Times & Guide (1909), 18 Apr 1913, p. 7

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a < MOWED DOWN 1O A MAN ‘Railway Stations Wrecked and Trains Blown Up _ By Explosives In London Suburbs SUFFRAGETITES ON WAR PATH _ A. despatch from _ Luneville, France, says: One of the great German Zeppelin air cruisers landâ€" ‘(ed on French territory on Thursâ€" [day, coming down on the military parade ground. here. at. midâ€"day, \while a brigade of French riflemen ‘was drilling. It was seized by the EFrench authorities. Six CGerman ‘officers alighted from the gondola, ‘and explained to Brigadierâ€"General ‘Anti de Leen Lescot, who galloped A despatch from Cettinje says : Great Tarabosch fort, which for months has held the allies off Scutâ€" ari, is now practically in the hands of the ‘Montenegrins, thanks to the sacrifice of 200 bombâ€"throwers, every one of whom lost his life in a last desperate effort to clear the way to the town, for the possession of which Montenegro is ready to give up everything. _ These bombâ€" throwers were all picked men, chosen from several battalions. Clambering up the mountainâ€"side under a murderous fire from the Turkish guns, they cut the wire enâ€" tanglements, and getting to close quarters, threw bombs among the Turks, thus opening the way for the storming party. _ Not one of the bombâ€"throwers returned, but they had accomplished â€" their object, and the Montenegrin infantry, The police believe that some of the recent acts attributed to the Buffragettes, principally the atâ€" tempts to destroy railway property, was the work of men engaged by the women. . All the railway stations and tunnels are being patrolled in order to prevent miscreants from damaging them. â€" Warnings were sent out on Friday by the directorâ€" ates of the rarlroad systems throughout the United Kingdom to the effect that militant Suffragettes had threatened to burn stations in various parts of the country. Paâ€" trols were ordered to be: organized at all stations and in the tunnels. _ Some empty trainsywere greatly damaged by explosives near Stockâ€" port, Cheshire, in the course of the night, and Suffragettes aro susâ€" pected of having committed the outrage. â€" A canister of explosives had been placed under & seat in A despatch from London says: The Suffragettes continued. their "reignâ€"of terror‘"‘ on Friday.. They burned a large unoccupied house at Charleywood, in _ Hertfordshire. Only the walls of the building were left ~standing. The usual cards bearing the legend, ‘‘Votes for Woâ€" men,‘"‘ â€"were found. The loss is $12,500. Montenegrin Bomb Throwers Sacrificed Their Lives , To Make Way For Infantry A ~despatch from Washington says: With the opening of the special session of Congress on Monâ€" day the Democrats introduced their longâ€"heralded bill revising the tariff. It is a measure designed to make good their promise to the country to reduce the cost of living by reâ€" moving or sharply reducing the duties on the necessaries of life and products controlled by the trusts. Urged or by President Wilâ€" son, they have added to the free list many of the products that enter inâ€" to the ordinary market basket and slashed the duties on articles that contribute to the warmth and comâ€" fort of the workingman and the avâ€" erage American. » The loss in reâ€" venue amounting through the cuts on the necessaries of life and other items amounting in all to about $120,000,000, is made up by the imâ€" position of an income tax, the first to be proposed under the recently adopted amendment to the Federal Constitution. Machinery Of Latest Zeppelin Goes Wrong And She Lards In French Parade Ground All persons having net incomes over $4,000 and also all firms and corporations and partnerships with an equal income will be called on to help make up this loss._ The income‘s of the latter will be subject only to a flat tax of one per cent., but inâ€" dividuals will be obliged to submit to a tax of a graduated character, BILL REVISING U.S. TARIFF GERMAN ARSHITP CAPTIURED Many of the Products that Basket Added to at Enter Into the Market to the Free List one of the cars with a quantity of fire lighters saturated with resin and oil. ‘Fhe force of the explosion splintered the sides of several cars, a number of doors being hurled long distances. There was also an attempt to blow upâ€"Oxted Station, in Surrey, on the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, but the damago cansed by the explosion was inconsiderable, ouly the winâ€" dows and doors of a lavstory being shattered. A travelling basket was found in the lavatory containing a clock timed to go off at 3 a.m., and some coans of petrol. A fuse had been set fnto a small package of ganpowder, _ which: evidently exâ€" ploded without igniting the petrol. A _ revolver â€"was found_ outside, which apparently hnad been dropped during a hurried flight. Mrs. Pankhurst has carsied on her threat to go on a hunger strike. The