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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-10-19, Page 2• Improvement in Autos. • Agfa is subjected to t3peeille beat "Few people 'oh buutomobiletreatment detorniincd through eabatige o a() realize y i ' tiVO Unt5.. ' 4 Ow Medern. eirietenCY, •undf. orakeeetaa each duyeroo, :glad . or , science have veritably revolutionized eteel,de#Muling; of course, ripen what the materials •enterine inte the unita': faucten each in to fihrree requirea ix of to,413y'13 motercare,"' pols 4 won.,, dint o heat trecitment, and finanythe , known, matmfaettner.: fitness, of each to serve. ite purpose • "Beforethe advent • ef the .inotetlar' znPY be detected by some of tbo Wen. 'only the enlp/non.mgmx. or tholmtanu,' title, instrernents, tmch ae Winne% facturer of armor piato knew anyt1i0 ilielde and many other maehines. about steel, •• it le a .relhathable fut. .Vicropliotograpity. also plays, on im- that the .2,iihti. or $10,000. eutomobiles Perient Part in the selection end. 111' of fifteen years ago (made with axles ePection of inateriale., ; - . ' • ' end shaftvelk were eamea t I teo •''After, this is determined Scientific " • ` '' • - ' ii i steel.' mese, RW PROM THE iiimu or.Tiru ROMAN GALLEY*. .14•••PO, 04 pounds. Tita" 41tand came hazi holt become arquebus% but long bows were still in use Vormillable Fleets. The Stuart kinge brought forth formidable Aeets, cOnslistIng of vole eels of different tyPeS, from pizMaeles Of less than 808 tollate the 40vereigu •, of the gess, the Ant British three. oreelter. Site was a gorgeous Oak, with decoratione 'of •earved • angele When, •;1011as CteSar'S Admirals Ruled and cupids eovered with gilt, and „ 34,4•4444•44- • the English , she cost just $2044e5 not cou,inting 4 the eXpense Of her two hundred guns, Chamiel. The warship in Stuart days did not &Vera entirely on lier guns for. pun- ishing the enemy. We read of 'ar- rovio teimmed with Wildfire to stick in the sails or ship's sides,"' ezur4,41101- low brass bells and earthen pots cov- ered with quarter bullets stud; in pitch, which,. in a crowd of people, will mako an incredible slaughter." Another nstep forward was taken with tint • "first:rate" ship of about ' When the ,•gigantie ''"queerz .glixac- .beth" class took the, sea. fig -abut the ' germane,,tbe :British 'were. but:, cene .tinuing une a .511Ceetlaon Whieb CAB te.traced. by small gradations .• right back to the. galleys .in,•Which Jullna Ceeser's. admiral's. ruled:the YBeg.liiii batinel..nineteen hundred. yearkt ago.. In the, wake of"Caiear"s Ships', with. greY-ttlue ealls :and twenty Stand the strain) were made then. of nAe • . • .• gun: battleship or tool: ..Thist 'thne Preveirtin'g' the ,ese llietal which chained oarsmen on 'each aide...came 1,700! ,sufa as the 'I:Intel:Ulla, winch' sort'of steel evolved gram the, chef/ilea is not. otthe prorier compoeition or is the hisit-proWed Baxon. flong •eldpe .,c,P;,t.rmen• .400 pop, fainn 6 pounds to lahortitOrY, .and What is niare natural •tdo to•Ord. or too ooft. f.tts ease' of and fgeeola" carrying a single. Moat. 4*.PSI•inde- - , . In than that the Chemical laboratOry is, .1.40"steorillV slA 'brnking Aisch4dsini 'Th"4(3. eulelleatetbdolnebtlit.eltelq.. 7,4,44%1 ,BeforeLtalr loTstanofirthcleae7ighte'enth no* a component part of the autonto 444 ia A °"eat fAstQr.':ia'iirsvehti*';/.1t!P:49fullillhinellitil twice as 104.40 -the .00ntorr Great - 13ritAin 'had a fleet ,hille. industry? . , . verious Accidents. ' . '• . numerically larger than •that of to.7 ."Throu'gh the workings. Of Science. 4The. final ' analyse cOncloSively "others," They were propelled by as 485 were se -called "rated: Yea- " in the laboratory the theapeet ear now alms' tint Modern, science has Otert:i meey as miXty oars. which ' • .. atiy.,* There were :poet 700 sail, of King Canute '..Produced • What his on the market has better 'SOO used in ed h Potent inflaenee in creoting'.het,'. .' % ,years. ago in making, the rich ,tikares, muclechenpQr pfice %hen laah formerly ,thine; ine°fnaseitzet(hte WmQ11.4"foufilesvvearry-, s'e‘18 a 211 t° 12°. guns. . - •a;eally• hact fiVe decks, was the stock its construction that'. tigtolzed fifteen ter and. etilf totter metoteare at "" a people The: se -called ' "three -decker," which Car. - No motorcar et to-daY is built"' thoughb l'oe-ible."'