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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-09-23, Page 7rlarri r 7-411114 7'7177 .--"Telereoe t.• • THOUSAND Mere then Sew th°0usan4 unifornall to divide amz the artrilea t Iminfee THE the button was preleablY not eaticla an- t' NIILES OF 101AK , der the share thtt eetfiel be.fairify letted to one regiment. e-110140: by the Milflon.. But Uniform's are net, of eptirSe AREA LARGEllteeTHANR,RITAIN. the 'only article$ a .Serdier'S cut1t LIES iRUINS. There are euch things; fLa .0vercaatsi pUttlee,,404% ehirta, and beitte, alI these articles, After the etti,threal.e eve ' a wari, were Wanted by the : ""a. mermau7 "1111Rave to Face in d 'Something like five Millioa teair e a,' the Way o 13nilde.ra' - bctets Were previded front -the vaelene A B111,1. boot factoriee inthe • ineredibly` short - sPaCe...of Vine of four Months. The ! The great Nvols "to over yet ,, In- rre "ie the Front, or.cOu,r8e, have greed, according to one pf our greatest eieoheeeeeed eeekee 44,41.4_.wouid....be_ the first call on the available euPPler- aathorities,_it has 'Onler lust begun. 40qiiire4, te provide the neW British. -.4401rtrarTho-'-arnrY '15o6tw f° No Pne Call ever, venture to prophesy *Tema 'with uniforms and overcoats, 001t Wimt would cost You 27a• 6(1. Pm.' what the datnage Will be before it is finished, sari Letieleet AnOWOre. T.Tp.to date an area, larger than the wb*le of the British Isles Ilea *relies. Four-fifths of Belgium, ten depart.. Anoits• of France, thrqe:elnerters of Poland,. nearly the whble of %Rein, et slice Of East Prussia, part ofMee 13a1 - tie provinces of Russia, tifi, well as a rapidly-greeVing portion of the Trert- tine and. South -Western Austria, are. prectically destroyed, •Besides these , , the gori,loo . capital •aad three bundred goitre miles, behind it are 1a14 waete whjlehe Gallipoli Peninsula has net a teWA , or. s'fillage .intact:,,,, • 7' Seine months ago a NiVell-Atmn) Bel- gian 'lawyer .set 1110.1'30f te petiolate the actual losses inflicted on,.hifeteune '47 by the. brutal and emproVolted hie 'itiirtseof the'Getinan hordea,. Hiskurinte *Mopilebr IlenrCIVIleason, and • eve give some Of his figures in round • numbers. Running Into Many Millions. • Lie&e and Louvain have, ,he says, suffered to the extent of seven nill. lions each, Nan -Mr -Ave millions:, Din - UNIFORM AT TUEFRONT. LASTS ABOUT A MONTH, „ Difficult Task' of Clothing Great Britain'e Vaat New ' Armies *Olt the outbreak ef War a etatisti:• eIan at the Ilirar Office estimated that UILDING EUROPE and, this estimate was probably, roughly enealOM correct, says .Lon. den, Answers. • By the middle, of August every • aVailable milt in the North of ' Eng- land w'alf. turning QUt the khaki •lengths. as fast AS the machines could -do -the -mat • • • 4. story- was tad:to the writer uf twel manufacturere, who set .90 on a race to egg wh,o :woaltt first preduce- oaelundred miles del:timid, the loser to subscribe five livadred pounds to Abe' Malone). Relief Fund. ,eepor,neany deri....aed,nighte the mills of the tWo manufacturers vibrated to the dell whirrine.of-niachinese for the •Pair retell, and they las(soldier ,in the trenches about a month. " The indifference o Tommy, by thP, way, to the manner .in which lee is clothed' Makes .it pometinees• rather difficult for the authorities .to provide hire with a proper,kit, EverY' soldier who a ordered from • Inane toe the Front is entitled to an entirely' new 'rig -out -Irene head to foot, • . A couple of days 'before a seldier is ordeeed from home to the Front he ,is instructed to attend at the. quarter- Ineeter-sergeatit'e ORO toereeei3ee a new; leit, bet he frequently neglects to attend to this inStructiono and gime tin active service in a kit he may have ' work proceeded withhetiout ,an „instant's • Stop. One niglA the tviremextefeeeer.I •.