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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-08-26, Page 7;50 -I- • - 11.1i1 TM. gr"- a Tr- 7,4}Wl• • .vgim Nr -r "' MAN WC IS'A FAURE nets have done excellent seavice 09 far, but •they by ne 'means solve the question, Aeroplanee have been used, but not with great succese. Dirigibles have also been'sent outRearcbing the waters, bat so far as la 4thown their have never discoVered, anSrthing. OUBAT BRITAIN "NOT CUT OPY BY ANY ,mgiorS. toxviNGTNpER. suB14(4 , Germans Coaaiantly BonslOrd Towns Near 'Thew lanes. T• here: are several towriii in' Frtince where -the inhabitants have grown eo aeCaSteMed• te being, bombarded that Lelsess IyOcrinan Submarine!) TO Not Decreasing Shinning, • The tendon correspondent • a op they net, drink sleep and go about • New York Tribiine. San; Ait119.13girk,_ it their daily teeke - under 0. cOntinpal • Is well 'known that GerInally Rao roar of earthen an& bursting tandle. eununisslow odd woriginr on,.th�There- are Thaeline, Pent-W•Mallaz obleckade" of the United. KingdOnl .1 and Arra, for example, '32144005 popu- inore submarines of a better type than latiens have had but few days' respite . aver before the operation does not, for months p.m*. . • APPeat to be, Increpeing in effective -O. . "The 'last passed Arras in nese. • No more shins are Doing. en* the train on the jemmy to Bou- logne," says a correspondent, could be Seen and heard bursting close by, and though' this was some, time ago the German spite against this •unfortunate town does not -seem to have abated a jot. The German lines are just half a mile away.. And. for 'eight months they have•shown a fiend- ish delight in showering shelis of every calibre upon the ...town, , until whole quarters have been reduced -- to ruins. "The 'massively %int cathedral is hardly recognizable, _arid the railway statiOn is pile' of nondeenript ,ime- - terials.'• ',There is scarcely a. • house intact in the place. • •: . "One would have thought that the inhabitants would have long since quitted the inferno. • When the bom- bardment began ethere were perhaps 25)000 inhabitants,. About 2,000 have stoutly stuck to their native place, and refused te• quit what is left of, or represents, their homes. "A strange and admirable institu- tion is the 'Coffin 'League.' ,Wliba the bonabardments began 4 the • victims were. So numerous that it was not pos- sible to give each a separate burial. On One occasion 150 bodies had to be incinerated at a street corner. This tragic spectacle so impressed the peo- ple that a Coffin League was started, and its members work almost day and night in cellars making coffins. And now all the civilians who are killed and all the soldiers who die in. Arras are decentlY buried Ina coffia. , "Fires are freqiient, especiallY late- ly,. since the Germans have taken to deliIering incendiary shells Upon, Ar- ras. A story. is told of hew on one occasion the prefect,,the Mayor, the bishop's vicar, and the vice-president of the Prefectural Comic% together with the bishop himself, were all seen together working the punnis under a heavy fire., At any .rate 4Crras pre- sents an extraordinary instance et coolness and love of the waive soil. The inhabitants. evidently prefer to be buried beneath the ruilie. of their birthplace to giving way to the burial birthplace to giving way to the brutal and senseless terroriani of the futile boraberdinrint.".. : ,now than diming, the early days of the bloekede. In faott the. Admiralty has just announced that ppt a single Brit- ian', shin Was , sunk during the Week • , ended july , British experts and gritigh mariners now .scoff at German • et-. '• forts to cut off.; supplies from Great' ..firitain. They admit. that'a certain. .nurelier of ships are destroyed with a considerable 'degree • of, regularity, • but, they declare that the percentage is • not likely. to • increase. They be- ' '• lleve this because' of 'the Precautions .• •• which are being taken „fie : doing •'`.ftwei with enemy. subhuirinee, pre7 • citations which range from 'arming , Merchantmen to snaring the demons of 'underseas with nets of steel wire. • They believe it also because of the increasing number of ships • which, when attacked, run for it. Building Many Subs.