.- , -•-' '• Poritht have been dazzled. by. the 'vreat , . of one kind et steel, lant many' kinds " •• ..L 1"--4- ' • men -o' -war of that period. These large shIP, and '416 le° the Sovereign ' are utilized. , . ' ..- • Don'ts For Touring. ' ships ranged.f • 100 t 200 f t from o . ee a the -Seairfar behind; The faraoua . • '"It WOuld be entirely impractiiable Don't overcrowd your car„. ' . long, their sides were adorned -with R..0Yal George; for instance, had atoll - nage of 2286. Again the old, salts. •-, 4 toconstructthe Medern motorcar, of . Don,'t loaa up with sui,plios yeti will dragons' and eeerliente' heads their feared that ouch great ships weuld One 4inii Or steeir,fience-the men ne- not need, • •• • ' . :•• - s; , salla were painted in rainbow/ hues * • • ' many -colored slaields.: • _ -it not be able to navigate. ' The ship of Nelson's day ' indeed signed to this task • thechemical lab' ' Don't '''' in e - t s art with a cai that is net 40 end along their rails were rows o N. ,Ora O Y conduct a perms of exhaustive first-class runeing condition a . ' touched the lmagijiation of its con - tet e to finally determine what le best 'Don't try' to do-the'inipossible, • or some ,epecifie Wee. The addition s Don't Me with locorhatives. TheNOrman SKIP& temporariee: "She *ca ed in her • titnbers the growth of -a century of Of Ouch elements as.. cakhon men- Don't fail to take an extra tire ot • Th Normans built still larger eraft • British .oak,' and a. fifty-ecle forest ganese, nickel, chromium, tungeten two along, , and in imitation of land warfare, cone was needed for the two thousand and vananium are the discoveries of . Don't disregard local regulations, strizated high "maths" on bow . and well -grown trees - required, for her the chemical laboratory, • These ale- ! even a they seem unreasonable. •stern. Thee° were sturdy square; building, Her cost, with all -equip- ments 'are added for various purposes, Don't neglect to. prepare for rain ench are -hardening, toughening and and cold.• • •• „.• . i.inereaeing the refililtence of the steel. Don't forget safety first last :and Carbon steel used in motorcar' Om- always. NEW CIVIL LORD OF THE ADMIRAL 14)110 LYTTON'S APPOIVITMENT ' IS VERY POPIILA.R. v Ile was Sponsor for, NV -Oman's But- • frage-Bill in the * • Lords. • The 'new Civil Lord a the ,British Admiralty is Lord Lytton, who takeS the plaee of the Duke of Devonshire, , nominated ' GoVertaGeneral of Can- succeiesiea t the Duke of Con- naught, • ,•Inheriting Rhebworth, one .of the. Most megnificea of ancient Enna, .h eetateS, and small revenues ,‘with which to ,pay its up -keep, Lord Lyt- ton became the second sear' when he. ••was fifteen and hadfaicordingato-hik faniily and friendirthe clear 'duty of' Making a rich marriage -to rehabil- • Leah •f,lettetti •structures dor the fighting,' much like •ment was 'MO 00 pounds 0600,000), • and a couple' o hundred shipwrights Mir did the Norman •fieet lack. for tte -stone keep. . • • •picturesqueness. The sides of their • werships were painted' in bands . of blue;arellow, red. and brown, and the sails were striped. with • the stake • ' bright colors. • ' • With •the. Plentagenets. the 'yeesels of war became more business -like and took a year to do the work." First Iron Ship. • But it was mora than thirty years after the Battle of Trafalgar before warship carried if gun firing a heavier projectile than 32 -pounds. . In 1861 Britain's first iron ship, the 11 t Terned Down at Home She &Meccas „ . In Englend niore fortmdable. The •Norman boats. Warrior, of 9,210 tons, was launched•Kathryn M. Stanton. aglim were under fifty tone; while now many in . the Thames. She was plated fez. with the triumph of selling the centri- twei-thirds her length. In the next fugal, gun for • which she stood 'spoil- -were of eighty tons. Each carried ;thirty seamen and an equal. number of two years the Civil War in the sor, to the British Government,. has United States:forced the science . of returned to the United States. 