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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-12-9, Page 6GERMAN KINGS ARE ONLY PUPPETS BAVARIAN DIPLOMAT WRITES REMARKABLE BOOB, ' Emperor William Is Supreme and the Empress Is a Fire - Eater. Baron Beyens, Belglen Minister at •Berlin from the end of the Agadir crisis in 1911 until the outbreak of the great war, has written a remarkable book "Germany Before the War" is, we suppose, thus far the only compre- hensive and considered picture that exists of the Germany which, after the failure of •the great Morocco ad- Professor C. A. Wand, the well- venture, set out on the road which known British insect authority, att- ended in the European conflagration: Perhaps the most interesting features of the book are the brilliant sketches of German personalities—from the Emperor and Empress to the bureau- crats of the Wilhelmstrasse and the wirepullers of industry and finance. Most of them are drawn in Berlin, but insects! the other courts are not forgotten, as By its fecundity, its enormous com- a mere instrument, no doubt unaware o1 the real designs concealed at the bottom of the Imperial mind. When he saw where this breakneck policy Was going to carry Germany, he did not resist or protest, but turned all his spite against ,England, who had destroyed all the illusions on which people fed in Berlin by not remaining indifferent and impressive in face of the violation of Belgian neutrality. The philosopher of Hohen-Finow turn- ed into an angry Teuton. All the Prussian brutality in his veins, mixed with his Frankfurt blood, came sud- denly to the surface and the profes- sional calm of the statesman accus- tomed to control his nerves gave way to a dramatic burst of rage. MANKIND AGAINST INSECTS. The Human Race May Be Extermi- nated By Insect hosts. vances the statement that the crucial struggle of humanity will not be that of nations warring for territory which each envies the other, but will be a colossal battle to keep from being driven off the earth itself! And in this battle it will be mankind against may he judged from the following cbarming passage: The new King of Bavaria, who hides a fine and acute intelligence under a battered exterior; the King of Sax - partitive strength—sometimes equiva- lent of what would be, if the insect were as large as a horse, 1,000 horse- power—and in its inextinguishable passionate and concentrated will to • ony, with the loud voice, the noisy live and its enormous adaptability, laugh and the soldierly figure; the the insect kingdom makes the human King of Wurtemberg, most correct of race appear incredibly inefficient. gentlemen; the amiable Grand Duke It is recognized that only by a tire - of Baden, and the other minor gods of the modern Germanic Walhalla are Kai - less, long and costly and dangerous struggle will man he able to retain his dominance and freedom to develop RIGA DEFENDED' BY HUGE MARSH 144 IF' Ati7••{,?tr d: The great .Tirol Marsh is causing tit a Germans great difficulty in their campaign against Riga and restrict. ing them ton comparatively narrow front in attack. SOMEWHERE IN conning -tower and lower steering- gear are connected up, in anticipation of the main w*heel on the bridge being and caseinates filled with shell. Gun- THE work longer shifts the owners of a is by no means the least onerous o NORTHi damaged, The screens round the con- nets' mates are at the height of their coal mine compress air at the surface the duties that fall upon the fleet. SEA n{ng-tower and the control -tops ate busy season, as they screw fuse after of the ground and pipe it through the How excellently that duty has been — rolled up so as not to hinder sight, fuse into the great lyddite shells — workings. discharged we know, for out of the while the range -finder and the vari- which are mostly kept unfused in 'the Among the curious things that one many thousands of voyages that have WHEN WARSHIPS GET ORDER TO ous control instruments in these ship, and only fully prepared when notices on arriving at Moscow is the been made only three have been in- tlte very humble servants of the. I{a{- 1 d t ' entire absence of whips among drivers terrupted by hostile craft—submar- ser, It is vain for them to exchange his world. "CLEAR FOR ACTION: places are prepared for immediate I an action is imminent. And then, as the preparations for of cabs, carriages and all sorts of Ines in every case. with him with a tone of equality, Professor Eaten(' begins his re- use, telegrams which the affectionate markable work,which he calls In Every hatch on forecastle and guar- action are completed, all down the vehicles. There is a law prohibiting Meteoric Rise to Fame. d tight that line a single pendant floats out from thea use I•THE FIELD OF SCIENCE. The swallow has a larger mouth in Proportion to its size than any other bird, The most valuable pearls are round; next come the postsshaped, and, last. IT .IS A YAsT AND UNOS`iENTA, 'PIOUS' BUSINESS. TRANSPORTATION BIG WAR PROBLEM ly, the egg-ehaped, Such n variety of sans are repre- sonted by the occupants of the Philip- pines that