NoTil AND rorBT' Viceroy of India Å- 70 n n aao of as 1a t ptei-INTERlNATIONAL LEISSO1 ber, G1rand Dulke Nicholais was reliev- ed fromt command of the Czar's de. JUNE 1. fenise and gent to the Caucasus, the Kitchener Was in Franco-Prusesian War Before He Entered assumption was that he had been sac- rCcd orYadspeur, om • British Army--Most of His Life Was Spent Lession XII.-The l'hilippian Jailer,- military experts thought his strategyinFrgnCme.As161-4.Gde had been brilliant In retreat, anil yet -nFrinCie.At 6 64.Gle it'was easy to understand that in Rue_.-TetAs163. snign have outweighe the irine Irishmen like to, claim Lord Kitch- Kaiser telegraphed his sicere con- vre1.MsesAfr aigFacesQerRd.s Ileiso i w rac.He had enier as a countryman of theirs onigratulations. Two weeks after Om~ jont roprie.Mtorsp i t hi3 vali 'onmytkgrnieu nSe mfeit fhis erfor nshad aed the the ground that he was born at Guns.. durman, Kitchener's forces met Mar- cha'tle (niers 16. ine osvau-The.Hllwt omthrsi,"u Sonamnt ussian y lst Polandand 24th, 1850. But although his father, officers aird 120 8oudanese tirailleurs, 'e18Esa ShisvrltlendIcuttsea t rtionpbutefhad ch t ithuaia Col. Henry Horatio Kitchener, hadiand their withdrawal left the whole 2.Pæos(agn-Ahg-o o ocr o e. h os e The greatr pat o-ri ayuanda migrated to Ireland from Leicester-lof the Soudan in the power of Eng- souning ttle belongin- to hchef Es lse.SermmeeadFacehdg TemCauceau was frtawtheatr.shire two years before the birth of land. Kitchener at once began tosjudi ileGritiesi Romte, n h kchtmohrrmmbrdhisiead seemte nuiradte as- his son Herbert, the f amily is East, build up the country. mrpe. ovirty in these duuvr.mn ie hnFacehdbe udnyEs Deelp hve gran wntAnglian. Even before he entered the , Bor WareSee ote i ese1, i°o et ogotn.Setokhodofteli- "Ta mks hadyayfurtherito Russia. The army in 1871 he had had a taste of Within a year the Boer War broké Studies for June 41. Jews-l'here wasteagrhn."'lkphrinredadmd eastern front" is almost the samneas actual war. While still a Woolwich out, and after the British disasters lno a tempt to distinguish, andl we havemiderysnemnuthsie"ithacued when the Grand Duke left It. The cadet he was staying during a vaca- Lord Roberts wvas sent t'o SouthsentaJwsernonu rusnshpomedTe.pighr fighting' has diminitahei to a minimum. tion with his father inBrtayfoAri. Lord Kitchener, while still Philippi. S f oSepHl hywnEs n oesi Bu i AiaMior lre vetsar te rshesats adbensold. Sirdar of the Egyptian army, was pro- 21. Roma.ns-See the note justinabghryecueratpnsvrsenim t plaFacescaedsprte srugemoted lieutenant-general and made qoe. Nt h kl ftei-wr foFacernigt epddntcm a i n g p a c e ao g ai n t o t h e G er a ne b u h o s a s b e n c h ie f o f s t a ff . H e a r r iv e d in C p - - - - - d ic t m e n t ; t h e p r o p a g a i% a o f t h e s e u p w t h e si e r s u c ka k l t e sh k . f r foughtisout bynbravenbutsisl-hrganized1Town in January, 1900, and in Novem- Jewish, customs might lead to breacl' rniia ato h ln u pi h i, From is Cauaingan basges thera nd armies of hastily-raised levies. Young ber took supreme edmmand after Lord LORD CHIEM,.ISPORD, ....G' fthpecadhe orton fsedintkowt;henwolyrewthlle Durke is Onvipng, prongd fork ito lKitchener offered his services to the Roberts had left fer England. IHe went then1w1P roynudGovrno-heeilega nasciantn fo.atihn wa(sta tws oeyt egigu n "h h'c T u rkg l o ey B ln e kpr o n , sli d i g a o n g th e F r e n c h , w a s a c c e p t e d , a n d f o u g h t u n - t o w o r k w it h s y s t e m a i c t h o r o u g h n e s s r a l o f r I n ia .st ne d o n s s ic i n o f ant n g o t e h l w t l a a d S al;n o . y o ' e d n , E edgeofthe BlpQ;ackSa sam<a erGnrlCaznthe openerations and built across the Transvaal a line ýchange these Jewfish customs. Semd phrsalmn htse Costntope aoteri pnera-around Le Mans. of blockhouses connected by wires 22. Rent--The order would be, "Re- wudtyt ea uhlk i laws