encanto Sma 07774 0c \t\ A ~ 3 WHY HUN HATRED BURNS HOT AGAINST ENGLAND Wounded Pride and Vanity Chief Causes Says a Swedish Nestral ~--Prussian Government's "Strafe" Propaganda Covered Half Century The intense hatred of Great Britain which Is expressed daily in ninety- filne out of 4 hundred households in every part of the German Empire, is Let new. The seeds of this poisonous weed were sown by Bismarck in the middle of the last century. They were fertilized . by England's sympathetic, but feeble, attitude towards Denmark in 1864, and especially by the equivo- cal action of England fn 1870.1. It 18 lucoucelvable to one who, like myself, writes a Swedish traveller, Hved in Prussi. for some 10 years, and was educated at a German Univer sity, that the British Government or individual Englishmen should ever have been deceived as to the aims of Germacy in regard. to the British Frapire. It cannot be sald tha: the Germans have ever hidden their senti- ments about the English. When arrived In England some seven years Agu from Germany, | was quite sur prised that there was no anti-German feeling In England. A few wise news- pipers from time to time called atten- tion to German hostility, but for the rest ir seemed to me that the public were drugged by the cynical visits of German burgomasters, professors, and the like. ! Prince Henry's ODuplicity I remember the amazement with which & young German acquaintance of mine in London watched an auto- mobile tour of Great Britain organized by Prince Henry of Prussia. It was of course a spy expedition, and the Germans thoroughly knew it to be such. Prince Henry's anti-English sentiments are well known to every one in Berlin. He is largely respon- sible for the ruthless treatment of certain English prisoners at Nauheim. Frince Henry's is a typical example of the better class German attitude towards England. Over an intense hatred it is deemed wise to throw a cloak of bonhomie and friendship. Thereby you deceive the Englander and at the same time obtain inform- ation. The bases of German hate are envy, greed, and the resentment that all Germans have against the undoubt- ed air of 'Superiority adopted, and probably with very good reason, by the English towards Germans. "One day we will show these decadent Britons that wo dre no longer the poor relations of jEurope," was said to me at Frankfurt. * It has taken G0 ears of propaganda, deliberately apréad by the Government to bring about this state of feeling, and nothing but a settlement of the War on German sefl, and far forward on German soil, will, in my opinion, check it. The greed of obtaining Eng- lish colonial possessions, the emvy of Ahe lofty position occupied ir the world by Great Britain, the determin ation of the second-rate races that compose Germany to make the world believé that they are first-rate, added to the horrible surprise of the inter vention of England in this war, are factors which confronted me every day in my tour, with the very few exceptions that I have noted. Nor has the conduct of Great Britain during the war been of a nature to do much to change German opinion. Wounded Vanity Wounded vanjty is another cause of German anger. Great Britain has been very slow to realize the services in certain branches of science and indus- try which have been conferred upon the world by the Germans, Let us admit that the German: are the first chemists in the world. Their engineer. ing, as a rule, is copy of American en- gineering; their shipbuilding a slavish copy of English shipbuilding. On the whole, I am inclined to think that Great Britain has been too cavalier in her treatment of German science and chemistry. A great many efforts have been made by Germans, who largely control the Austrian Press, to inculcate hate in Austria. They have had very little success. | did not hear one single expression of hatred towards England or France in any of the Austrian towns I visited recently: | argued with 4 good many Germans'as to the wis dom of their attitude towards Great Britain. 1 pointed out that it would be unreasonable to expect i _e English to admit Germans to social intercourse within a generation or two after the war, "After the war," was the reply, "the English will ha.e to do what we tell tiem, 80 far as commerce is concern: ed. The vast crowds that congregate at cricket and football games in Great Britain could not be gdthered in Ger- many. The people are not sufficiently interested in the first place, and secondly if they did become interest- ed, the Government would soon step In. There would be an edict issued | in short order banning the ;.me under | severe penalties, and it would soct die [a natural death. But the Germans | regard all games of sport as 2 waste | of time, and again most of the young | men who might watch them are away | engaged in soldiering. EE A A A i IN PrP S oldiers Fought Lions in East African Campaign Wild Beasts Invaded Kraals in Search of Food, Killing Many Sheep--Trap Set By Soldiers Killed One Cub. In the Rast African' canipaign the British -are fighting lions as well as | According to a story the | lions got into a kraal cOitaining a | number of food animals belonging to | Germans. 