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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-06-21, Page 21111 "FRENCH PATRIOT ammo Biettery Problem& to get acquainted with it and it; opera - .& tetrarieteg number of motorists tion. First season motorists Perth* lishiser eat their first car haven't the cularly would save themselves consd- ailleetepot Wee where their storage bat- erable expenses and annoyence by Ise - leer ia teateed. fame ere ootiroly on. quainting themselves at once with W of the faet that they have a their storage battery and its needs. Imoiesery and that the operation of Maxtor and lights—and in most cases Wash Ti*. Car Yroperly. kraltkes—is wholly dependent upon it Motorists who buy fine aars usual- easi its well being. IY take pride in their appearance, The mule is that the battery in particularly in preserving the fine ignoroll and often times harmfully Emelt of the bodY. abashed. Not until it runs down and "Peeper washing -Of the car and do faile to do ha work does the owner be- MOTO to, preserve the finish and sip - gin to investigate. • e penance than anythhig else," liars 'Most battery troubles that eome to the manager of a motor car company. oor attention, says an expert, "are due to lack of knowledge of the fun - ton of the storage battery and the at - Motion it requires'. eif every motorist tould realize that a storage battery is a perishable erti- ele wbieh is higlily sensitive to abuse and neglect a great deal of inconven- ience and expense would he sewed. In tide respect the battery is no differ- ent than any other part of the motor car. "Just as driving over glass and nails abuses tires and running motor with, out oil will burn out the bearings, SO will lack of care and attention bring the storage battery to grief, "The average car owner know* what constitutes tire and Motor abuses and he avoids them. He would, de well to find out what abuse's his battery, what attention. it requires and why— ! 'It is just as easy to was t e ca properly as not. All the Mud should be thoroughly softened by a gentle stream of clear cold water, which also will wash away all the dust. Then all the amigo and oil ,epots Should boore- moved ?Atli a piece of 'waste saturated in gasoline. The care should then be rubbed* gently with a eleau sponge, uating ‘sin abundance of clean add water, until all mud is removed, The car should be rubbed dry with gentle strokes of the ehemoiewriegeeig ie out as the water is absorbed. "he °bled is to remove the dust and mod ape leave the stirface dry and dean -with julit as. little scratching anti rubbing on the finish AS possible. Rubbing should be eone in straight eines rather than in circles. To pre- vent water drying and spotting it is well to clean one panel he a timeee THE WONDERFUL STORY OF HIS 43ELF-SACRIFICE. Breton Artist Who Gaye His Sight For Free Wes a Pacifist Before the War. Jean Julien Lemordant was born in Brittany and is a true Bretonabeeie, Ile' began his studies in painting at the Sehool of Fine Arts of Rennes and then moved to the Beaux Arts inranis, where he worked' in Bonnet's 'studio. After ten year's Of hard work, lea suc- cess. as an artiat was assured. • Then came he war. , • • Lemordant was a Socialist, a pas. THE FUTURE OF FLYING. Trips he Aeroplanes Will at no Distant • Future Become Popular; Mr, Wright;.the 'American expert, predicts; that the aeroplane will play a great pert in the new or- der of theism's that will follow.the war, Hir QUI/es that it Will be in great de- - nand whenever it is necessary to tra- vel at great speed. By aeroplane it will be possible to go from New York to Chicago in eight or ten hours •in- stead of in twenty, as at present; end to Sen Premise° in two Further- more it will be useful in transporting *inset Package" and very valuable freight to remote regions that the rah - way cannot reach. There are thou- sands of such places in the West, in Alaska, in South America and it Africa. Mr. Wright thinks, too, thee flying will become a popular sport, the greatest yet devised. .110. says: "It MILITARY PUNISHMENT. Old Martial Lewd Not Adaptable to "sionafe•pacilist, a ferventanti-militar- rasume *to from oar A °Writ trb t ter will *Aro t- Atokstret. t 'a toirtoemsiworr'a • arson orb Os,, t. infer *so ANC, ors to. At last the moreent came when he crossed the frontler beak into France. Ile awaited the moment with a kind of religion* emotion. Blind, with two ribs broken, an injured knee and fevered; temple*, he expected a miracle: a nairacle that was to come, from him - ▪ from hi* own mental powers. BRFBSH LAURIAS WON BY EX -BOER GEN. 