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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-12-21, Page 6• 44 ••••,••••• • /0 • OP • ,1116. " .4.....•••••444,444.•••••• 4.444,4444.4< a GiillOFFS EGYPT'S FUTURE SAYS THE VOHNTRY'S PROS.. ow. THE isfAlniCOP Tau i$W4sT. laigillity•of Germano to Underatand Nealtimg Ot There is sonlething almeet pathetic' about the vain reeehings of the Gera mane for Matra sympathy, says the NeW York Tribune, They Malaita PECTS ARE m neatrele, the' neutral Alps and tire Keep Year TOolo in the Car. and the farina and tire' tape they ',deflate ink righte and then "It isi poor praetice to leave the gars repairs. The Use* Of the others are ,, . in their deeire for neutral approvals . The Sultan Is Pleased With Protee- they buy newspapers', an neutral,capt. Aria:Ian jo 4gainst Any Reprisals age Without your full equipment of Olivia:ie. tale and eagerly reprint the continent:I a • toois in your ear," say on experienced "The entire assortment : can. be . ,inoteriet. "It ie always when .you ere 'bought or alitaut two 'killers," . ,tion Afforded hy Great aPpearing In the purchased. columns. • . . Eagle Against Proved ' sser,. Imiet prepared 'that the anforeteen ' Britain. Thinf it le that for the latest Belgian Man, Crilelties; . , PRISON C GrthIAIi BRITISH SYSTEMS R AN COMPARED, . • .0 ' outrage Berlin finds warrant in the Wrench or *jeek that you left Olt Your , Use Inergena7 Brake. When it Can he 'truthfully fed4 that garage bozo. maY cause you a great "Every Monday morning we read of in England the interned Gentian pries deal of ineonvenienee, and Possibly a Raton-S*1W aceidenta that have aoez; oilers of war are being treated aa, walk to town. Year car' comes to carted "the preaioas two days, .avith guests, eyen if -unwelcome OAS, sad, you completely' equipped and with a various calleeli assigned to ' every that on the contrary' the Britipli and Betsef tools with which emu ordinary smash-up," Wye .an old Mototist. Allied prisoner* in Germflny are repair inay be made. The point to "F -our months ago I started‘ an in- being rated as ;alloy •slaves, contrast bear be nund is to keep these to ether Yestigatiop, - to 'determine if possible, can go no further, 01We tho•Philadel- eur or an where Yea ean, find e One Particular cause,. if such ex- image Egypt. The Sultan is a Man nhia Ledger. The world, indeed, le them. isted; for the 'Majority of seeidente, f , - .. .... harm- ders children were slain and w e just beginning to realize that the Ger- "If "It one is going to talt.4'1, long trip As a result 1.1earned that the great* ti) Magn"le Persar litY-alla 84..violated, cities were clesstro and man sYstem of Working ite 2.090,000 it would be Well to Provide oneself number of accidents can he laid (wed, _ag converrtionalast, d his "ideas. ThrOugebout hie fife -he ie. eilleerati9 .11 homes 'ruined, and then t gerefilin Prieonerir of war le a return to cOndi- with a few extra aceeeeoriee which, IY to lack of use of the -einergencI mpreondturicelse,:s; eihedoeLes-pBorcuasseisof stodocu.thine gig analogies of which aaat may while they ' de not fain tae part a brae the reason heltg that the large 66 years 0ld7he has been a- stunt olf de - any te051 equipment, eart ha' readily majority Of drivers lIgia•thelr bilk() 80 progress add has•a Prefeann KII-.QW ' feed his course to Justify not merely Picked up in a moment at any auto. seldom that, when the real emergemeY en" a many aubi"ts' his offences, against Belgian neutral-. Mobile supply store in the city trial arisen all•they do is to hang on to the •Rig '11$0hess exP,reseed .satisfac- are often convenient to. have with steering *heel for dear life and Push ti°4 wIth the *greet' made thea far you on the road.. Them ere oria -or both: feet" with all their might, the. ea' i'agattla. the change In 'Ideas and t‘vo tire sleeves; or blowout patches, bend brake being forgotten. • sentiments of the people since his a grease gun, two rolls of 'wire talie, "Years age I crashed into a stone •asPenalan and addedat there was al. ever-growing feeling of,.. PoPlideuees.:nseny. a Anel damnation oModern Ger- many is one thing about Which extra light 'bulbs, at ball of heavy wall ancl after the collielon /Mind that . a . twine, all extra. oil can for use in, in,. there is no argument In America. *Jecting gegoline a can of grease, It is brie phase of the war which is . gallon ealt of cylinder oil, and a tight- settled, not for the duratien. of the lac eorked paint can filled with war, but for the 'lifetime ef men and line. 