HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1925-03-19, Page 711.
• Advil:ices • in autornObilo; tireVP117;
t211010.a. tear/ to, make !motoring less.
tirePonie. 'ProbablYr One of the -inest
*portant achieveMents in automobile
',design in the last year has been Made
in the reaint..0;ehpeilig the Alitinno.'
„.
For a nurriber �f yentO,p0eple have
had: to he content With.. riding PPon
tires that; in order te, insure reason-
able 'length of; life, needed to be,
fiated to a very high press,vore.. It was
. Lisp of either inflating to A P9t4
',13're the tire: did pet perform the
airablojanctienorgbaOrbing sheek
ir.-ordesilio get reiionahle wear or of
• •
Procuring .,increiked .comfort by what
..the' Manufacturers` considered
thetire. ; This: later -method
• resulted. in, ruPid destriiction- the
• :tires,..„..gven uncigr,e9riditSona of high
iiiflation Manufacturers, •ste-feur years
:tirea "for '3,600
. TIRE PlIOGREgS DURING 194.
whic Permitii, \of much gmatpr
leL-
Nifty. In the elder type of tires the
manufacturers stressed the point, that
if the tires Were not sUfficiently in-
flated the side walls .would break
down, and:this/would patPrallY occur
when„theAire. ,..irtaa......COlniiKed,jf 4
heaVy ,stiff fabric. For eXileo if
you take a .piece•Qt.heavy stiff card-
board -and bend it 'sharply back and
forth it will yery quickly •Craelc, while
L piece of comparatively thin paper
would stand any amount of such
handling Without breaking. By u4t!'ig
the thin side will in the balloon tire
the tire maY be used with a very low
Pressure, which i3erinits of great
ile?tibiliiy • of aetion without.harming
the tire. • •
-A tire'that has sufficient fleXibilitY
to keep it in geed cOhtact with the
graurid:'yati'ler than Imuiping. ever ,ob,
atrUctiond,greitly lessons .tbe.iitibility
-rnioes Of 4 ,ryis9. With the 'tires of
••
to -day it h3 not ;unusual' to. *ore 20,-
, 000 mi:e.s of 'service .from a set •of
' *tires. • :
•
The balloon tire whieli is the latest
development in _this field, , adds con-
siderably. to the comfort of riding.
Thia.tire Mai he operated:under very
Acw 14C.sfLur..e.;2: first, because it has a
•
very large- area of Contact with -,the
read. For example, if a tire.has.
$00 and the
77-7-7"."'fifii he's fifteen square .inches Of eon -
tact with the road each square inch'
would need to support '800 divided b
It
a • , alf
It, the tire is Made larger
so that " Say thirty' square inches of
contact, is Made with .theroad, each
• square inch Would have to support
only half as Many Pounds or twenty-
six an two-thirds. This makes it
posaible,t0.,rednee the air -pressure
in tbetire •
• .•
• • ;
• • •
c/P.S1701 OF FLEXIBILITY.Exiry.
In' the sec° cl 'place' the side Walla i
the tire Are, made „,in,. a 'Manner
to skid.
• 41.4i TARTER ARE 'SUITED,
'.While tb0 balloon. tire tepresents.
the extreme in the Matter of low
in-
f1atin and provides the greatest pos-
sible. conifort in motoring a Mean be-
tween this and the old type is found
in the 'larger Sized regplar cord Ore
that gives greater contact With the
road •than,Alie...roviaus...sizeS-and thus -
lower pressure, .but net as low as the
fUll-tallion type. This tire is being
ted• # great deal in extenSiie.,totir-•
Of course•when it comes to the con-
sideration Of the many cars used .for:
business...purpoies," it found ,thet.,
many of theseare equipped with the
'oversized. cords , instead of the largest
balloon designs. For all. kinof mo-
tor vehicles the Manufacturers are
Constantly studying , to improvethe
quality Of. tires. Their success in rel
cent. years has aen notable and'rePre-
seats a decided contribution toward
nereased tiding .conifort which owners
of cars enjoy.",: -• '
-
A,*
illii1111111111111 Walla
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WINO 11111111111111
111111111
III"111111/11111
iiIIIII11111 1111111 ii111111111111
1111111111 3°1 11111111
1111111N MIMI 11111111111111
MINN III •Mill
a.
