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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-02-24, Page 3• •""luaralellelelettere-••• 11 a 0 , . . aPeears, lteckoniree the egg Wo eeneeMed at the seine price as liE SUNDAY.SCIIOOL i hint i time WO sold they al/Waged a frac- tion over 85 COMO 'per dozen, total anlettnt ' for Ogee, 09.18, Vreen those We .set We relliedi 88 Chickens, 14 pellets, Which We latille at .P1, and 4 eoelterele Whiela at a fair market ' reewng Vatic Of Root' and, Silage. I le)erlelleherravNe°rvare 14511151 :raralYtointaroei i'lele9-11,1;*--11he Seven Heliters. A:as e, ' to • •The "Intl" nine a recite' nini'is"ile* 823.10, A total Weenie freer; tlie '6, Golden Teat; • nge in •tbq stack ,dietarY, is '4„tettneet40re",1whole floOk of $133,28, - • . ' , Gal 6. a. ' 'will& is often th8C1IBSIPti AIMI 013 4 1 Tea load ,eomaatea patnetpalla a whichthsre' is' nweit dif4rInlee a 1 Wheat and oats, supplenlented with Wree 31.,; Grecian Jews -A special opinion among practical farmers.If lalckwheat, crecked con, ground belle, use of the word iitellenist,4a describe We • compare the WO on the =Went hoof of matrIeutthey eOlitaine we Anserape, relied .oats, oil cake, cern Jews 'Who were beheght up. in the y ae d i anal, brae, . that sitage Is 'preferable. . . 1 foe 41 *beds, oyeter -ehell, Disperdion and had been accustomed Thu, 100 lba.`of sils.6 iins• dela` d, meegele, and ,a consider- to speak Greek. Many of„theni. would , ,. 9;`nthe, . able amount Of gkeerf feed 'front the: take the first OPPortutakethei could' -------7 average about .4 Ih. otaprotein anteegarden- anci- 414-0 ell the table scraps get of rereoYing--Valeetine," Hebrews . 8.6..lhe. ofestarch or its equivalent,,, we could. Convenient -1Y- got; total eost were (preperly) dweller's he Palestine ' 1001.14, of 'Irlangels (medium si-se),Itee feed $50,91, added to this • 5240 Whose laneelage.was Ara -Male" fb4•001 have4.1 ib. of Protein atA 41)9uvo lbs._ for Ave settings of eggs and $4.50 they viould generally Understand of sterch or its equivalent; 100 lbee et Swede teenips have 4.8 ThOf ro for the hens we lest leaves a Pet pro- Greek. The cleavage between thetbwe . ee P- Rt. a . . " ' teirt iend 7,5 lbs. 0,guire,h, or ' Aof mara O. 7 • classes depended ainost of all 'ori the fact that the Bible of the fogad: was the SeptuaginteWhile .`..`lielerewe used . the 'original. Note that Paul (Phil. pathetic Tholdear of a. Small Bey and 0: A) insists that he *as "a IlebreW • ' ..1,1.18 Baby Sister . and the "descendant of Hebrews," 41- , • There has been much said in Praise though Greelt.-waS for hint as ltulcb 4 of the courage with which ..the Belgian nativelanguag0 as A-verna,ie• And he array and the Beiglea people met the as entirely fentilia,r, withthe Greek, invasion and compteat of their country OId 'Testament. Neglected -"Were but perhaps Wee de not (elite under- being Overlook' ed"' the _sequel.is •istelid hoe Much dailet„ indoliseigllelta enough to show the1; it was quite IUflk. brave* the common people have Led tateritionaL The Helleniets oteaSieh t9",shuir :--- and. lltive• '001#11,, , " were - alr. it aaaaa 1.tbades F.30uoiar: a;t nlaartguerlayiethbeatVejlabeetme,aleenwde jt winaostir.t ho hec; which po, shows' the advantage NeweCellege,• Oxford,. who served ute .0f silage eVer roots Where' milch eoWs der the Ainertean„Coinadesioit for ad- lind• been in the 'eitY"all iheir lives are coned/lea, but that benefit, of feet!. ministering -the reliefsentby the IDA, . , . . should be heticed •first. Ing a mixture of half silage and half 'tad States, Canada, and Australia, tells 2. •It must be rememberedthat the roots rather than using. either alone. in the Cornhill Magazine' aboat on3 of twelve shad a message to.. give which Whee three-quarters of the silage re- the obscurer heroes of the war. could not be delegated, Other men tion was replaced by an equal weightether In Bruses one day I wept down could 'preach as well -hardly one of sl of rotas the Milk -produced fell from them could match Stephen, far less to Bal, B thwait mwatt the place Saint Sauveur.hwere eroze the 100 lbs., to 97 lbs. When half the sil- people of the Belgian capital fore-, Paul. Many other men eould organize age ratiop weerhplaeed by roots the gathered for thee Turkish baths, and charity better than they. But they • milk production rese to 108 lbs.,. when It Is .now MO ef_the largest canteens could tell what they had seen and. one-quafter of the silage ration