The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-01-06, Page 2••
1711,1(77‘7,,r.nor •
•
1.1
• ^
NAVY
TENON HOPE
'BAGPIPES WI
THE BAMEFIELD
IN ENEMY'S
NTANGLEMENTS •
UM ABOUT
IlLO'WLY BUT BURBLY CHOKING
GERMANY*
firAVE HELPED IN GREAT BBL
TISH VICTORIES.
•0
„
Laicr Weald Be El*Perer of Direful Coolness and, Self-POOSessiOn of the
Bat fir Fleet. Declare* - • PiPers in the Rent of '
. .
- F. T. Jan.a. . Danger.
Prod T. Jane, the navel writer, cOn- "As the nen bombed their way
tributes to the London. Sunday Pie- along the German trenches after the
torial an article predeing the work first rush, two of the. Black Watch
done by the British nay ince the be pipers stood upright on the parapet
ginning Of the war. While Mr. Jane . under a terrific Are and played 'Hie, -
does not believe that the Alliesi,,,Will land 1.4addie,", the regiinental Charge
ever march into Berlin, he is con- of this 'gallant corps. They stood in
vinced that an "invieible invasion" is: a terrifie Aorta: of Are with. bombs
bekg carried out day by day by the ' • 4,.. • ,„ . _ bursting all around them, and flung
Britielt navy and that the effects- are 0 , , *Mu) AT'vER4Tfxn their Highland, battle air to the
being felt more and more by Ger- fortner. Wet fastice or England breeze,. Mita' one piper fen, dead and
Teeny. ' . . -- the other was wounded." •
Extracts frotn MK Ante% article trade, erhat:**e. have killed, she has This was what ,happeneddating the
, follow* ' ,to fight on -what she can import, British Week on the German lines.
'Warty years ago the Kaiser det. These imports the 'British navy ill north- of Le I3assee some weeks age,
claimed that Germany's 1404 lay on trangling, SO will go on, srang1ing.: and it is one of the Mita such epics'
• . the water. It does, and a Very black The storm-tossed'sailors/of 'Jelltdoe that have been recorded- for• at least
future it hit . . - Are doing their job,' . - • two centuries, says a. writerin London,
•- l'Oii•' land, the Keiser has Parried .. ...„;___._„/„_„____,.. , - . ,,-- . Answer. ..,, • • ' "
• every blow. He bas conquered, Bel" ' SUBMARINE MINE -LAYERS. .,*: HerOes Of the .Pipes. -
„.
giam, portions of Russia, andle.ne.w . It.,is :schithat a tradition of our nigh,-
... busyexterminating' Serbia. .No hoe; ,44 /".ewpktrzer From German opera.. land , roomeata that the pipes' hwe
tile army' has done more than here: and '
there check his victorious advance, tions in. the North 'Sea. ' -'' largely contributed . to eVery victory,
• Yet On the throat of the German Ere- 'The subterfuges of the enemy are gained by their countrymen, not only.
„
Pire is an invisible. band, slowly thret- .extremely 'varied, and their ability to by Yeasinstgihoeaur .aontiMtahtei:apg.ipsetrroal.nina etfhet,hh.eoirurm;of-
fling it to death -.-the hand of the Bri4
tun around ' any treatiee or under- sic, but by the coolness, and self-pos-
Usli navy! But for the British havy standings is notorious. Par latest
•the Kehler 'would by now be Emperor weapon of war shows thit they have o
. of Europe, an possibly of Most of tlielest none of -their cunning. The pro. When the 42nd Highlanders,: who
. ,rest of the world, mise to America not to sink liners formed Pert of. the attacking party
"Years ago he SAW the shadow without warning must be kept if that captured Fort Washington, in
nos-
aefese his Path, the one Possible ob. sible, and at,the genie time they have 17714 scrambled bp the preciPice de-
etacle AO WS dreams. That is why not doubt felt it desirable to institute ternaned to have their Own share of
. .11 i,, the
. a eery, the first to reach the summit
any, public ma n . e pest who de- a new 'ahem° Of attack eh ,alw mer-
. .
clered that the British navy •vviis 'too chant shipping without tanning se i.was one of the MOS, who, as soon
e
big"! Could draw practically' unlimited many •risks themselves.Bence the.i as hhad made good. bis footing, be -
German
German gold for the asking.' Not di.- new WeaVena • the aubniarine mine- gan to piny. • He coutinued sounding
reedy, of course-. for the Heiser is no laYer,-.1404.-the_ItiverPeel2Joartial, of 4 his war -notes until at last his body,
• riddled with --bullets, fell -front . point
cr. Corrinierce. .' • ' •
GREAT BRITAIN"
A PROMINENT GERMAN'S CAN7
DID CONFESSION.
* fool.. _ _
. Germany% Chief Obstacle.
