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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-03-02, Page 7• 11 IN: ii VICTORIOUS ttiTIATION AT PRESENT QUITE CHEERFUL, • • Olar Way. for Dermany-to Win 10to Defeat the Britioth • • ,Fictit 'Ilia Re's/ °Teri; editOrially ,deirionetratea tinitlyete the, por- tentoue feet 'of '"Germanes,"!,_clefeat,",L. is not. witheilt design.. for •the., edi- tor, Mr. Prank Simonds, Who irt re. •, gattled• as theableet writer -in Ameri, on the Military prehleme-of ,the sir AnthanY, were used' ler the liritielz war; elloosert the moment at witiCit in th,eattack.on.the lioheaz011ern re - the German." successes ° the field THE WARI:TERB1014 WOUNDS • , thilleOft PedrIts 19 DestreetiVenees of ' Hich EXPle*IVW * ' Weituds fixiliCte(i in the preSent war are. far 'more iserieleti than Pre. IMMO Mader* Warr, declares Sir An. th9nY BowihYr the WOO biligertn who .treated Mug Qieprge after hie recent accident in Fiance, and nething ia latere aatitnielling than:the .•dareage in .Tiy eXplosilYe ' Lecturing to the °Royal College of . Surgeoue, AlithoOY Bewlby'sliowed WM' 54. Theiie thinge-Tbe lieWi hoMb beltralY as Mg Ile a WWII- ing Seinniary Which RIMS Stephen's bell exploded twbdredo 9g Placa- aillrvey of the national hieteey. They ltind og thick duet, He illustrated this ranging from large fragMente' to a had received divine messages throughe by a film- tiliewinD the' zitunizerfrages 24Z--tah-;e4-..thelkin-M-11-218e40;24: (al.nbaa4n:esiWaecureciliPthge under water to preeerve the pieces. Meets from. a British: bomb expioaeu • _ . messenger. Stephen is applying Thirty thottsand oethese bombs said afresh the 'Parable of the. wicked hue- bandnlen. But for theill ''the most unkindest eta of all" was in his."de- claration that they had "not kept" the law of.which they -were .so proad.. Like Paul, (Gal. 8. 13), Stephen holds the usual JeWish view that the lass was • delivered by angels; later re, fleetion" on the. awful :holiness of God tended to explain the nalye.theophan4 ies of earlier records ea appearances Of angels. -,Cut4.44iterally, "'were be- ing sawn asunder in their, hearti, and were ktiashing," etc.; the verbs des- cribe theieemotions through the part of the speech summarized in verses 53.•• Heart is a .little misleading to • us; for it •irichides More than .our word implies. Stephen never touched .their 'heart, in °lir sense; he roused every passion,, stung pride and big- otry to furry, all 'around the as- sembly could be heard the physical • si ns f 55. Being -A stronger verb is used which reinipds us that this is ,no new influx of "Holy Spirit"' bringing the Thie rending asunder was the spe, beautific vision. It had been with him made by the Germans has ended In a cial characteristic of.all. typical gun- in full measure all through. Jesus- .' deelsiVe defeat. If you set against shot wounds, and it had been shown The human name is very significant. miles Of ,French territory the )3ritish the German.occupation of 8,480 square that the injui7, caused by the bullet- Here only is be standing at the right - was *holly due to the wave of cone hand; he has risen from his throne centeet of the sea you have measured pressed air which tht3 bullet drove in to weleome his first in t 56. Opened -Not the usual word in I this connection, but Stronger. In deya when the sky was eonceived as a series of concentric transparent spheres,, material. and solid, it was natural to picture them "cloven" (Mark 1: 10) from a big fight is that nearly all of to reveal the spiritual.. realitlea be - them 'are asleep in spite of wounds hind; The Son of man -the favorite which one would think vyould cause title for himself on the lips of•Jesus- such suffering as to render AAP im- done ,by very email fragmente "Of high. • s. --• f, -- • ' *---"'""7"" INTRittSTATION4,14 LX,S• ON; MARCH S. . *Morrow'. -Death of Stepheze-eActst T. 1 to 8.. Golden Torii , Rev. 2: VP. er • 01" ORM , WAR Virarf TM SAM BAR. THOUBANDO 821424fOK 441:30 TO JiELP Tag ).3srazjg , seem• to be at hlgh tide in order to emphisiee the laxorable.: fact • that Gerreeny is facing irretrievable de- feat. • - • Ile stiirts 'by ;pointing out thet'th absolute. 