was of the Commission for Relief in Bel- heard of the words and works, the replaced by roots the milk preduetiondeath and resurrection of Jesus; and etas increased, to 105 lbs. Thus the • in this they could have no substitutes. • maximum result was obtained when 3. The method *proposed is very half reets and halt Silage were fed; if significant for the history of the .. were toots were added to the ration Chriatien ministry. These officers of the 'llove of milk decreased. ' the ; church -"poor - stewards" we • It-ia interesting to ateileare the • should call them in British_lVIethodista e amount of *food produced from..an acre -are to be elected by the whole mem- of roots I and from an acre of silage. bership, and installed by the twelve. At the Central Experiment Farm at The conditions are that they Must be . Ottawa in the season of I.913 the yield members,. of well-recognized charattee of roots and ---------1 a 7 tone pee and not only men of judgement, but deeply spiritual. For the Spirita ii: needed just as much for "serving tables" -that is, the counters • over which money is paid -as for preaching or praying. • ,There. were to, be seven, the sacred "limber, an additional re- minder • that this wai no "secular!' work •whieh the twelve rejected as not good enctagh. for them, Mete ' they are never called "deae-c-ens"-Fwe--:need: Tile Farm • INTERNATIONAL ttESSON. • V VAIWARY 87. ' lent , , The cab% feeding 'Value silage thus shown by -OS chemical.mpeste tion wqrapsout In . -feeding" experi- ments. An average of the results ob- tained at the- Ohio, Pennsylvania and Vermont experiment Stationse in the - States elieW 411E4 •about three per Cent. more milk was prodaced. 'bY feedizig gilageetitan by feeding' Man- g*. • • • • . • • . • • • '.• An intereeting experiment was ceps ried On..tat :81ttePenalec011ege,:qiie... THIS SPIaliT-OF BELGIUM gium. At the end of the hall, all elope, end apparently unconscious of the crowd of strangers steamtng Past, sat a little Belgian boy of about ten "years. la one hand he held a loaf of American bread and On his knees a howl of simp. Ile was far more inter- ested hi the Meal than In the teemed, and pairno attention to Me as I fie - preached to ask him why .he sat in the corner by himself. • "Oh, 1 Jest arriVed this morning, and didn't have a.ticket," he said; "so • aere •an that f silage -'tons per they put •m� here to eat, to be sure • - - that I was really hung v and did not crops must ,he competed not on the else." want to. use the ' taoci-r;-for s.ome one acre. But for feeding purposes these bulk of product but -on the amount of Heel' * • . . _ . .. „ng explained his position, he dl food nutrienti: produced pereaerally iniseed -rife, -and- tutted-1es- attention cotnaaring the mange's. and silage in to eating the soup by: means of bits of e this way, on the amount of starch or bread broken from the loaf. I realized its egebealent produced per acre, as' then that he wag too 'busy for further 1.00 abes-of-Mangels only 4ontairie6 lbs.. conversation, and so -I sought the dir- et stat•ch equivalent while' 'silage con- ector, a man who was . formerly high • In councils Of the' Seoltilist Party, aied , who Is now devoting ' all his time to- nos 1 diseuss the later tradition that ' .tainea-876-lbseofestarele equivalent' -we ,.. find. that in the case of mongols 2,040 the relief of the poor; I asked him geve them the nante, but the New a- lba of 'starch" or its _equiyelent was .about the boy, end -1 was nat. surprised Testanierit krioWs•-.eothing of the ap- peoduced ,per dere .and 2,064.lbs in at the little fellowei_norePosiere when lication.-Appoiat over this-busitiese , • i : • -, -the case of the silage That is, about I heard his -story. ` The twelite7Wilaransfer to them " • .''sea". The fl . . the same ternoent of .etarch as pi o- "About two hours ago, When we they had hitherto dem themseives., ' the enemy e - duced in each case If 'eve compare the tines" •the 'doors," the director sed, 4. The prayer -Literally, it is pat Aagast; 1 •- ideate is deekledly in favor of the Ail- btaby It lilts rnbi: reezhelhgeamb.ilank. two on the basis of • protein thea ,evi- ',The iboei• came ' .trudging IT t a ,first. as the outstanding feature of never recov age. The cost of groWing the man- e hams; Chridien meetings. :The ministry-, sive and thu service; for the.word is significatt- fortunes -et gels was $36.35 per acre or $2.14 per the•door for lialnan hour, and noth- Or big woeld induce hire to let the WO.: 'ter identical with " serve ' tables"- iii with our f -.