HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-06-28, Page 6P,
WAR ZONE
SOT COFFEE AS WELL
BIBLES.
laillte.Aas Week et Laskin After
Material Ceeefort and Spiritual
Welfare et Soldiers.
•
kin* dove, and great things are be-
eolooles has developed the effort to al vim rAlt91.00X.
ereeseleee7"1,7''"Reern-
-•
••• 2•.•,:'
lag aseatsplistai in the depondenties. Possible to Have Eyestrain. in Ind
From India *ten have coots to work ; and noel as Well as in Body.4
not only among the native troops in The oculiat 'woad back in his chair
England and France but have gonel
for similar work to Mesopotamia end "4 surveyed his Petient theelghtfully.
NOW A HUNDRED MILLION
DOLLAR INSTITUTION.
East Africa, We have branches in "le there a beeutiful view anywhere
the Holy Land and in Egypt. near your house?" he asked.
Four hundred end twenty.eight For a moment Mrse-Pareone frank- ,
Y.M.C.A. branches have been estab- IY stared. The various tests through 6 --- -Y al --Y -r".7-a- - -P ' ' ' ' - '
A Sete Increasea h ne el t28.999 NO
specialist vr
which the ecialist had just put her bile Current
in the Past Year,
lithed in France and Flandera for ,
eyes had not prepared her for any Louts, and °Discounts Ins
work with the troops, some 0 them such commonplace question as that.
being housed in cellars and ruined
Then,
houses, some of them even nearer to with a smile, he recovered creased by $13,902,393„
the 'firing line being operated in dugs herself Even doctors migh,t like to e.
ane 54th Amtual Statement of the
chat a little. "Why, yes,." she an- ,
Very likely you don't know what I outs actually under shell fire.
MUM by the Red Triangle. There is They never fail to follow an ad -
twit a, Beitiih, Canadian, Australien, vends without delay. The elay after
New Zeeland, South Afeican, French Bapeeme was occupied a Yall.O.A.
or Belgian soldier who is not faMiliar
., man appeared among the troops there,
with it. And all these tercet. see 'le, accompanied by a , mule laden with
constantly, says a London writer. R cakes and cigarettes. A. Y.M.O.A. is
does Rot mean eant, hypocrisy, or in full operation in Bagdad, and ethers e.
You see it best frqin the guest room, and Diecounts, . the measure of the . •
ceremony; it does mean helpfulness, are doing fine work at Salortica, Male ntsulationwhich keeps the beat in the
ta and eisewhere. , ' so perhaps," Barn's participation inthe ceinmerche engine. It preventri also the cooled
cleanliness of mind sit all times end Of ....
body when that may be, Oomfert for •
the soul at any rate, geed fellawship, •The Purely 'Religious Work , ye:A.:Jr how long a tune, should d i. ' ' • surface of the radiator from coining-
. . . ,
creased over 28%, reagbiag a total of in -contact with. the, water, Istheteby
eVetepnient of the Dorainionhhave he.
eansing the engine to overheat.' This
good sense. • We have given away -tette of thou- . Somethinghis tone told herathere
That doesn't sound much, like the sands of Testaments, for which men was a real purpose in his questions. $62.737,958e This indicates something condition means that more oil is used,
- usual list of things connected with the ask eagerly; manyhundreds of thou- Mrsparsons paused a moment to of the -revival of business which ha e Mileage is reduced and bearings 1e -
work of missionaries. But it is a very sands of carefully prepared leaflets, think before she answered, -
partial and imperfect list of what the which have athrted many men to care- "Why, perhaps a minute," she said, b e Tel es so n markedereas ei ntharsosuegths Ofuot: Canadatiley.. ginoiltaon dsh vinsteadwe"o' f 1 uTib 'rits:awt ie:gr itno til:
form of fine duet is taken up by the
Red Triangle means in the trenches of fill end. coastructive thinhing, and an and then she added with a little em-
amouated to $24,769,195, or over ta,5% full extent it „tends to hasten the
this war, in the quieter lands belfine unrecorded but immense number of barrassment, "sometitnes • more, leet
the firing line, and in eyery city of the sermons-bave. been preached to the not often," ,
view Merchants Bank of Canada, just Pre.
swered, "there'a a very pretty
acmes t: the distant hills arom one sented to the Shareholders, shows
of my upstairs windows.. Some of our
suburbs mei lovely, aren't they?"