'mastery Of the seas • eetah• anci s ed Great Britain coestftutes, rending i,veunds than the pointed bel- tio Pleat decisive. factor in thq,-whola I-lets:Of today. •Wettitda from shell fire, _war: In losing the Ability' to use the • sea, he he says Gerrnanr hes. leet,a_.01/-: .eisive•hattle, far more serious than that at,the"Marne, He Proceeds:„, . "The right to use the, awl, Germany can .regain only" two' eetn"' Pelting Greeat Britain,.; to re1iiquish tho cominand of the...semi or by coot- ' plying tv,ith the , terms fixed • ,hy *Great , 'Britain as the Pride of the use of Semi. . One would be the emtheinimice of vie, '• tory, the other of defeat. .40.9ht• and each of theln Cost a delliir .tizt Maitufaclere. • •. • Wetinile: inflicted" by ..modera projce,,, Wear lie riaid, could. lit ii0 way he Com, Pared . with thosa of the Boer 'war, 'The hullete •tif :the Seutlt African., battles produced- much lese einarling Territory Doesn't Count • "Blit up to the present moment' Ger- many has not lzee,n able in .the small- est way to exert any force upon Great Britain -to compel her to give up the mastery of the seas. Every. effort pot verY -It-Meant 'South. Africa, were now as numerous as those 'in - Meted by bullets,' The Whites Seen' In the' Beer war were infinitely less 'emtere and. the complications due to .thein :fewer and- leas aeilous than those of the past year In France. In dealing With the effects of shelf. fire wound, •the .royal 'surgeon said the wounds', were such as he had ;lever seen in the worst machinery acci- dents of civil life. He had seen gap- ing wounds, as large as a clenched gat caused by quite small fragments, which evidently owed their •power of destruction to the extraordinary vel - betty with which they travelled and to their ragged. edges. .. • r 4 PPINCE W•141A141 'of WIEJ) AND %IEEE PRINCESS • riie,"Gerznan and Austrian EintrroiFs are Said, to be plitiming a priump re-entry into Albania for is conple. prince William. wait driv out of Albania after a short ride 'and has bad a -Most cheek career, lie is the Kaiser% tholes for King of the 1,ittle.eauntrin g o.awild-beast rage - the , guilt. Excejit the apostles -The reason is not very clear. Was it that they, like James the Lord's brother; observed • Jewish piety so faithfully , that they were overlooked? It is j hardly likely. • We may iuppose that they felt their duty hound them to Jerusalem till a clear monition earner and -that they succeeded in hiding till the storm quieted:dowm 2., Deveut--Proselytes, net Jewish. • born. They naturally felt •'peculiar devotion to the memory of the Hel- lenist martyr. •3.- Laid Waste -Paul's •Own werd (Gal; 1. 23); literally, sacked, appro- priate to Huns eaCking a town, Is re- peated in Acts 9. 21. •• -tize.exitercondition between the con- front of it -and which-eltpanded within the tfssues. , "I think," said Sir- Anthony, "that the thing. that wouid strike most for.' cibly any observant person brought in- te, a room _fitted With a large nninber or Wounded men •just brought* down tending•Powers of the West'. . • "It . is plain that no ;hardships ..of • Franc,e is comparable with that .eif Geremey; be -Cause` France, thanks to 13ritisli sea Power, Is able to get coal and iron froni abroad, • 'She has now, been able to reorganize hbr industrial • eatablishmentain Each_ a. fashion th• 4t• . what used to bemade a Lille, 'Roubaix, . SL Quentin and 'Teercoing--1,-•-that is, • the things essential of national IN and •• comforts -are now made. elseNebere.. , Now, if peace were to be considered to- - -evitlent-thett-Germanyrereded • have to evacuate France and Belgium as welt • In no other day. could. she Pershacle. the British:to permit .her • • shim' to sail the seas,. and she has no - -preSent-nrearis-.07Comizelling sueli • .; • is :consent. But. tills •would be to, re- -e-xact- -status „ .fore the war.. : -Saerifieei ift-Valre- . 'It weal& mean. that fer.her'tremen: deus • sadrifices • Germany had gabled ' France 'or_Greit.L.Bcitain, .1..tut had lost her colonies. Conceit,- ablY, the British Wciuld hot inake such • :a -bargain, Then hat?.A•ik' , • • • 7",8ither Germany Would hare: to of- fer more or she Would have to'�o- • •finue Ir, -a condition which would mean • . the paralysis. • of her • induStrial4stab- . • tiaTithelits'Sliernight Make peace with Prtuce and with Russia and With ail '• not be one. step nearer the freedom -of • tho seas than -Was, NaPeleon after he " had conquered 'the contiaent: - She • 'could,' to •be sure, send her 1118./14.1ra0 • " 1..1.11`.6S to. Russia arid France if they. • v.cere prepared to resume friendly, re, • lations,• but would, they? There. one . strikesat the heart of:the real disaster tbia war. has :already fOreshadoWed •for German industry. "Before- the war •'Gelinany tited the Ruseitin_ matecets. She ••was ' '.. able through the _terms of the,treaty advantageously to hayo taken back their -economic free- . • tibut. Both have strongly indicated ' their 'purpose to ,discriminate hereaf- ter against German inanufacturers. ' -Beaten • on • .Markets s ibl " An extraordinary -operation has just been performed on a_weenddd- soldier•at