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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-04-01, Page 7,BiAVERT OF TUF OFFIRS . !..*RrilSo -sotilicti$ vOmis.,ND TUBIR-VOLIRAABe * Men Seem Cations, But It Is Only the Outeonie of Cootinual Uaniliere a • ileavyArtillefy. are ,eotopelled us to abandon 4 short seetion trentif, •which wu afterwardli .0CoU1)tedl----; In some such bald phrase the onicial communique a. little, while ago stonmed up the desPerato re- eistance that Was offered by . brigade Of British light .cavalry holding seine trenches a littlersotith ,of Ypree to tlu'i" attack gr3,000 Ger, man infantry, writes a correspon- dent of the London Daily Mail, The three eeginients, forming', the bri- gade were much redoceel in strength -one of theracounted only • lea rifles 'in -the trenches; they. • ,wero 400 at the most, against eight 'gales their number, .and the men who Came out ,ottne fight +so that they hael.ne'vee known .anything SO. you an the mad witliout,',,thanking, • terteible, though 'they' at ftboitt theirelothe. Theyilleict'you' ' • Mons in- Augugt and eountless tmies• •aaea a loak throtIgh .theili since then on the Marne and Aisne. glasses, and.follow it up with a drop of rum, If yon stay • in the trenehes all night they stay with' SP.u, share and share alike. Of course, in billets they like to do themeelvea will, -with eeven-course dinners and cooks • and waiters, 'They're-1'01-er Sport,. too-heaeling- and • pheasant-sleeotiug. • And the ether day they hada tort of paper - chase' on Innaeleack, following the idea of some hook, where a C,terinall officer issiraeked by the pieces of secret clecemeets that he tears up dead now," a seldier !mid. "Weed-' lest little feller you 'ever saw; legs thinner than my ankle, and 0414- PY sort ei" face- mouth alwaye open, likee-esillyelookini feller he was al- together., 1411, we was na very hot place one day; our platoon was ' behind sonic haystacks, the +captain was killed, and the ebellie and Millets; too, Wati jut 'uminin'' round us. We 'adult 'seen .our sub- altern for a.,itt whenall of 4 sudden 'te comMe along on his inatehstallelegs, right out in the open, not 'urryne, Just Wein' 'ie. time and tappuf 'is leg with Is cane. As e004 as 'e get up to the 'reyetirele, ` bullets Oppin' -past- 7iiw. in all directions, lehr eeegeant Mall- ets up to Pim. 'Shall. we move from 'ere, .• 40? 'o says.- .tGettin' very warm around 'ere. 'The little enb- altern just looks At 'ini aseool as anythiug.' 'Yon jest stay where you. are _till yoiere joilY we,11 ze says, and 'brings out nis field glasses and lias a long 104 round: before he takes cover. 'B was ' right,' ean telOou," "They'r.god Sartse" a .avalry-: man said, f‘T1teY111:eonie alongthee treuelles Irene one''booley-Initch to. „ lanOthcr ?to. sea if you're' all right, end they'll •lie down right alongside The German : guns had,the range Of. the English trenches to a yard, , and seht 'ehell after' shell that 'burst on the very parapets, Ger- Mans Care° on in extended linW/ • they havelearnt to abandea their - oid.liabit-P-fTittaeleFiti-eoluentr and , • dense masses. They lost enormous- ly, a Maar for -almost every •IiIngliele bullet, and the English fired as fast as Ongeraceuld load and press the trigger. But when at last they Were. a hundred yards from the trenches they fixed haimietss and 'came oneat a rush, etill'five Or six -to one. The English troopers :steed their grounduntil the Ger- ,..