The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-01-13, Page 6ISON W1LLUkM BOWSElit 01 VOL
AND CLEVER,
R Is a Native of New Brtniawick
ett4 For'ty.Bight 'flare
vI
British Colurabik's new Premier
liOni, WORM DOWSers is, like most
prominent Westerners, an Easterner.
Ifie Bowser ie. from a long way
East,, having hem born in Rexton,
New'Rrunswick, forty-eight years ago
year of Confederetion. He was
graduated front Dalhousie :University,
Nova Scotia, with honors and. the 4.&,
gregof LL.D., and was called to the
bar in New Brunswick. in 1800. In
the following .year be left .for. the
West, whieli was then very raw and
Undeveloped, and loelitedja VantOuvets
where be becainis one of the leading
lawyers of the Coast Province.
*Mr* Bowser took naturally-, to pen -
ties, VA since MS election tit the ISsis
tiSh"ColUMbia. Legianturn in• 190 Ow
hassteadily advanced in •pranlinenee,
having been since 1007 the PrOvis•ejal
• Attorney -General and and •,,Sh. Richard
, MeBride's 'tiglitthand man,, ink, in facts
•fthe man behind" the Government. 11.
is the general impression while
Nc-
Bride was 4he picturesque figure
"round which diversified' elements
among the electors were rallied, the
aniooth, skilful Mr. Bowser was look-
ing after the 'organisation and things
in general..
INTERNATIONAL, LESSON.
JANUARY 16.
LeittiOn Ilte.-Peter's SerMen at Peac-
oat, Acts 2. 14.47* Golden
eat: Ada 2.'21,
Verse 24 Peter has been capon d-
-the- eignificenee W1et-091W'
people have heard, by appealang to
Joel, who in his turn bad developed
older aspirations that all Jehovah's
people might be prophets." It is clear
that the "tongue" foem the smallest
part of the SpielVs gift for Peter:
that they were speaking- God's ties -
Sage le' what ;netters. NO men Of -
Israel -The name of religious privi-
lege (compare John 1; 47), Aeareved
* unto you -.Th l PAraelea were hie
eredentials, *since none equid 49 • the
signs iinleSS God were With himi
Voltz '3. 4)-• Three,leatures are de-.
ecribeti with einphasisi .the power
called farthl.,' the., 'astonislinient pro7
duced, the 'inner eignifiearteee . .
Delivereduli;e-CaniPare-jOIT,P*
*eitt without the, law (mergnak-
Oempere John 118; 35 A.11 through
the Passion eteofY it i,S• inaisted. that
thq Jews' had the responsibility for
the 'Murder 'Of their Messiah: Net
that Pilate Was guiltless; he knew by
a. Roman's instinct for*, law that hie
sentence was an outrage on justice.
24. 'Not possible -The essence of
the great veuture-of Pea; ld was 'in
the p6A's, dimly seeing that Gticrs be-
loved cannot pass into rtothiognes$,,
since God's love is almighty. • This
applies to all who can say, "My Gad,"
and supremely therefore to the
Anointed' One. Pangs -From the
Greek Poo, 18, 4. Peter Probably used
the much niore forcible Hebrew
"snares." ,
29. Peter shows that the Psalmist -
whom he assumes to have been David,
like all his eontemporaries--Was net
delivered from .the common lot of
men. Now to the Jewish mind there,
WEIS a complete Solidarity between an-
tiestot and descendant; almost till the
very end of the old:Testament per -
led, the only immortality rs man ex-
pected was in his children and ail-
dren's-childten: The deliverance freni
Sheol, therefore, whieh David- expect-
ed for himself, Must' have been re -
Served for "great David's greater
Son." This argument is cogent for
Jews of Peter's day; for us, of
course, Peter's own testimony --that
of .one who tonnes after, Jesus Christ -
counts for 'much more than David's,
even if we Were sure . that David
Wrote Psa . We oda see, however,
a permanent argument for immortal-
ity in the Psalmists conviction that•
love is mightier than death': it is ex -
he argiunert by which Jesus
••••• .
ORIGINAL TIIOMAS ATKINS.
Row the British. Soldier Came By the
" Nickname.
That the IMMO Thomas Atkins, the
papule: word for the British private
soltiter, orhicinated in the signature to
a specimen, official model for keeping
soldiers' accounts is tolerably certain,
says, a contributor to the Cornhill
Magazine. The difficulty is to identify
the particular individual. BY far the
best case so far made out is that for
a gunner in the Royal Artillery.