11111111
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MEM•RENEE NEIN
ii11111111111111 61111111111111111
The orrestiokoom, sysoicATf.
. . .
SUGGESTIONS gOR SOLVING cRos4-woRp PuzzLgs-
. ,
•
• Start out by filling Itethe•Avords of Which you feel reasonab17.
sate. These, will give you s clue to Other wo00,403sink th$412,
and they in turn to still others.. A letter belongu,..in eachwhita_ _
words starting at the munbered Squares* and runnineeither,'
haorizoutally or vertically. or both. r
HoFdioNtA!.. ••'
1.Customi
n.q-BOis
-.,---1-1-part Of verb !P
12-,rShanty , ••
earth
1 -Pen
10-Chofeest Part
17--Moter fuel • -,
18. -Before
18., -.Urge On.
82-431selc sticky fluid
24 -"The spikenard
26 -First steamehtp to:Orbs; the
Atiintle (abbr.:)
28 -System of WorthIP
29 -Color :
30L4Prilsd ./1 lob .77
I GEORGE BEARS -
followed' the exatiple ;of his grand.:
7•nuithar=444'' father, QUee-h-- Victoria
BURDENand King Edward, both of •whom
regu-
' larly visited the South of France Or
tho German resorts during the Winter.
Since his accession to the throne' al-
most. fifteen ',Years -ago King George's,
.absences from .the.eountry have been
few.: and - far- between: Early in his
. .
;reign' be visited India, but since then,
ivisits , aside' from his vsts to France during
. .
. , . • • /. the war and his state visit to Rome a
Dependence Of National Ad- rmiple. Of years ago, he'haS never been
1. ,- • . - .,• abroa. The brief vacations which he
f ministration. On Hereditary allowsd'. himself from the busineis of
,state have been spent .shooting .,in
-Scotland or on ,short coastUrise cruises
in his . yacht. • ' , : : ' :', :
' With King , George's departure :During :these trips, ofcourse, he Is.
' from the realm an., .. a: IVIediter. 'able. to transact the business ' of state:
rangan yachting ertiise,,.. which it • is The- Present' 'gQneraticm af'. English
hoped will restore • his health after a people, therefore, are only now being
severe attack of bronchitis, the Brit_ educated in thercontitutignak,lore that
•i, ish people hay" :realized, almost, for necessarily comes ' to the frtint when
'
the first time, how dependent' the the King is scheduled to go traveling.
Whole administration Of the country With the improyetnerit of comMonissa;
is on Britain's hereditary ciiisf. exs,..„ tions the formality with which royal
'
. _ , , absences used to be • _invested has
g.:13 -ti‘*! ' - ' '' ' • • '
largely disappeared, but at the sameIleinualr;the.Brit4-h people are in; '%. , t
clined to take their riaonarckor more or he
t
tithe the KingS absencefroin
-
less for:granted; as thy Le -1(noa ether country gives iVjelt to the norinaradr
ininistration •which.:.steps , 12?Ilst e
• PTA -anent: faetera of their .1iyes„ It . taken. 0 . meet. . .. s _...
'
NEWS ' OF IHEALTII,
STARTLES. COUNTRY,'
Chief Executive Suddenly
Felt by Public.
•
is only when that factor is put That elusive but important ,
out of gear.that:the extent of the knbody
own ne the Privy Council inpartie-
King is zilpreciated,and eiriwd:
toad resting- on the sheuldeps of the •ular. 'comes into the Ihneliglit on. such
. • s
whited all day long otitaide Bucking -1-- -- occasions. The executive •government
of this country, althatigh exercised in
toVrardrecovery.
"' ham ?nine° f" neWn ii°g.nz.ins. practice:by. a cominittee •of ministers
'. • • •
known as the Cabinet, whose existence
This Wei illustrative -4f the nation' s' is dependent upon the support of,a ina7
.'concern Oyer. .teniporary break- fority in the. Muse of COmMens, is
down, under .the heavy burdens of .
state.' The bulletin; signedvested' by :three' ounoinominally in "the King in
o,
• royal doctors, Which-firsediselosed,tber.
, • -:::_reNCTIoNS OF PRIVY
„
gravity of iciAlg. George's was ___.• •
'coincident with the- -reeerninen*ttion This. means the Privy Council,
. that he spend -his convalescent period body of the Mast aneient origin, inttl-
- on his „yacht Victoria and Albert as tilted in Saccirt• times by Alfred
to discharger:the functions of state now
soon as he is able to travel.. This
confined. to the membera• of the Cab -
the discovery that probably the hard-
, brought hip. subjects Shari 'against c
inet. In the Middle Ages the chief
eat worked -man in his country searde-,
ly ever takes .a Vacatien.'