last meal she took was lunchâ€" eon .before sentence was. imposed upon her on Thursday.. Since she entered Holloway Jail she has conâ€" formed to all its rules except that she refuses food. Mrs. Pankhurst will be removed to the women‘s penal establishment at Aylesbury, where any steps that are considered necessary to feed her will be taken. following close upon them, charged the trenches. The, Turks held their ground and a desperate handâ€"toâ€" hand fight ensued, lasting an hour, and ending in victory for the Monteâ€" negrins, who lost 300 killed. Tier after tier of entrenchments had to be taken, but the troops of the Southern Division, under General Martinobitch, to whom the task had been assigned, overcame all obâ€" stacles. The tactics followed, parâ€" iticularly in regard to the use of bombâ€"throwers, were similar to those adopted in the capture of Adâ€" rianople. But in the advance of Adrianople the soldiers who cut and divided the wire entanglements surâ€" rounding the forts were clad in cuirasses and provided with shields. At Tarabosch the rough mountainâ€" sicde made it necessary for the Monâ€" tenegrins to dispenrse with all imâ€" Canada‘s milling industry will seâ€" ecure a heavy expansion of trade, notwithstanding that this country will have to pay 10 per cent. duty compared with admission of. flour free from countries which do not tax American flour. The old duty against Canadian flour was double that now proposed. The butter and egg clauses will have no effect, as Canada is an importer of both. The coal mines and fishing industry of Nova Scotia will benefit largely through the free coal and fish clausâ€" es, and farmers stand .to gain through the placing of swine on the free list. The free listing of wood pulp and news print paper is taken to mean a great. development in those branches of Canadian indusâ€" try. Chemical pulp must, however, pay $4.00 per ton from Canadian provinces which prohibit exportaâ€" tion of pulpwood. Free meats should mean a big boom for the catâ€" tle and sheep ranching industry. The main view expressed is that the Canadian producer has an additionâ€" al market and corresponding adâ€" vantages for expansion, but that the future alone must show the extent The lowering of the United States tariff by the bill submitted to Conâ€" gress on Monday will benefit Canâ€" ada in the following directions : pedimenta increasing with the size of the in come. up, that the motor of the airship had developed a defect. The rankâ€" ing German officer said they had departed from Friederichshafen, on Lake Constance, at 6.40. o‘clock Thursday morning, and had lost their way in the clouds. The news of the descent of the German miliâ€" tary dirigible was telegraphed to the Minister of War at Paris, and Eugene Etienne, the Minister of War ordered it to be seized. of the benefits Whore Canada Will Benefit. Mr. Godfrey Isaacs is the brother of that brilliant lawyer, Sir Rufus Isaacs, the British Attorneyâ€"Generâ€" al. He has also proved to be a very capable business man, as he has placed the British Marconi company in a very different position financiâ€" ally from what he found it. He was the subject of a good deal of outspokenâ€" criticism _ from â€" Mr. Maxse, whose strong line of action was the subject of so much comment at the sitting of the commission which investiated the graft charges in connection with the Marconi conâ€" tract with the British Government. Mr. Isames is contesting the Midâ€" Essex division in the Liberal interâ€" est. The Marconi works at Chelmsâ€" ford are in the centre of the divisâ€" ion which he hopes to represent. He is the son of the late Mr. Joseph Isaacs, a wellâ€"known London morâ€" chant. ~ 300 Street Cars Wrecked and Scores i of Peovole Hurt. Buffalo, April 8.â€"Scores of injurâ€" ed in the hospitals, 300 cars wreckâ€" ed and not ‘a wheel turning in the city was the situation in Buffalo at the close of the third day of the street car strike. â€" On an order from Justice Spring, of the Supreme Court, two regiments of the State Militia will be called out toâ€"morrow, including Troop 1 of the First State Cavalry. Two attempts were made toâ€"day on the life of Chief of Police Regan, while he was on his way in an automobile to the different parts of the city where riots were going on, by some unknown person who fired three shots at the chief, which narrowly missed him. Francis Murphy, 13 years old, was shot in the hip and dangerously wounded in a riot at the Walden Avenue barns, shortly before noon. _ The shooting was done, the police say, by one of 7 strikeâ€"breakers who were transferred to the Walden Avenue barns in a street car. One goodâ€" sized stick of dynamite was found, with a cap attached, under a corâ€" ner of the floor of the Forrest Avâ€" enue car barns, by Detective Serâ€" geant Caine O‘Connor, and the chief of police ordered that investigation be made at all other barns. > feated by Big Majority. A despatch from