"As : often as not perhaps the , e
, 'Little Navyite apostle knew ,net why • t
' • he prospered: in business, and regard -
rd it merely as a coincidence that he .
earned enough to enable him to ex••• 1
pound, his .peculiar views. The ' fact e
'Carmine' that no -4,dttleNairffite--tvas-:::i
ever herd un. It was 'the Kaiser's t
- newer to. the one danger that. he r
fotesaW. • ' .‘, , ' t
"His ' answer. failed because bodies
' like,. the Navy Leagne.fb*ged hp pub=.. '
' 'lig opinion and kept the British ratv.Y i
: •:up to sthength, and .so insured. the de. .
it of. Germany. behave _ever , a shot
•.1roaS fired. With the first shot cante
I
"the invisible' invasion of Germany -
,in intangible , pressure a Oust- which
inillions of German soldiers are of no
:avail. „.so in:Visible .was the invasion
..that -the. Germans felt it before they
', understood; so silent and invisible'. alio .
was it: that we, toe,' as a nation found
There- have been no Trafalgar's; there
'.ii difficult ' to :see end understand.
,
have been no sea fights, • aaVe, a. few
'...small skirmishes. But these have been
merely „Milestones on the rea_e_l_o_r_ the ,
great invasion.- • '
•• "One. by one and without much de-
lay, all German, oversea possessions
were captured, :-. Germany attempted
to diStracr attention with a cernanerce
war. .,
- "For a -While thelik(iinised tweeds,"
the British navy was Loney deStreying anticipate a certain degree of effec-.
the 'earths,t before- it bothered 'about t• oriess • , • - •
iv ,. . ,.. ,•: ..
. ',;-:-- :44
Accerding- .accounts..-te_POint,..tin 'leached the bottom tit
the 'other hand, believe that a girl,
ion in, the path of our Merchantmen: erens earned. 'imPeriahable faine,. it • 8. Tongued parting' adunder, • er, •
mines eannat discriminate, butsuchwas Piper Kenaeth .Mackay • who spe- martin, distributing themselves. COM- who had fallen in lovawith the men
dr: ttoalsj n :sir rtield theo:n,:ina
These new svbmaiines a: wq- thick of, the fighting that raged. round Cor.-' 12. 11. The symbolism comes
y. cially
constructed air -tight Chandler' the 1-ernahense Of Le ilaYe Sainte, the
doilisstineligaishee: ,litilmws.erlfr.erteIbn ap_altret1Prriaucin'tis ratoleorf:iwila:
from a thunderstorm accompanied by phrase iAPrTahneg. uSaVmwaoradsistl:windar'eirsitl'o*ok". ocnau-gtihiei
arid kept by it, end that it is her fig --
easels of this class are liOW 'being Pie and disfigured. .
mployed to sow death, and destruc •' Again, at Waterloo Where the Cam- s • h crowd as we hear of shortly.
•
°
.. A wonderful 'sr* ot taken near the crest oe pespite
- of shrapnel', eh soldlem are seen getting ready to make thg.
desh•Sorward, whieh resulted fir the capture tlie enemy trench at
• glo, top „of the picture on the. r141A, : •
••11.^1,11.11,111.1`1.1,,,•••••••••• •
DAY SCHO
..: •
IN'j'ERN*TIONAL .AUARY 9"
Lesson IL -The comin'g of the Holy
• Spirit, Acts' 2. 143. 4olden
'1',Mitt COI', 3.46. ' •
Vefse . Pentecost -The "fiftieth"
day after PasSover; in -Lev." 23. Oa.
ordained to be a thankitgiving for har-
vest. Was being fulfilled (margin) -
the same plirase•in Tinke 9-., 51. That
momentous first *day of the week,
which began at Sunset on Saturdajr,
was now -about 'half way through. In
one place -Possibly in . the ."upper
room". pr.:pliably in the temple, as has,
been plausibly argued. - •
Rouse -This was was a recognised
name the temple, and there was no
other place largeenoughto hold such
we's paSsed on speakers With tongmes
ittorinth (leer.: 14. 23). '. New .witie
_
--Evidently strongly intoxicating.
. • .
IiNSCIE
,THEORIES
, • .
;
In011.rn•
*
Says Ilie ("entity Has lIardly
• " Inflicted a Scratch on
Britain.
An active and prenfinent pati -Ger.
manie . :.Privy CoancillOr
GREAT BRITAIN
"SOUND AS A BELL'
„
N*AhrcIALLY•,' SAYS Sig TH04
'
Hectares, the Ealeer'S COantril
Is In Pairn to •
Itself," '
Right Ham Siv'Thomos:
M.P., discussing Great Britain's finatht
jJWflflUAtI -Flamm, who is also recognised as an Oial Position as related to the war,,
authority Mr naval matterk being
among other things Professor of Mar-
inc • Architecture at the charlotten1
burg Technical College, has published
grave warning to his fellow-cOuntrr.
,menln Germany not to underrate.
