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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1914-11-13, Page 5Abariei 2nd erioh. rates, oaeri. RAN' Inde , 5tand- very. ptonA duet ,te o Steri 1 th e lat 10 ;pito Ir th clivi Dru aria gage Her rano agog the ca en. i '11E PROPHET DANIEL WAS NUT VERY Sl"lt19. ealrt That Is Said to Have )fibre- told the Present Great Conflict. In the :seventh chapter of the Book of Daniel there is a lot that's especially interesting ju•st now. It doesn't take much ingenuity to see in it a possible prediction of to- day's great European war. Of eourse, it's all the veriest co•njey'--- ture; Daniel himself tells •us that he did not clearly understand (these curious visions that mane to him. Here's the drealm as he tells it in the seventh chapter of the book which bears 'hie name :- "In the first year of Belshazzar, King of Babylon, Daniel had a dream, and visions of his head uplan hi., bed ; (then, he wrote the dream - and told the sum of the matters. "Daniel ,spoke :and said, I saw an my vision by night, and beheld the four winds of the heaven strove upon the 'great [sea. "And four great beasts came up from the sea, diverse one iflom an- other. "The first ti*•as like a ]ion and had eagle's wings, I beheld till the wings thereof were plucked, and it was lifted up from the .earth, and made stand upon the fleet as a man, and a man's heart. was given it. "And behold another beast, a se- cond, like to a. bear, and it raised up itself on one side, and it had three ribs in the mouth of it be- tween. the teeth of it; and they said unto it, Arise, devour much flesh. "After this I beheld. and to an- other, like .a leopard, which had upon the back ofdt four wings of a fowl; the beast had also four heads and dominion was given to it. "After this I saw in the night watches, and behold a fourth beast, dtread,ful and terrible and strong ex- ceedingly ; and it had great iron teeth; it devoured and broke in pieces, and stamped the residue with the feet of it; and it was di- veise from J1 the beasts that were before it; and it had ten Morns. ":I considered the horns and be- hold there came up anrongthem an- other little horn, before • . 'whom there were threeof the first horns '-plucked up by the roots and be- hold ie thio horn, W r•e eyes like. the eye s„4 f. ii •fin.` d;;;a imonth speaking 2 120 1 120 60 120 160 0 By Far the Biggest Part of tbeeelyorlcl Is at War To -day. German and the coloniee she had at the beginning of the war are black on this map, and her smaller island possessions are surrounded by a black line. Her African colonies were (1) German South-west Africa; (2) German East Africa; (3) Kamerun ; (4) Togoland. The last two have been taken by British force's, and the others soon will be. The largest colonial territory outside of Africa is (5) Kaiser \<rilhe+lm's Land, in New Guinea, which has been taken by the Australians. All that portion of the world not involved in the European War is shown in white on the map. up and .eventually became greater than them a=11? Surely the folk who hate the Ger- man Emperor and his 'boasted al- licence with God could smile grimly at the belief that he is the one who "shal,l speak great words against the Moet High and wear out She saints of the Most High, and think to change times and laws" -and at -.the last be overthrown. A century ago certain English clergymen liked to think of Napo- leon as the person Daniel referred to. But the trouble was that the, m.illenium ct cl not follow Nap'oleton'x~a ove'r'thro- , ;; Does the predieted -o erthrow of the fourth beasi, nlenYi things. a dray when internationalism iw coni: ' `I behe.id till the -three -es were ing for Europe°, Well, who kr iWe? east down. and the Ancient of Days } Certainly Daniel didn't. For. as he did sit, whose garment was white as i says in the concluding verse for this snow, and the, .hair of his head like I curious chapter :. the pure [cool; his throne' was like I A. for me, Daniel. my <'ttgit<ti the fiery flame. and his wheels astions mush troubled nae, and my, burning fire, I <ountenanee Shan .e d in me ; but .1 • "A fiery stream issued and caniee 1 kept thr> matter in my heart." forth from before him thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him; the judgment was set and the books were opened. "I Daniel was grieved in my spi- rit in the midst of nay body. and the Honor of Heroic March. visions of my head troubled me. Most civilians have noticed that ' "I came near unto one of thele , that stood by, and .asked him thea ScottishHighland regiments truth of all this. Sc. he told lee andv ea)• spats, but few know the rea- made lee know the interpretation of sc•)Il [why, When the British forces, which the things, were composed for the greater part • "These great - beasts which are I of Highlanders, were under the four, are Rita' kings which shatll leadership of Sir John 111tiure in ,arise .out of the 'earth. Portugal, in I809, they were !sieved "But the saints of the Most- High to retreat. from Astorga to C orunna. shall take' the kingdom, and possess During the retreat -which, by the. way. ended in the famous victory at C'orun nat--the very boots were cut from the soldiers' feet by the jagged rocks over which they had to pick their way. in order to- save their feet from being lacerated, the .soldiers took the shirts from their backs and, tearing them into ,strips, wound them round their feet. The in'ci- den't was re.inembered, and the White spats now worn by the gallant Highlanders were granted in honor of their .heroic march and defence. WHY '1'IIEY WEAR SPA TS. Highlanders Given Use of Thele in the kingdom forever, even for ever and ever. "Then I would know the truth of the fourth beast, Which was diverse from. all the others, exceedingly dreadful, whose teeth were of iron and his nails of brass, which de- voured, brake in pieces and stamp- ed the residue svitli his feet. "Thus he said, The fourth beast shall be the fourth kingdom upon earth; which shall be diverse from all kingdoms, and shall devour the t='hole earth, and shall tread it down and break it in pieces, "And the ten horns out of the kingdom are ten kings that shall arise; and another shall arise after them; and he ,shall be diverse from the, first and he shall subdue three kings. "And he shall speak great words against the Most High and shall wear out the saints of the Most High, and think to change times and laws; and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times arid the dividing of• time. "But the judgment shall sib and they shall take away his dominion, to .consume and destroy it unto the end," What do the four beasts repre- sent'? Are they France,. ,Russia, England and Germany-- France With the heart of a. man, the Rus- sian bear devouring much flesh1 Gretalt Brittain, loos-headed--•Eng- lancl, Scotland, Ireland and Wales -,and Germany the terrible beast with teeth of iron'? And was Prus- sia the little horn that thres„titself Valuable Inaccuracy. Pat was a, witty young recruit, who was taking instruction in marksmanship. The squad had finished firing. Pat was brought to task for his poor shooting, and told that he must do better .at the next distance; there were to be seven rounds of quick firing. "Now, Pat." the sergeant told him, "fire at target number Ave. ' Pat banged away, and hit target number four seven times in succes- sion. "What target did you aim -at ") asked the irate' off.'icer. "Number five, ssor," ,answered Pat, "And you have bit number four every time." "B,edad, ser," retorted Pat. "that would be a grand thing in war. Shue, I might aim et a pri- vate and bit at gin'.t,al11" FROM MERRF` DFD MA NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT J'OIi1 BULL ANi) HIS PEOPLE. war, abandoned their occupation one mile. One of the important and booked for home. questions which the experiences of Mr. Richard T. Gates, the well- this war will also ultimately an - known aviator and general man- ewer is that of the relative value of ager of the Hendon Aerodrome, has the two general types of air craft; died in the Central London Sick whether the lighter than air dirg- recei m, as the result of injuries ndi ible to which the Germans have red while giving a biplane die- mainly pinned their faith, or the Oect)rrenecs • in • the Land That.play recently at Hendon. lleacier-than-air aeroplane, faster and less expensive. which is the Reigns Suprill° in the Cam• " I►it01'RI:SII�Iti WAIL IN 7`111: AIR mainstay of the Trench, English and Russian air navies, is superior • inertial World. • in tris A rather significant fact ilii ilit[Otts at• `1 t►1 Have Great at that 1 t NEWS OF THE MIDDLE WEST li]GTWi''EEN ONTARIO AND Ilk. T.I'SLi elms i1ii1A. [fouls Prom Pltoev es Where Many Ontario Boys and (Orb Ave "MMus Good." Fort Osborne is the Winnipeg military prison. Winnipeg's patriotic fund is past the $500,000 -mark. Ernest $o ad, of Frobisher, Sask., lost his left foot wlhslt he fell from a train. Many destitute Germans in Win- nipeg can neither obtain work nor charity. Charles E. MacKenzie, manager of the 'Canadian General Electric Company, died at Winnipeg. Edmonton women have formed the ,Sir John French' Chapter of the Daughters of the Fempire. Frank Lighteap, 7 St. James Place, Winnipeg, was knocked down and injured by a team of horses. Two-year-old Arthur Was Wool, 145 High Street, .loose Jaw, ate ..patent medicine tabloids and died as a result. Harold, the four-year-old son of John Woodall, t66 ItCountain eve . - Winnipeg, was drowned in the R River. Eighty acres of •Shoutdiee Ps. at Calgary, will be plowed a planted with potatoes 'by the .•nei. ployed of that city. Winnipeg wilt be the we -.tern headquarters o'f the Salvation Army in the new division I the or- ganization in ^.