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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-25, Page 7BRITAIN REVIVES SPAR duAMgE. EIGINT MEMBERS 4r, TiIF.VA ,< a " NET CONSTITUTE" IT. • Will' • Pees: ' Orders n-Cauncol4::Iacde. pendently of Parliamentary • Control, . It has been predicted at ,various' tithes that in view of the 'internal lis- aertsiarts inthehuge' and tinwie1U r eeulitxorl Administration in England, the difficulties resulting therefrom, Parti fflarly those in connect -Fan with the compulsory service problem,. . would be solved by the concentration. of the executive power in the Naiads of a few' chosen statesmen; such •• as. Herbert Asquith, Sir •Edward Grey Lloyd -George, .gild one 'or two others, Who, subject to the. King, would form a',sort of •dictptprate ,dui -,tile. -war,. writes F: Cunliffe=Owe -n Thi! prediction was fulfilled when -.- the -Prime Minister announced 'iri Par:. lianient • that" ,a special committee of the `Cabinet had : been orj nized' "to take charge of the wee," the commit- tee consisting'of "the -Premier himself, Lord ' e Kit h c .,ser,. ' I,Ioyd-Georg'e, ;;'Sir ' Edward •Gey, Arthur Balfour, Lord .Lansdowne, Andrew ' on r a , and • Winston • Cng ce -0104Chill. Since' Y.. r' ,c kl.'.`, e?aerythirig in the United' King om,, and; indeed throug .•pout th e" : Vast h e entire at British Empire at the present mo'-. ment, is subordinated to the war,, this means that the eimmittge irf'.question will form what is virtually a dicta- toi'ate. its members derive `the extraordi-' nary powers with' which theyhave become invested pow ers-that are su- preme and virtually overriding the° law of '• the land and all civil rights -- partly from the fact that they are the • most important and influential mem- kers of the Cabinet, but still more from, the circumstance'that'they con= :atitute__a.:com Tni' tteo ---of --thu -• Privy Council -that 'Privy Council through which the zing exercises a sovereign, authority superior to Parliament •in times of national stress and peril. ` ;The decrees of Council the- :Prr " 1 are e .known.' ' ee orders -in -Council: a, They are the moiler equivalent n ' of the nie- .. •diaeva'l Ordinance, ' and of the Royal. Proclamation; so frequently used by the Tudor and' Stuart monarchs. The orders -in -Council differ from the ordi-. • nary statute, in that thee. do not re quire' the sanction of Parliament,;. -and.. -"are issuedlby-tF,re-"ung by: virtue of 'hri' royal prerogative. - But he -only •-issues them on the -strength' of • the -_.-._advice of^two=or--inore••Priv "Cou . lot's, "'who -are Ministers : til ^ of :-'the Crown. Orders -in -Council:• There are three different species'of" orders-in-Council, Thus there are those that- are `.issued to regulate the... provisions for the putting into execu- er"erellelf1”-- 'wee" • CRITICAL SITUATION. INTHEALAN EXJ Ai D Y !k,Y, J 3(. qJ4: rYrwiVrV.n .. !.X0Ft1ei0,'e'A • ,�aI•ti'tf'>. c<. o Strumitzz 7l�r� STRUMA VALLEY viraae �' 1.w „ tiEilint Van seri , Ary 7t NRI r4ili�/ Vi, LG 'RIA AORIAti0PiE Yen fis tIONASTI JM(l �Ro Q�� id"'•' 4S L•PIN 4 et 14WAyry & uj •r+�H✓7iry,J,•. r•J.�.:/.£y.•!: lei fir'••• c.r�•4 J/�/J.• J! : ?%J. Y" '7ylNnl,` s`%�:i/�•»,J,r„�.u..k/�Fl:;'G'`l,/�'•/�2s�•vk}r�Jy� •a , : This 1C ..,. ^' torial ma reproduced ,prom T� #• ., The � �� (7 . � .•, peep � ° �, nr w.. . .,. .,.. , : .. .' !� :n �► here des 1 e o e •'I � uf3 g y >t a t .� � est ati o e on . e ca p u Ido lit � e t til ink Ba • • • P- <,.� C fes whtch�ooz�front the armt ... ... � :the , . the , • rho A ed • the es can •axe.. grasped Basil b , . • flip expeditiofary�forces• at •Salo ki •' ' . ' a plateau eat thit e , Fromo .the landtn of . � ,the detachments: were c`oncentratecl Qn; a :plateau .qutsi . the �. g would be transferred to the Serbian border � de city. . there they, . Important rstrategicfpy the Saloniki-IIskuh,ratlway (seen'on the left of the ma y value; Another, railway route shown -the through route • map), This line has f the utmesy value to• the Austro-G4ettiialns if the can gain. o g ute to Constantinople -will of.course prove of utmost. facing Demir Ka u, Y possession. of it: •The :trap also shows the Bulgarian salient(i.e.,bulge) intoSerbia. P "salient g Serbia of acts of Ministers, performed under. 