-eneens were already ineieleeAlie-Atet. Line of trenehese and then, as one 'G'told the • story, 'we slfoipte.t114w.:471's, aftcr alt, the sensib1e • thing to do and when British re- anforoements had come op to make 'aceematereatiack :it was not lOriktiti- fore the tenaporarily., arietAerious -Germans diele-the- same. - "'Tv* had some narrow shaves," sod -a, lancer who was 'there,. ((but I never thoughtI'd get out of 'this. sone alive You Mal to creep over rie • • dead bodies. to get Vitt" ' Entire Absence of 'Emotion. • To hear a seedier talk of the men killed in ,an actiOnby their names _ . brings to. one alieener realization ' of the grimness a it all than the longest casualty list or •the most vivid deseriptio•n. "There were five chaps in a small firing treneh in front ot the run.in one,' went on ithe trooper, `Old Clarke and Tom eelolinseneand_Brownneneer-011-nr Jef arid throive away fle he *capes-. • • '4 Private Bombproof Dimwit on British Bast Coast Since the German raid 'on ethe east coast- of 'England, litany of the residents of Searbormigh,. the Hartlepoola and surronneling .tovins have conetructed berob-paoof dug outs to whiCh they can retire if the raid is repeated, This dug -out was constructed by a man in Searborteitgli. It' is lighted, by eleOri- city and la cute aeOinfortable Several tone Of sthel girders and granite bloke were used in its censtrection: ' The entrante eagle is :buil bike a miniature fort. CoLuns ‘tOne.--Of• thorn' .dressed up • as a Picture of a• Scottish 'Congregetion- . Gerinan officer in full ,German kit, . a Century Age. •1: s weateeaft _i_vjuir, 4,,trait_ a, ?pomp, _ Only very lately, a recent writer for the hunt to follow, It Inegr"-ht:'d6-61N're's.' lias it ee".°-4r-lbe-eus- have been 4 bit risky, for oter6 ternary in &Caren& for • a Scottish' were' British and Frenela troops iri shepherd to be aecamPanied into chitieh by his collies. Even new, billets all around,, and when they saw • what- looked like a, German .oftteer conic gallopingteVarde then they might easily have let him have. elle As he passed.' 7Satiefied with `thenieelvet, their officers and . their supplies, and With unshaken eonficlence in the ultimate ii.-4Ory, there is little Wrong With the rank and filt-of the -British array. ' ' r'n-1' lf--— only with k a, wooden sword, and Vt5 MAL :P.A.Ota FOR HilIOES • . , Men Who Ilave'Won the Vitoria Cross Twice or More. • The clasp graritea to Lieut. Ar, thus Raman Leake, the Victoria Cross which he won in the South African 'war is the firs ever awarded:in the -history of that. fereon end another chip" (these supreme decoratiene • are not actuallYWnames he giVeY ":"Itir-ordainietttlial auyoute e --"they were firing like mad up 'to • After having received • the Ceoss; the :very the Ailymans shall again PerfOrman act of brave Western ReMarkable Incre . • the Canada PREPARING GERMAN RIND. 1101090.400011 They Would Like 'Very Ruth to Discuss Terme. The military expert of the 140. don Times sayl that if emy. mari- time pressure is to be exereieed England the German high eea, Elect must be the means; ° For couteit between the mairi fleete England is in- 4 relatively better situation now than seven months ago. Germanyle campaign se* has failed, And though the German airy doubtless will seek to attee Any detachment which c411 be take' At a elleadvantAgee there:14 '40 pax': tionlar reason to expect that Ad- mire, Jellieoe will be caught nart• ping, • - 4 It must, therefore, be supposed that German headquarters will admit to themeerveg the game ie and if the -fleet May still he. risked upon SoniedesperAte haaarel most of the chaneee Will he against it.. Preparing, the reonie. It is not long step from ' this coneinsion tee the 'Opinion that it would:be best to close the hook . Of war aintreonen it some years heuce Under, more advantageous Condi- titres'. ' . *. INblic opinion in Germany is he; ing prepared for the idea of peaee' without ;;a,ggrandiee- relent. The Germans would like very • much, aiSCU6S tenni-before their military' machine begins t9 wear out, while they- still have in • their hands such material guaran- 4telleso:isnl/liyelguirkumbeeforteetiteP41;421d: and They are quite right for -there ie. aeoplininating paint in every , at- tack, and