'Even if YeUr ear deee women now alive., We are minds happans, and• the•absenee`Of an .end '41 have groat hopes for. Egypt. 4 'believe that 'Under tbe, protection • of. ,Enialantis the greatest of liberal pow- ersi the future of Egypt is. assured."' It was his Highness, liussein Kaxnij.. the %ow Sultan of Bgypt, speahhtg.'. The. Occasion, waS an angelic() aceorded. to. •TePreilentsia Oa% of the A[Seociated WOOS in •Aleita comment of Copenhagen and StoeU- blaril TieWSPoPers, And yet the most astonishing thing ablaut the whole war is the toineilete inability,Of the German to underetand the rot of thelworld, Ile eent.his troops into Beigiuni; ho permitted, he commanded' them to Murder, burn, rape; under • his or - be found in past savagery or in the historic isemi,eivilizatione of the Orient refined on the macho but in- ity, but •his offences in Belgium 'humanly. cruel throughout. In conae- against all humanity. quence Dortar Curtin, the American And from Alio outset of the ' war correspondent, of the leaden Times', the Belgian episode has endured es' WII0 has recently returned from Ger- -meny arid is givipg thistannier tho benefit of hie time study of German social anti inclastrial conditioas during the war, Is doing humanity a publics service in paintipg things just as they are. .Vp to date Germeny has been more than an adept in keeping the truth hidden from the world at large, but the manner' in „which, ibis new form of obligated slavery is carried on in her prison camps ce.nnot forever remain unknown, and any light at thisjancture welcome. . Noble British ,Tradition, As for the British side of the hal- amp sheet, roost people sicanot km* that, partly from' humane reasonis and - partly from the. pressure of the trade anions, England is not working and cannot work the prisenets el war in her mines and factories and her swamps and fields, as is done in Ger- many. Moreover, not only has the American Embassy in London reiort- ed officially on the British . prima' camps and given them a good recom- mendation, but tae attitude of the press of Great Britain is against' any repileals even against ' proved Ger- man cruelties. A typical ;editorial runs as follows: , "Compassionatd treatment of pris- oners of war ha's for centuries been a in attempting. to avert the •accadent , heel done nothing but jam on the foot brakes/. VroM that time, I have used m Great .Brit,ain, , , . . • Cast Lot With, Britain: "When I Was asked to•assuriiesthe ne almost as Much aff the ot or, an '139eitiart. Of Silltan declined. at firsts " if drivers e,ceastom themselves to this continued Ms Highness'. "The situa- method It will become natural to reach tion then was a coMplicated and for the head brake, that when: the difficult one. After careful reflection real' emergency does arrive. they' are decided thrit I could do Egypt a set- fullasprepated. - vice by accepting. Accordingly I east , "There is no other one thing that my lot with Great Britain. I have further toward seri- shaken hands with the British. .1 have >Putt accidents than making. a habit'of pledged my. faith,. and I shill tarry , my agreement to a finish, understand- ing well that it isain the interest or . with. the horrors of this *sir, we are reserve compartment, you will :oca deafened with the chargee and mini- easionally run opt of 'gas,' and that ter charges, but in the matter of Bela extra gallon willatalse you where you glum our • minds remain clear and ed Many a motorist a long:walk. fixed. : .- • • . It is not surPraing that the na- ear). get me more. Its vim has say - "The greats(' 'gun and extra grease thin which murdered Belgian wo- will 'help you out should your um - Veriest ..i.e axle uneicpectedb, run deye the use of the band brake. • • . a. • e. HE SUNDAY SCII0%. INTERN.A:TIONAL-,Lgssp DECENBER , THE R.URAL PROBLEM. . • • Gne of the Chief Reasons Why Boys Leave the Fatima .. Mr.' W. C'. Good,, of •Paris, -Ont, ad- dressed the Empire Club' of Toropto my country, "Such feeling of resentment as there may have been," said the. Sul- tan, .admittipg that there had been eome hostility to ih.e ptotectorate, 'was among that .'elass of people whose religious conception had been recentlY. all a practical farmer and reildered: faulty arid wile had arrived Leasoa XIII, a "Unto. Us A SonIeGiven also a student of the economic proli- at a certain fanaticism' en,tirely for- • .9, Golden • lents underlying agricelture 'in s- eign to IslaMisni, which"Germany and -Isa ada. Ile pointed. out that 'agalealture. ether powers had exploited in their • is not merely an occupation which in- own interests." Text-Isa." 9. 