In the 'old days when George,. III..
was king, life. in the ranks of the Bri-
YerS'' Una und the 'Men'
saw ittle pay. William Cobbett
serve eight Years in the ranks, and
be self speaks, of the difficulty he
exp rienced in saving even
penny that he proposed to spend on
apred herring to add .to his scanty
bteakfast.• Alas! the halfpenny was
stolen. Even as late as the ,nine-
teenth century, the time when our
hero flourished, soldiers' account were
anything ,but well kept. Many of the
men could not reed and yare 'de-
pendent for .,their just dues, en .the
honesty Of their pay sergeant, Sud-
denly 'there arose a born , accountant
ih the.persen of a gentler in the Royal
Begitoent of Artiliery'who, was named
*OR
,,sass.ss
sssasiSs.
SititSTMIss,s,
Ilon Wilham Bowser,
• New Premier of British Colombia.
. He 31,S said to • resemble Napoleon
Bonaparte in features and stature.
And his methods also suggest the
Little Corporal. No other Attorney. confuted the Sadducees. The. Patti- •Abbey, has it le no on ow wi y .
General in ' the history of British arch David ---"The darling of the songs: separated from tach,...ether by habit, '• him, the Count of Louvain, with his
Columbia has enforced the law so ma. of Israel" (2 Sam. 23) vvas always to "race, creed, and tradition - the indi- long spear, thrust straight, for the
jesticallY as he. But -61lee is one man P°steritY the "father" of his country. ;vidual meMbers. a the group may be. giant's face, and destroyed the sight
in Victoria, a chauffeur, who ()Cession- 30. Be would set ones -The word The same group may. contain a of both his eyetS. With the leader of
ullY unfolds a tale of collision between "one" is not in the Greek S and is inis- Dogra or Gashwals. a Pathan or Pun- his foes thus disabled, be had. no
Mr. Bowser' and the Iaw, ' leading; it is a line of Davidie kings jabi, Mulltiman or Brahmin, Jot, Raj- doubt of Putting them to flight; - he
Concluding his 'part of a public that was predicted in 2 Sam. .7. 12 Put, or IVIahratta. Many of these are counted the vie..tory as geed SA *on.
function at Escluimalt/ the historic (compare 16). But the very failure of a character so incompatible as to But the blinded giant ,Sallied site -
naval base on the pretty iittle 'harbor of that line combined with other pros Make social intercourse out of the leutbrfroln the shock; ordered his
about three.snileS from the border of phetic inspirations to develop the question in their own country. Yet, esquire to take hilt into the thickest
Victoria, Mr. Bowser, who t t h s • d• si 1 ss • h d t as the Boches are aware individual Of the fight and dashed •raging
t , was o a - hope o an in ins na Messiah a - ,
•
tend an important meeting in Van- heighten indefinitely the conception of honor and the Prestige of the regi- against his a/lemma brandishing his
couver the same evening, hastened in- his person and -work. ' .. relent and the British taj.have welded Mallet on either hand as he -rode, He
, to o taxieab and instructed the chauf- 32. Of. whom, ,(margin) -As in 1. 8. h nld not see
feur to drive him to the C.P.R. wharf Peter speaks for a "cloud of witness -
in Victoria Harbor. es," every one of whom can say, "l
"There is just time to catch the have seen the Lord risen." This wit -
steamer if you hurry,'' said the At- ness of What they had seen and head
torney-General. was the one supreme purpose so
"Yes, Sir."
••SIS'
-4;ssi,ss'?1M"**P
‘sc
+
• • ' Australian Volunteers; March 329 Miles From the Interior to 'Sydney, .
,•
A very. interesting sfOrye-is' tehl in this, picture„ Thirty Men 'Of the town of Oilgandra, in the interior of
Australia, erganiSed themselves into o 'Vaud of Volintteet4 the latter part of the ;summer Of .19.15i, They de-
cided to: march to • Sydney; a diSt.anea of 320 miles, to Offer their Services for 'the Dardanelles campaign.: The
athventent was originated by the. captain' Of the. local rifle club, Mr. W. I. Hitchenwho accompanied' the •res -
emits, on their journey, and the men came to be known, "Ilitchen'a Own." Residento, .:ot •Gilganden Ina":
tributed nearly .$1,000, towards the expenses ,Of the march. All arcing the route thismen sysere cheered •sind.
lavishly treated by the patriotic 'Australians, while TteW recruits fell in line by the score, --kt,each stopping
phuee, a new band joined the original thiety', and by the time the expedition reached Sydney, NOIT.1.th, the
number had increased to several hundred.'. The picture shows the "Cee-eee (as they were christened.) after
they had settled. well down on their inarcli.and were leaving behind, them the great Wheat belts of the West-
ern plains where most" of them lived all their lives. ' , •
14 OLD SCOTLAND/
NOTES OF flown non nuitt
BANES AND BRAE%
het Is Going 'On in the pugli1446,
and Lowlands a Auld
Scotia..