they speak thirty-one lan- guages. heal Magnitude Will Be Unrealized To prevent the loss of a loose finger ring there has been patented a guard Until Years After Struggle to be fastened inside it arid engage Is Ended, the knuckle of a wearer. To enable men who smoke to ob- In a general way, every one recog- serve what is going on behind them nizes the magnitude and the impor- an Englishman has patented a pipe Lance of. the transport mirk involved earring small mirrors on the bowl, in the prosecution of the wear, but That it will give more air to a user the vast amount of labor incl expense than the usual type of fan is the claim involved is not likely to be appreciat- of the inventor of a saucer-shaped al- ed fully until' the Government senders fair that has a hole in the centre. its account—which will not be for Sawdust has been found to be a, some years to come, says a =tribe. more effective extinguisher of fire in for to the London Daily Graphic. In burning liquids than sand, as it cuts the South African war the total num- off the supply of oxygen more quickly, ber of ships hired for the transport A new electric fuse plug is equip of men, horses and stores was 007, ped with four wires that can be and the cost of the hiring alone reach - brought into service inrsuccession so ed very nearly fifteen and a quarter that it is useful until all four have million pounds. In the present war been burned out. not only has the number of vessels A well in Pennsylvania that already chartered been enormously higher, but hes been bored to a depth of more the problem •of getting them safely to than 7,000 feet may become the deep- their destination has been far morn est in the world, Germany now hold- acute, Our transports protected them- ing the record with one 7,360 feet selves in the Boer War, because there "— deep, was nothing to attack them; and, al - Magazines and shell -rooms are To cool the air far unifier ground though they have nothing to fear to - opened, and the racks {n the turrets and thereby permit the miners to day on the high seas, their protection e egrams in tv is ter deck is shut own so r use of the second person singular is ! sects and Man," with the following An experiment was once made to The work of organizing and pro- ffer natter of ettiquette. It is in vain statement: "It is fortunate for man What Will Happen When the German splinters of, shell shall not penetrate ship after ship, denoting that each tectin the transport service falls for them to swell and puff themselves I that the insect world is a house di- to mess -deck or cabin, and so en- is cleared .for action and prepared see how fast a bee could fly. The g p Fleet Decides to Face. the ship through fire. Leather for battle. hive was attached to the roof of a upon the Admiralty; and there is danger within the boundaries of their resnec-; vided against itself. Except for this British Navy.a probably no public official whose work tive States, to address abut ant check the human race would be ex- hoses coil their great snaky lengths. train, which attained a speed of has been the subject of a warmer hither and thither across the decks, I FRENCH MORE RESERVED. thirty miles an hour before the bee J speeches to their subjects, and to lend tinct in five or six years.' "Somewhere in the North Sea" our tt,{th brass nozzles ready for hand- was left behind, eulogy in Parliament than Graeme their presence on public occasions. The fecundity of many insects is Fleet is ready—ay, ready! For over ling. They are not turned on, but 1Vr{ter Th{nits War Emphasized Their Thomson, who was appointed D{ree- For German policy they are nothing enormous. Huxley estimated that, twelve months they have waited for Grease` stains can be removed from tor of Transports towards the end of but the instruments of the wishes of mishaps apart, a single green fly the foe who never comes, says Lon- down below the great salt -water Logic and Keenness. kitchen wall paper by covering them last year. His rise to fame may aptly the master who lives at Berlin, would in ten generations produce a ton Answers. pumps are already pulsating as they English people who have lived for with a paste made of pipe clay and be described as meteoric. In the offi- Baron 13eyens describes the effect mass of organic matter equivalent to wait to do. their duty if required. years•in Paris will tell you that since water and allowing it to remain sev- er Bial Navy List for November, 1014, Ile Let us visit them in imagination, The signalmen shift their flag the war began the French have devel- eral hours before removal with a „ the war upqn these potentates: 500,000,000 human beings, or as many and see how a battleship looks when lockers from their exposed position on oped a new temperament. By this' clean brush, was included among the superfntend- Tn the case of some, the war dis- as the whole population of the Chi- ready for its own grim business. the bridge to the comparativelythey penetrationing clerks"; by December he had ec- tnrbed old and comfortable habits. nese Empire! Avast swarm of lo_ First, a string of tiny flags streams