wonld be possible to find for. his oilormen. ' ' The Duchess' Dress: • • The lady bowed, the King beckoned and when she reached his side begged a boon, as they said in :those dead deys.. Her Grace blushed deeply. ' . "But to dress fighting sailors in a woman's habit, that were surely ab- surd!'" she ventured. • • The King insisted, even offered to buy the whole •thing -blouse, akirt and V -piece -if the duchess was a seller. She wasn't; She amireciated to • the full the delicate conipliment the King was paying her, and imme- diately set off for home to change her dress. • . . The dress was delivered, the tailors made haste t� complete the compara- tively. simple garmeois, and a sailor was sent from • the yacht for a ' fit. ting. He rebelled in MS secret heart, and they conveyed him to the palace in a. carriage . hidden from • vulgar scrutiny, the, tailor, with all his tools, in.'close attendance. The Court " be - 'came afmost convulsed. with laughter at the Sight of a great herculean Sail,. or in a flowing skirt: , • thte German Empire, Itas been known the unity. of< Britons among, them - George, -however, was equal to _the' these'inany -years.as the ``Philosonhes "selves. . And that is the hint convey • ..... . . situation. „; , . - of Hohen,Finow," which .,)is his family to Gertnans in the single Word "Di - "Cut the skirt isp the front . and estate an hour or so from Berlin Be- vide" Which heads one of these Peace hack in the middie," lie erdered, "arid, Cense et.his lanky foz-in and the slip- arti-eles. •.• • ' • C . ,f• , ••••• 'make the seams on the inner side Of pie/less of his backbone it 'hea ' tip- - . - . the 'legs!" ' " . -.. - parently becorne the -custom •te, Con-. - -. • -....- • , ,. .. • The sets§ 1•4 snicked, the, needles nect his name with agrint,--.writes WHEN mK. Of K" MET ' wiA,Fm.HAND. „it flew on th . i ing model, and when at Charles 'Fewer, special correspondent' .' last all s completed, the Ant ,real- in Holland Of the London, Daily Mail Report- of the Conversatien. Between ..., ly dressed British Man -o' -war's man ' But the philosopher of Hoheri•• . .•• the•Officers. , •,, .,.,. stood forth in the glory. of his -uni-.. Finbiv is cleverer than his oritics. He 1 1! is a dramatic mdment, when form. • ;- ••• - has. a good portion of. the slyness ,news reached England that Cele -mei The success was immediate -and which makes up. for -want -of wit hi Marchand bad forestalled the britisli complete : The loose trousers were the sandy villages of -Brandenburg, occupation of Fashoda. ...Kitchener- apPreciated by the sailor; for they and he is not so dour a'S he-piretends. took -_a flotilla -'ef ea steamers with. could be rolled -well_ over the knee --------------------------sue, and yet 4,0°0 Men OP; ihe. 'Nile:before Fashoda, when water was flying about -as it. so often is at • sea -and, in subtle compliment to the,feininine 'riginto of the dress, the. upper part of the unit:lint is called a "frock"' te thiS -Mrs. 'Joseph Chamberlain Becomes Bride of Westminster Abl;ley's Rector. • The Reverend Ca,noti Carnegie a.nd. his bride, . fermerly Mrs. Joseph Chamberlain, photographed as they:left Westminster Abbe'y, London; just after their .marriage in •King Henry VII's Chapel in the historic strticture. Mrs. Cha,mberlabl. was the secOne wife of the late great British statesman, whom she married in 1888. prior.to her Marriage she Was Miss Mary" Endi- cott, of New York, daughter of Judge Endtcott, :of the • United State' Sup-, roma Court; and. Secretary of War in President 'Cleveland's first Cabinet, The Reverend Hartley Carnegie•was born in g ounty Dublin in 1860. He has been:rector -of St. Margaret's and Canon of Westminster since 1913. • NUN