prepanderance ea only ------ of value if it eanbe maintained un - FaDeand's bilTPlire°eouidsell)ennCleilf484the Geint'an riners Meet ni • arraiee must be disquieting to their . -Main heacloarters. The seal of ase ShOwn hi Prepared. Acreage Along .Linep of the PrUseian aralv iteseorps n Northern Railway in Prairie Provinces. .thin the next "few weeks the City, in the bleak loam district in farmers in Canada will be engaged the •attendanee of Ei• discreet dog or Upon the work Of seeding the great- s° is not infrequent, and. Passes...est -acreage which has ever,. been Without •criticism.;'hilt-the anavileg-e &yea • .oeee, to the -Preduction of ,ed'inieials Must be; orquiet.and ir- ereproachablabehavioz-,.-ConclitioP1 that were coinnion a century age woald. tOday excite the horror of worshippers no more truly ' pions e,than their ' grarielfathers, and eln- mest'recentreithente- of religions dew cm:Crum-far lees rigid. Dr. Robert Russell ef Yarrow Kirk has drawn an, aniezing and. annieing picture of the. country eceigregation, human and canine, as it used to be. "there Ware ' no doors on the pews," he exclaims, ."and nothing but a noreow deal ELS Et• footboard, an no sepals, ion below between them and .it oat easily be imiegin- e&-that when the- ehepherds-from Ettriek and Yarrow came to ,.cliurch each iheph.erd was aceorapa,nred- by his thig an5I snugly wrapped in his plaid --no . matter -whit the weather or :tbe season-awhat rows. there were. • • " • 'On the slightest growl, the dogs all pricked up their ears. lif conple, fell out aid allowed lght it was the signal fOr a generalenielee, I The rest that were prowling abotit, or half sasleep at their master's•feet, rushed, from their lairs, found a way through 'below the pews, and among the feet of the occupant, - and raised a dust that airly envel- oped them. Then the Strife *axed fierce' and • 'furious ; the •noise • be- came deatettine4 the voice of the minister was literiallei, drowned, and he was fain to pause, whether in preaching or in prayer. "Two -or three shepherds had to leave. theii.- •Placee and-1--iree their nibbles unmercifully before the n----Ttwas e.tiled and the service e surnect' , • When the. belligerent •animals re- 'frained from interrupting the ser- vice, they frequently went to the other extreme and.participitted in it-ajoining in the staging • of =the psalms withlOng-drawn howls. The benediction.; as a matter of Course, •was alWaYs „pronounced - with the peeple -seated -"to etheat the dowse" ;then, at the first D153/0-• "inent. after it, "aperfeet aerie barkimg-hrokeonteasetheeloge pour ed outOttlie-13-ifilding ahead of -the peopie't."- • t. ' • It was often' inconvenient for the shepherds ire leave their collies bi- - . -hind,- and-iteweaS -long before the &Jai weee excluded by Order. . One niinister gave great' offense through placing , such emphasis on. the Scriptural words, _ "Without are dogs," as Pointedly to suggest the• inferetice that he considered their -presence withio the.church distinct- tnidesireble. ' jumped into the:trench: • We ,never ..,eaW' them- Again. They wouldn't. stand: itniCh ',chance of being taken priamiers, 1 don't t)hink-we would• - n't de: it' ourselves," . • . • 'There isan entire absence of• wt3r in Well 0.6 act of•'bravery an additionalSar. ery, Which, if he had not,., received such Cross, would. have. entitled "hiin to it, such further act'shall be' re- corded by a Bar, attached to the riband by Which the Creas is 1e4, and and for every. additional Ihigliah soldier speaks of his may be added." , friends who have been killed, His -tone is as careless, and offhand as it might be if they had justgone harne on leave. It sounds callous, but it is only the *habit that comes from rubbing elbows with Death for five months 'with a prospect of. shar- ing his : neighborhood for many months more, • • "The