'the` terms of an order -in -Council, have always bee'n,regarded' by the highest legal experts. in the .land as. wholly superfluous and as merely adopted by Parliament for the... purpose of making a display and an assertion of its 'au- thority. It must be thoroughly under- stood_that; all -orders-in-Council - peep=have.. statutory force until actually `repealed upper jaw that is movable. The by act of Parliament; that: is to say, odile, moreover has, sharptwo e until .withdrawn b : ' since no act. Y the sovereign, ,that protrude from the lower of Parliament t .enjoys any through the upper and movable' legal -Value until it . has received the his • nose is'sharper, .his, teeth sanction rr of the Clown Parli ' amenlonger,: his - c Parliament,' ales" o s softer and n ,f indeed, ndeed, cannot: even meet.'without. an thick,and his boil is slender:. and order rn-Council from the Kin sum -active. His eyesight and hearing are ironing it. to its 'legislative duties.: both good,and. he c :Prom this' it will'. _art• scent. an enemy be' seen' that the if the wind favors for at least. a half. powers', possessed by the 'war cominit- mild. He can dive and swim like a tee of the Cabinet: are virtually those fish, and on land he can run at a of a dictatorate. . ace. Ile-' ._ _ .•, -tar is' is to c`apt a meg; it isnot.easy to capture him. the cunning of man has; found a to catch him alive;. it is the me used in Florida, and- contrived, said, by Warren Frazee, loea'llyea • CAPTURING `CROCQDILES. The nning of Man Has` Found_ • ay to, Catch Him 'Alive.. The • crocodile differs from hie .co sin,. the alligator, in that ,the lower maxillary,' or jaw -bone, moves in the "gator;."- '. ' is s - whereas' •it' is:'thecrocodile s eros•• INCREASED. GRAIN OUTPUTS." INTENSIVE WH • • • EAS GROWING. I j a The Allies' Food •Supply Asdured for. Surprising Results Can Be Obtained i ' .- u-, teeth -jaw one; are of • s 0 good and But way.' thod., rt :is.. Iled 1 SEA DOGS ;.IN THE' BALHAIV`S: , _ Troubridge Commands Serbia =- De' Robeck Naval • Chief,;., Ad*niral Troubridge, a descendant -of a naval officer Who served' under Drake, is in Serbia with the Britian navel expeditionary force which was allowed to pass, through Greece.. may`heve-• Balkan experiences He P renew more exciting • even than. those Of Admiral Marls Kerr, as Troubr idge"•is •oprat- ward . tcj keen away. such cherries •n' close . s g e. toe the Headquarters of raccoons, opossums; `.and' snakes. Crown -Prince,: Alexander, 'the comp When the eggs have hatched, the mender rn-Ch'ief of the Serbian army. Young take to the water 'et : once: Admiral Tronbridge would :probe-.'Durfng•the fist nix ••weeks they are bly like to train his guns at the Dar- . g by er, a daneiles against�•the Goeben and . Bres- lau, the two German battle cruisers' which Were .at sea in the 'Adriatic .tow .Constantinople-asdeclared -and ' escaped when war •vias dee the waiting British ships yin the Medi- terranean under Admiral Troubridge. Through t'he' extraordinary prowess ef a German spy, so close' ,to the . inner circles of the British Admiralty in' London that he was able to.