* Any impression that British waters • are infested with these "iintersee- boten," that one is lurking outside every harbor, is wrong. , • Germany has, particularly since the .beginning of the war, .made a specialty of the 'submarine. She has more of them than any other nation with the possible exception of Eng- -land; -find in type and efficiency they are equal to, if not better than, the - submarine of any other -nation. She • is building submarines at the rate • UW.4.010/5MA LESSON, • . *Jaw' an, • ' 140-ifOn- IX,---agfrO Care of MOO, lia King* 17. 146. Golden Tot:. . 4. feta "f0. 7. . 4 10 glijaleS Prophecy 'Concerning Dew and 'ROW (Verses 141. • . Verse 1, The Tighbite---A native of Tiehbe in Gilead en the east gado of the. Jordan Wirer, .. The place has ;mt. been •definitely identified: BlijaWs oii- Pearaneo*-are, Olterowslidden,,:and he, does not remain. long. Ms owing to Ahab, is abrupt awl his Vr03444 . 'without any Warning ' Whatseever. . •Other prophets appeared In the Seine •• way: for example, Alinah • (1 'Itings, 4.1, 29); .$1xernain (2 Chron. 11. 2)) Azariab 0.,”.chren, 3.% 1). • 'Where ..go.ire to come with all the Wee of the 0:nielx::erttfede the 7.9,rd of t17 .1., Aord, is • As , * . the ,Cod of Ierael. livetli-. Elijah spoke not on bis own author. Ayr but on that of Jehovah. ,m0od," he said; "will speak through *e,, oc-, .in . danger. because of 'the, Anger of Abc9grad.bini Ig oign to , t h73,:tvilbleIldichi': ,lifei,7l; :;:v":1.1,:ii ;i he: Would -*Bider, Elijah- iiet; the "anneilacerr hizt She Wipe Of, trio!: • ,orolivbb..-. . . • ! - .1.' .,.i.,: , . stook' ellestb:!--= Not elie*herel' ' mentioned: It was. not a lytholein the, •ordinary sense but 4 ravine, down' 4.,-.eo •• through which' the torrent rains of ' winter were rushed to the Jordan. It e:,...:„. Elijah was to hide. As • it was long . Was dry except at the place wherel " • and narrow and: dean,- it *mild ;talo - a good hiding ''place. Tradition,- lo- cates - • • cates Cherith .in the neighborhood of; able Projeets in which the King is in- Jericho, but "before • the Jordan,'" is' terested is out. at Ithefiampthn, where now thought to mean 4 .404StWardill hence the break is to be thought Of -..: • a large residence, Roehampton House, ha been fitted Up for the soldiers and as '•One of numerous water courses sailors who have lost limbs in the flowing into the Jordan from the east. , , .4, Ihave comManded the ravens to • • War. The old custcenwae.tO discharge amputation and Send the artificial feed thee -:-.These birds Would *eke - - their nests in the Coiled of •the 7 rev.; such met from the hospital- after the ines... The word myelin in Hebrew cant. limb atter them. Of course, not being properly fitted, they were generally he made .10 mean "merchants" er . • `misfits and frequently were useless. "Arabian's." As the "ravens" were :. • Iiiii Is Attending to His Royal Dutiee Early- in the war air appeal vitae made "unclean" birds, the Jews have favor.= ed the reading "Merchants" or 4.0a,,', With Tact and . ' for a` different method in tread/lig these 'unfortunate menraind the resu t hians'hlthat is, tra,velling earevans)., • Wiiidoin,.. , ''.'' ;' 18 now Seen it Roehampton Haa;e, wuho gave Elijah to eat as they passed where the limbless sailors and soldiers ''''7.--- ---- - .- • - -. ' ' ' , . .2 • a' 6. And the ravens brought •-: The, The-foliewing_frem_the New York are pent to be .fitted by the most mi. - Fifty tradition is that they brought hread . World, which has never been priiii.-ffert.ritakerrritiirtifieial-limbsv in.'the Morning andfleshat might.--;.. to pay complimentary things about thousand dollars was granted from the British royalty; is is significant as it 'Prince of Wales Fund, the War 'Of- ,..n. Tito widow: 0 ziii.e.ouiti:. is •ieteresting.: ' i • flee, the Red Cross and other"o'rgarilz- • . • While the British statesmen % are ations and King George and Queen sea -coast - discretioa and WiS4QM. His nonn- ., . , , •• C. .". about 9.zettir'grth(nialiehiro_sse SsocoA8u-t1h6th)oe.f ravens. For with a droughtinthe was,' (oily ..in March, , 1914; - that the .