5 re: ion se, in ie enue (four times ‘ verses 12-15), shows sis =e - ‘ atached t ‘hi ey 2 aS ee sfeacned fo tls crisis of a ccouNT OF. THE SOLDIER'S e LIFE AT SEA.” Zesson 1x. Jeaus entering Jerusa: tom, Wait. 21. 1-17. Golden “Text, Matt. 21. 9. Verso 1. Bethphage—A village ~wnknowa outside the New Him. From England to oe Service. | them when they saw Jes: tout the desecratera of- Mine tem- 6: 16. pia feat they ex-| Between the end as de pect Jesus t a stop to it?|and the commence fol- Why? Was St ae like the Phari- pas, eon whicl ea .|sees to tolerate an iniquitous cus-|known to his Majesty’ a fortes as! tom that was profitable to them, | the asine season, ir and grow hot over the shooting! of|transports ply between Saaee children Jesus defends is ys ee and many ports overseas, carry- yy # quotation from iag thousands of our soldiers to . Bethany—In the quiet “Gb this Rehan: and stood somew! he stope of the aes of Cab t from -Bethai ane fount of Olives parte ae hills which faced naccigige on ae east. thas oney of The Olivet of the Gospels them life on a atopah ‘comes as a decided nevelty, and not by any means an sa easek one, says Lon- don Answ Of apne “nobody enjoys the gs of mal-de-mer, but once they have survived, the days pass plea- 8! 9 Toot of Chic wae Gethsemane, separate. salem fy the valley of Sent two disciples—We do _ know which two. From the tail given by Mark alone, and from Luke 22° 8, some have conjectured that one of them was Peter. 2, Tho village that is over against you— “previous verse to ‘ make Tgrobable the view that it immediate painter that his ascen- sion took plac a COALING A CUNARDER. there pale ae tor a Single Trip kes Up Four Acres. re ; ‘a eoics of a Cunarder for a } single journey across the Atlantic rae Pee ice coeatant kar is « more serious feature than the < landsman would im: coal train of thicty. cars mea- sures from 500 to 600 feet in length, and a coal depot with twenty-two sets of rails side by side ee cover nals! width of nearly 300 feet, or an that the ‘colt area of over four acres of ground no one of the} altogether. The whole of this huge ig ge Deut. auentity of the best steam coal ob-|s E . tainable is required for each trip Eyery hammock must The Lord haa need of them—|across the Atlantic, and it all has|be rolled and stowed away in the ‘This, and the ready acquiescence of| to be turned ty _steam, he eat and | shortest poeels time, the indicate that the | smok. And y | hundred men rolling Jana feshintg up their bedding, push- so|ing and falling over one another, at |Jaughing and shouting at the top a and the room is decidedly limited. But, although Tommy may. “grouse’’ a little, it takes more than a little inconvenience really to upset him, and it is a happy crowd tiatrjontlde “ite neighbors on the med as possibilities. rolling de: : An aga and a colt— eocpeae is alone in mentioning two an ‘kc € add, LE.” ie early. re} REVEIL ‘Reveille’ bed— 3 and I. Sam. Jesus had some enw nee) with age space in the Seciahioe him (David Smith), but the total|small, indeed, in propor jon, th impre saion of the soy is Bee the | the Srey Lstotiodae® : heir voices in the semi-darkn orders given by he re-| aware of it idden | the mess-deck, is ofie to be remem- sult of supernatural Tenowledge. | de -ep in the Dewalt oP ie igs ves- | bered. 5 Moot and riding upon an as While we are filling our lungs |with ozone the deck we e just at 5 © precincts of the col-| left is undergoing a transformation. ende ered, and is combined with Isa. ry the transit of all these coal-| Mess-tables are fixed in position, 1 ~The position of the quota-| laden trains to the Mersey counts} the forms are secured on either side , alter the declaration by Jesus! for a considerable item to the rail- ot bat the disciples will find, and! way companies; but ras not, as we would naturally expect,!does not end here. after the mention of the forming of es ne procession, is an intimation that a modern cos Jesus was consciously fulfilling pro-| su s Barry or Garston