`)azia,da. Horace C. Howsrd, vat Bran of the Riel Rebellion, di-'r.i :it itis home in Winnipeg. IEC• h.s resided in that city for 26 years, Ex -Mayor R. D. Waugh, ',f Win- nipeg, will probably c,ntest. the Mayoralty of that city with Mayor Deacon this year. "Bud' Brown, a Witioipeg eole'r- ed man, was ti'rltsattc•'.ri to a year prison for stsa!in ; money fryni a C.P.R. paseengar. William Gilmour, uf N. e fire - hall, Winnipeg, was seriously in- jured when a etreeib eat struek a fire truck on. which she 'e as riding. E. E. Jarman, tete tth Avenii''. .:?use upon 80,000 members of the r n , 5' In this connection :s t t in almost I Saskatoon, viers[ kdlei. he, a street •Lancashires 1'lects of Flying "lIac111lre..• every instance in which a Zeppelin ear in Iii}Lf<inan!S+it'iwzy, \\'innipeg. and Cheshire Miiaez He had been r•ejeeted at 'alcartier. l: _ known ta( have reesrno 4 r.oi a . ,. Federation have c mmt�n :Q t• Baa,, Tye 'great tear in 'the. air,- Ion}, 1, . t . u c d o �. lbi�_--1,'1-,-.---0.-'oit,il{.1m t:.i.Tn-. t ,y. , - ;•..it.---^:._ra - :..! ,- Dirsi a •.i;r D t :en -die. atiLlws /Isee44''w:•' /5--- 1•ll.Flr E.t1 )1111'er�i%1t('Ll+i�' lets •111 cLiu �5'r,l}°ied Ili'•-pe'tS�ntt'.ii.-ilcrre'i•s~1'iifs�T'�..rr,c:�'. �- jl 4 �•--'� of t-lIe \atirltial Idelie£ l and.. • heee r'e,.a reality. 1 later reported its destruction. pans of4..3„...,‘,----1-40.v, ii-, :,x-04 The 3rd Scots Gnards arevtv Tile one strikingly new hese of The actual aerial strength of the 000 worth .if tion t'le the Pat•rh ie encamped at Sanclown Park Raee- ,waafare which makes the present various nations is more or less a Fund and.the ernpleye e .rf the course, and are accommodated 'Euro ean.ceniiic+b different from all firm contributed Jt6t19 p Mayor Deacon of • `k' IT I "AN„" is in - in the retail under the grand stand. of all •craft. From the very open- t fain civic. works v.y,lc „t 'i9 par .Mr. J. R. 31. J3utIer, 'son of 'the• ing�-o'f hostilities; the aerial forces of l cent. mere `bars tell i tenders •tl- Master of Trinity College, 'Cane' the'nations involved have taken mated. bridge, belongine_ to the family of part in practically all the opera- 1111, A• O nlith, 171 " t lrtN� nth famous classical scholars, has ap- tions, scouting, attacking fort- (111.1•ent •si::itisticd reports. Purely :.'•enue, ri•s••itrM•, ^,••)•tile ;1,,Lt plies} for a eommissi<in in the Terri- 'ren es and cyan batttin against from a. numerical t ietwp)teint: hate throu.,h 1. tl.'� ! t , of tl site '...ss:• torials. each other. The first pet'lat'U }a i' et'el . it is Pilllp't,seii that Prance gators thr-i.a of :lie famil neei Mr. Richard Lloyd George. old- climax came when a German Z:rp- and Illlh:a c•,fnii,ined are stronger narroscl:. it'i '::1> L lir,,.. est son of the Chancellor of the Ex- pectin stole past: the foi•tifieatiorls 1•f in the air time ah;' fleets of Ger- Sugar i. I!rt r.td : 1 ll•ee r., .,••-. ii) a chequer, has enlisted in the Port- Antwerp in the night and for the main. tied Austria. France is hundred ), a l': iii•' e .!'i,,-rl, ma'doc battalion of the Carnarvon- first time in Ili:tery a sleeping city thought to has had at the begin- ease. shire Territorials for active ser 1waS bellnbarded floiii the Skies. nilly:' ," f lilt ear ` 5° aeroplanes; Julian `A t' -e ,s s i •ru sst.e • 1 _ tit. 'vice. Dere, at last. was the realization Russia. lair Geentail} 1':t): Ing- Louis. •. nli•'1 1 _,•I: 1i'iking While playing gulf on the Stoke of the eisiens of the seers wile had ia/ni Itaiv. :::::.n. and Austria, - and l:iek t , '-•i, F ti:•`l;a:n Polies course, Baron Wurnih. a foretold this added hterrer .,f war, • I -h Of dic,gihhra. Franc's was ere- while in :1 . poet utE e. wealthy German, was arrested. as a says Popular \Iechenic:;. dice<1 with ' , rak•stiy ,�f the flexible An c•1T ;,,,t et' pl•140ne1. of war and eorivey'ed t<, the Hidden be darkness and with en- typo and lenity A+f them old; Ger- J. A.t. ., i i•: )..". i li i -(t 2t alien compound at Newbury reel r ' , 'T- many. teig`}it..t'11. ail iIt g'e'eod condi- • Carte, r:. ,.,I':,,i+017 1 J,:' fe +1 -' ��" r - i rules Teemed, the Zeppelin clivi., eutlrst ible. whit!h made the attu1t npt!11 111,11, besides tori Zeppelins 111 the d'''iintr, ,' tit t;; e'e i .T=11,,:2T. , s• witnessed ' over rite' to a seerse of t'!'n"treeti411 : Russia, tel :.h.::1 1 1t' li i l_l 1la �t iv. 1 peculiar sight was hunt ,:net. stole ser the t, ing a )t:a10-'1' n'•e •,1 c'Sss:,l,y at Lewes recently, when a club -point above the palace which the seventeen : lit;s l r d. thirteen ; turned out with the htalltsmen all Belgian royal family temporarily Italy. ten < and Austria, fine. With now. lnounteci on bicycles, nearly' all the aeteipired. It hovered there .t thous•• such an array of flying men-of-war ire horses having been taken for re- : fd the ground,an indis• putting to the tett new methods of Tht• 11,a At t's.tst.nrc' �::r salt. and f et from mounts. bine€ - mass silhouetted against the dealing death and destruction. Notwithstanding the fact that 1i yki«• ' With a rocket-like fizz a bomb there is nt imaginable limit to the large number of ,loyal Naval vol, rtll'y't�cl downward in a fiery- streak. awful poss:h^:titles of modern unteer reserves is quartered f<rr 'Buildings crumbled, carrying their fare. training purposes at the Crystal sleeping occupants down to death Palace, the palace will still remain ur mutilation, The bomhardmelit matter of supposition. because of- ficial figures of this nature are gov- ernment set'rets, In any case i would he possible for a lower to have twice the nun)ber• of air craft that it is neeredited with in the open to the public, The Arley Council have accepted with an ex'pr'ession of their warm appreciation the offer of Messrs. Godfrey Phillips; to supply to the Expeditionary Force, free of charge, '2,500,000 cigarettes. At a meeting of the Jockey Club, it was agreed that in the interest:[ of the very large number of per- sons dependent " upon racing for their livelihood, .racing- should con- tinue at Newmarket and elsewhere, Out of a total population of 1,429 the ,Surrey village of Ham, near Kingston, has '74 men serving with the forces, and at the present time there are only about 20 men in the place eligible for service, As a result of the representations made by the Newcastle Chamber of Commerce, the North-Eastern Rail- way Company have agreed that sol- diers will be booked at single fare for the ,double journey when pro- ceeding on leave, Among the passengers on board the S.S. Turalena, which arrived at Plymouth from New Zealand, was a party of young Englishmen, who upon hearing of the outbreak of continued, projectiles ea:pl< ding within:- the grounds of the palace and raining upon other public 44 -Wings, even striking •a hospital, street, after street was filled with delaric. Sixty houses were practi- •eally destroyed and 300 more were damaged. Machine gong fired shots into the inky darkness without ef- fect. In all ten ,bombs were hurled after which the craft lifted high and disappefired in the night. Some of the Zeppelins are known to be equipped with two-ineh quick -fire guns which shoot shells of I3elgian maearite, and some 'of'the work may have been done by these. It is' known also that the craft carry 220 -pound bombs. loaded with a special' bureting charge Which can destroy praJctie'ally everything with- in ithin a radius of 250 yards, In its* first month this .greatest of all wars has demonstrated that the nations' airy navies are a factor of warfare to be seriously reekonded with. It seems to have been prov- ed, too, that n.o airship or aero- plane is safe against gun fire from the ground at a'height! of less than .1, war - et Prince in Bags. A t}ua;11t picture of one of the Kaiser's sons on active service, Prince August Wilhelm, the fourth of the family, why accompanied the German corps which occupied Rheims, is given by a French nurse of the Red Cross Society who was at one of the hospitals established in the town. '.`One day a young 'of- ficer whose uniform was hanging in tatters and who was indescribably dirty," she says, "stropped me in the street and spoke to me with a salute. He asked if we could re- ceive in our hospital some wounded in whom he took an espeeial inter- est. I replied that I no longer had any authority there and that as it was I was hardly able to find enough food for those I was taking care of already. He thanked me and went on. I then saw him enter a pork :butcher's shop. A few min- utes later 11e came out carrying in his arms a great quantity of sau- sages. It was only later that -I learnt that this ragged officer was the fourth son of the Kaiser." The sea. S!%+1 tlr. . at '.'t.C; i.'iiit'rb?'lt' . in Ii stta.:'.t, 1i e n;',a3 in: from rl). 4.1,1, ire a. 1V -s:. z. litsek salt froul ! late^ n..,w f,'Cl a gas-fired f li 1'i•:G,f W:‘.'"E',` it -!welts, and rtirl:t tf),r vi'i,+l;,/ Ili+.! •'!e��I\' cliambess lu tat>, is tess:1eineers are tht i.11;11 ;Bile, ri•t�r• ",.l :with mint" u`,) iltli.e;i, ,Par tell which eo werf' , its 'if. eionseceswei air ,ire forced, in -.1rder t iaq,",..tletc, the en salt, salt, 'i.•i-d slime to 304, the `;i,a and of ..'r iinl)11ritie i ;ai't1: to the bottom, It blunt :1 iAtiw'a 1. r„tiirll a settling' t't,),tn1)et,. t,lt'I+ci to s reser- voir, and. finally into. r,.\° i Bans, in which the salt, n.o''u rapi,Cy ing. enoonnterii rak is that agitate it in such a way as int rsi z ire it in various grades a,nsi v ,- s, ready for the raa,rkot. The t,;hr- A'• fui'ttaces. at Car)•ialoferg;us prOdri„e seventy tons of refiried call: in twenty four hours, The •Proce.s iA ,.U1ltnituaiS; the salt is ,dcspoaibertd in a finished state half an 11011r ctfber it :Paws the mine. • Of .&tl. IbTe'til Denis. TSkinnem (relating ads'.+tltitre)--- Yes, death stared the itt ,he face and in thoae few •leiN.MittS 'f 't tt.'u .M.ht of all I'd ewer. done[. Smart --Quite a.'titihe cdirart,iry •,f names, eh? C 271 J I= �T O C 6 111;1,_ I 11 I' )r' - . ( 'y ) nIt ".. ) / - i'a; Aj 9` VA 1� ljIs i'IIll ` t ,i( II. ,`{I\�771JI�1I1 Peri' ,, ^^ t, ,, 3 . � �h \7� .I I -�'' 1 is �R t'� 1. t tom_ .I ��al� = _ �. .i f . ill 1/, \.