4 garrison snd Killed 40 sheep and goats. Next morning a gun was set, and at seven o'clock lions again ap- peated. The gun was heard to no sign of any more animals. Again the gun was charged, although it was | lions | not thought likely that the would venture to return the same night. They did come back, however, and this time successfully avoideq the gun and got the remainder of the prey that they had previously left Although - the intruders were dis tinctly heard by the sentries the night was so dark and rainy hat nothing could bé done and once more they got away. On the following night a trap | having been cut and covered over, a | number of officers watched in the trenches. later, x" shot, which sounded like a good hit, rang out. bu: as nothing happetied, the party remained on watch until after midnight. morning a fine big lioness was found not 30 yards away. It seems that one of the officers in the trenches kad thought he saw a lion, and fired, whereupon, the animal sprang forward aud landed on th top of the trench ' fteelf. Luckily this wa strong, and 4s not more was heard it was be- | Hevod had a i Lénaan's Colossal Exhibition What will probably be the greatest Trade 'Bshibition ever held is the British' Empire Fair, now being or- afzed for 1917. The building is to erected at Willesden Green, Lon: jon Ni will cover an area of 610,000 squgre feet--three and a half times the size of Olympia--and will cost a fafilion dollars. Some¥hing like 3, exhibitors, representing seventy dis: the darkness that thivanimal ade off. £0 | oft, and on investigation a full grown | cub was found dewd, but there was | Threequarters of an hour | Next | [ tt ett ts pats atns | AomimAL scott | i yr = 4 All over the world the sailor man is known as the "handy man" of war The title belongs to him because he can fight equally as well firma as at his proper place ing main But to Admu.ral Sir Perc y Scott of the British navy goes the cred't for proving that a sailor is a landfighter -and a blamed good ope, the Admiral is known as "the handy man," and a little story of .his valor lies back of the cognomen In the Boer war he was Capt. Seott. When the Boer attack on Ladysmith begun the British had no big guns. The Boers were bringing up several i Then Capt. Scott solved the problem. Down on the coast his men were loll ing about the cruiser Powerful and letting the soldiers {| With a sailor's ingenuity Rcott stri ped the cruicér of its 4.7 guns, | provised gun carriages from terial at hand and brigade going overland to the Ladysmith. on terra the rag relief of the fleld artillery needed to repulse the Boers wind save the town. He's | Vice-Admiral Sir Percy Scot: now, aud nothing comes up In the navy that does not call for, his opfaion, | especially bn ordnance top' gigantic sea rifles. | -------------------- . | The Arab and Mis Ways The Arab who is fighting for his | Turkish master in Mesopotamia has sonre curious ways. He takes off his | shoes when he enters a house, but keeps on his hat. He redds and writes from right to left. at the idea of giving up his s for a4 'oman. Taken all round his wives and daughters have a poor time of it. The Arad has one strong virtue, and that is, he is rarely seen drunk. ¢ rarely takes on anything worth doing, or atlempts to carry out an | been do the fighting. | P- | sfon of sound. im- | to tell the e- i¢t distance at which any the ma-d sound ceases soon had his naval | | masses of | impenetrable to the waves of scund, He is | Britain's gunnery expert and has in- | vented several improvements for the | The Arab laughed enterprise. He lives in a rut, ir fger | lleved that the ~--London Daily Graphic A A A A dn AAI INP AN ~ Treachery of the Troublesome to British The British or Indian soldier does not know that the tribesmen of the inverted double deltas of the riyers of Mesopotamia are the descendants of Khariji Anarchists of the "th Cen- tury and of the Carmathian outlaws of the 10th, that among them smould ers the sub-conscioug fire oi the cause of the Caliphs w!om the Turks re placed and persecuted, lit to them for above eighteen generations all or grualzed government has mn the em blem of cruelty, oppression and rob bery, that their chiefs hae of set pur pose been schooled in treachery by generations of perfidtious Turkish Bey and Persian Governors. The B or Indian soldier does not know Since Ja'afer tlie Barmecide was exe cuted by the despairing Harun-al Raschid no man south of Bagdad. has stood for justice and right-doing; that | all has been wrongdoing from the days when the Mongols pierced the | canals of irrigation and annihilated a| and | population of eleven millions, thence to the coming of