'SMUTS NOW A SrA.UNCH IMPERIALIBTe 0.1.0.•* SaglkeitY of Former Foe ef England .1. Foiled German's in , South Africa. Among the Britisher* of to -day who He asked the Red Cross nurses on are earning 'Merle:it to be classed as the train to tell him the exact minute pooReasing the iniperial mind, no one that he creased the line Ile set hie, has come to the front more rapicilly in Will, hie determined Breton will, to see :the last half year than Gera Jan Ohrift- the frontier, to see "something; of it, a tian Smite, Minister of Defence of the hedge, a rail, a stone, a hunch of Union of South Africa, arid at prea- i grgss. ne'was lea to thts door •Of the ent the representative, of the South CM? at the right Moment and he braved African, gonanonwealth in -the inilierial every -muscle, put far* all his • will conference in Louden, Pewer, The frontier passed, he fell I -The following, is a very brief 1st and, deeply intereatod in, the Ger-ein a deep faint his. miraele had not epitome (if the record of the man, who matt decorative art movement But the come • • 1 iseitow barely 47 years old, has the bet - conviction that right and justice were A war correspondent In Parts met i ter Part of his oxen* aheteLof idea On his 'country's side, sent him to the hira recently in the .Guerault Geller- and begins to be regarded as. one of trout. His age, then 35, •placed him lea. The Legion of limier and War the coming figures' of the eMetire and, among the territorial formations, that Cross were on hi* breast. On the walls . indeed of the world. ' nround'him were some 800 of his is left hirn he the reat to work on some such job as a food convoy, but on Au - guest 7, 114, be. went straight to the Mayor of Rennes and pleaded be al- lowed te leave with the actives arMY• At the 'laid moment the Potty -first Infantry Regiment wag found to be eventing a. Sergeant Ind 'Lemordant was allowed to‘go. • " _ Within a, fortnight he was taking part in the battle of Charleroi. During the retreat; when companies had lost their officerkand everything was con- fusion, Lerneeraant, now sergeant - major, stopped a hundred men of vari- ous units, including Algerian sharp- shooters, as they fled a d led them for- ward to a sunken V% from which as Venn fattens* they checked the en - Changed Conditions. The changed conditions of -welfare have developed eituatione to which old martial laws are not adaptable. Under the old system the suspen- sion of 'sentence for first offences was not obligatory, but was simply a mat- ter of • discretion on the part of the general commanding. Amendments passed by Parliament in the course of the present War make such extensions of sentence obligatory for all cases. • Nearly two-thirds of the court- martials at the front and immediately behind the front have developed freM either' drunkenness or fear, sometimes froni ' both, according .to :Monsieur Rene de Planhel, who. has had more than two years' experienhe as counsel for the defence Of soldiers, Cages of deeertion vvith downright works. The, President of the Republic had just left him, after buying' one of Ibis picthreo. I eeut his oyes Were bandaged and the Moot that ha canhope for Is thatl i some day he may be able • to ., distill - 1 Belisle day from night. Ile speaks with- out bitterness and still has Morels of praise for that which he admired,. in German art in earlier days. 1 . THE KAISER'S WIFE. • . • C----0 nr 'Why Does Not he German E ress 1 . Pretest Against Brutalities? . "The Kaiserin, so' far as