Detroit says: The constitutional â€" amendmenat in favor of woman suffrage which was submitted to the State for the seeâ€" ond time on Tuesday was defeated by a large majority. The pranks of the British militants have had a widespread effect. ~Two suffragettes were silenced at a Hyde Park meeting by rioters. Hereafter Getmany will veil with secrecy her experiments with aerial craft. & Sergt. Phansoux. a French miliâ€" tary aviator, was lilled at Amiens when concludingâ€" a fHlight â€" from Rheims. Englishman Kiled at Copper Cliff Whose Fiance is on Ocean. _ A despatch from North Bay says : Charles Hough, a young Englishâ€" man, was killed at Coper Cliff by falling under a moving locomotive in the dry yards of the Canadian Copper .Company, on Tuesday. Hough was to have been married this month, his fiance being now on the ocean en route to Sudbury, where the marriage was to have takea place. Condition of the: Aged Prelate is Extremely Serious. A despatch from Rome. says: Pope Pius X. suffered a relapse on Tuesday night and his condition is regarded as extremely serious. His physicians, Professor Marchiafava, and Dr. Amici, are in constant atâ€" tendance on the Pontiff, and many of the members of the Sacred Colâ€" lege are greatly alarmed over his condition. \ General. _Presi,-'}e’nt Wilson . is confronted with a serious tariff problem. Woman Sufftrage â€"Amendment Deâ€" feated by Big Majority. A despatch from Detroit says: FALLS UNDER LOCOMOTIVE. Y â€"RIOTING IN BUFFALO. PASSING OF POPE PIUS X. REJECTED INX MICHIGAN. MR. GODFREY ISAACS. Mr. Godfrey Isaacs. Rebekah, the wife of Isaac, after counseling her son Jacob to flee from the wrath of Esau to Laban, his uncle, in distant Haran, proâ€" ceeds to enlist the coâ€"operation of Isaac in furthering her plans, and enabling Jacob to make the journey in the guise of a suitor, rather than as an acknowledged fugitive from the just anger of a deeply wronged brother. To accomplish her purpose Rebekah resorts to deception and by its practice succeeds in withholdâ€" ing from her aged husband the real reason for desiring that. Jacob snall proceed without delay upen the long journey. Apparently also she succeeds in keeping Esau from suspecting her purpose. Lesson ILâ€"Jacob at Bethel, Gen. 28. 10â€"22. Golden text, Gen. 28. 15. T8E SUXDAY SCHRORL STUBY Verses 5â€"9 inclusive record the effect on Esau of Isaac‘s sending Jacob into Padanaram to secure a wife; for ‘‘Esau saw that the daughâ€" ters of Canaan pleased not Isaac, his father; and Esau went unto Ishâ€" mael and took besides the wives that he had, Mahalath, the daughâ€" ter of Ishmael, Abraham‘s son, the sister of Nebaioth, to be his wife." Verse 10. Beerâ€"shebaâ€"The name melns literally "well of the oath."" It was here that Abraham had enâ€" tered into covenant with Abimelech, king of _ Gerar (Gen. 21. 31). ‘"‘Wherefore he called that place Beerâ€"sheba; because there they sware both of them.""‘ _ A different derivation, however, is suggested in Gen.. 26. 33: ‘"‘We have found water. _ And he called it Shibah : therefore the name of the city is Beerâ€"sheba unto this day."‘ 19. Bethâ€"elâ€"=â€"Meaning, literally, ‘"‘the house of God.""~ The modern Beitin is a small village with ruins of early Christian and crusaders‘ buildingé, about twelve miles north ofi Jerusalem and a little cast of the main highway leading from Jerusaâ€" lem northward to Shechem. 18: For a_ pillarâ€"Literally, ‘"a standing stone,‘‘ that is, a sacred monolith such as in early Old Tesâ€" tament times constituted the disâ€" tinguishing mark of a sacred place, often standing beside an altar. In Exod. 23. 24, and in 2 Kings 10. 26, the "pillars‘‘ of the Canaanites are ordered to be destroyed, and in Deut. 16. 28 it is forbidden to erect pillars by the altar of Jehovah. Poured oil upon the top of itâ€"â€" Thereby consecrating it and setting it apart sacredly as marking a place of worship. > 11. One of the stones of the place â€"In the vicinity of Beitin, the site of ancient Bethel, the ground is covered by large sheets of bare stone, with here and there a rock in upright position, while a little to the southeast a hill rises to its top in terraces of stone. 12. Behold, a ladderâ€"The physiâ€" cal features of the place, especially the terraces‘ of stone referred to in the preceding note, seemed in the dream to constitute a huge stairâ€" case or ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it â€"reached to heaven. 13. Above itâ€"Or, beside him, as the marginal ~reading of the Reâ€" vised Version indicates. 16. I knew it notâ€"Apparently Jacob had been accustomed to think o{ Jehovah‘s presence as associated especially with certain â€"sacred places at which his forefathers had dwelt and worshipped. â€"He seems to be surprised to find Jehovah‘s presâ€" ence in this strange and lonely place. The city was Luz at the firstâ€"â€" Apparently _ the sacred _ place ‘‘Bethel‘"‘ was outside the ancient city ; but laters the fame . of the sanctuary led to the city being known byâ€"the same name. Finally Bethel compiectely superseded Luz. 20. Vowed a yowâ€"As was common among ancient OQOriental peoples, this vow consisted of a solemn promâ€" ise to render to God some service in the event of : a particular boon asked for being.granted. 