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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-06-14, Page 2TES trrruT OW VI:MY LUAU. Camelbas Reread im Comte, el tiv* Peoltese They Wire "In the middle of tke weld* on the summit of View Ridge there is a little group of whitiopainted wooden crosses re*king the graves of the Seaforth Higidenders of Canada, who VI* Care Brine Reward is. Mileage. whet* they may come in contect with fell in the capture of the ridge, writes , a war correspondent in Boum. These The treas. and oil gresttly reduce Canadian Seaferthe were mostly Brit- oil and tools. b is difficult sometimes to deter; if000**. masa Jost Viola a tees is unfit for fur- ish Columbiana. A long, long vow b, hmikatAs that it has attained its tool* many times mese the tubes to they can* to die, these longeimbeel of the rubber, while the Meer isse. Penalty in * tube usuet. the oualiti throe aeon and ten. At this stage become chafed end worn and unfit for gone of Victoria, Vancouver,' New Weetmineter and Nanaimo. Some very small cracks con be observed in ule• came evert fuetleer, for they cin:ae from the rubber if it is stretched and ex- the far-off slopes of the Peak Ifoun- eet is plitting when the pros aanizted cirefully, The next develop- Teo Commandateuts For The Auto. teens or the upper waters of the Free sure become too great for the tube 1... Ascertain the right size and type 4 ter River" when they heard the call. msair - ohlist. 'r - to beer. - of tire for your ter and use them ex- "Many othefeet willtread the Name joorney after them, the feet of pilgrime whe through generations yet Ji the rubber in a tube is "live" it may successfully beer as many patches as a begpa°5 coat. But due care must be exercised in the oulcan- isation of the patch to the tube, that too large a portion of the tube around the patch is not cured, If portions of the tube have been over -cured in peteking operations, dieaster is sure to follovr. Lack of proper care of the tube is responsible for most of the trhublee tire users experience. Sufficient telc between caging and tube itrevents the generation of heat 'which vulcanizes the tube to the fabric of the casing. Tube splitting is occasioned by the slipping of the tube between the C40 -e , big and the rim, which soon results *in * "pinch." The remedy is careful aPPIYing. „ The protection of spare tubes is * matter that many tire users pass over too lightly. Usually eipare tubes are folded and carried in the tool holt, .cluslvely. 2. Apply tires with care so *0,0re ^ and rim fit properly. to be born will come here as to a Use inner tubes with proper type shrine. The little graveyard will be of valve and carry in tube bag& as .a flame of inspiration to -•--the heart 4. Don't overinflate or , overlettd oftenada for 'ages, or there ba o been nothing finer done in the war Than the tires. 5. Don't drive in streetcar"tracke, achievement of those western men on • orlet wheels get out of alignment. the xidge. "There le no trod of all ties table. & Don't scrape alongside of curbs or drive,orback against them. • land where a man can find the original 7. Don't leek the wheels of your ear surface of the earth, but everywhere is in stopping, or :skid, or tuseetight ridge and Shell hole, the bardlY dis tinguiehable remnants of the old ch8a.I"Den't eitpose tires to the light. or Germeti trenches, the 'thin covering /et unusect car etand on tires ell win- Etat being all churned up with the Ur, 'white chalf below Until all is grayish i Don't neglect casing'cuts, no mat - white. • '• ter ihow slight, or let grease, oil or "It is so readers in Canada meet gasoline soak into *Mir etre& think of the place where their sous 10 -. Demand rime beerier the official rest The hot sun beats dotal Wit, atanderd Inbred -ion stampthe ehelle sing otter the place both . • obeereation of tele above covet -needs ware' end overhead aeroplanes drone will • give maointoin 'Mileage on all in a circlo Lt•is a 'hideous