docks, | tributes its stream impartially over phecy. His g thus was no to- Jee oats ton hydrau- lthem, and any luckless wight who ken of humility, since the ass was lic or electric lift arontd rais may happen to get in the way; the a fine beast, used by men and wo-|car bodily and tilt over con-| fatigue-party of barefooted swab men of ran It, serere suka vente direct into one|bers swarm gaily a as the Prince of f Pei ‘or, a , the decks have bee The merry hose-pipe dis: asses were | Met sGbe E time. But this is yet to} for err: aide oF 7 be achieved in the case of these fast | All three synoptists | first-class liners, which are not to| The messing on the boats has im- combination (in the|be exposed to the coal dust that) proved a great deal during the last Greek one word), to emphasize the’ necessarily arises by such process-| few years ane the ie st correspondence. bety the es; therefore the supply has to be|to be despi evitable directions given by oe. Master and/ put in by the older method “burgoo’ FL nares FS what actually occurred These are| almost sure to form the first course brought to t and dis-| and is followed by bread, -butter, pharga I barges, | and brawn, or something equally whicl in long ek eb . Appetites wax lusty by side cae Cunarder whilst at off|moorings in the Sloyne, pee Hee their own outer garments oa put) on the water line a number of ob-j| some on one animal and some on|long oors: thrown open. oh Ree sly the ott Through theta {ie goal de-atioy | decks, le the mess. orderlies and | inte the vast dark caverns by some) their Peers remove the remains ka iseies, i in giving up | hundreds of men working night and|oi the feast, if there are any, and clothing in order to|44y with all their le until the|clean up. : pay homage 0 the King. Compare} whole of the 7,000 tons is put in At about 9 a.m. the only real 2 Kin |W en the number of all those who/ general parade of the day is me eld ravthes ie / ae RRS directly pata in the process| Te troops, in clean attir ths, palm trees. which lined the |i8 found and multiplied by those de-|a rule, with bare f highway. ‘This was emblematic of | P‘ mace on them or have their liv-| pests allotted to them, and there i triumph jing atering to their sane; fol- 9. Multitudes t before! may be assumed th y Ta tter,| Meee aie. cctollcwad Those be oe ag who rec Hied on the uneven de ally. See fore are the crowds which came out|@¢Toss the Atlantic in ease and com-|th2 term, and evolutions are ‘0 meet him (John 12, | fort, the strenuous labor of 10,000; formed that are not to be found| and probably the livel laid down in qe of the text-books| 000 must be involved. n the subje This is particularly | the eagait the instructor be gift of humor. themselve a their toes, plave their hands ca and, after endeavoring aaawy on in the si BURGOO: = + Put on them their RE AD According to this version, the d Je but there Breakfast over, ii ay ultitude follow the ex- - of 20,- wds to the Hosanna to he Take en from Psa. Hosanna’ a pray. chiely at the feast of tabernacle «and through freqtent repetition | ad lost its original ‘signif aan of David where ee praye used | Outy LONG LIVED ENGLISHMEN. hips, down }solem so many long lived. people] scuppers, S not perhaps aston- povee in ts ca. donitl to “find that there are man TTT ALT: be to | Pe pla” haw: wives witty cathy tht SERENE t ri Three Mands hal Between i Them and?King Charles 31. tt is a new experience to ine| ail. GYMNASTICS. hurral the Messiah; and let highest heaven join in he accla ia rel 0. Atl-the city, was sti d At s has been finding peo- i jie aaa va gel i$ ple “who can shake ha so to aean: ee mense numbers ct speak, with a past so remote to the nd to the feast, and) #verage mind that it seems of hoary e apt to know mae antiq siderable about Jesus. Berides ne| Th teapat Saising of Lazarus had Eaprorgn ai, salem. But it is pr ss br ni Reda weravine Kaew compara-| great -arandfather ane born tively litle about him, and ther) the reign of Charles ek this cries were stimulated by ¢ vor of antiquity it is part tl ex Boatrol*aceing the ant Rin | plained ne my being Shore fling halt Messiah upon his throne.