is known, thee's/. reice in peotestaagaiast eth emy's onrush all the -afternoon. A shell horrors in Belgmm; nor the receri had beenlost, that destinyeand com- e* greater horrors Northern F470.1.03, mon sense summoned the real intent, exploded pear him, killing two 'of his French scelptor. "I am sere I ex. famous game of the, Dutch States to accept the situation and to beceme the tight Men Med wounding bira -in the right says , Auguste Reale, thee shoulder, which still remains stiff as kind of citize g of the -British Empire. Wats one o the leading figerete. in framing the new scheine of govern-, Were wore en 'the midst of the bitter - 'tient for the Union of .Sotith Afrioa, nese oe their defeat by the generos- Under which within a few yeare after ity which hesneecietheir coentey back to Greet them. and, gave them a measure of the 'Boereehad been conquered freedom and of real centeol ahd. op - Britain turned over to 'them, as the citizens el a British • dominion, the. portenitythat they, bad -never- enjoyed and could not have. hoped for wider complete control of their own affairs. • e Becamein the "govertinnent of Fresi- the limit,* and almost 'despotic reign Of .ICruger„an his burghers -a . dent Botha of the- South Africa Union the right harid, Of the President in the e•-eer:-...* '.-1.--.:-e Foiled German Intrtgue. . .. 1-11's MOTHER direction of domestic -affairs. - BC= in Joliannesbneg iral.870. : Educated in South Africa: and .at. ChristerCollette, Cambridge, where he made a really distinguished scholastic reconrancl earned the highest honors. l'ractised law with eminent SUCeese in South Africa. • e . a beaten 'topple, rise mem and fight- don , •all -sten, b Wrote extenaively on;11 variety of °leg for theesarrie freedom again, but Canedian' e another, whet killed in action public questions, • • pow- to longer for themselves bet for has been . At the rate e the whole of the rest of the' world, end establishd so fax there Will be very e . teht,leu::::71 of th, .eir efforts you wilt find feW es back to ts football stars left *hon the War . Written, all overof , Africa south the ends and sports Com • i owe. . This. is the sort of appeal that One of• the first to go was Eric Mc- ! Sinute and men ef 'his Mind made in Donald, of Fredericton. Meleenalch in elee - South Africa at the beginning of. the addition to being a star football play. wiz. These men realize that•British er was also a noted lrerineer and fam- • th h i de d forced up- ous all-around athlete. He carried out • recent easeches, "iethe battle of free. men spotlit bondisien. _Before the war it was bruited abroad tied thief Tuition hied 'Weenie rorrupted by wealth, that it was growing soft bind that the day of trial would find .it wanting; but wheu the blow fell it showed whet freemen could do. It Awed what a free metiers could do when it WaS fed on the stuff of free - dome To -day it bail become the fin- ancial, the morel and, in a sense, the militery reainetay of the Allies. "Looleing at this nation ae it stands before the world to -day," he continue ed, "I feet that liberty. like wisdeine ifs CANADA'S SPORTS- MEN AT THE FRONT LARGE NUMBERS FIGIITING IN LIIIERTrS CAUSE. Rush of Athletes to the Colors Leaves •the Dominion Mines Foot+ ball or Track Team. Vittoria overseas did not always went completed. it Will be found that no one once more justeded of her children. The great British comnienwealthe of When a reeore of this war has been Urban always over shadowing them. the owe *au tTlehieeybwioiondtshe eaduseebnedndth aenttehrreoirr 9onfermoillei: the aportemen of and eesourcea to the building op of stars of England who have fought Csoatnoe::. enlehouavleieca:ntallbluetteealiMmetre Otte(' their nations and that could not be and died, find of the stars from the • Meted. But neither' done when they had to be prepared to ineettlie- enemy tee every Wet, - Slow States w o country has given a greater propor- eon than Canada has to the CapSe Of rkextibi4 shuarteltyhisAmisterunglehwasascpthmee etido ereohig the Hun. strugglefor.vvhieThht'wasglaiehaonce