6. . , Verse 2. The vision starts from th,e dividuals follow for profit, but it is a Asked to ainPlify his statement re - Prophet's assurance that tbe,aotthern • t raitiohal i ' •attitude great interest, daaermining gardmg the of the people of ' • • - a dominant' vviiy the, ftnNunes of Egypt toward the protectorate, the • ,1 ,kingdom doomeds a , ever, have new heves. for a future thit ation and the opportunities and day, for it is Jehovah's land after .all. character of our population; hence the • The 'assaurance the-MOri'vetrin•-• inaproving of agricalture affects the crr411 in that the prepliet of Israel 'is ethtus Canada, its elltieek and dee- " th "inv 'He made - a .eoliMaaisori lietween Sultan said: ,.Only One Object. ,-"I will go back to. the time of My 'predeeessor and give you . an illus- tratiosi which may help to eaplain a people beloagiag to Istriel, Init con- e .nations, egriculture and manuf.acturing as to this difficult. and delicate port. Tina taininated • by much contact ;with the . profits, showing ;that if five per .cent. der the former Khedive the condition unclean foreigner, He -sees a day,swere allowed. on the melte' invest- of government was such as might' be - when the land which has so, richly ment of the-farmea•s -there would be ; compared to a house with three doors,' • • • t • t a deficitam the year's 'operations a ' These doors were represented by the ese?...ve vy p 15 be, blessed with a great., and sudden al10,000,000,.the value of their an - glory.; We may well doubt whether nual product being estimated at 1,000 t hd a • he knew to wbat his:wOrds peinted. tons. e _ Every true prophet says a great'deal surplus of $26o,000,000 on their year's , or ess Y. , aneaa thamheaa.naa vision (busitiess, in .additeen to the five per were different, and there was not the Englan.d says thats the sun is no Great Britain and relan n so men and children IS nove enslaving Belgian men. It .is not surnriatag that the nation which is responsible for what was done, not ,merely in Louvain, but in all the villages from the frontier to•Dinant, through which the troops passed, should riow,be in- voking the methecis of African shire traders in the congperect reglons. The true meaning of this Belgian episode is that there can be no peace while the spirit which is re- sponsible for it -dominates Germany. Europe cannot • make peace with such statesmansbip of murder as rules in Berlin. s To do this wouJd be to recognize the spirit itself. A native village' might so well make terms with a man-eating tiger which by night preyed .upon its children British characteristic. At the best the could Franca, for example, make peace with a neighboring Germany in its present mood. .t THE SUN NOT A' BALL OF FIRE. ; Scieptist Modipes ' Conception, of Source of Sun Heat. .Egyptian Government, by the Khedive and hy. the British agency. Each of - In a panel' On "The Utilization of Solar Energy," in the Smithsonian formed in the right spirit by the coin- ehese three farces was 'working more • • • • Th interests Report, E Ackerman Of mapdants of the internment cane'ps in FIVE ROSES ILHOUR /Broads Cakes-Puddi 4s-Postries VOVR puddings are pelat-, 11 able, why use Five Roses ? • Simply because you w a n t' thein more Poreuat more cligesigle. riveAoSe* pudditiVit digest .uncoagitilto6,--7 every spoonful is a tasty . source of vitality, .1.11.<44041.144. Op •DIGICITION Mother fligere Byrne correct& lied' ettemietes". Itee•Yeer digeleLl* bellal.rilines. *ode_ , the eldest etroetathe see bettethes the eF Omen. weleleorlsetionefelletesurie, ' • ors certain 11111 WEARS TNESTANDARD REMEDY. ,SEIG SYRUP, FORMOTHEF , FDR' STOMACH: AND ,I.IVER TROUBIA mg • Ile ell Dtheekte or etreet oe eeeeletoeferlee, ISO% end $1.00. 