Bri-
tain's in this war nor the mag-
nitude of the task •of breaking the
British Empire's Power,, says the Lon-
don ' -Standard's' Switzerland r corres-
pondent: After pointing • out " .hoW
lima the British losseahave, been in
proportion to the population of -great
Councillor Fianna continues:
Britain is the only .country which
hat( SO fartichleved- through this war a
great lames° of territory. Since the
eutbreek, of boatilities• last year BA-.
lain' has 'won territories in, German.
SouthWest Africa, Cameroene, Togo" -
land, the South Sea Islands, Egypt,
and so forth, Covering an, area of
something like .2,000,000: square kilo-
imetres or more than five times the
size Of? the German Empire, Britain
has gained all this without being ser-
iously% injured -herself. She has no
_alien armies sweeping over her land
as we Germans had the -Ruiisigni over-
running oiif provinces of East Prus-
sia; or as the Austrianssufferedthe-
'devaatation of Galicia, The handful
of bombs and shells clrOpped, on -Bpi-
tain by isolated warships and air
cruisers have been as nothing com-
pared -with the -sufferings- of all the
other belligerents, No, WO have hard-
ly
--,inflieted-a-setateh-ottAtritain-...v._
•
British NaVaLS4PromacY•
•
IS ihe "Man in the Won"' a Wend*,
- • • •
Girl or, Soot.
-A gretit many curious ideas exist hi"
various liarts of the world regarding
the dark spots in the moon's disk. In
the eastern part of Asia the spots are
belieVed to be a rabbit .or a hare; the
Chinese in particular, looknpon them
as a hare sitting up alai pounding
_
rice in a Mortar. Most of the Siamese,
.teke the same view. §ome few, how-
ever, see , in the Moon a man and a
woman working an a field. Curiously
enougli, The :North American Indians
have almost the same superstition as
the. Chinese; and on old monuments
in Central Area the_moon apPears
as ,a jug or vessel gut, of whick an
aninnaLlike h. rabbit is_pumping.,___
„ The South American` rridiaris, on.
lire which is seen Millie moon's face.
liiiiiii,..7Thet„Teii.,eiii.yrs__64,ifaity .eatiter,t6fi. -,..ty ,..... , -u_e_Lot.;f£P_Ota.-:.:WkePreSentinglizeminnensarrv,,,.
o be sown, When the sal:imagine -----! 7 ii,Sli, - and ell a curling- 7t-oiig
eacliea the selected` spot ilia water- th u t• f the baffled infantry, al on each •pitlegoptoctnhiladv,eansdimMilitarrlyiniotiheefsrt stobuethNielo'n,
ight doors, leading into. the •cliainber. bead. il.st.,iisccetlef.cigriaaadineaotineefnOtid Testa. -
men and child sometimes. being alter -
are shut, and the. chamber is flooded: inent vision's repeated With ' a differ- .ed. into on old woman bearing a bur-
are
mines- are then mechanically -re ° enne: "after thewind• • • a' fire, 914 den on her back.. The Eskimos .have
Each Mine when placed in the' cham- Jehovah was 'in both. But there is a
closerconnection :with' the New Testa-
, - an originaLsenerstitiOn.' They say
eased:. ..- ' . -: •
that one day Aniga., the moon,. chased
her Testa ea a series of steel "fingers." Went •Elijah, Who proclaimed that his his -sister; the sun, in wrath; petall-le-
e sinker, greater ' 'Succesaer would, ."BaPtita
These fingers , constitute th • ''.e- was 'about IR catch her, however, she
and this drops to the bottom,' Theap.; with Holy Spirit and 'fire:" , suddenly turned around and threw a
ward. pull of the mine forces the sink- ,•4,„ jBegan to speak with ' With' other great handful of sea in his.face„•and
et into the bottom,: and by this. means • tongues -The firet indpact of this de?
and the Camerons . formed . square.
And, While the. Cuirassiers caine;
thun-
dcring en, Piper Mackay stepped out-
side •, the • Square of bayonets,- and,
marching, around, played the stirrig
"Cegadh na Sithe" :
-.Instancesirom History. ,
, .
, It was the strains ,of ...the pibroch
that brought life arid holie tio.the be-
sieged garrison' in LachnoW; It was
the inspiratien ed. the. heroic pipere
thus escaped him• and Of that soot he
bears the. traces to -this day.
the Mine is anchored i/A, the channel. static state Produced a great uprusli '
_ ._
e new methodo sowing min s ,
will, if used at all extensively, greatly s'4‘'ggling' -uP the-raill1311rt a lei -el"
incriase'the work to hellerformod. by Kebir that 'goaded the British- on to
mit Mine -Sweeping craft during the victory; .and it Wai.Piper Eindlatet's
eotning_bad*Tather: ..it will also add Playing of the "Cock o' the North"- to
t.„. tha-Ganant Gordons, while he lay on
considerably to the danger Of navig
ki01.1114 badly -wounded, that car-
ing: the home Waters. • -.Whethet.tahe .the.
of Dargai' and won
enemy will do. any material damage for
'the heights
reinaind 'to . be „seen., ft. depend ' • for him the. Victoria,-,CreSS.- -
the namber of .vessels constructed,. on . hi the present campaign the pipers
our inine„sweepers ap,c1 on other,unde. of ' the Bleck -.Watch . have several
finable circumstances: . . • . .- : times distingaishecl -theingelves when
, .
praying the "Itilted'werriers".-into ac.