6 The new weapon which she sold* ta, crossbolemen and other _soldiers: In 'the males fore and aft were fighters 132ilding ships of war to an astonish- _ ,e_iet tain . is operated without -armed with spears "long -en -thigh V) leg .growth. The victor a of the Moni powaer and is noiseless - as. well as- epit a man on the Ail* of a Ali) ter over the Merrimac doomed the --/ smokeless. , R hurls mieelles with aiongstdea, , ., .. ., . • ship of oak and brought in the ship deadly aim, the missiles may, be any - Slings and javelins were also used, of iron. Since then there. has been, thing from an egg to a lump of dyna- mite. There is no barrel to the gnu with axes and bills to cut the enemy's •a hali-centuty . of develimment the the and mo be operated by ivy ine rigging at close • grunters. On meet- ' most rapid the shipbuilders of ed man or woman. It is simple ing 'a .hostile.'ship a war vessel . a/1,n.! World have ever seen. The ship of of constructiOn and all of its parts can alongside uncler'the fire of crossbow- I iron has been displaced by the ship "be made.at any machine shop with a , steel. 'Cannon have increased cost of less than one-tenth of the men and volleys of heavy stones, darts i 9f and incendiary projectiles, and then i until the maximum bore . is •fifteen price of a Weapon using exPlosives. ertainly not reach- Mrs. Stanton financed the building of grappled and boarded her. . , „inches. We have c the model and 'personally superintend - The oat -propelled galley disappear- I ad the pitch of -development. Who can ed the making of the gun., The wee - ed about this time. In Edward' M.'s ' say how, much farther it will go? pon was tried oat at Sandy Hook and reign navel „ architecture' had pro- • • ' the officers • present acclaimed. it as -e. the weapon of future. warfare. The gressed to •the "cog," a. veisel of 200 ; • TREE HUNTERS. tOneand more. ' She carried from ; • ' ' ' to 150:seamen, soldier's and arehers. ietaire th-e. "'castles" at 'stein. and Stern . . •• • United States did •not Mire . to 'pur- . •• " •• chess:the invention, so -lair& atauton ft Is a' Profitable Prolessjon and Re- reele to ‘Great•Britain. Thip is itee • quites Training. . . secon'd,invention in a' short time that features of a efeang Greek go, and, times to visiting royalty lisp& enemy until the moment arrived to Rate the *Utility •forttines:a With the • After Lord Stratheona gave it Knebworth. was. leased. at • different . • , an on mast ami p des. fired ehew airows and bolts at the . paying professions. Mahogany erees • While Mrs. Stanton was abroad ner M h h f thebest and later accepted by. Great Britain, wasturned down by the United States thoer4QonTvheya the romantic temPeraMent Of a, poet, in. Ainericans. Mr. Ogden Mills of run alo:ngside and:hoard' her. , deenot grow in clusters, but are Scot: igiluasdbetniddindesie.,dsbuonlionxpoeveee tered through the forests. '•The ma tetdo k sad newe to her. est of trees, and' the hunter, seeking d the t 'd hi the arch- was one. of the hest' matche& in , New York rented it in 3:909. as' a Hurled Stone • M" 'I • 'to him were hushed -on her lips when ISM ea. hogany is One Of the largest arid tall - the English matrimonial Market When country residence for his -daughter, • her sister bro ethe • -, et the age of twentyetwee he married the Cohntess of •Granard. Three years ' 0. the highest' ground, climbs to the top the. Pennileaa Wee ,Fatnela .PloWderi,! ago the' Grand Dpke Mielmel Aleican. be noted. Flame' the casties crude can- l • Of the talleit tree , and siirveys seven ears older than himself the droviteh; the -only brother of the Czar non of hooped. ikon bars hurled stone . al' t II' t' de • eye soon detects the mahogany by its • sa— Lord Lytton is the bent° of hismor- so astoniehed the French fit 'Cressy i Its Form a Mystery, But the Globe as • , d CORE OF THE EARTH..* ' daughter .of a small Official in India. of Rinein, leased - Itliebworth from, projectiles The weapon which , had s . • • . • Lord 4floos. genetic: ,wife and Childr.eri whea he had been adapted to the sea. UNDAY SCHOOL ."INTE1$N4kTIO14AL 1,vssorf ocrotsgu 22; Lesson IY.--rreurs Defense XefOre 11440Pth-Acte g6: Golden Text Acti 29. 119. • the tent Nese 'at ' Verse L Hered'Agrippa.IT Wee ill0 . 'mt. of the Ilerods and (Whieh•is sor. ' Pezieres. in' little) the best of them* Ilis title S. 1ORT�Y or ,VICTORIA .,CROSS TirousANI5s or' 'Rural qN ;nix • , BATTLEFIELD. • •ROMark4010 fitory el( the Man With d king recant about as much • •, „ during good. 