• straetive 'War.: - Sidon. making shreds and tatters of each Mary gave generously from their, Pri- , -other's reputation ' in their . public vete purses.- They make frequent- I. have commanded a widow there quarrels, King George goes quietly on visits, to the men in the rOupds which to sustain thee --This was as precark: his way attending to the. duties of his they takeamongthe hospitals almost - .ous a -source of sustenance as the' position, .'playing the ,garee" as far _ever, daY- • dried-up brook and the food of the as he • himself is concerned with great larity. with his subjects has wonder- •EITROPE SWAMPED'. IN DEBT . . • land, a widow would not have more • fully *creased accordingly, which is than enough for herself and family.. :' - ''• '. Britain's; Ability to Finance a D . 10. Gathering sticks -The povertY 'an the more- remarkable because it of the widow- is,:indicated by the fact,. ,House a Commons ivitnessedan Mit; • . she was obliged to Pick pp. every, burst ,against the sovereign-, led, by England ii new . paimg riardally- 'stray bit of for fuel. the Radical and. Labor members, fiffaen• million dollars, while the daily 11: Was going to fetch .it =-.• ITO, : Which -had: not been known there for , war expenditures of all. Europe are hospitality, even with starvation tic - nearly a -Century. It was at the time sixteen --times as greet. GreatBritainin*, her, was as ready as her faith:_a'. ,, •rif the Ulster alit's: . . • . is spending the most money, with Ger:. moment later; Was reSiiiiiinfre. .;,- many second, Russia third and . 12. Jar . .. cruse -The jar (or bar-- . Had to Coax -Kitchener.. 4 ' France Toliith. • One reason for Engr. rel). and cruse were the heeessarY • , domestic articles of every home, and would thus be particularized. • ''. ' ' , That •we May .eat it and- die -The last meal; another evidence of • her material poverty. • • • ',- ' ' 15.. She went . and.did-Faith, the -* - substance of her spiritual riches was great. '• . . • '4 - , _ ___...........;B ' • , HARDLYCOMPLIMENTARY * • -arshal,-Qyaied Objectest,te_ be:-Re-- garded as Baked Mud. • . Men of One of the ,13est. Russian Infantry Reginiante.. -This photograph shows the crack Russian, Foriogorijski Regiment, which has been cloing,heroie work in the fightingaround Warm% ture gives an excelleht idea of the type Of men. thet compose the beat of the Russian infantry battalions. • ' BRUTAL TREAT- MENT OF WOMEN MISSIONARY* IN PERSIA TELLS • • , ' • • OF OUTRAGES. t., of one A ,weelc., .. ,• ., _. • Fleet of Fifty. , . . Men Were. Murdered Before the. Eyes ... . . The British Government has . in- • of ''Their Wives and Chil7 • -•• • lermation -that-in • all parts of .Ger,,, ,• many factorie,s' ere, at work On sub- • • dren. . - marines. At poiriti. far inland parts , . • The shocking...aewa._ni_the-, torture_ • are being Made; to . be tranaporthd, and massacre of More than a thou - by rail to naval bases; -there to be North - fitted tegether • and' launched, They sand Christians by. Ityrds in'North7 vvestern push% shortly befeee, the QC - are -building at ,'Hoboken, . outside cupation- of the city of Irrumiah by a Antwerp; .having taken over Belgian .. ship .. building yards. There is evi- Russian armed force has ;just now ' dence. of construction at Zeebrugge,: been supplemented by a credible:eye°- . '.. and certainly Zeebrugge has, been witness of those scenes in a way to add infinitely to their hortors. -• : . Made a' submarine 'baser as. has • Ostend. .• ' " While Kurds Were: venting,' their Be -fere the • war • Germany had fanafic..L. rage against the Christie* • twenty-eight ' submarines., with a men, they, set aside the • prettiest of ecere more,under censtriiction*. With the women and young girls and even the . outbreak of hostilities' •many girl children Of seven and eight years more were laid down.. It is estimated •who gave promise. of fixture "beauty, that it takes nine months to build tied them hand and foot and. then, el- - .- thaeligille-ote aubrilarine".•" ."