ORIGIN OF BLIND MAN'S BUFF
PRE UDICES OF -- h
• ' • s How the Game SO Dear to Children
RAE AND CASTE•
Liege'and, Louvain, in this year of
Originated.
CI1STOIVIS OF THE GALLANT IN.
: DIAN WARRIORS.
Hindu 'Will Not Eat of a Dish That
Has Been. Touched By
An
war and desolation, are names that
breathe the 'very ,echo of tragedy. It.
is hard to associate them , with any-
thing as gay and innocent as the
chil-
dLen's game of blinditares buff -al' -
though that game, indeed, owes its
origin to a. tragic feud between two
warriors of the rival cities, as long
ago as the year 999. -
Jean Colin of Liege was a mighty
TELLS OF NAVAL BATTLE.
Tiger's Captain Gives Details of Fight
With the Bluicher. '
Captain Polly) 'Commander of the
'Tiger, in a statement to the London
cstrespondent of the:: Amsterdam
Telegtaaf, Who has :visited the British
says of, his great shii'S, pert in
the North Sen Sea battle of January 24:
"The Germans said that we broke
.off the fight on January 24, But there
was nothing more to fight; The Igoe-
chee had:paid ,the toll,. andtlie ether
Thon•as soOnsheeaMO an
Meet of: admiration 'to bie, comrades
and an object of awe to the pay ser-
geants... PYeli some of the efficers,,St
first greeted' him' with suspicion,
• ,Gunner ,Atkins Was, however, a de-
cent fellow. He had proVedThfirtself
a man of ,physical courage in the
field, and he SQ011 earned the respect
of his officers 'for his moral courage*
He started a book in which he entered
and balanced his accounts monthly*
and so is believed to have originated.
the idea, ottlte soldier's pocket ledger,
or, as it was celled at first in Also
Royal Artillery and afterward in the
army generally, a "Tommy Atkins."
There is little doubt that the pocket
_ledger was? generally known by that
IMMO in the regiment; .and it is %pal-
ly true that there was then serving in
the Royal Artillery a gunner of the
name of Thomas Atkins, whose Meth-
od, of keeping his accounts was .
hon-
ored by almost general adoption in
the service,
Edinburg), street car fares are be
ing increased Li° ;per Cent*
In Argyllshire 6,935 eggs WeTe col-)
1ee.te4 for the National Egg VantIJ
Many of the Scheel ebildrarraeiistc41- •
It is noW eaeciarle at Dunbar of a
. ,
mght that the authorstiele are eerioUse.
ly thinking of 'wbitev1001414 the larall-1
poets. . • • •
The" number of Allen men hale%
since the beginning of the war, in41,
eluding one eaptain. and two lieuteni
ant, is 60, • • '•
RUrntislinal has just experienced
terrific gale, .acconapanied by heavy'
falls of sleet and SnOW. 1‘111,4 44440.
wtui done. , • %
-Damag_e eetiguttO at about $20,09
was caused by Are in the pronitine .of
R. Strathallan. Ha _
Curing Werkeelfridge-of-Allen... t
The Aberdeen trawler • Feral/. Pht
into port with;an'unitsual catch ill th4
shape, of setoriledo. It WitS Ogelt 13
feet in length and was withet4 nose,
Owing ..to*the, scarcity Of houses in
OW Greenock district; the Admire:It
has arranged for the erection butt
dwellings at Battery Park for toped
weriters. , •
Infidel Hand.
ships made off. Of course, we were -
Theindian se •• ifightes of gigantic- stature and not such fodls as to be lured into the
familiar figure in England. One meets I s rength, 'utoSe choseirweaPoll -was Gerinan milia-fieldS. - "My 'rah* Vas M.
him
him in squads in the streets of 13tigh- I neither swad•uor aPearebut heavy doing sgandidlY when we saw the
ton, or being wheeled about in a baths 'mallet, which he wielded ,with such Bluecher keel over and go dawn. .And
omit on the pier, or walking . the terrific effect that it soon earned him all mY 1;300 officsrs and crew wera
glades of the New • Forests and on the nickname of "Maillard," or • the sorry Ole- the battle was se soon
WednesdaYs. one sometimes encount- r`,11troughout his own and over." lasted as, hour,
ets a parfy of convalescents from the all the neighboring provinces he be- "There must have been great ex' -
hospitals who are being shown the came known, dreaded • as Colin sitement on board?" I asked ,Captain
sights of. London, Maillard. Everywhere svaa -vie- Pelly. "Oh", no," be said, "No' one
a iorious, until only one chieftain, the got excited. In a moment. like that
party chatting arnicablY together or coot of Louvain 'still held the fight one needs complete self-possesaion.