the Young Turk Committee of Union and Pro. gress and the German Concession: aires, who have .hrived on intrigue and vickedness in these latter days. All the British and Indian sdldier knows is that his dead comrades' bodies are stripped and mutilated, tbat if a trooper lose his way alone Le is! that a bullet ! has sung past his own topl or pug-| little likely to return, garee from a mud wall aboy: which flutter: a white flag, that he has now and again found s loved friend lying with tliroat cut from ear to ear. And the name Aral is hated. After the war it will be small wonder if the Indian veterans will want to make \he | har- | Arab conform abeolutely or be ried out of the land aud back into the desert whence he¢ came. If muc. goed is to come out of the native Mesopo tamian he needs another master than the Turk For years the Porte has applied steady pre Iré upon the native population to make them settle down. At German suggestior the Turk has increased the nlember cf military and polick posts to make brigandage unprofitable. He has plant. | ed colonfes of Circassians by way of example. He has brought about much forcible. settlement He has contrived AIA A A A Sf dd CLOUDS IN WAR TIME In England | Have Remarkable Effect on the Re- . sults of Battles Why can the roar of guns some times be heard when warships are in visible, while at other times the: are inaudible though the fighters are in sight? This is a question which has often asked ' an nvestigation has shown that there is hothing in nature that. varies more'than the transmis. It is quite impossible to be heard. Battles have been lost tlirough this fact; troops having failed to hear guns . { intended as sienals for them The guns of the Powerful made just | Changes in the air, moisture, snow, or fog, all influence the carrying power of sgund. Certain clouds o are found to be almost although light can penetrate them such clouds happened to come be tween a battleship and a shore, even { bread they deperd although the distance was slight, it | would be impossible to he r the guns from that shere, though the flashes and smoke other clouds, reflect and echo sound almost as much as solid objects would do; the long rolling of thunder is probably due to this echoing. even Russian' Wolves Alert Large packs of wolves oa the rigit bank of the Dvina have done a lot of damage among the , horse: and other domestic animals. There have He | beer cases in. which they have car og i8 no ry affectionate, is very. .| ried out watchdogs from fartnyards| has for this the large ead Ta so litte in yorv senor. | = the. full light of day. and the peas- | buildings which were allotted to the ants have been compelled to beat off their attacks with clubs. wolves | his legs had been led by nups of a curious order. | | i Arabs 1 4 4 : { 5 £ to get considerably more land under cultivation and has increased the se- curity of life and property and con- sequently the desire to wok for a living, but he has fafled in two cardinzl voints. He has not given honest gov- ernment or capable administration. He has not secured sufficient popula- tion of the right character to make this desert blossom STOICAL TOMMY How Some Soidiers Bear up in Spite of Terrible Wounds Perhaps Mr. Atkins is the greatest of all, the full and perfect hero: v hen tragedy comes "Give my love to Patrick Street, Waterford," says an Irishman. "It's there the best girl on earth lives; and tell Ireland we are doing our duty." "It's not mueh to look forward to," mutters the Englishman, after cne of utated, "but my | mother will be proud ef ie!" | "Is there anything I can do for you, old chap?" a Grenadier asked a caval- ryman, who lay stricken unto death. "Yes," he answered, "you might light my fag for me. You will ind matches and all in my inside pocket' "What gets over me," sald a sol- dier who had been shot in the feet, "is how It ain't done more damage { to my boot." How John; Ruskin's heart would | have warmed to the Lancashire Fusi- ler who, with two ghastly - wounds in his breast, was calmly reading "The Crown of Wild Olive." A man of adventurous spirit had several "close shaves," and at last was shot clea:. through the body. His comrades ran to him, raised him {up, and warted to go back, but he answerdd, "No; let me be; the beg- gars have done me this time. Get these chaps away, because they will be good for something again," he add- ed about "As for me, hoist me up Aauick; give me my rifle, and I'll give them Bosches. another round." | So he did, and so he died, and 'a' 'more heroic death it would be hard to match.