- - - .... TH.E.sessy...!EATHERLANo2' • 't er slaughtering fathers; levers and The vessels Which. were under eon- • • -- - . ' brothers before their eyes, these un- . , struction et the beginning of the war hi Germany .Fteedom of Utterance Is happy girls. and children were carried ' •-twenty-two is * the belt estimate -Not. Allowed, '', • . • away to become inmates of hareMs. .available -have probably all . been ' „.•-At..the_.saine....tinia_a.' neMber,:.ef *infi- ...finiehed by this thrie.• ' With the Rules and • regUlations -ari--Phiii:=7 M every branch Of Gerniari del Persians: took • advantage of, the - . tWenty-eight which 'Germany had be -f. life It would be hopeless for anyone' panic to seize several 'hundred more * fore that would- give 'a total of -fifty,. young Women and girls and carry hot born and bred hi, the land not to them off to their harems. , - Many Hate •Beezi ' Caught. .. ' sin, through • ignorance, against eome • Details of this -outrage *Which re- . Since the: beginning of • the.. war of the innumerable. petty • laws: and .sembles those committed ' by the ..,.. Germany :has lost *air submarines customs. 7 • . , hordes ' Under Genghis Khan, and by • accident and 'through., hostile , at- As an example of "the absurdity of shows that the ?lapse of. centuries his - tack, It is impoesible to give the Social, etiquette., it ia looked' upon :is 'Wrought no change.- in the character .: exact figures. Submerines have been and customs of these Oriental peonies,. the- height of bid manners for a visi- Sunk; of -which the Admiralty says. tor to occupy the couch in a drawing-. • • • • - are contained in -a letter received in •• • , nothing There is a rumor in London ° .England from the .•:: Rev., Herbert room, unless expressly invited to ' that in the great net which Stretches Whitehouse, an English miesiOnarY.iri so by the hostess, as it mark of spe- cial favor. . Should e hapless foreign- the ravaged district, who escaped to - from Dever, to Ow French . coast three er;from-La-griore irce-intbeaSy, laid .Thbria. * ' . - :,..., ....... '. • ' enemy craft have been snared within' tonunit Mich an offence she is looked Mr. Whitehouse's' , letter .amply . the week. ' • - . ' : . Admiralty .officials believe that the at. askance, but 'never . told ° in ..what bears out the latest' cabled report, Germans have lost , twenty-nine ves- Way she has tranagreased. • thht, following the. RuSsian• oceupa- sels, . This • is 'Considered a conserve- tion of 1.1,riirrilak 300 Persians, being For anyone, :except. the . very poor, to occupy a seat in, the. gallery of a accused of this' outrage, ;confessed and I....___ ------knownip ' -of-oxie_of theatre is, to use the German phrase, lowoottaile„an.rolons4L _hreveriied the v Ik'places of . their . five •estiniate, based on facts acteally the bohts and on infermation ' which . . arem-ens a e victims London think of thd nightlY. queues • has been, reepiyed..of- accidents which .A -Girl's' Heroic Fight. _ of well-dressed people, Outside of - seenis to be acCurate.. The nuinber At the *onset of the raiders the wo--- ex., 'West -End theatres? ' , ,' . • mai: reach. thirty-five but naval " ' men, many of them, were as- brave as ' . To play. a musical inittement or to _perts will. claim no more thantweritr• the bravest of . the .mezi. At Van the sink in a room With an Window . nine.' ' ' is an offence against the 'law, and sister of Simon Khan's wife, .a-giri of • • • punishable • by imprisorlinent. Woe- seventeen, proved herself the equal Of ,. , -' •• Canna ParalYth..Contmerce. , heroine of history. , Sinthn Khan ,- . . . , . . • • . betide the. lusty singer with a 'taste any But if Germany -has - lost only for fresh' air!: - • . .. and his family had returned to Rue - tweak, and if the bad been possessed - In Germany,- even in normal times, 'silt; but this ;girl remained ..it - Tan of sevetity„whieh2As-,more. than. the freedom of utterance: is not allowed, ".• When the ravaging _Kurds entered with her old father.' 'estimate, het fleet nOW'numberafittY. Rail against the Kaiser •or the Gov; the and caine to her boiled she. :And, under any •circuinstanees, fifty .ernimeritat One end of the atreet,-and • . iubnitirines;" -operating tome then's- you will -be- arrestedat the other eii& . seized - a rifle. and czirtridges and fled . the toot. She called to: herfather a more profitable .bueinesS, of., making . . .1_ ._ • ...1. _.,....: Ands. of miles..from their base,caimot 0•Ate_cioctilpygoe,af :eizite.hrytr pero.liperematvetdh. trrhais ' .tet° join:lie: ther.C:1111t: as. 