The man in the street, observing
gazing, open-mouthed, at the front of :,against him'. At 'length they met in
Buckinghom Palate or Westminster finals battle., At the. first onset, • be-
. • • • fore the teirible 'mallet could steal,
--
which the twelve Were called, ,.
6 l
Stir:Skip the Law. 33, The opening phrase is identical
• • , with that in 5.'31; the margin is suite
Half way to the wharf Mt, Bowser wrong in botnsases. "The right hand
'looked at his watch, of Jehovah doetti valiantly" (Bsa. 118:
,41 said I wanted to eateh the steam- 16) in this she migiitiest. of, God's
er to Vancouver," said Mt. Bowser in- deeds. Note how close all this is to
. .
gisivelY- the Johannine doctrine (compare es-
".Ye8r, sir," the chauffeur replied, 1?lit pecialli John 16. 7). It is also very
"he neglected in do anything to assets close to the Pauline teaching in Eph.
crate the speed of the taxi. . 8i,r„ The coincidence ,of these verl,
. A little later 1V11% 13°IvSer 'gain 'con- independent reporters has ' strong%
suited his watch, ov, _ell
1st tial value. '
"These are just three minuteS left," •84, David, did not ascend, because
he shouted, abler to contain .hiniSejf „no one hath ascended into heaven”
no longer. "Why don't Ymi- hurry? (Sohn 3. 13), an admitted truth. He
"I must not drive any faster," said saith blinselite-Ae in Mark 12. 34, the
the chauffeur. ;``I am making (ten, argument is based on' tlie then un -
miles an b(mr, and that is 'the $1iLIF" questioned authorship of • Psa. 116:
limit in Victoria." - . The .._ psalm represents ,Jehoitalt as
"Oh bother the siseed thnit: • Never- ,,,,,,,e,,,,oeiin t e DaVidic king unlimited
mind tins ,regulations. I am
' t1.14 -A' I'vrctory,s and, the vicegerency of
0
the diffeteint. communities into a •veVY s ew. Y
united front. . • an the ter or inspired, by his dread- oti e. In addition, we were faster,
is one of the romances a the war ful aspect, --the el:mention, done by the and we gave them the Uthole broadside
•
A IIAT STORE.1,i- .
Homer Cray's Adventure in
ss-H000lulus
,•
Im hi 4 eagereess to see a whale attr-
ing the voyage between nonolidu and
the island of Ilasivaii, Mr. Homer, Croy,
who belle about his: acbieotote Trie
vel, leaned too far Over the'rail, and
lost his •Iiitt.'• '
, After ate:Wing at the island he
-
Mr. W. A. Craigie, 'Dundee Malt
and a former student -of the Univerei
sity of St. Andrew's, has been lip)
pointed Professor of Anglo-Saxon in, ,
the University Of Oxford. ,
Brigadier -General Lord Levet is en
popfoalitil4re'oelousitrioessaput ialata:griaot oa,filt:tchereTntsolehiga
been invalided -twice frein the Galli
- Clydebank Town Couneil hav
adopted a recommendation to the Fir
and Lighting Committee to, empl
six women to light the :street, lamp%
until the end of the war. .
-veThrsttoxenorfolZiintwfirgguhrestfuoirs th:estioinoin-
show a decrease Of 480 compared With,
parediasy ewalitha ntdwao decrease
g:f. 148! emn..!
A tragic affait occurred in 13arlins)
'niesPrisons Glasgow,. Vsli§n two 1)4
-miners enuedelled dnd -fell. - On '
them was killed by the knife used in
their work penetrating a vital part V
• The question of providing education
for from 80,0 to 1,000 scholars in the
Milton distriet• when Dandas Vale and
Stow Practicing schools are clesed is
caueing iinxiety:to the Glasgow School
climbed bite a 'taxicab and told the Board ' • . •
driver to take hint to a bat store • The report of . the 'medical ofileeri
But the whole ship's company glowed•• "Do you .understand?" be asked "A for Maxwelltown, Dr: Maxwell Ross
tell you •that we put our shoulders to
ean'hat• store . , states that 87 cases of infee loos
. •
with the ardor. of. battle, and' I
the wheel from the moment the enemy
'No
1.
• 11 " the' J'as eases were 'noti.fiell in the burgh° las
appealed. The latter turned tail when
they aught sight of our fling squad.