chips cod each 'other," said a soldier. • "JOld Bill's gone under,: they say; 'Remember him. switukin' about •bein'' lucky, the other day I '-- Clopped it •fairly thie time., he has.!." - .Ilieribteeellateetheyeelon'teecare;'-'- explained the troupes,' Who had the • clay' of the trenches still upon his enters, "bat you either get potted or you don't, but it soon don't come to Matter a. bit. either way.'r ' • , Army Short of Nothing. , There is a magnificent. spirit, in these men who hive been -bardene.d _ , ih3-1-foltOkelnottstroftlienntgeterrilele tee,auene ane_of_atwo fainous brother.s:, and most. continizone war in his- -whoi,u-tiWon. the 0mM. in.the___Indien • - Mnecwas oretlited with posless- i 'This is the passage in the Royal Warrant of February 5, 1856; et- tablishing the Victoria, Cross, which provides, Per a poesibility which has nowbeen realized. . • Lieut. Martin:, Leake, who won the Cross for gallantry at .Vladefon- telin in 1902, was then -serving with Baden-Powell's Police, having gone out to Sauth Africa with'the Herb-, fordshire Yeomanry: Heeehe aemeelical-rnair, trained at University • College Hospital, -and on his retuiu to tare -and he -went - into private -pr-actice----at • Ware, Hertfordahire: In September last he• re-entered, the army and • was gieen'a dommission in the , It has frequently been sated that Clasps have been wenebeeheroeein the past, but the '-"Gazette' con- tains no reeord of such an event. • The late Sir Charles John Stanley tory. Danger and hardship have beCiatele_fer _them _the :normal. codi; deenthe Bars- 11313 tr_1140hatt, Jiyou just- get ee,el orated• for no fewer' than acts • to it, Said one, of them, rt uter-toiesPienoitaeand,•;:separate, best, symptom- of all is, that they otbravery; one of which was saving are thoroughly pleased with theirt- the life of his brother, Lieut. Hugh. 'selves, with „their officers,. their Gough, who also won the:V.C., but reed, their ,clotheweewith the whale he was not 'gazetted- until October wet. It is not the false confidence ei, 1859, when these' various acts •of . vanity. The armyhas been were enumerated. . tried by fire, tried and not. found Major l3erryinare a Crimean vet-, -wanting... " - etan, who was ",inentioned" for his- . "What 4f10„you miss' th-ta-very on fur oteasione, was an - are you most Short al” 1'14%1 t other V.C. wearer 'opposed to pos. ' staler I m't in t 1'ien6h.rall*44 Se•ssa Bar, but he* himself denied station. "The • British . army s it. of nothing," he auseVered, 2._ -7-10edoet, aggressively. "We've ffgeT-7.- •rirf 111 -it • everYthing we want. and e plenty to— . qPP : !.11!.e _ grain, in the history of the Doman - ion.: While statistics portraying. 't -lie •Ii7ettiiii-hicrease in area will not be given until the feeleral•Blutherie ties at Ottawa coinpile in the at •-spring-theereports from their- ear- ereispenidents-a-on work done,, the findings of investigations which have already been completed point clearly to the eonclusion that the additions throughout' the Western provinces, at Iea,st, will be very -eonsiderable in extent.Offiaiala of the Canadian Northern recently fin- ished a survey of fall plowing along the lines of that company in Mani- toba, Saskatchewan and • Alberta. The figures which were sent in, Of tonne%_healwith lieGaNit-.11-z-einlye but they may be 'taken as an indi- cation- of the manner in which the farmers wept of the Great takes Italie responded to the call for a greater production Of foodstuffs in Canada e Five hundred and thirty- nine agents .contributed to the re- port in order that it would be thor- oughly representative of the terri- tory served. . --7Altogether, aleir the Canadian Notth•ern 'Saskatehewan. ' I& was given as 11'0;000, and the increase over last year as 40 per cent. Naisb4ry, •Olose to 'Star City; re- ported 75,000 Acres, Afelfort, hear.' the ranks 'the German army at the. l' -v : on the ' enile° line, , elaireed: an dose of the ".wae.'may be'alinOst de.: seeth-,--See Lake 16, 15e Acts 1. 