Sunderland 'hospital. When. but only here used by another. There has -.been acute cont • versy as to ite. primary implication; but the besf-'njew seems-tithat, which links it with . • BIG BRIBES IN WAR . Turkey,: Was 'Giv'en $50,000,000 By Gertriany • The biggest war in hietory has been responsible for some Of the biggest bribes le history, • Germany, .for instance, gave Turkey $50,090;000'in hard cash, and the prom. iso of huge territorial, possessions, for coming in on her 'side. Great Britain Offered to make over Cyprus to. Greece if she would side with her; but, the bribe; apparently, was not considered big enough. Anyhow, Greece refused, and the offer has been withdrawn. Towards 'the end of the Russo-Jai:tan- ese War it was freely asserted that General' Stoessel •was bribed into sur- xendering Port Arthur. The accusa- tion .sounda ridiculous enough'. on the fade °tit. •yetit Must not be forgot-. ON IMIMIGONESST, • Old Ties ,W01 Be Broken- Up and Theintande Urn f•O ' New Land. "Aftee.- ttle war ht over r benaV° tlmt Canada will put into operation the biggest national land settlement • scheme in the hiittory of the world." • Thts *Eta the statement Made in • Montreal • in an exclusive intereleW °with a 'medal correeponde4 .of the Wall Street Joureal by Baron Shaughnessy, president of the Cana - Allan Pacific Railway, and A 'Whig -force in the directorate of the Bank large, ,1',ner'eallemouto' ill:andNanthorpoadair. • • „ ItItudeata., The year that has, Just data bid; been ‘141 .chrnifigervesfpr WOMIParr though rale vra* 3rIlas-afrath*Pti‘ "man in4themuakril.., lizi,es-towards the .feliiiniet idea of ' the open door •tis AU Wilds of ' work.) Olive Sehreinera "I teke all labor. for 7 • my Province" was a brave watchword Air a critical' time. It has 'proved) ; however, in a eat degree measure • y o e sacrifices women were pre-." of Montreal, Canada's Monier hank' pared to make, and not of the ree ing ne tu • ii'tt"eEreYserYted'411,,gi6ritrginrCeaanat Canada who to the'formillation of a new iMinigra- tion policy," he gontinueil. "Our in- tention -is, to bring the inarinnurt lunnhO Of, people -here., We however, preVenti the resOurceff. of the mistakes made in 'the past by paying far greater attention' to bring.. hig the right class of .people here,. 'an4-what. is eeually important-eee- ing that they are properly placed when they "get here, either oft the land or in industrial occupations, ac- cording to their abilities." 0 • Settlers Will Pleek In. He told how the Canadian Pacifle had absolutely •shut down on the sell- ing of land to anybody ,but actual Settlers, and exhibited a -remarkable series of depltrinnental reports deal- ing with the settlement policy which the company now has in force on all the vest agricultural lands owned by them. This shows that, the neinnatlY• not only provides settlers wi.th.land, ilvir the they yerIgnret• IlhareePPartiedSe.er: 04.1:71g,".1;: recent- London letter, , • , . It may be that the centime yeat;• May see them called to replace Oen! in the.bigher • branchea :of • the : OYU. -, ffiveirri.ivebeicithndtheinir adfultdesiocatibotritivatte gianta./..* Ing fitiethein.: But Whatever the year,, -. .Tadda in tilie Way' of prieese it is 'WA wt6illtiabYetifiaOrtemtheestidienalttfe'ulninsefildis soefrvithcei Majority 0? women. • • . To summarize the year's changes in women's Work,' is difficult. 'Thought not in itself the flret , actual call, the!, appeal to 'women to volunteer for wag service, issued by the Board of Trade:. on March 17, was a great incentive tovi.. women to offer themselves for. paid; work formerly done. by nien. The Goireenment employed Women largely; They were drafted into the Censor's' Department and into the Census o • / - • Production. In the War Office be- sides clerical work of every kind, thy' did certain remount work and • the a house, pas . buying of hay, etc., and Intel* women; _. ..... ub pu't fbetiedess °d4oeeasellsofm"eni .:have taken the place of men as 0014 . plovving and . supplies. cattle. For this the cora» pany asks one -twentieth part of the purchase price in cash, and the settler is given 19 years. to pay Off the re- • • mainder. During that time the set- :'• Mei has the benefit of euidance frem ,- ETERNAL MONuMgNTs rten that the same thing -was said: aboat a g -rganization- of- of, agri- • - ---,- 111M•shan Eazalicei surrender of the culture and animal husbandry. • . Dan. 7. 