mean that they have become ore I To test the of rifle come the junior Civil Assistant Direc- •screened one of the fore part of the served, almost silent, while before shots snow walls six feet six inches for of Transports, and when the next No more travels abroad as long as the Busts 2,000 miles -in extent eros war should last. No more stays in Red Sea in 1889, and eight years pre - watering places, nor even hunting viously 1,300 tons of locust eggs were trips. The war exposed almost all of destroyed in Cyprus alone. them to cruel sorrows. All of them, But that is not all. The 'United however, with the help of discipline or States suffers damage annually to the an outburst of sincere patriotism, extent 6f $40,000,000 owing to the de - thought it necessary to greet the war predations of the Hessian fly; the of the ships have given the necessary with enthusiasm. The King of Ba- cotton boll weevil causes an annual orders—the quartermasters give the nee scary varia and the King of Saxony deliv- loss of $30,000,000, and the coddling on with all the of their seal- . speeches just as bellicose as moth $15,000,000. Add to this the strengthened ongs mighte slogan shat those of the Emperor. All the mon- damage done by gypsy and brown- will set every lungs tingling with ext archa ]fastened to howl with the tail moths and the San Jose scale, to wolves. out from the admiral's masthead. It stays there a moment, until every other ship in that vast line of vessels is showing similar bunting, and then trails down to the bridge once more, And before the flags have touched the deck—almost before the captains The Kaiser and England. Of the Emperor himself Baron Bey - ens gives an account not greatly dif- ferent front those of other well-in- formed observers. He describes as follows the Emperor's final, but un- fortunate, approaches to Great Bri- tain: IIe had reckoned to high the sa- to be receive tations. coir faire of his new s ambassador, It is quite a common occurrence for The sailors who form the upper repair to their appointed stations for gether; Paris quickly recovered, and Prince Lichnoesslcy—popular in high a South African locust swarm to have I deck complement of the ship repair to •action. then the true French nature showed London society—tie well as the in- a frontage of fifteen to twenty miles that deck, the bridges,and the boat- Down in the bowels of the ship the .itself. The French people found fluetfce of the friends whom Germany and a length of sixty to seventy deck. They lower the davits for the stokers on watch close down all water- themselves with a tremendous affair possessed inside the Asquith Cabinet miles! The sky is blackened and the boats into crutches made for their tight doors and hatches, shuttington hand, they began to think quickly —the Milanese the Burnses, and the sun almost blotted out. As the swarm reception on the ship's tide; they re- themselves—save for telephone and how they were to do it, and they set IIarcourts. The language of the Ger- passes they devour practically every move every pane of window -glass furnace signals—completely off from about doing it. They said, "Let us mar.•ophil organs of the English press living leaf. The veldt is stripped of from the chart -houses and bridges; the world above as far as communica- ii1S( helped to deceive him about the grass and every winter crop cut down; they strip the canvas weather -screens tions and chances of escape in battle true sentiments of the English people' trees are broken by the sleeping lo- from the stanchions that usually hold are concerned. And then, even as the last piece of loose gear are being stowed away, the bo'sun's mate pipes once more: "Prepare ship for battle!" Protected by Cables. say nothing of a host of minor pests; and the total assumes alarming pro- portions. They (insects) annually con citement: "Clear ship for action!" Every man to his post. Ever. single solitary soul on board, upper deck; a place of danger truly, they were ebullient and eloquent in thick were erected in Aurillac, month's list was issued he appeared but the only place from which sig- their own delightful language. One France. Rifles were fired at a dis- at the head of the department. The pals can be quickly seen and as quick- wonders just how far the English tance of fifty-five yards. In each case Director of Transports is only 40 ly answered. The wireless operators resident in Paris is right when he the ball was stopped at a penetrationof rig up their short -distance apparatus r years tie onsi He is, of course,viinin no says this, says a miter in ` T. P. s i of five and a half feet. way responsible for providing con - behind the armor of the after -turret's Weekly." The French people are the! The fruit of the nnganu-tree of voy, though he must keep the Admir- working chamber. I keenest thinkers, the most logical South Africa yields a strong intoxicat- alty informed as to what may be re - The carpenters, assisted by cooks, . folk in the whole world, They have ing drink. EIephants are said to be quired in that direction by the move - writers, and stewards, make their