-tiiscover the secret code changed ;every few da s, --through which': orders were: transmitted to the fleet, the Germans sent Admiral Troubrr%dge • by wireless a code message to return 'to; English waters. He cleared the `.path for' the. German boats, and arrived in London tion .of , acts' of Parliament. Then. there are the • orders -in -Council th - are - used by the various •Adrninistra- tive departreents of'th"e Gorverihment, on the, strength :orf. •powers conferred upon them by some acts of Perlia - 'meet. Finally, :there are the orders- - -in-Council that are entirely indepen- dent of • the Iniperial.Legislature and 'which are employed by the -sovereign' and the Government' either to assist and supplement existing .legislation Or. else in order to deal with some emer- gency not directly provided for by In times of ;war, such as' .,these which now prevail, orders -in -Council are indispensable to the executii,s. It is not .'always` - either convenient or po11tie-to consul , par lament con- sistmg. of over 1,200 members as to ' the necessity' of adopting this or that Measure rendered urgent by.unfore- seen• circumstances. `Legislative dis= cession always. involves publicity and delay, and •these cannot be permitted in moments of national' crisis, wheii the welfare, the safety.e -the= very existence of the empire are.. at'� . stake. - There is practically no -limit to, the •!.authority which the King • and.his Ministers can exercise by means' of these orders -in -Council. The Govern- ' ment can, for instance,• by an -'order in-Couneil assume, :control' of the en - lien railroad system of the empire. It can commandeer . every.' merchant' vessel, every motor and other wheele conve-ya'nce;-every --draught animate every saddle -•horse; every .manufa tory, mine, and quarry and factory in the couptry. It .can place an_embargo - Upon -the-export' of" every species of "Brit'islr -produce;-prohibit'-the, import` of all •forelkn; goods,. forbid all ° ves- se1s,'under the penalty of seizure -and , confiscation, to trade with foreign countries, determine the• . nature . of 'contraband, 'and decree , the blockade of hostile ports. By -means 'of an order -in -Council, the. King . end the, newly formed spe- cial Committee •of'sihe cahinet„Jar_ra., the; -should tay,„of the ,Priyeq, Cohn._ eilijiisfor:ginized to; "take charge of legislation. in Parliainent, compel -every.-man to- serve the. :country rs ear By the Method. e food supply for the allies from all official reports reeeived'in Wash -i ington; 'so far •'as cereals are concern- ed, is .fully assured for this year. with •the exception of France, all the allied •countries. have 'produced Very large quantities of wheat,, rye, oats and barley. a The i British c' . Y colonies have increasedr their output • of wheat and of once cereals cal • s aver' large. e.• by percen- tage. n- Y e tae. g P Can g Canada's crop of wheat is un- , SUNAY SCHOOLJTJJ.. SEE NAUGHT 2101/EMBER 28., 4 h. Lecco •IX. -Amo the Fearless .Fro. • d pi►,et , Amp€ 5. 1.15. Golden' Text; Jeer, 23. 28., 1. The Irpentling Fali. ,('verses X4). •• ' Verse 13 A lamentation-:-�1•Iebrew,' " •Rinah," which meaner a "dirge."' , CoMposition 'oareful]y prepared, in poetic form,, and. useally uuni„r` by ' men as" professional mourners afi funeral. See Jer. 9. 17.; - • 2 The �iKinah 'is represented by two parallel members,• the second memb of which re-echoes the first, bat wi a plaintive, melaucholyµcadence. Ver 2 is a good'example of this. form f poetry,, ' The virgin of Israel is, faileni She !shall no more riser 'She la cart• down u.'pon. tier Land* There is none: to raise he'r'up RUTVcroRy. Wall BRITISH SOLDIERS" A THE FRONT. The Plower 4f Kxil�er'a , Army Lie. Dead in Mullets and Poland. Nero At the base one is} fairly is the backwash of"the war flood, writer_ wo, a caespondent As' Storms at ..Sea a strew the sands and .shave rocks with evidence of .its fury, so does the war record -its moods for' all to see and er understand' at the base; ith) the tides„ • the battle-worn'andscarred I eonae..down to rest, awhile. before se' I plunging back .into the torrent sof war, , o. or be_flung h ---a dl• -deo ita reach, The latter are they who go. to "Blightie " -• They are-. thasit-.whet sink �' mlist•ferventl , •"Blightre,°dear o.d Dlightie, •, Hilt land; across. the f m • or- Some people . pall . p e it En ;nt� ' . Some , 0 le call P P it home., ..