� �1 )� .Ty g. 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IIII e ,-` 1 .t,�e ` y=r BONIN y!ffs 0,' '1 I -,v ,( " YOec,nD- s -@� ll l'I:..'•',, �T aMO *13 t°p \.t ) 'I aF \ LIP) OP4 pNfNr� ,{ 1,+1�'t PF iNGS .- „4 fe ,yFSN '".'eC Gc, n. CNARI MAS t e° '� -..w%�: "`". -' . ceNTRA. AMERICA . � l " �_, r,/- .. ,1.�QQ�I!I , ,,I,'pq1• A„ V+'" c t�"7 :IY:tL- ".15x � D1' . ' :� ..,e Y N t 'p00,:::,,,,;, 11li ./1, Il,i� � .� 1II ra I �11 tfnu '" ;,-....4011.`I ►"-.'t'.. ° 3 L4:s . +�! 111 r . otil umA : ! .11111 ��� UCLA AtOwe; • �Illlll rI ('v III' r III ,. IN .'1, tl ,,pee•' ( `l ._ ii?.3 Ra NE -1, fay'n-. iji: ' d < luo°�C .ice a� otlNe a. �'i.� 41 , f (�.y.,� j,� t .� y r ,s, �:/ , s -ii) I anrr+,,. IE i T INDIES - p' .. nIIIiII °'],1, _ .DW 6TnP k 1 y l MaNW ,IYtA,Oi I I MAROUESAS 4 r' C. °BO 1 , N "") 0 ) 7A IT Fr- To MOTu TONGA 1. • LOW ARCHIPELAGO' .., 1. "?1S ieaNy, �'I E A. Y - 5 p� DR •�+:"�' •- KA 1 UTH oscr S O %..� l' pp/� ./�71, „- sxxeunM, ! t°'! . taiC a • . 1 y 1 / 1 C1I1 ! {I111t Q it,{ t •�`!. N6 43" ,,til 1 Tae (l 2' ko AM,AA TC is - I A` ,, .1 �NAO4! , cl1M ,�, 4,:, CARWDD]Lt lo) ���~ { i Y” i. .. QDR°oR,Q,si p. OR) 1• !, ,/ to 14' :: C •_ '- J� II hi 11 ,I ,II1 I' I IIII 'r ` S Xse 11. Ill • BISMARN _N'�'_ - I P6AG0 f.., [44 ^ 4. •Isinnos �� ew e(fin H% 4. Cif -H% 'C_1 COD .i. t,.c'.UC°"A3`'"'-` w' I[1t R • , ( �S,o.�:- \ T� ,.t• J q+t "fFt `4es.. I luleDe tD.?• III! �'. '�.i%Vd�� t�%i`.��. I Il ...i fr ' dpieRMAACC I 10"> - q ... ft ..,,,,,4 ..,,LS:j ., xA7NAM L le•) NTlea) S I. �A pC - •,,,..s, REFERENCE IIIIIIIIIII,GREATBRITAIN 1:,. o l,i !,FRANCE, 1 RUSSIA = 1 BELGIUM *,Y NOTE MEGERMANY , 9h 4AU5Tp1A•Ht1N&ARY JAPAN [� NEUTRAL ! ; ,``^ /,'i y {. ! i t M ' j�/ 1 u: `' •� , MlsrAn w c ` +r`,rr;. 'Fr,• f�R�I c;; �P w sr0�° 2>v J x. ti e •-.—'^• !Aq 'xt•.;��.rc 1. ALNLAND '� IDLANDD 3 Tet .,,A.,so IINy t''H•DOUVCT. 6tu(� SANDWICH IC I 11,1A r. ,1 ,,�{.yj 1 ryi.•c '.' 1 • :., st, Y. , . ) L. u e4 4 M,1,CC ,r' ,Dw , ,m4 r R • t y yy� \) i"" 'ems'#: r '+` : t , _ �:.,. NC AMSTCRDAM eD. SIT f0 ,,.,A,„. !�py+9.'s0.,,,r ,. V) . YV - t't'� --- 'n. w t, eRr:�I.ena rt41r. t 3 _ ..) f fi` ' ;ul1•tlTi ;, �' ��- r . ♦ ,, ., - \ i l� - o/kr, t° w .. •-ti" •tea .�` "uffuARI Ill // •1 �It . 19 I � (eV"Doc �- /�f N. ^'I 'k t (ilii/, m,:wA c L o k n 1��)°�j,a,{ /� p6l iMIB iT•� ' ' 111° 1.+0 ,r, Qir lP . , +.X v a -r. a •c,•,•.•NO.�'! .. ��- IO. W P H-, '1 ,„,,,,„,i,,„„ '+ '. cAALD u 1 120 60 120 160 0 By Far the Biggest Part of tbeeelyorlcl Is at War To -day. German and the coloniee she had at the beginning of the war are black on this map, and her smaller island possessions are surrounded by a black line. Her African colonies were (1) German South-west Africa; (2) German East Africa; (3) Kamerun ; (4) Togoland. The last two have been taken by British force's, and the others soon will be. The largest colonial territory outside of Africa is (5) Kaiser \<rilhe+lm's Land, in New Guinea, which has been taken by the Australians. All that portion of the world not involved in the European War is shown in white on the map. up and .eventually became greater than them a=11? Surely the folk who hate the Ger- man Emperor and his 'boasted al- licence with God could smile grimly at the belief that he is the one who "shal,l speak great words against the Moet High and wear out She saints of the Most High, and think to change times and laws" -and at -.the last be overthrown. A century ago certain English clergymen liked to think of Napo- leon as the person Daniel referred to. But the trouble was that the, m.illenium ct cl not follow Nap'oleton'x~a ove'r'thro- , ;; Does the predieted -o erthrow of the fourth beasi, nlenYi things. a dray when internationalism iw coni: ' `I behe.id till the -three -es were ing for Europe°, Well, who kr iWe? east down. and the Ancient of Days } Certainly Daniel didn't. For. as he did sit, whose garment was white as i says in the concluding verse for this snow, and the, .hair of his head like I curious chapter :. the pure [cool; his throne' was like I A. for me, Daniel. my <'ttgit<ti the fiery flame. and his wheels astions mush troubled nae, and my, burning fire, I <ountenanee Shan .e d in me ; but .1 • "A fiery stream issued and caniee 1 kept thr> matter in my heart." forth from before him thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him; the judgment was set and the books were opened. "I Daniel was grieved in my spi- rit in the midst of nay body. and the Honor of Heroic March. visions of my head troubled me. Most civilians have noticed that ' "I came near unto one of thele , that stood by, and .asked him thea ScottishHighland regiments truth of all this. Sc. he told lee andv ea)• spats, but few know the rea- made lee know the interpretation of sc•)Il [why, When the British forces, which the things, were composed for the greater part • "These great - beasts which are I of