| thvough m third year, the Gia Ghat causes of the hamultuouw youngest, child oat of my fa- ve metre Si i arn reflected in verse ther, who had ten children, and who The iinpladcl in. | Was hints se) ae youngest but one the| of t andshakes between them and the King Charles II. he A <iequent intervals the 1 a furious i 1g hither and thither of soldiers and sailors, and out of pvarent ae cones perfect order in consideraoly less time than it takes to teil it Sentries ar their pats prop a Spr eaned ar Otibe eee theis qudeys the orderlies of the Roy al Army Me: dical Corps are in attendance on the invalids in the officers reaper nsible of the rounds, and found otherwi ot is in for a a bad quarter rates Unless we Bs en to be fotaee Neto! for auate, or some similar duty, signing | rest of hay nds, sot ess Danie ke da est hd e at of ‘e ‘am- ofa } himself ~The second cleansing o! late Lord Granville told the ae “eine This event occur red t day (Mark 11. he| Writer that in 1844 John Bright went} jiex parade at the cook’s galley, RGF Mae isis hex’ bie Meathed thet te Bradsha ancashire; to/and in turn, as the numbers of the ‘temple, be retired to Bethany to8| shak hands with J. Horrocks, aged |different messes are called out, they Ler had seen Crom-/yeceive the delicacies apportioned s senior had married! {> them, and convey them to their and the following appointed messes—that is to ay, aie hal this long. lived kone TRUE th ves overlapped Cromwell and toria, ‘There is the dinner—at noon. “pian of ie mainintry, We such ev hers years} the seal t, is BRE of the general purpose of ak ‘serib: by Satiioks Uhroe evangelts | tl Raina SITTING IN THE es ‘table: ah groan of anguish asoond 27 mess, how: fren all the other Lord’ Onslow: who ra Re eae me officer at the execution of Char “The aigays brother of the late Str Fitzroy Kelly jdied 146 years be- | necessary for, ilgrims to Y, set fore Sir Fitzroy the the official half-shekel, in or- pay their be seen sitting in the remains of what was intended to a dinner for sixteen of his comrades. hurt, and another — JUST HAD IT. He (at breakfast next morning) ~They say we are going to have an nary fall this year, my dear. She (frigidly)—Judging from the noise downstairs when you came in lind: ‘and the lame—They | at 2 this TERE: I should say what arouse start made. fearful crash, a wild inrush of wat and men and plates and catables card When the Great Troopships Carry | 4." | of talent amongst the troops them- Bom mbar: has for ae the ae Bt aa the -evenin “The Ber = occurrence, as the See ee it.| ath of eedless to say, smoking ‘between | K' td. the training: in decks is prohibited, though the rulo| Cornwall in Hamilton harbor is not invariably observed ; but it is short shrift for the Tommy caught 1 bedkina te da ent into mourning, SPORTS ON DECK. @ worn for six weeks. mi ‘ts, boxing competitions, and concerts are tl ris ang little boys playing in the shi -| streets were similarly decorated. All the women and: children went into black, an Suciley in-ake Satieaval kam which the competitors sit petae « x pole lashed above a tank filled water, mop-fights, and so on; an the boxing bouts are always full of not understand the deep sonal grief of the loyal islanders, Al! social engagements, no matter ij iow small, were cancele On Monday following, with for- ma! pore iea. Se G preclai a aachaay “of ees were dra up in front of the public, building. General Kitchener, the governor, with medals across his breast, stood ‘on the steps beside the Chief ios tice in gown and wig and all t officials, and read the Fears and, of course, the ladies are to the fore; while there is always plenty Selves. From time to time a ‘trooper’ returning front India is fitted as a hespital-ship. The mess-tables and other paraphernalia are removed from the decks, and in their plac- es are fitted up swinging-beds, for the reception of the