; "Our hu-ridred" stokes% worked below.
like ttoopets ,tet get mor0. speed. put
Of the'Tigers We were sloing,*28 knots
es, o , ,
pinese chanffeur onsweted. year, The • death rate for •the yea, ••
• ' They Went bumping up.the street, was 14.05 and -the birth rite 20,287.s
swung Wildly toUnd a corner,and Kilssrth the delivery of assess-, .:
finally at the far side of' town 'Tient notices issued by the Town: ,
drew up to the curbmg, In the win. Council has been Undertaken bYlisCheeLl
*Low of the etore was a hedateed on. who have agreed 'to hand over the.
Which hung the., sign, "This week money usually paid fop the work to '
at least,. although the ship was only, •chesp,st , . • the funds' of the local Red Cedes Work -.
built to do 28. We only stoke ail; -and. -tweet- acTy-011: oloart by -toeing me Ise,rty. -, •
we used up ' e good, meuthful. Our tb.a: furniture store" Croy de. A sensation has been created in the
00- • erlis•Hate. store," replied the Ja.-
mended.: • • Edinburgh printing industry Iv". the '
anamineemerit that the employes a,
13.5's worked like fun. The flting be-
gan it -15 miles, and we Over
Ballantyne, Hanson & Co., number),
whose guns did not catty so far
ft''S• name a the proprietor .0E. ing about 500, one of the. biggest'
panese. driver, and be, pointed to the
printing establishments in •She "
nearer than eight mil e% to the enemy,
It that the Prejudices of •Thee and caste swinging mallet, and the renewed in a minute. • • - • , - .
are observed in London and- Brighto curage of hie followers, charging ' "Vise thiether Was terribly knoelied
s rigidly as in Benates or Lahore, close at his heels, first disniayed and
about," and gave the Tiger her last 0 of these seposis are vegetarians, 'then destroyed the men of •Louvain. shot, which with teto other shots Aid
ule -others eat meat; but the ,clif-. Not one survived to ..tell the tale. us.. little . harm: Look, here a shell
flcultsr only begins here. The Mussul- Robert the, Devout, thenKingofstrucleour-Wooden (lecke-came t•o•-tin
Man will not •eat flesh ' Of any ordinal France, wassan ardent adMirer ' ,Of
that has not been killed by the throat- deeds of valor. 'Such am exploit as
tutting strokeewhereas such meat is Colin mirdin-dird,s was entirely -toe his
"I wean hat, not a 'bed," Mr: Croy
said Wteeling. "I want it .for this,". have been s all given notice.
• •
.pointing•to his hare head. " • f.
• "Yes, for taures'all right." -
iron beam which changed AS Airestson stteet and avey to the Other side of , '
the' town while the taxi bill Was -mer -
With that thecabwhirled (low, Not
AWliQH,nYysillIeLLKig,FhEinRiMii:TNhTaSt.:
o„. itT"ed. ways. will sometimes t aneeu. orf-llidaturi;p-ientngs;anotthu41
the
2 rtlfyo•rreunanb r suhis,iine-11
and it flew over the deeic ' again and "No. :11014
want anything taken, i
3
.
pellution to the Sikh, W,116-:iesists on II . ' I showered gifts arid
, taste. e not oh y g .
the strolce - honors upon the hero, but caused
At the Back 'of -tile .-NOCk. the players of the court to produce a
,
•
• . - :pantomime, representung. his achievee
'tile sight of -meat killed in' the:this nientS, on the stage. They made, as
orthodoic-srianner - runes the worst: May easily be Imagined, an -exciting
passions in • each, and in India is often melodrama, Which soon became •s6
the copse of riot arid bloodshed. Pork; popular that it wes played ' every -
of course, ,is an abomination to :the where, and imitated even by the dill-
Mussultnan, as IS beef to the • Hindu, dren on the Streets: The great scene
on account of it 0 sacredness; was of course, the blind man seek -
11 'for his'entinies; and the lad who
"- It theresare only two patients, . a •
Molioniniedan and, a Hindu, in the played'Coliteleae.7islindfelded-and My -
seine ,waidithe're muStije two hutch- .en- a stiek, while playritateS dodg- that iior ship- Suffered." - • .7. -
ers-ancl•two cooks, two different phteei
tap ite-it a eheck e the sininiatedlq_To.,ais the drama,
the -chie.ftainse---1914YEAg OF DISASTER.
everboard.---No man was hurt hy_it.