Highlanders, were under the four, are Rita' kings which shatll leadership of Sir John 111tiure in ,arise .out of the 'earth. Portugal, in I809, they were !sieved "But the saints of the Most- High to retreat. from Astorga to C orunna. shall take' the kingdom, and possess During the retreat -which, by the. way. ended in the famous victory at C'orun nat--the very boots were cut from the soldiers' feet by the jagged rocks over which they had to pick their way. in order to- save their feet from being lacerated, the .soldiers took the shirts from their backs and, tearing them into ,strips, wound them round their feet. The in'ci- den't was re.inembered, and the White spats now worn by the gallant Highlanders were granted in honor of their .heroic march and defence. WHY '1'IIEY WEAR SPA TS. Highlanders Given Use of Thele in the kingdom forever, even for ever and ever. "Then I would know the truth of the fourth beast, Which was diverse from. all the others, exceedingly dreadful, whose teeth were of iron and his nails of brass, which de- voured, brake in pieces and stamp- ed the residue svitli his feet. "Thus he said, The fourth beast shall be the fourth kingdom upon earth; which shall be diverse from all kingdoms, and shall devour the t='hole earth, and shall tread it down and break it in pieces, "And the ten horns out of the kingdom are ten kings that shall arise; and another shall arise after them; and he ,shall be diverse from the, first and he shall subdue three kings. "And he shall speak great words against the Most High and shall wear out the saints of the Most High, and think to change times and laws; and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times arid the dividing of• time. "But the judgment shall sib and they shall take away his dominion, to .consume and destroy it unto the end," What do the four beasts repre- sent'? Are they France,. ,Russia, England and Germany-- France With the heart of a. man, the Rus- sian bear devouring much flesh1 Gretalt Brittain, loos-headed--•Eng- lancl, Scotland, Ireland and Wales -,and Germany the terrible beast with teeth of iron'? And was Prus- sia the little horn that thres„titself Valuable Inaccuracy. Pat was a, witty young recruit, who was taking instruction in marksmanship. The squad had finished firing. Pat was brought to task for his poor shooting, and told that he must do better .at the next distance; there were to be seven rounds of quick firing. "Now, Pat." the sergeant told him, "fire at target number Ave. ' Pat banged away, and hit target number four seven times in succes- sion. "What target did you aim -at ") asked the irate' off.'icer. "Number five, ssor," ,answered Pat, "And you have bit number four every time." "B,edad, ser," retorted Pat. "that would be a grand thing in war. Shue, I might aim et a pri- vate and bit at gin'.t,al11" FROM MERRF` DFD MA NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT J'OIi1 BULL ANi) HIS PEOPLE. war, abandoned their occupation one mile. One of the important and booked for home. questions which the experiences of Mr. Richard T. Gates, the well- this war will also ultimately an - known aviator and general man- ewer is that of the relative value of ager of the Hendon Aerodrome, has the two general types of air craft; died in the Central London Sick whether the lighter than air dirg- recei m, as the result of injuries ndi ible to which the Germans have red while giving a biplane die- mainly pinned their faith, or the Oect)rrenecs • in • the Land That.play recently at Hendon. lleacier-than-air aeroplane, faster and less expensive. which is the Reigns Suprill° in the Cam• " I►it01'RI:SII�Iti WAIL IN 7`111: AIR mainstay of the Trench, English and Russian air navies, is superior • inertial World. • in tris A rather significant fact ilii ilit[Otts at• `1 t►1 Have Great at that 1 t NEWS OF THE MIDDLE WEST li]GTWi''EEN ONTARIO AND Ilk. T.I'SLi elms i1ii1A. [fouls Prom Pltoev es Where Many Ontario Boys and (Orb Ave "MMus Good." Fort Osborne is the Winnipeg military prison. Winnipeg's patriotic fund is past the $500,000 -mark. Ernest $o ad, of Frobisher, Sask., lost his left foot wlhslt he fell from a train. Many destitute Germans in Win- nipeg can neither obtain work nor charity. Charles E. MacKenzie, manager of the 'Canadian General Electric Company, died at Winnipeg. Edmonton women have formed the ,Sir John French' Chapter of the Daughters of the Fempire. Frank Lighteap, 7 St. James Place, Winnipeg, was knocked down and injured by a team of horses. Two-year-old Arthur Was Wool, 145 High Street, .loose Jaw, ate ..patent medicine tabloids and died as a result. Harold, the four-year-old son of John Woodall, t66 ItCountain eve . - Winnipeg, was drowned in the R River. Eighty acres of •Shoutdiee Ps. at Calgary, will be plowed a planted with potatoes 'by the .•nei. ployed of that city. Winnipeg wilt be the we -.tern headquarters o'f the Salvation Army in the new division I the or- ganization in ^.