"How often. de you leek at it? auk -
ed the (lector. . .
"Why, every day or two, I suppose.,
Preventing Radiator Rind. .
Motorists pay to little attention to
their cooling systems nowadays, with
• the reeult that the motor becomes
short hved. The Water ooling sys-
tem of a car wile designed and instil:.
Jed to give • the maximum power of
which it is capable and to use the
Mast egratifying proven, during
' the rinnimeen amount of gasoline grid oil
year ending April •00th last. , see, at. a certain temperature. '
a""" , The rust and' corrosion which as -
only h
have Deposits end Assets grown auniulates on the 'walls of the Water
very substantially; but current Loa
ns jackets and in the- radiator forms an
allied fighting nations Where soldiers soldiers at the front and elsewhere by "And yet Ws a beautiful view?"
of the British Empire congregate. The our werlsers. Among these are some The doctor's tone was quizzical.
Red Triangle is the 'sign which Salmi of the most.celebrated evangelists in "Ys, it is," she said, "hut I'm a
"Here is to be found, st rePresentative the country. Thoueands of clergymen busy woman, doctor and I have to do
4 of the Young alert's Christian Asse./ go Into our huts to perform tharou-
ciatiou." tine work of helpers, serving coffee,
the really great influences of the war ing the faith by service as well as by
The organization has been one of foe example, sweeping floors, preach -
zone. It has clone more to keep the word of moeth.
soldiers clean and healthy than. have
the sanitary regulations; it bite done
more to keep thent happy than any'
other thing.
Beneficently it even , has reached
*cease the Channel, out of the fight -
reit ineenthe homeland, to help
VaVes arresweetheartse mothers, fa -
there and other a.nxious relatives of
loved held pained ones, for %has been family that one or more of its Deem -
the influence which has kept the men here are to. be permitted he visit the
felt of the thought a tools, not only
front for such. A. melancholy purpose
the Y.M.6.A., is -simultaneously -net%
fled, • . • •
When the. relatives arrive in France
the organization at once takes care of
them and usually sees to it that they
are comfortable on the trip across the
Chaimel. It may be that We may
have to motor them for aa much as a
hundred miles from the coast port to
the peace *here their. dear one is lys
and we regard them as our,
guests, supplying -them even with
lodgings at our hostels during ' the
whole of their stay in Frande.
Miele it safe to say that there
huts. More than a dozen have been %Geer is, a time when lees • then 250,
SO ewer that they have been destroyed friends of wounded men are staying
•
. Arrangeatleeeings, of Friends.
Not the least important work done
by .the Y.Id.C.A. is that which it
has undertaken el escorting and car-
ing for the friends of deeperately
wounded men who go to the froet hos-
pitta's to see their dear ones, some-
times to find them dying ot even dead:
When an official notice is sent . to ft
furnishing them with pens and pencils,
paper pad e and envelopes, which they
scarcely can carry with them in this
intense warfare, but inaucing them to
write home to the "'folks in Blighty,"
In this war It has been a sweetening
and wholesome influencrenf the sort
that ens wan ever knew before. It has
been truly wonderful. . ,
The Red Triangle Huth.
•
Go to the front where the lama has
been ploughed up by , shetlfite and
just back of the danger • zone; often
indeed within reach of the , enemy,
shells, You'll 'And the Ra Triangle
most ofmy looking at little dresses
and stockings -.when It's not family
lettere 9r some kind of petessary read-
ing, A house -mother has to use her
eyes mostly on things that are clo.se
at hand."
"And that is just what tires them,"
sOd the doctor, *Wing. "Ie is the far
look that rests the eyes, Mrs. Parsons.*
If you wish to cure those eye of yours
make it an ironclad Yule to, gaze at
your beautiful view for at least twenty
minutes a day -preferably thirty. If
you keep- that rule, you won't need to
pomt. to me again. in a long -time -if
ever." , -
Mrs. Parsons herself told the 'story
months later to one of her 'friends,
and in answer to a meeetionshe said
delightedly, "Yes, I followed his ad -
Vice, and he was right; ell that my
tired eyed needed was, the rest of that
'far look.'