• 0.0far months. The new kit- intik 1/t. after him, but, in any 'Cage, it ers Mettnt their club- at eleven p,in,is.generally • Selne time 'before it reaches it ireay .44 be apPree , each instrheted-their man- ager to telephone tothe club' directly "1/44t°':1)Y."61eme - the hundrecitle mile of khaki came off T. A. Must Have•His Joke. the meehines, which it was anticipatr • ed would be done some tithe 'one company of a certain regiment midnight. befQre received the kits' they ought to have taken with theta, when leaving home, Lest Through a Breakdown, two months after they had arrived in • Flanders. .By this time the company. So far, the twp mills had been rac- ing•-ainee:st-neck_and etta • • difficult to pay whieh would turn out ' the complete hundred miles of khaki firet. At about a quarter to twelve the telephoneebell of the club rang, and tho waiter• informed one of the tnanufacturers that he was wanted. He rushed to the 'phone, 'and. his friend and competitor went with him. After a few minutes the manufaetur- • bligff,. end thenetueningeto friend, said: "A piston -shaft snapped When theyhaddone 211 but six yards of the hundred miles." ' AIMOSt immediately afterwards the • telephenabell rang again, and 'the ether reanufactiarer received' the news thnt. the...111-nnar.ed, /Alikeof khaki had been run off the machines. " The loser _at once kat down at the *riting•table and -drew-a- -cheque- fOr five hundrekpoenrie „for the. Relief • Fund, 'and the winner„did the Same, for he said that, but for the accident • at his friend' e factory, he would have •• ot ' Made in Stock Sizes: : • Avul ,;vhile•the mills were producing' • khala-lingths as fast as . machines • eouldmake them,' the Army Clothing • Department were busy •making ar- rangements for Converting the khaki into uniforms and coats for the 'men ,• at the Front, and for the uniformless were in rags. And •so, unhappily, lint -three TailIforts:-Al-Chlifierol not mere the new kits. What happened was that the new kits had been appro- priated. by another company of the same regiment, badly in want of a new rig -out themselves. After the garmtnts had been worn for some • eca.t time the company got a fresh rig -oil, erit,mhile the damage to rural dis-, trrcts amounts to fifty-six`rnillions, • Railways and ether fltato propertY • hoe been destroyed to tr value of neerly-fift-yertillione,- •Thetotal-of-the darnaga this-onalittle-LCountry--la probably two.hundred and twenty-five =Miens, • • Later, a 'paper was read hefore Ie Royal Statistical Soeiety in London Wert"- this be: estimated ther de; structien of property by. the Germane in Franee at, one hundred and sixty -• In round "timbers he gave the dame age done to property in Galicia by Old hilasing. As .a matter of tact, he was- ' fighting at olie jumdred milliens, but wopnclode and invalided home:" In the le'..elee figure must by -,this time he (pith hospital at home he read, to his • prise, in a daily paper his -name among doubled, the trussing. , • 4. • qiegorra," ha said, "and I'm miss-- ing, am- I? A.nd it's small wonder I am with a 'German bu1et inside nie thet they can't,find. But when they 'do, it isn't inc that'll be miseing, htit the bullet!" •• • ' ‘• • •• ' OL Front the Ocean 41, 0, f0PAPT.P, • BITS OF NEWS FROM „ 1410VIIIORS4.• , aNTER141,ATIONAtre LIMON; SPFTEMBEIt 26:.. • • Lesedia XIIL ee- Obedience and Wing., 1400 -of fo,terest From F1.31 Faatin 21. -F4aViledADtilYNY 4tatr ot the. 4101)---Beview, GUiden Teel: • IttlVe been stMiYing this quarter The. potato Crep of a 'uric 014va. me who showed etrengt4 or Northern New Brunswick is lerit by Weakness in obeying or disobeying rust: • • Ooors. law, Th.a fast YoUng mane Dartnieuth is angry' at the peer . ..ne7nstredcals,Absbualt001,..beor4p o'hadewvretIc taeaaaapheip_n to service on their brAnell: of. tile Inter - ti ..leSs and:finallY mat a infierahlfideath Three. Ii4faz aheLreqett go7t d00-4 heeanse he broke one of Gotre laws ThWord fIsh after an. leonea fight * by disobeying the CoMmands of KStbe baro • e .; own father.. If he hid. obeyed` Geo: 1,Zight13r, anpeelte for arraY 1'0=0* w'7I(EPl6,1,hewoul1have be, 0.44-been.ae., th.e"ereeta f st0n;inthe12uroftrl34,;iBSte The next young maxi started out. . Meneton railroad Men 1.1417e given1fe.