If the enemy heye'spent,tinie and
Money On the COOStrUCtiOn ef,.11 con=
. .
siderable nemberef_submarinamine.
layers then we may take it that,"they
ehasing the vermin wbieh issued
,theretrona. That accomplished; the
:Yest waS easy; .And so -.Germany Was:
. , „.••
WHY pc) IIANDSf-
iSolated and the Invasion .
, , .
' made • Complete. Exactly .hoW, Om- the-Geod 014 Days. it Was to ..Pre
.. pieta we can, as yet only dim•ly guess.
'But since• 'all "private' CePPer
,..inierits• and utensils have 'been. reesii-
..oitilooea to rikake, to for a deficit iS1 one. of. the things that every , wo-
that article, we InA7 reeicon that the man does not know. • It not because
cans lealse them look pretty -and inter -
pressure is extremely • severe.' Rene -
dam, is this AAilieh rainaioor It is because when the Ro-.
-that Germany aro4t.,.wys, a mans,wete in England they introdii&
. .. •
..sapporting country. ' • • ed • t eta as
."There are, however
Whick_Germa
he'
. Vent 'frea,cherene •
Why. do wictoWe caps'Wear-,..This
It was Logs that Piper David
Simpson; of :the 2nd Battalion Black
-
Watch-, died on the field 'of -gtory.. •"All.
through the battle roar," wrote one of
his, comrades, "rang the soul stirring
notes of the. charge .by the piper, at
once a stimulus and a -rallying call to
every man. wearing . the red hackle: •
"Three lines Of 'Getman trenches
fell to ;that fierce assault: Then *the
command came down the line to have
a try for a fourth. ,
•,'"Piper Simpson at ante 'got his
pipes in position, turned to his com-
pany with the cry, `Come on, boys!'
antr Striking up the battle -tulle -of, the
Black Watch, again rap, playing, to-
:Wards...the foe. He took ten or twelve
paces, a :bullet through the breast
hrought him. down, and, .with the ex-
ultant• yell. his triumphant. coin-
ades thelears, le died." •
, .
of Music that .that"Filia, the Blood:
re christening?
o, er of the thiiiga...that, t
every -woman deea' not knoW;'. but the -
4eticiallreadiiiiie-effeiigli'fo-7444:7-theli
occupied her '•broOd .60141e- 'the: days of Sacri-
ork a 'IltrerSe position, .fite to me gods, ,itra4 :customary to,
all We say? .t seine poor victim'when 'a boat was
• ilistiutt,:fst..i,,,Eroetwt• ,-...„-,...- launchelLand_IO.:cat throat
' • • ' th h' • d bap-
PlIost.ile invading inPO-o,Ses-• tized ' . • '
..SiOnef Kr:Linea great works at Essent *by after
inight be driven out'. again --at any, • brides?The reason is kOafeel coin-
woaldlie-aIways.:that.hope. faltrientArY. • rOM time, ppm:emeriti],
:•• .But What. eoldierr 'slant JI-io,c11, ;tier It. has been. the enstom,for Parents to
or. iDentsehIenti fueber I Chastise their ehildien With a t• shee;
he friaYi eanir.eaeli the end* Who i and from this the custom :arose of the
itriked him deadly 'btPcvd froni • „500i*. father of •the bride making a present
away?ni1cn,' • _ , ' • - Of '011,0a to -.the.' bridegroom, ,as
-"Iie".,ean ‘Gett •stiate 'Eng- sign that, it VA'S right-ti);kebiilwr
kind!' , a5 be. wit1;_, biaL eti What, avail ,in, order. - • .;
Vai away. out at sca„--iiensewhere'•-.ti. Agate ''hatidS-T.
'lies the British fleet, if hid .own ships To She* our friendship* noWadaYat •
Ten-
tean ,OurTforexstriefd- were -M11:, g .ters,
„
• •Deacribilig.: the' hispking scene Of
be passage of a kilted battalion ,aleng
one -of: the: rocky roads of. Flanders,
With 90 bagpiper ;defiantly,
a .ttiitisii cetrespondent at the V.ront
vrote thus: , • '
'1h� -drone- drone- ef..the- Pipes seenn -"to
rouse -re7held, caliph:410g diviFandet-
the tartan. It is not altogether. a
Pie -infant -Tsight ,to. seh.a ;Seettisla-regir.