cngral erlm n u tionand is n- Learned Value of Organization. charged with electricity; sixty mobile mv elcosrpadsoregr spsils htte oli n th tended toi cut Turkey's transverse inta1erbe itrcmagnclmswr ut into the field; all the them." It does not, of course, imply awy e e o h eebr communications, and another, pointed Kitchener saw miles of stalled freight women and children and non-combat- H A T that the praotor-ý tore their clothes AtheopftehilRbadSly "esil, atraight at Bagdad from the north-icare loaded with war material; soi-at eetkn f h am n themselves. Rods-The fasces car- wr atn. "h ossae ti ik eatbs tray iecd heTrc- irsfrein frlak foýras! placed in huge concentration camps. ried by the lictors as token of auth-red"RbcrdanIseyo g El Persian moulnin barrier almost to stored in plenty half a mile away, but Slwy adwtd ' ke eso lf rtybfoe h aisrt he ev Khaik, 10 ils romth Hlywhich there was no one to issue, and than would othriehvebe o-Thte Ucerated Tooth. *ltl lm ftesa h eytp Face p City, on the plaiiblef the Boersawere worng downoandh24.roInnerbprison-Frone twhicheof the hill d"Yesathe2horsesr aresquiet.mSheid Ty, peton te lis ofMespotamkdia. te arvin o fod hat r or tted eri- in May, 1902, the srggle ended. A girl 8 years old was alflowed to Paul was able later to see the jailer stl tnig"h ad Eshr' o eie h The a orkata smomewhalik Te Tdrv- tere wa no nachey for iht Kitchener was made a viscounit, ad- go in bathing early in the season. against the light, while hmefi-yusadteeaemn n al'. ogthrd ng afor ino amol hil. Te Trk utin. hat s wy h laer ug vanced to the rank of General, given That night shle had a toothache. A visible. Made faste-A verb derived HepntdahesoanFrceslgetjot maly either he impaled or trapped the Dervishes with Nubian track- ay- the thanks of Parliament, and $250,- hot mustard foot bath relieved her- f rom the adjective appearing aslokdhr.Secud eafw"IlrnfrU between two prongs.mme In the caeofers anwrcnbige bulders and 000, also the Order of Merit. Next day the tooth ached some more- safely in verse 23.slmitetrebunohssadno BtEacu being trappedl he might escape bhemdnthBorwihbckues 'A ixre of equal parts of aconite 125. Pain and the cramped posture 1 dF i t 'lomsl lateral ways, in a westerly direction, and charged wire. His first campaign Sent to India.-And liliesugstd yth reti.mdsleipoibsohakgv tn eryegewgw wn-togrtanI aeroits the dessert, but that would ended by his catching a severe cold No sooner was peace signed thanbyntleoane, s aplied andh ge|n g tookdts epiposace, Lsotningwith T l e ac e-fs meae toabadonBagadnndoll fBaaeraabllonnacen&mae wen isVisounrKicheerlasoenttoan-consderblerelef.Bu. sh slptlit atenton nd maimenhaeobrethst iggr wen its So henan Mesopotamia. It would establish clothes were wet. In three months dia ai; Commander-in-Chief, and i tle all the following night, and the verb implies; they harl seen thoselsw c aln yoeol contact at once between the Russians he was near té death with pleurisy. seven years he revolutionized the In~ ithird mnorning elhe was taken to the bleeding backs as they were bundled bace r s"er rmi t and the English coming up the Eup- With British Army. <dian army, and freed it from red tape. dets!h dnitifomdhrinps hm.,' "Unl1hl hrates River from the Persian Gulf. Hie joined the Engineers in the This stern, icy man put an instant end fatetatthcilhaan"ce-2. The chanswer fxe infothe hebntdwnEsa k e satre s, n they spring of 1871 and began the long, to the old round of polo-playing garr ated tooth,"1 but that, it would be dan- walls, and the doors secured by boltsancugthlofwoitebrceFacewss Theéaracsledterof te Grand De'shard toil that England exacts from anon e H e deevry okne. wor gerous to do Eanything to it until the that such a shock might dislodge t s s.en hnRbltg Wa r opertion isdetemindxbytheex-hhemenrwo seve er.eorvhreeandthanedro on forwo1ng u rwllin suside. W shold ay 2. Th jaler asof curs, libe nd te tre sranghig.fElcobntssid ig, all 4 ~~treme diffeulties of the country years he worked ab Chatham and as in South Africah a d h 400 ff here that the dentist was a bargain with his life. Compare Acts 12. 