-• -Wes-e22-63-pereacre-or-$1...84_pezton, teby.!' • . ' • - .--- 5.- The-translationeabove trieseto. ' _Foreaatime the German cruisets in That is, it cost about thIrty cents less • The director Went on to toll ale imitate the Old Testament flavor distant watets seemed to have thing's to .predece a, ton ef silagethan ,a,ton that he had knovin ...the . boy'a mother whida Luke here, as so often, gets out their own . way: -.Authority was 7not .JstroitY. OV pARis $00P4rtit; !Prance , Ware Was 'Vaught in Gangeling, Dela With- iP.reerite Prince, • . An• extraordillary and •iliaraatie •SCENE.' AT HARTIVIAN,NSWEILERKOPFe jelPtHITANT • ALSATIAN • , ,. • ' • . HEIGHT The now -famous height of Hartmannweilerkopf Aim; •heen the scene of some of the bloodiest fighting in the, present war,- having been taken and retaken ovar.a dozen times. It is now in the hands of the French 'ow eon - sautes the key to a very important position. Desperate fighting 1 i the • eminence goes on dhily. Before ,the war it was a thickly .wooded forest, but, now only the. blackened stumps' of th.e trees remain, The photograph shows French bomb -throwers ready • to cast their .deadly feom one of the commandirig trenches of the height. ., . a y• , • _..... • y • NAVAL STRATEGY WAS SUCCESSFUL BRITAIN KEEPING GERMANY. • OFF THE SEAS. Concentration and Initiative. Suceeed- ' ed in Bottling Up, Their Fleet. -•"- • - - • What -the' British fleet has done in 1916 is the subject of an exhausthre erticee in the Daily Telegraph by Mr. Arthibald.-Hurd.' In theacourserofthie artiele Mr. Hurd W "Concentration' .• initietree-ein. these tWo words lies, hi large Mee- ` le ea et' fe-- our --success-at • AND .HOTTEliTg ARV; FIGHTING.BilfANELY 1111X, VitESENT WAlt. Afriea'a Thetlaanted Meek Ven Are • "Clvillmr The colisplca0:arga.11alltrY . Of .014 story of the 'disappearance of laery- negro eoldi,er in the present, War en - Krupp, the German Caption King, is der coedit:4m directly 'opposed to related_byetha tExcelsior" of Parieeetetliaaa_ ysh;eaeeeeeaeeeet„, ,tete_,...eieeiteoee . In November, 1982, when the news Ment and trainipg for centuries paet of Krupp's death Was known in • Ogre has demonstrated hie -celerity' -of but- t -teeny, many etrange, stories' were tatio.n. The raee has aleveya been the told. Some said that the fareeus Most adept eopYing the White 044 irorimaater had been strangled .at and in PA way has it- emulated Capri; othera effirme4 that Ile coin- companion ra"ce mere closely than in • 'raided stlicide at his vine, at Peelle: the adaptation leleiderneyarfare Aral. e in whispers a scandal was„ related Allan courage Se: restreined diacitte • whieh wae supposed to have Oded line.' in the death °ter herr frederick Al -1 fact, 12Q transformation !NAL bert, Krupp. . Iseveger to civilizetion Was, ever per: Many were the Stoties recOunted fe.rsletie with More° thoroekheese and 111 westpridian circles, and it issaidSAlifereicad. ttpeat euar:t13114:41 of Herr. Thyssen, another erturahd ,steel - Magnate, that, when told of trooper • • • ..° • Kreppts alleged death, be remarked:. .1 ,Ancestors :Were Zulus ' * • ea "It is -a pity!: But- who tau belieVe T44.isas, tuhusinams•egdenzeurlautiuttuntgliteihtfteuTentt' : it? Yee,- I doubt at; but who Ilha will heat of kr110 later , Aghtind Wildly and singly thretighthe • jungle', rebellious againet - • 'Certain Gernian newspapers 'said 'EEgyptt in 1798, and Villeneuve's es- cape o the Wed Indies in 1805 • • that the coffin did 'not centein the ye- -lin:e mid order, fieree and determined , Mains of Krupp, and the • Kaiser's funeral oration contairied more .peilia moradner'sed and tractable, •he Aghti on a ' to. resist gr4til death all ortlie 'white propaganda. To -day, drilled; • : tical metter than is usually intro - half dozen frontiers, vieing• with the duced into a speech, aver:the remains Sikh and the Ourklm for the, title of of a 'dead man. It will be recalled aee„ England's most loYal subject. also that the "Vorwaerte- made tain accusationie which were stoutly His YouthaWas spent in the • wilds, • his father roamed the brush, naked, denied' by the organ of, the Krupp tattooed-, with a spear and wicker family, the "ItheinisclaWestfalische , shield in hand, the hew, or at bestthe "eitung:'"1" disorganized tribal fighter. Now he Heavy teambling. • : marches in ranks- uniformed as his In pm, according to this strange comrade Britisher; armed • in the ut- stoey in the "Excelsior," at the in- most of modern ,techniquet and fights During.. the present war the enemy augured= of the Dusseldorf Exhibi- as coolly and steadily as any High- . has only once . moved a single bate tion the Crown Prince made his first lander. • • tleship from behind the protection of Asked ire Quarter. . his mines aid the. defence of • the official appearance. He returned there several Iiineatediedifg with'. the 1 , When the savage fought h -e' -made shore gunst . ' - ' organisers and playing heavily at the'ione'impetnouS Assault and died ' like a "That, is a 'remarkable fact. Net hussar OffiCers'• club.' When the. ex- t fanatic lunging at'his ehemy's heed. a Germari battleship has been in the open sea for many morithst not a I etoto.cilSsuesseMinldorei' against the invader's rain. of lead, he hsialitiethionueeerhaesidat17euetin It he trinuiphed,. which_ was seldom, German Wale cruiser has. been 'out- f massacred the • prisoners and the side the Zareba since the opening •of to , make an appearance at the local .1 theatre. All the seats had been taken i wounded. Now he can control. Wri- the present year, when the Blucher lin advance, and it was stated that self • in the gruellingehoura of wait - was' simk and the Derftlinger and the Krupp had retained g box for the ing in thatretiches and inthe patient -EferiVed •incognite----as the -Graf Van Crown Prince, who that morning hedi ltIeyendorit • 1 he is more at home, but there have Seydlitz damaged; so' .far is is' evatel_aces of the night In the charge known; `nee Protected eruisee his :ven- tured beyond the . limited ' area Of :' - ''' ; been no substantiated charges of his 1 water which the Germans are able The Pr' • * d ' h • ince was accompame Y'; bautality or savagery in the -eveet. of ' •haa lost beach with the . • - _ . Cotint Euleeburg, and that night was . v to eentrol. The enenaY'ss'eme!in ;fleet fetory. • ' ..r_ the, gapet of Herr _ Krupp, who gave ' t Civilization -has made a modern sol--L,--L-", Influence on ;Morale. . 'a splendid dinner. Later in the even- I die . t f him in every partietilar. e• ` ' of officers and men liee been, 6 what inclination to go to the theatre • I , • ' r out o • 'What the influence on. the. moiale ing. the Crown Prince ,showed little1, nients Were utilleed by the Nerth a • . DUrhig the 'American dell, war negro. . xtent they -have.lost 'the seashabiteedonlf want a FeetiCh lessim,",he said. "rgi im the .latter_Yeers of the coutest all . ed.- sprang a purple -aeon Whether theireeTtrinrery--htte buffered Four of the party, the Cretan -Pkilice;1 - proved themselves vahap ..in _ e exe ° -ere questions upon which pacli of i Eulenburg, Krupp,- and Max Dahl, • in the early' days of treme. Given the proper offieers and • 914, • from. Which he has us can sPedulate. But this at least went around the towgoing from the desired' enthusiasm they were a ere& It took the -offen- ' may be said-. 'During the last seven- etireern to tavern. The 'Crown Prince match for any opponents s dedicated Strategy:. Our teen menthe or so the British .fl ef'did not seem, to he amusing himaelfe e eeep_ 1 Less Susceptible to Pain , sea. have been in contrast hap' had. all the sea yeeen Which the very much. ' At last pahl seid, ortunes on land for that Worl at. oceane o e '1 . G pose•we•go to the Charlottenstraegar I Scientistseinaintain that the tateuee 7 tont The cost of ' groWing' the silage men in the line. take dirge of the verse 2. The word -"The gospel.", ' reason. ••• if mangels.•Cetiadiati: C-.ountfyinetia- -aeatheeeetite ote, a eprosperotts farmer of the Septuagint to. give en: Moira distracted from its peimery purpose .."......-e. • — ,• who -was killed it Vilvorde. during the to his pheaseology. . TIley chose a in the Nlh Sea -thee• con ' ' • Feeding. the Ferro* Cow., siege of Antwerp. After the husband's boar of whop every niember bore a the High Seas Fleet - • • - - , death the mother had stayed on the /Some "eo*s are persistent 'Milkers' farm 'wfth the little boy, and after I Greek name Wore the Hellenists in: "All in, good:time.' it was said in ' While others cease giving' milk at the the baby was b9rn she had died, tele such an overwhelming M. ajotitY? But so Maher words, the other sea e Will ...., end of seven or, eight months. The Ing the little boa, with whom she had if it was an unfair representation, by be swept clear; we refuse to be di - former are the more :profitable dais been left ail aloni, to corn 3 to Brussels 'Which the "Hebrew" Widows would etted from our strategy, Which we •and find the director. At daybreak, afs suffer, were. the twelve likely to en- are convinced is as Sound as it -is simple. T ,by losses e there; they what mat should be sive wale' ' • "If. the w officees and in the ear year, it ha peace; and have antici is true, ass • • 'to keep, but veiny dairymen do. net give them' a. fair deal. Aneknisto se,s . cure • as much milk as, posstble,. it. is •ter •an all -night's vigil with his :baby clone it? Philip -See, Ads, 8. 