'behavior. We have fear as, that . "Yen must never suppose that the only deeds of heroism are those that, of nawab or rajah. in Autiat he held it lige:re:4°4re IOnretalltl' NatfewatTtes2t71)71; gklaieQ:ndlr 8:171:484:weut°1113.144ePtnitd°°:'‘4111114r1:1°Ii141471i; A"gripli Apit113Ia•s(A(Uctric2.,11-)*4)h,tlilissorltevr. b";1747eaaroete dth'Irelle4;"'Qt.)frtYlv?'sfeli141.' Stretclted"ferth his . hand -Compare' °Mee "IV, L ,afraid they we inipatient: interruption; Festus Was "Take this .last '0,1. now, ' front, in. I was 'knocked .over in a bit of a PeziOrds, the one' 1 wa's• knecked out Ade IS. 16 and Act& 1. 40. ' 24, Loud voicea-The tone suggesta thin '"nzedneazi." Festus is imMeill- hollow. X was rather dazed at first • Then I heard the order given several, ., times for our chaps to get baek , 4. dal . teeter& Med-e-Perhapit enthuse re to have a theologle iasm Or franaticisin is nearer -the idea ately conscions of rudeness to a man the trench. 1 tam 'a big, -burly,;(110 chap, with a, queerly'bent nose, mvik. whatoteles to adodustlhyoreltspweactsegrapeaatuidorte... ing hack for our trench, It wall: queer to te'ultim striding .back in report Paul's defense is,. of course ha that was turning MS head. Luke's that lei'ItY, hesitating Sort of liv,aY, onlya tiriee *seminar& of ii, spowthiii after the. Bodies, hilt,: Wit •strinit may have lasted an hour; Paul doubt- enough to overeotee the Pressure A ' as. though a stting leen) palling' him lees queted law. and prophets largely other way of diseipline. , to prove his great thesis . This pro- • a . Cowardly B.oches. • ' ' • dixced on Festus the 'impression that paw was "a great man, of iebtors,,, 04 ho'l'ariewhWeansh'Joustswuonntghe edge of ' Infs the qreek -for atitch Iparning literally suggests . f a e i n g the Boches, and I saw round •of the faets is niade.,to Agrippa,: since he, saw, twenty' .qr thirty paces off) 2Q, Paul's. appeal to the. notoriety , Festus wawa newcomer. hi John 18: Two of our men were down, woundecti! 20 Jesus similarly emphasized the pub- and. ,three Boches were prodding at %city of his work. It was he himself .them with their bayonets, meaning,/ who determined' the publicity of his to take them along back, you see, as last act His enemies Wanted to hill hina prisoners. The poor deeils struggled them to do it in the sight of the sun. lip to their feet and fell again They'd . nothing in their hands. The Bodies "in a cornet." (Matt. 26. 5) e he forced and through his great-granchnother PTA the side c'f- were Yelling at them to, get on, and the ill-fated Mariarane, had Maccabean a. s one fell again a Boche Idcked him the head. • 27. Agrippa Wee a professeVjew, withia him that "belieees ell things" angry "At that, my big chap. with the (Cor. 13. 7), and .he gave Agripha twisted nose let out a roar like an blood in. his veins. Paul had that . . Siivinel' be yelled, and he made one bull. 'You dirty German enraetudirtef.7 a seriousness foreign to his bolt of it for those Bodies: Mind,' 28. It ie -very doubtful whether the there were plenty of bullets flying, and there wasn't a sign' pi' 'another • Greek --of this verse . is capable .•of. man c•f ours about then on •his feet. translation.. • The acceptanee of, a -Runt That fellow .fairly • bounded vety slight Change found in one Wiper- over the broken groupd. T,he Boches • tent manuscript, or an•eqetealent con_ ran, too, and, they yelled and sereaM- jecture by Dr. Hart, gives the sense ed like frightened wofnen. • One of adopted in the paraphrasea"thOu per- thein go e clear away;, but. in dark dark suadest thyself, art ,confideat.I' A chap, truck one through the back „ChristianeaThe familiarity of the tern' 'and the other he Ant jumped on, ..7.. -makes sifftuicduYltrifoot'ti ufolertoMarYeal7i-ze What it meant as anew word. "Christ- brought: him down,. and smashed him. man" above attempts to suggest: this. Crawled With Wounded. The Authorized. Version makes Agrip- "The' like got a bit 'hotter, and I . pa speak Seriously•, but the whole sem-, have been bowled , over, I thought. \. saw, no more . Of the dark chap. Must tente is incapable of such. meaning. And I was sorry for that: But five - Paul's iinsWei. alone • is enough to show that the king .was not a hope- again, minutes later the fire slackened ful Convert; , What a different ring and next' thing; I 'Saw was my such a hope Would have 'brought into dark chap 'crawling. past 'the side of . me hole with . one of those wounded bis voice!. . " . • . , • • . .. men of ourb on his back: I thought 29. I would :to God -Literally, that was .pretty. good for. him. ^But"' could pray to God"; but the verbris nat !ten minutes' later hanged if he didn't • the deeper compound that -is used* 0.f e0Me striding past.: Me again; . :fie Christian "prayer. It appears in crawling this time; ' Walking. at . hie Acts 27. 