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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-10-05, Page 2• .4-4* 4. ---'4111r1,17141/177'13181F9irsirw 'ressineawaswesear„..-- „des /fentning The hileilres. Motor WM not idle demn, that ib Te- Apersen'sreelteiriecraMent is shown?, fusee tO go 'withellt 4=144 ti•Mi PrAr" .."fihell a cer steps cat tito To44. $oniv ing at a lea Speed than ten inileS ar Man, jump mitt nee tee hoofteose teeir hone? then ril 1:44U0 11,1re that air ise petie.00e, mouton and awe a ie leaking some place. Under thee exhibitien of themselves that s 10,00 conditions, you iiiltetild examine ell the Plaasing. Others. review the eitea. MalaLf414 glshetl' the CYllhaer'ile44 tie very enefully, and whether tlk gasketS' 1:144the mtake valves' These ' emceed. in making the motor move. or teeta Always Provide definite iafernsa. .110, they prove themselves courteous tion. In so far as tb Omit is eon - end dignified at all times. Now, let egraql. YoullloW thattlie hotter it is Me tell PM what:nue should de. if the the greater will be its assistance engine /Vet dead. With your limit., startin6: the engine under eetracirdia..” ed. knowledge of .its meehanism, you, arY cireemstallees. Ilenceeif you are in Meat decide your Wit mind how dif- hang trouble, it may arise from the • flan the trouble may bo.s • Of course, or a ill, magllet0 being Weak, Ina have previoesly eeen that there IS or tho coil having' developed a short ballttli by trMember . of the Pritish . „enough gas, water,. oil and greeee ear circuit' * Wo would reeornmend, hoz w- Once .stall", gives a ;Clear idea the receilireniente of the machine, If evert that Yau• ilei. not tanwei" with of the task the EritishAre endertakm ,some very vital part$ but rather IPA such.a ing, and the headway they have made. the stoppage is eausee by ' ; techincel teouble; you Nvilt bq compel., 'eitt141011, to be handled hY a eerOce Frons, the Somme 'River where ,the it ' • to car:te eed• - ' man 1,vho posia..ses a real kn 1 d . rive be,garie tile country rises m' en"- M !. • Man brought from the garageellet de of imution. , led bhave the •,, S EA OF THE TASK TUE BUM MI ARE IMO/MX*1NQ, •. . • Able to Drive the Oermana Before There SiewlY, Is True, But Steadily. Despatchei from the Western front havnnot made it as Clear es plight be that the British advance is over ris. ,ing ground, that it is now near the ereSt:and that when the high ground is taken it a comperatively easY *natter to seize Bapaeme, one of the aid objectives of the drive, A, Map ,prepared by tbe.British Govern - Ment and reproduced in the New•:fork Times, as well as .letter-presS cont.ri. dulations as f Martmem' !eh* ar as • , t take any draatie StepS becausea• • • Misfiring CYrinders., „ 'though. this v'll ' age le rather beyond • eareftil 'Cl(araination: may. Zhow you If,, after having primed your motor the crest. It then declinee with few that misfiring is the real trouble, , Dea imalheref times, you; find that it Undulations to the,Ancre, rising again • fective spark plugs have frequently does llot ePerate successfully, but con. slightly to gainunne, which IS, on St a meteraheut the seine level as Frieourt. The alled. . • • tneleS to give iest a few heavY ex- Ploaions talld thea step, it is postible hills that extend from the Somme to that the gas supply pipe, may, be ohok.. the Auer° ere too Small to be I noted in the Ordinary map, The highest peak ed.; You had better disconnect the nn between the gas pipe and the is not 600 feet above the level of the union carhureter and,blow it out until is 8"une' 74 since' the Germans haVe had PerfectlY clean, and until Yeti are ah- couple of years in- which to turn them into fortresses it *will be under-. , • - . Starting the Engine. . , YoUr first motion will be the crank- . .. „ „ - • Ang•ote ear a number of times, or . , ,the turning of it over with your elece ' • frit, air pressure or other starter. If 37011 -,de not achieve and 'remits) it will whitely certain that the flow. of fuel • be evident that the cinnedre are eith4-, will not be stopped. Perhaps, too; stood ,that an elevation of even ten . .. feet just doublesthe task of the as.. er dried, gut or fined With gas- If 1 there may` be a dent' or kink in thesailanti. they are ever -loaded, then you can ar., pipe. If you discover. either of these, • - . rive immediatelY at the .conclusion the Work • to be'`ifone will be obvious, ' ' An %hill 'Fight. , . , .