5, eta, sister" the, little fellow lead set ,out 21. 8.• ,He. •is the only one besides on his ten -mile walk to ,Brussels. He Stephen of Whom we hear anything a temptation . to continte milking : A eaw that Will give milk, until a few was afraid to stop at any of the. v - _....., in,... ' The Acts must Floe be ex - lege I ng the way, and *hen he , s a o Weeks of the time; of freshening, says met Belalfins he would not talk o prated to supply biographies of the. ' Farnici's "Advocate. -While. the pre e them e'ecept to atkehlsewaye Now he sevene_wheneraost of the twelve are 'sent gain May be re few cionts, the was haying a meal before going to passed by: Nicolaus-One 'might al, future loss, both in 'strength of • calf, the directors house, where hi most suggest that he is Precisely des andthe quantitg of milk daring. the baby sister would nitete their future cribed ' in order to distinguish him , followingelactation period, may eo• home. - from same other Nicolaps-the one ., , dieectar ' wane hack -With • me whose nainetvas. attached to the en - •,. 'counted. in the-dollArs: The dairy cow •• "•-• I , s a machine,' and .a. profitable cow bong' the hall, and we spoke, to the • . tinomian Sect of the Nicolaitans? woyks herder' seven days of the week, his adventures of the night before: 'He boy; but ho ,weuld ittey nothing about 6. • Laid their hands-e,A. symbolic , , the Germ fol.' a Perfekt viiying-Trom • eight to-telle-inoitaalikee-an -experienced -hued- fi lire _ faniiliar in Old Testament rit- ° a e -- aeee --eleven • months"- there ethe-average 'nesse-men under a pressure at__ rese vied.. It suggested, as it deet in many [ Without - -a . hoese. A good:horse/hem likes to rest ponsibility than a sleepy little boy of primititie YeligiOns-, the passing, en -of • strength- te _ or eight' weeks and feeding her well •elens 'and coolly herole spirie . Of Bel- natioh 'in. his.-hoese. So 'a good dairyman knows i ten; a thnik that that incident made • between lactation periods,. she will gituti and the Befglan people: • ' by 'a 'bolt produce more Milk annually that - if . days or by he nation may ...be worried „ f inerebant shies here •and . 'do :not seriously' .,matier; tete is that the enemy thrown' back on the defen-• Was the policy. a success? Man high se 'fleet has been eonfirted ,. Krupp tried to diseade him, but the feels path less acutely and is not so within an area ea. small ,that at, Ale- ' Prince said, "Why not?" ' .• ' isensitlie to heeve-racking agony' as erican would net describe it as a To the •Charlettenstrasse they'vente'ettreawbitend they -state -that -sudle [ lake. - , ; and metered a gaming houed of evil. unparalleled fearlessness as the native' "What is probably. hardly realized repute. The same evening the police troops show is partly dueeto- this ab- le Itatathe reea•rdeiffethe-Britieh-flcct raided.- 'the hottee, but the Prince and., senee of dreaded suffering... Trevel: - in the present war has no parallel in his friends. efter being identified, -were ers relate many instances: of how history. In the past enemy frigates allowed, to go. A ' lieutenant named savages in the jungle eedure:the most always succeeded in • getting_ out Of Loew suffered for the others, and the • frightful pale without a single tre- scandal. came to the imperial ears. !riot• ports, however carefully watched, when there were no • mines, and sub" - marines to harrass the .blockad/hg tofea-e-arid doing great injury`, to �v- ersee possessiens and dada, Since the • battle- of •the Falkland Islands the only damage done to our .mer- chant. ships has been • inflicted .by• , . Count Eulenburg was too powerful i Be that as it may, there it no doubt to: be punished, and t'o ettack Dahl but diet the: negro trooper who falls' 'would have been stooping too low I for England, Fiance or Germany . in . There remained Herr. Krupp. ' the.present fighting does _SO for a Cet- i , •. am patriotism and that