-- | The London Fortnightly Review. m-------- 1 THE ANTWERP NEWS Belgian Ladies Who Live Only on What Townspeople Allow Them Antwerp, the city. of churches and chimes, is crowned with history, and its name will figure prominently when the page of the future somes to be written. that ever resounds with the sound of church bells, will doubtless have heard during the siege the- sinister chime of a bell that has not been rung within the history of living man. | The bell hangs in a convent support- nuns hav ways, and consecrated 10 the church. their wealth Having taken the vow of poverty, they walk through life | barefooted, and hold no communica. tion whatever with the busy populgee outside their walls. For their solely off the charity of the townspeople, who re- | ligiously leave food on their doorstep every day. The bell hanging in their could be seen, ! Convent is never tolled, it being kept A$ a last desperate resort to inform { the city, that the nuns ean live no longer: unless they have food. The Crystal Palace Barracks One of the most interesting centres of warlike activity in London is the Crystal Palace, where The Royal | Naval Division .ie being trained. Be { Ing & naval corps the men, i sleep in of course, ocks, and cach: battalion purpose one of Dominions at the Festival of Empire. It is bei) Thus one battalion is spoken of as have been! being housed in "Canada" another two other wounded men. ! The romantic Belgian city, | These | e all been grect ladies who | : have renounced the world and all its | ily | Aa} AND SOLDIER YARNS | A Clergymai, Sees Both Sides of Life at the Front and a Few Stories Here Are Appended A camp chaplain holds "services," end, if he be the right sort of chip lain, he lets it be known that he will gladly perform any other service for { Tommy Atkins that is possible. Some of these other services are quit. pos-| | sible, but very pecular; others are peculiarly impossible. 1 admit that | | quite a little thrill was mine when a | burly Tommy sought me out, saluted, | and said, "Shoule be much obliged, sir, if you could do me a little kind- | ness." '¢ "Anything," I replied, e:: .usiastie-! eliy, but imprudbntly. "Would you lead me a coupldh of bob, hen, sir?" The thrill petere but I parted { An hour . ter there .ame another Tommy, with siining eyes. "Please sir, I've come for my { '0 shillings I had to request information. And I got it. "Friend of mine said, sir, that an old lady had given you a lot of two-shilling pieces to give away." Oh, Tommy Atkins! , Gently 1 dis'llusion ed the new mer, and the sh'ne went out of his eyes. "I'l Lreak his Lloomin' jaw!" he said, adding, "Beg pardon, sir." I advised him to leave his friend's jaw alone, and gave him a shilling to put the shine back in his blue eyes And I'm glad now that I did, be cause--because he was worth it. His eyes are closed for ever now. Hill 60, "Don't Lay it on Too Thick" "Got a gathering in my finger, sir," | said another Tommy. "Would it be! troubling you to write to the missus! for me?" "Not a bit! What shall I say?' 1 asked "Oh, anything you! like. Only don't lay it on too thick, {else I'll have her down 'ere to see | what I'm up to." "'My dearest | for a start, } "No! I never puts anything to be-! gin with. You don't know my missus, | J can see you, one of tle hest, but she won't 'ave any flummery! You tell er | 'ope this'll find 'er quite well as it leaves me at present, an' put this in--a money order--an' say there ain't no shops round 'ere so she's to get erself something for 'er birthday, an' I ain't killed yet an' don't mean to be, an' tell 'er to kiss the kids for me- an' | ike that, you know." His eyes blinked a bit, and I went on writing. "Anything else?" 1 asked. "Ask Her to Excuse Mistakes" "Lei's see. Oh, tell er she can pray reg'lar for me, like she says, but she! needn't get 'ousemald's knee doin' it. Yes, an' put 'Your affectionate hus- band'--no, not 'Your lovin' husband"-- she'd know that wasn't me--an' put a P.S. to tell er you wrote it an' to excuse mistakes." I looked up, smiling. He's safe, so far, thank God. Here's one of the "impossible" re. quests. A Tommy came and showed me a marriage certificate. | them things?" he asked. 1 said 1 did. "How much are they?" Thinking he meant a copy, | told him. "Well," he said, "me an' ®& friend want a couple." I couldn't oblige, not even my offered me "ten Hob," and not ord to nobody about it." Marriages uce marriage certificates and not Otherwise. Tommy and his frien: had partners, but they had omitted the marriage ceremony. It's all right now, but I am sure Tommy thought I was making a fuss about nothing, for the excellent reason that he told {me so. I'll help our Tommies all | | can, but 1 draw the line at forgery. { bins | The General's Teeth | In the retreat from Mons a "dis: | | tinguirhed general" thought to snatch | {a few hours in bed In a peasaat's cottage. He left his artificial teeth on the washstand. At night he was aroused with/the news that the enemy was near and hurriediy left, forget. ting his teeth. After subsistirg on light foods for a fortnight he battle of the Marne. brought the general back to the village. Although only the four walls of the cottage were left one of the general's ADC's ex- | plored the wreckage. Under a lot of chicken bones and champagne bottles { they found the teeth intact. The | general then had a square meal wife'?" 