MENACE SEEN IN ''CLIMATE.
As a London neispiper 'pointed out
in /commenting on the King's trip,
advisers .to the King who -were per-
manently about hinr-fornied.the Privy
Council. - Now the 'Membership] of the
Privy. Cottnei17,..with a total' of more
than 500 Persons -,in Most eases is
merely an honorary. distinction, ••
`there, comes a time a Man a ' The Council, however, Still is tech.
when England's winter climate ceases nicalty,.the'.conntry's executive. All
to ben bad Joke and becomes a definite adminiatritiVe orders. • signed by
Menge°, to health:1 Although Xing "the King in Council, The members
'George /or setteraltFears proPt has been of 'the Cabinet must be Privy Council..
subject to winter Colds,' he has never Ion; and a..,buncli of cotincillers'there-
4201.A111:04.6.7' •
3874:Wroiel"alY
38 -Suffix to. form f,erialnine nouns'
44f--.4•FBef3tY;1131 en' deserticienam;Poi .
••.--45-I-Pareel. ground
• her? Pot
:49 -Anger
,60 -Mantle worn by lurks..
el -,-more kind ,. • "'.'s
i-kinery .
- .
..e4-DefInIte artlela • • ,
8,0131y / • , "
6....Meature,OUt
7-:.LIquor
:8 -To dress up"
.9,--.121eriod •
"fpr recreation :
13,6P.oison; • • • •
20U'rehln •
21 -Wonderful
22 -Spring flower/
23 -Change ,•••
25 -'Owing
'26 -Ocean ••
erce
West State
41.-Selparaeo:. •
33.,-LOoPed etrpe,..'
86. -To .oherlsh • ••
38 -Deserve, merit'
42 -Unit of ni.orley (abbr.)
43 -South Ainerlaan plentc.• ,
44 -Kind 'Of snort/Shoe
• .
45 -Cover '
46,-;#e*. Metal. .
,
,
7171Irgi
••-•
When, -ghildrea, W*2'4 born to the' Da70;." 800 •11.1* a pretty old one. 13,4
.aacipt• Hebrews,, thelfiro:•datywas fancy the GreebLbeing 120114,1, by inich
Was
torib them all ever with Salt, It oredulityi relli0ous Flaty,.. Salt Wae- the accept- Atiethei Old-Worlit belief was that.a
,' :t .
ed symbol: of lire,'and is application' to I. child-been-a/1th teeth would boon, 'I,T,row
the infant's body .had the repate.41 up to be .a.,IMan, of either Herculean
newer of i#Stirfag ,tigerep# ra#2420..04.•• l'stretigthi or., Of 'uncommon mental
fh England during /the •elghteepth ability% it is Said that meoicdrldatorY
century a slinilar idea prevalled wlth Tecorcia-aitir-tihtnit
regard to mud, and 'few Me4.0n4Q3',ed I renliaring teeth atbirth, but from the
^pitch:. notoriety- as Orehotek prominettee which thia...Superst4ien
en -
Pall MAIL". the fainpus enaoh, • W40.1 jeys, In folklore ..we, May: he rertern
amassed a'fOrttme•by, expounding -its that inan:c4des. the-:
Virtu4 4P4' the various methods of ex-,. ,ch.reatelers' notice. • • •
tra.e0pg theta, • : 1, • •I.goula. XIV; was one of thefaziious
. It was 'OS& 1.22421)1241y •belleVed, lo 'persQ00.4es who heti .thia ' tliStinction;
former timee that if, a, child 'on, first .Ile had two teeth whet?. he was born.
, .
leaving lts
Mother's room ,was not par-. Bigot,.theCelebrated:philopoPhr.! wai
,rieciulotaira.herore it was taken7.4oWn-' another;' as was also Boyil. the. p
stairs', it_yrontil never riieln:the world, Richard was 'a. fourth. !•,••
'Where," tittinval•-• an, op;taIrs to: \the• Otalf, the 'other, Week 6,4412143ra W,e2'e.
hoi.e the 'general pee* Ice Was. for the born- at • Bordeaux,,,..plange; .„.ef whorn
:coltriet:t0-4-kteii-OVer,the•threehoid,pi ithe•:-•staried''''',0nftIng!
