The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-15, Page 7„.
fiGREATESTGun:
IN THE, GREAT,
SIR WILLIAM itoummows 3.11S-
TgiSitlic
He Is New Spoken of ss the Man: tlie
, -British Wanlina •
• Wants.
Ireie SOMethrniTahout-tYlrman
who has succeeded the late,„ Lord
..Kitchener as British Secretary of
War. This article was written befqre
Lord Kitchener'd death:
Same Wine ag0 an English general
found himself at dinner beside a WO -
map for many y,ears farooue In Lon-
, . den' sbelefy: In the ,eourse ef coal/ere'
eation be mentioned, qiite naturally,
• that the last time he'had seen her he
was standing behind her Chair in "uhi-
ferm"--..noy the King's but a private
employer's, and not of khaki, but of
phi*. Hd had been ie, footman before
he became a soldier: • •
• The general was Sir William Rohe
• ertioe, whose name has been- so fre-
quetitly quoted in recent speeches,
• espeeially those of Sir •Edward Chr-
•fain and Mr. Lloyd Geergee and who
•
has been advertiged elsewhere (not
• • 4,,tly- life -ore yOu 'May. be sure)
as •the man the nation Wants.
The story has more m'eaning than
most anecdotes 4:4 great men, becautie
it "does illustrate the simplicity and
unaffected character of this gifted
prganizer. He • does not, like some
• self-made and self-educated men,.
weary all and suudry with the mir-
acles of his guccese; be does not, like
others, hrink from all .recollection of
• humble beginnings: Re simply. -we-
• Snell 44, a bald cataiogim of •datets•
'n the Career Q. the Man NIT,,,bla
a revolution since, ho toolUp
dnidea ha Chief of the Imperial
Staff. But the record,. remarkable ea
' ite• beret trntlineff, ffivOniitUe
notion •of -th..e peculiar abilities. w_ Web
enabled' 4 private _soldier, tai We
with every baialicap and owing noth-:
in to fortune or favor., to attain tlie
unquestionable. confidertee of every af.-
ilcer n the.Britigh armY,' $1117 Wil-
liam has vision, a 'way ef seeing what
••Ought -to he dere ned zetting it dope,
and a tempered energy that la equal-
ly. adapted .for avoiding and Overceen-'
gr
•
A False Impression'.
His department, if we are to be-
lieve Sir EdwardCarsqn'stood inneed
of improvement before he was ap-
pointed; and this hae been interpreted
in some quarters as an indictment of
Lord Kitchener, It should rather be
regarded as a compliment. The busi-
ness of the Secretary for War is to
be. responsible for, the work of the
War Office as a whole, and not, .•tifi
some people seem to think, to attempt ,
the inipossible task of bearing the
whole burden himself; and if, as is un-
doubtedly the Vase, the, work of the
Chief of the ImperialGenererStaff
is better done then formerly, • it is
AO, the credit, of Lord Kitchener • that
he found_ the'right man and put him
„in his•.preseat. office as soon as he
could be spared frem France,
Tha ,t -Sir William is the right mar
fe* will be rash enough to deny, and.
tertainly none who shared with him
the labors and perils of those terrible
early days of the war, wheli a grave
mistake on the part of his department
would have spelled disaster. One
i'e;•?*::'''':•e%,54.89a*., • .
•
Hundreds of Mites of These Light Railways Have Been Built Round Verdun to. Carry Foqri
• • • • ' and Munitions
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
•
••••••••• •
ItErtiVATIONAIL
NNE 18.
,
Lsson 'XiLLThe
Acts 16. 16.46'. Golden ,
• Text Acts 16. 31. -
Verse 19. Masters -A firm laving
joint proprietorship in, this valuable
,
of' a cleansing more vital than even ..ENEm
THE..
isn't was the outward and visible Sign
the washing o f those seres, that soon
would, fester. ,, The well in the prison ' BLEEDING PO
yard 'may ' be assumed ' to be the. scene •
. . ..
of both.
I i are •
34. a tah e g n emp
Psa. 23: 5. Rejoiced greatly-A:very
strong werd, a favorite with Luke.
India -makes- the-word_vivid with ite
myriads of sad fee*. then go to a
students' Christian camp and seethe
boys frolic -they never knew how- to
frolic till Christ taught there! With
all' his house -How suggestive is the
repetition! Luke evidently remember -
needs to have been in touch with men chattle (verse 16). Gone out -The ed something special about that fain -
with memories of the Mons retreat to verb is significantly repeated from Having believed God (margin); --
verse, 18.•!Deepite some belated commentators,
20. Prwtors (margin) -A high- there is all the difference between be-
• understand the cOnfidence they felt in.
this' quiet strong man, of the .steady
•;:‘
ND
EXTORTION UNDER •THE.' GUISE
.OFLA.
'
Overhaul Your Car, • C'eareet-••••Berneve. old lulnicoqat,
,
I EVery car nqedt3 a special examin., eleart gears and, ease, adjust bearings,
elsptirrege,14 Taiseanneernaulurnsfingvinurpic iliv,,htilig ' rteoadet,Iler:ntesfujiTtlay'reelf Alatgart'ing
1:111:b11961111ineeefrsbiragoaelii;inbe,:s.ar:ctt°--nwtWilitioi'ilb-n(41;Prtl*htfCickit Elrielallier'n'A-ttAxani addlil":":4 derailrarste:b174-Lr1111:11:4411111:181143321115Prael:
. . .