'Otehaeie boatel eilecalto. tereeerettet as • touch es the eteeller. ' A J WHITS vo. Luang), woe attest wine saoetreet " . • , THE LOWER' DANUBE. Beautiful River „Mighty Barrier Be., tween N'ations. "Fighting the Dobruja". would •mean more to most of uti if we had a more definite mental picture of the lower part ef the Danube River. For a good part of its course below Bel- grade it forms the boundary line be- tween kingdoms, It washes the shores of five eountries-HungarYi Serbia,,Rumisaraa, Bulgaria and Russia, a-beCaurie its waters onstitute a na- tural barrier. Its wide channel and difficult banks have again and again neade it impossible to mations at :war. At Cetnavoda, Where stands the only bridge below Belgrade, both shores belong to Rumania s 'fitit . one. the bridge is rendered useless the river becomes as baffling a Military pro- blem as it was Old. • At Cernaissda the river flows in two channels, one eight hundred and fifty y:ards Wide, the othert live hundred; Between, theiri lie eight miles of, swamp, with here and there a village on an ,oasie of solid ground. It is no weritteratlytt, 'although General Mack- ensan• penetratediato the Dobruja, he did not succeed in getting his army across the river. • But although the Danube hale always acted as a mighty battier betoken na- tions, it has; of course served \ to unite them in the irresistible ties of com- merce. • Up and down that highway, from the Black Sea to Bavaria, the nations of Europe have sent their trade in ever-increasing volume. : The Mouth • of the Danube be a- delta, a marshy area a thousand square miles 'break of the war, the word in every M extent, and the aleepeSt of the three eprincipai-lehatmehe-the-Sulina,--was one's Month was "siegen" (conquer), When 1 revisited the country, after • originally at few points more than two years, another word Was being nine feet in depth. To that miser; meed,"durchhartee (stick it out). able channel, twisting inland through think the second Motto is 'spoken with wreck -strewn sand bankt from an more heart than the first, for there Open seaboard, were coining by the , , were many in the empire Who opposed .middle of the nineteenth century tad - war of conquest,. but now that con- ing vessel e the rate of two th,ou- a est has been abfindoued for exist - sand a year. - ven in the best wea- enee, and the life'of the nation is at _thee, three fourths of them were oblig- ' stake, all feel the need of endurance : ed to land most of their cargoes from , heavy upon them. . Their work lies • lighters. plain .before them, and they do not Such was the state of things in 1856,' count the costs, for they keel that no when the powers met in Paris to set-. price is too high to pay for' national tle the map of Europe after -the' entity, and Unit is what thel Getmanat Crimean War. One of the b,est pro - believe they are fighting for. That is visions of the treaty semi the one that why their etrength is renewed after organized the Etiropeap Commissioa • renae., each reverse that is. why there is no of the --Daipube, composed of condition of prismaers‘of war is a hard one, and it is the duty of a civilized State mini* itself Christian to miti- gate their irkspme lot by every means in its power. . Whatever the enemy, rimy do or not do, it is not for up to imitate his bad example. Let it sul- fide that our owe duty is plain. We - rejoice that that duty is being per - sone ;from 0_ vivid mese,: Of doe's en . on c i • • e" co-operation theis-shouldArave-bee. ' tine the'y are Maintaining a noble neelpegee eege-reed tee a monstrous ball ac deepest truth and the '''ulfillment is Melded. one of the -chief reasons why •' - ' I British tradition of which we have a always vaster than the anticipation. rboya lea-Ye:the farm. Yet agriculture • Darkness-DesCribed in the last. verse is the most important industry which , of chapter 8'; . , Shadow of death- ' contribute i to ruall'S- welfare, besides Compare Pea, 23. 4. . -. : ' ." --` ' theitig the elle which :supplies leaders 9. The Hebrew for "not"'and for in all ,otheriines of life; thy life in a ;"to., it" (its) is pronounced:iii -the same 'few years *Mid become extinct With - way, and there. is sometimes a •confus-: out the constant stream . from the ion in copying. •. -Hence the; blunder I eciPuttk• The seed -bag .of the whole recorded in the margin'. . - . • . population hi the. rural life -including 4." Three typical Signs of slavery- I tarmiOgr lumbering and raining-bes. the yoke from which the burden Irting, I eau" these occupations have a men- the long pole. across one shoulder. at 61301Y- of fresh air and [sunshine, and the me& of *high, two leads were slung', the farm affords the very best pppor- (aa used by coolies in India), and the thrifty for an abundant supply of good stick with the slave was beaten- • feed, In the life of the growing gen- 1, three things are of su- ' The day of Miaian--Gideen's, great de- etatiml-th6e liverance was PaturallY remembered Preme importance. Again, agricul- tor ages- after-an:the type of completeljtpte, as an industry might - be called and final ;victory, . . 