29, and iii the eirsainary weed 'full height, and with a regular swing, for' prayer in 'pagan 'vernacular. If ae' if he'd been. _crossing a -paradi. pa, he would have :used the stronger Paul had cherished. real hope Of Agrip... grounk"instead of a :'.ploughed - -up . Norlifin,'s7Land, with a dropping fire With much (trouble) -With a tithe Of • • . Rescues Settled Man. • • verb and in theindiCative, "I do pray" felling aceeie it. • , .. the encouragement the Old . version of . hAgrippa's remark implied, Pahl Would. other Wounded 'man of ours and fix - "I plainly saw him get hold of that Agrippa s ' sister, - a him across hie back; • but then. ' he ave eagerly pleaded all day, h• .: ' '30: ,Bernic • ' went down on hands and •knees .and ' • . . . started crawling back for the trench:, • You See, he'd go upright biinself, but • preferred to give the other fellow 'a .. .better chance by crawling; .though, • mind you, it's. not easy over ground .' like that. I lay: very low,.partly to escape flee, • and partly"' because I didn't want to attract that dirk . chap's attention, or , I - felt he'd come • out again for .me; and it was hardly :to :be expected he'd.. get • thtough three trips alive." .... • "ZI9Ale FOR YOU, 'ZIR•?" • — . • . • ‘ , . • eendering german. •, .. . . -- - _ • ._ . . . The _•Waiter.like Instinct of a' Mir* , . ....1 trees wi g t, notes the directions ; • • 'thin si ' • a Whole is Rigid. •• ' with some freedom.' ; noted -beauty Who changed huebends was , exiled• from Russia -at the time By the end of the fourteenth een and distances, and then, descendieg, I • The theory that the ctust of the 31. We have to assume that:Luke of his niatriage. The rental was said tory the "cce had ' been relegated heard of this conYersatien- ultimatelY cuts a narrow trail to each tree, earth is only- a few Miles IM thick - to be $22,00c a year for .three years. to the ecrtip heap kir the "great ship" „ peculiar foliage and he' counts the I • hie he'carefully blazes and marks ! ness and rests .upon an antenseay film?. one of the assessare. • • -Grand Duke Michael was permitted -sailoisrairehers and sPeatmen. - - . But as sooh as war broke out • the of 500. tons burden,. tarrying 2801w • II; especially if there is a rival haater in Mated molten interim hi no longer ' .theTov\ifeienllit•ye. ;erg' .(3 mahogany tree - isi It is now known that the earth, as a one 'clay's task for two men. :On ac- ; whole, possesses a high degree of count of the wide spurs which . pre-, effective ' rigidity, as gi•eat, as if it. jeet from the trunk at its base, kid- were composed throughoirt.'of steel. fcildi'must. he erected, and the 'tree It is no; doebt true that the ,interior • to return to his native country and . The hells* were .ornamented with take his laraily with him. 'Sinee then heraldic earyings and • "some had Lord and Lady Lyttou.have been it Purple sails, eAbrbidered in gold and Knebworth themselves,. about ;the emblazoned- with blight colors" only period since their marriage when The method of fighting still re- ' they have Jived there for;any, length inained the samea The long bow and cut off, above the. spurs The hunter Of time.. •• the crosiboa, were the principal ' of the earth is in an intensely- heated •has nothing to do with. the wells of condition ,end- that it appears to pos- . A Graceful Speaker. " I tenable, . Says the. St. -Louis Despatch. arms of . atteck, and the primitive . — - ' cannenewert-usedaidere-fete their de. - • cutting or removing the timber. He 1. Sees some of the qualities of a fluid. Lord Lytton can hardly know much merely' points -out -the ti•ece. and ineyee- the seine -time it behaves -in man - on in search of mere. He is.paid by 'respects as a stake their d tru t* ff • moralizing e eet on the•enemy than • • of naval anatteis, still hie appoint- . • ment to the Admiralty is the meet for . ave results and it is. by no