place, but quality tires, there could beim prouder burial place . for these inentthao this central sum, net of ridge they *on se splendidly," PROTECT BiRDS be made for the lielitti; Birds like company. Even the -bluejay, usually AND SAVE CRO termed a rascal but at heart e boon his nest near a dwelling. e; The robin companion Of the farmer, likes to 'have appreciates forked_ ;seats placed in trees' for him, and the wren, bluebird, Till lItOTIROTION OF BIRDS IS A and purple martin enjoy the cern- penionship of Msin seen at .they /earn that he is their friend. " The hest weer to get on amicable tonna With birds is to build and put up bird -hoopoe and See that sue% • are not destroyed by bets or. preyed upon by eats* • rat up a single, birdhouse this summer if you ere a, skeetin and :Watch the wteio or bluebird, or purple .martin, as it feeds . its young,' taking • note of the kind of feed it uses . and the number of trips made per beur„, Keep a record Ofthis for a few 110Urar.ea- -tintato the geed done . in. a 'day, in 'Os. -*cake** a month, and in a' nesting ;sewn; and you be wiser the fol- lowing year. . . . .' A Succepsfet Expertnient, • . I know one farmer in particular Who loOt; dither one euramere throe toWS 'of corn forty rods long.- .The • core grow next „to a teem. - row heavily seeded with blue grime, which, pro- duced swarms of grasshoppers.. For theliake of experiment atone, for tide farmer' was a skeptic, last String he .peit ,tweittyeone bird-hpuses,plEtced„ two rode apart on the fence along the forty rods. The 110USeS were some that bean& the 'boys had made during the Winter- months, from : dry -goods boxes fobtedned town.,Thirteene,of the twenty-one houses Ornire inhibited dining' the following Stunnier, six by --Worke and, ineoliti.,as pegesgo, lend a wrens; foot by bluebirds, and three hand, in .deeteg 404 -el by colonleaof purpleonartinee • &aro* tile. gong means the The grasshoppers that summer • destruction Of hundreds,and in siene made' rich living for the birds, and • uaseis: .,p0usaucts# eye fle. summer le when the fall came, that termer had 0,44 • , the satisfaction of -gathering twenty- Goverrenent!tatisties and • personal throe bushels of corn frera the 'three rows that grew next to the fence, oleServatious show over eon& .iyoer . *gale that the- birds are the faireetiO tri•hgah:,, -wheear to,raf° thcre was ore. With ,4n0()t nc 6:0111. ats - all best friends,:whieliy in return for theiri five cents per bushel, 'it repte- '11!hleese ask only protection that they i'fiftlr.. nifty being teeth more eactaiaa of in_ hegted atiaving of $12.65 for that year moue , • alone, with the seine tnautance , ee_eee,e_. , .„ e for the follo'vving year with no outIaO Os. "'ma "Om el immounee• itt•all. • Does it Pity? Roy& get. buey. otya‘ e „ee pro get your fathers to figure with ° you gi irT Happily the time is passed, or how much torn: growing next to a'But when, these two 'together toile • The idle men and the, idle Soil. 88 FARM ASSET. ." • Over • and Over AgalieerePuernam4, WSW* 1ow That the Birdt---- • Are Fanners. Beet Friends.-- • „. If ons -tenth of all tlie agrieuiteral, products' raised annually he the Unite - ed. States *Ore eciettered ever differ; . oat sections of the country where most Heeded, Would it tight -the.' •high *est- albeit*? Statisties ishow. that • . -*banally there le * loss of bee -Wien $800,000,05Cand 0000000,060,1O the atfriCalta* 10(46000f the United States, ell due to theritiageloof Sects, Writes C. Ce. In "Our Dumb 'Animals." • • • This feet as cited recently by te leading Chicege, piper, and it Was further cited that tbe less might be •, materially lessened 'were • birds pro- tected'ae they "eboille be. Wien eine of the 'leading metropolitan news- . Vipers Of the • 1;44 advocatea. that ayery .available peot of ground be. • turned hito a garden spot and celti- vatted, and wheikintho;SaMaisaue that OMB paper Urges that birds. he -pro- tected that they Might destroy itt- iecta, it te