Merit being •played . into the -trenches.
•
dee it in the determination. of
the 'inea; the thrustof; the jave, the
'grip of the knotted- haridts
on' riffle. -
butts, and you feel that the *ail of
he pi 'es ahead is a liattle..erY fiercely.
from the subconscious, -very seasa- . •The inhabitants of. Northwestern
fulfilling accordingly itaPrimary Pill' monthly tionni in its spectacular -effect, and-riara-„--.4A-0
disappearance by declaring
account for the • moon's
pose . or -arresting, ad-61'11ton. 'Paul that She is burnt up regularly and re-
found the Corinthians exalting dill placed by -a fresh moon, explain the
wholly subordinate "charism" above dank marks by, saying they. are the
the greater and more characteristic 'awes
and he P, [ Other: nations explain her disan-
of the 'farmer moon.
gi4s.of.the Divine 'Spirit, .
There is very little increase in the.
cost of liviag in -Britain, and so far
as the working claSses are concerned
any rise in the price •of food hal been
,niOre :than counterbarinced by higher
wages and -liberal war alloviances.
The working classes' of Britain are
actually more prosperous. now than
before the war. The moneyed classes
of Britain may feel the pinch Of high. -
receatly' declared it is "sound as a;
bell." fie is. otte of a committee Of:
financiers who advise the.Government,
regarding new issues ot•caPital by
corporations during' the War, and is
chairman. and Managing director of
one of the. largest insareinhh, - •
companies... Sir Thome§ was one of!
*the initiators of the project for the' •
acquiring,: by. 'the,. Government • of
American securities held in Great 134-1 .
tain, as a• means of meeting Britishl.'
obligations In the'Vnited States forl
munitiOns -and'-other _
•That is the real financial pOsitioni:
Of ethglend as regaida the Warr •
"It is a# sound as a' bell„, Of couts,e,.
nut' expenditure for War ie entirtheas,
and it Is largely increased by the way • '
in whioli"we are aiding 'ter 'Allies ,
fineneially. We are at the present
time providing pretty well all much
money for war. as are France and
Russia combined. How long 'can' we
go on doing it?, Far longer than Ger-
many can go onbearing her expendi-
ture, to say nothing, of her calamities *
in the field„ which are eight times aa- •
heavy as ours. Financially, we have
not yet reached the stage at which
gerrnany began.' At. the very outset
eriormous amounts were raised' by
taxation, and loans have been raised
freely, easily, promptly and without
resorting to any thimblerigging tricks
whatever. We already increased our
taxation by considerably more than 50 •
_per cent, and shall Willingly nut it
Much. higher shortly.
er taxes, but the general commercial
Prosperity of Britain1 Seems likely to People there are prepared to accept
froni each other the GovernMent pa -
war •
be augmented by the results of the
."' „It .is. absolutely incorrect to. per, secured an their own' houses and ,
pretend, as many • blind ahd foolish Property, but who else will'look at it? •
Germany is being bled in the inean4
while, end lshen, the war, As_ o_ver she
will be bankrupt 'She keeps the elk
Pig -on -Bacon Transactions.
"Germany. has not ,dared Vincrease
her taxes. She is living•on paper. She
herself lends *to her people money she
borrows from them and then again
she makes•loans to them on bends she
gave thern and. eshe borrows that. .
Three Wiles has she gone through that
pig -on -bacon transaction until the
country is /argely pawn to-itselt
The thing can go on so long as the,. ,
Anglophebes are -doing, that Britain's
naval supremacy has-been destreyed.
I have already detnonstrated in an-
other publication that. . the British 'rite of her; people up by talking of tho
nities she. will get. , She will
the war. British naval suprenureY
Fleet is strong to -day than before indem
So overWheiming. that it . has reached
le -never get a. penny, beeitese she will • .
never Win the war.. IA reality she is .:
the superlative degree'. British m,ari. beaten now, although it MO be an., .
time superiority cannot _hecome.great- other year before she achnita .,41,, be
than it. is atthepresent Momeat. cause a condesdion 1 -of defeat -means
_ _
' pearance in various ways; the Dakota It id enly dangerous and mischievous her utter ruin, and she "Will 'stave it
.i .
when Germans have a false heaves. off as long' as 'she 'can,
it hac into e p ace i occupies- - "The .demands on -us -are heavy -and
sion of these matters: It 'is a far bet -
pates them for'higher, things. 'It will is that the souls of the dead feed- ter policy. to see things as they are. the unPrecedented strain is great,•but.