19·.owr n aedw, hnrs nalgad which je very mountainous in aillap- Aldershot and then was detached to back to England more than d00 o1-dentist-there was no sterilizer In his 29. The astonishing forbearance aansotn n agig twsln rs praoches to Mesopotamia, with few wvork in a semi-civil capacity on the eers as- useless," he starte d office, but he did phenomenally cheaip of one whom he had handled so rough-wodru!nammetoeSlyndalycp and wretched roads; and scanty sus- Palestine survey,- For four years he weed out, the incompetents in Ini. work. ]y finished the awe-inspiring effect ofanRoweedigtesmthgEsaughr- small, wretched roads and scanty etus- passed up and down measuring the Hie never playe4ffavoritest t. The fourth night the child grew de- the earthquake. nohrtes hnFaceke Po ee to go In thin columns and rely en- lan<d of Canaan and learning the ways After leavIne India withte ranklros The doctor was summoned. 30 Sr.I hscean.xa-wtteymntotesrth tirely upon their distant bases fradte.peho ispolIn of Field Marshal, Kitchener succeed-Thre as n gnthtth ps0asgraedrer,%Ing himsdped aboet 'yhos!-hecid "heeogls' e supplies. The difficulties of trans- Palestine, In Cyprus, in Egypt. Kitch- ed the Duke of Connaught as Comn- pointing-that is, no "gum boil." The1 recall the identity of the title givenismhoe "Dntpyt poratin mst e eormuseThre nermangedto dat hmsef t th maderinChif ad Hgh omms dctr ugedimmdiae etratin. o JsuheSoals is"dlivrane" he ides lokdddwn."OhweCer."Thys are military experts who think that wy fth aie.H curdntsioner in the Mediterraneain, and Te paretimmbjecte-excase . th us to re al vere 17, frmwhch ogt"Rbsad Facei te UcePi whe th hitor ofthewaris ritenonly their language but their very In- made a tour of England'a colonies tn° dentist had told them it would be this rough, untutored man doubtletss clyuko.Rnrud ot n gi n w in perspective, this Caucasian cam- itonation, and could live amo>ng the organize their fighiting forces. -On dangerous! The chibi, suffered for -got the hint.kckuanjmp"Tethywnde. hnhe paign will be one of its most Interept- Arabs, as safe from detection as Kim his way from Australia he visited two more <lays and nights. Finally 31. Thou and thy house--Compareonrdglietewdoehadnt it succeeds' Making a Mummy l'ight. 1n oEgadi 90 lslts doctor. Counsel insisted upon im- be saved alone, by father!" From theAbgluprsinhrtoa.'ttlheceks -- ~~~~~~~~~~service prior to the war ha<d been Inj mediate extraction. A first-class'very fir.4t Christianity is social. On Ims o r, h huhadb-eesiig when the Grand Duke Nicholas wap carg.eut nr aL 1 a ord Cromner a great work. He sue-~ extracted the tooth. ,Psfoe on verse 34.Shdinokoweatyowactwsthkng ernfrot i wa doe ewth a ewto nither money nor p w r ret, ad n ,wth ag at f 1 ,0 ,0 ontned ok rn a high tem rt re d oes32 nThintved to follow the ord e < pd adhl up er an sos'sg en the importance of Asia Minor a.s a but the maps and reporta he sent ka k from the British Government, createri have chills and somne delirium. She time; verre 31 is the summary of an "Wythporitlt ng"sdcy"-Yu' theatre of war and his special ability to Lontdon were mot a of teirkn.,a great cotton-raising industry. wa nhtzdoc oreonthe epsto ihu hc h alt to performn there a task of prodigious onlnt80 ers nade Bitis haVnce- When War Began. ninth Jay. and theni it was found that'believe would have been unintelligi---- proportions. If that is true, the com n a1Eze8 m..4s.el hace \hen war broke out Kitchener was necrosis of the jaw-,,,one was exten- ble. We may he sure the jailer re- moepoieadta eadtrbcues Rusiancaein183 -h dadbeisia lend utlevdth is.nnrisdwudsad ut eaesoedaeergudeny odotoet- serveianoresig it high y ts agte def After the bombardment of Alexan- in England to accept promotin in the'sve. 1.und drand, but