I,)Prgoii • N92.4."-e*rried.•;''-the.:.1lititt.. new,one had all hs teeth, while the;othcr
270.13,2n,. 0:10 .ft,ehrtir.:i'"41ieb.-Oractice,watO twelve days. erti,„:.:errein.thiS it maY he
suppo:s.E)(14Q.c301,re,the .sanTe pnrp.os'e, :.fpresuniedt ;that,. France. .'ha's,H14 Il i -ea
•`• It was also cohaidereil. unlucky fr soli to desliair dt her ftiturpigettluet•
the child if • the • mother . went out of to be horn with a caul ra:prererable
ilent;ObefOrOlmittg...teehttrch to have to:being born' OVIO 'Under the lueltiest
her baby chriatened. ,It was mainly st#r,• as readers et., Charles pfeit'ena
fOr.thia e'*oka that -children ;Were bap-.,. will Mit need..tobe reminded, :„ •
44ad.wbe&-' they were but a‘fortnightl. • To Make wig's entrance to the world,
or SO o1d. 'rhe the ,the !liarniee: frhualhe..plock is striking; eSpecially,
wasover, the sooner tile Mother was if •it he 'sounding the midnight hime; ls
tree-te...reatinte--'he.r norrnal lite.. • ;.:1-,W.)e :blessed .with7thegift7OrielOriinif
;40, Weigh,. 4. child • was. 4-.L -further aight„, to have the.Pewer of•seeing and
St1740 of, .bad policy. for such a child smelling the :Wittd,... like the 'plga of
tfiatt -ftr'e rlitTiOultrorAntrtvliir-stelr,7.4.Westphalie;,eadAbliastrestrth-ealsititr
•ly.. 'To reek an OII1PtY. ;cradle was to t� discern all Manner Of •eVil.,.aPitita
'rock a; heW baby inth,it, And .to let' a in their secret lalrs. , •
Child sleep on one's lei? Was e Certain. • 'With sb-ma4yglfts•ncl graces 4e-•
we bringing ml'sfortuna-an-the,ln!-*4r4tng-oa-tha7-eOm'inganoterof--M2r
nOeent victim. Ilesibtl •allUdea.... to this 4064, the pity surely is that we haye.
:latter. Superstition, in his [:"Weelis..,and such small 'choice. in- the,12aatt4r.', '
• , •
fore was. z great&I When •114.‘ ettenald's
•LaliOr- idininiStration took office. the
reason far that is that . the 'Cabinet
theoretically is committee within the
Privy- Council; Upon which the title
"Cabinet" fails when, it „sits under the
King's presidency, '
King personally• is the nucleus.
of ; the whale adniinistration and, ;he
'personally sumnlens the Priv.i7 Conn-
. When he goes' abroad the power
.of Summoning. the' 'council Must be.
delegated and, ..• under • one 6rin, or
other, the kingship -must- be so • dele-
gated, on this occasion:, When King
George went to 'India a formal pomt-
eil of State Wifs:'appointed • to exercise
certain. functiefis of the crown. :,Pub-
lic interest over the question of. put-
ting King George's. power in commis: -
Shin \ during ,his convalescence Cruise
stresses the 'closeness With which.hehas stuck to the job,
•
• • • • •
Solution of Last Week's Puzzle.. .
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OUUMU UOM MUOMM
•
Charles parents had ;moved from
the city to a farm. Their 'nearest
,neighbor was an bld ladi, who stilt
Used .a eoffee.niill.. •on eher,
one day, Charles spied the Coffee -Mill..
••"What is, that -a 'tee talking Ma -
Chine?" he asked,
•
Of.'shingles antl.Iitth theretwere 3 - • ••
$500 -a -Week. Dog Film' h t h 1
,p ore p o, ograp ed on iis return to • • . ing..rat.roa
d t It
•
'
crosingL'
Attict‘ .ennl:pg get ..ecrOSS' ,afel'!,•-slint- off'
.4t,.ouring eke."
the. gas:•you.'" the, train,
likely ••to' Shut' :oft' .Yotif breath,.
..'"What style Of car, do, you drive?"