• .1,•stre.vvi?hg, ainhheo.dwyats71:1419•4xan:tisp,ktringite' U000 for a machine gim for the Care Carleton ConntY, N,P.o.noW -reb9rt$ • • • His father, David, gave hien such geed; Ojai" arMy. • • that,4e could not but be -strong fbe eroPswM be geod And ram a dRIU210 it iV4Ut ja(ch 41iSti.1:g:. wiseg ESC hSra:tInigCy; 112711111:;:r9dala:t. haS. .Qt 4e. hilftSeaf 1:.:1:1N1583147-1"1;144.Scoticolored tt e ciStgme for " t ' l ser- strengthk vice at the 'fret* • • • • .dfornew,Mil::ovlar.,...cneylest,rIn(tertprt and9CleCkge llandl°7feil:r4te the burn" of`the BuckleY' milt at • Chatham,: .14`• only the toWn but all the fine faetor- les in the neighborhood were destroy. ed. He buts the damage there at • over twenty millions, Antwerp' has suffered to ti Edinger and,• for a joke, repacked the • olt! things, and sent thein to the base for the company they were originally in- tended • One most impotent-, arti'clait-the soldier's active -service outfit is his identification -plate, upon which is stamped his natrie,`number, and the company to which, he belongs. It is Iry Mr Cramond on "The Cost .ef the from these Oates that the lists • of ' misaing ;have often to • he comPiled, arid, hence ,mistakes aced- sionally arise.. Aa.Trish soldier once lost his iden- tification plate, and was repotted as 44 • armies training in different parts Of 'BOMB STOPS GAS ATTACK, • ' .. ' i Invention Which Briti. e_e_ . _ e_ _ • we have no figures. Put it as low as -- the, couutry at home.-- It Was a- tattnie ,, „: - • Ltl Government fifty mMions-an r&i.--ndly- small esti- iiiidertaking, thie, of clothing millions :' - • . mate -and we find that ut the present of teen, and whatoer crititisin may , be levellederit the Army Clothing Fee- Is Now Testing. mothent nearly eight hundred million ound --wertlee_Of prnpertr-jimacen wasted and destroyed. • • France'witli characteefetic pluck, haa aireaely set to work to repair damages; and the Northern -Railway • alone has contracted .with A British fileim for h hundred "steel bridges; for tolling' stock,liails sleepers, etc, _ uktheJact isAat_all: the: _1001 works in the World will not be able •te -cope With the railWay reconstruc- tion alone; while, .as for the rebilild- 'Mg of houses, Avery mason and car- -Tenter in Europe--will-find his -hands • Then take the roadie Thousands of Miles:Of highways have been absolute- ly destroyed by • the haulage- over • them of 'huge guns and great trolleys 'carrying stores. There is no ques- tion of Yemetalling." They will have to:be remade.. . An Aid. to Peace, -- ' This coultry has7s", o fail haipily, escaped being an attual area of war. With the exception if comparatively tritial,dainage one by raiding critis-, ers end eppelles, Or homes and fac- tories are intact. -This is very good' r vq; for. ininiediately,-after peae is declared we shall be swamped with • Germany confesifee to a .loss Of fifty miiioms by the Russlan ,invasion of East Fruatia, and she herself has done double that- antetint.of harm -in Russian Poland, • - • . Making an. Early Start,.• As fOr the damage done in Russia herself,.in Serbia, and in the Trentine, tory„the.,broatmet--mnani_lhatit- -''..1.±.bh..British.3),..y plans to fig • accomplished, in face of unparalleled GerMan.gae.attacks. with fire. This • difficulties, - the imMense task 'set it is the seh'ente %recommended by • a . with almost mncredible rapiditY. • • -committee ofinventors beaded by Sir •;The uniforms are niade in different Hiram • Maxim, who has designed.: a sizes, -according to the standard simple apparatus which the .Govern - measurements for. eaCh niilitary'.unit, ment is neW testing. • and a certain number are made in ex.; - ' The Object Of the apparatus-. Is to __•-•.