CHANCELLOR IS SLY DECEIVER 'MORE DANGEROUS THAN BUL- . J4IES OF PRUSSIA. • His "Peace" .1Programma . Said to be Intended to Divide the • Allieo. • . .rethrnann IlollWeg, 'Chancellor of • poisihle peace terms • are 'pursuing what they suppose td •be a diplomatic plan. They want it to be understood that with Prance, Germany has hardly any quarrel, because they con- sider that for many years to come she will not lie dangerous,: Nor' do they ,(openly) Wish to embitter fur- ther English Radicals, so they sug- gest that a restoration of Belgium is, by no means beyond the bounds of • possibility, while' Serbia and,plonten- egto are now included • within the hounds of their generosity. • By such argumerits they. hope, as 134nberci explains, to 'weaken the bonds unit- ing the- allies and- even- to weaken WOMEN AUTO DRIVERS. Accepted By Elrltiell War •Offiee Afte MeetWo Toot. . • . T E SUNDAY SCHOOL Jite,,,,, ..,1,3„,,,a,rt 7.thi.4. ,w,t3..1,,,,,,,,,,ILI,...t.; INTEitnEriO,NAlti 1.0g$SPISt • hosp.itals, ,abou,t te00 .1)4vo been me-, . *SUPWAXIMIt It • ......... ,., to eupply trelned *00031, •000he OH larltlett tome. envapo .oad eetwaleepont • e9enfe4 employed, ' The Vorrnatio4 .of ./.0.MAT4Na, A PalleonerilatT40:00410,: tk motor -transport eeetlegt of the Wo• - 401 We:1MM ettoeesefel results,. and ' •..-.Aets...,U, Golden Text.• znee's-Legtonln Aprll of tilde Yeer'llee it is '117.ow olltlelel0 .,reeogetged .0Y- the. ' . e., 01. % WAT:070,010:00::•;:vtaltat:1:asbeacrudolituaot:..: - ..ireme-47tzezoca-,,,e4anr4ttc-4-.. With :branch. •,Prayer API in Acts 10. 10 in the- ease of Peter., - The Greek 'word "(borrowed an our ecstasy) implies 4 Complete loafs of eensmOtisneSa. . .ComMOMOn., 'vit;anittiltte. ach,IsSeriOt lawg4th:pt .etbzpeefortetneLw40.4rcitid as Paul 'describes in 2,Cor: ig. 2-4. 18...- Saw Itine--The prorionn gees.. •bgek to the Righteous -One in.verse 14. Of thee---fineraphatic.:. th.e .stress lies - on •Coricerning nae, ''. , ,.• '. .. 19, flow' vividly theSe words ie -C44. fer.hospitals. ,All, expenses, of training 'falroernmaCni.i.rillitsht9.-fc.:rul.b(IMPLraoytgrbse' csb4Itte9'71. '. bpth tha camp ceoks and the motor- TO leave, ',IeruSalent with.his tale .-tin.,' transport section. are covered la e 1:Irv:told was the heaviest trier, ' • Surely " 'vete fund. subacribed• bY . Latly' Lon-- • for the motor -transport iliectiou is ist hear 4, Alen. who. had prey- , doude,rry•.'s personal friends. Training' .1i.e3T-.1:n- given free at certain garages • and ' Thio gnowling:. "Paul ..seems .at it, ed. his .iewsin. . xertatimsna se will -. motor schools. with,. which 'the Legion were t! plead. plead. with his • 'Lord' tlaut Men has madearra.ngenterifs: ...... . . cannotAbitt- receive -testimony from. • The work done for the. War Ofilce- one *he' had previously been an erhv so far has been in. connection .wittr the erny a Jesas of Nazaret14- the word*. • Army Service . Corps.. . The. : women •ten are - direeted to his, hearere so. t .erive light cars only- end: rire'"drefted. .-•• .. .. - • . " , '- that they may. impresa them with the lntri.service •units for horae serYice. • - - - • .• : • • • • • strength' of the, testimony thus given • The Array Countil *as -asked In -April to try •the women for a mditth:• They by one who. had imprisoned the Citria--- •Agreed„and :during. the rnonth'S test. "tians," lyIyers has 'caught . the sob : tire *omen' wlare. given • . cars which. with which Paul recalls: these perse--. could not even be 'described as second eating daYai-' best. • ,,The women,. hoWever,"aceepted , . .. , anti -,it was. reported that their work,. Saints, did Isay? With your remensL• , • all diilloulties as part of their test, was • "excellent," and. that. in many . Deerbeinreedr:faecneds.! Women whent f cases the cars were .kept • cleaner than, they had been by the ..men. . The War Office rates of .pay are re, • garded. as satisfactory. Superinten- dents get 52s. Sd. ($13.12).a week and travelling expenses ; head drivers or • squad 'Were, 40s. ($10) a week and I -In the emphatic form each time it; . overtime to .drivers returning. to the occurs in this and, the two following ' 'garage, after 6 p.m..; - roeehanic verses. '.