poor fellows who, from one cause and another, are being invalided home. It is a sight to make one think profound- ly to see the ema reataS taking pla Some can walk on board | without assistance, some must have} The captain in charge made |@ helping shoulder; but too many marl which stowed lier cuticierai lie prone on their stretchers, and| fo as; and-how much this pro- are ae - remain recumbent un- til the ied ashore to the Gace honuitalee a Nell tley. the battery fired a royal pie, the band played ‘‘God save tl and the populace went quietly home. c each one. As he aor from the a een st ROYAL BILLS. as so awful all Saturday and Sun- y, when we had no pro- claimed.’ The warm feeling of Bermuda towards Ring Geageds heightened by the fact that as a growing boy PAYING How ae of British Ruler Are ept and Discharged. fae eorge came to pre- ide at Marlborough House his Ma- s not | the an eet, fall in ae "the i , | retary om|all her big family the flying ma- ene atsl gave his attenti Wales, he zing the keeping of th there One of us comnredan acta Tittin | ar girl whose great-grandfathe ad | consisting ot fought side S side with Wolfe upon| three clerks, under the control of|the Plains of Abraham. § sed the treasurer, Sir William Carring-|¢9 push her little ton; dockets for goods bought for close beside that « the kitchens, storekeeners’ and but-| Jaboriously departments 0 f the prince and time ies small rs e of hi Ct ether. < One sieht incident shows the in- gave all particulars of | tense loyalty of at least the eur the article bought and the name of| | Bermudian An American e tradesman who supplied it and ent a copy of Miss, Je. 3 §| Queen's | ters; irmly ens courteo! plied that they aca ‘the author malas r queen! The stor. sef-captain’s wi death, and the a hak tradesman who has the royal | her children co ustom must si he fend of the month, when it is com-} oq pared: with his ledger account, | Jace eee [and if it is found t correct, is!taken more humorously, a beauti- discharged diifing the first wack <t folly bound copy having found wel- |the month. No discount is asked| come place there. tor off any of the royal accounts; a| radesman ‘who receives the royal | s informed that he must| (ane goods at the lowest, reason- | able prices and there is never tenyy at bargaining by the official the royal household. | a gener book, from hic thes | fare t | man’s account in the royal ies the ledgers, by the way, are bound | dark red leather, and a crown s stamped in gold on the back nt to RES CRIPPEN CASE PARALLEL. Murderer Caught at rteen Years Ago. Australian isco 2 tradesman is thought to be | making ~ extortionate simply loses e rarely o charges en on the the royal custom r never attempts to do! here are of course several ar ti which-are sa oahed to the roy- al household by aes 8 8 coal, for examp the contra jza_most aaa are made for tors-are he| 80 in the capture of alten murderer, at vy in 18: biigler’ hid: dinedl-¢e¥ers] (hubtia’ lians into the Blue Mountain region i New South Wales and had there aaaiere r their ever es cles jas | is also ¢ hangee contract, su ,|cleaning, carpet. cleaning, and the glass frames | ¥ o giaedeacatie Sydne, estigation followed. The result that the murdered man’s com- a number of large ee are| Panion finally, traced. to itn also cleaned by contract. Buea ship: Swanhila pt. - ll the servants 7 are pa on which Butler had inher he upper servants, eae Foner the name of Lee aster The portant and responsible po-j Swanhilda had already paid by check, ele is| Sydney for San Fran s cae from the treasu | tectives were sent on a mail a eam- department; the other serva er to the latter port, vee they | ° tend at the cletk’s office to receive | awaited the aeen ship. One of their wages. ‘The King’s pee detectiv England for clothes tis, | from Austr tia oS aeosens ry nec- newens extradition papers, and sonal. {joined his companions in Califor- wages ie ci essary candenaeenat al! in the clerical department. We accounts are also discharg- 1 wh , but King