surely time for every one to ' consider what pert he iota do in the • StfoCKEto .STRAWBERRIES. Application , of Electricity• to the Ripening of Fret. • The British Government has -decided- to conduct experiments in Hereford- shire with O View to finding out whe- the*, the growth. of various , cops can- not be accelerated .by means of elec- -tricky. . The idea is not new. Years ago Sir -01iyer Lodge enclosed a field in Gide, cesterehire in a Sort ,of overhead cage of wires, strung upon poles, thimigh whiche* poWertel electric current was made 'continuously to paw As it:rte quit tOtt O'rotise growing underneath were were foefid to be increased by Asa* one-thirdof- their yield under - ordine, a.re conditions- . ••• ' Strawberries seem to be .peculiarly susceptible to electric influence: Sub- jected to 'a *Series of " mild ,gaiiiaele shocks, they- low, in some instances, Ahi of 5o • at. ttebiereage Tee , per. .cent. Raspberry plants -sprayed With elec- trified water heye, also hadthole yield materially' increased; wbile some tee. peribierieers. have 'attained 'oven more 'startling results!, hy• means • Of . power- ful elect* are-lampieetieeendedabeive growing crops' and kept burning all night, thereby stimulating the &berth: Of the plants in much the seine. way as continuteueebright sunshine does. , ewe 11,11k FamTW' dead-.-. the living, the dea• Zee ground we tread . And as we till the woridroui Sell With Care and -OEM and daily toil, We earn the right to live on earth, The soueete to which „we owe our birth. - ' and. and the Peasant knowing him- , So Why should untilled.tracts found self ignorant of great affairseis*readee Where naught but useleas weeds to follow the Jena of his educated and abound? . prosperous felleir. citizens Whenever Why can't we see with mortatken lie is convinced that they are honest, That idle land and sidle men, : well-disposed and loyal to Motheroltese sia. It is that combination of 'high Are berdent lilitd that We Meet hear, character'in the'leadership and of That oixit. us much in toil and cafe? trustful confidence on the of the mass of the population thet makes the future of the new government hope.; THE FA THE NEW RUSSIA OP WORTH 4/41417AL TORONTO FAT STOCK SHOW Union Stook Yards • TORCiN TO - NOTES ON THE LEADERS OF THE REVOLUTION. Sterling Qualities of the Men Who Are Leading Their Country One wart tee the Light. Caeadiane • will be intereided to know eomething about the- men Who • are guiding Russia through,ber thrke of stress. , Prince 14voff, the Premier, is • a landowner mid an 'aristoeratr7as Washington himself was -but he has *liver"' •been petriot, His greatest 'service has been ' in organizing the temott`04, or Provincial emnicils, fot ce-operation during the present War, and he stood sturdily • agallist the treacherous end corrupt ministers • who led the. Czar lo his downfall, More than once he, d14 so, at the peril of• his preperty and even' cif his life; Re is a Ann believer In the future the Russian rike, but not Pane Shiviat theaggreesive sense of the word. • A 'Famous Rapelan. • Prbf. Paul Milukoff, the new 'Minis - DEC. itkitt 8th, 1917 WRITE • F• 9DRE1W\ MIK - LIST TO -DAT • TOMMY TO THE nESCV-K Pow He Risked Puoishinentle Dein! • a Kindly Act. • ' Mt ANIMALS 1FEEDING GREAT ARE COMMON L#RITAIN'S NATURE HAS MADE PROVISIQN POR DEFENCE. • ; • Many Examples 'Of Insects,lislies, and Anima* But No Armored Birds. Now that lighting meu are • going back to the wearing of armor for pro- tection battle,. it is interesting to • note the fact that nature has • made similar Provision formany animals, • The early Spanish invader'. of tropi- cal America were greatly..interested. itt certain species of armored mommaist wholly new to them, which they found. plentifully distributed over that part Of the New World e They coiled them "ReMedilloe," because they were en- cased in coats of mail:. The sa-called "great armadillo! at- tains 4 'length of nearlY five feet. It is clad in a complete coat