-Beat in every synagogue - divers, 3.§s. ($8.75) a week and ever,. Thus fulfilling the Lord's prediction time; • probationer' •.drivers,. 2613.. ually driving, and garage washers45s. `.--" - . 'i(Mark 13. 0,),,, , Offenses against the, law of 'Moser -were tried and puoisb- '- (6$.25) a week, 35s. • ($8.751 when act - ($6.25) a week: ..• - - • ,.. • ... . • . ed.in the synagogue, then fit place for the Women's Legion is Miss Christobel • Ellis, a cousin of - Lord Howard de Walden, who has b.een. in Serbia with the Red Cross and has driven 44 Motor transport for some weeks at the front, She hopes to obtain for tho work wotoeu Who may have to ore their own living, after the war, and who would find a congenial occupation Ja the driving of light vane. Already ithoet• 200 women have been placed, Dot all in War Office work, but Mae In munition area st and sonie working sought and slew! 0 when we Mingle in the heavenly . places • • • • • • How will •I Weep to Stephen and; to you! • • So far the 'girls employed are Hip a "holy inquisition! . daughters' of country squires Who have • 20.. Was shed -,-Imperfect• •tense; suffered losses during the war, sthe period of the war is made.'the drivers lo look: on ; throughout the horrid , Saul's fanatical conviction nerved him Th ore it . tortured his daughters of garage owners and the like, . After the month's probation, . will wear a khaki -uniforin with, Army voice within told hire of the face that sensitive feelings, and the...louder 'pt.., scene. . e m• when an agreetnent for a year.or the Service. Corps nurneralg; for which was:like •an • angel's; the greeter • was. there will -be a special grant from. the •the "ritual: service" he , rendered'th : God (John .16. 2).••, --he would tiot offer .. what ' east him nothing! - The_niast • (so read) of •Aets• 2'6. 9 is the key.. Consentirig-Acts 8. 1. The memory -.... lends • its Sting.: to. Rom. f.:,32, Where menstwill also be• -a. Government'ls,sue Paul makes the celd-blooded approval .. • . of .an orilbolter.an eveit•tverse .sin than -- the sinner's, evil deed. itself. Iteepirig the . (outer) ' garments -See Acts 7. 7. 58.::' • ..: " . - : :!'. . . .. • , ,2L .Send. thee -forth irt•the Csreek la *the last and einphatic Word, as the :I. equally 'streased. The •••• things that nobody *anted' theriCto :cislinst-haste.ni?..tn'et unto the Gentiles,•as-in mob fastened • on . What: the Lord's the English, though this was -what the their.bones were forever feeling maey feel. It :never rallied un,' a, holiday,'-wOrd left burning' in •Paul's soul was. the. washertvornan , 'setter faileciTsto the commission and it ' ..Giverthat emitier tile hags never ate the 'roSes, .he, the .persecutor, 'Was -charged. with • co.maany neve!' appeared unexPected:. an apeotleship ' (se the GreekY.hlr. • . 1Y, 'nothing unpleasant ever.happened he is not merely a political cantor- •and 'invited .Celonet. ,tia,,rcharid .on Ile nelson. \ O. had .bones. de- •jesus whom. :he persecoteds:. 1 BY •• _ . tionist.: Bluntly „Written, he. is not bipatra• The latter thus reportS •the •claring-that she had known it .all the. delniapilailson.tiribh:this the 'rest was ' a . ReVentiatv,.