"Do you se that neW pieee of steer
on the:turret? There another- enemy
projectile Made d hole. And if. you
examine carefully tiss Side of the ship
poffut' monyithpelde:-.6.1arIodwivianrt. Croy
thv!linogwas ning that causes it, fOr the heat before
deistorm. • I is not always-theslights
hOw quite irritated. the storm . is often :great enough to
the milk ferthent. "lot light -
.."Yes, for • sure; 1. understand all moRe
_the ,eauffeur, vs,ith, a niniiiillk turn sour by its action on the
It',,,-uel-eviinitill-ritaheitticklY°*stelePlelaivideatet';of Itlirlhees.'kririreihitt:
-Tiger. , Here, in the armored observe- the other ' side of • the town as they
"trvePeniledelattering, Jest as far
posed Of two gases -Oxygen and nitro -
can, and sometimes does,moke
to air. Air, as evetybody knows, is cern-
'Tiger
to*Weis an enemy shell drove in could; and drew up before a store that gen; but these gases ere mixed to -
through the opening, without' asking as an afterthought eppavently parriod getii&, not leonibined.' Lightning,.
Mission. ' ' te line of hats.,' Mr, Cloy had to pay however, mikes .the gases combine in
' "Do you see this rieW steel plate as twice the price of a hat on the way the oir through Which it fiasses, an
a.'soUvenit of•the enerny'S shot? And
to buy it, hut this! did. ,not seem to .this combination produces nitsk acid, ' •
now I have shoWn 'rou all the damage
worry the cIriVi--, tinity, afiee the mane:sem-6-6f, Which Mixes With the Milk!
rier of automobile drivers, stood UP and turns it sour.. Perhaps it might'
under it bravely.. , . - be well to explain the cheitical_differ.14_ .
'-' •: -a. " .,, • • - oleo betieed mixing and combining
.
• • i
•
LIFE STRI.),Lg OF THE TREks: When different- ingredients are pot to-'
. ed and ran as be pursued and etuck
to -wash in, and water from a different • • —
elutched atetTiern; .: • - . • . •
ser, .‘• ..1.0a1
We baYc. only to say of ILA.M.C; orderly to diseover thal the
ss.sisaonss,. pssi„i „sus_ itn,thy__ In Jesus. Chitst it was Hind will not eat of a dish that has
replied the, ehhhadlii>,•-been touched by an, infidel hand, _ • •
• . - • was a title lie Won by death; to use etaitrant, the Mohanimeeliais an
feNV; daYS before., , table, the Hindus 'at . another. The.
. When- -the'ehanifoul" dePoetted after death. In Ina 'earthly ininistry
••• . • food' of, the Hindus will, b prepared
tesney-Geilerol,'" tbuntiered Mr. BinweartlL
-
„
haVe
at a bliiesuiliferm ;he 44.A$044'1.l'-'6A,'; 41rea.-41-g-, -vrr VUs-Paitir --Londen will
11 nar and recalling a' flee for..speeding VadeArini . 1.4"ariLoir4t.1-s- their raidc10 ment at an.. ina, re_
' made this futuee dignity . • • • , • .
-0 at 81/46 • by a Brahmin cook -a man of so limn
r ee .1 no
ble lengths out. thus it time
two ea , a c.
Ss that, the seeed, regulations of, his diseiples, forbidden to the ' . • •
intion to anv. C allTiS 0
. • • .
imeigorating,cun of tea,once ,the7,b. r/tepiii.e.ta.t „el.rxht:n. ba:mrston'':iytis-L
d • •- .easte Observance icespected. „they never did before if they •are' •
' m tadee, end confessed only at his trial, , -
• •
and the king are forgotten; they are . . b
relegated to dry and dusty ChrorticIPse Japanese . Superstition Beene, Out y
But the-,gaine -still ' gnglialv Ttagte Events.. •
_biornd:A; in,ineitilettrkst;hitl_dis7e4itciT4s,bFluirs.14naisiin's.,71h.• a Briiish c6n.
:Ohlai„lieport-TTOM: 4.0ahp 3US
-wasrs'eaedbngs4o-theZoiSTSJAiine-se
system or reckoning, the' Year of the.
' • .gether, Without their undergbinik anY .
li_nt Some of T_iteyme Lrisv.O.
n elestmgAl-gbt is threw Oil But When . the "property o • f' each ingre-• „
iNe-longevi
ts thettees that row- ' • :-
along the thnber line of• the llockY a combinations as i for example, SAIL' •-
. I L dr
' Plubts. Blapnl. Whel"eVrelh.-- . ' Tigerr and in; emiforinify With Japitee _Meth -italics_ hy Ms, Ehos: 4...,Mills in ' ter poured . on rAtick-Iime, Whicii coin-) • .
A new . diseevery in horticulture, ege superstitiona 'should have been his recentlY PuhliShed 4iRock.y "i‘1161/r.. bines 'With' it, SO ilia.t the property of. .
or . tain Wonderland.” He se s:
makes the oxygen' and nitiogen• •
0 1 Ad SI te:e • t:::rb emi sol is ,t el itiretebselivtie;et:juns:.
go longer :air, butric acid and font
'Onfintglut: air . combine; And the .reeult.•is'
vainad:ite:4116,7,,:hhtwhp,,.40,1i:f:ii;t9hr:0,e;tit.es,pas crailirte.,‘'„00her,4trowil.10.6iiic. _ __,..