sentiment, but they have never had , very fond of it, becoming quite tipsy, ments of Government shipping. In the way round the ship below decks, shut- much of the other thing, sentimental-! staggering about, playing antics, words of the late Sir R. Vesey Ham{1- ting down every iron deadlight in the it-. They have a habit of going di- 'screaming so as.to be heard for a ton, he is responsible under the ship, and rendering mess -decks verit- pertly to the point, of seeing what ismile, and sometimes having tre- Forth Sea Lord, "for providing con - able death traps with their darkness. ; before them, of exactly measuring the mendous fights. Every door is closed and quickly • effort they need to make, and then of tested for water -tightness; every going through with it in a business- 0' ( t) 11 some an hatch is screwed down into its seat-1like fashion: WINDSOR'S WOMAN CITY CLERK amount of produce that sets calcula- from the captain down to the latest- ing as tautly as possible. When the Germans descended on _ tion at defiance; and, indeed, if an tip- joined second-class boy, knows exactly Sick -berth stewards flit from tur- Northern France it is possible that proximation could be made to the where to go as soon as the words ret to turret with First Aid bags, in the nation was, for a moment, struck, bliss Martha A. Dickenson Fills Posi- quantity thus destroyed the world reach his ears. In less time than {t the use of which at least three mem- i as we might say, "all of a heap." tion in Ontario City. would remain skeptical of the results takes to read these words the whole hers of each turret's crew are skill- I The thing was unexpected and cotes- , considering it too marvelous of the ship's companies are at their ed. Bandsmen get doom the stretch- sal, and the shock was great, but the d as truth. era from the racks overhead, and French quickly pulled themselves to- towerds England's chief naval and - dusts, and even -washing hung out to them in place all round the shelter c,nnnureiel rival. I dry has been devoured. Trains are decks. Less s familiar is the account of the stopped and horses, as a rule, refuseThe boats, with the exception of a Guinan Empress: to face a swarm. In one winter alone couple of cutters, are lowered to the A n.istrese of her household she the locust damage in South Africa decks, with and then has much to ,lo. It is her business to was estimated at $6,000,000. dsecks, filledwidh canvas to water, and spills - The still the little storms which arise in T' cables—all except just a few court, to reconcile the Crown Prince THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY. ters from flying from them, should a shackles for immediate use—are shell strike them. The great derrick brought up from the great chain with his father after every new ow- —' that hoists the steamboats and g pade of this turbulent heir, or to in- Woman has this in common with duce the Emperor to consent to the angels, that suffering beings belong out of the ship is secured in place as lockers below, and festooned aroundthe inside of the ship's side at the low down as possible, so as to be laces where the armor protection is morganatic marriage of another of especially to her.—Balzac, well out of the way of passing mis- their sons, desperately in love with a The child lives in the future, the sites. Spars and booms and planks thinnest. Great wire hawsers are mere maid of honor. The preparation old man in the past; the wise man ; of wood are passed down into snaked and coiled together into a of Christmas trees in the Potsdam lives in the present,—Thevinot, the stod are either placed behind armor most effective entanglement, and se - of the rococo palace at Potsdam is It is Fear I stand most in fear of, cured to transverse bulkheadslso her great pleasure at the end of the For in sharpness it surmountetli to all out of the way, or else thrown clean that they shall form a protective }overboa year. To make family life in the other accidents.—Montague. 1 rd. shield to the thin plating. royal domains as gemutlich as it is Sweet language will multiply "Way for the Guns!" Bags, racks, and hammock -nettings capable of being mala in the home friends, and afair-speak{ng tongue The anchors are secured more are taken to pieces, and sent below of a small Prussian farmer is her will 'increase kind greetings,—Eccle- tightly into the hawse -pipes; the into some dim recess in the ship's print{pal care. siasticus. cables have extra slips put upon underworld; mess -tables and stools But, according to Baron Beyens, it He that will not reason is a bigot; cables so that, {n the event of one slip disappear, and the sailors have to would be a mistake to regard "this he that cannot reason is a fool; andbeing Bitot away, there will still be take their meals squatting on the mother of a family and this personi- he that dares not reason is a slave: - sufficient restraint upon the cable to bare deck. Rope hawsers are snak- pcatian of Protestantism on the len- Sir W. Drummond. }' ed in and out of the wire shrouds of ¢vial Hoene" as 0 pacifist. Ile re- It is curious to note the