Georg. several’ weeks of tiresome, the Farralones, early on Feb. 2. "ee | Ths revenue cutter Hartley, carry- being dehargey bth. ot] det ane the eal cash over the bearded her. After a few words of i “1 /explanation to Capt. Fraser the ExaW cede anlitereds ad BAMlek whe Samples of goods which roy-| e answered to his vic- a'ties may desire to buy are in the ordinary way sent to their place o residence on approval tie roll of the crew. e prisoner was lodged in the | ie ob- ject of our pee apiltitndion: Iked all the way from see him, Butler was fin- aliy taken back to Australia by the ot bite! What is the answer?” | steamer Mariposa, which ttt San Oh, it merely struck me that of Francisco on April 3. He was later ney. ‘There was no chines, have been the hardest to, Ol aR ay CSE taal |keep in touch with the Bwauhilda, eof the Montrose. ie be- D TO iG FLIGHTY. “Necessity is the mother of inven-| peg ae SEs is THE SACRIFICE. Richleigh erat 8 in athe British navy and had led a ains, Ferdin-| vagabond life for many years. Sev- joney. ther victims were charged (unmoved)—I did] against him, but he was tried and once, dear, but it took all of them peeteey solely for the murder of get the money. Lee Well ey “Swanhilda was lost off He is a wise man who knows when aan Island, near Cape Horn, othe teinpl: gates seeking you had had a late fall. are floating across the de con- Tacat ie aang ineant tet d 205 na Spae and a younger son of the Prince of] g passed a happy winter]. the ground, in which sailed Na h r iting the Swanhilda was sighted) Trades im’s name when the doctor called} w. fence ships ee subsidi essels have bee mitted as not being abouts fight- aie ships in the British dist i) Mes Pe; ced Mi M he iotal capital cost ef construction and armament vincible, Inflexible, St. Vincent, Collingwood, Vanguard, Indefati- gable, Neptune, Colossus, Hercu- i rincess Royal, Conqueror, Monarch and ‘Thunde er; what is the annual cost of main- tenance and ammunition of each of thesp battleships, and what is the annual cost of maintenance and pay | st: of officers and men of each of these battleships in full CoN: cKenna said of the ships named the first viet von been completed, and the following. fig- ures Bive the aubsrmotign required in regard t Tndgmitable “Tora Lcost of con- uction, £1 fi nape total cost of arm ment, 000; annual cost of maintenance a ammunition, £58,- annual cost of maintenance y of officers and men, £70,- £1,630,- ; mainten- officers and. men, “Miflexible— Construction, 740; armament, ance, £58,2 £10. £1,676,- mainten- men, Invincible—Constr ue a oe) St. Vincent — Construction, £1,- 35 ment, £142,400; main- terance, £58, 100; officers and men, £68,450. ingwood — Construction £1,- ; armament, £142,400; main- tenance, £58,100; officers and men, le ngwood is lia revision. regar e remaining ships estimated figures. could be given, 1 it was not considered desi able in the public interest to. give such an estimate at present. percent See 2S ‘|HOMES OF WILD CREATURES. Bear’s House in the Snow — Molly Cottontail’s Simple Abode, When the long arctic night ap- proaches the polar some sheltered ant fa rock or ti precipitous bank time he is eflectvaly jeoncesled: by the heavy snowdrifi Bomevinee the: heat s-euita nb after a heavy fall of snow, says St. Nicholas, and then, digs a white cavern of the required form and size. Such is his home for six long month The common little cottontail or s not live in a , as does the English rabbit, but makes a slight depression in she i flat- jy pressed to the earth as to scarcely distinguishable from the soil and the dried herbage in which her abode is situated. The rabbit ia, etponglyatashede ate toe wherever it may be placed, and ~ |even if driven to a great distance ;,|frem it contrives to regain its little domicile at the earliest opportu- nity. One of the most gruesome among animal homes is the wolf” = ae This simply a hole dug in the side of ank or a small BAe cave gen- Biahy situated on the sunny sido of a ridge and almost