in. his...lust e • • . . Diaappeare.d. • • • • hour he feels the pangs as surely -as For a', long time . the Kaleer hat doe's the hypersensitive Frenchman. di-eamt of lordine it entirely over submarines; that. has _been relatively • • - • - Eseen, a,nealied tried toinduce Krupp • • . small in home. waters , eince the of- , he was supptyina feeeign countries, veloped. ' • ar has not yielded, all that Men anxiously anticipated ly &es of August last petted as 'muck It Was, RI or • engagements, but by the power . The: temptation was • When the Wart . Ends e• s given us in these islands "The extent ox the guccess a the • even prosperity, We might' fleet is not to be judged by battles his customers. . In: an article written- frtine . Paris. urnecl by-ssrne persons that ' lvhich it has been instramental in great. If Herr Krupp disappeared there Would be Only die woman andat Rudyard Kiplhig stiyS: • fensive-defensive. measures were de- to "fake" certain materials with.Wfiich . r4D-WraFteR-64701Y". tiaw iludyard Sees Situation but the irenmaster would not deeeiye ans woul • not, relinquish ' creating. . The whole" fabric of . out at Essen,• and ehey. Would be eadly "The idea 'le beginning to pene- --stregglea allathee_adde,delife_ein .theseeeieleede. bangs on One oVercome. Herr lertipp was given the tnreal,ethear of victor ,Teutotaa iheadbehat. this fa- ' Of -death_ log ,dis.a.P.O.J.L.uT.'nee; i • f hieh the -seas' efferate -aa-theeed, The com-p,atatly_e_ nfeasere itellities- ,iiiii..ftne ,aa,y.,aa..lef.a..._for. _canoe „Alia. ode, retaliation ior -his-species:- • ea -a -in-------, the thYpes of evara . Some of peosperity which we are • enjoying Britain... are -fiette-r -1-rtediemeda on - thia— , , oP n than • crafty use of same. chance out military operatione is due to. the. of isle several times .reeeived• the visit , of an anonymous person,. who always .- ! the trenche*there can be no, vie- - from the blue' in bl'ie' early , sea. . The. widespread eharacter "When a Whole nation goes-. into . I . . that, by giving his- dm a' rest of six me yealize_foe the • fir time the tette- 'effort weuld esurely be mede either .,i,e traceable to our cOmmand of the • h'Id• , at :the head of. affairs.. stone . cause. deiee- ratetrileeseQhtlerree:a4netlentiley "(11)eeenlignrge,, e andciiy: • • deprived Of thia rest: Because the • . ' - , .. . teileefht.Herr Krupp in a state of, : .. , , io'w is not giving milk, • during the • AUSTRIAN VIEW OF BRITISH , One day the, •iro-nniaster left - for 'that, the . Tenton be killeci in retail ' , .. . rest period, ia no 'reason why, she Enyetopinthe''irhtTole World Like a . • . Britain Best Market.; Austria, • where he had a meeting.: ,since • he menet :be -killed in - With 0 - •-e• - should nob-have-theebest 'of -care ita . 'The; United Kingdom leads. all pere.sw'V'etidlinieisa.iiel:iteo.daLeplict.eltn, • feed. Straw and roots alone do ndt .--:- • s' --- Shtoud. • ' ' • the with his' Cousin, Arthur Kruitp, heed sf.la.loei .11 his d the great silver works at Berndorti• "The oerman cannee .Witedraw c ntain suffidept nutriment to whirs Discussing Great Britain's share ,in eltritap's death -Was •eirenhated.. The It was At this. bine. that the news of because h thet itetioh to his °Pin -People: Ile . ctiffin left CaPri, but Ilerr Krupp was bmestduse himself up gi-a:eually • `either.. y by vaecing and wineine victOries, . no longer there:. •The 'older members or y staying where he is: Andtvhen t5f the board'of ditectors say between tte_is,,, Itiod _opthGrvni_be„...„...very -'t.14itte. '14atmetiroiuntilsrer:little of the German problefe to settle. ' telhreernth-seetleis-he. tethea:t 10(ls 0 emeotonous life. They also That is fhe end whereto the destinies • -"..., - say. that et the Breidenbachee hotel tete' ford in:Dusseldorf the bakoness Von Bende ; We have made th avoid it. . arid •het ewo daughters, 13ertha and ,,..foi"cTeheo questionfacts. i f gohfe :7117:i:illy° to grace and special funetions from ene person to another. It was ,destined to give, rieteete, a most unapostolic succession os superstitious edeas, but . wes perfectly -simple and very sug-eor carefully prepared opportunity, to gestiee in' its origin: : . interfere with out • command, of . the 7. Priests -This inarkg the climax; ocean corernuaicattions. of the humiliation of the proud high , No German Flag on Seaq. priests: their own • order is changing . its-Sadducee-principlese-tearthee e "These expectatiohs heeT not been Countries in the world as a market for the domestecaaffiere 'and forest pel of the resurrection. Were ,o ed. fulfilled; for a year and a half the ilthe groeving 'calf and allow the the war the Austrian Socialist organ, ient to the faitli-Gompare Rom. 1.. 