of flint -like armorplates, and it a tail, as solid as if forged iiiimetal, baa the shape of a trumpee. In fact, the aborigines *of, XPEliT COOKS PROVIDE ,HOT MEALFOR TOMM1ES • Best Fed Army In the World, With -the ,Greeteet Carimilesarlai Officer 1 , . , Since Mose* . • , "low Tommy -by TIO other name I known to fame--ceme to the rescue of a"hungry infant and 4 distreseed mo- ther in a Metropolitan eubiva3t car is the theme of OM inaidOnt,deecribed In the New York Herald. Somewhat condensed, it runs AS fellows,: •I The mother opened a small wicker.. bag and drew forth a bottle, the slightly gray peeler of which indicated that it had. fora:101Y contained ter of Foreign Affairs, is the most She gave it to:the infant, who, after, famous of all the new leaders of Rua. two lusty intakes, dlecovered the de, she Ile was long a member_ of the eeption that had _beau 'practiced upon 'hire d we twooctave i his roaring. On all sides looks of 41S- -tress begin to appear in the eyes of the passengers. • • At about this time 4 young man of .eleven yearir caroe int° the limelight. All th t kn f Iiiin i t hi faculty of the Univereity of liefecow, and has been imprisoned • and : 'even tient to 'Siberia because of the radical democracy he preached from his Pro- fessorial chair. He lute 'altered both In New York and Chicago, end he both admires and loves this countrY. HO Is, like so ManY Russians, a splendid lin- guist.- Ile learned to read •and write Englisk during a three -months' hn- prison/I:tent forlomeoPolitical activity, and he learned. to speak it perfectly during a threff-monthre Visit to Lon- don. He hi the greatest autborityeot politics and International law in Rus- sia, and the greatest authority onthe ethnology and history Of the -Balkan Peninsula in' the world. He b also the editor of Et great liberal news, paper, the•Retch: . Rodzianko, the president - of -the Duni is a Moderate liberal and an arifitocrat like Leaf!, *Mitituileff, the Minister of Public Instruction, is 2a colle•ge :professor, and the • edit& of the Merit° and literary --newspaper, Rusekiya Viedoinosti. • • Friend of Peasants ' • Geebkoff, the new Minister of -War, is a landowner and rich man,, but he has beereactiveein liberalizing the institutions Of the country, and • the for soMaistrange psychological reason peasants look upon inm as a particular he kept the'elderey mans quarter.. •Iriend-otetheireerdete boo° Aso • - been'presideoe ef the, Demi, • Keienski, the Minister of 'Justice, is THre:'' FOE' FIRED .THE GRASS- ' a lawyer by profession, a determined . , radical in polities and the -repr dente- A Terrible Moment. in the British Live. of labor hi the geyernment as he . •-:• • In Canipaigit in Gorman gest Africa. was n e Duma. e s a •soma . • and a republican and his. influence • In the inoke open coentryegrows:the, among the . Russian people grows' giant grads, • weving over; a man's • head,- dense and resistant as sugar - The leaders of the, revolution are all cane, and --once a . source .of .of deadly men of substance and education; their Rerit,, writes' a .soldier's wife, in ' de - interest in pOlitieseis pateeetici and not scribing the • event. • The regiment at all class-conscious. • There is, 'en- had deg itself in some 800 yards from deed, little division'araong the classes the •eneMy trenches, tithed • the wind, in Reptile, and not very much social- brewing in. their faces, brought to the Ism. There Is no ;greet _ hidusttiel men a smell of burning, and. with -a population, and there is land enough. sudden . roar a :see of flames coitus for each; peasant farmer to have his !weeping down upon them -the eneiny own piece of earth.. .There is; 'there- had set fire to the tall grass': fore, little jealousy of Mere wealth, There was neen isecond•io---spare spare. - especially when it is in the .form of The men leaped up, and, weak and ex- -hausted tut they were, forced • their Brirthiseh liJaateetre taha;e1a4naevateraale,aduragi' the German boasts of bleceading Bre • tain and preventing' needed f.oedstuffs from reach ng the g d kingdom. Notwithstanding . tlie dane , gers of the ocean and the difticuleiee..' of land trausrott, tile. gigantic task of feeding the British arra of millhine in Fenee Is performed with clock -1140 precisiee, by a OYstem rich in, satieface' • litorriy.trifh"allrit6n4. detrcrell:esdtbals%tillhatit bailee; fed army in .the world, with the great. . 