13. By calling himself "Son ... • ' ••• Mountains ,Named to • Gommem.osate • fortress :Of Metz in tl•ie war of 1870-71: .,. "That," he said,,"is the kind of at the front a piece of shrannel Struck • The unhappy officer was, put upon hini en the head and dislodged a piece iof Man," 'Jesus. was claiming to be The new. e scheme we are .now hoping will be of bone.' ' • The Sunderland sergeons the•Fulfiller of the apocalyptic visiOn. thdi.titei:ni It' obs • ee: 'rth :e .1.1111)1154:silt r.ittahli, lanamdtititerlort,!,aof brought thewaraincf r carried• out On a national scale after took strips of bone from the patient's We remember that he sealed his ewn highest peak. le the Canadian ROCkles; t a el psald ovuegias oar brid the yaw, by means of the united ef- stile and filled them into the skull dooto•at the trial bY Ouoting that very . el actual -inn% Ifite'llgence ' alder forts. of the thiminion and Previncial Is to be called Mount Cavell, as an I b: tot"' cavity, which was 3. Indies_ by....4 IA I --eve- rse-(11-aTh-1-47-6M-it Wili-b-e-folind- mirsd;reballs the fact that 'there i eternal Monument to the martyrefftwile-enginexeread-the deal being pet at Governmente. If my, advice and in - inches. The new bone knitted with firierice .are of ,any avait; we shall See in Canada the biggest 'thing in the way 01 land settlement that 'the world has ever known. " in camps and militin7 . convalescent. : -• land Yard has engaged a. large num, hospitals. During the past week Seal ber as substitntes for, men from '•thq • Civil Service staff who have enlisted/ . In the London post-officeswomen , 7 sorters etnetAemperary4festriien..iiict- a feature, of the' Christmas Season. . • • • On the Tramways. •-. . • In many cases the,country has .set. the eXample • to -London, 'Women" trazOway. and 'Omnibus conductors :. were _tried ,in •Glasgew •and other Pliteei before Lender/. considered them .„ Mont Jeanne d'Arc in• Prance; White' a; rtlesfsoliscr mItihietyni $. aln„Orfereng.teT:ezda int: Women' have -been -cleaning:railway". curious sugar-TotiVeliabed erninenee -in was found he was never executed, and - carriages% adting as booking elerks Quebec has been christened lecally levestigatioes 'undertaken long after,- and Portels, working the signal boxes "Joan of Ate's. Tower." • , _wards would seem to show that he ancrlearin g the language of rolling Matint Rijnhart, in Tibet, commemo- was the victim' 'of a . miscarriage of• • "Those of Us who are familial.. with k f't k 'n e Maria' posts thro bout artititer-of-lesus just referred foe ratea.the sad fate of the niartyredliustIoe, ., . the wor o securing m 'Ow t at on the Europ illl igrants Ihoe9kiiii " Th 1i 13 Ig gclom. ey aye een clean. ...,• that of the skull, and the Patient, raP-1 a nearly always the Gospels the lely. recovered. ..He- is no" -' welkin ro.cognition Of this, allusion adds -oh:, g ,viously to the force of the saying. . •abont with no sign of his injury except - . • for the scar on his head. , 57. The'sting of Stephen', ecstatie was in its recalling,so vividly the de- PRANCE:SURE OP VKTORY. New Gens and. Explosives Will Blast .Out the Germans. • •• • ' utcli miss • ionary so narne,d, • who, 'There ts.no doubt•though,' a.bout the •ku 4 Oen ,ceritinent, I in.- ships- n dock, Woikinghts f although they had crucifled him -he many yeare.age.„ conceived the vio1Iy4 .-- was on the right hand of Power af- impracticable.• Plan of travelling pn sarrender-ef Seib tic; the 8 Turks in and in •England as well, there are a business* houses, ,and on the tube rail - r in- , for a bribe 'of $850;000 colossal great many men who Would'have lik- ways. TO hear in, a w6man's voice teallt q'hey stopped their ears foot amongst the Tibetan nomads crime • against a•h,ateful fact that ••(vai• mak- habitingr the alniest• inaccessible and . and one that was* directly r -,ed to come to this country or to the , the wafting to "Stand clear.of-Alie. - Ifensiblefor ceie of tile most frightful United States,_but We.re more or- rr-h ieg apPeal. What was Sant 4 desolate plaf,eau north of Lliessa • • ,.' This war will not end ip_a„draw....or..., thniking-ef-when-lejoined-egri-- He -took M41-11"htlii: 1118 .'Nirife-iinil bttfird:.• ... • . :' ' " • i - it stalinate. The niilibary authorities Jed) ' tbe. uproar" .. Let the 'ought. Of For several months nothing.was heard • T'Ati, IN His LIFE SAVER .: massacres-xecorded-lo 'modern history. of France make this, 'statement Moat .Acts. 26.'9 point toward the answer,. ' of the party. • Thee ,ene day a dying . . : --- - --.--s- ••••• _poeitiveho: _ . , - . ----..---zini-iiiitek7-in Alieir. .1%toir.ilialisellg.chgeuarner7110bwa's- .'Te1:61rRtitieal: I The,--.1-ing- -Grah-tise's it tot.. out Him 'on° It is part of •the'Gpeinan campaign frenzy of wrath -they were careful to His Feet , , .... for peace, now that Germany 'realizes keep.All *hart. • lier basin:old, it transpired, had I • . -. the. Parts. of the, law :that did 1 -for .her is ceded; to speek of demi- ,Witnesses-Whq had to take the re been .frezen to death at her bre'ast that all hope- of 4, ,favorable Outcome not, inetterCompare Heb. 13. 