"But 1.wondere" she added. thought-
fully, "if that wise doctor knew for
hew much more thanmy eyes he was
Prescribing, My soul needed rest
euite as much as my body, aad the re-
creation that I gained was miraculous-.
The twenty minutes son grew :into_
half Anhwei and more. It became the
most important part otthe day to Me.
by enemy artillery. Go to the, ports
of embarkation and of debarkation
and you'll find Red Triangle huts.
at ourhostels in France;
They do marvel work -there. Go to BEST -FED -ARMY IN. TrIE wogia
the cities where the lonely 'soldiers r -- - . ,
Rwill
.._ go on leave and the ed Triangle. , . .
'British Soldiers Receive Well -Balanced
meet your eye at intervals along the .
busy streets; and at every railway . . ' Itati"c
. station guides ''will be found raeady to . While, food prices for civilians con-.
soul its well ite in the body: And the
see to it that the wandering soldier tinue to, soar, Britain Still has the
practice is far too valuable ever to, let
learns the way to friendshelfry likely best -fed army in the world. Here id
go. Even in the city, where I have ne
they'll be new fiend, but they will be the standard daily ration for each
on the hale and meentains, I can look up into
friendre.,,e-. i • e man at the front; it is based
-111i Y.M.CA. has been the guide,' most caheful scientific research:, and the •sky aneitnegiee More miles than
' I can counte if the're is anything bet-
e. ,
the eounsellor and friend of men on has recently. been: declared by the ex -
the her. than a starry eight for Cultivate
' leave and men on leave need guidance perts of a neutral power to be
and ldnd, counsel. more than most peohresest balanced as, well as • the most 4 ' •
rile realize. At many of the big ter -4 liberal ration issued to any Lamy' . in
Landon there are a'score ie which men I Th. fresh nieat and three-quarters
minals there are. sleeping 'huts. Ththe held: . ': ' • •
can find beds. They can accommodate , lbe (nominal) preserved meat; -11/4
thousands Of men in London every : lb. bread or,1 lb. biscuit; 4 (its bacon;
. night . late huts are never closed. A : 3 .0Z. cheese; th lb. fresh vegetables
bath or a meat Can be had at any hour • or 2 oz . dried vegetables; % oz. tea;
1
of day or night , ' 3 on jam- % en salt; 1-.50 ez. Mae,
The initial difaculth in our work was tard; 146' oz pepper, .1, oz., pickles,
that from 90 to 95 per cent of the three times a week; 1-12 tin condehsed-
young men on whom we ordinarily milk; 1-320 gal. lime juice- (on the re -
would have relied for the supply of commendation of the medical officer);
. workers were not only eligible but • 2 or . tobacco' or cigarettes a Week; 2
eager for military service. We were :boxes matclies; 1-64 gat rum (ori the
bat with Only. the lame, the halt -anderecommendation of the- -medical of -
the blind, so to speak, and those be- . ficer). ' • - . '
, gond the military age. In this regard In addition to above, men in ' the
we were fortunate in •leadng the „trenches get_ certain extrase an for
• active sympathy both of Queen Mary i instance, pea soup, Oxo, butter, chO-
and Queen 'Alexandra, as well as that cotate, cocoa; and . .. •
— 'oriTeeriret othereofetheareharate s • . e • '' .
_. 4.‘InstinCtively,aa I Rased outr ever
lie ried forward- -consequently-showed an
that beautiful prospect my
eyes began to hike the 'fee leoleatece . '
'Thee" increase-- from $250,984 to $421,22
after Providing for the ''usual - divle
The little thins close.aa hand didn't
dends, the • Government War. Tax' on
seem so overwhelmingly important as
note circulatione donatiofis to Patriotic
they had before I, could_ see au th
4---rsee•F and Cross Faids,hontribetioets to
into the future andbialier in the sale
Officers' Pension Rena, and writing off
of values, my ;metal eyesigat grew $106,000 from Bank Premises account
stronger and clearer along with . enh During . the year the ' General
physical. It'sspossiale, a am- sues, \ to e s
have eyestrain in the mind and m the ranneeere Mr. E. F. 'Ilebdexa was ad-
vanced' to the 'position of Managing
Director; v l'ele the *entreat Manager,
Mr, D. C. Macerove was appointe,cl
General Manager. • In speaking of the
annual statemeee, the latter referred
with pardonable Pride; to the fact that
of 874 Mate •members 'of. the staff of
e - every sense 0 . military age at the beginehig of •the
word -I have yet to. discover it Awl. war, 520.; . or 59%, had enlisted an
vollalaelleg .le trues' your sense of gene overseas..