.arOttnenintnigonorto,dera. eutOtaliserlsuudgon'atup tatyraly just torque • arelli clean' 4ni•Veraal
e.t.a% The followirig ready reference bj°riankt:8%"irtsjetlin'ictrgar rleinnineWtssu't PPIY•ilist44:
luhrieant.
gives a list of operations' involved in
it thorough overhauling. Few motor- StPering Gear -Clean "a illsX1eet
especially -74n added know]. lust drag link, renew worn: bushings?
all parts. Remove lost motion', ad- .... •
ists would or slunild attempt such an
oVerhauling personally, hiit the list
autoinobile's mechaasin and igtdesisoiefohciaa..:f .1alnii 4:47jfaasaggtileep::lafa9fgic.ilinng:eraals'nwtalitthieus'aeet4bilits.i9eon'trt:l•ef:
will give some owners -new owners
points of probable wear and .
.tion. Do what you can yourself al- Ali 11 ' R *
sloubi„ make, a list of what You think
v sce 1111"115 etiturementS'
Ways; and .continue to inceeese your
knotviedge of ybiir car. • • When. in
the car needs, and visit w good, reii-
.
•
Machinery and .Raw Materiale Stolen
and Taxes Have Been • • • •
. .increased.
The amount pf-damage done by the
Germans in Rasian Poland is incal-
• culable, according to, information
reaching the London Times. They
gaze iiiid--iturdy, assue9d1.- --easetega, soundi4g tale belonging,40_44e-ohief--lieve-and- believe- I'm, the --first- -in -Imre done itrby-direct -requisition
who seemed to carry on his shoulders judicial authorities in Rome, and a , Greek as in English, being limited to and thefts, and by ruin inflicted an
with the ease of Atlas alt the =WM- mere piece of veinty in these duinnViri. ; accepting some one's word. To take
indestryFrom Lodz elope they have
dihous worries of his complicated job, See note in verse 12, Lesion Text --God at his word of course logically in- taken away machinery and raw ma,
.
end kaeiv everything that had happen- Studies for'Jane 4. Jews -There was :volves the higher trust, so that there terial§ .to the valte . of .. $16,500,000„
ed, and would or could happen in his
department.• .
• HIS OTHER -SELF.
'
An Incident of Cemedian Foote's Visit
:- to Dublin.
In a recent .eollection of anecdotes
Of famous' tnimies there is an amusing
stery of the celebrated comediap, change these Jewish customs.. • Description of the Famous German of German monopoliSts. The figures
Foote introduced a scene in which he 22. Rent -The order,would be, "Ite-. 16 inch Howitzers. •quobed below -.cover exclusively the
. ..
mimicked the carriage, speech and move thein, Baer; strip and scourge
In. the. 'recent•fighting• around ..sfi... Polish territory under German Occujia..
personal peculiarities of several local
celebrities. The imitations, although ithem." It does not, of course, imply
that the PI'Mtes,' tore :their elotheh don ne_erdeal was_more _terrible f -or that and that only for the Period up to,
-:-the devoted French soldiere than •the -ja4inallr" l''
bombardment by the. fameus 9erznan mairily•efroin public, returns ' and are
1916, • They are derived
presented, with a Much of caricature,° Th f
themselves. Rods- . e .
fasces car- 4.
were not ill,natured, and most' of the ried by the lietors as. token of auth-
• These guns -which by tile Way, absolutely trustworthy as far .0 they
• ge, but they are by no means come.
victims accepted the jest at their ex- ority befere the magistrate they sere- 16sinch howitzers. '' •'
purge- without protest, if they •did not ee.. , 7 ,
. i• ' • • each requires .twelve railway 'cars tes ;plete; whereeer estimates are -Made
wholly enjey it. 'Bat -there was, one, . . theY tend to be well below the mark,
.. . puf On Old Tax.• .
Wheels and SpringS;-Clean and ad-
just hearitigs, test. !inpatient, Of
Wheels, clean and lubricante Obrings
inspeet 'hangers and bolts, °tighten. '
. .
able repair -man. The overhauling spring clips,"cleen and graphite il,u1s, •
inspect :tires and. taint& •• •
Ignition -Clean and: ,oil timer,,elean
and adjust contact points; clean tuner
• dietributorrjrispeet eauplings for
reference list, ,compiled for h motor-.
ing jelly il, is. as follows':
• Engihe 'and Chasiis. '
Power Pi.s,nt-eisarvei,reatationsYg.-
iem, drain crank case, "clean oiliug Wear, cheelt•timing,, clean and adjust
system, remove grease and dirt, clean spark plugs, examine and test
fuel system, remove carbon deposits, ing, tighten connectiong, clean bat -
clean' pistons and rings adjust bear- tery box, .clean and test battery.
ings, reseat valve, check timing, ad- Frame--Riniove-grease---and-dirt,
just fan belt) examine water eannec- try rivets for Play, tighten nuts and •
tions, renew defective gaskets, clean • bolts, ex.amine tire irons, tighten.