11, 124 had Come-. tO convert.. • Her . babe . had been • murdered , b,v the savages.' he Th The ling. erab..uses his 'tail for ''a .,,imagite what a .sea animal .wants of •life :preserver.; Probably .yOu can't lockS,.said one 01 the French •War Of Sponsibility of Casting , the first stone She 'herself died a few days later. :la life preserver. 'IT y'ou 'watch.. this fico officials recently. : France knows --,--whigh in • a rairmal execution. would ' •DaVid Livingstene, the ph:1116er nhs-' creature- long. eneugh,,,. ' either '.along this. is "victory yeitr.". ' • . • be intended to produee ipsensibility or sionary of Ceetral ,Africa,' has had his 'the beach a in an aquarium you'll •• General. Joffre lihrthelf; in hiS.Order death.. See. Dent". 17.. 7.•• • . So • When ' to the arm's; on. January- 1; said that . Jesus bade the Sinless_ cast the.first -th - - ' - '• name bestowed upon .a whole range . mouutaine, not to m4ntion se'eralja • lated. peaks. iWount- 'Evans; shunt . s , one of glory for stone at the adulteress, suelt a Person FrenCh arms:. " • Other generals .have %yr:raid by his. life -.be. -a silent!witness sizoW-Oftp- that erovers• -•the .-.-Aixtarct . hight tip On the .•frin.ge of tpe etern 4S NIPtent • s os its novelty, tted to the email plots of land- they were eilltivating, and therefore 'hesi, but the sight of h•wonian in uniform with a broom on the underground•has - tated to break up their .h.omes,and a'serfseonnh- atinakes-pne-won- leave for a. new Country. These men der it was not thought Of before. The have been disturbed by the war and Aoioat banks have largely , availed. •. their ties have been broken. any ',themselves of Woznen's services; from of these will came here to start again Ithe Bank'of England to Cox's. and rehabilitate rehabilitate their • broken for- • In agriculinral Work the substitd- • . 'More Ma. nufacturing, T o o., " - dbwoahi eidirt:eis;wy ando] nwoeinlvgo Ilia ale. dvfieenitebotern,niwi kaosrheiewrid cows and ... . I and many schemes- tnr- stipPlying these needs have been • ;Mt on foot. But the great number of women of /I elaseest-Who-ehosomiratition work; tunes tion has gone on more slowly. Every:. • • find out. He's got a shell' on tie ,back '• .hen again,. there are.inany thous- •••• o -,„and lona,..spinY arid •of strong,_tealthy •Young. men tail th.v-looka as • • ed df. it could be Used. as a I've . f i with ambition ..who hitherto' haye apon• o, been eziore free in characterizing 1916' agaiiist.a sinner. Laid downtheir Continent, meinorisea ' gaitant al defence. desfeonmeeeti. ni'0.6 .,, ..0.1.;• .. kiiig_ ...era4. gets , been erigaged• in indoor occupations who Will hesitate, I. thihk, with the . . . .TO prevent the pUblic from -being 'hot 'work Was done 'le BMA sleeves," Foie. • •He was the first of the partyAo..'ean't tench anYthing witheit eittIs...thheeripe-..! their occupatiobs. They i w•ii others' because' it wee -Well paid,..les, •.- .. impressed by statements to...the Cf. • as We should eay.• The tense' of the suceinnb On the return joorney,a mar-) 'fore when be's oil 'Ills ' ha -. , ,. , • .- sened the number available for mere . • feet that neither -Side eould win a !Verb stoned suggests that - the .cruel ty. r to duty and to the love. of ex lo ' less. - ' • ' .. ....•• prosaic work. The success • of the • Want to try farming. \ if we roma- authorities flow are willing to show Presu.mably •under thirty. -How he decisiVe .victory, some Of the. French :work was prolion.ged. ' YOung man..-, itS4.a life preserver.' The.- king crab with a reasonable degree...of know,' •Of farming careers -I believel,fively ne'v'i'i trade ef .Welding for .eir- '. ' late. a' scheme to get- them started, . This Is. where the long -tail tomes in Wemen Who undertook the compare- . . - . . • , 6 turned_ ave:r_ola --feet experierice=of active service and mentai,--The outetygarment: any man who went with Scott to the South) idba II th • are all 'curled' up in the Shell, So. he :.outdoor hie,. about going -back -to • some from . patriotic motives.. and atlion inherent in all Britons. . • ' •sand and lifts himself until be Makes '="eY stieke the point of the fail in the ,.,,. ledgewill be very g ... ,1 nlane work deserves a Word to itself, • ,!, lad to avail them- - --- -., •- b_ut_in_alL_the-process-ofairplantr-- • -----'- aii,_arch __Wit_o_ti is...Joule_ _Then_ho.iselves-.7 of it. ..',.That-is-•-what-we-ninst work, from the diffiehlt inatheniatical prohleins arising out of the speeifiCa- - thins to . the proefing and stitching of the -Sails, women have, been efficient. . e . positive prpefs wind'. "kept the garments of 'them that slew" ' • "UngeestibeablY 'British • products they have of the certainty Of 'their Stephen, he recalls himself in Acts 22. and coneeivably \those of .the, United. coming' victory.: Those:proofs_are •20 It is: obvieu-s-thathe-was of ittni: t4e paST-4we ugs s ewise,• back and forth mull do. . . a effort e flops - ,hint, "I don't look for any rapid improve- .. . . • FOundir of Turkish Navy • • .