--tessofAlleSe,measitiseinentsta-ineet---‘einee-large4and. • the needs of such cases as exceptional- fires by me,ans. :of specially designed ly tall guardsmen, etc : - incendiary, bombsin the path of the. • .•In. a. toupleofiraonths a nuartei advancinggaat..a distance of several . .a nulhon of khaki • uniforms. had been' hundred ,yards. By this means, , Since . . • ttirned.-out 'of the -Army -factory, as theL-Iteating•of the air inust causeTa . . againet a mormal output Of• ab tweety thousand • . of • ordinary • uniforms inneace time.. But this, of upwereleurrent;•it is expected to dew the gas out of harm's way. • Sir iram's explanation of _the course, sufficed but to meet a frac- scheme is as follows,: . • tion of the immediate requirements. ' 24The German,. gas at one atmos- • ,,Eighty per cent. of the uniforms Phere of pressure is two and a half •turned out of the Am my Fee_ times as heavy as air. In escaping tory mn the early months of the ' wail into the air it very quicklybecomes had to be sent to Our Army in F.raece., mixed with a large quantity of air, •• Lasting a Month Only. The average life of a uniform at the Front is not much more than a month. •ing air;* that is, it is extremely light In the trenches it is Usually shorter. ae.compared with the air,. but it eenee st A soldier, after he has taken a couple rbng enough to prove fatal In of spells in the trenches of, say_ thte most cases- we find the- air that has - Nays at a time, with intervaee oftivo onlyelefith-partLef.-ehlarine-isethe-:on that has done theharnm: : . days between, frequently Andalis . . - um"' "It occurred to ' me Months orders for all sorts of material for , •-• form in, rags, held together mainly by -r me some ago that, if a fire could. be produced making good war's damage. The Cakes of mud and ,pins.• 'The next spell' between the gee and our trenches,the United &idea also and 7Canada will - --- he gets in the trenches, he gets.a new . rapid upward movement of the air find their -heeds -full.. _____ . unifoi"m, and the old one is burnt -e__ __ would take. the chlorine along wtth it; . 'All this will Make for future peade. . Over four -million. uniforme have . e. and this is quite true The bombs that Men all ever the world will be so busy '• ,zz --heen-senteto-the Front sineerthe :°1't-4 I. Made Were t� be thrown byheed, with the reconsttuctien' "of houses, 'break of war: A regular delieery . of f. beetei was leterie that; in order to he roads, railways, and the like that they -:.• Uuifoints-is-netrinadeeteethe-trooS-' thrown any 'stance, t ey a o se wi no ave une or cas mg Cannon France, but in -the early days of ethe made cleite Antall, and; moreover, they •and 'Shells And, as then -luny Will no War it was impossible to guarantee a could be thrown as far as the officers longer remain as a' threat to the ' regular supply, • "wished to throw them. I delivered 100 world's* peace, it is not ,impossible- to . ' A story is told ora"rompan'y- of a to the Government for experimental• hope that this ie the of the great Certain regiment who, on corning out •se_thatelyet.heetimeeits_onr_ trenches it is, as a,rele, less than, • 1 per cent: heavier than the surround- "Goad -Bye, Good Luck to You." THERM isn't rauCh we 'reveal shared since Kruger cut and run; • • The same old work, the same Old ski:a, the same old dust and sant The same oid Cha,nce- that -laid u..4 out, tar *inked an let its through; he same old Life, the same old Death.. Good-bye, good tuck to you. • 411411)44 The Day.'! • Some -.day fresh green will creep along the Belgian lanes, And wayside flowers will Open to the May, • Aildon-thegrave .of my dear son grass groW again "&itnt to -day. . . • • • •_ And 'on the_Duneseeeill eehildr-en-nray. ---B4as•daylind.Time will stay the aching qf my heart, . '• But not to -day. ,• • Sem ilarthe'svidows of Louvain wilr cease to Weer); And ;from the ashes of those tutus grey , • " , Will4•ii3a et`,,city..fashiened by the whole -world's love, • But not today. • • Sri:Me-day the soldiers -will con -back. fiveiri"France . And 'Canada be decked with banners gay; . • lbr Afill env see them' _marching comrades of my boy, •'• But not'te-day. • But on that Gelden:Someday which the future" holds, • , • When trumpets blow and angels line the way, My bay shall•teme to meet :me down the glitteritk ranks. '• • • ° And be will.say: 10i.. lie was chosen to build a great .'