-- thatthe spark plugs are shorted \vita Should you find water or dirt in the T the over -plus of gas. .• It his is the pipe; it will be a simple matter to eraiy an uphill battle, and the fact is The British have been fighting lit. . case, open the pet cocks on the cylni- conclude that otherforeign substances tlukt they have been able to drive the . der heats. After removing the spark , exist elsewhere.Then it is your duty Germans before them, slowly, it is ' Plugs, turn the engine a more of times to clean out the 'tank with a swah.In rue, but -Steadily. But they do not by hand. While you are doing this, most cars, misfiring can be 'judged • "by ave to drive thein uphill all the way ' it, is always well to open the throttle Putting 011 the muffler cutout, but in to Bapaume. Once they are able to and have some One held the intake of the carburetor open in order that only , air may be sucked into •the combus- • tionchansbers. Having atcomplish- this ' t th k Tix d ff f levers prOperly and close the pet Cocks loc,ating the •cylinders which are Ws: - If the engine does not start, open up firing, but probably the easiest one is ' the cylinders and pour about a spoon- to loosen all the spark wires so that ful of gas into each. one. Your en- they cell be easily disconnected or con - gine may stare now, or it maY gime a meted while the engine IS in opera - `few evplosioni and stop, or it may ab tion. Slow the engine down and open solutely refuse to turn is hair. If a pet cock slightly so that a distinct the Weather is 'et all °chilly, .and we hissing sound is available. If this. may eiteect alteeed atmospheric an- noise in not altered by disconnecting ditiona, it would, be advisable for you the wires then that particular cham- to try the priming process several her in question must be misfiring. If times. The few explosions you seear- your motor misfires at a flow speed, ' • ed a the first instance may develop 'but regulates itself at a iffgher one„ • those automobiles which do not have each a contrivance, Missing cylinders can be detected, if. the' ear' is at all Practiced, froni the Sound of the muf- ,•jus e sp r an gas fier ere tire eren ways o , .9 command Martinpuich they will be working downhill, and have °lily •the village of Legars betweee them and the River Ancre, which is in a slight depeasion. Then Bapaume rises. When the British advance ha brought. 'the army• in sight 'of this n6W-famous village, the German lines win have been sent back' into an almost penin- sular salient. A retirement upon, a long front will thus become necessary Mika the German *general decides to maintain ;an impossible positien. It is also necessary 'to bear in Mind the fact that the further the Germans re- tie the harder it is for there to main- tain le foothold. They are in the posi- ion o a man se o egins. o s into a regular series and start your we would not advise your stopping on • engine going. We give you these the road to go through anyelaborate: simple remedies in craft- that you may testabut would sOggett that you get - be saved ; the sacrifice'. Which ea's* to the nearest garage without delay pride undergoes wren, having a car in order-thab an expert me'y bring hie . towed in when the mechanic subsequ- experiences to bear. She* you ently,states that there was no serious Upon any occasion,' itOwever, find teouble. • • spark plugs covered with oil and soot,' • ' • ' All the air that,. the , cylinders Te- do not hesitate to thormighly,clean or quirermust be draven.throegir the ear- replace there„ --Auto in Farmer'Ad- ' • buretere. ,. If you discover that your vocate, . . • • THE DEVELOPMENT OF EVLOSIV ° FROM GUNPOWDER TO DREAD.;, because it was first tested at Lydd, a little plitee in Kent, England., • If the names' of Nebel and dynamite are not Synonymous terms they cer- tainly might to he, for we seldom speak of the 'one without suggesting the other, It Was the great Swedish inventor who took the first practidal ' ED DyNAMITE44 • 'step toward the dynamite of the pre- fIeW Man Molds the Gift of - Nature Into Great tngines or Destruction. It will probably never he satisfac- Ily who firet inVented gun- • powdere-there:really is -not -said solid evidence on which to pin trwn sent day and ,gave it the name by which it is everywhere knOlvn. Mr. Nobel 'discovered • that by mixing nitroglycerin with a certain kind of earth called kieselgulir he could make a solid substance which possessed terrible explosive powers and. 