Why ddesn't some inventor come. "
forward with an automobile' shock al),
fscojtr'bethrat.pehadtasWitrillan4Wa. 6things easier
'•
An, undertaker 1212:4up near a
-
h,0040gger, is, as wise as a doctor who
n-earta-rail-road-a.ressi •
• „.
: It •filik a men -with a "rest. SOOSO of
itnpcirtence to get about the streets.
.. ,
-6-f-tr-citY-all-:dathout-being-'-rn
dOwri.' '' i
Natural . Resources Bulletin.,
"
%The Natural Resources Intelligenee
Service of the Dept. Of :the Interior
at Ottawa says: - 1 •
' • Until 021e:sees the actuai. figures of
PiOduction. it is • hard'‘ credit the
Amount. of -Material heinrtaken out of
'
THE WOMAN MoTorasT.
When 4 wild and .1:kop-eyea' driver
Shoots' his auto down thestreet,
He can Make the public .step about
light' and riimble feet
He can 'make the bravest tremble, .
lie can 'make the boldeSt quail,
But they say "the 4ma1e .drirer
•
product and the ,!quantities are onor-- , ' What a diffarence. in the ped of
:riiaut:',:-•:•' A. staterrient . just isiied by . a iman's ear When he is. 'bragging
the. Doininian Vtireau,of .Pteitiatics of about it to a friend- or lying about it
the himber industry • in 'Canada; for to 'a' judge:'.. . .' '• '
.1
1923 contains some :figtires., that will
be areVelittionte •mariii,. even of. those
who are inore-lor :-Iesa-,-famitiar'-with
.- the develapment of this :great Can,' mobile.-
adian. datural resource: . ,' ' '' • • ••'; •
. ,
• Nowadays it takes' two licenses' to.:
Marriage- , and anto-.
.0f hnnber alone nearly; three and , • ADVICB TO MOTORISTS,
. three-quarter thousand :million board 2. Don't run over small boys; they
Here the, latest' pikegraph of. feet , Was , cut by . the saNYMills, -the: Might have pails in their pockets.
• : linud Itismtis.Sen;.'famotisaiitsh.:e26; :Vaille of 'Which" *raw"Si°81P•5'56•P'' • :2..A•1;a7aYs. s°Prid' hOrii when. ercInni' •
• .
, 84.2,385,000 piecea• eut, 2,718,650,000 The most important rint on an atita,..
•
P ii agen, after his reeent Green- h. 1
s ,ing es )and 1,153,735,0(10 lath. '
land trip. ' ;Mobile the d 4+
Dog days are 'prosperops days in • • Thr • 03,6 9.... is e ow who rives .„... .
, e were , oz. ranway Aka , • •
.111mland.; judging by the .pgpalatity o
the leading•caaine screen Performers
,Stiangheart, ' an Pete
the Great Of ,.vhom it be said that
unlike ,other stars, they are , neither
jealous, of ,each‘'other nor of ths•linie
„ .
All three are of the' Alsatian voli
'dog breed; ; and ..theirJntelllgence is
positively. unciinnyw as th�sewill agree
'alta .seg "The 'Silent user,'!.
, •„
which Peter the Great s
.;
• . . .
✓ , Oldufashiened-Ind in the .1Y11)1S. qiii$ does not. ' TRY THIS DI4II
, There Is at least one industry whieh ,by tie contractors in the woods.... Bc'x i*o; or. three big: drinks of bad .
, ,,g .ep lone
_ • end still employs for wOrk-the 339,761
A priniitive pole.latlie is e he, I Th a
uS rYr- elude 'the Millions that are ehe111
pped '•
n remains unaffected', bY...soientifio ro- shaalFa ninnhere.d M9V18, pickets, a high-powered, fast motor car. Seek P
take'one, reckless, natural-born fob.,
, gres.e, , It is Pairleit on 1.11 OP beechi 3 124'000 • fe' • •
fool in liquor; place in car' and let
After due time;!.repiove•freM *reek -
age, place in .black satin-linedbox and,
. .
garnish with 6owers.