means ..un- I 'Prefeasor Milne concludes from the ,. es c weriess. -, . !minder one by the Coalitiou Cebinet. Growth More Rapid , usual lor a clever hunter to draw' 000. velocities of:seismic waves at differ - As a boy.'St Eton and a young man at - ' , -* for a month's work in the forests.,-.. „ , ent the age of 26 in France before the With the* coming of tne fifteenth -- depths that the materials and - war, •according to the latest complete •COInhriclge he won local •fame in axiiiie . . general character of the crust of the eentury the &meth of the warship be- ' ---`0*-7" statistics. From. the age Of 80 up the 1. teur theatricals. - Later he -traveled .. ' , , ' , i earth that are found at the surface canie. inore rapid. Vessels of • a I Wanted To Know. -.• number of mimarried was about et -anal. , oyet Europe, ,•living long eliough in thciusand tons with.. two nuists were ' A bold, unsiibdued citize went t - liney extend ••: to a death of about ;hilly, :France, and Germany to learn -he .. , hoot% • between the two sexes, With a million, the language and understand the lite not uncommon, Heavy ' cannon of , new boarding home, and ilas thirty miles, but beyond that the a, .,fair_ :.„,eac . - . endure and politics of eech nation: efiat-iron: were mouoted. on the fore : always met his obligation. promptly,! material seems to Merge into considerable number of happy In the .House of Lords he at twenty- and eft "castles" which had now he- . he had become notably outspokenasOn • ly• homogeneous nucleus. This state; ' I probably extends to 'a depth of she- -househelds could have been organized eight was eonsidered the most grace- ecnne. permanent structures wrought • his second -day the hostess asked: I • • • • . . ! out Of • these vast 'tesOurees, ..Mr, WAR MA'I'RIMONIAL AGENCY- Eueene Brieux Proposes Plan •To ." ?eh) French • • A sort of official matrimenial agency is the latest expedient' pi•e- posed by Eugene Brieux of the.French Academy to- relieve the anticipated earth' SI lieshaiuls after. the war. There were .1,87065 Siogie .men and ' 1.664.665 single Women above strongly into the . frameveork of the "Why• don't. 'you say a blessing,. >fr. I. e Brieux' thinks, had there been greeter • ful speaker in the (handier, and (Me aeuretenthe form a .• eprO avhich whose knowled e Of forei hull., • . T•••• Plowden taupe of good family, „, she Was pretty ,nAd. cherininia 'ainbi- . . • . tious•an. orig,na , an • she had 'geed luek to attract. the attention of. •the then 'Marchioness of new the Duchess 9f Rutland, a we- • man, of triaey actomplishmente and sweet disposition, who their, as - itoW, held thedemeeratic idea that a beau', ••-aaa,•.-elatifalatindeettleateelevromenawne-a-pareir •' enough lair any mot:iota. Lady •Graia. • by.was'a member of the "Souls," that •°- Mile coterie t� 'which belonged Miss. Margot Tennant, now Mrs. Aequith, and Arthur Balfoiir and Lord Curzon, - and in "I,ady • sarahhy's airawhig- reale • in Arlinp,•ton street Miss Plowden • wee - • it• mita n • • Itoneymoop Knobwottle •-• • . and' iiady Lytton -spent their tiaRIT-Teen n its • loaned le thein by. :Lord and • -Leda. Stratheonn, who had it On' a lone le tiat, the L'etton family. net havilig ain orarataatiat- 0.4 sy much the sone as it was left, liy Lord. Lyt- '• ton's irendfather, .1'i:cheer& -1,sytton: • ...Mime-, the poet and. novelist, who in - it. treat -bite-motive and, took • • her :name .as Baron Lytton in 1866, i• --4-,z--Ay;llen he wee 'elevated to the peerage., 4. for'. distinguished servictin to the • -iglatS.,. • The estate has been in the Lytton fondly since the time •of William the - Comiueror, 'Edward 'Lytton Dulwer'• e melber, Mias •Lytton, all old lady • as eccentrie aft she Was wonithy, pull. ed dewy thren-fourths Knthworth, • saylog that she couldn't :afford to ; pay for etteh a largo estebliehment. , • N'illortt• is left of It le sufficiently cern- I, wifely; to house,a royal.. family,* • t.. • Golden," He looked over the tal3le • facilities for" bringing eligible partiee e . . . was unusual for a' man of his age. , • W.e also hear for the first thne of differs in 'its physical and ,.possibly 'together.. They shoulcl in' the figure; said gloomily: '"I'd like to know, what Before' he. became One of the prin- • "hand'• cannon," the muskets. and ..pie- ' for?" its chemical constitution from • the . tole; of later- dal& The • little primi- l tire muslcets' popped •side - by •side n a a Oiled sponsors for 'the. Woman •St.if.