24. . increase of eoe•per eant. noithern. tdeteatiogliy eon"sfituietl, , zi-ig7.4i.m. Israel's Arst.14%.:kv,0 n man fter. a i'et*ted an iwT.ea" <If 3°()Per'eVlb• hot be a reeahle to the .ulina Class their helari': 4.e.'rge' iii' 4aiiiiie '6eni- over last, yeaxr. • Duek fjake's 50.-- F • ,• . 1 - • • .. Mantling in areara • bi t th , and the court in view •of the ita- nee , i etr 000acres-is in inerea-se of .75 per ma„,e, eeeeeee,„.: •en.a „eke ,,,,,e,„ tc„, ehoiee of 'San Was, influeneed__• ' bY cent.- To the ,north, Orifford, on -'"'!'''''`'se..4=5;t-i' ''''''-:-.. - '''''.'"- '''.-- the - eXtertiel'Y•APPearanee',.- '''',P4O.ve - the new line cenneeting the eaiee which t*"'• • ell ,ot. the war„ Wil:* ln" Jehovah. will el 'e for -himeeltand ' of Prince Albert and North. Battle, solve. • ' : . The Geienan army:, was severa-I ford, reported Igidoo acres in areas, thousand officers To the south, in Saskatchewan, De -war" 1913:short when the 95 'per cent. greater than in liegan. It west have •proven lisle, on the Saskatoon -Calgary 4nereclih.13, difficult .to find leaders ,alinneinreerpeoasretedof883,00000eacric'eeen,t1.9h1mOhiris., fsotrreasll ortehellweawr htrrniotli°nseverely e - shall; on the main line toward the upon. ihe Germane orgainzatioll; . , . . . . Alberta boundary, • returned 50;600 the units have become intermingled al.._,Weiwill_ not .sitt_i_down --The acres. In Alberta the town of to such an eictent, in raaeay „ oasee,' Hebrew has around,, 'meaning "We eHainna--repeirted 40,006-acrearean._that all seinbiance of order has elise. will pot sit around the sacrifice offieers; which also is the litOSt • 0 INTERNATIONAL &MOS* APRIL 11. 0111009111 Lesio4.11. Bold finointed King I Sam. 16. fAlolden Testi $lam.141.7. WN Veree 4. Caine tO meet" him tretablinge-Saraneirs vieiti. had- -often been mado to rebuke the peo- ple of sin and to correet abuses. Renee ..thofitirtniSiPZ that he came fee sue; purpote,. wonid tremble. The fact, that Sdinuel was no longer At 11;iendship with Saul should heighten their appre- Window. • Sanetify youreelvese-The icus- topiaryteremonial uhielt included 'we:thing the • ga_r- tuent$ (Gen,' 34. 2; Ii:xod,` if). 10; . Josh. 3, re). e .And :he foeuttlad aesse and his . sons -elle superintended ethe• sunetie ileation,. of jesse and his sons - This 'would take Place in, 'Yesee'S: housece.nel. give Saninel ai oOli tunity for eleser acquaintanee, with jesse,and his "eons. : • '•' Called to .thu . saerifiee-'e-Ile tedd the el4oks of the 'city to coniewith." him to the sacrifice. He was, Care- fal to sce that joesi and his sone would be present., - 6- 4p4 said -That is, he thought within himself. *Samuel well re- . Membered Saul; who washead and elottlderg aboVe the rest of hie; tribe. So when Eliab appeared,. •Saannel concluded that he was the •Bera's chosen. For he had all the outward qualification. of -a king. As -ihe suceeeeor of Soul, „Bliali fitted, the requirement'; • SO Sam. -- Ilea reflected. But lei was gem' to learn that commanding height and pleaging COUntenante were not the only evidences of kingly. qualities.'; In fact, these were of • no signi- ficance it the real il.ualities Werki letahle auppo,rt of the. Prnesian dttaixig crown. 'This •eorps saffered• . ',sai unto ave1 heavily; indeed, the losses cannot be replaced from the class. ;whence it was recruited. "Order Disanpearing.''', Itpeoniotion takes place from --Something in Ella)) • muSt have struck Samuel as unfavorable, and . J a heard, the voice of God proniet- inghim 0' be carefirl in his ob- servations; 'For Jehovah 'seeth not as man., he will look Upon tleheart, , 9,' Sh'aniniabLeAlso ,ealled Shim - ea& (2 Sarre 13. 