---gratee• -Avt11---retelve • more tavorable located. , at .the *great French armai „ . . mending positicnicns_is shown alsa by . almost ..lts • existence t an Phigii b: , muni sons,. factories at his being intrusted witli the special the war Is •oVer.., Again, up to ' the -Crensot. • ' .. ' , .. • • • -Invasion of Acts 9. g. ,Deissmann's .. present moment Great . Britain heal ' „ cempleted . with • Germany ou equal,. . - At preSent; the wed: • of Inc Creil-•ithesie (hi his fascinating' monograph .terms in her home markets and those' sto plants has been se far advaiwed, :Saint Pahl),that he was an ,artisan, 1 • M• 'her ' eolonies. . Nothing ie make! the results of the tranendbua exer-i is . bused ;on facts easily explained • cei•filin thin' that after 'the way there t -tions put forth .there_dirring..the ' last. .otherwirte• and • Seems quite • enteriable. will be Imperial preference •betWeea veer and a. half ate . . • - . ., tariff treatment_ :than -Germany -after.- -t- • • • sailor, Hobart Pasha, a bold buccaneer , Sal( ever. right side up at last.' ment in business," Lord Shaughnessy who. was born inte the Victorian age. •:Along the ...Jersey coast they reckeli iontinued "but'I. think We have He retired from the English navy in , the 'beginning of summer by the king. Lloyd Ceorge stated- lin Deiem- 1863, and duping the Americare*ar he erabs. About the time. of. tbe full' ed•the•bottom of the down grade and ..sootoott bet 20 .that the iininber of munition became a blockade runner With hair- mooa in .tune, they say. the king erabi are• Climbing towards the breadth escapes inatimerable. After, conie upon the sand 4,. 3.. their eggir It 11 take same time to reacn• • again. e s workers was ''''not yet lay enough; • urkish ser- oys go down oft the 'beach • th 1 mi e stm t but I eanoot ,heip feel- I /3.• and that 80,000 skilled.and 3 0 000. ti • . , is/ a ei had ,..Roman citizenship .vfce, soppreseet an rebellion fth Men .and b ekilled would yet he needed; in the Fiance,. Great Britain rind; their re- .and the prOduction of •th 1 • i ' w .wagons and shovels and scoop up ling that we have • passed the worst • spective colonies, • , , s..,,-.. r.,. ), and sent him to 'study by • intercepting .the suPplies from . • I been so huge that 'it: is considered ',under the . greatest of rabbis- : (Acts Greece anti then reergantied the Turk. . .-,.•. . •e. - ln. France.. Russia.; ,ane to spinit, th.cre,. is no ,iongei much need Of; '22. SY.; that he cut. hirn qff when he Ash fleet so' well that the Sultan tip extent evenin fatly, the baseof- . 'Gummi emintterge, have been '. leaking a MYstery of the chief work .became a Christienwas to be expect- poin.ted• hint marshal' of the empire.' •r. -away. , In, addition, there ' has been :. 8.1‘...°Pe 'I that has been going'on Or 'of co ic al -..:ed, .tal Paul 'th Iv d t .1 ' en a o ceep .- h. •• Hobart Pasha:else enjoyed the unique inn the 'e e in ' ' - -d t* • ...e ' t ' '..4‘ ' arn a. traTe- • created . aft • • anti -German . fooling • •••• . ' 1 n. pus pro tic ion of the .sel .. Eyery 4eNir had. to . , . 'cilistinction of being .twice • Struek off -•.• Which . Will het disappear for years, factories. Should secrets get out now , Satil-74 itathrel :tame 'fee a .,Boala_ .the Britisb. nail, list for •br,eaCh of the --'-iiiiii Wili',.iiil• against. -tierinati-inticr--;'-it ,-would -be---too late'ler .*GerraiinY re mite.- IP:erase:among Gentiles he had toreign. eulletinent ant and twice robe est... ,In eueb a sImPle matter as• Irrellt by it. • , .. , ' . 47 . the Similar -pounding naine...Paullus.; - shipping it is entirele,. •unlikely: that , •• Fraace - Worked leverialilY-.:iff• li..er Otnapare Silas-Silvenus, SymeonL-4,' Franco and.',(lreat• Britain will. ever armament preparatione .and the Work Simon, Metfichein-Menander, Fillakim ligatia Perini( Germany to Use their; 'Li'. practically • done, so far it and id Mediterranean least. ••-•.-Aleimus etc..' • •. •• lial•bors as ))0q8 or call le trane-Af- as it is considered heceesary for the . : 50. 'Calling unon-LTheeliject Of. th la n ti e trach e .. :--and Far East transport. ' . l• % 'great effort Which .is • to be put,,forth' Verb •as contained. 