-- filige Bill in Parliament, he seeped:"... • ed legisletion to suppress the white slave. traffic. Ile wahtea a bill passed to brand' the •conyieted man on the forehead with_ ainstaeop,,,aied ax-eanitinedettnetrriviareeri 'of such 'a measure iiiheh it -was' op- posed • by Lora Chief Jiietice • Alieer stoee •becanse eucia mark would make a man's 'reform an impossibil- ity,; A3 an advociitac. of .Weriain's. Sufa frage:-Leed Byron entirely approved of 'the action of . "his 'sister, Lady • Constance Lattea, who went to. jail s, e i‘egis ere( at their ' outer portion. What the state of this e . resPectiye towe halls. nucleus is mat be a 'matter largely I • -A More significant suggestion, eise - The •Senitible Girl , • • -with' the twang of the bows..'.,A little!' . o conje e • . "Shc'eS Mighty sensible girl,".',. '..knewledge of the . state .' of . mutter t due to • M. Briepx,..is the abolition - of later light cannon. were fired '•through. *, •..... * ..„., • • . ; the marriage contract and •the dower loopholes'in the bulwarks, • - ' TI14 "7 • - • ., when subjected to the.vast pressure • ....gt,45.4,t,Teanirfaaiwafer.- !eve-ge-iiii_ta--o-ra- bre- -either' ifasifird-liii-U litiFdianand le in g afar ice!. • ' . j "Yes, the man she is to Marry fiele-siielLate_ea. aste:_avithi. --ethe great barrier tothe niarria e'of :•._Unddr• the Tudors, waraliips talk- a ' 11"Il'e".e.9434'"411-:11-67111-1-witheut •a ortune. • Some he- nOW er use the money•to. buy some-, a •lieve a romantic period is to set in, Great Harry,- the celebrated vessel ofAdditional evidence that -the earth . King • l•tenry VII., which. cost''$14,060. thing for their hdme instead.". . • - as ie ' vithole is at .least as' rigid 'as e a e• t I • - in -which the dower will get lost in a This and the .Great•11,lichael weae each• the stet:1,1s Semis] d by a t y o t da , me sentiment. • • "And she tholg"the furniture?" - • . • . fi great r o spon anew* ant germ-. "N h t s diamond .ring." '24Q" feet long and 26 feet broad. They . , 1, phenomena alai also by the variation . _... • -could fire a broadaide of eight latge - ef latitude. Shirker. guns each in - addition to so -faller • .. Among ,the officerie who haVe just arrived In England from the, Sonntne bettlefield• Captain 11, told the following story: _ • • • • '• •• . "German morale ? • • Wella I don't • . know: There's a -eaptlin" of the y Se- ----'ai aboard this ship, Who told me • a taipg. that happeeeci to' him alongside* us, at Pozteres. He was - worldng along. a • communication trench with a parte of bombers, when' , he met a regular Procession of Boches, all' holding their hands well up and led by one' who carried an . enormetiii cigar:1:4x Over his head. "The.English officer suspected some sore , of fenl play, of course; The pecies have played so Many.. dirty tricks. But the fellow whipped Oben • x, and phowed-it-ha-poth Ing in it but cigars, and explained as: .. well as he could that it was by wily 1 of heIng*a sort of ' propitiatory •offer- ing, you• . , • "He . wound up by saying: !This *. War . nO.•geod ; no good at all, sir. Plemedilly again Soon, now, sir! • Of• .Course they're fed up; . but taey'vo. got leg inachin'e behind'em yet." - • - - BY AN APE, ordnance. •.•• ••• • • "Basta, Bliggins a motor ear?" , ••• • • . I WHEN 111.TCANEERS * . 'Wirt of President of • France .11hei qe Thomas. tares!. indliaa-Waileahice • e" e "IC!' • 1 a s' eat two-derked -Vieeael, :With 64 motor " f4titai Pointed laWard..• •.. end refused nourishment allee being • • •• • '"But you alwave see arreeted . for breiiking Mildews i•n the • leciloived,..the /tarry Grace h Dienrs eff 's too_ la2 both°. • ' ' T ibl E i s ' • Ileadquarters‘. . ;flay jlthrhig ihe -canimti, the , largeet Wpolindmi, be -1 ' . • . . . ' ' • The linportanee Of the Ciltin,l, dr St. mien of thoyobinot will a wive Lake sides' ciwious batteriea of .ehort, wide -1. ;• • ' - • ' Simply, Awful, '•ieg as was ell ns beautiful 'women in aft and pointing inward '. The letter 1 '' visitor' ut roor'se, you. •eriedahe frotu, the. tart that "t i herh 7 . , • . • • avare-liihriiee--the tineniy• wh-gli7M-Yrortitetni"ortte -e w e •e In % , a na:n , sne i h .iste et the Hand, . on Whose •• • •- ,- .