grease cups and refill crank case and fender irons. • • • • .
reservoir. .. Miscellaneous -Clean and inspect
, Clutch -Inspect bearings forwear, speedometer drive, replace and re-
examine clutch facing, drain. wet type pack grease boots, clean and refill'
of. dis clutch. Flush case with kerd. grease cups, lubricate motor starter,
sene, adjust spring or springs, ad- oil lighting dynamo, inspect lighting
just clutch release, inspect lever and wires , clean top and curtains, tig.liten
windshield,' clean upholstery, 'over-
haul tool kit, inspect accessories.
seen diet Jews were not numerous in i'the two phrases denote very differ- linkaie, adjust .clutch' brake, renew
88,000,o0o; they have cut down. irree 'supply lubricant.
no attempt to distinguish, and we have is less difference; but in John 8. 30. 31 from Czestochowa to • • the value of.
PhiliPPi. ••. ent people=watch the sequel vAth Placeitble forests anel devastated the •
21 Rornans--aee the note lust the,: men. who had only "believed"
quoted: Note the skill of the in- -.fesui! In Acts 27. 25 and 1 John 5. country. The time has not yet tome
for attempting an estimate of these
dictment; the propaganda. of these 19 we get the cqmmentary for this losses. • -
Jewish custom Might lead to breach' veree. - • The following account deals mere -
of the peace, and. the formation . or : • ly with the quasi legal forms of the
illegal associatiOns. Stephen was ONE SHOT, 2,300 , CASUALTIES, German •exactions, with contributions,
stoned on suspicion of wanting to • ' • *........-- taxation and concessions to companies
7--.••••••
SIR WM: ROBETTSON. '••
New British SecietarY .for War. •
cepts•the fact, as 'all others,: with per-
• ••• feet balance. it is -nothing to be
. ashamed of, nothing 'very reneatk-•
• ahleafter all. 'Was net • .Murat .•a
• stable -lad„ Lennes a dyer, .and "Ney
a peasant? • • •
Belance"---the balance of ;energies
and , not of doubte hesitation -is,
,
in fact, the leading•-charaCteristic 'of
Sir William • Robertson's character.
•-. His face 'bespeaks quiet strength, the
• maisiVe head .set on broad, square
penetrating glance tell equally Claim,' and heaped reproaches imon to Jesus, Se...oleo is "deliverance" terned that one §het lege killed
t . Inc amount leeted by these taxes t.Private _Smith for having a d y
shoulders,, the shaggy eyebrows, the r a this gun can do, it may be men -
their faithlessness. 'hejt'' • in turn used; to recall verse 17, from which • • to Januar 1916 ' • IPeTori parade. PriVate Smith Must he i pressed upon . them yi the. early peri-.
•
, puts it'.
2C 'Inner , prison -Fro w icb transport them -fire w shell Which - . .
. a wellaknown printer with several . Paul was able later to see the ,jailer weighs neail Ylielf a ton, andwhich,
ludicrous little oddities of .manner, against the light, while hiinself in7 Stood on end, reaches higher from the
who angdiii resented both' seeing him- visible. Made fast -A verb derived ground than , the ordinary maetel-
ielf as others saw him, and • being a from the adjective appearing as • piece. , . • - , .
source Of publie,fimesement. • Hj_ re- safely in verse 23. ' , . It takes liventy-six hours to set hp
solved to put a' stop to the clever act- . 25. Pain and the cramped postureeach gun., that is to say, 'to assetrible
oz's impudence. ' Collecting a score inodo sleep impossible, so thanksgiv-' the various parts, six hours to adjust
or 'more of street trite -bins; he treated in000k_its_plattening_wi_,±
:therri•td".a supper, gave them 'each, a
-200. men4to-serve • ,
EVOLUTION OF AN
ARMY OFFICER
major at an opposite table caught hiss
eye) and, with a mum:lured apology to
his. neighbor, ,pushed hack his chair
and came over the young subal-
tern's table. "Earned. your dinner,
eh, young man" said the major. "I
• . . should smile" Heim' erretelaieud ‘sitInbgert,a"mwonligo '
SOME oF '`TRE • SECRETS:: OF
NECESSARY EFFICIENeY• ,other habits. "And, of course?" on-
• . - .. '• .. ' tinued the major; suavely end politely; • :
"your men have had ,their supper all .'
• • right --no complainfe, ek..7-"Albert"' ,Thoroughness, Discipl1ne, Cbeerfide
Mashed red from the of Isis,beauti- :
... • •
. • . ness, Fairness and . ' ' fallyelippedmoustaehe to his plaster-
ed hair. : Ile had forgotten., The •
, * plaster -
Truthfulness •' rest .0f; the ineident was short • and
if Military Writer in, the .Loudon painful.
•
•
Pally Express says:--
•
, , • .,
: ' . ::Fi;ve Cardinal Foints.
The contributions. -levied on the 18 It . is no .difficalt thing to beceme.
towns •for which it has been possible an officer' in these strentioug times: • The -real ."pukkii" officer does not ,.