bringing the total Assets up to $121,e
140, 558, and enrolling the Merchants
Bank among Canada% Mildred Mil -
lien Dollar Institutions. This is all
the more creditatee since it hes been
acconfrafshed ' without amalgamation
with or absorption of any other bares.
wear. The final result is that the
motor has a breekdoven, and despite an
entire overhauling if the ewe anctnore
rosion is not cleaned out the evil still
exists ited the same process of trouble
will he rePeated.
A number of chemists have sought
a remedy Zee the prevention, of rust
Notable among the assets, are over forming m radiators and they have
ganaellyb succeeded in their eitorts and
Ten Million Dollars in Dominion and broughtoutNon-Cores° •..a.fir
Imperia4 war obligations, indicating exhaustive
that the Bann is doitig its share :tee in. the form of *small! sforluethealairlet:
to 'be deopped into the radiator after
ward carrying the financial burdeneeof
the nation. The EiSS0t$ Clo not it- I
L
Idraining and refilling with clean wite
ter, The option of the compound is
the same winter and hummer end it
is not affected by anti -freezing solu.
tips. It is a rust preventive, not a
rust remover, and it will not, injure
metal or rubber fabrics.
Helpful Hints.
Too much grease in 010 transmis-
sion Part) is likely to make the goes
almost Ete noisy as tot. little. It ire
poor practice to fill transmission cases
Until° brim in an attempt to silenc
the noisy growl from. the gears. The
heteer Way is to All the case .ahout
half Way up the gears -unless the
manufacturer recommends some other
limit., •
In electric motor Ei or generatoes in
which graphite brushes are employed
particular care should be taken to keep
the accumulation of •brush -dust away,
for, as graphitees a good condectee
electrictiy; it is possible for a ground
or a short-ciecuit to form with the aid
'of the dust and perhaps A little •moist
oil. '
Removing insplation from electridal
tonductors-made up of Mae etrancle of
wire is viiry easily donceif the insula-
tion is set on fire and alleivaescto burn
off to the desired point. The wires
will not be injured, and if there is any
tendency toward brittleness, the heat-
ing will remove it and leave the metal
soft and pliable. ,
elude any mortgages, while real estate I Ennit
other that' Bank Premises, and over-
due debts, amount to only $443,236, or
lees than -2-5 of One per cent. of the
total assets.
. The eonadence Of the public in the
kimbants 1,,ipk of Canada was.strike
inglY shown be the 27% increase in
deposits, which have now reached a
total of $92,102,071, Such re. increase '
is also ah, evidence of a healthy state of Many and Varied. are, the Inventions
business, and ofea general practice of e
thrift. , . - • I Which Owe Their Origin to • •
ART
OF WOME
WOMEN' MECHANICS NO LONGER
- ANOMALY.
• This marked increasehin the funds 1 Feminine Ingenuity.
and the gradual' clearing of the fin-
ancial horizoneap.ut the tank in posi-
tion to -extend its loaning and discount-
ing business by many millions, auto-
matically placingtheearning power
Of the Bank Upon a inuch improved
plane.. The profits for the year car -
• - -
"
mapeaeldenteefetite-Wereeetee
. Penicesia 'Vide= "e'er .eeetlireirtergei-eseefele-eareire• traleehantheereeocr
Holstein. At the present minute not, papa to day? . Jack -Sure, I did; but
•
less than 23,000 women are enrolled , le didn't appear to enthuse.very much
under het Most of them are volun- it over my visit. •• Nell -What did he
A LIFTING HOPE.
There is no prison of the mind,
• Death's sting is drawn when we can
"Visions and dreams alone can bind
To -morrow's hope with yesterday.