' lif :iiiiiC'Utliect by their, ilia or bY - •s• -: ---S ''' -4 --•''' '.-4-
he centurma of deference in the ages L .
te pa
Vieteria Were still...intatt;. _ r,
e • misied art, importitht politiger when it.Preeleitated. 'd cen emna•
.
' flan. In' Civilian India especially in the
-Bow; et. .
' • ' ' " VericoaVere, . ,
---.'.'-Tbe-'-!•11.4.01n of rePeh ,a • , -If ' ted
1 'OntO retinemen or s its t e:•-preparit-, , , . ,, . ; . ,, .0 even g,
' 1.1-etion-priailied by'4Olirt.'leads, as in the'llrahirart is pet Merely, preseived n m •
habl "
Mit IN-.01,10.0-40-eiv,,, , - -e-e ara ens• --1 _ he tiotifeold teat .frem one-fearth :to one . I ter, o
4 . to th h etcOehlt,t_Witik-4.1totie__,_ e ;
1, • .inie_4e: all these New ,.N4a4raams„ho.iiiondoeiliotiwIt.ectitistellimgftiUm/y eri: .surprised' to find how rem y , the shaina Bank failed and lisAugust war t, . ,
4. $OW. e p Q" vi a day- LeVeis Shave, the' inventor,
in I -give my geranitiM et-dibik-z etap,
the er p
n the iliscloeure of certain scan- their -general ApPearatice, There may
. nee $. . - - A
hO eewiee.eiarrie sayst rom meg . an cano ip the 7.Tapan.;
in th
Vein of the „Salcurajima
-441%1ENS:E__
a ,cup....pet....plaut,____While___at, .„dale_centr.ibuted.fatitte_fall a the _
•‘-
2_Calinieg.Ust Waters,
ete-thee-Kit-Ole:W041)16-1 —"tretiiriqiil- on Ilir:te7-iiiihled wa- •
je 0 • f t: 41' -41'4 . b,e t - eras 1 -
Ii4-0.9e-4-1/211/i114-Tli"IligaTe'4'es4Ilie'lli'il-nt!_nfrir:-.7.,?... a "inotFlireaTi:110.!a .
s'et eetionined teve trees -that Iverel -- In .
C Moved -1V actories From n
2 aNis. Ara' i •
• -titiief'ittga. .
. . . ment-lfirraectrtheeeetual--prortoimmtag-
, Tile esaessation of the. large ecities of the hely flame is implied.). its as aos tee. --C aStaa" 111.7efuttlier-sdivided •-intcs-
that., Ruaila hew 'abandoned- to the Sub.castes, so that there are Issans. buds toolrblornsatspnee.
elattoris "produeed erpowerfel inipres•
-
Gerrnenet is 'a teak tile hititienSitY 4 gior, on Inen''S Minds: . • .
Iv I v .0 alithiig [fie most often reeelied -- 1 -
' who may but whose wives mo.y not.
411/6ilabr° "tIcer'iiril" iih.e i''itt4i et '' - . - - And* every Sub-divon is hedged
of Riga °rite poPulatinn + prophe'eies in' Christian , circles (tom-
• ebout with with a hundred different
tci s" haS long been lteowe as an ef.
.1111-1? ic plants.blooined end how many of the i broke out. , growing within a, :few yards of each '
k t,
mins Who may cat mushrooms and
hicb from figures .39.. The. greet' evet.ds, of Tsn io, Brahmins who nt_ay not, and Brahmirts
. ,
Nwilmiamomprommon
vvaeUatiofl of Riga' ititS'net-.1ken'sdrieeSly ,dife. Pare Eph..1 13,- 1.7).•,.. There ..is. hole
tuibeti, the CRY haiing ahottt'ae Ilielly• ItiSe:ell ...appeal .to joel 2, 32. The
habitants- no -at t,lielieginnisig of the egratjautewerds to yen ..., aed to our
• .. War, eiliCe-lilailli•-'reftlgeeSile',i-e. &the children Might seem ft, be it direct, re-
' Creel'. there, from the Raltic'distrietS' :anouse to the savage.•Cry of 'Mett, 27.
t5
Oiiiiiire0Y.11W,"Getntatierbtlt-400-eftte . e•ee-----,ee-,.-....