1 suggested, but Tommy wasn't A Slight Misunderstanding Genera! Sir lan Hamilton is a poet | of m: it, and at a certain banquet one of fhe speakers, referring to the @neral"s political abilities, that he had been "kissed | Muses." The next day one of the newspapers announced in large type | that Sir lan had been "kissed by the! | nurses." | WOULD She's a good "uun, mark! "You keep , when | declared | by the! STOP THE WAR BY GRANK INVENTIONS War Office Deluged With Offers of --One Man Claimed to be A oh "For Heavew's sake, let rig see the Secretary for War immediately!' 'The breathless request was tender- ed to a Whitehall official who, as it happened, had as much power of granting it as he had of producing the King himself. Realizing that his lordship was not within a mile of the building, the caller obligingly re- marked that it would la = pity for Britain if any time was lost, as he possessed the means of ending the War in a week. | He then explained that he had dfs covered a way of making the twenty. | six German States fall 'u:'ously out with each o her, though w. at the dis- covery actually was he dic not conde- | scend to say. He was respectfully re- férred to Downing Street; but as the War goes on, something must have gone wrong with the recipe. Torpedoes 'Would be Foiled There was one crank in particular who haunted the Adm: alty offices; | indeed, he may still do so, for his pertinacity in the face of many rebuffs | was phenomenal. | He prepared the ground for every call by an advarce guard in the shape | of an effusive epistle, reating with | some new phase of his discovery, but | he found it impossible to excite the | Lords of Admiralty, or even interest | them. His theory--it was something | more, judging by a bulky model which | he carried wrappeu up in an old news- papcr--was that if a warship were coated externally with li.s new secret wash, it would be impossible for a| projectile to pierce it, owing to the | highly glazed surface, which would! deflect the blow Apparently, the Admiralty chiefs, if| they thought of the matter at all con- cluded that the British navy was in no particular danger. Anyhow, nothing hae yet been heard of this freak ide-. i When submarines began most expectedly | power, responsible naval officers of | all ranks and degrees were inundated | with schemes of repression. If a tithe | of these could have worked half as| well as the proud inventors claimed, | un- | to demonstrate their fell] | not a submarine, that wasn't hid away | high and dry on the shore, would | have lived an hour. = } -A certain M.P,, who writes on naval matters, was generously offcred, by an | inspired crank, half the glory if hel would pioneer a veritable submarine | staggerer into the favoraule not'ce of| the country. Alas! the great chance | was allowed to go a-begging, the cure being reckoned infinitely worse Ahan | the disease. 'It consisted of nothing otlier than a liquid composition, which | the inventor maintained would in- | stantly attract the hydrogen gas in! the sea-wat'r, and explode just as much of the ocean as was wished, according to the quantity of this mir- aculous composition used. Making Towns Vanish Of course, not a few schemes pf crankdom are a bit removed "frdm the hallucination, hare-brained stage. This much might be fairly accorded to the researches' of a certain en- thusiastic patriot, whg modestly ex- plained that he had blundered across the principal ingredient by accident. He was the self-confessed discoverer of a smoke ball alleged t« hav- ihe power to produce almost instantly a million times its own bulk in smoke, s0 dense and heavy that under its mantle the .hreatened steamer could steal away into safety. He further claimed that, with the ald of a few of these balls, a whole town could be made to vanish from sight if menaced 'y a Zeppelin. Fin- ally, he cheerfully offered to give a practical demanstration, but, provi- dentially, tha offer does not appear to have been accepted Returned With Thanks One outcome, at leas, of the Ger- man use of asphyjiating gases has been a furious eruption of crankdom. Cranks have tumbled over each other with the most amazing projects and contrivances, both for circumventing the evil-fumes and also for counter- attocks. Not the least extraordinary of these is an invention, still very much in! the chrysalis stage--a wind-jamming | instrument, guaranteed (on paper) ta! throw vapor against the breeze. The inventor was good enough to explain that his idea was not so much to play | the German game, as to return to! them with thanks any future offerings of gas they gmigh. make. | the Ocean > over the tablecloth. Every Oonoeivable Description ble to Explode Sections of "1) » : or | LEMBERG i Lemberg, the capital of Galicia, . the fourth city in Austrin in sises ranking after Vienna, Prague, and Trieste. Te