hidden by bushes and loose boulders. feasts, which, coupled with his own’ dor, the wolf’s den a not}, very inviting La BIRMIN mAs Much of It Mado Ui Under Unsanitary Conditions, BREAD. Birmingham (England) into the condition of bakehouses in the city, as regards -| sanitation and the work and wages -|of the bakers employed. _The re- sult of the eee 8 i rth thu: RAR Or eons lero na associated with more than ordina The ‘ous 2 wages are low. 3, In bake: houses men are required to work amid the odors of adjacent stable: and other outhouses. padi accommodation in eating dens is of the most prnbidys kind, or entirely lacking, yard frequently edn HORE hi oie provision for washing. 5. re made exceedingly diffi- cult, even for well-disposed em- ployers, by the Beseranalek com- petition of the swe: beh e Operative, Bakers’ pose to seek to be apedutea see the Trade Bonrds Act — until, other measures have been thoroughly tried. The Lord Mayor deprecates me belie “ that the workers an accomplish the object: by organ- SAG Daoleaee Muirhead en- a bucket i tho Ai jalcrses the report, and describes its | .| events equipment of the Indémitable, In-|t | don, ‘ouncil recently set about] or e | sued al i eles. U0 soon the publi cut for a second mw ported widespread spiracy in Eastern : ‘Beane is ON pula oH tag series ot 2 of a - LIKE CHAR. ACTER. Bengal i is the sto:m centre of tho, anti-British movement iu Lord Curzon divided Bengal into and that the division was pues for eficient government is partition ned Ria ty popular, or Fi etisle i- speaking, agitators teas it ve aarti at became a higaly aie “t a condition which cannot be en-} ured, MEN OF ABILITY PRISONERS. The Earl of Minto has convinced! Viscount Morley that rigorous ac- of y-seven person. Sat Co a plot at Khulna. What s the arrests peculiarly signi-}’ eae is the fact that the men ar- rested are superior to the former, agitators in ability and come from! ys, the assertion is, made that an iidian: scare is un-' . N. Maitra, editor. vernacular paper’ of construction in the|® | ease of the St. Vincent and the ie at ihe bottom o! which reaches ke Government, tS FROM AFFLUENCE TO PENURY, Man Who Retired W With Fortune Re. comes Organ Grinder. Another pathetic’ instance cf a fall from affluence to penuzy came} to light at be Westminster (Leu Englan Jourt o1 whe Aiteed’ Renard Lamport Grosvenor road, My charged with begging h causing his eleven-year old daugh- ter Eileen to gather alms. r twelve months or mor> be} es ea out with a street organ,! on which was a placard stating what) he was til resent held & goo. 8 te but that through a series of misfor red acute; therefore, much} was peaaoslied to! child with him, he was said to hase replied that to reve, Ber it home meant a loss of 30s. to nim. A solicitor, Mr. iors Hall, said he had known the defendant personally for twenty-t a comparatively early period life he and his sister revired with! an ample fortune from an excellent West End bute! the bulk of the fortune the dant lost in Stock Exeaange sper u- lations. Then he took a boarding housé at raga and managed to get rid of tho r Friends, who hed no idea of his tall to poverty, were said to be ready to help him, and he was bound over. o_-___ MAP FOR AIRMEN. Being Prepared Under Direction of Ro, ‘oyal Aero Club, A new map OE teat cue those ae: Bid by air inste is in active ‘Preparation: Ry. the end of th that the work—wh tated an entirely now series of ey be completed. wa: the airman’s ma) under the auspices Aero Club. Already half England has been a | snesially surveyed. hich is mintle st of the -falt lief zor Hills, woods, dangerous wind prominent landmarks, and fa e spots for ardescent will bo indie: u Boel map, ne wikh be arranged venient rr Kip Handling tian a da aby high specs The ealoe of a dirgible balloon, comes upon harbor m upon the map, Seacaild fetal to the airman to bs foolish. eae with Aeaey all her crew. contents as ‘a national scandal.” | oh Prato a eee marl niia, | determining his position will be va >» neat