-13.i'anct was •ccerOate(1: ' • ' ' and and splendid teiriple ' tO the Lord'e.a A 14(3uethu- 130 stele SW dis :t.4;ihUtlit•1.ai,eP;letaie171S farDetwhlohettrdie : strength 1iuntatiithturbs.7.trweot4o. . • "A 'bettutif* queen,,ipeari./K 0 ae;e0..., • Albert County 'Council .id HOpewell eloac)tal'fsagesrte' ealuireld heard t (? * :I ej ia SI 1 it.14.et.? .fi§''1,1 gguilnis'rr.itiveQt41Canadianumilitia,te machine '' r . found iris glory greater than she had ' Charlottetown businees men are or-- dreamed, and she learned that IA Was. genizing a eheeri r-aneh - at r4eneli aGnodd wwilInsdor(pgrivoevh. 8h,intu)111 this gloryCapt. Ralph Markham, killed home- . Fort, F.E.I., on &O0 acres of land. Solomon's son, Reholmata, hest M.' Is where in Flanders, was at one thne strength . by thinking more of himself busineSS Manager of the St. John $41'1, hthe rulhe9d.diAta •ge)!bteboa-plellactillwerea d4Liv'etsthvided and appointed laiPppT-EI°11.t7d-axebereoeuInist'ye-fil7er-sAlita. et-lb:Pa' ntrcPahaePili : . • he was weakened. ' It was something Breton. day of opportunity (Pro -it. 18. 18), . The three-year-old daughter Of Her- ' In his_heart that made ladm fall in ld , ace Clark, of Rockland,. N.B.,' was When the kingdom was divided, the burned larger ,sha.re of it fell to Jeroboam, mahe"st.o. death tlu-ough playing with , who Was not of the royal family.• One hundred ships have left Mira - Jeroboam lost his Power by doing a tatehi ports for the 'united Kingdom Wrong thing in his effort to keep the and not one -has. been • lost ° .by war . people lo,yerto him:: Hellisehend-one--methode.- -.-.- • ... •-: ,---,-- \ -:*'• " of God's. oommandittents when he did William_ Crippe,-datiglar,•_awaiting I this (Exed. 24, 4, Oa): ' . . trial, escaped from jail at St. Ste - But a good king came to:reign in Ju.-' Phen, ..: ". • N dab who Inci"easedhis strength by do- the man..13: Man•Y; !tiler cities N.vajlt, i ' frig what was right in the sight of God. *William- O'Keefe, betelkeeper at: St.. _ He . relted upon God for his strength, John, was remanded to • jail on a " an -4, Ood never failed:him. God had charge of allowing a drunken•man.on . proniised, hnd Asa telied upon the pre- his premises, . .. : mise. • . • C. M. Arnold of St. Jelin is suing ..• Ahab was , a weak- king becausehePolice7ConstableFeed-.0.'Neie for beat- -disobeyed Gods !awe, but a strong and ing and kicking him while in .the p0 - . Welcome; .btoive •mother heart, The Day at last has dawned; •" The parting and the pain have passed away; . •• •• • . eAnclit shell see, my.ears shallhear my hearteagain grow young • . .• . • •Upon that _Clay. - , '• • ' --F-C.14,1PBELL, Belfast. • ROIVIAW-ARISPTTALS: - SicI5 People ' More Fortunate Now. „- •• TitaiLIFernierly...17_ • The ,tonstruCtion of many new hos- pitals \throughout ttaly and the activ- ity of the Red Cross in alleviating the suffering i of those wounded in the present war bring to mind how much ,mere fortunate are the -sick people of this day and. age than those of ether • It is doubtful .whether any charit- • able institutions. for the tare of the a pool, to whose waters ,miraculoue healing'powere were attributed: • • The Romans had somaprovision for. the sick and -wounded of their 'armies in the ""valetudinariurn" of. their camps; Mit very little is known about this, The first hospital on record was founded by the • Emperor Valens- in Caesarea, 370-80 A.D., and later a similar institution was built in .Rome 1;sy Pabiela, a woman. , "__ The --earliest distinctLiecord-43fa-hers- pita1'being constructed in England is .in the life of Lanfranc, archbishop of skit existed Previous -to .the introduc- ,Canterbury,ewho in.1080_ founded two, tion Christianity; • . ...The .. Bethesda mentioned in thas • scriptures -the entree signifying aehouse of cliaTit is thought to have been nothing more :fearless prophet CUMe to tlittl bringing a ,thessage from God. The prophet drew hie Strength froth Odd, 'who never fails (1 Pet. 57). • - • Elijah the fear1es be1iji4da wondered teat with the prophets of .Baal, in which he proved-rGOd's poWer• --to be greater than any earthly -power, though Over our hundred were .