„ who being ' re4-.Y. r-- dominiona," ii - .s_ same • possessiOn :of the Kire-dima ones. . , 'ation • "I lave' ceme to: S.. tfme • ., that lebe had • felt it in her "'.„. 'is.,i.viipzir. always btoods.e.a., .01,;,_ . .. , ... _ sueli-e„fooh-tia--linte-SL-looice • t°1"iel.'s • 1 'r ' . • • . - . • • - ••• •' mild -eyed. Scribe, :pictures him.gelf as. !-Kitchener began 1! ' •'.- • If the •boho barometers "eou•Ict 'have fish lust of monopoly.; in this respect day.. • •• , :r :. _ . . , a kind.,Of.'"Teutanie ' knight Slatighter- "Well, General, 1,, Capt...,Marchand been trainedtst'prediet surishine.,Ind, the Jews Wers'as bad as any Brahmen.'.... - • (as lie then was) am here byLorders geed crops Alley would hatte been very.l Of. to -day. ...; The profound insight of • But this. vsa,S only the bide- suit, ing the. _English with a, huge • two- 0! ate- Prench Government. , t' thank good things to:have and Would• here'. .the hook. of -Jeneir• pilloried.that uns • witheist'any...'df .the . trimmings. that handled 'sword; :the portly . Passer-. :Yoe for , yOur offer ot Conveyance' to haVe geneoutOf 'style,. but e 'bone'loYely characteristic.:.in the prophet' • the .present-day sailor wears. . ' mann, who excoremenicate's 'vs-. ' by Earope, but ',I Must wait. here far la- litiremeier was always . - bailing ' Atia• "Who . steeds' for' the people, hack from . • ', What the Collar Meaps:, , ', baolcic an t cassi. Von HeYde_ structions," was the reply:, .. ...at% last It - had fallen - arroost. oitt of:,.. • • "It IS a long •time Sinee.you had. any . . . sight: • - . -. • ,- _ •' -.• . , Exile' but tio• better for. their ,discip.": '. • . . . . bell, . d , , r - • - 'brand,. the ConservatiVe and agrarian' - .• • ' • For instance, the neat collar, with .. : . its rows. of tape, is 'quite a `recent In- • . Hotspur, who Would like to spit ...es ' a-e,,s..froin t reece,„:.‘ , . • .. '• pr- 'course, . bone' baremeteras. were '- • . -•. ,. .- - • . -- •• s. • si •. . ._ lo • . • - d• - 74 trait in the ' Elder :Brother of his. . . •, line Jesus t..a bliiimself Ira.Sys, t..h,!ir. p7-.. .•,. .ncetatien, and,. like' most naval:things; with a 'stabX ferki ere. disagreeable ' 4, orders ,are to -Wait•liere." ,.• ' .'• 'a . Some months, tsgaeral.;. • ,bets my. iau s...enym,ast The nev,er pre icte . _ pything • except in the Vaguest mai.ii grea es.p ra. e...„. .. . .. . , . •_. ' people, but they arealmost pain, : "Major, I will 'place' my boatg etyour .tter until it ,had :liappeised. and nobody" .23. Threw -off -Read, tossed • about. ian purisese:•--In- - Nelson's ' -day, .ando iiiist. . N„ile.".' . ; , • , .• . ,.• . . % - then, or at least Ifbanybody, did eare,,,: and furiously Waved abont. This' was : it:hadIts origin in a strictly' utilithr- . honest. •:' ' ' - .' . ' .• • disposal to i•etui•ii, to. Europe- by. -to eared' whet they bed 'to say about It The 'loose -outer robe; was; pulled 'off: long afterivards; sailors *Ors' their • . "Ad Poise!) of Asps?! hair in eye:ties, Which hung down their,. „ire_ backs.. Now, As the sailor has always. vv nen they say . they are ,determin-.,aeOpt your offer. I • am waitiog for Grandmothers.. as • pleasant - ., itGeneral,s thank you bet ' -1 cannot .e..as. top ate to do an} thing but aatl 'useful•: rage. - • Travelers 'in Palestine inc • .nal'e•; in manifestatioa. of .excitemerit • and • .. - ed to-have.at1 Europe. and • half . Asia orders from iny Governmeist.7.- .- . as they were In other -wars„ were of.' had to parches -4 his Own aniforms, and as ."Compensation," you •know '• that ,; -"A goad raartyLthings: have happened- ten /Ice most et-erinlirest: a bone ism ,inodern ti es oecasionally Se.e_an ex -1. fr '---7-'.1tibition df •the,,sudilen exeitabilitY of' :- aa the grease with -which -the -hair' was , , these: reallY7 are their ;ideals; when .i since yen. started on Your joureeyst tneterg,.. Anybody *he remembers a , - •,._......