* - .----, • • . • deck had becoine ti battlefield. ". . , . . liorster: thietoWn ef A:barrette ,X ma lie ... Mrs. New Gilt? • Not That Sort, In pe,,a, 000 nr. the most Inteivsi., mouthed cannon, mounted fore and • • • ' • .. . Thoreire. Pateleh• West indiee, ariees 'the Money to live in it themselves,. In. ••••14,-nter1 14 zi.. • It •was ati the Imptistrial • font, and Minister had the baby in his arms. "'What is the namo?" he asIced of the mother. "Josephine Newton." "Joseph E..NeWton, 1 baptize. thee In 'the 'mono' ." "No, no," hurriedly whispered tie mother, • in great alarm; anoit Joseph iR. Newton, Josephine. Nev • • The .Harry Grace a Dien was i'- ' . Mrs, New ,Gilt .011, My' Word, yes; is loeated. ie one, id 'the linest in all ' aren't they. the awful testlyg thingst. tropical America. ° Flinn the days .of toe; itnot thet kind of',11 baby." Wnetoof Clash. "My wife is sanded with a wasting disease." • '• . "Wasting disease?" . "Yes, she hes a had ease of shop- ping habit," tons .gross and had four masts. • So largo was'ahe that many •Oterari Men ,proclicied. She would founder tle first time she was' taken into the open Ate huitie. The groat 'ruder ships proved very seftWorthy, however, but net over fast. By the Hine Of (been Elizabeth the days of .boarding were poet an enth The ittnnan had been improved tintil they Were ableto rend the enemy's masts'ydirds and hull. The gtins of lergest else wore eight' feet long •tind' 8% inehes bore, and could Amid their projectiles a mile. Eiteli my - vied from 40 to 60 be -11.306• catmon, the broedside reaching as..nroch as • - the 'buccaneers its . stretegic advent- , , All the Comforts. ;I age has been %tallied, for when tho .Deatrice (after dinner at the Adel- Spanish Maiii"Was the happy hunt- phia)-0h, I feel like crying!ing • ground of the gentlemen of, the Sames-Well, there is a ballroom' bitick ling this turbotwas: their head - here, , In moderh, Greek marriage cere- mony two rings are used. a gold 'one for •the' bridegroom, and a silver one for tho bride. • Bridea in Greece intik first visit bbe oen Ib .company with her fether, tat. Utott, and, then obtain leave tO .net oUt for tlie elmrelv rinartefe. . • Behind ita the pirate craft found Shelter from the open sea, and were ' well screened froin the sight of passing ships: urttil the no- ment • carne to pounce .down upon them. In More recent :times' it hes played the rnle of safe harbor for the thousands ;of tessels bound•Ironv tu- *'opo to Pimento and ' surrounding josryitorri Vied' yetsae e't ee• , • • • • • : • ; While the President of Frahee and Mite. Poincare were Inking an after- dinner str 01 in the ard n f the Elysees recently, -the President Was aunyroncd--tv-redd-'gayWd-cta-et'aftWitt that had jilst come from the froat He had hardly reached his study Wheri he heard screama from the ard n d rushing hack, the Prellident learned - from Mrs. Poincaro that the moment he left her she had been attacked by a "strange being."• • 'While an inquiry was being made Dr. Henri de Rithsehild, who Wes:- n few doors away front the Elyeeett, At - rived on the Aeon° and explained that an ape which had been tient to lind acipedefrom eage and had been Seen climbing oyer scov'eral gar- den, villa the direction of ths pilysees. t. The ape was 'found. in a tree, but it' was not until a Hindu attendant had been Summoned that the animal Could be. Inducted to come down. • .a' ••• • New Gerrnab_Horror • . The Germane have..found 7a. new " horror fee use on the Buseitue front. It is a 00180nOne gas,' quite Invisible, whieli. gives warning of ite presence 35 .• enlaaha•-e-eteklea..-andeeseetee*traihrfe sinelh Another new WeePon am- • plOye'd •on the, eastern trent-is a still.; pie magezhie ..attathitieet fee •the ' rifle., by meting of Whieli twenty-1Iva bulletii chit be fired Without- reeload-' ins, . Thso tite-weapons ..'that the allies will flottia bo able to counter:. The gite•tuced bf our blazes lit ierarieet' Is. very much more effeetive. than 'that • *vied by. the 'Cleeniens„.. as '..Prisoiterif iinve-ndmitted, : • • Th . I1e--41.1131 Made the. • bridestnaids, look so•lieppyl • ' She -They.. had each refused the,: grodrii. -7- Thine ista speedlifnit of twenty-11Wa miles per hour formotor-cars at tha ' Froth, in Prance. *