'est commissariat officer sinbe Meses^-, Francismieolowytrue Waste The . The waste which marked the earl)* -day% of the war, when "radiaWere is- gard to desirie or capacity, has been mirept away in, the mating of miles of red tape .entauglements;uetil now the •Toremies get all the toed thee. wiehe 'bet canoseehange surptes rations: firet the cook .was gen.erally something to be cursed as an atilt% tion, for good cooks were scarce, Ood aneateur•coolis were pleittiful and:Afro- cioes. They were simply soldiers' at - signed to a task, to"make the best or it; or the Worst of 4.. • the case raigilet..! tOe Amazon Valley USO it as a tru ene_t fined tu atee qoantiteee without re- fer signalling in war. • 00:tat of Mail. • • .• „ Even -the ethanel. species of arma- dillos, however, are equally well pro. teethe, the head tieing, defended by -a sort of helmet. If attacked•by a beast or bird.of prey, the: cr,eature instantly rolls itself into a ball, thus rendering Itself proof against injury. • In 'eery ancient- thiles there lived in South America a gimit ancestor of thee a s own o s a e generally. It, flatter, first name was TheinaiL He broke the • m9der.P'armadlitlo,s, One of its liuge be, and between him and an eight-year-old, aids LI .u.a--.1arge Paper hag that rested shelle' "Ine• Ye rf3 146° Was f mind bY I Trained Women Cooke • ,. , tee of milk.* He loelred bashfully itt house bY hulf a dozen children, an.Englieh natitralist in use as a plaY- 4 In' cooks were traitreogue:Ileln, ttirhwoemree .. ecaripanion and drew teeth a tint bete A few Months .ego teamed women,. • bottle up 10 tedded the question: , he oame across a trumpet • (it 'was, in the iPemdpoans 0,000_of .theses experts in .the..servioer_, ., when -oho; glaieeedeatehim•lie held the 'aim*” camp big, alt ehosee - Foremen ,e ., erne) eyeni iv: region) . is' sent e!lut bil the front. There are now ' the troubled mother opposite, ..and eoise in tOe. car .was a ,I • of the extinct armored mammal. ales. it .wes the*till of a spec& e .and • food • . t th t Armored Reptiles. , 'the theysavingsoldiersarebeterthaneveari . e r" 44Want, it?" .... % - . • ., . - - ., [of s20,000,900 per year, while feeding' , Two minutes later the only -unusual gam*" the :Alligators and crocodiles, of course,. ..: • . ,-, - • .,-• Hot Meals For Tommy baby wee„still .``going- Strome when are familiar -to -day as types of the 071 . • • the car reached Meaty -sixth street. ' Mond reptile. . They are clad in coin- ' ,Tordiny Atkins gets his hot 'One* . • No sooner had the older boy- -re. plot° mail, which is -certainly-714'9ot , three lines h day, and -must bejn a gained his seat after doing his good ageing buckshot, and is hardly peneo very hot corner Indeed when he oen, turn, than his little companion *les- treble by a rifle bullet, unless a point - not be eierviede Ration partite) carry pered in awe: - • ' in the armor be struck, Such a bullet,: the food in covered bot water. heated "Say, Tommet, .you'll git kilti". - striking one of -the 'plates,. is fairly, reeeptacles teem; the communication The newer to-that...was immediate. sure to be deflected hatmlessly. . I treitchee to. the front line, and the sol- • An elderly manatTenney's right There are no armored birds. 