'She uttered ,..ificl for Wilunded.• • ., Germany • mist retain a gertain ties: Each paper must -beer -the name fere he eyes by the leader of the • the words the oleman was'killed-W . . Belltuiral baa been in. ase es -a ' con --°-'-At the eti&-of the -present year Bri- - ' • the • kriyal estate in Scotlid at • .. . gem ditiligerit'At.argearfs. paralyse British etinimerce. ' . • explosives .4...n., j____;--,--.•,-,- - -- - -- - ' •- . ent-40--the-Dandan- • I I ' ible for its contents, Some pe- -raiders. Thp, next instant the 'milt- ' side his victim; killed by . GIVE MOTHE.I. A HOLIDAY. • - - valescent. home .fer 'wounded officers , tait's ,total debt wilt', reach nine .bilL : number- of scibriatrines with her fleet of a, infininai editor, who is` held' re-' . . . . ... •. for many Months, while Witidsor lions. ' The other countries are ic-.. ellea It .is, not at all likely that the pea s run a 'prison 'editor.. 'lion an a .shot froth the braye,gir .s ri e. e ing am •• ii urcleria-Whigli-3, ' ' Germans ere using •more . than forty action be brought- against. the paper; ' ;Then: she. began a flight. frorrr thof A Thing 5 e reams o , • . Seldom .uets. 4•• • . the, • centre Of -numerous -arrange- even more difficult for them to carry. ,. . Ca.- e an . submarines on the British' Mockacie - this Men nndertakee to ,seiter the im-, to roof, pursued bY enraged Kurds, of • • . Meats, 'charitable , iri. their nature, for For generations half . the civIlized I -1:iirn • fi'OM' its base for more than twenty To dgVell in safety M the Father -Fear that was What the. extremely , as baked mud)! • . , , A subinarihe, cannot remain away prisonment inflicted. .)', :.- • ' *hone she shot and killed five. At • Even While our men are 't!oht.the're," . :tbe benefit ,of the soldi?r.s. . Begin- world will still he straggling to liqui-. 'by the ;Queen,- -began _ ent'ertaining_. elof.regal. ' ' the liberal tratialator had ' Made of AA.........i. • ' ,• • days. - Neither its fuel capaelti nor land, it' is a 'wise plan A -O. -Carry about length,' fleeing .from the villagek she., out woraep and children, at least, need Shot tha single berseamn who -pursued Ohio c a ,g , . d stein .... _ , • • - • • nil* early in June the Xing assisted date debts cOntracted to -day' as will permit. * And each subniatine arid laws-.9Viaile- in -Gormatty," ' "brick" . • .........„ . ,_ ,_.4t::7 _ the :physical. ehdurahee of the , erew, it Cen. d.e,n.s.ed list of the regulatioas • -. • . • • • • - : - her. ' The Kargazar ...(villagel, MO, It. helps, them th terget alittle. 'Solt- ',. • -- • - ' - • ' , e • l' daily partiiii of emivalcseent 'soldiers , ,•_,--4. "--'-- 7' . . thtiat ;remain in •ats home port lot at:„ . . - . • , . el • • '' with :admiration for her•courage. The: es usia ," ' 11 'lig' " ' . y *b-- -b t ' at tea-at::anckinghani Palata,--twenty - . TAT V" .Q.iliENTI:-:7-----': BRITAINI.ItAD: ONCE, BIG,- ARMY, . • , , . . . nianY gaVe her refuge,- being- nilecL is. wiser for lie to team pat holsclayl . , , . . , . , 4.11; _ to see if it was beautiful enough. They examined their teeth and their - eyes. They subjected them to indigni- ties as thoug they had been horses or dege which they were buying. They- set- aside all the_best-lookiag. young. girls andthe women who passed their • r, • inspection and also •gir1 children of seven or eight leitire. These were tied up like so many • sacks,' aid carried away. • In many instances alittle cavalcade of -Persians would galley into a vil- lage as pretended rescuers of woman thildren -urging -them .th invent quickly -behind them, • or •on the led horses, -before it_ VMS too late. Inex:, perienced Christian men, face fo face with the horrors- of -torture and death; would beg their women • to accept this chance • of escape. Some • did So, though evidently. with instinctive forebodings. • Others, with womanly instincts more keen,- actually:Sought deathheside their menfolk rather than trust 'themselves to the suave Per- sians.' • JAPAN