81. Ile was ,the third. son of Jesse, the 'father 'of Jonadib;• "4,' very subtile „person" '(2- Sam. ia: and of Jonathan, who slew a giant of Oath .(2 Sam.. increase of .20 per cent. 'Stettleappeared: • h Leashes of new lineVhe in the central_ n portion of the pre- --Thus, tl RAM vince, gave 30,000,an increase of 20-fiet cent Oriitgneyle, lose tea Calgary, reported -40,000 acres, and Delia,• the 'next station, 47,000, •which is an increase of 200 per cent: Two towns on the same line, cloeer •to the Saskatchewan -Alberta, line - Cereal and Chinooka-report 15,000 acres. each-. -In theefekerner the in= • SO•ree=='-frctullorsea to Yam - •-if you are -one of those ainforten-. e -The huudredsQf.yO1Thg menio. ate personease whom the winter and, spring bring a series ' of coicts andwhom 'the War Office has -latify chills you might 'ponder over the followingthree tips, and give t them at least a trial.Whenyou are ',go- ing to 0, place of ,worship, 'lecture, toneert; or similar place, tarry your overcoat your arria its you go. The exercise of walking will keep you Warm. Arrived, don your coat; The habit of removing it and sitting down ineens. that the body .rapidly ehills, with the result that colds come. Drateglitielteitteegernis have been bia,med,.. 13ut bile forego- ing is bitA314 the reel cause. And, Instead of wearing your neck Ma- iler .ot Scarf in the Usual way, with the ends in front, reverse. TAR% to V epenbag at the neck then //or winds to -search. The third tip Is , to. have your waistcoat madof the same. pateriar at the batk the front) ,and 'oat deeper. The back ig "0, most 'Vulnerable spotsratan. ors, for 40xile reason, leave it the: less protected. The above, three good tips thould Mean no bed colds, -Spain Is said,to havirreere hunoli- back than an other country* given eommissions, willfind that- • .-„ethey .bave a.veryhigh standard to. live up to when they - Co*, over.' 1101'6. . The British officer. is praised. mosthighly keenest critics- - ..the Menlo leads, • "The -finest OM - COS in the .W.Orki, sir, and the -ea what.realtes . the British artily ..What The reservist, who .spoke used an epithet, and uoh einpliaaie that his sincerity could not bo doubted; --- rifyifeal- tentage and -'a .-readiness • share to the 1011 the liardihips men tOt4einto be..the. quall- fo, that rnest. • eintemend eaffieee to Englitoh qidicra. Th 0 11100,,j4gco tinrng thttookotabout one offi- . •••,,leer'S thief le* another'( atiO4101.09. 'the1iip ot otieetthiltierri, the silk .ntidereliething of another, end sbis .angiish M behig Unable. to. .get "at: ,related ,b his gel.- ilier,serVatiti :but .tliese very . • aet4st1os that under roma con.., • • ditient provekte,proletatian otOy t1iow up tho..45bleeert soldierly •higher -Mkt • Tho tittle Sulialterite v•lite tut st Utoo , 0 ..,By.anealis of a-SiCrei ,•PrP9Sfit a Xreneb seientiet.....poilverts _ fruit and Oen animl tisates•- into , i to* oda i59;04.4.0.90Mili‘ Cio9totte 4.110 tiatt. tiot.a. yeit • Ao foots loo, trt wits., omit. ilift 40‘1,4_, tot. ro(I&' . ate n0.4011 ettii0 lik Otar t'ttte to OWL' Ifitit*Ornarol#44. ti , tooliaibeilit 4004015 03 ht/14191110 eisitilitt10. ' i solo. Woo, 'wt.. /oentooi oto. -------................- f 0 ct. ----" e• E. s 1 ..-- RtsULI-S _ , :•.••* Cutting Wheat on the Ergen Far my Saskatoon, Canadian Northern e ana way,. • , • .•••••*M*•T • Northern lines in the- prairie. pro- vinCes the increase ,may be, aver- aged at forty per cent: The. fig- ures give a Iiital-acreage Plowed last fall of 6,181,376 acme. •This is an increase. Of 1,7863108 acres over the preceding, year. Fight -eel' at 21.38 ,bushels" -to thc aere-the flat average sof _ the_yiald, itt Western provinces in 1914 for. wheat, oats; grain yield from • • ' ern ,ountrieS thelatt • and., 'coin - Who 'wai that' ie, red ' hair and fair of, skin, was partiou- • larly attractive, geoelly. look " upon. 'See-t4en1-30?