Nothing could be more perilous to we can bear it .and we are_daing- it. :.
it is; as. it were; the church bellthat
.gatherd the congregation . arid Pre- by rniee; . the Poly:nesian superstition
Indians 'have it that she is eaten up
be seen from Acts 14. 11ft. that the het. according th the' Hottentots,- the
en .Germany than to underrate Britain's and will do it cheerfully; knoting No
'Power and resourceS. are fighting the battle of right•truth '
"gift of tongues" :Was not. used in ..maon Eagan froni headache, and
missionary.nreaching• - Despite 1 Cor when when it gets very. intlie_hidea her
.14. 18, Paid did not Understand the :head with her hands ,aiid'coVers up her
Lycaonians, • and. he preached . in :face from the gaze of the world; the,
Greek. The subject of these° frag- i Eskimos maintain -that after shining
MentarY utterances was always "Tag' 1 for three : weeks, she gets tired and
nifying God" (verse 1.1_,),. brief eJecif-i'litirigry;and:. withdraWsto_take •_ssile
-lations_ofPraise.. -.__ ..,-- -- ...-:-.1-1-eriornious-meatrafter-theiraira_'-fas
. h. Devout' men frOui• every nation .iont, and then reappears' and begins
to.shme again. ..- •
• . . • • . , •
urging them on, . .. : - . .
-:‘,-i,iiiioil.;, ,i3iird ia, serg6ant. troin rinni.
'felts- to whom I.. mentioned this mat,.
Ler et' bagpipe- inspiration, 'Men, when i
I hear !ATIV. ,Cock . o' th'. North" X
ciiiii'd.7finiFt4--,Oni-.ai:..7.5yk,.-:.-ittn:•,-bare"-: -;--,
tit wad tWolie. menthe ' or so" itgei.,,,,,, theY'seized each otbees'., right: ,hand .hOiTiasri . 'i ' : 4 ,•
.„. .
!' 4T11.1•01•Ve MOrithS , Or,, SO ago the Ger-dining-4. p .1 rOtin..the, duel , to -prevent '" ' • • • - • "
• , •
• taan nett ventin a •,state of high efaL .•'" it treadlierous'bIOVA . ' , • :
eleney, .due. to 4erig practice at 'Sea., • , • . Right; But .Wrang.
• • • . • . . 1 • 4 . .
0 X ill r . 'Xit sea tail • it sailor 10 he kept • in . A popiniAg BPLIP.14. • • the '•late. Prof. Tlioinas It. 'Lbinis-.
training. • If allowed...ashore' lote• and aliii•:4•;...of. Tele, speaking. at Cambridge,'
. .. ,
. . .
• liquor anneal .te,laiirk Moro than battle pest iiiiii,14.0t. prodimed ,a iii, h-.0 lifghied, 'Ch. the PrOPerillSe et Eng-. -
.anil. bleoclilied. „If' kept 011 .heard...in, : .. ,. , , ,,,,....., ..,,L, ,,,,iiiiter:. , In 1%.r.. filio, is thus created: -"Precision can
.. _,..
liatibef lie grows , flatter 'AtilIt.artir tis, , • • . . • p"! .1!‘ 7 be Carried tenter. 'The ultrapreeise,
like as not friOt4iit le.$.tilutliyolifi.. in: : It has alwaya "been, b,elieved that ,eiren. i.vhea 1egi,011Y..0ght; iire'reallY . .
...lir ease he ightlizOi .and. hs plenty Milk, ltiitter.ahd .otli.er fairy.. products wrong. ' ' •. • . ' • .
..X time to. ,realisei'lhift his:•Siflierhar are at theirbest. in ,The spring. add.... .v.‘Ari ulttanyeeise professor went in-
cLicerS 'keen him inaide, be'etalag they slimmer, 'when the cove' liave the beat to a hardware alioro. sn'i said, 'Show
Diti7tiath-7ciatilde;')•°.-And-Ifer;tiii,j, •pt.; iR•;01;ff•Ittit'llieWsit'itiv.uatiglitlWir Me5a'shea'rat-Vrease'-'' -°°.------;---1.--,....•
learns to feet it. And .the tenger -ilir fait ti'i bear, out this widespread .popu... . " 'You. Mean ti!'pair. of shear don't
• bides in safety,the'more lie comes to ler belief; They iticiliatel on the COna ': Yc/t.1 V- Bilk' the dealer' :... '
fees the ordeal Of battle.'. •, •• &fairy, that tinder taiterit itirditiona • ,' 14,r6.01, saq :t.1_1„.„13 •rloft...atilaito isl• ;Moan
"this icAletitiera (tlicery?"10eiund "the Wfilk'dbtairiett in. •04Miiibr, Is, If • "nt't l'saP" ''''''''44 4 14'"'“rti'' ' '
• . ale.,we thil'aciilot who acted 'Ori. the itnything,*-Sotnevirliat• inferior fil'Autil. ' •otho dealet took :do.wri h •:boar• of,
. ' defensive analept .in•hather hs been ity. to. that obtained In ..the winter 01°411' - • •• ' " ' : • :, -
• defeated 'lies driven to eMne out and. whoit the ci.oto tire, ,ilii.iit up iii otablea. '.‘•!Look ' here,-..profe'ssor,'„ 'ho ,stibt,...
trio roncluelona with his, 'offensive adl: • • At'4 teri.Iperituit Of 5,0 'degrees the 'aren't 'there tWo'hiadea • here.?. .' And
. tiattOria in. milk‘Will iiiti•ease'in fifty. (161iPt tW.° 11141.C. 4 1111111''. - .' ..' ' • . ' .
a 00•7011
hi,:loiitve got 'two. legs. ... Dees
,_ "There . small chMice that, the At., hours, from three to thirty '.timas thd .