old sea- Prevent 3t running out and bringing the masts to prevent the wire -rope pthe ship to anchor, perhaps at a most Tates that during the Agadir crisis the markins of human thought. Eacli •; 'moment. The great capstan flying when cut through by shells; veyance for troops and seamen, navy and army stores, and all persons of the army and navy departments pro- ceeding, on Government service." The Landing at Sutla Bay. The exigencies of the transport ser- vice naturally demand a fairly wide Windsor, Ontario, has the distinc- system of decentralization, and this tion of having the only woman city is met by appointing transport offi- clerk in Canada. Some go even fur- cers at the ports mostly in use, who titer that} that and say she is the only are graded as "principal," "divisional" one in the world, with the sole excep- or "in charge," according to the im- tion of a town in Poland. portance of their appointments. This unique example of feminine Among those places that may be men - endeavor is Martha A. Dickinson. trotted, the transport work at South - She is young in years compared to anipton is superintended by Captain cease all else our whole the incumbents of similar positions William Wrey, `R.N,; at Havre by to else and devotet those Hone elsewhere in Canada, for example, in Captain Sir Malcolm MacGregor, and might g Itiontreal, where a member of the at the•Dardanelles by Commodore R. from Germany. Canadian Senate holds the city clerk- ' F. Phillimore, C.B. The dispatch of hip I Sir Ian Hamilton covering the land - Paris is France much more than London is England, and so, when you are there, you feel yourself in the wider radius of the nation. You know what Paris is saying and doing France Miss Dickinson was engaged in, ing at Suvla Bay illustrated one of newspaper work when she became the difficulties confronting those 00 - assistant city clerk in 1902. For 12 sponsible for local transport work. He years she attended to the details of records that when, all being ready for is saying and doing, because in France the office and gained the confidence of the direct landing of the troops from all roads lead to and from Paris. A City Clerk Lusted so well that in their transports, enemy submarines summer visit to Paris is, therefore, 1914, owing to increasing deafness, he' suddenly appear on the scene, all the extremely educative, for one learns, as asked that she be promoted to the big ships had to be sent back to Mud - much by atmos -here and instinct as responsibility of acting city clerk, and ros (in the island of Lemnos), and by hearing things said, just how she was unanimously chosen by the men, horses, guns and stores had to bo France is thinking and acting in this Council for the office. That Miss sent thence to their landing places in time of cruel ordeal. iler thoughts Dickinson takes her work seriously— mine -sweepers and other vessels of spring quickly into her expression, that is, she recognizes that her posi- shallow draft less susceptible to tor - and you can read them with especial tion ie something more than keeping pedo attack than great liners that sit in the water. ease in the comely face of Paris, al- books—is evidenced in'the fact that though, indeed, the tidings which the she was elected by her Council to French paner•s ale able to give of: the represent Windsor at the recent meet - war, thanks to the energy of the sen- ing of the Ontario Municipal Asso- sor, are not very full. If information elation often goes unnublished for military reasons the effect of it nevertheless circulates about, as news docs, they say, in a desert. Brief Decisions^ ui ica Silence is frequently of unspeaic- Empress, who disliked Herr von Kid- subsiding century reveals some newis unshipped from forward, and lilaced every piece of timber and wood is able value. orlon VVate we, said to him reproach- mystery—we build where monsters inside the fore -screen of the ship; sent down to the coal bunitots to be Aman is also known by the eom- flly, "Are we then always going to used to hide themselves.-Longfellow•fuel if danc1 the loose gear on the forecastle is all used for needs be; , great - petty that keens him. retreat before the French and to Int Asa high -tide wave passion may secured tightly into place on fire fore- est job of all, the topmasts and yards Faith in one's, self will remove up with their impudence?" Crown Prince and Chencelior, The most interesting feature of Ba- ron Beyen's remarks about the Crown Prince is, perhaps, that he by no means exaggerates his importance, and explains that. it is an absurd rills - be the greatest value if it is used just most bulkhead, and the rails which are sent down to the upper deck from mountains of difficulties. to take us over the bar which sopa' prevent men falling over the side on aloft and securely housed there. It takes a real man to stick to rates the lower from the higher level , It is a terrible job, this striking of a task he is not stuck on. of spiritual eontluct.