___,...c, ..... anointed had' an • tinhappy 'knack. •°". ;they I insist s that •'.everything • that' day when there was going tote a .Pic, : au ..Y-14,"''''' Fu•'.'"1 '..C.aa..t.d.ustLike. 'General , ' -w hatei: er . so ay have . haps spoiling' clothes and thereby.depleting . - - • . . pened Prance, who is net in the habit nie .and it rained will remember. that &onset (2'Sam..16. 12.4: 1 ,' . _ .., . . . s . . e u ace . o ie. .ea er. . ., Jack's store of ready cash, he evolved ' of abandoning. her officers, Will send grandmother said that she had - told 24.-E0tnitisd by. scourging -Legal . a -shield of blue jean cloth which hung shall .be sunk rlithlesslY: you. -knOvii - "• orders.- , - - - . 'yob se ajthough as • a ..Matter .of . fact, , in,the case of slases and ton ovithout'' sine . ... ... .. _ . • . • 0 . . , • over the serge and thok a the grease -that the.yure not consciously bluffing ! • .ot must liois't : the • Egyotian flag she had been busy making COoklee and Political rights, bOt•netai the first:ea , , and Which had also the advantage of and that this is really thessubmariee i•bere," Isitc-trener next aaid, „ '''_ __ .: .167113g_ .chickett the whole:slay Otero, of an inclitiry..i •..Angustus had exprea-- • policy they desire: If you, prick •Vori- "Why,. - I , myself „will help . you . to: with .never..a .word. about rata: '' 'Isly ferbidden it, and' Lysias's-"reinor..'. being cheap' and readily washed. It Bethniann Ilellweg, Yen Are .ant •to io. st . . o e e V st . War Office of 26 030). in,the ease of superintendents,' squad leaders ' or head'. drivers„.aad •23 • '($15):. for mechanics, -.kith a smaller renewal grant Sinall army Overcoats; et, •actly 'the Same as thdse, *ern by the , , BONE THERIVIOMETERB.. 'Going" Out,of Style-sOely a Fraud„ . • , Anyway, • , • It :is. 'a larturiate. thing...that :bane barometers 'are gbing.'out'ef•ityle.• The People who always -felt everything tents -had been emptied, •• / though 'anioitg fellow-Prisotiers • "I pulled it. •- had at one time. been.. very unpopul .on th sea-symboltse to the man in '1 i r th ilia e " it was a eottece of •wonder'a d 1 rodece only the milk of liturtan kind.' • over our fort • nes.as which, in .a Prussian, is as the f . l'. N 1 O, that ..- ellen resist-,"-- poisen of the asps For the •Prussian i I.Fre,nch aflicer's reply. r•Do. you know. Maier, thatthis at. ammeter is naturally • as coarse' and, sa.is,„.,!../.13, sq France and England• at era& as, the sandy soil 'of the. Mark ,. *of Brandenburg; .'when ita tone fai colonelar Marchand.: bowed .withour diplomatic and •its 'demands •have it .;‘,,,re:apsly;ilteIfpale Ist.t„,thener rose: He modest ring it :is' 6;u:ceding .danker -H . .. The colonel,also rose. ' for his ille el action•tenterstu on thig ' ' tere0. that granslinother Should have ./ • g --- - • ., P . . • nowir-thatthere-su a., -gain g to she a •kYr'r. zu),_ ' , ' ' . • - .cycfone or a flOod Or .in .tai.t.iliwaii. 25 Tied him up-4.iterally,- •*.fel.--7 • - in seine laisoff --tomtits., but the fact ',ward: his :, hands were • tied , with -Shit she knew it Was going to rain and leather' Strips so a$,to*.bend•-: his back ' • spoil . the plepic and:never said it word ' over: a•stcine. soourgingsPiller ,ity, re-, ....