Woods ef Butkinghanisit hire, Engla '138;124 :and slabs and:edging's
cords
turiiing•of chair -legs• -exactly the's•ame „
'type of tools rised -hundreds of Y .ti•ty ,Cut, although, Douglas fit is a
Spruce still holds the lead in quan-'
ago when the industry,begani s et, 'close 'second, and white pine third.. • ,
ere re 26 in vidual species df k e t
di • . Some people s brains are like am-,
fi3rw eel 01 crank to cl.ri,v for -10.th End 6 s
no ,,woo used or um er 18 e used use - • •
peculiarity Of 0i:inch-fa :that it requires d , -er,gencY bra es -,..they -ver r think
springy PVIO; or even yonn sapli t • r iingas ruejq
, lie prineipal •WO0.4 :nnea for :lath, al.
Peter is able tsr; rea.s. 4; there Ca.4 hi :heot oVet the beat of„tbe• wo.r r, , thougli. ,such, bardWoods: as maple, ••The"pnrcha's.gr•of a •new ante'.14ualt
be ini doubt of It. because he is seell' and e cord colineetOthis to the treadle. ,beech, ash, biteh: and •elm...Were sawn. :ly buys a feather duster' and .goes over ,.
to pat his head -liriow,./iligly on one side- tip. : its ' way; from the Pole to. he. 'the '..car, a dozen times • a,..daytthln .. ..
'aatdio. .sitt:,lede3;:.leihoieAts11,t-ii-lanit,la°4e.ebe;f:ten-tVIltiinclgt..twiee.. rn.lothe,• preee of wpad 'be lig shingle cut but , 'spruce; white, ipine;
treadle. the.. cord`.is:,'.wrePeir once or . Ce'darlirioat:helcta,mOnepoly of the l•IPes,....h!) duter', •• .: . . • -, ..
he has to c'onvinee• the heroine, who.. :Mined :in the ;ladle: • Thus. when. I • ' '
has disatipbared under the bedclothes, treadle is preseed deWn the piece
'that he J. not a'burglar,-. • • ., ...',... -'„ wood revolves', end .• the sharp turn
, .
..• The "story , is - artifiCial. 'inelodrania; ...Obi held - in the haat -ofthe % wor.
;designed AO show off the - abilities of rapidlY Cute away the Superfluous
, Peter • 'who is the dumb ''witneas of '.6., ierial: '. ,.,
' When the ' treadle is released, the
110' a8efa,' •a_.nd. \i.le '..v•iii•ai tie. previnees •cut but few shingles.
6 ,000, in New BrunsWick.. '• . The
w."011t P,, the' vi tit: 1, :4 th°arcilkWards;
is „ withdrawn .during: this period, as it dneing 'Only 330;000, frOinsprUce and
:The t.)! Alberta Okla Saskatchewan eacg,,pro-,
in .a. forward direotio_o.... . ?. ,.,-. -- .: ,.,-7-1t-wofird -be. difficult. ta.eatimate the
i
:cut s , only . while the, work ',. IS ranning idok 4310; ..,,,- . _:_,,• ,_
' -The lathe-- and the hat ,I.vliich covers '- • •
it -4 -la Moved io. the ' jriare- where - he
muider for which hie:master is wrong-
ly Convictedd •and 'imprisone Peter,
'getting on the tight side.,of the gevern:.
or, attends 'Ina Master in prison con
niies at his escape, and finally at,
--tacks. and _4/denounces". the real mur
derez- whorn.
the frontier:, ,
oar "Daddy," said his •weeping litt:e
. hemlock, :balsam, fir and even,po
daughter, "a •naughty,man broke my
of were used for Small quantities/ More .
ag than one-half of the shingles were cut n.ew sled with his automobile." ,"Did
er in British' Columbia, although 26,- .411,,we?h7'e:orieids hheec.f f‘hoihr';',jyliemn,PiPgaael:14
a" 802,000 were cut in f Ontario,
.; • •
catch hitn„Idaddy," said 'the, little one.
53q.,401,opo • in -queivec 239,,
. "Two nien 'just carried him into a
drug store:"
The 'great • diffleiilty .in training most suitable trees are to be found,
and although Modern powet-lathes
deg for. the screen ,is to.teach hlth to.
take an order Without :taming his
head, Cue way pf d�htg thisie to
'Place lihn lna room walled With mit.;
tors, se: that he can. see his master
froth . any position. - GradUally he
to Obey a spoken order'withOlit
the' aacompanyin.g signal.