'which was. yet quite safe, .tici handle. He called his discovery dynamite. ' A Mistaken. - • • its invention to one man, just as t is In spite of , ell -that has been. ,said . . y, many first used IL one thing.,'however, is pe'ople itill have tlxe idea that dyne : - "When the Allies -open ,a bombard, 1 Buddha's "Noble !'. Eightfold Path"). material witnesges behind. ' They • ',The Bureau Veritaa (the Frend here, and, every f • r • action' indisputable, and . that is that ' unit mite is ekceedingly dangerous stuff t; nient the Germans" retire to these Sect—DeriVed from a Verb meaning 'would have collapsed under ccoso_o_ Lloyd's Shipping News) has itist is. that the helinet rises abovethe scalp • ' .' • . . . . : .. a COMPeratively.few years ago gun- take any liberties with; and that it caves, and remain, in - safety, except: cheese! it Suggests the pigheadedness amination; and even .if .their..1l.. seed the Statistics of all merchant is a disadvantage' ' ,-, Powder waa the only proPelling agent wilt explode at the le.aet shock. This for the odd chance iif a shell falling of -people who clioose their own Pway drilled story had stood, Felix . would ships siink or seized from the' begin- But Are cennot simply clap a cap a * nee for =ma of allitindsVariousis a ,mistake. Nothing less than - a through a single •opeuilli: :TbeinOst"' and care nothing for the opirtiOn of net condemn. Paul for prefanith ug the ,ning of the war until e end cf April, steel peen a,living head and be con- . ' . .! - -'-4ene might say meneroet—inventers : treiziendous shock•will make dynaniite poWerful explosives may burst ever- , Othersi:udividtialism run mad. It is: temple, unless , as 'an nein in the 1916. The losses amount to 6 per cent. tent. Here we must 'have • the very . - tried to add ether ingredients to, explode, and this shod: is 'obtained by head and do no 'damage to the en- thus :theexadt antithesis -jot -the great .oh-arge- of...stirring_iip- a ' riot. •-gunpowder, but for long no substi- , exploding a mixttire of nitric acid, elni lying 40 feet below the surface Christian word catholic, which bus un- 20. The Sanhediisis were no coni - tate wliich gave satisfaction from any mercury,and alcohol; which in tukti of the earth. In the meantime, of happily been raonopblized by the least; petexitwitnesses of the 'fact 'alleged; .- point of vie* Could be found. " 1 explodeS"the dynamite. '• " •• einirse, the Germansoccupying these catholic sect in the world The god but 'Paul challenges them- to confess - • A 'considerable impetus was \ given ,herg7,-So that th"e Way i* no that 'filar Only verdict Against him Fulminate of . mercury is the name dugoilts cart do no harm. They become or our 1 by the inrention of the so-called nitro of thig Mixture, and by it,s aid many ',active, however, when the infantry' at- , bY-petl b t • tr • bt.1" ' ' *th th was an a religious charge. Jest as in , • et. • :CAA\ V's .44.# ' Chic Hat ond Smart Collarett.e 'For Alitunan ear. • VY OVELY new Smolin "Blue Bird? model of the new shade of cerise vaunt velvetmhe teeing of which is of Alice Blue, The shirred- Tam-0,8hantee rown and •ornaments of jet add to the attractiveness., of this charming • e a ery.popir ar •t Collarette Kolinsky ancrermine which will e o v his • .., oraliig season.'• • te FROM SUNSET COAST ARMOR FOR PIN WITAi TES WESTERN PEQP4E AS" 'WELL Mil ARE IWINS, 44e44._ PrOgrese• 9f the great /Vest Told Few' Peinted • , Paragraphs. A AMPe of lellreer has been.' 140' Covered in Chinatown,' Victoria. The •reaser River sehnon Peek ia likely to be the smallest In history. w* Aeotpinarnsytearfla, slt00;eIenuditaonspilett hops suzugititraillnlgPmfoolintaromfotrheedEprrlt at Agassia. • a • tection for the soldiers' hearts also., _. Duck shooting season opened Sept. In speaking of the value of light 'are Pt Creston, but few licenses were mor for vital parts he says: applied for, '• The outlook for the iuraper Indus- Late hist summer manY of us who , trn.4.In riotIR:tmeotimdiset,rict ,s better .count every soldier Peered urged that' our men should be armored. The, • . An evaporating Plant has been hFerlemneehtehaaluld ellvrseontthleYr profited reply thbaYnthare i tablished at Chilliwack and Will mor to the machine-gun was then •see . gin operating Within a menth. Yet is in exigtence. TUE BEST STEEL IS V9It THE PURPOSE. • . Dahmer of pritioli, Heimet sokeo. • onio Further Interesting \ • Suggestions. • Pr, a saioebr, who urged the:0 adoption of the steel helmets neW.111 4, . ;-• SUNDAY SCHOOL .1111M•111111.1.