...tO obtain statistics, (the, Het; how- To be a thoroughly efficient one is: forget. He never "thinks• so." ' He .
ever, is incomplete) amount to $280,e anything but easy. In the 'first makes' if his business to knoW, There
309. In November, 1914) the -Mission °place, in officer should be thorough are Ave sound weeds stored in the
Government, on account of the general , in all his dealingson: the barrack hack of every good officer's braint--,
istress, suspen• e • t e exec ia--.76r-square---and-on-the-training-k-ea-e,--hi - Cheerfulness . Accuracy. .
certain. taxes. The German authorities the •barraelt-room and in tbe/officers' Pluck '7 Fairness
,
.
not only reintroduced this- taXation, "niess. • Diseipline is the , key to , ThTerthirtahnfuwinber be., u'rs.• •
. all these 'Oen- .
•
•
§hilling to buy a 'seat in the ,gallery, attention and . Amazement, as the each ibot'cost. $2626. •• ••'
verb implies; they 'had seen • these • The gen crew, Who fire the, gen
orid protniged them another treat the bleeding backs as thee were bundled froin a. distanee of 300 yards,have to •
the stage.. They•prerhisedmith glee:. , • . wear special protectors for ears, eyes some of it at increased rates; -but ded thoroughness, . en -
next day it they would hiss Foote off ineiast theM. • .
si an e doors secured .
e 3. (-) a ground ' to save themselves from. in- the arreai•s. Thus, the Germairs rein- spells reliability. It folloWs, !then 'ties cannot go far wrong. . Te • be...
26.: The chains irere. fixed in . the cded to exadb• the payment even of
bet.his friends' with attended the per- . and moutb; and to . lie • flat on the 1 ' • • ' • that the •Very first :thing for the ,
'takesenior "officer's diegs,;. .•
able to a se , . . .
27, • The Jailer was, of course, liable per cent), the hearth tax and the tax
100 'young off' t • t r. 's diScipline ing 'down ivhen it is wideserved, and ,
. . Wall d th ' d ' d'b • h it * ' • • - •
such a shock might disledge troduced' the land tax -(raised by icer o mas e 1,. .
forrnance that night yepOrtcd that net that
a his Was to be heard; on the con- jury during' the terrific sheck of the • - D. • r 's the secret Of the GuardS,
mop ine i ... at the aarim . ,
time id store up the
. .. „ 20.. The agtonishing forbearance and in this foundatiOn are . Special ,,on In. oVable ro erty' in towns and lir: of . the , line regiments which- fought words Of geed advice for future re -
ban: districts, an, a so e an . ,.
discharge. The gun itself is Mounted'.
Iraq, the obnoxious seene of mimicrY with his life.- COmPareL Aets_12. 19.
Was recieeed with More boisterous ap- on- a -foundation -iwentysix feet deep, ---- .• - --. P' 'Pu-r--th-f-d-iii•Fo-d7 at---MoneT and- erf the- famous -29th•-ferenee4 to differentiate'. .
-between the
is sworn to exp o e, and so es oy . d•D" • h. made their mune-
• 'er" and the man whose wife is really
9,n !Tommy "whet has a "dying gran me, -
can only be acce „ , ,
mplished by the.
of one whom he had handled go rotigh- Mines which the engineer in charge d houses-- and the industrial:taxes Division, w o
plause then ever, , • • ' ,
the earthqua.ke. • .. •
• d d fr . These taxes had . produced in - 1012 the Gallipeli Peninsula.
$17,000,000. They have also intro-
' l' An Officer must understand . his ' ill..
' Naturally, the 'man was dieappointe. 1Y. finished the awe-inepiting effect of '. ' •
troop sof boys ttirned tip in exuberant .120... ' ,eie,a_ja ihis, ease ail:. exag,... the gun • should. tlheil"re. be any danger .
'ed; when, the next morning, the
of it being :cantered. ' .. • duced new'' taxes on timber, on joint. : , . .. . man who has charactee and who un -
spirit's, 'Clamorously .demanding • the gerated rendering ig adopted above to, ' ' stock companies, on dogs, and . ; ahd wherefore Of. g •
. . must know the why
thie e• 'it. is not ers -ft s s me ,
romited reward, he'repudiated the ec 11 the identity of the title •given '• . • • - • fire -arms A conservative. estitnate of •
' ' sufficient 'to give three days C.B. to , .2.. . ,
on :,•Prefession, he ,
' irt rifle im which' most. officers have im-
,
A " ey'd ce of the enormous dant- 1 • "Get to know your Men" is a max-. ;
‘.1
.••
• h
Mental. and "physical steength:. His
' ;Ordinary expression' is Pee .Of pur-
poseful gravity, but there is Irtimor
and sympathy' in, hie clear eyes when
"for the actor man, had heard of us,
were indignant and:reproachful.
• "plaze, • yer Honor, 'We :did all 'we
Could explained their . • spokesnuiti,
• occasion calls, and he knows how to
laugh as well as any Nortii.;eoutitry...
• • men., -He belongs, ia short, to that
• plain, simple type, stream .and: kindly,
but .forceful in Word • and deed, com-
mon in Northern Britain. •
• Rise to Fame.
,.*
. But though he belongs to the -High-
land Robertson's, the only mountain .
. . wee -I come, and left yer Honor to yer oVvn.