- lice will. ever •Mareit into ilerliti, , ',Put initial : number,, *bile at lo. degrodi 'th4t .1111,i'lo Ybu' # "1* .° mei?' Atid
itetflev ttl*
the 'invisible invasion' is there. al... they, will multiply. 40;000 tinned. This
iliete""..erill1616t *6 !'
ttiely. The British navy is.making, its is why milk should be ,kept eold. ,Milk
1.c.ral ftlt front the far atraY. F : i.Vili net sour for.aettirel days if,pack•
. .
,:"GerMany 1%31131'0 on her titpott. ; ad in tee. - . . .
ender heaveii7-And• therefore •-away
from helm in the. Holy Citylfor a
period of. worship. • •
6, Came together -From other nimbi,
of the spacious temple court, if our
assumption is correct ,
• iv
' • Donald Was Fidgeti.
. A wet Sunday is a trying time for
small boys and girls, and still more so
The catalogue is a striking -sign for then•-•:paren e. -On-One such`d
of the extensiveness of the Dispersion. little Ponald was very fidgety. First.
Jewish faces, like Greek speech, were
to be found in every country of the
then kneOrr world: The order of .the
list if not intentienally 'fortuitous, is
le -asked his mot -her -if- he could play
with his bridics.
• "Oh; no!" wad the shocked reply.
"Yen don't, play- -With bricks: on- a--
• and justice, for the sanctity �f -treat-:
Practically Unaesailahle..
_ ies and the rights d imall peoples:.
The fable Spread Germaay Ileai:Ty as thd• Cat of 'doing our
Britain's immunity ficon invasion has duty, we ,should despise ourselves if •,
been destroyed dangerously. _mis-
leading, It , is tree that a few air.
ships_hava_flown.,04yer the. iSland„. but
Vreciaires--eauch-more_thina-inclividual
•Zeppelins to abolish Britain's insular,
ity. There may be some vulnerable
put $100,000 into. the ;first loan.
peints of the 13ritisli Empire overseas,
but. Britain herself is practically un. made our holding in the second loan'
Government has got g1,000,000, Ixorn •
assailable. 'DO -Germans realize that 1300,000. At the present • •
British imPorte and exports are go -
us, and ..early in the new year lex-:
inetinct Corning with the. same regli-
we had stood aside." - '
_ A Great Delesion.
eked -what insuranar7centerneliip-.
his own weredidialdi •
"I can only. speak for ourselves. -We
laratranirr-thnea. of Peace?' AVhenin peet-we havagiven-thern41,560,7--
every week from 1,500 to 2,000 ships
of 'appreciable, tonnage enter Ind
sources 02 ct-Uoui41
ha . -.21i -
it zo 14 0;4 y, rte;
leave_ British. ports it cannot , be said
make them, liquid and availaripc
short •notice, but we shall •de what is
that British trade has been injured' or
British- maritime • sipremaey destroy -
required. The spirit and determine- ,
not 'explained. Jadaea seems out et ,sunsaym • • ed. Equally niisieading is the state-
pleig, •atitt-inZy Viztii be ihiarritferf tor n istrumpet, is drum and ment that ritish credit has. been tion, as we as e coil ( ence. o. o r
11 the ' fi 1 '4' 6 '
I turn• if h* - It ` • ' '
people are greater than ever. We are
) ball were also banned. .The little shattered all over the world. Let us
has been suggested. - ' - - . chip was silentfor a' Short time; --thea abandon these infantile- imaginings
some other district: Ayodhya (Oudh
and face the hard fads of the formifoivid; .t.
We are 'rather prone to self-depr; Cie-. .
not _a.._ people of brag:and huneolnbe; .
ion, which soinetimes, r esults.inether_
but
able task of yer. ,a,--s•-h i " Biltl,tin.'.' ' . .,peoples. failing if), undeistand.osr.
supreme InnifF".
10..• Proselytes -In this book , also
called "God7fearing men",-foreigneri
enibracing Judaism; tillbwed--4.6 fre-
quent the outermost cOnrt of the ton -
pre; that "of the Gentiles."
13'. • Essentially the game critieisin
- .
he asked for his horde.
, sonny," admonished his
mother. "Horses don't -Vol% . on the
Sabbath?' ., •
"But, , Mother," argued •Vonald,
"mine's it: milkman's horsel"
• nitipleatitlY throngli his spectacles.