on thlea 12 oth hungdeas son ar e haudstakn Oeo h heds mrc i.'nttm e for unoubtedy the erman eredri nlnd har i tohereorganete peMiieretodenhearSeretar of St'ate1 day the child died from blood poison- in their message of hope. The gospelanirpivtlre rk:"rmysowaesf unprpard i Asa Mnorandtakn Eyptan rmy Kicheer olutee- Mm e ma headees nde inhising-acue sptiemi. sorywastol tothewhoe fmil ma ormaynotbehefetedon he ovrcoe t ou have the willinget tmoeElsa had stor- e oreand was holding Francigscrambled en- ýda ood deal, but rt e into the saddle, vas holding tleaf oven pied a four-es oe' five th s week! heo e a sut n en c o her to drop the rens. ,se rearet again, hadhe ,tly than anyoned he rear before, and h own. Francie gave a she found herself way linging to the slender r migh. ied Sally. "Look what sa Bl! already looking, and. hands as she . jooked. ,pen?",.she cried. But ,d very soon. Franciel' Rob called, y off his own horse. n inch.!" t- very still and very li ot ery even when t he had better not tery wn himself, for the might make her fall. ncle PhIl," he said. aght hold of him. "No, ,she sid. "4Youpre am; you sta-y here to e falls." 1as fRast as her f eet er, through thorns and out end, on a shOrt cut sB When she found came hurrying back, til holding on. ýve girl to be sure!" Uncle Phil, as he stood lifted her down in his rancie laughed, and Rob Pped their hands, but head. Francie said, pointing es the briers had made hem," said Elsa, seizifig ught to hurt." )ent the tree horse down ýng Francie Into the sad- estood beside her with he horse's back, and she l ride. She rode un- were pink again and her forget her agaisi," Elsa Bwhispered into the tree ear, "I'm go glad 1 didnt il Companion. ec cannot get either woo lothe herself. Tees een'thisi and the, next ýr German chemistry to ýe simple problem of ý 'rpldman was useless. Employers don relief expedition in 1884; and During all the years- the BriteishTh grat on-er s tat oresumr. ry.Havng crippldi Th greatwonibelieved, mGeodu(margin)--vi were urged for patriotic reasons to stayed tilt the hero of Khartoumn had people hadl looked, on Kitchener's1 ers do not have a fatal result fromn de. Despite some belatell commentators, re-employ all crippled men possible.1 been avenged. At Handoub he was silent but effective work; they hadly lvri etrn on there Je all the difference between be- The government in setting the example! severely wounded by a' bullet that never been able to fathom his person- 1ýis extracted instinctively by eey lieve and believe mn. the first, lin by retaining cripples in the service of 1 hatttered his jaw and buried itsef ality. A cockney non-commissioned body. The identical principle op. ýGreek as In English, being limited to sTa triu oe Vih the State-owned railways, in hisq neck, and he wvas invalided officer, who hadt seen mnuch servicei plie" in the treatment of "uleersted accepting some one"@ word. To la eWht It has been pointed out t-hat the back to England. In 1888 he returned under him, summedi up the generai ot. heacèt sprtto God at his word of course logically in-. u f h ok go ernment can go further and, in'to Egypt as adjutant-greneral te, head· opinion when he said of Kitchener: i that it was dangerou94 to treat an ul- volves the higher trust,sotathr placing orders or awarding cont -arts, the First Brigade of Soudanese troops " 'E's no talker. Not 'im. 