• INTERNATIONAL LESSON • OCTOBER 8. •• Lesson II. Paul Before Felix—Acts t 24. . Golden Text.— . Verse 10. A gs4pe".1e6ch alwalcs 'began r a with a captatis, or conciliation Af the person or persons addressed. In con- trast to the barrister Tel -Willis, who had dwelt with audacious fulsomeness on the "peace" the administration of Felix brought the nation, Paul says the only true thing he could say in fav- or of Felix as a judge—that he had the experience of many years—about seven. • • . • II. Thous canst take knowledge— Felix will • know hoW to verify this statement, and as the alleged crime is so riicent it can easily be investigated. Twelve days—This involves mkaing the "five days" of. verse I count from Paul's leayjng Jerusalem. The days are thus accotinted for: • FIrst, 1?aul before, in Dan, 12. 2, The Sadducees, typical coaervatives in religion, re- fused it because they could not find it in the law. }fence the point of the answer Jesus gave thera—Mark 12. 26t. 16. Ilerebe=-In all the life purpose -just described. I else—Emphatic, "They accuse me of rudely trampling •on my brethren's religious suet*, ibilities: I am at least as careful as they to wound no mane so long as I can keep .my conscience clear toward God." Conscience -Repeating the de- • claration of Acts 23. 1, and, softening Its seeming self-assertion. Here he gives us a glimpse of the perpetual self-discipline which alone an pro- duce the conscience Of "a workman needing not to be ashamed" even be- fore God. . We see another and deep- er glimpse of it in 1 Cor. 9. 27. 17. PauPs last visit IS recorded In 'Acta 18. 22. Alms—The Gentile churches' gift, of which we had so mach. in the lesson) for August 13. Of,- ferings—Theie Of Acts .21. 26,‘ where the same word is used;• At the smelter at Trail. there are' The.recognlied. answer of the sol - now employed. some 1...,600 men .with dier to. the surgeon had been that the' a monthly payrall of over 08000; Weight 'el armor reduces =MIRY an,,d,, In one section of Grandview (Van- titO hilrelve€1 more danger than le couver) fifteen dogs were poisoned averts To this one 'pointed out that in two days by unkeowdmiscreante. modern surgery, which' was made in ' It is estimated that' the net Oro- ,England) enables the Ligterian pupil • , coeds of the recent Hospital Fair at to save not only the life but even the 'Minoan will amount to between $500 limb or other injured part, in a large • and $550, •• majority of . eases, provided that _...the There will, be only about 42,000,000 Injury be. not in itself inortal. We , bushels of Potatoes froin. the coast ask—or rather, Sir Arthur Cnoan this year as compared with 48,000,- , . Doyle and Who are not surgeons, 000 in 1915. • • asked on •• their behalf—that the au .- As- the result of so mu& snow and frdst last year unusually . fine apples are being marketed. from the Fraser Valley this year,• It took ,fourteen horses to haul the telescope which is being established on the top- of the Little Sanwich Mountain, 'Victoria, South' •Vancouver, school gardens suffered recently from marauders who _Carried off ame of the best produce raised by the c,hihlren. The keel of a 315 -foot steel vessel, the first of any size to be constructed on the shores of Burrard Inlet, was laid at Vancouver, last week. ' Although in some parts of the Fraser Valley the honey crop has been a failure, two Ladner apiarists averaged 125 pounds to the colony.' The first consignment from Sidney of fruit jam fertile soldiers, amount- ing to 250 pounds, has been sent in, te..Victoria to be forwarded to ' the front. Frail, ripe strawberries, a Second crop that sold at 15 cents .a box, were in the New Weitminster mar- ket• last week. TheY were a second crop feom Fraser Valley. ' A Nish fire of some magnitude 18. Amidst which • (offerings) -e. • • . broke out near • White Rock on These particular sacrifices were offer - da but was soon 'brought un - ed at the suggestion of the ieaders of Thursday der control by the fire rangers,.. the" jerusalem• thimh. Their pur- f th C bell • Wonderful Defences Destroyed. suited by men from e amp arrives at JeruSaletn; secOnd, meets pose was. primarily t_e contiliate Jew.