litiveThaen-ti•fed, their -Work has
been satisfactory, and they have b
cliseartled. ,
We should he enjoying life, livin
with the truly great, the. noble poet
and philosophers; and thinkers an
Itiii-Tinain draws' a .salary, Of $500 diSeeverers; Witirthe inspired.,leaders
week,' lives 'on: steak, veTeCabiesi :with theI/I
gay CS harmV loVers
•
milk, and eggs, •aad. has ly bath, . Curers t 0 answer to,the mar
his own •motoi',car, benik aecoant, and `who would nifl tiUS Halp.
fllm contract. 1111211 Ji!111.18, I '
. - •
number of trees required, to prove
this sawmill -Output; but ;even '40,0
as it is,'ialithoritiek,:adVise that if fire
can be kept-out-,Oftha-fctests- natih!at.
cutting. ' .it :',spenia• 47sinall price to
.tilerem°11t *iii• rePh4ii'• the "acnnineroial ' ' ' in a.:.'deterrained effort to win baelc•-
,the toll being. talcen by forest fires
yet .the "§ohneider' Cup, the international
,trophy, for. air :Initrine, draft, .,which
pay for such alt. impo.rtant'.result,-
,ecitial. if not ine2ceesS Of that used ••\vIkii !W°11' :by. the, United' States ' at '
C two yearis ago, craft ate. now '
bk industry. - ..- \ .
•• , tieing constructed to represent ••Gretie
, the.47•vattei' -i..4d."ther:eee:4Pae'"draiant€14rj!iiiiiii.nete1Wal• .1i34•'":"116:' s'N'Irill 1:1:6' das'Pb1°' lar . a 81).ded f.'''
.,, • • .
hid ' °it is ethifidently be '.
':A town :that is i9C; poor to atilt*
about its 'traffic problem. - : '• • .
.*
‘: 260 . jVides An our.
• 'Aerop1a#60.
I:Invented machine.. . nietins of Ya. bntwc,.°Pc66 -alf.(1 27° an IA°tir''
running belt they racing
toomrg,
_ again
‘cleanenter _ •' built secretly is, the. deVelopinent .
THIS CAT MUST BE A VECiTARIAN-Ry 'Burt Fisher.
MUTT AND .30
wow, e . ALL yoti del -TA
Do ',ISW. Pizaily. Arab
• `./OUILL,
FEAT O 1ed:
iNirl-Ti.OtirG WORRIES
ABoUT. fr,tt.d 01,Pg•
'IVAAT bC10*-k
00.6. 11AE 1th•
1210144.,111c- 'rpict
r• Noy 11.V.Y A
DoLLares ivORTR
oc mouse
IltAfit?
...M.••••••
Plo FAITS 27'
TEN cENTS''OK
tttc-cse ANt•
Nit4161`e' Cdre`r
Fort A cAT
LGT's LOOK •
C Atzt4PiGc
•
,
tat
'
'
•
41
,
,trials' last autumn, a tiiined, a speedof:
'.215 .milesi an ,hour i.ith the, throttle;:-: -:
\net fully;Opea, ' ' ! . ,: . , , • ' . •
N With 'a .very ,sinal 1 siian. and \Stream,
'lin d sp ' that there are ,no "Iiiinips". in
• the., selage,, this raber.. which 'win be .
• 4.......,• •;' equipp d ;With 'floafts, or landing . on
Wats'', *kil. Inolellhe a.pying bullet, as
• it goes Inkling through the .riir...,'
.: One of ,,t13\1, secrets Ofit's spee,d•,,,,vilt,_,,,
ho:. tlia..• ipeCias:Oy'' cOnciirtlitiVd e.og rife,. • •
44 ihrirlhe Wll ile
iuIsa age to min tiiii-se *.wl, 4 ,t. '
• :, 'i- *
rklittatix
Caz' •:• '• '• ' .: '
.t,his; is i developt lent, or tit 0 :Nitii r
Lion' engine but the w t.•33cy •
, •Velon nearly' 800 hip.,, ini by the. la- .
. troductiott.' Of . n, Aireet.' ri,...c., '•;',e1gbt..- .-
,:,witt,ht-redittoii--hy'ileafily 4.t.-t,,ottr:7-=','
'I4 tie is";JU.L 1113
NVhere t's-ttaN4r ?eollog
whefe no 1 hit oan
Oi' ple,tisant wat4r. flow:
Tint VittS sgarden
1•Vhere •Lore and I(indnes.,
And tilt who wail< the iiatAts e k u r,
Io set it is to sive:
-Rebecca
:••