•cona- -blued against thlm.. While their test • failed, his succeeded, because he pray- ed 'in a; 'way that was acceptable to God tProv. 15. 29), After this test. 'Elijah seemed .to Signi:-&----:,wenteia,---and-, , discouraged: He went Into the Wine, and .there God gave him one for leprosy and one for ordinary diseases. o • Aspen -leaves were once considered than a collection of sheds built aroUnd • • • - a great remedy•fer .14 • Teeposisee A fe-w of these have -been wars. . of the trenches, went to indtlIge in the . tested, and it was found that Ow fire,. highly-piezed lueuey of A good wash- . should be greater...mid -farther Weeny, , " ' ---; • ee- e".. .----e- down. • They were iaformed - en I,A--e-;ri0,..-vbp y --e-hA, • •• -ExplATNs -awe To' umNts-leee -• . iwarterr'nfaster that neae,tielforms had.; ler and leteee farm...Z.4'11e firmeie Lon. ,. , e .,„ ,.. :re.. , . . eee ., , . - . . .... „.e„ -waived for them -from 'ilte hd 6 -mid ---2 ---'' -----r? den who pi opeees to -4ake them hive that their' old ones would be burnt rotmer Head of Pekin University -g. 'designed a machine ' for .theowing . e- ---- tTheenent gladly got -rid of t lei 1. g. N ... nee • Gives British Side of Case, 1. 1. 'r ' tlibm With- great necnrhey n dista , gedenital-caked uniforms; whieh were et ego yeeee, \Altai will , be quite , . teridthers in thina,, Whose hitereste gathered up end 'taken off .to ,be 'lava eneuee, se tlds means A 'fire of other have been seriously affected by -the •j)y the quartermaster's pairni; but, size maY be produced,- and if the fire ,publicitY, campaigned their German _ • unhickilVAAie--tiniternts that hail ars taw teeteeh theegaees -mast 1.44i.e.;,anliter.Series-there, -are endeavoring . rived had beet, taken posteceien of by • sipated; if eanitot be otherwise. '' .; counteract the effect. The Rev. W. E. ' another comptiny a few heurs pre- • "The, first bombs 1 clesigriedeinvolve , Soothill, fOrinerly the bead of the re vionsly, Mid no more were 'available c.cr -tiv use of petrol, but it was Tai Yuan Pu 'University, has written for a eouple of days. During that .• thought that the entntivtion woultk a eper in the Chinese language '(in; tittle the unlucky minis:thy in question be so •large that . there might be it whkh he has a reputation as it- schol.- i. had to live M, their overcoate' lied . , ShOrtage. I have, therefore; been fir) exelaining• the *at- from the Brit.; ' shirts, and strangea gartnente fosn- experimentieg, and ane new in posses- ish point of view.: • . kmed out of .hltinkete. '-' ' • .. I sion of a liquid that doePat as well : In the document, which is being .eir- It was, .of course, some months be- as and tally 'Costs half as /pupil while .culated throughout China, hd says that hitherto Germany has possessed a distill& advantage there, because of the Minced mime for that eountret, "Tit Te goo," •or •Great Viritie Natioin The mime conveys the idea tothe or- dinary man, ,the 'writer states, • that Germany ' is distinguished above all other eations, for its To,' (virtue). The mime§ • applying to • griglaitil and Vallee are respectivety Ta Ying Rao (Great Breve' Nation) and Ta Fa Hue (Great Law Natal); anchit is inter - Whig to note Met applying to Areeti- ee• ist" Ta Itit,el kW? (Great teatatiftil Nationt. ... lice •station. • • A panel has been :placed- in Chriat -v 'Church ' tentethry;' Dartmouth, 'to the'.".,_ - 'memory Of George Wright, lost on the 'Atm:tic, in 1.912:- Sunbury . Comity has had an out.' break of sheep•stealitig, and Frederia.