- • River mill. • • Jai:lies; third, tnkea' 111E4 VOW; Seventh ish feeling: to the Jews Paul became " la 'ed havoc with a flock a betireen forty and fifty Sheep might, and though the. line of the •, at CovviChan . recently. Five sheep blow may be depressed, this amazing ' .. were so badly injured they had to be teel does not wive ' killed, many were badly torn, and six a - • . were missin '•• • Poor Steel Dangerous.• ••• • Crowds thronged the wharf at Vic- cm • ing y I now call upon all the toria recently when "Daisy," a "baby outfitters' who .have been displaying elephant; Was put aboard • ship for and selling helmets and body shields, " • - - ' • ' Honolulu. Day came front, Africa not tested; not made of manganese to Victoria, but Honolulu authorities steel, and deadly to the wearer, to . offered too good a price to refuse. withdraw all such mArderons rub- ' bish forthwith. , . . As for body shields, last November.. • I protested. against seine • en sale. - Many have. been, and ,are, made of . hook. The smaller fisih had swallow. 'Mild steel, Such are. bought, tried, • „. • . . is -arrested; eighth, faces Stuillidrin;' a Jew, that he might yin JewS. of Indian dogs p y Too.little has been said of the task so far acCoMplished by the . . British ninth, leaves' Jerusalem for last -time; , course for , Paul anything with relig: on the ' Somme.. In the Matter of tenth, arrives at Antipatris:, eleventh, bus associations could become a. miles Won the advance has beewcOm- :. at -Caesafei; thirteenth; stands before means of. grace. But in him the re- paretively slight ' Nevertheless it Felix. • k . . •: .. ;. valsiOn from utter dependence On Jew - hat been such an advance. as is made 1 12. This' answers,. verse,5, but Ceti- ish rites to rest in the One Bacrifica to crack „a modern chilled steel vault. : fines the issue to what Felix had to was such that we • may well doubt' An inch through the Harveyized steel 'try, stripped of rhetorical generality: whether he .ever practiced Jewish represents greeter effort than a yard'. .13. Here Paul challenges proof that piek-,7 for his own sake. ' Purified— through ordinary ,iton. The SsiMree , he tried- to profane the 'temple or in The ritual bath had been in all history defences have been of the former any : other' way endangered the peace a most effective . parable by which cliaracter, is ,cOmP.arod with the i of :the cifY. This was, of emirs% the men learned the deeper lesson. of pre- Never,in the history of warfare have Felix hatValiY,.vreper concern with. tirae even a "Pagan" Greek could. from Salvers,- Island, near Vanconyer; A story vouched for as time comes Sweep of the Russians, for instance. , only point. in ' Counsel's brief *Mph paration for God's presence., By this such 'defences been built. , .Por: the I where a lady angler laded a 41 -lb. 14. 'Paul ,now frankly adnilts • the write, "Ile. must be Pure who enters Past to years- when • the 7 Germans part of . the indiatineat about Which the Incense breathing shrine; but to ling and a 14 -lb: salmon on the same have not been fighting they have been I the Jews really cared",'. but a Rounimlbe pure is tohave holy thoughts"; toiling with concrete and :steel to judge -would care' naming, as Paul for Paul its purpose was only tender-. - make their defences . impregnable.lkneW from, experience_ A Mud -high- nest .for the feelings of others. Jesus They have dug themselves in 30 and er Official, the . Proconsul Gallic); had 'had; once deliberately melfted a sim- thorities should ermor only our 'sot. diers' vital parts, and the surgeons , • would go bail for the rest. The fac- tor of weight Would thus be dimin- • ished beneath consideration. • Accordingly it was decided to imi- tate the French helmet. This task was undertaken in a fashion so bad and disastrous that my attempt to publish It here at the time was forbidden. But • . in one of the reviews in November I argued that the French helmet might , be much improved upon. • • •• • All I asked, and more,, has , been. , devotedly done by the Minister of Munitions. • Our helmet is made of • one piece, being none other than- a sheet of tested steel, moulded into; the uncomely but. blessed form "of • a soup -plate." But at . to my three points. • The only steel that serves is