mer fought Pistiuguished Footballer% t emrw George Washiegton against George No one sport in Canada has given a greater number to the ering line than football.playe0f noVtierthitlygoneeveorvyin:sefaoso, tabnadll, many of tee best have already been killed or badly wounded. The list of the dead includes Russell Britton; bf Kinghton, the star quarteeback of the Argonauts, aud one of the best that 'Canadian sport has ever known, Gore S utham of Hamilton, ore& of the. Ur. In other words, the issue of freedom against slavery, ,,of free gov- ernment against military despotism. , Bettie for Freedom. • "In my day and in my country," ad- ded Gen. Smuts', "I have seen freedom go Wider, bet rhave 'aeon it rise again, I have seen that small people of Mine/ Entered politica ea • a -young man, and, was anunfailiag supporter of the Boer comae .when the South Aeeican. war broke out, Loyal British Imperialist. Riese to distinction AS one of the' military .figures in that struggle, end to more distinction as one of the first men to recognize, lifter the Boer cause a result. • An Intrepid Soldier. . Later bat evening he orgenited ,counter attack with la handful' a men which enabled, a battalion to withdraw -without, severe losses. The next day press the • unexpressed colbeetive thonght of the wellies' of the allied, nations When I say 'they Mast -Vision the etlent attitude of the German gm= press with loathing, in the light of . ,light of that which has occurred in • Belgium he was maee a Secouddeuestenanta and,. evacuated territory 'in northern . The retreat to the Marne followed. France. For thesaimietial Wife of an. The 'artist was Wounded again during imperial monster has raisee no dis- the 'battle but refused to be sent to a seritine voice against the horrors I hospital. He followed. the "retreating have MeetiOned. As a wife, al; a mo - Germans and was Wounded a. third ;ther, what can be her thoughts? . She time, at -Cramnieee ishell splinter lodg- is iepresanted as imbued ‚with- Chris - Ing en the • vertebral column. Ile tem sentiments, a zealous and fervent kept with his regiment and dutiiii` a Christian who according to reports, bayonet charge in the • bade of the prays, 'earnestly to the Almighty in /eve received Eye wound's at once—on favor of her county and her people; Is far more. exhilarating and delig• ht- Ulm as the canine are occasionally re- theleft OM, the top of the -head, the If- so," what must pass through her , •which the Germans thought had been it end revolt ‘againat its 'al- ful than the automobile for high ported, and very eeey soldiers are to- temileatheehodY and the right legeHe mind *Me treatment of.French wives refused' to be carried off the field and, and mothers of the Somme department set for egiance o e re P • . - supported by a soldier, he led the by the 'soldiers' who serve her hue - charge and was struck by a bullet un- band and 'Whose acs of violence and .BeeeTe the Mieieter, of .lietil:Mal der the right eye, crushing . his fore -i vandalism are publicly precloimed by — . - I head bone. . .....' .. . him as 'Worms to the arm', of: Ger- Tie felt mild hisAlieed had burst and - man'? . • .. . ' - e as if both eyes had left -their •sockets. "As wives' and guardians of . the 1For tour days imel nights he lay where sacredness of homes, the women ' of. • he 'fell, two. days unconscious and then the ' Allies . must haeaer collectively twe'days fully conscious, endurizig the classified the German Empress- in the tortures of thirst. *blow from the same category all men to -day classify butt of a gun roused him .from a her imperial 'husband. ' • fainting spelt. It was dealt by German I.