BRITISH ARTILLERY IN ACTION NEAR LILLE j ITT?I i ? designed to carry 13 men and *ai propelled by hand power. It caat 360,000, and waa given a trial and condemned In 1873. _ DOG WON THE IRON CROSS Heroic and praiseworthy service In the German army la rewarded so mat ter whether the performer Is a private, a corporal, a general or ever an or dinary dog of the kaiser's "canine eorpe." Tell has the distinction and honor of being the only dog In the German army who has been honored by having the Iron cross bellowed upon him He Is seen heire proudly wearing his decoration pfBnefl on his collar. The service for which Tell has been so signally honored was the saving of an entire troop of German soldiers from a Russian amouscade toward which they were proceeding Tell discovered one of the Russians In hiding and at once gave the alarm FOR NEW FORESTS IN CHINA Movement Under Direction of Ameri cano It'Expected to Accomplish Much Good. During the past /ejv years much at cention has beeD given by foreigners in China, as well as by many thought ful Chinese, to the question of affores tation. A very practical movement in this direction, is being considered by the Nankin university under the di rection of Prof. Joseph Bailie, an American cltlsen. In reviewing the wort- Professor Bailie says that the co-operation of the .director of forestry in Man'la has been secured In the establishment of a school of forestry in the University of Nankin. The director has offered to the University of Nankin the services of two experts sent by the United States to the bureau of forestry In Manila to lay out the course of study investigate conditions, put the school in working order and deliver lectures. It Is also understood that the head of the bureau of forestry in Peking has enthusiastically indorsed the project. The forestry fund committee of Shanghai has sent six students to the School of Forestry In Manila by the scholarship method, some of whom have graduated, and has shown its ap proval of the School of Forestry at the University of Nahkln by awarding three scholarships to that institution this sprints. WHERE MRS. ROCKEFELLER MAY REST Though no definite decision bee as yet been made by John D. Rocke feller. It is understood that the body of Mfs. Rockefeller will be laid temporarily In the Archbold family vault, which adjoins the plot In Sleepy Hollow cemetery owned by the Rockefellers. As soon as the Rockefeller tomb Is completed tbe body will be transferred to that, unless the family decides that she be burled In. Cleveland. John D. Archbold was formerly John D. Rockefeller's partner In the Standard Oil business. GERMANY'S YOUTH TO THE FRONT The great gaps In tbe rank* o( Germany's armlet have to be filled op. and tbe youtb of the country It being called to the colore. K regiment, tbe majority of which It compound of boya under twenty, It hern aekn marching through a Berlin etreet en route to the front HAD A SPIRIT OF KINSHIP Choc* Meeting About Decided New tiorker That All Women Really Are Sister*. Caught downtown umbrellalese on a rainy afternoon, I waited in one of the Broadway hotel* for two hour*, then, deriding to risk my) beet bonnet In the slightly slackened shower. 1 started serosa to a Sixth arena* shop. to pui-shsse an embroils. As I stood under the elevated getting what pro tection I could and waiting for a hold up In the traffic, a young girt stepped up beside me. With her skirt silt to the knee, t^er hair forming "ear Hope" dowff over her too pink cheeks, end blue, Mue eyes peering through a fringe of flaxen yellow, above which was a bow three times as big as the hat It adorned, she was In every de tail the latest cry of her type. One glance and she seised me by the arm to draw me benaalb her um brella | "Coma Id out of the rata, glrlte," she said. Even It my mind had not bean 01 my very extravagant hat. 1 ahoulc have mat halt way hay spirit of friend llnaas. Attar thirty "girlie" has a ran and soothing sound, anyway. Chatting aa to an old comrade, she sheltered ma to my shop door and with a bright nod, passed on whence aha had come?Into the unknown. New York Evening Poet Put snap and vigor Into feu work Mumtional stmrsomn LESSON (Br E. O. SELLERS. Actln* Director of Sunday School Coufte. Moody Bible In stitute. Chicago.) 1 LESSON FOR APRIL U - f . OAVID ANOINTED KINO. LESSON TEXT?I Samuel IS:4-11 GOLDEN TEXT?Man looketh on the outward appearance, but Jehovah looketh on the heart.?Samuel 15:7 R V. After the events recorded In last Sunday's lesson Samuel retired to Ramah never again to tee Saul's face. Samuel "mourned" (16:35) 1. e., be wailed and lamented the deposed king. It was noble for Samuel thus to be grieved over 8aul's sin; still, God bad work for him to do. There is a sor row that "werketh repentance" which is pleasing In the sight of God, but that Idle sorrow which spends Itself In unprofitable mourning Is detrimen tal to man and a hindrance to the kingdom of God (ch. 8:7; 16:1). Men may fall but the 'kingdom goea for ward. We do not Interpret verse 2 as suggesting any subterfuge on God's part but rather that God refused to pay any attention to Samuel's fear. God autwers fear by giving us duties to perform and In their performance we are delivered from our fears. I. David Chosen to Be King, vv. 4-10. Saul, the clamorous choice of the peo ple, was not succeeded by David?"the man after God's own heart"?for sev eral yeara after this lesson. God's will In this matter was shown to Samuel progressively: '(a)-In chapter 13:14 Samuel le Informed that God hath sought "a man after his own heart;" (b) In 16:1- b^ la told to go and find the king whom God had pro vided; (c) In verse 12 Samuel Is at last definitely told whom God has selected. This selection Is in ac cordance'with the prophecy made cen turies before regarding the kingly scepter (Gen. 43:10). Of course It was high treason, this act Samuel was about to perform, and Baul ypt bad many friends and supporters (v. t). God seems to have permitted Samuel I to use one avowed purpose to con ceal the real one, but "such a course la one to use but sparingly" (Maclaren) God can and does protect those whom he sends (Ps.' 34:7) and "man la Im mortal till his work Is done." Just what or how did not concern Samuel Wr he had God's promise (v. 3). A step at a time was sufficient and In taking each step Samuel was to tell the exact truth. inus uoa guides ana testa his Samuel ... a judgeaswe".. e of her eyes. Practi cally blind since ber birth, one after noon she felt something snap In ber eye and normal tight came Instantly - to that eye, thei to the other. The miracle almoet inserted her. The sight of people scared her; the sight of food sras strange she could not eat; everywhere she turned a new world met her. She plans to make up for her enforced lack of education and rejotces In the miracle of fust plain, everyday "seeing." not attach their pedometers while "running around the house, attending tango teas or shipping." . At the end of the year those who have failed to tramp 600 miles are to banquet the others. ????? Horrors of War. Parts?Clever French revues are being played regularly In the trenches and some hare had long runs, al though produced la excavations only a utile and a half from the Oonnaa lines. ,v He Triad to Plea**. New York.?Because she bad al ways expressed a wish to And a pearl In an oyster, a well-known physician had a (100 pearl placed In m plate ot oysters ordered by his wife at the Hotel As tor However, she failed to chew the gem-laden oyster, and un knowingly swallowed the pearl. The Leader I A leader .of men Is oae who seas which way the crowd Is going la Him to get In ahead of K.?Atchison Otoha