• - abont It till :atterward waS etiongh:to4ceive the blows: -Paul waits till.they . •inaiss etre lose faith In the -preirh'eeies . hioie. cannoitted theniselves •to the ils : o ier C1110S, and nuts account for tho,iegality:: A: 4.6inh, loid, tulcotiaenth---. den.)0„. , Kitchener gozed at his 2.0.00 ; tpe,n at fact.,that. they are,going out Of at le . outs The craZy peace terms Y, • Cd -As in 6;37. ' Itstcl, he been no • ed ..by Reventlow* and by the congre._ '•the fort 011 the 'ramparts or 'wht.ob the just as grandmothers are in so,,_ many Reinan, the sedond• Count of Paul's in • gation 6f East -Prusafan JUnker,s si. •bayonets glealted: ; . ' ' - . other ways. - '' • gii'ith.di... drctment held. ' ,-; But ysias ignores .. s'. I .,' "We -are •tbe stronger." Kitchener' , Of Omni's, if wai net, always 'feudal barons are not dangerous,' be. - Cause they . are peefectlY honest-. i•re,moarilted after li:eisiileistirely 'survey. '•inothers. There, were Many hope bar. ' it ityhiSioterregation fe Paul,. in vie*'. ght- a. • sett le.. t t..." meters among the loafers'. the( used ef the -greater Matter, Alt is e mis•• . the moderation' of Botlunann•Hollvie,g I - • • • • . to aft arotin•cl tl -6 1 1 • ' re to t 11 0 o t 9 n ur o ,pu a.• oman citizen '" 'ust. a rectification f it' r , • wards, Peland e • buffer : State, and tae Fret the eat t f Id . ar •the street, as, well. as to the Man in '.3 • ct ie.] "itight you • are." -seas Kitetiener's grocery',Atore Or ever the registe'• •in s • ' • " " - "He fell and :died ifistantly.f:. en account. of the rate at . which • • : "Vicilled.Your Son." bolted my food. ' remeinher it as • one, rem -'-----c*Ilrmr-Ya"..45)1e-661.-r e gr es s ma o o • we. to ai ds. well • ws„„ only •want - time, . And- as ••4 sign of the ,Navy s something that will guarantee that ou nin for its i I the. .„ 'soy 1. • im nod er te" thi i I ' • 4 yard of silk -is. knotted *about tOZ he . . ; • , •° q, • a horrible dream. 1 lifted theenirarda ; hats you alwaYs, kept -on. This an - body of any clean frein the 4, arrow 0,,4t, 4,100.cw, .veetswere Aid and inyin....allilitit,•but ho.re it -some distitoce , and steed hhy,i there was. tic!. appeal." „ • against • the door o'f •his father's house.' , The. slayer. was taken by the..13e1-•. CHOKED: WITH- VV1-14A!„ glen civil pollee,. .and handed Over te . • black -silk hanakellchief-sone aware ": cause it is eSsentielly dishonest, neck a the sailorMan to. this day - • • • •tnere is .one m.ore. instance.. of' P 4°Ph•P' "d"-- • tho hila ' ger are etitially dangerisus form which' is traxlitiopall 'aserilied • 'tg. he - to Adlnirat Nelson, tied it•happens •tp . , . 1. 1). On f •a fe otty.,te _seourge him, Says • -- -retilY, "chme afongs let's have a Al's,. . . . . . . the air. eorner drugstore. „.And the eicat0, ., . ' . -. ' • : ' .• ••• • 'key and so -da.. . • • • - - things' they felt :in • Blob; • bones, we're: .. . . , .. ... 4 . 26. 'Is .ta-,Ranian.'--s' It -was death ,.to . The r.eqiiired .instructionSo as ":the enough .to' make the Wisrld rhinielarfe - • • . . slam citizenship falselysand both the '-,[••. .- • *, • ' Parts la catirge. the wars and the crop failures,: fertlidontlegfron not, yell See SO much the things them!, word withoui seeking.evidence, - It' ts'• 5ergeent. ehd bis thief, talte"Paurs "' • ; • toli- LOYAL *6--.C11.1.TIH, RULE. • • • • rozsl about- Omit, itTO,1-tireltrols-tre., sense , •• More ..coittefnprueus (iodation; 7 ••-••• -• - scivos that waft ns, It she -• 27.• ThetS‘--F,In-phatie. like ,Plate's • 1 eause they have: one • purpose -to. de - .6 : • I...., .. t . r . . .ff. '.,•,-, :.. •• 1 ceiyes if possihle, the alli.es. ' Verfun- - , • . • ately, .there is ,Gerihari evidence Or f ' . h' I • !Meaning'. :Arid '1:bat-these, rather--, 1`,,.. 7..41- g, , , . • .•• 1 .. ii irg le: • 3 VOSSIRCIr Zeitung, cu ..Montickyi,. July are the- three inittOns w.hieh •eaCh mid- . • .., . . •••• 24 'says: 'We:misfit .reekoli now more '.