-6'iOr•a...similar description Of Joseph 'and;EXOtl.',2. fl°3r,,--T'a hdee;°°11orirPotico°f11;e1; 1.1(s°ese7Verse 1 of this chapter)' and anointed him -See 2 Sam. 24... 'just ae- Saul had been anointed twice (a Sam. 1.0. ; 11: 14; 15); so David was twiep an- • oint•ed. In the midst of his brethren -- In the presence Of his, brethren. It is evident from the after , hist,orv that David's brothers did not beenize has 1 Iselect have :d41. tp„ David pshotaisgcleci saltoptehipd;tut daspt omp, tahim.Ityhel a diy: prophetie school" '.(aees Sam. 19 18ff). , . And the Spirit of Jehovah can*" troops are still forming ernaany and Aust -ria.; .the German ariny-be- iins •to deteriorate, and its situp: - tion Must pause 'many sleepless nights at snain headquarters.' e, Snort in War. Our soldiers, °Seers and privates alike, must have their sport in be- tween their bouts of fighting, so there is no reason to be scandalized at a. pack of hounds being tent to France to provide 'a run during off dayea During the strenuous cam- paign in the.Peninsula the Duke of Wellington always -took a pack of hounds With him; and 'once when a, retirement was neeeSsery, he or- dered his general to Saxe his hounds Whatever 'dee had to be abandoned., In the 'South African War, too, our officers managed to ete-an__Oce • ' n i ,,e_eithetheOapepick vitten opportun- ' ity. offered; when -ii famous regiment on the way out made a few hours' gay at Gibraltar, the Cape Hounds turned out for a rAtn- Rilee-meetings were often organ -e mightily upon David from that • de,y---forwaret=e-See-the Spirit came upon Saul at first Sam 10;, 6). • So the Spirit Castle upon, the judges (see Judge 3, 10; 6. 34; 11. 29; 11. 19'; 15. 14):` Compare Act). 1. 8, ized.Tana t ------ow the -men -were 'Bat ye shall_ receive powarezegieue • the Holy Spirit:is-come- upon. SfOu.' ' never too tired for. oot wue and men indulged in a little shoot-. "darling," probably in • referenee ing.._ _Rap_ the German Crown to his being. the yOungeet • of the -Prance.ifeeently enjoyecLaday_evith. fair. - ' his partridges; and our -Akers fora, • lowed his example. ' Brothers Fighting Brothers.' when the foe was.not about ofeeers David ' -means - "beloved; - -or' • Orease.it•-4iven,at_1,400 per cent,* .while at the _latter place. there was - • no:fadt .pIOWing done in 19-18.•••••-.. -- • Even the older -Settled parts. of the. West, there are 'gratifying-. increases. At ;Ma r ris, ine Manitoba, the. acreage, ..given 3%000. and the increase •35 per eent. At Glad- stone; there..are 26,000. ares, .which represent'. a' 25! per cent.. iricreasq. • g At Spirlin, in OW Carman sole. ' A* Parra; erewepape StiStg, thatifr • th.e present Writea- Swiss - mother lune. lost four of her •11011a fought different arPlie•4;. .1b, her first Shoirld the tlay-eyet arrive when band. an Austrian; she had twO the British Tommy Atkins fights son After, his death she married' side by side with the soldier of Ja- a Frenelmnin, ,by -Whom she had '- pan, the greatest contrast between two, More sons: When • the war them will:up:Pear over the question broke out the four sone took fare - of heightf. Five feet two (niches is well of their` mother, -• two -joiting and barley -the about the average height- of - the the. Austrian. army and two the fall -plowed lands along the Cana. 'division,. the agent reports 40,600, Japanese warrior, though the ar- Freneh. 'Fate willed that the Ause cliaii Northerfiln Manitoba, Basket- , which is AO increase of 15 'Per Cent. tilleryinert :are much taller, only trian sonS 'should be' sent to rein- chewan and Alberta, - would be At Denrea in the 'Heaney Dis- picked men being enlisted into this foree:e the Germans at a point a 1321-15,48186.