- Toilimy jdst calls. it .Blightie f: . IIis, home:across.,. . the aea, Where :'Ka.i . ., ... sen WiIlfon: 'hopes; :. some'day,-•,� is. Hymn •of' ,_te he'll he 11 fonds• • play,, -• In Bli ti" ghe, so dear tome. (Please note that the reference Blasted Bill's" : ambition is sung sari 'castle). " , Light Reacted. See -411'e book of Lamentation (f example; chapter 1); -for.•a 're a e Use of the' Kinali. ' - ire t . The . vir i ii • of� Ismer- „natio s personified as,,a maiden, but one n longer blithesome, and gay; going happx way erect, a ,. z .,nd','•vi vigorous, bu .east down' end, mournful: (Compare •Isa. 50 ],f,) The idea of a nation as a maiden or mother is here .used the. first time.. Afterwardfor ca ion is frequent. tfie, persorii • • II, The Fate of .Israel Deserved •(Verses 4-11). 4. Seek ye me, and ye 'shall,'Jive The Hebrew has a more forcible, ex- pression: "Seek ye me' and live." (See. Gen.: 42. 18), -To seek `God .means to onsult him through a iit°ophe't or • • n. o. he Seven years ago, •says Pearsen's c Weekly, a Russian farmer discovered, o a -meth _ .f_ .. • . ,._ . - __od �J -increasing the -,yield of wheat in so startling a manner that ,g no one. believed he was telling. the hi truth, The Russian declared that it ;l Was possible;to get Seventy 'pounds of sen grain n from one seeh' n d and to make , an acro carry f ort rfive tons. y y . . That does s sound -like' a xilrracle and we do not vouch for it; but here is the racle (Gen. 26. 22; Exod, 18. 15;1], Sam:, 9.9 • : ' ,: etc ). It also• uzeans toe and his revealed will and to obey 'm (Isa. 9: 13; Jer, 10. 21; Psa. 9. 0; 24.. 6;- etc.). It was in this latter se that God wanted.' Israel to seek m,r not a sen verse 7. Justice stic e to, wormwood w d --� Israel's er in sr l s g evil was civil injustice rn�ustice• and the• e method a d if precedented. , n any farmer has the, epatience to try it, he will certainl " Ne w South :wales fortunatey b this year with a' much larger acreage aed surprisedatthe, result.d a good season. This ea' `c ! ,Each grain is planted separately __res. _redo, �t�s a sunken bed about fifteen inches estrma£ed, will amount• to anywhere.':; deep ,from 52,000,00Q to''60i,000,Q00 bushels. 'end three and'a' half feet le width- There was a large increase of acreage• feet, remember; not inches. I this year in response to the offer by ; As soonasthe grain sprouts, the the Australian,Cxovernment of Y, little -blade is ,covered with a thin lay - the a guar - • er of earth about .an_inch..and l y anteed price of 4 shillings, oi. .97e.,.aa 'half bushel for all whoa grown ori nee in depth. The resultes One get' land. , `" • I three stalks'instead'of one. At the' Italy' has this yearproducedt end of three weeks the hoe conies into laracrop of ' cereals, -abar- use again, and the. three stalks being ley,a largest crop rye• Bear knwivan covered wvith earth, turn into nine thewheat crop ye ru•everning kn wto 88 there, stalks .This process on being re- 000: bushels. India and Persia 'have =peated a third time results ssian -twenty- this year increased their yields• of seven stalks,- and the Russian in 'ques- 3vlreat, and'Peri..�•ia_will export a'great-. tat• l a t c tgr iakpr _ducall,59 er amount •than eversbefore: It is thatest each grain iso first wn doubtful, • however, . if this wheat. will in alks. If the seed is first sown go.to- the market --of any of -the allies: transplanted the . ordinary -y, the y and~ `=ten- owing to the- turn the_war has taken' to: pit: Before Wren- tinned, you - get .an even ' strbeger a ens. interruption of .growth, •.so that, •after only eight cov- erings more than 1p5,000 stalks 'halve bee produced from . a • single grain.' • New troops; eager for the' fray, put into the base for final ,perfecting. They go "up the line" with .those whose , wounds - and ills are remedied -and they go; light-heartedly still. Be the fr m ]3om i am, Barbadoes or Bow River'in Can a a,. -Spirit d ,• their Spir t i : the same. Up . the the "Alligator Jun." • The crocodile' liv ;s' in' a .den or 'cave, close by a lake or' pond; close by the den he' builds a mound of grass and , mud, -and inside the mound' the female ''• deposits 'about -sixty eggs, -which ('she carefully covers :and leaves for the sun to-incubate,•:although.hhe. mclunts ': carefully -guardedthe Mother, 'a that period she is a dangerous creature. to deal with. • • "Alligator • Joe's"' crocodile -catch= ring• outfit consists of some ''boards eight it Iong""a•nd'a foot wide, three or -lour two-by=four • scantlings, a spade, a ,crowbar, and-• a - block .and tackle.