-shinman wears on the•front- Of .; his - " ' • • • than before' with. the 'Possibility' that' cuff,' • - • . . • at feeling ,things .10 :i•etir: bones "Art thon a- king?". " • • • " ' holey,. they happen na •then ft•eling• 08.. The name Lt' • ajaa is'Greek and • Natives Grateful for !Defeat th . 011 .places atter tro..y• hap- t.k.,tribizne-Wits Prbbahlit 'freedmai • Mad Mollah,• • , •of.the emperor 'plaudius,.or the s,oh•cif •• • . . ..„ • • ' A 'lot tor li‘s,v4- t1; • 1..'041‘'..4 ;1;r -the• .• . • • • • .• - • • • , . Orin to w ic doe• can tack . any th• . B„,.„1,„ •,,;y Australia Having' Diffieutty .GettIng the Germans, but nt‘evidence •being ers for 'Expert. found againdt him; lie was allowed to. ' c .• go free, the German officer making •. The ; Australian Gevernintrit's•. pais the significtint eerninerit: 'Tibia.- will + obscure the deeds of both good and •bad hut the deed of a traitor is • never forgotten.' ' Afterwards de lit 4 Merck- went. to the bottle' of de Rode..s • lather and 'told' of his deed: ' ‘• . 4. announced my mune), but they did•ilet knew' natrre. Then r told them, killed your, Son!, ; I:Was ex- ltecl, ethervirisia I would not have arttlOunced it so brntally..." O No Sorrow for .Traitor. Must have been :tally Insane; or • tylly should haste visited nty vic- O (tit% aged' pitrents? .Would ot ,.taVe done such a thing in My sober • ' O Inovit'oroD,,• I had not. irl'altod. thg Ltoo tor tni) putpoop 60astIng or dot et 11110110. POrgottIng lho avity Of Mr het, $ liad Welted Major id Itodeli: ,to •tipologlzo to hint . kill i-Sla Ve ii-- s no d . 'A horlgfees- Bret or.., , . ... ., .,... . , . . one.... Roman. etriperors•-eftett .sold the 2..6 Ara d rn e ti di ' A dee. ex ores •iing. ti p nreciri- don. Soviets' • in - Len du es. from. ea tit..s SON TAKES; . FATHERS '.....PLAG-E, ' fre !whist', tts,.a . ''meanS7--of • reven • . . . . , 'RanisaY e."XplailiS „•PatiV:s....inlierit%edr' naval re. 4'1.11/011111Z :11..*trel'at liON- n ' . , ' . t. Icier, ca" d6tro Aid,: • • . tton't et -I he ' a ssis IA! CP.. 01 .ri British ' Cent' Caslorna• . 'Co-'11.8-tiett.' CarnPaIgn as ' Ifyireatotelloisfe Thitry .3.gzii!igvy., Iiii,aSiille..,iteO;(1:tihnettSeitetlAt. 'tile a Mid( I*. the Mad S ollnh, •' -". • • , • . ,- ,. , ,s lases:ray and *as nissie.' ••te '.kill soorsgenetal sniff of the Italian artily.- ts '4 trI°F.44 ‘',1 Pant's"- Anoosthr. t lien ihe l‘r}th ..,.ronah, ;fad (rprui,odis '001.1. •Litigf • Catior.a..'ehisf ot "filo `,.q.;•i°,.°:roild,0(1 ',v‘141..a., pcfre. ial'. tfihe. One.: „ , tilt, ' .litluiblto'at, .. timely . isos cams, the •Iiindenborg of the Ft:ens() . front;.: ' .'2& ' cAni ---.. it i -the .`"tr‘V•o- Chains". ' from a British:shin. 'in.the words of Ho :knows : every foss ..0f... tso lood,, erst,:EinAilli.tothiiieenn.f.ftso. 8. t.sovisorsLinWdiretah ' the rho a 0 myroit .,.• . - - . • • , •. , • I m cnin t al ti or valley, every: .putle, .:',, li ono"' -tor Seetteg:nr... .. . • •..',.. -. ":rha.eonthipanee of fire .Wati wok throegh. the rocks, every fortress orss • ..:- . •• . effective aild'Sn.territte that tho i ,,tol-the Austrian or.. on the Italian side. i .- . .Mad Milli -Itad to run Slyer trot' •is ' !fecal: eopinita. 1,ma:nyii:Iyule3agal•ts ;on etlaievaidrii:trfitIcrt 'Ti.;,141,c'att.irc:, through .ontiotm. tn..te; ..,rho,,, .,.: , forttiled pos ii, 'and we honey elt. plate. - - • ,so planning for the inevitable day of war,' 't'lose; On halt a nilMon, spindles ate 'will no mem ' y ( 0. '0,0tne back i, lo with Austria- and the heat • Militassse now -stoppiaedb. eft: olcniiritune:en:otrera ,•1:11idtr,g1:,:d.4.0 - "Surely we have. found lit, the . t. ' ' - • - • . 'stategy for ineeting it. • - .• • • • and • •adiolning . Owns of :Southeast • . . wander a stivrelli* • ot our pine,' - -.4 Italy• the great.eommeretal .A0Anortpeerf '.;otill',tuistl,11., (1.10 it, it . intossible ft') get " p6otile.