man- . • ganese steel; again made in Eng • - land, Sir Robert Hadfield, of • Shef- • field,. put his brains, for no lea than , • ' , it decade, into the making of this most 'wonderful alley, into which atone we . can safely put our soldiers', +brains to -day. Our helmet, weighing only two' pounds, is bullet-proof to a Web - ley automatic pistol at five yards; every helmet. now supplied to the troops must be and is, proof against • a shrapnel 'bullet, 41 to the pound, with a striking 'velocity of 7,50 feet per secorTd: —It' can be Iiiid—•on the •• floor and thus struck with all one's • . ••• • ed the hook when the big one' took condemned by officers at the front, him as a, mouthful. , Mr. C. S. Douglas, former mayor of Vancouver, Was saved frem cirovns: • 60 feet deep, and haVe roofed, them.! decided that Roman juStice was, not Filar "ritual, to give . himself ' a text for ing by - an expert swimmer; Eloise selves eOtix . such . steel - phites, as , contemid with such things:- But ' a Most important lesson (Lake 11. 38). Anyen,: thirteen years 'old; and. little . Dreadnoughts are filled with. In ,I,a,u1 feels it necessary 14 dispel the.' But certaie JeWs 'from Asia. (saw: me , press o the cyw . en e P- Bobby Young, in Engligli Van- corietructed veritable cities; hospitals, ' bulent and bigoted faction. -The Way Minns), "he, was gding to Say.; but the armories,, 'parade grounds even;, they the term doubtless•itarted from the eiw :point wept away the , intended water; and have stpcked, their re'.. 14.• 6. It is "a way , have tapped subterranean springalor ..•-• •uord's - description Of himself in -Joluf conclusion° of his sentence: live are of, salvation" in al•Ways finding • this charaeteristic of trate with .machine guns, mortars, I Aal %. ts 16. 17, both' -words there being Paul's vehemence i hi • these subterra• nean 4everns they • have, im ion that he belonged t a tur- in h It ith thed til Trii coever. The children held the un- conseicais -man's heed • above water and, towed him to a raft. . -• .. 3,324,719 TONS OF SHIPS SUNK. and all the .implem9ts war. reminiscences of phri-feconstantiy. rather ,dictatedY-letters. Luke has -g - Pauls lips. The term :meets as ,his master to the life, The San- . Underground Warfare.' still a debatable point Svhic.h nation and written to' the • contrary ••'autside Christianity (coinpare the hedrists had very wisely left theie Jneece n s written (or . . „ 4iitials ,HtivellAsst a-TOW:T:0mM • • .• of 247;427.. • to whom steel is just steel,' and so no progress is made. • The shape of the helmet has been • considered. The French helmet struck • me as having too vertical a front. If we give the projectile a smooth, rounded, oblique s a strike, we : immen,sely aid th -inherent sistance• • the steel. Ou helmet Is accord- gelly low in pit , and is much less ik• rench helmet • to he • -ted in women's' headgear, but it eeves_its_purpo,se 'better. Obviously • the shape of a policeman's or " fire- ' man's helniet would be unsuitable t, u in.a s aig me e of the world's shipping, if ,the_toUl tbest .knowledge of -pranial. and entre- of shipping, sail or • ste.am is placed ' cranial surgery that the world can at 50,000,000 tons. afford, so that we may know what • The totals given are: ' • to fear in the pay of concussion, COO - 1;204 steamshipS ..., _3,134,790 tons tusiori, and fracture, and how to - 271 sailing vesseisl... 189,9294tons guard accordingly. Sir Victer Hors- ley, the incomparable pioneer" of ' cranial surgery, and the greatest sur-. geon of otir century, was of Course the man to name as consultant. • Aceordingly, in the • British helmet -; we have really a double structure. It is, first, a soft cap, bounded all round do.' the attacking, British in the rear, and steainships .:. L. 42°2113%3 ibn o concentrated nitric - acid; hit. ,When fulminate goes off it Pharisees Might be turned 'ageing tlie he was betrayed.into.a wrong line, as -compounds. Probably the pioneer m a the high-poWered explosives are tack follows the bombardnient. Then pas t, :Law . -, . -.• ,prophets— A ' the- trial of Jesus,- the accused was Makthg 1,47A- ships and 3,324:719 , this direction .was Braceenot :. of detonated The wet gun cotton in they climb by ladders to the surface, frequent and. cemprehensive term for reiiadentned on a charge.wbich no Ro- tons- • Neutrals have lost 180 ships (247, - Nancy, Prance, who -in I832 discover- , the Old Testament as, a whole.. .0 Man would look at, and before the id that starch,. woody fiber and siixii- the warhead of the torpedo is explod. hauling -their maChine guns, and turn ,• highly. combustible bodies by the ac-:. the nese of the torpedo• happens to destroyed.. 