----e]e-:---,e.:'e'-...-...:'.._
,,I
tpriee,..ef:WItielt, SO: belong to German . 41; Thee; ,then having received bis
.enhJecte, have .beete; traneplatited to.: *Ord (initrgirt),The whole tortgregit-
leterbeie pitivitieee.':,: During theone, tier is represented ai.perieaded,•And
netion.peried froiteifit'l to 2110: loaded a Mese mevement.bringe' into their
earpeweee ,dialiatelled daily, 'and in all , feltavohlp ;seine' three thettsand:' ..Ift
- 24 000s Carloads eir-mathinery, metalei Acts 4, 4 wa heat of' fnie flitinsand
• More, and Acts 6: 7 complete the' pie-
ture of a marvelloim ,expatisten.
... e
• eeee—f-ea---......--- . .
Eirk Derteon: "Wlifn I topic at +lie
ngee.gation seated. in the Owe I itek
.iitheel• "Wherit'a the..puiel" • ;When I
look At; the toliettiort at 'the' elese-of
the* eerviee • .I. teh 'Where afe the
'ichl,'".*.. • . . .-, , • •
. .. .
tind'Say.r Mattriale were shipped out
of Elea. The. Worlf, tentinnedefor twO
flIO21tl• ,
,Facte?,-y peelers have a•C'eeicti tore*
• peasetiole froM the Gov,ernmeet' trete.
• e,ury for the coSt of refeaval, mid moet
of ,11143 kiUt1 .vorkero of: ,the • foe.
; fellers leteee.atecotapaniett th'.!•..etuploy-
• 101.3 to the new locatioiee
.priVileges eand disabilities. • .
There. aro Brahmins in .the Indian
Army 140 Wilt perfoiin their' ••:pre-
ahlutleitis :in a glacier streara:
When the therinornefer is below Ireez-
nglyaint;-but-thesineyros,',3n-vnie,34
not so exacting as his'l?orine-etayitig
kirofolk, and the and tango of
a, campaign has a teittlaitcY niake.
1111)3 less' so. .
', •
Stillenetbing iriaY 1)0 loft to chance.
It is a cardinal. role or the' 1'010
Army theit mete obterVaricea omit be
teepeethd. Even at the Proet.repree
,ot the different teretraele.
flea are detailed frore the firing -lino to
railhead' to it de meat
is 1411.01
by, their, own men tite.tig4 way. •
•witrif;ht,;.A.3 With in) MiSfortimes
leannet,,etijeV'llfe .to its . tidiest value.
. .
fielea• method of • preveetirg the
ether' in the shelter •of a crag. •Om
was foutteen- feet high and sixteen
inches in diameter, and had 337 an-
nual, rings. The othei watt seven feet
high and five inches in diameter, ;end -
bad lived 492 years. • •
breakieg eff the weves, A,novel • in-
ventlen which will pour oil front a
Sea 411ChOl• to windward and spread, •
It for two or • three hundred :feet •
around the vessel has recently h&en
effeted.. The apparatus eonsists of a
••••One day; by the slimly and shelter- siyudi„eit.tanh on the vessel, a suitable
pipe fer the oileeupporeed by a haw-
ed side of a boulder,1 found a tiny
set from ViiliCh • A drag ' anchor' la
seed beaier at an * attitude of 11w1 1 8 0i 1 (0
feet. , Haw splendidlY llfleollSeidtIS it
•
hung, A. drag, anchor is made: of, •
Was of RS size arid its utterly
heavy till1VAS stretched over a frame,
WOrk,:„sci Olc
to form,...a_large con_
shaped object that floats in the water ' •
to windward es far as teeCeesary.
Upon the dreg ruichor. isar;oezoliel.
surroundings! This brave pine bore a
-ditiety-tonereeyete-a-dr-inking
would have completely housed beth
•the tree and its
4
see"
,Ser•
.*•se..ses
•
,
1 . Peep Into lite Future,
t did "ott d tnting thegrat
e
• , entlen
'Massage Cu'W
re for et
• Nye.. Alineric 'Paget ' organizing
•Siid teaipping massage:CAMPS in Eng-
• land, Miss- French, ' daughter of
• thin, Sir lolln French, is in:charge, Of
Otte of theee, It is reported that groat
bemfite 'hoe resulted in many eaSea
•'Of wounded thee fr011e `the frenf and
ff
Aimee ;suering from the result ox.
thattered nervea. • ' •
through winch the oil iS sCIi a ad
;each ,Side of the drag., •
• One More Woo Vatough.. .
• Precocious Offspring -Pa, nag:
ark just one moretmeetiot?
Petient• Pater !ei4tny eon.• : juet
one more, • • •
PreCoeious Offspring- Well. then, '
ss, how is it that while the eirie rii
ti te day that leettiza?
•