311 he addreas, Lord _...,...--s Ian -offset-101M: ---hirs-ciernuirry - .%---. .• • • • .` • this Veer _by the, •-arroy - in -,-order.- Lo -esu ---Note how ''.-iuitiirelly at this 1.•,.a lated1 , Her . comport t 'in. , . Belgium. acineire. the ;decisive victary, It now Carle! _Period the Ilan of Calvery.be.. • AO fiTallee ate Vallidleis "save miry iify:iS adinitted that, at . Creusot ',dente comes the recipient of' prayer, and the ' thi‘); pravida, a basis far ,bargaining not only the greatest steeknaking same prayer that:team; .offered• to the [ - :won Great Tfrirain ,ovel• Ad blockadeand aininunitien-nialdnriti•lentr:of the •Patiter.(lruke 28; 411).• , They leek inipesitig ,on, the map.. .but COUntrY was mot:Also& , but also. the 60. .The dYing_,_13kl-KvLer-,goe.-4 back -r--:- ''• a etitally,flermany_ isi-in.-the.',Ipesitteil-of--c.geeat -invent,drs :Ind -alithoritiert in direetly to Luke 6..28. It is not like.: a burglar who. has got into a house :i.he departments. Of • elieznisti7 tied ly that Stephen had eVer heard: i*iv ' ' grigatOree..#1141,.h e tea, .11p the stiver.fiat 0, tl 11 Ot . VII yrrie•&-,- ....--irt.;- • ',..-- :.--, .; tile- Liiiirrhia--.I.UlaiilAai-KAVriir•Peent 14 it- I, ( AV 1. tb.y1 LI. T-iiii;:i.i.eit•War- -with.- -,1,3-;:i.ne-e--,-ww•-i-i--,---,•' -,-.....= -1- • .'.tt, ' .. . ..,.. , . _ ., , - , • i. -.4 e is ceteepec wt. i new Mend. Three evangelists pas 'over. . tii.ertt Iii•itain 'and' t rauCe, therefore, it modrif .guas -ivith ne‘, i f .n. .1 . .. t' , - , • , • Is 'plain , that Gerlita ay • ha tejteen beat- ' .. . . , , , ,. % ypes e. 11 es, iis prayer or. the •,executienere and; lame ahoy° all, with new kinds of others responsible for,his --devitli, 'and ' - en." ' , • . , - '" 1 . 1 powder; andthese ere so far Superior (as the-margitt in 'Luke 23. 24 'hints) Germany Cured for Madness , ' to what France's enemies are, known the saying was net knOwn in the I' - i fa have that theV form the chief batis chtireit till after our Gospels were " 1 (1;•fillrg te tbe East, the New York!... . •• ' . ,. • " -1-' Tr:I tine coltiende the t not. even flos. .°1 i Gotne.,vernment s certatoty•ef be. written. Probably the, centin•loil told • .. .1,,,iost swi.eoplag victories. caa cotavea., ,iiig able to blast its way triumphant- the story years after;only he and! • ....ritte her leiteet4. 15 she retained' her ly through the armored trendy% on his 'four men healx1 them Spoken. Lityl• ' Statei; there would soon' be ir reVolt the Western front and to deittey h not--.4itte.t•allY, . weigh not,: a figure ' ,. jiggled ber.. " leurope would' fieVer eitbstatitial partof the celemy's mill- from Weighing money that represents • ' eeliSent te the eStahlfallineilt of a tary forces, unless be withdraws Intl a 1,13t. ' C ' ' stated there, And he died in 1886 With-the,ranle of a T3yltisli'llee- Atirhilx . ' • . . • the crabs by the bushel.•Then they The. •cozalition of Canada might -be • coming year it is very probable that feed them to the 'poultry. 1likened to that/ of a Convalescent, "We • !' • tiie 'of theiie will•be wonien. The. . I have past the. Werbt .and may now 'promise that n woman. assessor, wOuld • Willie (looking .curitmely at , the I leok for eontiOnous improvement:"... IsCourt.at which,:weern or girls would tbe appainted to., every Munitions visitor) -•:"Where 'di& the - hen bitei Lord Shaughnesay said he looked ypu, Mi Tones' I don't • see • a.ny fot• • a large 'ciprirt business tobeibe-heard was. one of the most notable marks:", , hapPenbga ef the -year and was :clue • • Jories-:-,•`iWhy; Willie. • 11 built. up:- -Canadn had . -the urees • • • • een en y eny hen. V;1 ti, to . Provide many _ of . the that.I.,te_the • .• ertion s ;of Miss 'Mary . Mee_ , I lie-,47"Manitria,'•dido!t .yoU tell be retitaired in Europe for Arthur.. • 'Mr.. 'Jones was dreadfully henpeelceV.'i construction • PurpoSes.,. le- .:110dicine and DentiStrY. • . • ',eta • -:"If I piny attempt to effer a'pro- . nee, iron and .st.eel• xnanufaeturers. • . . The 'twit.' has led' to aver y large in- RESIGNS FROM ILL.HEALTFI plieey," remarked Lord Shaughnessy •Icrease.m..the number Of women Medi-. ... ' I "17WOU•I'l -Sarthat-ag-e•TdOtrit Of IIIV-V2V 07 t lit 1. ...4 tleeTerfel:nti 0 work of Women:it nttlents.•., But one... :;_war we are,.going to sep .e now light i ow &repassed almost Unnoticed has ' , ;in .mantifacturiOg lied' iriduetrial n- ca1beee 'the enthenobs 'amount of work • i ditions, and that our inninifacttiring i done under .Government direction by .,!1.d 11;4„ousrter.,i,eswill ,,,b.rO.a1don ' 011.t. nes& COVer ,mmi al laboratories iii- the trialcingZ•,,,,:r . 