—'Ibarlceray. I ordinary occasions are lowered flat. I masts andyards. Sailors swing out ie Then the great guns in the fore- Sonne men are never too busy to Device to Save Wasted Time. most turret sweep slowly round until perilously on what appear to be mere go looping for trouble, they point as far aft as they will bear, cobwebs of rope, and unshackle stays Place a high value on yourself and A new device ln•ought out by an so that it can be ascertained that and lifts as fast as possible, securing then prove you are worth it. Englishman, puts an end to waste o1' there is neighing to get in the way of lowering lines --three-inch wire haw- A coat of arms is no good for eon - time in using t tc telephone. 1 h , 1 — places,Bea ing defects in your. Recently the Mayor of Windsor wrote of her as follows: "During her depended upon its being accomplished tern of service • Miss Dickinson has with the least possible loss of time; secured a thorough grasp of muff{- and it is enough to know that the cipal affairs, and has developed re- manner in which it was accomplished markable ability in handling the work won front Sir Ian Hamilton his "ad - of the office. For a number of years miration for the cool courage and nn - she has been assuming more and more failing efficiency with which the Royal of the work, and last spring, when she Navy, the beach personnel, the. ongi- was compelled to assume the full nets and the administrative person - management on account of the long eel" carried out their arduous duties, illness of the city clerk, she did it in The duties qnd responsibilities of the navy do not and until the last man, motorcar, mule, horse, camel, gun, box of ammunition, case of provisions, or what not has been safely put ashore, It involves the use of der- ricks, steamboats, rowing boats, The Navy's Duty. What this change meant to the local transport officers is obvious enough, for the success of the landing such a manner that there was not a hitch," His Choice. "I was counsel for the girl in a case barges, rafts, extemporized piers, mid once," skid the barrister, "and I a hunired and one incidentals; and take to suppose that the Kaiser, who"i The in- tiers m then lacca and then coin- 1 character thought we had a good case. One of all the time the navy has to guard the has fur too high a sense of his own vent{on is called an amplifier, and then fire on any boating. Tne s routs ing down through a hundred feet of W, r_ the strongest points was the ardent seaward s{de of things, It is n vast importance;' is jealous of him, can be connected with the receiver by of the foretopmast are slipped far- space perched precariously astride wooing of the defendant. We atipu-,and unostentatious business, whose Baron Beyens draws with a firm button. I3 this simple ar- ward, and special stays set up to the kicking,their Respective Regiments, latecl at least 1,244 kisses he had history will tat be wnitten, {f it is y pressing a y p hold the mast:, The Brent wire ropes jumping yard, or to the portraits of Herr von Beth- rangetncrit one does not have to wait used as swifters for the rigging are mast, Pat and Sandy were discussing the planted upon the fair one's ruby lips. written at all, until thr. war is a nem - mann Hotltveg and hie assistants. Of at the telephone while the person at f their L ve regiments, Uma me ou surprise Screwing in the Fuses. r when the de- each one was of the (minion that fondant admitted {t. `That's true, Signalmen, too, swarm `aloft and their own was the best. y, said saide, testifying. hadodo t , r fresh flag halliards to replace Pat "wizen our colonel is dismissing he explained. 'Ilad to cio it?' I soar- preventers,im ar n s shrouds et shot away. " "That don't count for he answered 'I either had to keep said an our coon kissing her • e• tum the said la a to regi en' c o sing, and—well, are shifted, as stated above; then the ower enemas , ou slipped, and special fighting stays merits o ten i ¢spec t g 002. the Chancellor's attitude at the oitt • the odor end goes in search of the sparkled on to the neckiace of the and break of war he says: person you seek, Instead, the ampli The are in the nature of "Why," " 'd h I t 't' 1 inclinations leaned to- r is switched on, The race{ver can mast. se solution, but this a flared n t weak man let his hand be forced by of the caller resumed, When the par - A burning thought isn't always, as Ills personal fle n case the ordinary reeve g ttatds a peaceful .olutio , then b 1 o the desk and work those displaced from theft ondmaty ug he says to the officers, Fall out, ad, hoping toe b r s him 'Yes,' alight in the darkness. g resting places on the $nada, and to gentlemen!' Lite warparty, and bowed, according ty sought calls his tone is greatly fn- Ready For fire f fig a new long dtstunce masthead mach," aa' 1 S dy "If 1 t el 1 ' g 1 constantly or permit Iter When a man begins to 1oce ground p he is naturally dissatisfied with his to his custom, before the will of the creased by the amplifier and raiz be On the bridge the semens and gloss flashing lamp on the' s p of f 'd tl t 11 the 'm t want 1 fall t I referred the Y Emperor, all the more because he was heard across a large-sized room. h 1 f t I t!" kissing.'" " lot.