• on police have Archie McReathen held as one of a gang.ofshipects. ,te • 14 , 10). .He found It. ssiffielent for his new ne.gus•41ad en an important. minion. Eiling Aid it is amazing what, a difference, - a. .'. oroVe the new strength 'which he ,hact received in the wilderness ' (Pee: eerength. In order that e he, prove Ns new strength,'Lrod sent min: should -prove Pfethe -greatetb-valtree-as intim "bright idea?'_ _department.- - 'Ms_ ee. of a thing, Often, indeed, turning the • *-401-$..litinle -11rielitions-likeeNieldect scale between a great speeess and ..ge little lip makes in the efficient doing . ... . ' Lord Fisher is at the . head of a • - '. Great Fortunes,. , BRIGHT IDEAS.. . • . -e--'iost the power to control the sai- d -pp -wen. ul c.mr.1Plete failure: • •:• '- • soda -water- btles-- -would' ad haci:a great an Who. would • have thought,- for, ib - army -: - army', but this availed hini nothing, for •stance, that the.invention of A:cap for diers when he lost:the poW.er to con-. mean an Annual profit of thousands Of, . INA himself. The young men who had dollars? Vetthat is -What al Bettie' trained themselves .to obey Overcame more. Man dravis;and the lucky invea; and defeated Ben-hadad . tor of a collar clasp reeeives_twent1 „. In Nit.. 72 the writerbraya for a: kin:g thamand dollars a yea; whilst a net; . • to come in whom thereshall be eTery kind . of .-iiire button, Which-iseasy i----Ineieijuatice element Of atreng h and efficient; made fifty thousamil dole'. • , gentleness, forgiveness,' faithfulnesslarain five years. •• • , fearlessness. ,. A king came whose An American "smart?' notion .for reign shall -never cease.: He Is the ex fastening kid gloves yielded h fortune ample of strengt h through obedience: of several hundred thousand dollars - :He is aur braille:. Jesus Oh -fist, the sd,,,n: for its, fortiMate owner. . , • .• • .- , • of Gdd our rather- • ' The sittiple twisting of a safety' -pin . • ,, ., . in • sitch a way that there Could be no ..- • .,.. :„..„___ - - Medd DYE CAVALRY HORSES. -dairger-tifetheepointeeerateiring . the patentee ,rieh beyond the dreams. • Re ' ' Rendered Inconspicuous at a Distance of avarice, whilst the observant hus-: . ' . When Painted; band -who noticed that his wife's hair- . pins had a way of turabling.ehOut the ' _ French•War horees will seen all be i ted a color •palled_here.:_hol, .. .i7 and- the other man, who made the pletec,e,anct Wheeproduced a crinkl,y_one,„'. pom s blunt, both realized a tortune. ' . Theman who devised. the little me, tdl disc to hold on shoe buttons,. and . the lucky individual who: first put 'a • bit of .rubber on the ;end ..,of a pelicit,' • lue," whichis found to render them as inconspicuous as possible at a dis- tance. 'Stained with`a new tint, horses • will *merge into -the landscape- in a. -reniarkable manner, ' • ' • • • - The problem a inekirietiihorses , nd thman who -thought of- thcaps__ 4 invisible, er nearly so,. was solved by •-ae e _ : of these trifieSthe 1, Dr . Lefiineyof the SocietY of Com- o,' ' and heel plates for boots, did better • .bparative- -Pathologyi- -%e whieh the, -1:lilat; , emany a ,rnan ., !War Department badtwhia , appeal- ion l• . done out of More important invert- • French set the world's tongue" . • - wagging. • • . ----- --eit- - , fore uniforms were available for the the supply,ofeit is unlimited." • troops at hone, excepfeiti quite small quantities. . .The. weitee hrr ead el One iritable: erueltY to Servants' regimental qUartermastor who wasWink Jane, the new maid, Was constantly worrying thii clothing fae-, hiking hee first lessee in arranging tory for uniforms fot his teginient tliedianer table; Si:nacelle in the base - "You Might, at least, solid us. our molt kitchen put something upon the share of any untrolins that ave avail- '&10M -waiter below. able," he wrote; 'whereupon the reply i) "What's that noise?" „asked Jane, came back: "All right; as matters -.P. stand at present, your 'share is one: "Why, that's tho dumb-waitei.," re - button, whichia enclosed spolaled tho inititress. And when orie cobsidera that at Ant(' Jane, "he's.a.sertitehin. that tittle there were probably not to trt out," 14 . . .. . by thc WarDeparttnent • to color ' Anning bigger till -lige, the two broe • Permangatiete of potash Was tried luirses, •bet it proved unsatisfactory there who patented the Stepney .' , bt, irritating to the ani- wheel,. 