01/0 was loglcally right? eald Pro-
fcrior
ta*sbury, "but, really, he was
'Wrang. . „
-any one- who fancies
..slightest. degree faltering Or weaken.
GIVING THEIR' ALL: ,ing this-busiiiessrot 4,hatwe are
• • • . : - absolutely certain of compiete-victer.k
Layalty to, Britain bY 16 cherishing a great '&16.510.. The '
the paraaana.• _ • .7_ effort we have .made and ate, 'making
'vastly. great,e1 .thhO Awe_ who ..do
•,-"the WeThatithenticated
'not 'teeny ItneW- iniegine,. and vie: an
.
stir doilies „front a -civil Officer in a ,
truly'say pf Present „we.' are pro.ud..of :
teniate •part of Burma. One early
;our successes and•are'eOdfident 4s to
morning not long ago this officer
• .„ • '
found an ancient.Burmanscluaiting on thsfuture:" • ..
his .heels in front. Of tine iningeleW, .
whom herecogiiiied as the headman' , • ,
ef a village dietant 50 miles away, in IVE1t VICTOItIOUS GENRALS,
the iluestidn'ecl hytheefficsr•at . • „
to the purpose for which he had up„, BrilshWho Hay -Ne .
dertaken 50 long a journey-ihrough . vet Been .Defeated. •
-Towlit.7,7.-.7. .,---,:.--.:-.----e.:7,---.'4••;':•--;I: -Met-witti". uninterkiiiited- •silei;de .is ..
the-jiingle,Ilie old man replied h_s_fol_,- -•_
',-.1'1C__iiiin-ibr_er of_genettils--who-hav--.
"I'liakiii ..(masterl, • my .. villagers
ohe
eintill,,for aome. Of tilt most...renowned--
- wish to makosomoreturrk•for tho:fav,,, - have Suffered defeat at thhe or
CloVernroent • has 'tom to Ioal down im British military '...
en-
givenlthwheuris fig000add :tiler:tau:a: . eApPtlocii7ritoeaw, a,
i
: ors bestowed upon Ue by the Er,itish•
•Government.• . The
'1.gligicuds'io no .flrat-elaSs. War for iiians.t. ::
• anether, It has..nsually bee.6, Om iivis.:. ., ...
'Tritesosset,;01c:Ar itiaixatelab,:colloleudeottitheaftle.toonavridsis; yth,..atianiztl whottut.liv:irlroet01611:iye. rhioi fve:., i. tiiii4lore:r.
are come to tell". you that we have in worse' if. they' had 'bro.' on4lred hi
•
gennewder.iii ,•ii bottle,. and 4,,beg, 'of Conninintieri.nnd tteugll.hEL1 olight-oltir-:
vwgouri:ai inli*tivtaetd116164baa'7Y:lest:11:de$1:8:Ixtuhl ti: • °hp' tgeoliiiitidlin:iiii9itit' t'd;oenbfrel. 61:e' xl :11;1 itlelliileiinft6141 . p' 0 t h e p s iltitairea ..greatest -Military--.- ---
bulletartliegir heifir iiiithO''ffi,efenia' west exPeitieneed generals in Europe ..•
ititstothhoctiao.thivlsotht:olivient'a;lhieternos:t. 'epeitfiraisiutts hewheett.tivyli.
‘ auMalobetireOvnel kWnaesw: 0110 (ifetittft.t1,1(1:14g:Iwit .'..•
South Mrietit! for histatice. , ... • .: - 1.:
bt1017: Trildillit. :1'; g' 071114: 8 lin(ii. att.4.......
gton,, of contrite, •is." another,
because Britain hae, been
iIthIle14*Bir:47i:11:"O:vk4e:4110'' *e.114°- Ili ce: Vie :nin'is:veciait• laesa.dair general, and tertainly,.he 'me
their, 4111,:in tlie,..ctipture . of daeoltsi: promo. Lord koherts, -thinks • that
Tliokifi, 'we, have heard a fun -licit' that Britain lins. never given idrafilis du• .
trenble with ',its enemies.- Whereforewith: remarkable :success conaiderin
our „villagers have empowered. Me to thateverything !Wes against -him h
say that the eight guns, bottle of gun. , the Peninaille, yet ha :defeated every.
powder,' thq:. bag af bullets, and the . one of Napoleon's most brilliant. geti4,
IWO traelteta are freely at the:disposal:, ;•erais, I' .. . • . !
. •
T,11114 P11,03.!ECTil0
1 1)1151. '1:N116
rrisit PLA.G 1&.0140
.0,....Frotat The „Monti:tat Dad$ Malt
utg, troubles-4hey eat up little once. c eat. .
`of the ;Eritish GOVerninertt." MOltke :feet .a battle an thd
. . Wit
Sanke'vuty be said of ,Virolseley,
" Thera Only, bile geodnetrit about Lod ,Iloberts )iever ,whitt