It T~situated in a parro among the kills about fifty miles' the Russian frontier, 370 miles nosth- east of Vienna, and just uniler 300 from Budapest. Founded in 1259, Lemberg was an important Polish city from 1340. It fell to Austria at the first partition of Poland. At one time the city was fortified, {but over a century ago the fortifies- tions were converted grounds. From a railway standpoint, Lem Lerg is a centre of considerabl. im- portance. Lines from Vienna, Buda: pest, Stanislau, Ozer. vitz, and also from Roumania meet just outside the city, while a main west and east connects Lemberg with Cracow and Przemysl, this line continuing across the AustroRuesian frontier. ' Lemberg has a population of about 200,000, 80 _ar cemt. of which are Poles, many of whom are Jews. The population is mainly of the commer cial and middle .laes. From a religious standpoint Lei: berg is particularly interesting, being the seat of a Roman Catholic, an Armenian, and a Greek Catholic Arch- bishop. In the seventeenth century and ear- lier it was called "the town of the monks," and to-day has nearly thirty churches And several monasteries. The Gothic Roman Catholic Cathe. dral and the Armenian Cathedral date from the fourteenth century. The University, founded fa 1784 and * recognized in 1817, has more than $00 students. y Its library contains 86,000 volumes and 470 manuscripts. Here is also the library of the National Institute, which contains 81,000, volumes and 3,000 manuscripts, chiefly of Polish literature, and ' large collections of coins, paintings, etc. into pleasure THE SIRDAR Britain is fortunate in having at the supreme head of the tian army at this critical pe:fod of Turkish men- ace Sir Francis Wingate, Sirdar of Egypt, who knows, next to Lord Kit- chener himself, more about Egypt and Egyptian administration than any other soldier. - Like Lord Kitchener, Sir Francis gel to work in the first place to mas- ter Arabic. He is, indeed, a wonder ful linguist, and has been known to say that there was no lan ¢ to which he applied himself that he could not master in three months, Sir Francis has held the posit'on of Sirdar of Egypt longer than any other man, the appointment dating back fif- teen years, when he himsélf was only thirty-eight years of age. The stories of Sir Francis' active service would fill a book. He has been mentioned many 'times in de- spatches, hag received the thafks of both Houses of Parliament, holds: the D.S.0, and Las a chest full of médals and decorations. He is an excellent raconteur, and is rather fond of telling a story of a certain' young attache of the British Embassy at Petrograd. During i din- ner at the palace, at which the Czar g was present, this official hac the mis- fortune to upset his shss of wine "Do they do that in England?' asked the Czar, with a smile. "Sorietimes, sire," 'replied the attache; "but in England nobody makes any comment u R." It vas a curious coincidence that Sir Francis. on.y daughter was born on the day when he defeated and rid the Soudan of the Khalifa st Um De- brikat, in 1899, --e KING EQWARD FORESAW His Statesmanship on Russian Ques tion is Here Revealed / A hitherto unpublished letter writ: ten forty years ago by Gambetta, the French statesman. to a Corsican Sen: ator contains some striking prophe- cles. He says: "Affairs concerning Russia become more numerous and important every day. Lyons (then Ambassa'.or at Paris) keeps the Prince of Wales (later ialward VIL) posted "daily as to Ittes raised and encountered by that Russia's political dreams will be fm. peded by Austria, who Lis already assumed a hostile attitude. She is fn fluencing Roumania. Caa you in the course of time Austria herseli with Roumania and against Russia? What a condict! "The Prince of Wiles, ho foresees it. He does not tinct trades will be represented Japan's War Trade * Three Japanese ship iin | ar- run- regularly to London, instead of ohe, as before the war : of the I scared from the forests of Livonia { in "New Zealgn&™ atid 30 on. {and Poland by the incessant artillery | fire. Ls ja pas en | Acrn Club Members Three Huns Killed Simultaneously Adol Kai.merer, a cooper of Waldkirch, Baden, has received the news that hice 3¢ hig Tow sous have, The of .aviators® certificates % pS been HU AR eranted by the Refyal Aero Club of Saxe Japanese in Londs and |attack on HartmannsweilerKopt in| Great Britain noe numbers over others re also seeking British drders, | the Vosges. 2,000 names. / Ancient English Superstition { In accordance with a belief in the | West of England, the boots last worn before the man of She | house enlisted ver his § J -- i are hang 9 oe will nd. re as Sergeant (to 1a'her slow rec~ult): "Now then, President Wilson, you're a to wear them again, J long time 1:king. your cost off!"--The Passing show, LonCon. TL pee, LL 1st SERGEANT (16 rather slow Todmuit) ~ Maw then Prosidert Wilson you re & long Limes taking es ly beet /