3ehtele enabled a •disabled mo. -- it` was - lentil:and vvotr. -of„- little lase Meese 1,170_,J tor -ear to contiieue ita journey, made )14t1' ' • ' . e,reeiegpized, autiteit----"IlY. -1 rb.. Repland, $hed hie.' otlf btirie fGeres14111viii.ei-l-nvealtilesht-tjainera Which. iut's lade • eountle-se_ million% forerehriv •" svhole idea - • plied te the -horse hefore he -4tieviied I h e-Uie: 'crf "nieeteltrirfiiigise-'14eif -thailittlibt.aPtIt••til*I-11; '-"-ttLir'-6'''''''- firms, arse out of Elias •HowPs slid- -aneexcellent antiseptie; espeetrilly thother end ' ser- '- e • • , needle pear the point iestead of at. ' . Ing horses n khaki color. ..The tteid .41PfirlATA . . ; without 'irritating:effecter': the horee.. But perhaps...Abe most remarkable , .. vieeable• for 'burns, -has preeed to lid '• •It. has bete :eegeeted, however,• !Ilea. ifive4:, IvIhne•enagehtnt.ebriutli•itamP(alteAndttinlioe'i: ...-. that the aim !holed eeetee eeeereeehe (hewing -gum Which set all, America . 'ay.:sell:0! hi.torh',.:;;:,irti Iiii:eilst.:';(i'iri6::re,,,IYunais:-.fe'herAS'tnielreinil'°oATild'elat!e'siffpnoTile3i'kelij.:1':arm-ti76.-t , • , All unprepared fr the var, . they_ , r had been obliged t, and their' . then USE D.eGGER, NOT BAYONET. . bite the tiehl en iughler eonsPienons. ' .. colers-dark blue tun:es.innt Ped c‘tp.1 corsemes. en Vallee Army Throw and trousers '. - - • - 1 e AWay Rifles in Charges, . , f The garb of the French troops is i „ The Italian troops " 'fighting on the • new of a "horizon blue;" an attric-; /same ' comprise several regiments , tive shade at close view and lee neer-i from the south of Italy and Sardinia. „ ly.aa possible invisible. at a distaiim end soMe soldiers from.,corsien, 'wine_ The question then was how to giVe s' when it dernee to hand -t6 -•hand fight- , thie "horizon blue" Het to the .horse. trig, -throw awe/ their rifles and use. - - . Dr. Lepiimy _gets time color by mix- . their daggere and etilettkii. P , ing Methylene bilk in ii special waY • The Italian offieets have frequettly with tannin. Experiment& 'show that t• :id *e'en' troops that 4 beyonet at the it neither .is toxic nor irritating ' to end •of n Ale is t)f far more titili-ty the horse. Care must he talcen , iii thim A ditgge.14 bee th* . advice is nee.. applying it to raise the hairs And Work lessr.,t.t.barg, it is instinet nud .it into the grain. - . , , • • ; tore. When the tii;op4:frala ACIzthe,rn 'Italy enter the, teteleht,4 kit' 'tit‘. "Ohl,' e ' . Life it a burden tie some people, 1 triaris they uie elle Itn:cit *eel teit the and ;scene others are a burden to lite, bayonet. : NO? 8'792 " • 'PRINCESS PANELS .SMART, - ['length sleeves opene'd fete the 'back, [ With shaped trimming bands The • The Princess gownk.With its graee- skirt in four gores; with.trimmed and ful long lines will ilwaYkvie.for favor shaped heeds at the foot Sizes 82 to With the Empire styles They pan be ,' 44, 85 requiring AR yards of 80-ine1t very effectively combinedehteivetet, as or 43/4. yards ,of 42 -inch Material. • ' shown in Ladlea', Home elan -nal Pat- l Pattern's, 15 petits each, enn, be pur- tern, No. 8762, ,whieh"is really: ail I chased' at your local Led' ea'•,,, Home Empire gown with Princess paliels ex- ! lament' Piittern dealer c» from The `tendiag up find dawn the ' froilt and Home Pattern rampfity, 18.3 -it 'George rear. This dress has a loW neck, i Street, Toronto. 4 • • -04 , •