• Having. selected. a-deri that the sign shows to' be' inhabited,' he drives. a -noir 'bee of boards into the mud- so -as = to stop up the entrance- . and prevent, the. oe -upante tromp escaping. H then takes his crowbar and prods the ground, -the •den§ are -all built near the surface, 'and at times extend back , for .150 'feet,_• -ft ds the nearest a,'p- preach of the den to some convenient AP - to undergor:.court-martial. However tree,• attaches .his block and tackle to' when. he produced the despatch • • the tree, and then digs a . hole -just large- enough to= ptrl•1---rips. . prize. through. .Next, he -drops' a slip noose of the- rope from •hi§ tackle and at - ranges it t-ranges`it so'that. when the. cro`eodile runs along the den he will run his head into the noose. - Next, Joe takes his crowbar and jabs it down along the' course of the be den until he stirs 'up• the' crocodile, dered . impossible on , account of the , and a moment later the creature has. weather, and. it is known that Admiral ,his, head hung in the noose, . and _is,.' de Robeck will not return to England', ,struggling frantically to. escape. ,foe: but will busy_him�self. with matters. in 'Pulls cautiously `on his rapes until all ' the' vicinity' of his :present quarters.. is. -tight--and seeuree,,-when he- very He fs a"younger brother of,Baron de carefully reaches down with' a strong Robeck, now airing his financial troll- coed' and. ties the crocodile's4aws eta- bies_:in.the Iiankrti;Stcy Coin t; but fife gethei Then Tie slojVly.pulls- on his family, _which. -'owed'.-its title to King .block and' tackle, and as he draws the. Frederick L of . Sweden, conferred' in. fighting crocodile from ' below,. puts 1750, came 'into possession of 'a great one of the `two-by-four. scantlings fortune by marriage in Ireland some. alongside of him, and wraps n: strong generations' "„�_ rope round' and round him • all the way to the. end; of his tail.. With his legs bound ,close to his body and the;scant- ling >.-holding..:him• stiff and' rigid, the' crocodile le dragged down to - Joe's' ' flat=boat, and shipped to some circus ,or museum, • nd•j in the$ lk Not the rn vemeint of the'crop of India by. way of. Suez has been reported, but concerns' felt. •for the effect of mill- tart'! operation in Servia on the pos- 'sible shipment of grain ^ frons' •the Orient.• conce, an the---Finestion of the guilty de, there was no doubt of Ail. ;r,, man has need- yet been answered. Admiral •de Robeck, in command of the British naval expedition at tlie Dardanelles will very likely bedirect- shiPe against Bulgaria. 'Operations at the' Dardanelles will soon ten - The admiralts grandfather fought as a cornet in the Seventh Hussars of his family have long been assbci- ated With military and naval affaira. Their metto, significant of the adin' forte fatiseet" (The strong yield- to the strang)._— the ranks of •the army, on board the, Increasiing Dentand for Their Work warships, .of the navy, in numition • • • factoriee, Mince, en railroad lines, In Great 13eithin. • • and 'event in the cultivatien of the Em' ployment...sbon took a turn for Crops" Of the United Kingdom. . Of course the Ministers of the Crown. who are ;northers of this spe, trial cortiniittee may be eventually 'Called upon in 'Parliament to account 40 have been unduly harsh or contrary to the rights which the. )3ritish claim tinder the terms of their for thb most tense as time went on. - There were ' censor is riot going_ te expose German weaknesses and susceptibili- ties at juncture.' He wora even let the exact percentage of German deaths from typhue be known. Thus, the Berlin letter to', the Journal 'of the American •IVIediedl Association the better, and women began fe be readse.