`)azia,da. Horace C. Howsrd, vat Bran of the Riel Rebellion, di-'r.i :it itis home in Winnipeg. IEC• h.s resided in that city for 26 years, Ex -Mayor R. D. Waugh, ',f Win- nipeg, will probably c,ntest. the Mayoralty of that city with Mayor Deacon this year. "Bud' Brown, a Witioipeg eole'r- ed man, was ti'rltsattc•'.ri to a year prison for stsa!in ; money fryni a C.P.R. paseengar. William Gilmour, uf N. e fire - hall, Winnipeg, was seriously in- jured when a etreeib eat struek a fire truck on. which she 'e as riding. E. E. Jarman, tete tth Avenii''. .:?use upon 80,000 members of the r n , 5' In this connection :s t t in almost I Saskatoon, viers[ kdlei. he, a street •Lancashires 1'lects of Flying "lIac111lre..• every instance in which a Zeppelin ear in Iii}Lf<inan!S+it'iwzy, \\'innipeg. and Cheshire Miiaez He had been r•ejeeted at 'alcartier. l: _ known ta( have reesrno 4 r.oi a . ,. Federation have c mmt�n :Q t• Baa,, Tye 'great tear in 'the. air,- Ion}, 1, . t . u c d o �. lbi�_--1,'1-,-.---0.-'oit,il{.1m t:.i.Tn-. t ,y. , - ;•..it.---^:._ra - :..! ,- Dirsi a •.i;r D t :en -die. atiLlws /Isee44''w:•' /5--- 1•ll.Flr E.t1 )1111'er�i%1t('Ll+i�' lets •111 cLiu �5'r,l}°ied Ili'•-pe'tS�ntt'.ii.-ilcrre'i•s~1'iifs�T'�..rr,c:�'. �- jl 4 �•--'� of t-lIe \atirltial Idelie£ l and.. • heee r'e,.a reality. 1 later reported its destruction. pans of4..3„...,‘,----1-40.v, ii-, :,x-04 The 3rd Scots Gnards arevtv Tile one strikingly new hese of The actual aerial strength of the 000 worth .if tion t'le the Pat•rh ie encamped at Sanclown Park Raee- ,waafare which makes the present various nations is more or less a Fund and.the ernpleye e .rf the course, and are accommodated 'Euro ean.ceniiic+b different from all firm contributed Jt6t19 p Mayor Deacon of • `k' IT I "AN„" is in - in the retail under the grand stand. of all •craft. From the very open- t fain civic. works v.y,lc „t 'i9 par .Mr. J. R. 31. J3utIer, 'son of 'the• ing�-o'f hostilities; the aerial forces of l cent. mere `bars tell i tenders •tl- Master of Trinity College, 'Cane' the'nations involved have taken mated. bridge, belongine_ to the family of part in practically all the opera- 1111, A• O nlith, 171 " t lrtN� nth famous classical scholars, has ap- tions, scouting, attacking fort- (111.1•ent •si::itisticd reports. Purely :.'•enue, ri•s••itrM•, ^,••)•tile ;1,,Lt plies} for a eommissi<in in the Terri- 'ren es and cyan batttin against from a. numerical t ietwp)teint: hate throu.,h 1. tl.'� ! t , of tl site '...ss:• torials. each other. The first pet'lat'U }a i' et'el . it is Pilllp't,seii that Prance gators thr-i.a of :lie famil neei Mr. Richard Lloyd George. old- climax came when a German Z:rp- and Illlh:a c•,fnii,ined are stronger narroscl:. it'i '::1> L lir,,.. est son of the Chancellor of the Ex- pectin stole past: the foi•tifieatiorls 1•f in the air time ah;' fleets of Ger- Sugar i. I!rt r.td : 1 ll•ee r., .,••-. ii) a chequer, has enlisted in the Port- Antwerp in the night and for the main. tied Austria. France is hundred ), a l': iii•' e .!'i,,-rl, ma'doc battalion of the Carnarvon- first time in Ili:tery a sleeping city thought to has had at the begin- ease. shire Territorials for active ser 1waS bellnbarded floiii the Skies. nilly:' ," f lilt ear ` 5° aeroplanes; Julian `A t' -e ,s s i •ru sst.e • 1 _ tit. 'vice. Dere, at last. was the realization Russia. lair Geentail} 1':t): Ing- Louis. •. nli•'1 1 _,•I: 1i'iking While playing gulf on the Stoke of the eisiens of the seers wile had ia/ni Itaiv. :::::.n. and Austria, - and l:iek t , '-•i, F ti:•`l;a:n Polies course, Baron Wurnih. a foretold this added hterrer .,f war, • I -h Of dic,gihhra. Franc's was ere- while in :1 . poet utE e. wealthy German, was arrested. as a says Popular \Iechenic:;. dice<1 with ' , rak•stiy ,�f the flexible An c•1T ;,,,t et' pl•140ne1. of war and eorivey'ed t<, the Hidden be darkness and with en- typo and lenity A+f them old; Ger- J. A.t. ., i i•: )..". i li i -(t 2t alien compound at Newbury reel r ' , 'T- many. teig`}it..t'11. ail iIt g'e'eod condi- • Carte, r:. ,.,I':,,i+017 1 J,:' fe +1 -' ��" r - i rules Teemed, the Zeppelin clivi., eutlrst ible. whit!h made the attu1t npt!11 111,11, besides tori Zeppelins 111 the d'''iintr, ,' tit t;; e'e i .T=11,,:2T. , s• witnessed ' over rite' to a seerse of t'!'n"treeti411 : Russia, tel :.h.::1 1 1t' li i l_l 1la �t iv. 1 peculiar sight was hunt ,:net. stole ser the t, ing a )t:a10-'1' n'•e •,1 c'Sss:,l,y at Lewes recently, when a club -point above the palace which the seventeen : lit;s l r d. thirteen ; turned out with the htalltsmen all Belgian royal family temporarily Italy. ten < and Austria, fine. With now. lnounteci on bicycles, nearly' all the aeteipired. It hovered there .t thous•• such an array of flying men-of-war ire horses having been taken for re- : fd the ground,an indis• putting to the tett new methods of Tht• 11,a At t's.tst.nrc' �::r salt. and f et from mounts. bine€ - mass silhouetted against the dealing