5 battleships of the High Sea Fleet products of the United States, Dur - co* to gain hi flesh.. In order to en- the Arbeiter Zeitung, says _that con- (margin). , Faith is a monakch de- have Only ventured . on one occasion ing' the past 10. yeart Hie United itiet• be in geed" &Maiden 'at' tittle a 'secure the• Ailing -up-of •gaps-caused-Steptieri's brief stole!. -is to show us proteeted • waters.; extur-Sites • 411- tile -, tont: of - all- farenetand-for est produtts-- 4 .• Sure' a heavy flow •. of "milks -the- cetv serilithen even it it dime Anrnore than 'mantling. a .vary practical__ loSralty. beyond the patTow ' limits . of . their ': Kingctoni • averaged annually': 39 per .fresliening, and. with a cow ' en . a by loS.ees,• is Yet of tb Baltic have met with repeated disas- exported. ' . .. • - • - , . ... I .. Shipmee of Ilulifax .complain of a clover or alfalfa hay*, along yvith a Greet Britain is earying on the wee THE PESSIMIST BREAKS' LOOSE. been banished from every Ocean. inixtere• of, corn, silage and ' etre*, as a land • power in .0 degree never ' • • in former' wars .no blockade' opera_ ‘,..shortage of hieboate, ' , • , . with •t*o . or three. poutels -of -conceit- befere seen in. any eoalition wars- ip Ili . . . . . . bions ever' .suCceeded in keePing alle! ' The :foiger • appreciates a "geed thrifty condition there is less •trouble nificance for .the continuance of the I e•s, in calving. A, liberal quantity of war. a. It 'must be recognized that • man flag, naval .or c:ommercial, has • • • ere la a land of small dellght tratee daily, is a suitable ration for her history. The insurmOuntable bar - If the cow, due to calve, is • stabled, tre eaves her from spending her . . night most care u wai g enemy's ships in fOrl; frotn. time ,naine. Witnesa the 'French squadron marell do as he 'likes thin -and thine Krupp, the should have • exercise; but not strefigth in defending bee teetrieland, A d l'd 11 . Where all we metals dwell, peeterseibw„earld ,tee eime _ squadrons have eleded the I Larry: 'erregl• ipabsitte, it cow due to freshen in a few Weeks. tier of the seai*suirounding the Colin- 'Where ,sometliing 53 chased by dogs '` or 'allowed te ge There is 'no threatening foe to COY11- which escortid Neffialettifie: fierily 'AO that- woie't ill banifale tat" p ays as ,we Germany bite disappeared by . the . Barbara Krupp, •eometitries meet an ' - ,- . e, , ' • # rr , e , • , old man with •goIderimme glasses • will be• cheaper. to continue killing.. It ue'' ' /":7v He hasilie appeeietece ofenenah who___aaa_ aaaarraia,:reate as ititeut lademuity. , Y4- • -'e returning Id, the status,*eme, what euer.,• • - , 1 antees will. there' be that as soon' as. - has` aged; 7 omette el5. It. . ,: , . 'Whatever -the ti MAY be, it. -IS, .cleitieation le' dleateied she ' will ,ao.t..,.. eertain that. the disappearance. of the.. thi•ow herself on ue again? '1 .. . • ..• male member 'a.the Krupp• fain- ,' - "The moral law direeting. bei - life.' ' , ily' aliewed the 'Kaiser to d'Ontinate,--coMpels--,har_to_do act _IliA,04...):01.Y...]._.:!._._ ' • ...1,8,1,„,-,.44st.ia,...4„als.q_.allOW_theAliLm,„'_71siele;ligrien•.!annsoutel_eboaa.alllofved. to go to - More' war • when . she is'53.17-lieetl4g4-44v. waging, . .. •''''---f.. ."- ' lexerchet bus will aver c dam° i • • kingdom •tuarte deliver to ether states because she Is engaged' on. all poiahle... , .:trt-ill-e.i.l'A that was not as it ahould 150' : fronts... She can defends end console .i "Is Xrupp dead?" 151s tiiieteldixs!ael-1).; .consolidatioh when she •perPettiallY date her conquests,. but kyliat gooalS" . spie0:1.1.:::, 'at • J:tilattlt, e.lt•isie lyitct,laer, vir•he, Ger- has to throw ...1ton into. the. friege et 1:rrei11 le.gan her aetier 0,eparation for lire. burning all around her?. • • • - ,. . , the, a tfuggle which she has . waged "Allah has deereed that she shell . 1 Derisli•hy her•own pet, from the ' con., ;sequences of the le* that 'she profins... ' wrthot... an I (..,s , . . •• , • ... - , • , es, anti throUgh her CMII. temperament' ilard flit By the War. '. .. eteieflermany will veenale, Iles may •". 