•
' clan of Silicon blood he himself
. born fifty -Six years age at Weburn,
• being the eldest son of Mr. Thome.
• C. Robertson. • After the start in life
and did ,not eome at all, at all. And
so we had nobody to hiss. • But ,when
we say yen Honor's own: dear Self
conie see, we did clap and, clap and
clap, and Showed you all the respect
and honer -in out power; sure, ye Hon-
or must have seeh and And
so yer Honor won't forget us because
yer Minor's enemy was :afraid to
dear Aelf?" •-
REMARKABLE WOMAN.
" to which reference has been made, ho .• • ' - . • •
enlieted• in the Royal Scots :Greys, Madame Oleulafoy Fought as a ,Sold.
-and soon attracted ktitention by • his : ler and E'xplored lei Asia. • ,
. • ability., hisextreme thoroughness, and mIe the sixty-I1Ve .years . of her life,
his high serige of duty. In 188 he was 1 a/11.dt sa in ero.thenne 1 :Di a ii 1 a foy , who -died In
given. a (*emission. in the 3rd iDra- P t y. , paussseedd h thrtough ex.
goon Guertis, and from that time his perteneei "whiel; ea
, Career has b-een--orie. Of-ever-inereas- gam as- onentilie• Mosterrem• • e b: lii.t.
ing distinction; Yet the Man is so WoMen in Prance. , lir a e
She was born. in Toalouse, d when anwas
modest, so averse froin any kind" of hot her
display, that outside of the army few waS married -to Marcel Auguste Dieu.
!teens she
, had heard of him entil he became one' !ploy, a Young 'engineer; Ile v. ant
orthe greatest figures of the war. • Prussian
• -, Sir William was .cailway traneport ' g'. the France
• the front durin
by
fir
u ..b(ren,ch in -Worth and ---to he
, .. .tib and s side Poth returned
d,o India in 1891 ;end
Immo lately akb r ' • appoint....
unectithed from . the ' battlefields. In
--- otbecoi.b_sto_ffL.'oo,_ enptain_a' elmw.anweig,..L4a._ the '80.'S her husbahd
tellig pet. Department, at •Army
. altriest •
a itigh_remitatio' wh° had eatab•
-
• shdrr and took hls bride wmithulildrui•n. She
the .Mirenzai and Black r. sgguutrguilirlirself as a
trlicienrtalen-'
frtynti 3ityelitiotis on the .North- 6
West•
- -el; Wits '-001111etesitOeCti to ers a Simla. He served its.' •
•• healiquart
for aroaeaingical r.eapinvigo to Asia
.• Relieftir'ee• effieer :with the Chitral
lt '•wits
a\ dangerous and •ardnotitses_ia_ek, euti.
.iceice in 1895, and, then nearly
duelv leatLe••
elted• ,and he was left for w
pleulabey. elected t
lost 'h' Party was breach:- nil*"
• dead b 11.*
y is eicort... He survived, how..., ing
his -ver
ever, I
get thent. ••• .' ' ' '' : • . resses of NaMUr. and Matibeuge each "
. . • • . .
Poorest in Europe '''..
, . „. . . ,., . • made . to understand, first, why , his .of• their • soldiering. There • are , •'""
s4 000 000. Y • - "''' ' '
this rongh, untytored man doubtlese orwounded 2,300. men, atid the fort- ...
gigantic.. ehells hed. struck • them.. .:. . Supplies, lodgings, etc., . are being rifle is dirty; won , the importance ' some officer's- who . have no •secietei
Matthew . Arnold's; •"Thou wouldst not ':. of last,
btheaintg,hiceeptiasp,boatlieasgslypnelne punished
danidn; ' an
nh '0, pthene their bookm... 't 9 Tthiipeir, gtnoiondells officer
eeeT .,.
. surrendered • after 'only... ''' • these •
31. •Thou and• thy house -Compare ' ' ' ' . two et! • • •• " • ' • '. ' ' ' ' • -
be 'saved alone, by. father!" from the .• .: ' • ' , • .
verYr first, ChrietianitY is -social. : • • On'
. . . . . . . JAWBONE OF RICHARD If. ..'.•• .
. ., . . • - German army and .for the Governuient -perle in the futu•re. . • , : .
i order that • it shall. be • cleaned pro- He knows their weaktie.sses and their
; . good points, .hstene• to their serrow$
e.-...._,-___•_ • , exacted from different towns for the
the great world believe: on _see mete . . authorities. • Up • to Janhary . 1, 1916, • • • . ' - • ' ' "• ... and their: love •affaira, and in some
. "Telling. Off." • , eesee even helps them write their let-.
. • --•-• .• , • • • Warsaw has expended in that Way
. . . ..., • $900,009 and Lodz -...$1,250,000-. , Theee. • ter's.. Men would go through any- .
on verse. 34. • • • : .. '7
. .. .
time; verie 31 is the stunniary of an! Many strange stories are ceptred ' . There are two way of "'titling. off"
. • - •Weitniinstet , Abbey Story Says . 'It
does not .intend to -.follow the order of •• !thing for these officee's. -
.32. • Tine verse .suggests that Luke ... • .