21, 22, And Jehovah will be my God, then this stoneâ€"Or, "then shall Jehovah be my God anrd this stone,"" etc. Shall be God‘s houseâ€"Not in an idolatrous â€" sense, but â€" meaning simply that in the place of the stone there shall be crected at some 14. As the dust of the earth â€" Compare the similar promises in which the countless stars of heaven (Gen.15..5; 22. 17; 26. 4) and the sand (Gen, 22 17;â€" 32. 12) serve as figures to describe the great numâ€" ber of descendants who are promâ€" ised. To the west, and to the east, and to the north, and to the southâ€"In the days of its greatest prosperity the united kingdom actually â€" did extend as far in every direction as these words of prophecy could posâ€" sibly be interpreted to indicate. Thou shalt spread abroadâ€"Heb., break forth. _ 17. Dreadfulâ€"Literally, "to be feared." 15. Bring thee again into this landâ€"The word. ‘"again‘‘ in old English is constantly used where we should say ‘"back.‘" The house of Godâ€"The place of iehovah‘s own abode, and conseâ€" quently the gate of heaven. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 13. "‘Then they departed from the presence of the council, rejorcing that they were accounted worthy to suffer shame for his name.‘‘â€"Acts ys..d4t. Beauty is its own payment. ‘‘Virâ€" tue is its own reward."‘" We have heard that ever since we were «school children, but few of us ever have reached a full understanding of . what the great philosopher meant. I think that the parents of Noah had something of this subâ€" lime idea when they named their child. As is explained in the Sceripâ€" tures, they named him Noah beâ€" cause he was to bring them ‘"comâ€" fort in their work‘"" ; he was to make their work enjoyable. Joseph had the same idea when he named his son Manasseh, beâ€" cause he said, ‘"‘He has made me forget my toil." The apostle said, ‘(Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations." To present this subject in as conâ€" densed a form as I can, I will say that at last Christianity, working out into society and giving its slow but continual impulse to the modâ€" ern educational affairs of the world, has brought into being the kinderâ€" gartenâ€"that is, the Christian, the godlike idea comeerning the educaâ€" tion of the world. ALL WORK SHOULD BF PLAY Now, under the kindergarten sysâ€" tem, the fundamental idea is the Christian idea expressed ‘in this verse concerning Peter and John. They were rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer for his names sake. Even suffering was a joy. Labor and toil were pleasure and play. When the kindergarten system was adopted it was adopted with the idea that we ought to make this world happier and that people enâ€" gaging in toil ought to do it in a different spirit. Consequently childâ€" hood is taken through a series of plays »all the way upward into greater and greater wisdom, and its work is made sport. 7 j Education, labor, and any sort of toil ought to be play. There should besno such thing as hard work in the "world, as we understand the modern sense of that term. Education, Labor, And Any Sort Of Toil Shou!l Be Considered As Such All Labor Should Be Play, and all play, in the opposite sense, should be labor. A despatch from London says: Mrs. Emmeline â€"Pankhurst;, the leader of the militant suffragettes, was on Thursday found guilty and sentenced to three years‘ penal servitude at the Old Bailey sessions on the charge of inciting persons to commit damage in respect to the bomb explosion at Lloyd George‘s country house at Waltonâ€" Heath. The trial had lasted two days and when the judge, Sir Charles Monâ€" tague Lush, pronounced seantence his speech was received with loud cries of "shame‘"‘ from the militant suffragettes, _ who crowded the court. The jury had added a strong recommendation for mercy, and when the judge pronounced senâ€" tence the women rose in angry proâ€" test. As Mrs. Pankhurst stood in the prisoner‘s enclosure,. her sympaâ€" thizers chesred wildly and then filed out of court singing ‘"March on, March or"" to the tune of the "Marseillaise."" Mrs. Pankhurst, who acted â€"as her own counsel, said she did not wish to testify or to call any witâ€" nesses. She spoke for 50 minutes, at times wandering _ so far from the matter before the court, that the judge severely censured her. Speakâ€" ing with much feeling, Mrs. Pankâ€" hurst fiercely criticized the manâ€" made laws, and said that the diâ€" vorce law alone was sufficient to justify a revolution by the women. In impassioned tones sho declared that whatever might be her senâ€" tence she would not submit. From the very moment when she left the I will surely give the tenth unto theâ€"â€"the distinct command to: set aside a tenth as Jehovah‘s portion is given in Lev. 27. 