HELPING RUSSIA: Sending Big ,Guns' and Laege Supplies .of Ammunition. . •• -Now-thet-thadariger-of-war-with . China is over all Japan_andKerea is engaged in making supplies for Bus= - sia and her *alliei, The war brought hit financial lOsees to Japau, but ' the gaps are being filled in part by the furnishing of . guile, ammunition. iiiid general necessities to;the arnalea at• the front --Particularly the armies of • • land's heavier outlay is. the greater Ruisia. . • When the War began he kept Wni- • A pay she gives to her volunteer. army Officially, Japan has given incyeas- self in. the background except for 'or.: bi .4,000,000 'men. In the 'other coun- ed :practical expression to her friend_ Pamental: occasions, not° having, lbe. practically no Pay. ' ' •' ' • tries the conscripted' soldier xeceives ship towards Russia by going to the -constitutional 'ivivilege of his comin, , . . limit of dieniantling some' Of her forti-. William IL, of being the leader of the The end of kthe first , year of this ,fications on the northeastern coastof :piny in ahy sense of the word.- .It greatest -of all -wars shows that the the empire.- Big -coast gurisatripped . l after much tactful- persuat- , • banks of the four leading belligerents from these fOrtilications have ,been 'gbh that he obtained perinission, front etillectively- have over $100,000,000 .shipped to 'Vladivostok to strengthen. tord . Kitchener for the Prince , ef inOre gold than when the war began'. 4'4 She big gun artillery et: the armite Wale's to remain at the front .petniazi- The ,baiiks of France and Russia have, ,of the 'Czar. '.. ; ' . ly: . The-King-lninSolt-hasbeen---approit• , „ y,---48001000,4300..eagh Of • Foreigners who Irina japan are. with the' troops for only a short visit. , . the yellow metal, but bath have fallen especially .astenislied• at 'the almost ". of a few days last fall He has - re- 'slightly during' the year,. The Bank' limitleas" number. of tiny shops in the eently returned from a visit to, Ad :- of Germany .has gained 470,000,000. During. the, Russe -Japanese war, • Miles of streets'filled with them -all . But not a:day passes' that he is net total ig, still $200,000,000 ,below that' an mr. Franklin Matthews .represented • Anierigan newspapertaa near the • big cities of this nation --,Miles upon mira1.4ellicoe andthe navY. • • . , gold since 'this time in 1914,• but its occupied -in_ Making sothethin when as he could get, • and: One " day „ engaged upon his humane labors for Of either Franee or Kusiiii. The Bank . front. they are no selling something, These e selgiert-and"-theseirernfi-A. .....r --ant Of England,gained--$704000;000-goldLin succeeded in breaking • through' the shops are really the factoried of the news cells° s p-itral-reachiriel , a no mesh ,iniportance in ireashig ' the last twelve 'months: . empire. It is here that cloth goods . Marshal Oyamh. The interview was'. loyalty, patriotism and enthusiasm for. In discussing Britain'a ability to Iceep huge„ armies _ iii. _ shpplied ° are Come , acqUainted with their king Paish, the ablest economist in Earope,. , . brief,. but exceedingly- gourteous, and ahd innurnerable articles needed to the •War. : The people have also be- finance 'a destructive 'war, Sir 'George. turned Out, handed 'over to cominis- through lie daily 'intercohrse in a; -enumerates-Some. interesting . facts the jubilant" correspondent hurried • sion merchants, eSsembleci in "great way. which before the War would. have First of all England owns:twenty bil- back to prepare: the story for his .pa-• quantities and distriblited to Russia, seemed hardly feasible, since it has lions of foreign'. securities, Of . -Which per. In the course Of at he used the. meant the removal a maty.'artificial only ohafortietlrhaS been sold during expression; , "lgershal Oyarea is •a ties of boots mid amthuniticin. Cases. '. simple nature has. stood the test And 000 tons of new ships, eitheeding keit 'brick."' , , • "• • . : ', ,. .,. :. Korea, also, is in.akiag big quanti7 :bairierS, But King George's kindly, the year: The nation has. built 1,226,- •\, The letter was 'passed, along to France arid everiEiggland."- - 7,,. 