'So fat i diem. enjoy a hearty Meal, at the same tattled the. boy's hand flat Aand liut, : a us known, there -never eirero any. , It is time keePiag-11, wary eye oz rrAttougt- .. . quarter IMO k and the 'feeding :me-- a -fact Accepted by naturalists that ill acmes the way; for 'auspicious ,moveo, '- 'thee tossed tee Cents at feet. The birdie are descended from reptiles, but meats. •Should Fritz ehowOany dis-po- . bot: Oinmedietely ',returned the, ten in the process of acquiring wings and keen to drop et at meal time. a. telte cents to the infant's mother, but, feathers for epueposee of flight they phone message is Beate the reartan4 ' might have been expected :to discard -a few -shells dropPedin eitiefelty ielece-- emiecessary .encumbrances. - . .' eted•Oleces stem convince Fritz •that • it - --liieetizitediiiiiviair'dayee -there ' were JO ex*.eloolY 1114.011t0-40-1hirUde "dm.- :-- man,y :speciesof armored fishes,,some,ing meal 'time. ' : ,:, •: ' • of 'which are represented to -day • by( For 'men in espeoiolly exposed posi- • .. survivors,in this respect elegeneritte. tions a ration-carieer strapped to a ' Evidently •nature, which - is forever emenO Onek is u*sgi. wi These hid separet.00doutibflooel:, • making expeeiraentsOdid not think the pkinned tanks idea worth perpetuating. • , • a adore or se of Men. These Maki are Armored insects. . . •. igiull:beaynoidnaththe e.c.'arreraieohr. efit•othese ethnr.earameoshe' ' in the In kingdom, however, . there are to -day not inetely a:few, bbutwalking or crawling, as the occasime hundreds of thousands of armored -spa'. demands, until he reaches the hungry soldierii awaiting him el toe deneer • cies: These are the beetles, which are clad in cemPlete. suitsof einael. Their ,..,. . . zee& ' 'Buoy Beef in a Pinch , ilarammeorlir, ,Ii:,eflauctiti:1, 6i.s.,!. M. cadheitionfe liamnnatoetrib..7ael i timite fir more .•indestructible than. steel being, to send hot. meals to litho, it Is entirely. ineooesihie; for .the acids. destroyed eX•ceP,`133: certain .1.414e711 ration. to fail back upon, °budging Of • ,- front line, every soldier.bas his own i . whose "shinitig. armor" is reputed Offitahr=gold-or steed, and, owing to i There are several species of beetlei, frwt of ivarios kinds, clime sumei4nt thi'to last a man. for'several days in 4, bully beef, biscuit 'Red Compressed neatly -is% when the ' farmers think fence row is destroyed 'by insect& and Hutt the birds must be destroyed. be. 'then tee if your fathers will let you t 1 -A th collie of the fruit they ea, In vont-, ' pa Up bird -houses and Pale -?,79u... e ' -pareson With the amount of good they; difference 06 first year. ea -en by moes ---oe.—•-e-o do, the amount Of fruit ii- e It "'A ...1-- ttiit 41.L.-1.1111Ler-ialan-7- v' t-----..,-..',...relit4412.41P-4 1 1 Al mattere-ea•-miOhty geed form of ine • A. vety. practical syetein has been • ' eitiatickN-lorlitertarinew----• '''' lifaitealc-,tesriti; iierfOu's ;Yawl of But there is another way in*wIllat air pilots. The would-be pilot ems to the :birds require protection, and that hold the'handles of aspecial'register. 15 protection during ' •their nesting Ingemachine which is so finely adjust - season, 1 Not. only should prowling ed that it wlit phew the slightest tut - eats. be restrained and egg collectors. mot. 'Whilst he le, so- occupied a pis; either made to pee the folly of their 1 tol is fired euddenly, and if .the ma-. ,heartless „Allies _Or- else be summoned lchine records more than a very slight before the law, but provision Should tremor the candidate is disqualified. . , ete They are the tdattigreelet geoid, • . To bring to Merl their daily food. And ae we tee what Ooit has given, .. • ' - virtelnakae ArAghtelitairmulrietiiir.;41." BEeovaireitirT.TERe .,.USji o ear . hemlive-,On.4.10:-,cnotnyt-5--throug ng smoke and suddenly mite- . '"eeee'seeeeeeee-Thelft,O, . „ , 1001 who.. toloolinet thole moth, Aeo the blindi failing strength Pito Clearing. the ground and cuttleg a fire belt. A was tone with the steed of 'demons, for d fiercer demon was upon them; the men, with,tbeir 'tattered: garments that would have flared up so easily, put half a. life bite those few Etecondio gee teeth, and with a lustre -as of • olcl this beliefo people often other them eineb. . • • • and melt them. Most