• • - Was,lJnearthed by Schoolboy.: ,, two . industrial cibiee„,probably ' now. - • ' . ..._-_____.4.-L:d.._: .
exposition without 'which the call to ,lii Westminster Abbez•bift ' • the • fol-' *
feed: their „starving populations and a man. The medioere officer finds'
the poorest .itt Europe, are Unable to
• • BRWE's UNKIND RE GRT •
..
believe. would have been .unintdligi- lowing,: which the .. Church _family I have to raise heavy leans thrmigh fault in this way: '00h! you've got a
hie. •• ..We ntaY be sure the jailer. re- Newspaper says has been hitherto. un- i dirty rifle, have yen? Very well
name"
lieved the , reissiooaries' 'wound's and published, is one of the most remark.; 1 pelled to pay these: regular . contribu. Sergeant, take • this ..rnan'S ,
hunger, as Soon as ever he had taken able: asiinetY. years 'ago a boy.. a:b., tions. The smile hhppens., in the ease -t The' offender • gets. no chance of Mak-
Oerman hanks) and still they are cam-
' theif Message Of hope' e' ' ''Vir "
in _ ; Th gospel estminster School, ' which_ .adoine !,of other toWns. .... ., ..- . , ing his excuse, •• good or 'had; and he
story was told' to. the whole family the Abbey, .burrowed , through. the' In the chief urban •districts of Rus-
t is Punished, ; as • he .thifilts;,. uejustly
when they were 00 in . the jailer's sandstone • forming..the foundation of : sian Poland; the. German Government 1
He goes to, his barrack-roetn . and
departed for the city •in a rage, says
house, and the baptism as the climax;• one Of.the walls: , Inside the cavity -he I has introdeced a monopoly in grai Milks.- ' The good officet•bears whet
. -. ..
•collocation la intentiorial: The bapit-- ceeded .iti" removing what turned. outl• Complicated and involves an ingin- i the defaulter . has :. te. say, ' reasons ,
. . ., • . . ., • '' lous system of 'exports of. gram *id ' • - • , •
- - n I With' him., :Points. out What .happ.etis to :
men who'. get "elack,"
think. tirt• perhaps, after all ' h 'h d
, e a
. .-• baptise I. -The felt a skeleton, from which he sue:- ' and flour. The. transaction is moat men Answers, London. • • . ' . • ' • .•
As, the day. passed; he began to -
• ••••reismocmpsino....enasz ."--,-.... to be e human jawbone. He book it ! Getmany ,, • - . . . ., , - . • ! has • got to be punished, that. he must
hereto to his •father, ' Who visited the "lean'n5' 'and .tie . reimportatien of 1
but hrinly iMpreSses,unon•hinithathe '
and . gently.
33. Washed •:
been re her -hasty. So, as he Wended
.• his son had raided thetomb of Richard., It is calculated. that-theTetertrian--Gov make the best of it., and that he'Must..j.ds. way homeward,. he carried a .
Abbey, and •fornied the . opinion that.' 4 certain .artieunt, Of •floin to poland. Q-'ientall but interesting looking parcel.
S.allOatiQn_ - The bene :remained 'in the fainily ! spend. on the rye, wheat and barley:: jag • 'del!, ..
!Our again .".•11-iiii-tre &meg out. of 'ten
not at any time let .ibe .Offence e
• , hande $4,isoo.,80o •as. month.. As.•• they.' tlie'enan appretiates this kind Of "tell- ,
mY .pareel, .darling.1" he pleaded wit -
users
. .....: . , , • _ • , .. , . . . .. ,!. erninetit . an ytheir. concessionaires- . I fused to take, the 'slightest -notice ,a .
• . labeled ', "Jawbone of Richard ' II.". un-; which ' thus • :passes througb .their ! his: rifle as it shcbild: be...'•' %It; as 'Pi ."Den't you v;ant to .see what's, in
„ --.-7.,1‘.' itand. him. ••., ''. , . ' '
A,. great. many fortner til lete•re 'King Edward's. reign, when '
. . ' • ' •
$2,60,0,000 • th.ey ., _ and. appears. on parade wi
.„11Sers;pf tea and coffee have .. the thew owner , sept it- be a
. .
• . mg iii ice 'a profit of In bOtat.2. per cent. e•.
• , • cifarge, for Abe ;same 1 semetimes .• the ',Case; the. .dirtk •rifle '
Y•. .. • . . ..
''•fOCki beverage' Imade,-Troin-7- : ade 'by the, by-hird-since--eince • been • the tiatigaetieri. in the ;am'. ieultu.ral i "--- e •
distriete a .taX' ef 1 trunk is"iit-iieerdiff .
t a pears agaiti, then. the man .must be .c.,„ii__•,- ... . ..
.not knowing)" ebe_reto,rbed Coldly.--: • ...
• 'Wheat; whial. has deli'ghtful •
... closed '1), a,pd.,its „whereaboute oatild t•• ,. . f • 2 th .. • ..• ; :,..rnid _character, eleanliness 'in thought
. he grin nig o every 2t) . . of, ram 1 ...,.