'E's alI cerated tooth In an'Intelligent way is iern;buinJh8.3.t Insist that a proportion of the work- at Toski, where he led the fina charge. steel and b'ice." doesn't deserve serious considerationt the two phrases denote very differ- Srn.p el igy norsiAd ers employed be war cripples. Time and again he wa smentioned in De&Mane Deeds.,Î to-day. It is a adcommentary upon en epe--achtesqe'ia t"Nmxi, 7 wlh h 'the segregation of cripples in dis- despatches. Prom Govmero-eneral His face was that of a man who: the statue Of the dental Profe»sion the men w h27 25 nd on5 sth atr bble otofte ihtad a couraged. They are returned as fer, of t.he Red Se& littoral and Command- neither asked for symnpathy ntor want-. that such a delusion should be fout- t J e a orhetidndetso the rock so didfo this ogolr .as possible to their own communities ant of Suakim he was mode Chief of ed it. He had steady blue-grey pa-s. ered by one of its members. The lit-towgttecmenrsngbbeonheipofheacnttr;y-a and their own Jobs. Where the crip. Police et Cairo, and on Lord Cromer's alonless eyes and a heavy moustache t la girl in the present instance u **polfeljyusy pnaeul.teshrs pling has unfitted a man for the same recommendation was promoted to be covered a moub mat shut.eose and enplaine for manly days prior to 'h u dosfl pnteprh.igi ote ask he la trained for one au near like Birdar ln 1892.Re was only a coloneld lk wl rp ebeIlieved the bMbng Ineident that shoe eouldnt 'CTO 5EN.e lgn addnisteuiesa It et ho can perform, the idea being te then. wt l i'ih ntegset ofchew popcorn r pes(ta, "becaüseIt --.sleyntso oiN ogd tr pig utilise the training he already has as Slaughter of Dervbm" wrk Aef-cons. hurt her teeth b-ýprovngthat' the H oh pntalseigero h etrbsu far asis possible. Mr. Murtrie cit"@ Four y«er later he beganbis k*dance. For b ' camnd nt-heart.'trouble had already begun anrd that'Gtsn fy w tt tere sn otepol*tepo h seWral examples. ~conquest of the Sondan.The Dmn- «ednesbuhe wa e'Ofeeling te athing was a na coineideneem erNx itr i ogt h ekht eé:A h$ A young, paperhger, iwho had lost glaexedt.o wn imth rn o smpth r hoin mreianof- theonmi apetso te ord ...heSog f h Wofs hesogofWhekgtt bis leg, sho;wed artstiC Ablty aM namajor-genera, and the next yar, e4r who faiedhim onee-gotno e"moad1 WHAT FECH OhiE, waWr M e nertood In 1914, 4 hWorlS#1ma id enethesttist. Bit-former employer deat. His% !lmstep à ,as a*-ored iNt4 e- nieh fKteee' ermane Have"se#looi 0iere ids, an 0popemade inrylo tohedphftigandadsis vul re-enage him.from Cairo to Khartoum. Ithad to activýe iffe were spentout"ideof the The" ,-0 t= etePi ee 0asto why Atacal UblIentions shoi ote ufc "pd nee A bartwhose lft foot ws cr=sh- cross the deset from Halfs to AbeBeritish les, and for that resn tdvoeftm saeto thuiemletin upsig euyrt r ldasbeng intrtmed i bookkeepf Ing amed. 2M0miles of sand. Experta'hbsbeen saideof ieshe Mdint reaUy r mRëw- that Germany in b"r Mamb" iteafeueadyt ancmfmerciatl itic that eçoffed at the d",.i - t wam absurd; Iknw Egnd whenthe wrbroke exceeds b&0ann t o u st Isedhq»ng lþedlyfor p¢e ocl ht"btsm M" enter'the grain tradeand tan- the entire carrying céapacity of the'out. ainbetftbe , hlws i h eite M, >n soatns fmdr*aee sxa a age thé- bakeofa dead relative r train would be taken Vppby t*ae waer 1- M-- egbrndo aRo nnsabeome stead-absbees atrs 1 y ounit farmer, who 10«ost oneMt iîupply necessary-fer the locomotve.&s w-eseaw withrathn a ftare é s axapg thteeseQthtaa tnird& stdigaricultur, a m"ie MW ndBut KItchener built on, and as he ' o heUms ate ae n stest'dgsrn falrÜ M t rteth his14left hand- built he bored, and he#struckwatab n Apitoodr hd adplt PaeemeaM .ïs t heWfeia ta 302 has been arranged *t h t & allthe sands just whm ereheusde , and mna hdbs o oetm oesisteme f é'aeo j*after the butinéess and of hls -thet work wa's enished un Octber#ti a= ial9here he hbad be-s rns teo h arm. 1897. In ~M April of the following yearw tetdAti a y em -- --,Ki"twnr won U*9 batCle of the At- nad to b 0 as fign of aa M ar«ket- bar, and dh 6pt. 2 caughttup withCa fr opitro a tre had the Mahdi's, førcetat 0Osdurman &and tlà perature and whMe teamy t sealed his former Viery Oat te"n forSae Hre- Kalfas dom Gode wa asa 4d.te ede b&Mtbo& Pf m Force the Water while in the. heart of the tkness, the dusk singsthe edom:-.-Spring up, -. re sing uinto I161-, An4 take up this song, carry- d forthith *verê hr ufttd 0pontane. :te that, mysterious power thai; t -of vthi bu hihreaheâ-dëwn to the our e sd sndg tia - i terna stte ;int e -stse ter m j