„ . "How can she, mother ane grand- '• tiddlers' searching for the dead,. I mother,, have remained 'Silent at the . All was dark around him. He could tearing away from their mothete and . institutions, oug e f the football en - fen them unwillingly, had been really the original idea o etalessing. In truth- thereare no more triesawhich was to ripe through valor loyal British impedelists in the eine er fall en the fieldeelii This Cage - - pire now than these men, of ,South Denaldehae aurviVed to rise from the Africa, who fought wider Kruger and ranks of lieutenant to thet-eit actionela Botha in the South African wire ,They and it would be no surprise to see hire soon preinoted to the ranks of a brig- adier general for distinguished ser- vice and militery -efficiency.' leis re- cord at the front has been even great- er and finer thare his record in Caner • diansports- : Femme- Track Men. • . • How proud I was iyhen• he let the beginoing- of the Present wee ' ; away " • , immeeiately took a ,leading part inee On that Met great day of se ad, • making eertainethat the • SeUt,h African 'Though, mdt Irgacri waseelek for ,hle prat nation should not fall ) into the "trap e" tang play, se. . . And the touebeo•f lingers *eel; I longed 'Le keep him and bola tylm, AS Only a mother can, • But I braced ray will, and ,told him, "Be in,otheees brave little man," arehee speed, and far safer. The time is not tally exemPt from fear. ,lefele who far distant, when people take have fought •bravely in numerous .ac- oliday spins in their aeroplanes tions, Mon. de Plienhol says; finally precisely as they do now in their auel give way' to What is called "nerve tornobilme Long tours in the air well w.ear"; their inoral courage is noiange offer greater relaxation from the daily- er sufficient to oveiceme physical fear, grind than long railway haurnere and they run away from danger. Their People need only recover from the number, though, is small in eompari- foolish imieresesion that it is.a danger-la:di with those who forget their duty cue sport, inetead - of being, where in the stupefaction of excessive drink- aeopted by rational persons, one of ling. Even these; considering the mile the eafest. It is ale° far mere Vika- 111011S of men mobilised, are so small fortable. The driver of an automo-e e percentage as to constitute no fe- Me, even •under the most favorablefleetion on the army as whole eireamstances,, lives at a constent .4%. frequent and. Effective means of • *erre tension. ,He muat keep always defence invoked by counselfor accuse, hear: moans and groans .of the grandmothers of more,than 400 young etheathneheekeile.fbeeobteelie atone in the- ed soldiers ie the citation of gallant wounded and he dragged himself French women to serve as slaves, or -e. read; fol' other autemddleg, and for condeet Oh the battlefieldit often toward them and asked why the night for menentionabie • purposes, to the -sudden mitergencies. A long drive is haPpena that e• soldier refractory to was so losigellirevas told it 'was broad uniformedofileer barbarians of the therefore Dicey to be an exhausting army diiciplirie is a, great fightet, and 'daylinhte Then he understood. German twiny , • • ."1 had thought of everything," he • "No French woman, were bee bees- , .has since said "of death and terrible band She Eniwetor of all Asia, would woihiele,,but not of that" , • I have remained silent Wider like eeir-- ' .Pieked up by German stretcher eunistithce, and, thus ; given tilde ap- betireere he -was carried off atee after, preval to the practices of ,her Attila:- • . , amateeeeleeetee ":.•0 .Fwaa Prouder stilif-Vilien-lm marched away . • To tbe"job" he seized with ,Taleage. I knewetlae saccese et thee • busy day, . • Meant the lesseat My darling leo; But Wine with °the great werldeeliaing, , May header oreationaeplan, . 1 , e hive- done distinguished serviees: White, -Victor Buchanan, ptesident . So I .kepeemy. tears from falling, • , of the Montreal Athletic Association, - a ' " - •• -- Was • killed at tee front while going . But proudest of all when he inarched oyer the top with the Fighting lathe • And murmured, "Be brave, a man!" • eWaY . . . He was 'olio of the•best-knoem 'mortise" • • Tom • Longboat is still remenibered" as. one of the greatest marathon rem - Tiers of all time He has put the king distailee-efficiency . into effect as a -dis- patch. merrier on foot, where he has dope .remarkable work aaa has been mentioned