-88,lushols.,111_ - thee_fignres---iump-to--IN000,_ _broach of the Service. About three the front vrher e thee_ Vrenelt tons, basis of , last --yen-r-the - 'Increased winch tePreseiits •an Increase of 70 mines ,ap hour---Ti--,the • rate at -v-Inti aereage Weald preduee 37,759.389.0ft per -cent. rePorts -..75;000), the Jap soldier . marches and he. car- epealvebr: 'were fightinx• A18 thlO bushels. But1914was ani off year an inereaseeof- 90 per -cent,- As these 'four sone' were killedIli the Shane . - • - for grain production irt the West, are, the conspieueue reterns only, and that average Will probably be it is apparent that Canada is doing eaceeded in 1915. , her allotted part of :the task which The largest acreage for any one' is at present eonfronting the Em - station was reported from 'Star .pire. • Ties sixty-eight pounds°Oat :and ,clothing. He can march for tremen- rous:gretehes without fad, tto• quite the healthiest and hardiest -soldier hi the world, with the possi- HAS BULLBT IN BEART. • .4i11-14110.104004/0100.4.41. • case of 4 man living, and even of f0111).Wing some oecapation, with a SomeNSoltiorlinesLoofmtiliiniitelesitllit4Sloi.ldiette ifnotreeirgenoihnogd3;aidniorgar'vaiptahl ' 111 the Twoit. Among the many curious cases of p.olom,ital illustrate thi One.eis f - oratory at St. Bartholomew' oosHae wouw(1,8_ whieh --r, have been inve,stie ,rightfitjuneasu Germieennhul let imbeelcle, ed ---ie. the gated hy the X-rays at Si. Bartho- s about -one lomew' s Alospital in Landon is Mit and a quartet inelhes long, and the in whiehr a Ger n bullet, vfees delineation is" perfect. -Tho other found . imbedded •d tIle musaular tthows a number -o/ pleas, 4 ellizaP- P4ThrtPod raiattilollgliear;tehr *Irt'co loctten. Of the eye underneath. the brain, ; , liel in the skull cavity at the base the bullet :said that it entered de The shrspupi entered one side . of man's- left shoulder and ,burrpwed the &Leek and °penetrated through downward; The amazing feature of to the other side. the ease was that after thesoldier had been hit he walked for a, toile , . . 1 -and o fiajf fict,,,611 .1411,1)Illail66. Re'..dl.d Itowever, there are Maley, fair' not realize blab DO Wttp WOUIleetto ilititepira who are not ;blondes. . 460 heal3i4sateintil ho i sawn, few splashes _ ;- i . . . nav. . '.1.111.r80 tusee,ttal linnet e neon The bullet WW1 latit ItOMOVOCI, ansi1 011411716d In Chink, ,whort, oxtoroivo the fraarilivea afterward. . derresits of the mineral have been , This is' by no Means' ,on isolated L,found. . 111 I J. , Scotland • is estimated to pont* 1,000,000,000 horsepower.. from Wa- le ekception of our Inthanetroeps. ter, . • _ -"CalatriiNone!! Prevents Bad Colds Strengthens Weak irritable Throgs-,. RinployS-Nattire's-OWA Method and IS Invariably StieceSS.fid. Pew will escape a cold tide winter, but alas! many colds runtinto Catarrh. Neglected Catarrh- is the straight gateway to consuniptiou. Critarrhozahe it; ete germshiner-ues• ttoys microbes that. calls() Catarrh. It heale and soothes, telitkes the cough„ *gives throat and lenge a &anode eleansee the nestribi, Clears out MO phlegm'. You feel tetter in hour. In a day you're greatly relieved, aitd on goo thecuriug of Catarrhotea0 tin you're 'well. No treatnent .80 'aired. Catarrh0. zone goes 'right to the ertLenets .0...._•0.1111000.0.01110. 'ttalekilt, cures thorouglila b;:tatrboittoiz6 so:4,40' all tliroat affectiofls. -' "Nothing could kill a tOIA so feat an ling. from St. Johne. "Lagt, mouth had a frightful cold in my head,' attiltn frolashing hose, rtumiks eyes. and. torturing headache,. Ten minutes. with "Oatarrhozone',itilio.ter gave relief and in one hour / was Well Of my 044 Caterrhozone X eetisidee a neared: Carr? ''Catarrhozonen' inhaler Sit your ' pocket or .1itree.4alte it to church --to the" titentre-to wpek-e uee it la bed. ' It prevetta and Mitet alt niatitiet of ioe and throat • . troubles. Complete lantfitg•gitat'antee4 $1:001 swat eigo: :064 041016 tiro 250.; at dealers ever3wneto4 4 .•• •