7; - • ' .. the official ;translator, and presently' The Japa.n •Celluloid CompanyA at the.watin sympathy -he -has shownior .vast margin ell the tonnage destreyed CaPtain- Kanaka. of the marshal's temporarity,-the telluloi. busirieb for -d ' 1 ' , the Gavel nmei*' normal years Englishmen lavest htin- • * Ikl. ;staff,- called upon the correspondent. ' - • Onldiers has, become an asset far by -hostile fleets 001rAtTTP1PS Abothi, near -Kobe, has • abandened the _ "Marshal-Oyania 'presecita,hi.s eeng-.. ., dredi Of Milli -brie ji foreign. itocks- Plitil"ts''' 'said, the captain *van ' and bonds At Present the surplus is and **regrets to inform the egteeriie: _ c'ettespoixdent=that- his-honorable-4et- • - ter cannot 1Z--ftirwarded-es Written."...- • '"Why; what's' wreng -with -it?' -, • 'Ciiptaiii-Kaighica'ekpliiiiied-With'Igo- . lite' gravity: "Marshal °Stamm objectS , l -raeriean-people regard POPULARIT.TOF,. HIS MAJESTY DOING "HIS- pm . IN THE WAR. The pie, • A. 0 • • ' 1Vioslems wished her to become 111a, sh'ert one.- - • 'men being' ievited for each ' occasion, • crew' A 'rest; • " T • -Me least ten days for everY. twenty -day , trip„ to-be-tiverhaided-and. .. She:Bored? • many of them being allowed to bring 'what She Did to Yelp th‘ Coral'Fish. More Than Half-Milheri• at Home hommedam, promising ,her, 'rich hus- I Talking of holidays,' What about • , ia e . , he band: "She-reniredllint.shm-Would,11-111--nto er_ at___sort of- heliday...-dom along their nuraes_er their near rela.- . era of Torre del Greco.. " Abroad in 1809. Ivor Submarine operations in the f • ‘, • ' wiide)eettled. Sonfe years ago imrhengi army, icattered h " f 'idlers • Wouldn't it be possible, in most the men renn thtoughout the the coral ing an • Irish Sea) in the Ene'lish Channel west! " Iwith as m thing of the ciuick wit and teadisyin: A kindl little het that shows-,- - 'ttle."..Mohart'. . mous aviator, author of The Aero- ,wheever atterripted to make her she get? At home, she has to- super- Ives; e - - onS-- " •-• • ." Plane in War " was in America when change her faith and then :kill herself , vise the4ouse, even SAC doesn't douch..careful thought on the • Y some Bkitain, with a population of. aliout a -0- ---- - Avia ion -was. ne.w_.•he-was_speridhig_ A,4,The_Tarkish sent -for leer', the' vKork; she has to order the meals, • Pert of Ilis;Majesty as if he were giv-: pathy'of Queen Helena of. ' " /tow is turra its present size!. was maintain. toasts of Ireland, where there has week -end at a chuntry hoine. .11e 'and to-ninier gen -nWAY; inking-iliettake-C:nre-of-the-thildrniNetee ' ble gaiden party to the court; and b0 -4t r -and -on the e utli An viesti • t, ' • 'been considerable activity, Ggfinah tells the following • story of . an inci- was rev_ vcsr,els are how. obliged to make long dent that was very widish* to him t , She returned to the .kargrizar's house. cases, to .entist the aid of an Unmar- trips. The elia•miel is blocked. So is "The ,first night that / arrived a : The Turks -frustrated le their special ,ried relative -Lan aunt or cousin - the north channel, which serves as the dinner party Was given. liteeling veryltlesigif upOn het•t•-eent word :to ,‘have who WoUld Assume the reins of goy - entrance to thc kish Sca from . the enthusiastic over the recent flights, 1 her killed. 13ut the Karguzar hid lier;. aliment for a few days'? . The mother :began to tell a , young woman who I, and the Russians Were in time to save could go aWay. to friends and have a was my Partner at the table sortie of her. ' " "real rest" -a thing' she drearns of, . . the details of the aviation saint. • Brutality of Turks. ' but seldom gets. • , , • mews devoted to 'this purpose de 'It was not until the dessert was . The Kura mitered house after Father shaild go, too. For a week much ns possible. Parties are inade brought on that I realized that X had house, and drove out of them all wo- they Would be free of their respond- ,up every day at the different London been doing all the talking; indeed, the men and children, While this was be t bilities, to enjoy themselves as they hoepltale, and Sir Charles Fitzwilliam, wish. It would be a second 'honey- the Crown Equerry, and Capt. Ben - young woman Seated next to me had ing done the Men of the families Were bear, superintendent of the mews, not uttered a 'single -word ghee I first being cut to pietee, thrown from lia"'ne Of course, mother would worry a send around motor brakes or carriages began. talking about aviation. Per- housetops and • 'murdered 'with ter - little about her brood--4nothets al- to take. the times gueats into the haps she was not interested in the tire. At' lastothete was only a wog do -but a daily postcard. would country. 