1 a. far 'gretxter "(1'6611. ill 0.:f "el' di!! ' woof synthetic drugs - arid' anti-toitins. • , • The invitation . given to Dr.. Garrett . , ' -... i'• ,..- ' ,. •• • •i-AnderSon. and_to.19.44M -•to • drottni ;.of -Gerniait ex-Panslortibtri,tile • MAW: will enoble her to realliiie Iter ...ceannereial life because tlie' British • fleet',.blocke the way: • • "In tenclettion; the• expresa- es the belief eliet'GernianY, dernitte the . boasting of her nubile Speakers, has natt, 5L • NV e aceepts the jieect conditionswhih will the same verb is used. .For Sinasa be irriposed. - •• debt to God compare the Lordts pray - '01 Pell aeleept-The 'verb gives' tut Oar Word cemetery (that is, a dormi. Squelched Rim,• • . tory, sleeping place).,1i had long been I gave up Sinoking for you," said boon owed of ,per madnese, mid her he. "What did You give up for me?" erpeni wellt40124'014 Valliehr34 "Seven. of the fittest follows 1»the.int6 thin Mt' "dernianY has lest the tWoric1,4 said she. And then silehee war beentlae She Went into the veer reigned, ,• . • • determined to win world,supreniaeg„ ,s'nd she is MIL of the -tear at the; , eery best, 3Y heitvilY hurdei\nd With; re all these allege inlurious to debt, logving 1":-'1. groat faos allaeatoll.' my health?" asked the .patient After leaving Great liritein her' thief t•Ival organiecel ‘for war on goteething like the German basis, end heel* loet-the he had impeded the list et things he must not eta, . said the doctor worki‘ntattecim, in which plic tonne low but you ve got to economige somehow , getatest pfespeilty before the War."' Vyesre going to Day ' . '7- • in use for Sleep's ."brother death"; but when we. rend the typical words of the Roman Catultu'e lovely poem - "Por us, when ante- sur trief day has net, ther abides one niending night when we must sleep" -we feel that the idea has with Christ eenie into a new world. world. R. 1: • Consenting-L,And Plod hint- , . self tells US (Rent, lt tl2) that aPprev- n1 of an evil deed is even worse than the'doing of it: there is an clement of. het blood iliminated which may dilute L'O'YAi_. latei TAIN :take howtai by $ir Alfred XeOglx was also ene of the N� Truth in Ste -ries' ;3# Revolt, Sas ievents31f the year. ' , • British Authatity. 'Ttali es•15 b;ribkeenaeitr women eftepladeeeamnennixt: . . The Newva ' t: World correspolkeeefl tm has obtained from high scourees a tlie baking of smell. bread. It is, stilt pewit t ef tonslttwn,, In frung. •Re- 'Ile*ever. 01.°Phe.sied .as not unlikely • ..„•!,ga.rding the. presistent reports froni.:.that nludi of thq. 0.1.1factianary hread 'Germany:of revolutionary, tendencies.: trade will pass -into the hands of Oro- whiee, reeethly have reeeived men ih the opining •Year... ‘Wonten, • • ••:.n I4 ppb11t.Lr le• tile tierinan preris too,' have ' taken hp herb,gi.owing oti nd 35 despatehes to henfral eountri05.,16 busieesir basis to 'sap' Ply., druggists 4•41 8: *'4414?11 94°14%. • MR ti who fortnerly bad • things from' thetstsabsolui eiy i enth in them. Ythi nm,„1„ do" The Vol:notary- work despite:the feet :that -e'vfirrig neint- ed to tic, eoodosioa, that G•mutin (lone, 111 :women ill every. pert .of the - agents Were busy before the War ire- . Country has been beyond pritist.,Fer' • Ing to format a revelation, • '••• It was asserted that the' of.lte ,dlatt eonspiratore who were hatching a rettitutien befere the Earopeith war shoWett thee° 'agents IOW welled' ea- sidebusly Areerica and that' German flavors • undoubtediy. gave the*iiitt;" d80140tiatilrleet that. no un-ret'exists itidia, beettuee tit. the Gerthau begets that it.somr. be all abieet et nitriele '••• GENERAL JAN „0, SMUTS ' SIR H. L. SMITH-DORRIE% • Iloraee toelcwoOd Smith-Dorrieti Wan has fora short time, here In . m comand of the Riddell troopst operating ngainst the• Gement.. in , neat Atrial, lige been forted to resign on adeount of Hitless, l -.had been suereeded Lietti.Gen. Jan e, Smuts, who Is Minister rf De- fence In South Mrica, Sir Smitlenorrieb, formerly hed itonee: ad of tile second ariny.ill Plandere, and received great pritiee for his lead -Mille •here. ; ' • A • • "Your 'wife came frlim mu! oia • family, didn't elte "No; she' :eought them With her," • Wien Mary's Xeedlework Guild, for the British Red Cross Society, and the Order of. St.'.1olin fee the .sUrga.. eat supply depots, and !the ether great organizations, Workparties were •busy all the year. . Of the nurses:themselves :it is el. niost.as difficult to speak as ,of the Army and Navy. Tom tllo punster, once' de., scribed the Ineeting Of Matt and Mild in doing so he enide-J1110, Mail tall off With 0,11 his inigilt# 'end' the liort with ¶fl bit 1iista0;" - J wo", • r • •