'domestic -the entire family co-operat- 5. . Armor -Representing the pos-. in g in:carrying on the, work; little sibility.of future war, as the garments ; children having cipportunity to assist rolled in blood represent the memory: pareets,. and through these operations . of War in the past. All suchis to be learning how to do things and shOW to Wetted out in the happy future - alas!: think, thus establishing right habits of life. In these respects'farining con- withA Whet a fan' 't has proved to be; but pod " isand years are as one ' trasts sharply with city life. Again, day, and yen to -day we knew he will farm work is seasonal, and the farm - yet fulfill the prophet's dream. ier must work with Nature, and be ' fi, Who is :this wondrous child? , governed 'largely by weather candi- There seems no escape fronti the con- tions, hence' his , work is very „varied, ,eititiois that he is a supernatural be- i and cells for an unusual degree of ingin,the prophet's thought, however adaptability, initiative and ;resource- littik Ile may have realized the full fulness. It thus contrasts with rou- impleations of such an idea. It is tine work in the city. Country life , olu ely imponable tn. attach to any is also quiet, and promotes continuity abs ' t • <.* • I o . re, a a.e p As a result the people never 'knew hundred thousand ‘degrees ' bend- eLbuLv through whichofthese doors they grade, fcir,, great as is its, mass, ° it weee being'led. Now the theee forces i' would , he gomparatively rapidly eon- have'amalgamated arid their interests ef ' such comhustien were tak- are one -namely, to work for the good "'fled i Merely"- human child the names that of thought and strength a eharpeter. of Egypt." ; ing place. The temperature of the surface of- the sari has bfar too een deter- in,.Hustein Kamti is a great believer mine as about, . , . . education as a means of establish- ; high to permit the formation of most Germany does, since over there when ;mg good government and prosperity. chemical comPounds, without which the British, sent seine prisoners of One of his most studking declarations the. production of heat by combustion war to France, where they are being is impossible. Such a temperature used as workers, • but not under the was that he was an earnest advocate of education for Egyptian, women. right to be proed." , ' • A Kind. Of Siberian Exile. Indeed, the chirge-has even been made in. England that same of the prisoners of war 'were- Pampered,. which again is in contrast, tot what decomposes "'nearly.. all compounds conditions obtaining in Germany, the German authorities, though they had . into their elements and prevents tbeia MANNERISMS IN PARLIAMENT. TO Ile . d _ been working the British prisoners reuniting and the consequent p .. • — ' ' • ' tion of heat ' ' since the beginning of the war,- con - Asquith Graceful, Balfour .Awkward, • Mr. Ackerman sa'' ' ys • that scientists sidered the act optrageous, and as a Birrell a Hand -rubber. 4 are by •no means certain how the warning and= reprisal shipped a large group -of, ptisoilees into service __Mr: 3A4a,_014.01.P. sun's heat is produced; one theory • . . betiethateitels direatoarsidasaactreity exil had 20 years' :eicp'eriexce in the Britieh House of, Commons,. wrating :about - and another that the energy to keel; Under the circumstances One can well up the radiation could be supplied .by believe that German prisoners .of the • "Mannerisnee in Parliament," says: .. a relatively .inicroseopid contraption French' or English. write home that "Mr. Asquith °and •Mr. Redmond are 'of its volume, but this theory is- • not that ,camps are palaces," whiie it members very.tgracefill' in their actioneeethey 11 .0110NQUEST • • • IS. AT AN END "STICK IT OUT" IS .,NOW THE, • GERMAN MOTTO.' The Possibility of Women Fighting lea - • s. • mallag'SeilogslY • . • Discussed. • Herbert Bayard Swope, special /staff observer for the New York werldareeently returned from Ger- many, publishes' the following observ.; ations the: World: • , • Seventy million people with their lion people fighting as one. ,Seventy bthrecniks. million people andmot a quitter furlong - ageing the wall. Seventy mil- , • That is onesof the deep impressons r