1 yeaoet rot,,,,,t,es'..front :Gerlyitiny ikat,'„ tiound extravagant:. but All that will eyeleyee in I remain. win be a few people, living. on", .1,the town of Miitenwald, over tee , the ,etereal defensive in ',total, !Atrial! „. i . Ittabltrits terel ,r,titioftvn,tdi. all a • , . N.V01 ( as Illa {LI S..0 N 10 MS, IS . 041.01. , ,, 4 te ... and, DolitteaLtrenches. . ' •• . . . • Those who tie, the .8011 will be rich . the ware those who: do not will . °Valence fully fopr.fifths of, the out- I, , / tug* greatly 'from tin, war.' In times a attar be Door, but there Will l'he no ' put of insittinientS• Went „ to , the oerniany.,, ... , . . l'Unit'od• States,. but the difficulties' of expoit. IIONVAdayA haveitini0St entirely. , ',gee teat eoste aattern , le- perfeet '. . • ------ ; - -es-, -a ---, . tea off vtlii,s trade.. NeVerthelesa,the. 'before cutting ,t'atur gekTe. ,• violin -ma -kers eontitype• te- enodeee tlig„ . instrithienta and store ftlith tteitty in t• • ' .1"ies r'aeptatelloti Of better daete; iviitak and - got a av to -`t• t'11- -ife• it Rome- Rea . Misfortune's icais spread afar' . Cileeee where it is slippery.----AefeWala pel-he'reto-r-ush-forceSeta_the frontier, 2:es...„-"' vious to the time of freshening , she The, British have time en their. side. And those who dodge the motor ear 'tiliouldabeepttelif lreT5ITIfOrlaiire"Airel.V. . . 4..40--..10/14.C11-4/16Y-0)Ve -#041PICIN eee-Appertateitis -griiieeeeee bedded box stall ,and watched closely, 'permits them tO Make good withetit to that assistance May be given. if any serides disadvantage the negla necessary.. . gene° in wer -preimirattoas en the wax r . itself. ' Profits lerent 'Poultry.. It. 'even inci•eases their power. For wherever the strength' of the eneirty tippeets to be growing, week there emerges at first aeprornise and thee, in part at• least, as a reality, some of the hundreds of thousands of Kit - 'recruits to node the een- .th.usiasm �f . the wee in the yeins of the Entente. And. so iteis, Great Bri- tain which 'spies tire threads -the endless threads of bleek 'Misfortune which erielope the •whole earth lik.e a shroud -and is doe more to ha• faL` vorable geographical sittiatioe thae • to her determieed persistency that Great Britain is able to, postpone the 'decision on the Contifieht • Whereon-eaoh--rnortal-slipa;__e_:. • I enclose a report of •the results ob- tained thin a flock of 24 Barred Ply- mouth Reek, fowl, kepton a city lot in a small yard 14 x 20 ft„ part of • I. which 11785 separated •for small chicle; i ens. ` The house is 8 x: re ft., single Ijaeareled, covered with ready tooting, . Whieh Menthe quite a comfortable 110u50 'writes W. J. t,arnsey• in Can - pato Farm, . 4 t The tleek conflated of 7 one, yeav old hetiS,. and 17 pullets; seeeral of Whieh wore laying.in December, 1014, Aoki for „elicit Motet they laid as fol- ows: lan., 171; ,Veb., 800; . 1Vierch, 87; April, 469; May, 339; Stine, 266; - tile, 288; Aug., .248; Sept, 204; Oet, 61; gov.., 10; Dec., • 78; a total of t 52 14 doz. rive of the hos We Set 'Serie. in May, three died, and five . t tee killed early in thestatute,. only p lbaiting *10 by the lst 6f Anti which 1: kivez, them ,0 beam: average than at doe:: war. .,•••...1.'1'4 ..g.md• • •,••••41.0 - „ • The man Who praises the baby wins the mother's Wale, • A Man seldom cloce tleything the way a woinhtk thihica it Should be While shines the' see mati maketh hay. !And sunstroke is hia gain.-- • • • - He saveth for a rainy day; And lo, it doesn't rain. . The.detnon corn. gnaws ,at hifeet l- ' Or pitie,his eyetooth rides, • . Or something thet he's had to eat' • • Disturbs his whole inside. ' His Wife deleteI 1,vhater he's earned And buyeth hats galore; And e eeery time ins hack is 'turned; - They kaige his tips more, • Almost before he gets to, bed • A Pew day cloth coniredice, Full eft lie*d wish that he were Adel- ettceept for the. exPenqe. , •' Such tlie life We medals A Peltry, tireembe task, • All jays ore giVen •in a Melte, Cares irr a stoppered flask; • I!poor, a men in thought a• It ride he'S called a Mine. Good fortune knocks, 'tie said,: but Irdrd luck lolocki 01.1 the 'there. . • . . 1 1 Thsent•ert,sla. smii(NAN,r,1 t bought ilint. IhSI f‘w 110 Want to jOin 7" ' •• • (MO Ok Olt• TIOYA 401,m -sot' bolt ,witu 1tira,•as..11e1511411041 Agin' LI N, lin'1"--1,011(1011 Tit -13114. • • - —etire of 'Vote. faete before et. cme a%tete ea. • • ' • ' " " tentpting to pose MI a liar* X. male:who coietinuously Intrpitig an his virtues'lias at leasb. one vita • A long sentence `dosn't Weery . rdadek as much as it doee t eriteinill. •