death and destruction. Notwithstanding the fact that 1i yki«• ' With a rocket-like fizz a bomb there is nt imaginable limit to the large number of ,loyal Naval vol, rtll'y't�cl downward in a fiery- streak. awful poss:h^:titles of modern unteer reserves is quartered f<rr 'Buildings crumbled, carrying their fare. training purposes at the Crystal sleeping occupants down to death Palace, the palace will still remain ur mutilation, The bomhardmelit matter of supposition. because of- ficial figures of this nature are gov- ernment set'rets, In any case i would he possible for a lower to have twice the nun)ber• of air craft that it is neeredited with in the open to the public, The Arley Council have accepted with an ex'pr'ession of their warm appreciation the offer of Messrs. Godfrey Phillips; to supply to the Expeditionary Force, free of charge, '2,500,000 cigarettes. At a meeting of the Jockey Club, it was agreed that in the interest:[ of the very large number of per- sons dependent " upon racing for their livelihood, .racing- should con- tinue at Newmarket and elsewhere, Out of a total population of 1,429 the ,Surrey village of Ham, near Kingston, has '74 men serving with the forces, and at the present time there are only about 20 men in the place eligible for service, As a result of the representations made by the Newcastle Chamber of Commerce, the North-Eastern Rail- way Company have agreed that sol- diers will be booked at single fare for the ,double journey when pro- ceeding on leave, Among the passengers on board the S.S. Turalena, which arrived at Plymouth from New Zealand, was a party of young Englishmen, who upon hearing of the outbreak of continued, projectiles ea:pl< ding within:- the grounds of the palace and raining upon other public 44 -Wings, even striking •a hospital, street, after street was filled with delaric. Sixty houses were practi- •eally destroyed and 300 more were damaged. Machine gong fired shots into the inky darkness without ef- fect. In all ten ,bombs were hurled after which the craft lifted high and disappefired in the night. Some of the Zeppelins are known to be equipped with two-ineh quick -fire guns which shoot shells of I3elgian maearite, and some 'of'the work may have been done by these. It is' known also that the craft carry 220 -pound bombs. loaded with a special' bureting charge Which can destroy praJctie'ally everything with- in ithin a radius of 250 yards, In its* first month this .greatest of all wars has demonstrated that the nations' airy navies are a factor of warfare to be seriously reekonded with. It seems to have been prov- ed, too, that n.o airship or aero- plane is safe against gun fire from the ground at a'height! of less than .1, war - et Prince in Bags. A t}ua;11t picture of one of the Kaiser's sons on active service, Prince August Wilhelm, the fourth of the family, why accompanied the German corps which occupied Rheims, is given by a French nurse of the Red Cross Society who was at one of the hospitals established in the town. '.`One day a young 'of- ficer whose uniform was hanging in tatters and who was indescribably dirty," she says, "stropped me in the street and spoke to me with a salute. He asked if we could re- ceive in our hospital some wounded in whom he took an espeeial inter- est. I replied that I no longer had any authority there and that as it was I was hardly able to find enough food for those I was taking care of already. He thanked me and went on. I then saw him enter a pork :butcher's shop. A few min- utes later 11e came out carrying in his arms a great quantity of sau- sages. It was only later that -I learnt that this ragged officer was the fourth son of the Kaiser." The sea. S!%+1 tlr. . at '.'t.C; i.'iiit'rb?'lt' . in Ii stta.:'.t, 1i e n;',a3 in: from rl). 4.1,1, ire a. 1V -s:. z. litsek salt froul ! late^ n..,w f,'Cl a gas-fired f li 1'i•:G,f W:‘.'"E',` it -!welts, and rtirl:t tf),r vi'i,+l;,/ Ili+.! •'!e��I\' cliambess lu tat>, is tess:1eineers are tht i.11;11 ;Bile, ri•t�r• ",.l :with mint" u`,) iltli.e;i, ,Par tell which eo werf' , its 'if. eionseceswei air ,ire forced, in -.1rder t iaq,",..tletc, the en salt, salt, 'i.•i-d slime to 304, the `;i,a and of ..'r iinl)11ritie i ;ai't1: to the bottom, It blunt :1 iAtiw'a 1. r„tiirll a settling' t't,),tn1)et,. t,lt'I+ci to s reser- voir, and. finally into. r,.\° i Bans, in which the salt, n.o''u rapi,Cy ing. enoonnterii rak is that agitate it in such a way as int rsi z ire it in various grades a,nsi v ,- s, ready for the raa,rkot. The t,;hr- A'• fui'ttaces. at Car)•ialoferg;us prOdri„e seventy tons of refiried call: in twenty four hours, The •Proce.s iA ,.U1ltnituaiS; the salt is ,dcspoaibertd in a finished state half an 11011r ctfber it :Paws the mine. • Of .&tl. IbTe'til Denis. TSkinnem (relating ads'.+tltitre)--- Yes, death stared the itt ,he face and in thoae few •leiN.MittS 'f 't tt.'u .M.ht of all I'd ewer. done[. Smart --Quite a.'titihe cdirart,iry •,f names, eh?