The- ideal. officer Mint' have -spirit'.
p el on t!:hard and. 'rOper.," . . fall
v,
'`Well;!' he... said playfully. Its
"1 ...expert 1,eart. menage to snreive •
learne'd that'there- is a pure . • with an. explanatory lettek. ' The hole .•_ P
•goinething for sonieboclyl'love,more .----H-
' it -.' never .-65tacts• of W -s:- the' jaw,liehe of the4skerii. n• (•'‘ °' Tvremt --- . '' •-• " the ',flying •-men Mews. his :engine.. If than all the world.. ' , ••. . _
• .
t .ktion44 his tetri as
he
'ties Richards tomb we's opened anni'Ainn n ) ,. • h
, It is- ealeulated :that. this -tax* Yieid ...4".. C • '. .-
-flavor. - ', :, • . not be traced,' but after eniny,formali-;
- • . •
.. , •
•lestriesS, heart -flutter, h.ead, ' :replaced, end a parchtnent manuscript , trig the feur Months 'tip ..:tn -Jae 1, '
' . 1 tlieS67tritits are blended with -a -II ' - . _-:•.Tho_seonlan's.fare bei•gheened_up.. .
pose it's that cigarette case you've
.
users. the • tribute. of 'steep- - sure 'enough,'
.ton .vk-as found to be missing. ,. It e Mx pn .suger lute_ brought dui.:
'
°ugh •knOWiedge. (if the soldier'S pro,. -.."Really?"; she sari. • , 471101 1 WV-
ache apd other . ills ..often . recording' the circumstaneesl.was de- . I. t 1 '
1.61,6)- a- total of 'over $100.0,000. :The
so a surc arge nta e on -ma •• is cal-. -•••• ,
fession,.tliere is not much that is lack-,
been wanting se long." .. • '
. • . :.
feine, In tea alid 'coffee: „ h • ' ' • • ' d - i • - ' in,r : y'rfie 'Officer , who i$ -carefal in ell.:
posited M thetomb. ', • - , ' ' - . - • ••• - circumstences who • is juet, but 'firm, -.
„„ •,. .---:.---tes...----e- . • . . at 46,00:000. ' ' ...-• • .
eulated , for the ..4y.e-mOnths....in 1015 • . ' - '
caueed -by the' drtig....eo, ,
. ;:miih. his Men; Wito . listens ,to: griev-4.
A highlander •who prided himself one. . •
, . • • •. • . • • anees with:hare not "greuein,gs," mid.
• ... ..
• . " •Not' To 1Be„'Beatea: ' ;' • ... •''' ' '•
„ , - :,- , • Vodka .;tgain Sold. •• ' - • ' ithem -' • 1 1
being able., to play.' apy tdhe, on the , Russian Goveceree0.'
At the beginning of flii3 'war the. likes. With. his .men, no matter •what
1 seek:;.to rems. y , tim.i o: as he
i
. ,
pipes perched . h i in sel f on the • e id e of .toild Of rvotikti; The • (l4,,r then ' ken i ni s . ' ' 1,141-c;' nri,i'C Illariy• • w el I ein . an Ina ,
n1)01141(41 the' the eireefestarces. 'Mai
-uneeY .tratioe haves reintroduced it for: fiscal . young Officers who 'stiffer from forget. •
..
.one of hie- •rnit,iee hills 'one • A bi
'morning and cOmmenced bloWing for e : e ' ' '‘A ' NC Of 'mot qt.' • - Out of . T1 • \\ t, 0, •ubal#ern ' -aisossississivaissiowasimssionmangssmimm,,
, . . , , ea ho s-- in ,. p •,, e. 1.,.. Nine:4s,, lei e .: 1.,t .. , . . .
all he was worth. • • : • ' • :. • .. • the' inottenoly In iticohol. •established i.n.,s-sine the WAtit.C11•Itnean, eii his' -,--..ee-e--... ' • ' •
• Presently • the ininister:cerne along ' in Detemier, 1915; it:makes o revyniie .- •
and, :going up •te MitcDetigalf. • With -of, :about $3,500,000 :a.meath; ":.' ' Way to the -.Dards-noires, who -prided
the. ihtention• of 'severely rep-11.111mnd./ ••- But, •us :has been .sttateti, .this sur- on his knowledge of, soldiering," • and •
himself on his: Farialitits+ 6 di te a t t on •
ing him,:'asiced in a' y'erY harsh voice,. Vey is incomplete.; It. does not in-'. Tony other things which he did , net
."1VitidDeugall,'• do you Itii0.W.-the Ten elatie•ekeise taxes levied' in tifi.-, Pro" pois.tes. .. He Was it :gay; light-heart-
Conuriandinents?" • ••• .•• -• vineese fees. for. permits. to...travel', the e,d boy, who looke,l,, upon eve ything , .
How a Severe Jolt Was Administered
- Loves Young Bream; '
• Alas; • the honeymoon was indeed
over! That morning they, had come to
words over the breakfast, and •he had
intelli
his wori • dlnd. They.- ere
came y serious wounds • rewarded
out with . a' rep t and tl • seevering tn " Were
Darius .and Arfaite • .
e. rums. of •
u a ion that ,eti . ie palaces of Dar' ' ' -
VI:dile ' 1 Xes. 1
.e, Kilda*
tii •ning to
•sured his emp
, , loyinent as D A A ' -1 * Atier .
etilefoy„ - Who. had becoine "4'
.a.cetistoin.:
. . A, for., Di ° me :1•
ei my headquarter :in ed,dering her travels' to tit
• intelligence With ' e. constant ,
At the War Offi - ! •
rearing of ninit's 'eoet -
'Sntith Af •• '
riea during•the Boer War, ' •
• nut•herizafloo to
ce. • •
,this apparel. She WI'cie large num.!