brought back with me from my visit to Germany: That is the reaction the German spirit produced in me. And . that_is NAY I think Abet if peace ha dependent upon a forthright German' defeat, then peace is still .remote, for . a nation unified by such a spirit as I saw in the empire is stip far from be- . • ing 'humbled. • . But beneath all these attributes there is to be seen and felt a certain, , though subtle, change in -the fahric of the Geaman spirit. • Dreams of Conquest Over. When I was in Germany at the outs 0 • ,aparance, Rtassi-aiathought_of_tem orian.a.sthataisaa- reat Prussia; Sardinia and I was told bit many, that before Ger- any, the netion, died, every woman Turkey. That commission, coetinu- would have te be killed. ed ever since by the addition 6f new • • In. entire seriousness, I believe that German the worst came to the , worst the • suit the action to the word, but their as it implies is incredible that any British prison- I necessary, shuaisinsatraichgahntreei dbayndtushttoirntge er in ,Germany who is housed in the ' P and go into the trenches before they . a complete success, . eerman women would arm themselves that the sun It only about 17,000,000 numerous canals, and has deepened years old, or less than the ago of the it as far as Braila; a' hundred miles action' is. not very , marked. When industrial camps could declare that his Would see the victorious armies of the My -Redmond issues a note of warning !accommodations Were _palatial unless', he Stretehes out his right hand and he were unbalanced Arid while it is , inland, to twenty feet. , . , allies march into Berlin. And such a earth. As to the structure of the sun . prospeet is no impossibility -for the • Thus, Europe has recognized' -its Points with his first finger; while Mr. there is also doubt, but the inner-por- : known that officiel 'Germany is still ' - eommon lamest' and its commoril German spirit stops at nothing, and I Asquith rarely gesticulates at all On .tion -may be spoken of popularly as acontemptuously indifferent to the heard such a plan seriously, discussed the other hand; Mr; 13alfout uses his the :nucleus and the outer portion as c.riticisms of outsiders, the week of 'rights in the great witteretray; and the arms' and his handS a great real, and the atmosphete. When. the . outer V' les 't like D t • Curtinal . oc oi • will e ;, t li volume of commerce from the seveni . kingdoms along its 1750 miles has' Ask an Accountin the movements are distinctly awk-, . sta layere • af the atmosphere get rela- ...some day, and in the final reckoning,' ward. - • • g. justified the half, century of internaa! With the German spirit so ob. ' ly- °elm they silik- to a *war': there will be an accounting for all the 1 tiOnal caoperation. • But now aff that. seesed by one idea, there. is Scant ‘ tive c • • "Mr. Augustine Birrel, late Irish level, then place being taken by hot_ !unnecessary tied unprovoked savagery is as' if it, had never been. The cons-. room lair Pothers, but neeertheless tCL layers, thus actuating a. continual of- which any of the eombatents may Chief Secretary, has an extraordin- ' ary way, of tubbing his hands t0 of- The sublime dentral thought- Man, needs, for, his highest welfare, to ' , there is a subsurface mOvement of ' mission vanishes,. the world trade circulation of the sun's atmosahete. be guiltY. • It is unlikely the world vast political 'portent. Her rople stops, and the Danube again resumes' and gether while speaking. I think it is The author states that tha wei h ' .g. t ea has heard the lart of the German in- ' . its, agezold function as a line of.'de-1 seemingly ,have time and inclination an average eubie foot of the surE is • duithrial 'prison, camps. . • fense against the invader. -Youth's only for. the fight they are in. Their • is that the migh y Victor is a child-- get away to the mountain -top due to nervousn'ess, for although one • Govermnent, their mode of life, Companion. his Maker. the Weakness of .God that is stronger .there commune with . Last-. • I of theeablest and beat scholare an the, only one-quarter Of that of an avere than ,Men; • Wonderful counsellor ly,' the continuance of alemeeracy- - " (Matin) -So read -the names are Iiiitely dependent on agriculture The is I House; he is ae shy: and 'flattest as a age cubic foot of the , earth. The : ' fear, not -five. [perpetuation' of A sturdy and ,inde-! schoolgirl' (old style). "Mr. T: P. O'Connor, 'when. making: has b.een concluded that it can still deasity. of the •sun being eca small, ' .7.aa David -$o the "Mighty God," pendent yeomaary is one of the best • the "Father *of °Eternity," is to be 'a .ittarattees We hive:for-the perpetua- • Man after all. There is a similar tion of democracy, which is the only elevation of the Son of David in'Psa. thing that is destined to last; it May phet reached the amazing idea hy a tem of geliernment -which etnitains so , his head and. keeps them there. for . ns seconds bath his voice re•iches I he great gloating aualnee whic strint ng them, It - wan, however, eceatlya there has been brought Bet pa t e very unity of the li • i 11. '1. ' We -may suppose the pro- :have it faults, but it is the. only Sys- ' ..- the sue Presehtee'to as, Veen ("onside loend tiecessary eo give a name to t'a to Ugh Ian Londen a Widespread form natiOn, eagaged upon- the struggle , eontinual dwelling' on the grandeur of within itself a Continuity of life, From The ea" •hi, God's purpose for ethe bouse of David that point -of view, the maintenance of g a.t Pt h ' I then puuhs ,ered ns a flat disk; has the enormau i : new deeartniento and this fdr pur- of insurance' against police Murt for self-preservation, • can 'be founda at the instrurnent Of hit infinite 'coun- an independent and intelligent class in them di.Own°wit,11,1 ;re' antriforce to cline areo of '585;750,00000 ,s4liaee miles, pose"( of putting .averybod'Y. off the fines inflicted on thieves.' The sehenie the certain evidence that when the ' i e , sel for man. • . • ' - , the 'rural "districti is' of vital import- . 'the argument. The action le 'tome - Imes more- forcible than graceful ' . each Square 'foot of which emits the scent. was described as the "tank" was discovered by Mt. Cecil Chap- time shall collie, this unity shall be . teenier 16 a u u 1 , e .. m , h ow Brid in i t ' used for their own ur -f • ) -Lass...a* .. - -- !.ance to any conntry. Canada especial- ' "Sir Edward Grey had a .1 • ---c peeu laiaalisr.,; ._ e power ai tl - ' ' id, ie radiant energy he new armored a, co Eloquence, when an t e T er ge . ag s rate, p poses or the .E us • mo nt of abe t 2 50(1 de artment." Ae n receive( On t 6 ,sui face cf the earth went out as tanks,and the mime took ' 'tentative that "it t .cars went out, they who told a London Daily Mail repre. establistinent of 4 truly • liber • ly needs stron a rim r i - • g g c ltu al ntereste aia arises arm., the ernmentan which each shall govern . al Gov - habit when addeeseing the Hause• of • 'a i . ' h .• . • ' • qUA1NT OLD SI.TPERSTITaONS. I as' well as be governed. 1 in order to maintalp its financial cu eleatli, reaeine: his leek- band to hie ' at noon an a dear day is 'about 5",000 the fancy Of the "Temmies" and o prosperity which had been apparent what may he called a big speech, Why They Are Called "Tanlia:".. • The origin of ' the word tank is itself intereeting enough. When the • THIEVES' INSURANCE their rules of conduct, they ere eon - tent at this time to leave to •the •few who rule. Leto an accounting • will be asked, but now they are a arguinerit is reaciang its climax he • a ears London Members a Underworld Or -1 do, nett as they tell themselves they content to • do as they are, told to popularly supposed, making it a .hope- was fleet undertaken the 'utmost se- '4- ftil future ior eltiazers of solar energy. crew/ was enjoined on the officers con- • a • tought to do. raises ,both arms at full length above • 'e ganize Fund to Pay Fines uses'his arms a goof!. deal.- When his all the time instead of cooler as is construction of these armored continue -to contract, getting hotter • • de. and progress •Mr.• Good quoted Timber to be 'Cut in dlaane of- the head and reeking scratching move- . • • -expert. eltowing that the burden of Phort intervals." • IF 4 . The Germans have Met. the test 0 • • • frent 'Sir George 'Phial,. the financial aliorse-posser eer acre. •• .ce•earbotle • connected with them. on. the surface •during the last year • • ment with hie middle ,fitigee. ;Thin. he:- • • ' - ' • Moon • • ' a • ' • One of e quern s o aoor-m-p-utt---h:itri•et-on-tht-o.neretons--emst-of " of their right to self-government - or so prompting a great map re , viou•sly honest people to pilfer. " eeleg plenty, theLha•ye suCcumb- : ed to •temptation to take some for ithemselvee. At some docks, ware - 'houses, and otlieillitet the ef011ifed Of pilfeelpg has increased threefold. This