30â€"32. In Gen. 14. 20, however, Abraham is referâ€" red to. as paying tithes (that is tenths) unto Melchizedek, king of Salem. How the Scott Antarctic Party Met Death. A despatch from _ London says: The Imperial Merchant Guild of Liverpool has received some details of the death of the Scott Antaretic party from Captain B. J. Watson, future time a permanent sanctuary for the worship of Jehovah. MRS. PANKHURST‘S SENTENCE _ Noted Suffrage Turned Pale When She Received Three Years Hard Labor s That is the new education. It% GRUESOME DETAILS. must be carried into higher walks of educational life and the collego student must learn that in order to achieve the ideal type of humanâ€" ity he needs to make his study as much his play\ as his baseball or football or rowing. â€" There is too strong a division made between what is work in college and univerâ€" sity life. § 2ax"t 4 The time is coming when Christ will have built up thatâ€" ideal man whose life will be all joy and play. Not a thing will he be called upon to do which is a duty that he will not do as readily and enthusiastiâ€" cally as if he were engaged in a game. In the ideal Christian of the future that Christ _ came to build upon the earth, man will all the while be at work in the sense of belping and inspiring. Yet All the Time at Play. What is the pay for the Grecian races? â€"One spends four years in discipline of body, he spends many days previous to the race on plain food and in exercises that seem to. be so severe, for the purpose of running from Marathon to Athens. When he has won the race what does he receive but a crown of laurâ€" els? He has worked years and months for the purpose of getting that crown. Of what use is it to him? If it were to bring him real ability of mind or high position in the political world we might as huâ€" man beings think it worth all his labor, but he gets only the applause of the people who see him enter the stadium.. Yet that is the most enâ€" joyable thing in his life. He has worked harder for it than anything he has ever undertaken and made sacrifices for it such as he has never made in the daily walks of lifeâ€"all for the little crown and the little applause ; yet he has enjoyed all the toil. the guild‘s agent at Wellington, New Zealand. . Captain Watson says :â€" "I heard from a shipmaster who had a conversation with Comâ€" mander Evans at Lyttelton that at the time when Captain Oates left the others in the tent and went outâ€" side he had no feeling, having lost his feet through frostbite. _ Some time previously I also heard that when the party set out to look for the Southern party and later disâ€" covered the bodies, they were so atâ€" tenuated as to be unrecognizable." "If it is impossible to find a difâ€" ferent verdict I want to say to you and to the jury that it is your duty as private citizens to do what you can to put an end to this state of affairs.‘‘ . She then repeated her determination to end her sentenco as soon as possible, saying: "I do not want to commit suicide.. Life is very dear to all of us. I want to seo the women of this country enfranâ€" chised. â€"I want to live until thas has been done. 1 will take the desâ€" perate remedy other women have taken and I will keep it up as long as I have an ounce of strength left in me. I deliberately. broke the law, not hysterically and not emoâ€" tionally, but for a set and serrous purpose, because I honestly believe it is the only way. ‘This movyement will go on whether I live or die. These women will go on until woâ€" men have obtained the common rights of citizenship as they shall have over the civilized world beforg this movement is over." Mrs. . Eankhurst â€"almost broke. down when the jury pronounced its verdict. â€" Leaning over the front of the prisoner‘s enclosure and adâ€" dressing the judge before he passed sentence, sheâ€"said : Now, if this very thought could be taken, as the apostle Paul tried to inculcate it, into the daily living of Christian experience, all ourâ€" duty made but a delightful race like his who is seeking to win the goal, & race wherein we consider every sacâ€" rifice a joy and the running the, suâ€" premest of delight, then we should have the ideal/ man Christ had in view when he came to put his charâ€" acter into men.â€"Dr. Russell H. Conwell. Justice Lush, in summing up, told the jury that Mrs. Pankhurst‘s speeches were an admission that she had incited to the perpetration of illegal acts. e Removal of all tariff from raw wool has been agreed upon between President Wilson and members of the house ways and means commitâ€" tee. court sheâ€"would refuse to eat and would start a "hunger strike.‘"‘ Sho would, she.said, come out of prison dead or alive at the earliest possiâ€" ble moment.

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