more e n enee fen; his due- ing, stamina and. efficiency. The idea of• an dispatch runner proves again that this war is not epeirely modern. in its make up, °despite the ferty-two centitneteee the 'Uebeate and the Zeppelins. Longboat to -day is running greater distances at greater speed than he ever peed in his best inarethort days, to -judge from re- ports that have beet received from the front. Percy Molsom, leleGiles_ , pear sprinter, : and Frank Lukeneare or Montreal, are: other -track men who • • ' operation, Now, the aeroplane has -between court inertia% accumulates a, great future for 'efpeirtingaurposere Worts and deseoretions that it is diffi-- heecauee this. element of nerve tisaiden cultdo ignore: J e absent. The driver enjoys the pro- A much disputed point ise. When eeeding as : much as his parniengera, has an infraction • of discipline or a And Probably more Be care make nes- etihie been committed "in -the presence a terrible voyage reached a. hospital , like husband -and his Attila -like fol - takes, even lapse in his attention, of the enemy" an aggravating circum- in Bavaria. His condition improved, lowers, who disgrace eivilizatiore! without h any serious consequences. stance under military' . Jurisprudence? his eyes, . one of which had jumped , ea -e---: ' ., 1 , • i Windt! no longer terrorize the airman. In trenehavarfare the old definitions of from the socket and the other had THE SWEETEST WORD. . . ;Newspaper readers will remember "presence of the enemy ,have become • 1 b i f b I - that, ten years ago, my brother *end I obsolete; greet latitude is' now given from his forehead, had been placed in . There are aoft words murmured by carefully *elected the days in which for leniency on this point, ante: it . is position again and he began to seed deer, deer 'epee. we Made our flights. Some slays, vthen exercised in- all but the most flagrent He could even trace lines and decipher : Far richer than tine other; there was too Much wind, we -would cusee. very large letters. - ' . . 'But the sweetest word that the ear, ' . bah heard — not ilea at ealI. But we havealearned ' ;.• , ee, •_ teeefieraetadeeeethAteeheaagegalete_ele , ,..__IturIli., A Sigahtot:f.,_2iBeritloved France._, . „. ,.?, 3 Xi 4 . Is the blessed :Slime of eeilotheie," ' „- entilpeeinteeiovrofeetimiglietelealteihr tir.rieeafey,gitla „tun; . •-•,----- .. :-0 - ve4i4sTenlailies jltilitriltilaiiiiiieS7.4. jruitheil broken. Twice he tried to escape and o magical Weidieinie it never die eaye. The oily 'wind conditions that are ore to be some failures. And 'deter 'him now are the kind known aa/ cyclonic, when there are great twists Most :of us are so thoroughly hilinan that .we'llate to acknowledge our We-. he the atmosphere. Under theiie eit"' takes. • A 'successful farmer says: ee laave learned more from my 'neighbors' failures than from their successes; and I have profited most of all from my Own eirsietakeite-bea studying out .liff about. August. 13e. ready' fot it. tee causes tracing out their effect, -Don't- overload the pasture& and avoiding their repetition.' . , To the. cohere -call was.l. • • • Though I knew that' ill° lad who left so gaY • '„ ' • • Was bidding a latig good -by; • But love both stirreel•and tattled, me Ae—one the figliting elan— . He wailed ;with a- look that dial:Warne, Alwaas and, forever a man! • StoP, Look and Listen, ' Every' year about .5.000 boys, 'giriri menan Canada. Ted Savage, outside wing and captain ef, the thampioheitip Montreal football tenni, IS still an- other who has; rendered brilliant Ser- vice in France - • • • ' These names are mentioned to show what Canadian sportsmen: have done There is no .football team in Canada, no track teain, that hasn't eeough • star players to break eie the organize - rose their lives taking tion; and that hasn't contributed the and growneedies finest sort of fighting material --game, • asesessemeseaseesseeemelesese rises, en 'crossing railroad' tracks.. res'ourceful,, alert arid always to be " danger of taking short -etas and walk- on top of the job, making good • Gen. Jai Christian Sleuth. • • Marta. campaign to teach children the: found Defence and as such directed the cam -e ilea or remelting on the field' of. No Manee • aiding elaiene on ah tracks.Land, with the game .over for all time, resign in which. the German .colonies •,re too v1014101° t, -ha ehrovne, fievey. teree. now a serve - ese ru ea: , • elever use rehreade traoks for high - cunistancea lie does not fly.