'Often they have caught smell ridnerity.ou the &mutation. The .' 21, Paid is•not here admitting that 42t toils). . ed by a little of this fulminate, which them loose On the enemy that has 15, this verse makes it plain' that . c,Ivil court there . were flimsy ' after 427 suhstances could be converted into ' y. . . :The losses among the Entente al- oes Off upon s '14' ' thing that supposed all the defeaces to have been . . ,. . trt ing any ing At • the high priest -at a 8adducee was in zO`thoughts read ` ' been. • lies have . -9 • 9 ' • 9 • • few years later Pelonte extended this ielops tremendous heat and exerts have 'reatie it 'necessary. for: the attack Saddneeds in debate, hilt when they some comMentators have verY absurd- • 45 steamships 121,612 its edge with thick rubber studs—now• ' 9S sailing vessels: 26.346 V sailing vessels.. 24.375 mmt.a.de .hollow for greater -resilience: .24 2 Sailing vesselL' : 2:725 36.255 This ,cap has -a double lining of felt • t hiseis 2425 and wadding, so that even if the hel- • 22 steamstitpa 22.9a8 met, at point-blank range, may bo _ pierced -the scalp_ 41,gup.rsted_ fram tint_ discovery to cotton .and other orgame terrifie Pressure. If it is placed in ; to be bolted, while bombihg" parties. left the Sanhedrin it was, paid, they , Inferred.• , The • returrection • of Frex2c substances. But no practical "result the middle of a quantity of gun cot creep back; bunt out the entraneem•te liated',, not Ananias. They had 'sup-- Jesus wits the real point at issue, and Rustia followed these discoveries.. until in - . , ton it is this great heat which makes ,,,tbe shelters, and • silence the defend- . . lied all the power behind the scenes flie Jews, had deviated into _cinder, itao. ' 7;.•„Schtinbitilt.,1111XiIfftZbit 11119r -1,3'..,enq-acts-aith-d-3tharnit-a,414re•cie41$---,the-;---• ers hand-grenarl serMall chemist named the. gun cotton instantly •explode. It ; -rest • • • ) when their unbonsciouS , tools, the would have•confessed this. - So restus • Jesiis to. tleath;.. iwaS. clearly ,,.saw Adts and Paul L'w.g4'""•"" Method. Of treating ceiton nitric same fashion. ' • " - • tbey who tcOt the reatlead noNT'lloth reiterated before AgriPpa (lett 26: 7),4..lEtOihe'se • -2: siteinshiPs °US Padd"' calk Peas - lust, un ne rs s o s ope a ara on my The' losses of the,, ntral . Powers .• • and sulPhurie iannounced "the , " • . •Th•so; hiive .established their , • an _ d' 1--Prh d ft "fi t *It f r 4bi th t' I • .• Pcrrtuguese stearrishs 623 ed the casque 'of steel. The interval . between the • two serves \for "ventila- • * -- *We May :kroW Walk en Air. . .discovery gun.catten,;_Which he. pre-,. ."r. • • • ^ i.p.esis in a most diabolical' manner, down, some two centuries trial. and aCtually aboused hy Jews." have been: . . „ pined as a substitute for gunpowder.' ' • • '1111(..7 ha'Ve (Ig "tunnels in front of • H . S' e claimed.for it that tbe advantage GRAVITATION LAW REVERED.their trerthes gird on. either side, and• 7 ••Gartner::441 1:106,457- liad over gunpowder was that - • •• -then- have -epenirtaS ut various f9"'r'• „ 2 Austria , 49 • 173.317 • . Ships•Tons ' • .. ..• burned leaving. any regidiie, Snob 'Deep -Sea ish Fall Upward poito... in:these ,oPenir nthe;•snip- , ; 'And CoaseeMently without 'smoke,- , Death' • ..'" • ..ers hiiing7„, • . :•;.• • •.:Powerful'Cardite. • t ' Ntimps the Most curious aceideni Plaerare :with the • • ' fi-orditeranch more poWerful titan • • • ' ' filet ean befall any cpf t•lod's erNIttlIVS" debri? of 1..4.r, • aps of 1 -rush; sititter- •. • - • is tbe strange' death' sometiiros N•iqited -ad '41:1 1.1tt 222 4'1 rea g cornposeo. °I nitro- • . wagrop, 4oa, er er. In these •, disiOlved, Irv. so. may arts -e.tso the craze/try law of• gravitation stationed. Vvliefr the advance •' • k glYet••••r",1•4 *cotton* and •vnieliiii,--1"11-; •eerrt'•-ra.,'" -Peon--1-0-re-.,,:hatittig_iihk,,.. track-, it,-ilisin-err are , • P • ar.41•14terallY .as • land • • • of, acetone.. Thesenie mixed together creatiiresf11 dawaWard:utoblesniper endo orn de g ' . until .