- MaY fled give him .10v• • 41. Trieste,. .whinle population is . 77 '.: chase • of fifteen, large.. steamships; . ib. _ • • psogiod to Lye oposat„,1 .1;,..y.1•11.,, _ Those 'Three Bettons.' genei•el 'feeling. Which Will • 10°011' toonsvealth in the atiosenre'fit • Of Au's,' The stery goes..--I..do net vouch for their 110100 nail Airing:before the" there will •arise emong oui• • enemies 11 . . • . • • , tralleir wheat to-Iilitrope will 1161 g.t tt,,•miltd,that one. • day, when tho. eyes etidtessness and. ulclessnels farlbiverds.solving the problem,. The :great little nian was jnatiecting a, of further lighting.," He gees 'on to steamers. 'here e total cargo' eaPaoity eertitin smart frigate in 'his cenurtmitt," say that the enOmY Will be the Mere of 120,000 tons.:but it. is doubtful r be noticed dark ..stains on the cuffs '01Y diatotoliged as they see 'Germany able they can -make /310t0' 'than two trqs the midShipinen lined.up for his serif-, and determined to go .on fighting if eiteli ttr EUrope before tho end of tho .,.., . , . . . year and- this, Will •Ilispose . of only lanY• • - ' : • ' necessary', and he ends,• "they:wilt be the hugo quantity '...Turning to: the captain, •• he asked i al., the readier ,te accept 'eonditiotia of 9,000,000 bitshele•Of of theooreal that laatviticiag sitiptuont what these stehts 'were, 'and. way; . in- -p-cace• which are, intelligently ..,antl • fortned thato some niitishibman or •eleverly formolated. by _us.',1* " bhshels Of wheat; stored lu slitids or' for Punishment or • .to •keop a good , .' Australia has ' about . 100,000,600 other \Vag al*riya •at the • masthead 4witt itisilltagibii- hetintlftlfg to °PrOlt In fitneks 'whore. looksout, theY found the wind more Gearg Bernhard }lite the nail orf,the storage is unavailable in- country rap,. than usually, keen; and their 'nosea.be. head,- Von Ilethrtirmit..11ollweg' 'be - ""a4 "70' ti41(.1 'tkill C°,14111P1Iir0111‘tIV° :atone clainn ad.' any noli.rospooting Heves, PrcihaltlY rightiy, tkat he can OOZE Wheat harvest iii toretiaY in eight 'to frAmor complicate' the problem, . nog° Avatild'irr sueh dirctimatancess-Aa. forniulate' term; Of pease'inOrd. "iro . -T 0 DOVertinietit'e Parelitiso of ttio the inidellimion had perforco•to cling telligently arid cleverly," :that. Is more otoaraota Ili InItIod by the ran,bor party to :their airst .teltheg-.-v.o.'ith" Peal hands deccPtivelY. than IteventloW the With Watifieation, for the tistablish- Well, •euffs eanie . iii . eiteeetlingly Ituthless . , and', " Iititspur-Hesiciebrend, I*Meilt •0,f 4 Gloveramoot,atvned ' fleet .handy, belted the staine; ':Whereuperi rven now the Chnneellor'e party in haa leng .13ftett ti plank in, Ito platOrAn, the ewe ,liuttens, were orcleredt ; • 'their purely academic discussions • 1;f, , women to till Many 'of.the pesttiOn.S. - ' ‘a.v,toutilt,r..o,,s,.litnity, I, loti...er4........,,.:_:,anifitt.a.iree such' 1, , ., 'e "Icloat:ti•odit°41111a:harnwly'aeott,hiOtatitos afilf't•:.°::::: . . . ., , • . , Whith .111* father, Gen. Raffaele 'Cadet,' • . ; . --..- • ..t. .,. '• *•.• ego. The S0141, then a •bey of eigh(een. "Ntrhy db. You, alwdys, haYo,. to bo. Of :pours*. . .. ,• learning 'tho intlittirY game At • Milan .0Xilinirled'hy a doetor' before you can:. • whatnrii' ideals.'?" • and Bologna. Was not nertutitod to tie• get life' ilitnirattle .?" "Ideals, my boy, are ti 0e0104 • ..144 company his father,. who did not in,. Of presume. thecompany Wants titi, to be something better than It.' , ee tend to give favors to anybody, eVen4 knew whether or liet you are strotigi eXpeOliti to bo." • 'enough to tarry lit" '. .1 . to those neareSt to MM. „ . .a ••• - - '