° e Every year the farmer wonderghov the -Pastore is going to- hold eut.4 IS a pretty safe guess that it will fall ever seieed by.. the Shath African A • eeee b th I forces'. , e holt to leen effeeee-andaereepaegeteal ' ;ra-n'rtaearlr-C''deefertfeeeeeejeeteieierht'ereFieceieiefheelie' elleateleyeetbr ealedehe tempt, only felled when he had reach- , Nor melt away frees the • filleting' ed the frontier, calmed him' to be -sena • hearts . ~ - , • tenced to a reprisals camp, Then, to That even would brealtio keep It his despair, he again lost his. sight ' • 'a At the reprisals damp, his blieclness Was there ever es name that ve like caused him to be "placedamong the this? severely wounded, who are allo.Wed to Will there ever be such 'Mother? be exchangedhie was soon allowedeThe angels have reared in eheaven ' a to° g9 to Switzerland, where he wall . shrine • , nursed for some weeks: 'o the holy name of "Mother." - SAst 11,M; FANee6 ellatste Ife lea; BACK NARto.'. WWI Poritr 4ou61VeJIM A QOARYelt AND arerh Wei Noo. „ Wt. Vilkf BO) OUT' OF life. i3ASME14-1;1 TIIMIS A 'eon. I401040 OA. 'PO IHAT WHVii0 IS 3r1/6r MO 0# YOOR.5 ‘100.1.1- WAD_ MS 1-A2N %ties on IN bee VAR!, leeDrie vm ei316 TREE ' • eirees----ree-M—Te-eP en- a - Never -ate krB4Or0L-0.014111Stratiolv...0.MItt- r4,do,_•-strlAon.t-viirap..isr.-and•-oft-tvat Perial-pioblemsepresentediey the war. 'wale, pijAy .s,ra. mintage Never Smuts is one of 'the men -who have , areatnehoruider-theesatety gates.--whe had time in spite of the' eeeose of wartheyare down. Don't, use railroad to shadceve forth ail outline of the vase bridges and trestles for shoeettese 'sequences. a this era. It is a Vidion Keep out -of railroad yards and don't, play or loiter about the, railroad IAA: tion.It iSn's brave to take reek's. of what theeBritise Empire end the reunion' of the 'Anglo-Saxon races ineena to the world. • .• • ' Democracy vs. Autocracy. "This," said Gen. Smuts in one of his • AM. lel. HM. HENRI) VIAI4e Up !! VO 401) *tier -ro EARN A' QOAiheeER.: Hope foi the best and mike the beet:of what you get; e. me.t' ^ 0 airs eaeleee- . It* • . 4,, 4 .. • - - ';'443,41 r , • eivaea, • 1.eisheoe—aimemmmemmm.:,... 4 , • a _$yworsof tbeWar_ 'Hz ' hat when bailitirisni with war • at- ' 3 3t# altaltiltzia-ehaff-ilebmeellet,werFareail:ted.:Yith-wh, hereeliateatle."er-e•ze. eit • , • --That Whatsoever -the service every.a loyal ;Canadian an or is called expert : - • to render, each thall gay to himself and to all the rest; With this'. service I.would help the nation to win victory. • That every smallest garden thrill be redtsgbitecl ab.rao1'lier . of the desert battlefield That every fan. ew "made •by a plow • shall rue intothe eohlier's trenches et the eront - , That -every barbed :blade Of wheat shell be aspear. . •• • • ' -That every bandagefor a *minded youth 'shall be part .ot the grientent of degtiny to -stanch the ebbing' blood Of theewounded, the, better, world.: ' To the endthat the German nation shall cease to seize the lands and honies of other peoPles lande, and homes for its own people. • • " To the end that it shall cease to prise. *- claim it lust of eonquest to be God-- . attd lainutchAeirtny,ig.ohttltoe'tGur°0c1. roi°df tprieuenedheerry aiid • . lies, • " A number of of starcby' rooes, teberg nnd• eorms 61 vegetables, including Jerusalem' artieholees, cazaves, dash; • eons, yam, yautiae and taros, in ad- dition tothe well-knoWn sweet Veta. tops, have food valeet Anil degrees of digbtibility approximately equal to these of the Irish or,white POtOtk.. omit, lefteethe lattice merit-extensiVe use as • e a east, of miked,dktt_ • ir m •