-they fm a • , soft . .puttylike tumble. ' • - • • • comes too near t;he- •down, and, using the eortununieating ". . , ' •,1;) ,i_12,i-m_th The pr,T4water in Ale :deliths • tat,nnel. rejin the -main -1;iod3t of his. • • • • - a.inetal plate ariti.etutrges ia • of the sea IS trertit,drus'atid` the ere4,-.--Anfrrarlps:7•FA"e"ti-11064-in'ate-ctiling-t • •Turke) .,_......... .6 46,851 • • •••' • Great Britain's 'loss represents' 7 Walking'bn air is no longer an ex.'', , - • • , 4 -per cent of her total tonnage, while aggerated ekpression. One .of •the, Y -.-- - - • !*; Germany has lost ne,Srly.26 per tent. new inventions to be placed ,on the' • , ' - .Maay of the ships that Geriliany has: Market soon is a pneumatic sole. put .. • , lost. have been added` to the merest'. , forward. to share the popularity- ,,of- ;. :•• tiff fleet orthe •Alires,' *Bile- those the rubber heel. • The new sole is pre-: - .,.. . ••`-'• GermartY -hag deitroyed have become 4' sinned to take up the jar of walking. • .2. utter loss's. More than 796,000 tons The new deviee is attaelied to • the i • , :of German shipping have Patied un- leather tole by plates and serews, and . ,• ' • der• oilier flags, ,33 shi ,ii• ol 162,7_66 itpuncturecl nn hp ileaditu„...reinoued--- ons y sa e, o mericans arid Oilers and repaired. Another genius, work- . long e+rsses t1 el its . name -cor... tures which inhabit those regimm have ,oecupied by the Germans is tfins do- -, by capture or seistire to the •Entehte ing along the same lines, has devis- ' .• ',ate" e.yoes, . :o. . :- • •• i bodies so coustracted, tVat the. oaw fended:, an&the tatilv Of clearing" the . • . . .Allies. ErIgland has thUR acqtfired 126 ed 'a pneumatic plug for use on the ' • '• Vii ,f,:trlokelc,Sx pOkreler, tordito is. s.,‘,..hn tit 12,0,,s0 in thip burdensome ele,-.Iluns out is a t( 10 mid'. a costly . , 'stizioships (490082 tons), •France 8 heel of a ghee. It is claimed that the - ''. - connitOnlY f71.5454,111 g big ,guns. totoPtit• Nn7 and then one keill b4, ±i_ one,. -But it is well Ite relnitaber that .. ' ' ‘,2 y. A „ ' , • in which ti • liteti and arrive at or -x. Ions cannot e an t n steamships (120:45 ten:), Japan 4 new eontrivaneet make not only for tonsY• .01,306 toksi..and IlnSsia 51 (36,503 less nervous exhalistion among people ' . • solne eases r.tatly tin; ra.;ithreavif .31(;tc, • •• • ' • ' cl•tv The G(rnians :have'been driv. , • • ..4th where the water pressure is *•••• • , bui also A ineans toward safety on , . .11171101!it.iija a 'hiel i1•44Asirt% in, 4 wi.:Ii..g446", ' •• •sbe7tt-ss.th;i: 'ihey ildve to * qt•ove the stritdi of ' • 7 -Hew' the i•szgrz, ".‘ieighing in e de " ' w'at" 1,1oh t. h t .• •••. aastorKes toren to . piqtter, .01i'•01.1t int" rthtiPt,' that. ..tbey torok ••to.,14`4' Old Iti*e5 15' r'i.V.• 'Ott' rA3t. •flpera " eta 'svcimiting blakliie,s1'n•tli rfemli'4‘. nee he etleh •-• • sIIPPery Paveinents. • Ifir.S. • te slit"; 4. t3('S,I fli'SJ,And tht'S". :C•ts ll i' to •Irrve. th-etn bilt of', rtoora to Tura. • ii1;161 11 • VZt 4.c.tt.t1,••• t, - ./%•?: ft.r. ttlis7;cs.. , lilt, • • • •-t,!rfiz. t!,•••1',".•,,c,:34,z:g.:(1•,:f.:7O-',' • . • . ••. .. • ;. ' * eoi•••12ite. • . t • Z U -e..0: " • 2 , •Ili -al -A -rid flit% t? -'4o IST'21 1•'!•"..••t • .• • • yes., 4,t;,1( -r p•-• lin.i•••••ai.,1-th$ • ,./ •.• • 2 • , r 4 : ,9„ • • Att 4 • 4•F* ,abr' • • • - Floisting s Shell into One of New *British BigGun§ (Mn• att ca. ( .; 42, % • +7, lie. '2"" ' ht/it; s •,?; z c.e•, ";14 • ret.,-,1,',9,t.,rti '14tq 1, - • t ...,. ••• •-• •4? , • t it:r? 1.2t.". i• . • • ' •, Pa., • • 4'to, 04 IT 4. „.5 . s..6 CUI set , • '31? ; ;:wtS th.• t'an0444.1-"15 t•441 • t .e...' • '.• ••• ,ei."4144A torty-ttios. •' • id! 11. ly1,3ite • • :• • • ' •••, v ' • • • , 1 ftaZO t 0. 5,...t11,- ,qr• • . ditie.-4.1i.7,tgin an pper;;I 'hit rteer.r-,- • r•.• • * 14tier her .•' • .. • • ' 12.i47;nt.';ng ger 1i:fp.: 1'1 tIe. . • "I, ••.-r'iy,•• :a. 0 -1,nt 'a; +44441 v• • ••Italy, Purvslies Plotters.; • • \-er•otis judivitipals iterth,e'd•of.lta.v.. .it.0 rens a tiro in 'the ntrrt' of Gonon. (...xn,a.,,pina In n dynanilte footury tit and having etteMpted opt- : rp,Ve. f;gair,•,:q 5,1e.1,1 WOrldl 81 Tern' And hav,p nserntencod by Italian r Fria! at • A aeon a. " A man • * •••• • 4 1 be -5 , • • 5„ .f t --------------4I's kit det% iientinle43,1 to vi tc,d ter turn fryer...4 •*Etird !at or lot life. • ,• • u . , • • tr. • . 1