remarkable of A year ago the British- armies' were. these are the "geld bugs" of the genus , fed at an average test of forty cente i"npaluatilsoptiLenOntea .bineitghliatmeaarskilyafimaaarag;,, -oporndit.Ti: whIsruid, onamthoet,mbr to clever artifleer. in. neetat, the head and, $730 0041 per year.. Since then the ' wing cases being, brilliantly" polished, cost .o provisions •beis increesed, and with all the. eerni f tol t i h the cos per man is much higher.. „e • • • ,• . g .From intorniation Oathered from, The haat or the .fire was on their itself. • sGeerrinvedalloutPrin18.6thil.:11G •eramsaatoarraT a con store reached out :tongues towards their ' '. 14"" . : faces bliiiding t Or eyes; :the flames ' store of ainmunitioe. Under cover of When a man becomes thoroughly tract of twenty cents per day per man the .fire and oimoke the ...enemy came -contented he baamitliged. his meted- would vile • a get-rich-quiek jolo,proviet. out and attacked heavihr. . Out. men ness. ' . ing the facilities for getting food were'• leaped back, turned the full strength as .good ,as those enjoyed by Great , ZL IIfl itiiiiite; to be -aOlileiteiY=thee-Wiiiit bigiviar mat_ nuat tielO S•Eshow, tliWere • 'hes Ter°nto to learn wordiness work in the . "MY PO, you Want to 'praetise at the Union stock !Yards,' on Decent- It 'is gratif3ting ta know that in. thrift." ber 7th and lith next Our readers will few moments the enemy survivors woman .uegee.4e.e_, ug Pernianent work in "I• know, dad; . but I haven't the 'remember the' record prieteepaid Attila hurried back to their teem tools." Auctieetile xt last year's e d you mean by -th't ?t, ' Grand Champion. being bought. by the before the flames' t find their largest established est t , oeir grass, „ r ,a,uran In Cana- "Whatraton Company at 50o. per lb.„live shelties on fire, and under a withering da. God , wages paid, beet- worldng toe youlet me have the five pounds weigbt. Premium lists will be, oub in storm from every rifle, orfaxim, and •conditions and foir, treatment. Write . . e Good opportunity offered young I need,„I'll see how long I can insiOe a .few df0 ited win oontoineall-••the it last" • old and several new classes. • . gun a • grim silence _loll' Upon their, [telephone- -Childs • aye fes trenchee.' ••• . Yong, -Tordiad,;' • .owneema, Ellalaxgwas 1,661z. otiViA s 144 •M4 Av4FUL. MA' Be CAN HgLP. 14.E.140. ppy Hti4g,cawie i4afte. A • SEZ041) tabse 5AI 1.,ietraj; I GUiss oLoriA BRawei.1 00R 6ARYOR -100 hAD DETrea Give 140t Told. oN vitehree vo•Av•••••.vvv,,-;vm. • WHAT IMG GUNS ARE MADE OF - Miles Of Tested Steel Wire Are Wound _ • • Around Thene, According teethe Millgate Monthly,_ no rdWer than-Onehendred and seem). - teen iniles of•-ateel wire are -wound .. one a twelve4nch gen • that . weighs thirteen and a lalf tons: •In appear- 31:1)11.11etrSete anee this- Whith is' of the same `Tom, efou*R 'roe. OAS. opt A PAlit 'Oa New 11401 ARE r tierodr /4 /%1 CI? A 2.4 !! —*CT M sv vigeRt. ° 1 vsimR. t41 G ARV era •••• • •101"1:.: OR' 4.101 I` 11 SI/ tifia quality ee piano wire, reeembles teepe; it is 'one quarter ,Of an inch wide and one teeth .of. on inch thick. •It is tot. tel to a breaking strength of one-hun. dred and ten tons; The wire unwinds frog a tee as the gen Weal reverVeS,*' end a tension of about fifty tons to` the square inch itisures mechanical ae- ourecy in wrappinglt round the gun: • Various parts of the gun receive • different. thickeeeses of wire.. At the breech of a twelve -inch gen, where the chief :drain conies, there ate ninety-two layers; • which glee a thicc-. • nese of nine and a half inches of wire;' but at the intizzle there are only four- teen layers. OVer the Wi.te the gun - Makers shriek on 'eteel tinge at white ,heat, 'When they eeol, they contract and and with immense force. The tif. ling of the barrel ig enetutomatie pro. cess -on 0241110e of weinlerful • enical legennity. When the gun•is ' • • experts test the ticcetheyeef tha. Ming -with p1ad1c guttiopercha.