- .It has been determihed thee re7abserbed, though in many cass the Russians display. a much greater -they tad, to turn their energies into resistanee to typhus . than the Ger- created 'many garz in the • ordinary 2%., the 'mortality among the derman mete .d. industry, -4nd siin -pressuro -doctors and :nurses As about - --,--•%,, et Government work grew. more In- „(This percentage' is deleted' fronl the orightal letters -by the console)" „ art titrWritten national Constitution, o deigeized in either House, they Pute-errixed by virtue of an order. In -Council. All that could be done in •Ati extreme 'ease would be to Vote their -impeachment for baying. given treasonable • advice, in :their 'official ca- pacity to tlie Crown. In' feet, the billEi indeirmity the Imperial' Legislature, has pagsed frOnl 'Chile to time for the protection large armies to be fed and clothed and eqUiPped; and 'fewer workdrs to undertake this enormous task, Hence there WAS increasing demand for the work of women, and ,womeii- have shown themselves willing to shoidder a ittrge pert. et the national burden: Women etre at Work in the parka, "oil the lend, on' the traniways and 'rail.' Ways. In increasing numbers they can be leund in „the tailoring trade, in "I think does, irium'io' • said the leather trade, the niandtActUro Bridget. -"Hes begun to consplain• Tip woriian of the, house reached the conclusion • that the attachment of the policeman "for her took trinst he- investigated, lest it prove disad- trous to domestic discipline, , IV you -think lie Means •business Bridget'?" elle aeked, • • Only one woman in a thousand mar- ries after• she is •sixty years of age. • • DRAPERt;TUNICS IN VOGUE: , .0060.0.0 Drapery and handkerchief tunics are enjoying vegie seldom conceded to any ono .style. But, coupled ,w1th this, they aid eimeptionally easy to 'Make, end are, therefore, 0, partial- )arlY desirable costume for the home dressmaker., The present style in separate skirts.Make's them adaptable to Wear With Separete Witista. • These are Ladtep.te' Home JourriM Patterns, plice style for ladies and init?ses in -Sizes p4 to 42 irieleee, hist .irik-astire, and t sldrt, -No, -9085, 'cutting in sizes :24 te. 32 'waist Zneestiree Skim 80..ese 24, ieqtriee 8% Yards af 36414 Patterns., 15 emits eaeli, can 1.; par- Chaied At your Wel Ladies' Home Journal dealer, or ifroni the Home Vattern ,boinpanY, 188 George Street; 'Toronto; Ontuio, oppression .of the poor:. The Hebrew word for- wormwood has been• turned by the Greek' and Latin. into absinthe,. which, let us -hope, is no more, to be a synonym for curse ton the ,strong.. drinkers -France.` - • • 8. • Pleiades "The seven stars," as used •in Old, English. Shakespeare, Henry IV., •I., 1, 2, 6; see also Job 9.. 9,38:31.._..., .• Orion --See . Job 9: `9, 3831; and 'in. the. plural, Ila. 13.'10. m Pleiades . and Orion,; in, .Hebrew,• d -mead : "the group'' and '"the giant." . go on their lips, .young men and fit, mature men of other wars, all with .one . • on@ arm -that is the hning f the war by the, onlya shortening of tactic al method, fi ht' ° • in g Som ' e see' r + com ouird p florets of war at the. p near' the camp' before they gaup. They.question these ;ine have met' and been worsted by • the.: lads on the line= -and they, go. oway more than ever convinced that..,Bni ,,. afar s sons must always beat' such men as serve in the '"" e wser',s'artny. To -day the German soldier seeri ill eaptiytty looks poor. fighting material. . -Re-is either young andimmature; or old and•failing.'The flower' f ' o Ger any's manhood lies -rotting in Plan- ers or. : Russian . Poland-and_:.:.those - that remain _ are . beginning to, realize that the fight is:nearly done. -: -• ;End .this. Winter. •The y frankly admit it. This` win ter, they say, will.: break the back that III. The. Warning' Repeated -, (Verses 4-11).. - 1.2. , For I ! know -: Jehovah is not. . ennead ..of : their transgressions; a they perhaps suppose' he is (see• Psa. „O 1 Y _ T._f• Beep .. ... This • Take a bribe'- That is, a ransern Needy' in the -gate--Conipare Isa. Open Spaee near the gates of ,a 'city were' deed as. •nlaces for publie 13.