heeled --tos what can only be de- scribed eel thieves' insurance societies, In which both honest and diehaneet _mon club together to forma a fund from which the fines inflicted on those' cenvie,ted of thieving are Paid. "They appoint an offioiai called 'the banker, who collects the money, ptid it is his duty, to attend the court and pay the fines. In ono eerie a fevr daYe ago a youth caught stealing had ,ok Mtn a 'card showing subscriptions to, the amount of £2 for use in paying the' -floes of friends fofiiid guilty' of thieving. Ari even stranger case was., that of a peitori &tilled with stectlitig ''s 43d 1 -le itad been entrusted.with 16s. subscribed by friends, to pay. the fine of a pilferer. The fine. was only la, ,fid., mid tho %grater), kept the balance., . . , ' -.stitions, referred 1'; *r by Vitruvius and ways in Canada- which are suflinient I ' " • Liherator ,of Ruidania.• . " Pliny,' was -that -timber -could only -he to deal. with at least- -tWiee, Ai t eee.• ,..„..„.„,e, _ e „se, ee.,eee 1 ea -to advantage at certain phases of throe times, the present output,' *ill - • ''°""' ""'"L'r"''" ''frelaa-e- w-""aat the moon, says the London Chronicle. be enormoile Until the productive statue at Butharest the Rumanians .. In the royel • ordinances of Prato to power of the •eq it ntry is greatly in- I are •dieViaYing their war trePhies, is the conservators of- 'foresta it ' was creased. The . welfare of the Cana-' the national here of our brava - allies. • • directed that oake mhbuld be ',felled ilian .peeple, individeally and eolleet- Bt‘Vr ina 1 rir?8, OP son 'Coto- Walluchitul • dilly' "in the teem of the moon," or ively; depends absolutely on tie rapid aii3ftitili, • 1'6 'mono °f- the' "when the :wind was north." . There • are still eountry folic who hold that a Saturday AIM moon 'or full :moon brings twenty days of Wind or rain a Most of the old weather ohserveria. beets' only to have taken note of what supported a theory; ne"tedera *ea kept *ten it vent wtong. 1, The Benefit, Of the Doubt. increase of the agricultural and min- eral output, ?henceland must be tilted to capacity. • . Less Crime in Scotland; • 'me report on prfsons in Scotland for 1915, just issued, reveals a re- markable deprease, in the' number of erlminals dealt with, the lowest aince • 1860, notevithetanding the fact that -"Volt don't thinic. that money brings tae population of .the country has liappineasI" , • • • - Incretuled since then ,by 4r, Der pent, • "*ett,Thndeerease is attributed elkiefly. "Ilut atilt' You ate after MoneY• the, growth of the temperance move.: 'red; 1.1 seei while I don't thiak nie.nt, inoroaaod facility ter finding 'that brings happineso I% dead sure' employment, and the recent mobilize - that poverty doedn'Vo Icon. ,• province in 1593,,pattly theceigh tho inilitepee of the English iimbassador. at Colietantinople, , Edward Harteilr but quickly rebelledagainst his au-, zeramathe Sultan, and, after two Ove*:. whelming victories in 1595 eririd 1591, freed the Rumanian people for a while filer tile. tiricisli yoke.Ilia embitien led, to assatilts poighberfing pro= vinces, which brought the whole Rott- man race under, ore rule tor the 'first Anil only time hi inodern history, but his career eves ended by an aseassin'a blade in'Sententher, I GOI. • , . - „Le • 'Many a man on the read to fortune daten't. itilOW At what station to get •Off., 1 Him Bit. Boy. -,'"What did you do in tho great war, daddy'0 , rathet-Pr watt orio, of the jurymen at an inquet4 en a Zeppelin e 4%» se.Lptidan; • BYtittaider, • .• ' • . which Bismarck feared to grant be- cause of his belief that they were net -ready/ And the Kaiser ,himself has ap- roved,' Perhaps he has ' read signs of the times; perhaps he is act- nated by,.a finer. motive; but whatever the hireaulse, I was toid in -Berlin by One of the generalastaff that the Em- peror. had said: "MY people have shown that nothing Is beyond them and they shall have as large a shard) as they &mire in the affairs of. theta' Governnielatailase • An Old Whetstone. • A whetstone end an axe, said to be more than 100 years old, were found , 'embedded in the trunk of a tree in Sanditeky, Ohio. The, tree is known to" be 116 years old. Edward Smith foutid the articles in cuttimedown the ' tree. It is believed the treeouce was 'hollow neat the ground and the articles were placed in the interior , ‘for safe -keeping, and that the tree greW tcgother around them. • 4.<