Six Yettilt la the War •Offiec aid bei of books 011. histoica). nrehaeo- ,
six at Aldershot added to Sir Wil- 14)&0 mid romantic themes; tine et
liani's reputation as an adriainistra. Which • WePf cited bi• ,the • loreoeh 1
Academy as of esp.eeial excellente, •
• tor. His three years as tomtnandant
•. of the Staff College niiide his name a
• household word aritong. lite' corps of
• • officers. He was strict- •vitithout • tiri-
• , .
Freernasone of the World.
Concentrated
• The Mimetic fraternity of the world
due Severity, thorough without Pe' has a very large membership. ,Efig.,
dantry. As a leeturer this highly iind has o moinborship of 160,000;
" practical soldier, the Weald a man of this ineludeEr'English lodges in dif-
Action, Was a most .conspictious sue.
toss.: • ,
' itlIX'Sli? William 11Pberts.on went
to the War Office as Director of
tatty Training. On the outbreak of
war he joined Lord Vretich'S Staff 4is
Quattermaster-General, and was spe-
menoned for his services dor-
• Ing•lho retreat from Mona. avd 'the
lereet 'Parts of the world on the
tnglish register.; Ireland has 19,000i
Seotland 16,000, • Australasia 16,000,
the 'United Stateel,1105.179, and Can-
ada froin, the A.tlitntio to the Peale
hag 110,000. • •1.
• , •
, •
giv . ,. ,••
Cerentanies ay ddrer, but. ,true
politentise i eVer the same.', . *
glbEnitinent adviinco to the Mem: • a
•
Instant•
Postum•
has -a .delicious; snappy
flavour and is absolutely
•free from ,caffeine Or any
, • harmful, Ingredient. In: 1
stant Postum IS in con-
densed, soluble form and
.wonderfully convenieftt for
the home -for the picnic -
for' travel -everywhere.
If tea or coffee interferes
with comfort or success.; as
it does for many userS, try
a shift to Postum.
•"There's keason"
riatiaiiten Fontein tlereal
Windsor, Ont. )
, • .
Save: Money ploofirig
Get my piices.• direct tront to you.
4 have Roofings .for 'every purpOsZs.
l'ree. ,AticireSS -
Co.,Halliday Ltd. Warettt!ri.
"MacDotigall seratched his chin for-
a Moment, and then, in an ennally
harsh voiee, said:* • • . •
, •
"D'ye thinic yeu've beet ine? Susi.
• whistle the flriiit three or four hare,
and I'll hae a try et •it."
: Nothing to Brag of. • • • •:
‘411eia heen :45 years in the semi)
le 4 • • A
Pegnhollt ,
"Ile 'aught to he ashamed of .him,
gelL" 4 • ' • ,
hind. amounted to $9,06,00a.4. o)ootit, does W011i, "earned a day's Amy, to- "6"" r"". th"""itQa kelt'. lovietti
ItAteritg0 reVenue. Which %mil. , sed to with 4Albert4; in fine form; as lla 1.‘rviet•le•:allwetetliskr`,tanos1:10:tiettie.:::::::::::::::ofaa:sla.'t'ailearrif: .
derive in 1914 from the who " (0 Pe- said'. hs and his men had done a: good ateit'OY
PrievgY min ability will,bring peothetiort,
revenue from tobeee'e end betc, etc. as it good joke.:4-anid. the Men of his Help. for 1/Voolort
'estiraate to put the monthir i,venue, night, After li. long afterneon's- dales;
It is certainly %a Most '
derived•by the (.4rnton$4,00n1..,:,ti part.' as effieer of the guard, "Albert' turn. •
'cow, . V ative draft milled him "Albert." .1.°w one : '0,' a rtie•Frisu'ioNfer:s .... :
pitioil at $7,B06.00g. a m4 ''.' The ark ,heptAilkil.", • The .rheal. started .„NaP' i3er* Ten'd-et:st;<.
of Russian., Peland under thi ':' Oemi- ed OP to first dinner looking paftieni- 1
which stiM ineluded.,litiport (1.11 -s do.y-kohite . . ,
on• goods which niereTy.passed .hrough .14/above wiiisloy , and zodit hiid ttign, ,r1,,,,,ti, tettrecitvi Imuteniont to,
in reality :IP' !V 'just been b, -ought fo blfil, when, elteetfenee. tut Lnit.toAtadebt.ottlf, tattit".
PO140,,:..hut were
• • „ Whether. hY (maga si in...hick, his 4 'Pm "'MIL" 1140.0 bolitzsiger, tit*
1
the coasamers'ia. °'lltaesiii.. . . . .
. . ., : „ .•
, , •• •
%••7
•••
•
•tt
..)1V beseoiff116110.
•
41•11,