- An evil. time -When ..men zneye and eighteous, TOMMY'S, NAVAL. HONORS. - Fighting at Sea. akes 'J?art in land- fighting, as witn the. dotghey dee& of the, Naval' 13 gade in the Crimea, and, in more howevereit is exceptiorial to fled To 'my Atkins .fighting at, sea. Neverth less, at least three British regimen 'bear naval battle honore„ One is t _Who served Under:, Sig John Jervis .the naval battle off Cape Si Vin ent '1797:: Lord Nelson ohristened the ship the Agememhohc end the niel They are else known as .th-e "Op hey,. have 'abandoned -Ineie Not,' a --One may -see thein back bee - ken and battered from the fray, but as 'etre of ultimate vietory as the new troops that ge•to ee_place,them in Those- who have suffered from shrapnel wounds are- as sure of final victory. as the men who have not yet heard. the. screaming . People „of sech a mind cannot hi, beaten. • Dien if they were, they - worildn't .know it; end because of that . happy evasion would -fight on till Ae a 'general ;Ile the up -going. sel-„. dier cannot advance any. argument hi, • s pPort of his faith; but he ie alinest oThey'll 'be beat," says the -average ler man, 'fjust because they'ye got to be ri- ng re- . Victory Sure. • '11- main implenient in' that work of de - 1147 will be. beaten, • do- not degue.abaut it . ;Li: w.s t. ii•Ttehhcett*ipoz inh.iauvee .. ' • ' ' t!,. The.- soldier§ 'Who- - say ' Germany ,), and the bend, grenade; and ,Oilier am- '''. GerMan- prisoners can testify, ,' auti end Dewns". teeth the fact either Way up. The ether, eaval. ho nor bearing peeps are Princess Char lotte• of Wales's Royal Beelcshir Reginzent and the Rifle Brigade. Rot were embarked at: -Yarmouth .th Fleet under Sir HYde Parker and' their deed do Praire.' • .111 Raw the British Sailor, and Soldier • The populer narize given to it sailor by :the man in th-e street originates from the tarpaulin waterproof worn by Jack in etormy,weather. -Curious... ly enough, although the sobriquet us.nallY resent it.. , an, Ofticiai s,ouree. 'Mink years' age, ranka. were able ,,to •write, each was when very ''few. of the -nten, in the I ,hie name, mge, date of milistMent, ami plt particulars as. to his wounds, me- als, etc.; were entered. If a soldier' ''• •Wal tremble In -Write his name In the space allotted fel" that purpose, 'the colonel .pf the' regiment would do io for him, the mon "himself making his In the (Ada] initructions as.to the filling up of this, space, in order to signify that. the tante was to be Writ.. ton in full, it gave as MI exartiple: Name (Thomas Atkins)," vary meth azinie Aviv as tho "N' M9 in liCuttsetehleilstittisli soldier came to•he Threws Ton of .4plosivet Out of English football star, hes been de-. coveted at the front with the English ' ' militau Cross for his: Coolnese:k. un- covering and rennieing n ton and a etexPlesitte,fr-onta German mine . portant salient .01i the: Britigi 'trent,. a miner, joined the .E.oyaI Engineers ' 'at the beginning of the -Ware His ita- 1, When he broke into. a German mina moinent he thought his . party wit's, doomed; but acting quietly lia cut the the explosive Matter piecemeal. • Aa the' tunnel was Very lowkhe and his radii lay beadle. feet arid passed the stilif -be& from liana to - hand. The tit* ectupied 12 hours, Ansi the weight of over' 8,006 pound's. ' rive it ' the men 'Were rendered unt,lonacioils du ` 'Wounded by 17'Needles.. •