'Caring for Cripplee crouching, terror-stricken crowd Of . . perhaps two hundred womon and ail_ help to ke*_„*eri her mind easy. .. The official's of the royal hoimehold, dren clustered on one side, while alb /1 The ma ikteitort. •wholie bud/nate it is to f011ose,..:the infront of ,thena the grotted Wrie thiCk „ With the mutilated ' bodies of "their "Are you certain 'that you had Miss- Eing's example), have • been' inviting the soldiers,to their &nary Placa cuter theumatismt" liten the Turks went brutally • "Yon bet; it was niritietliar-'enough for onivaleseende where hospital through this. Swami of the inieerriMe. to lay inc flat on My back for three tyeorintme eOnit twheaaninottt nimecveotirtsaarnc. pit.r5va, They tuilsonncl the hair of the woken weeks,;00, • . . .• , ..• , ...4, Atlantic on the north. The device used is the same in each ease, - It is a wire net of large mesh, reaching from -just .bensath the sur- face to tbe bottom of the sea. • Gigantic Net. , Tho net. between Dover and ' the Trench coast is a gigantic affair, but it is nevertheless, there, spread along in deetions, With openings, here and subject, I thought, although to an en - 1 there known only to this pilot and thusiast like me it seemed quite. in- • patrol boats which are constantly in credible. the vicinity: From time to time the "'1 arn , Afraid I have been boring : Mita are melted back and forth,ht dr. you with this shop talk,' I said, feel - der to change the location of the open- ing as if I should apologize, ' ings, The British Admiralty is con- ' "'Oh,net at all,' she murmured, in dandy working .on tie problem Of I very polite totes; 'but would ybil • • alibigiarine detection and capture. The Mind tellthg inewheit is aviation t' '" i • T diG eet; r the worId. In '14100 the local ' oi re fresh Air and talking. t� the King.° ples, were in hard straits. The valuer alone , „. numbered , 200,000, and these afternoon dnjoying the sUllShine 41w1 '• + •;, Per several weeks_this hospitalitY,hgswere kept in training until the peat- . of coral had' fallen 6,5 low that theY were • been, supplerho• longer ible to -fital purchasers of 1815. Moe'- than half • a million royal motors ami oarriaiisentea by driveeir 'harvest. At last in their men Were , garrisoned- in the tliiitee , George his orderedthat the royal' •w dcome toespair thetheir aid. y besought the. Queen, to Kingdem,, another 22,000 rekularg ns in the '' fighting in Portugal, SVhile ilk At the first great court ball that India, Ceylon, Ceylon,' the We:tat Indied; MIA-- " Was held that Year at the quirinalisthe America) the Mediterranean, Cape o Queen, to the surprise of all behold- Good Rope, and Maderia were ler .ere, werezikhout her rieck•a collar coin. bodies of British troops, struggling t a posed of ,0ix rows of coral instead of .keep the Empire together. her_b\tplitb dollar Of pearlii, and her ' • Thirteen' hundred regulars guirde 131401t initr: Was h.owned with . a dia- the convicts' of Nov,South Wales, an d 0 'dotal and brilliants. roretn18,06 mere Were on. the high tea •t1:14 Ifetlifig, the mode changed. Old And, in spite of a long war, eostin 4,I, 1 MOOS that had been hidden 5,0%00 w wok, the omit* man 4, N'• i's- . Vt and years were again aged to redeein millionS• Of rinfinide ti ,116 lewelorsi and were debt and Show a brave froht to th 4 1. rt. iillbY eager astirchabere. *oriel, with bread 'at is. 10d. a leaf 41180.1Ieletfit.S objet i as attained, aid that court ball marked the begin, According in Professor Wei flea li Ile 0 'Mole PreSperousdoll for the Aro yeti fond of music, particular Weil &lora of Torre act Groeo.• , that ,of the tronibanc, , 7 .11 , 4 , 1 "141. • _ • • • • •re,c