The violet lifting lovely head, •
The red, red, rose blushieg fair,
Grow best in cities of the dead
And from the grave of • man's de-
spair. , •
I
There is no erison.of theenincl,
Theee's no death when the sting, is
ran dram tie atehafind
itt
Leverage.
TO cleanse bottles that heve held•oil
plebe ashes in each bottleecover with
"en OBTRfaeww
%ors and their work is • beyond all say? Jack -Why, when I asked him cold water arid • heat gradually.... Let
pewee. fpr permission to press my suit, he .
the water boil for about one bout,
, • Beaches in Various Lands. simPla answered, 'WhY don'i you • • .
then allow et to stand until old. Wash
"Bath of' the self-governing British send it to a tailor the bottle in soapy water, then rinse.
,
loco ekehee,„„steininteeeeehtIV--=hmereehielies-trerittrieheeeee,..e__7
eareernetelkenaPre.Ottin eantelteleareentlearecleareinieseeradeatideen4asesee t h „2_, 2
. or, elheesseeee,..„.a. rn
larEaVrlialarsa**-
•
eee-e--e.—..___.
. A • UsefulFamily Tree. •
• Last summer a young London clerk,.
who held rather fanciful views as to
his - origin, spent hid holidays at a
Wiltshire farmhouse, the perneipal et -
traction being the golf finks' near by.
" He greatly annoyed the other board-
ers by his oust* references to what
he called his "pedigree" and "family
tree." At last the farther eoulst stand
it no -longer. ' :
"Young man," 'he said; "I meat ,sah. Inch the . maater inventor, Egreatly fear fnan, readily recognizing
dison, ,
you've done a heap o' talking about custorned to menipulating tools, .but w
after they have once got hold of the hatl been working for six months • even the ability. of the natives to do
yer femily tree. ' Anybedy 'would after
they improve with Mre. Walton's knolie eon,suiner ie, them harne but they Commonly stand
think' you owned a whole tiMbet yard.- hang of _Atit
the thing Omit which ........shei against all ether beats, haViiig been .e.
Tome out into the tinea minute?' surprising heps ancl boundsandin .. Ifiaaever,
can be, mast proVd.; - This barns all ebeh to chase out f the f • t.• .
' -The youth aecompanied him. , an amazingly short tinie become very
efficient -Mid every-reeourcefule, " -241°Ice-imr);-"81-fireaf-1111*".477 alul Rut -when -the tios‘hoi /Lei!, hirineelerted
awing by a weeping willow, the
A woznae mechanic is nolonger an
anomaly. Furtherniore, she is no
len a woman because she is a meche
-tithe, and; conversely, she is no less -a
Mechanic because she is a woman°.
says an American. writer.
This is being proved everrelity by
the great number of -women who. have,
CHAMPION ANIMAL
"FIGHTERS"
WHAT .CREATURE IS REA.LLY
TREEING OF BEASTS?
All Things Considered, the Rhipoceros
Probably Deserves the Title'.
of Monaich. •
It is a Dig mistake to suppose that
the meat -eating creatures are the
champion scrappers outside of Man
and his weapoes. 'The lion has been
called,the king of beasts largely. be-
cause of his noble bearing, and Alpo
.for the reason that most animals are
41q1ertaeilidupdedllsiinto;pbruovtehheisrePalliacYeehasindohnies
nothing anal as against other fighting
oWn territory there are a number of
creatures .that, eingly, can de up the
bAisgigaetiset and must sav,age/F, leo that
ever trod the African or western '
-There is the tiger. A few of these
big -striped . cats wander., into the
deeerts of Afghanistan and Persia;
and now and then they have got into..
Aghts with lions, the tigers, probabb'
taking the tawny coats of the king for
some kind of deer, stalking end spring-
ing on it; or perliaps the kill of one ,
has been loveted by the other, • But
in each ease whereethe two have been
known to come together,. the remains
of the mutilated and partly eaten tiger
have been foiled. , Not because the
lion was the more 'powerful bf the
two, but simply for the riason that
tigers hunt Singly and liens nearly
always in company; but you can bet -
anything from a cent with a hole in it
• Some Women Inventors to a million &Mars that everyenember
The eaten gin,' one of the InOst tfaifgetrh;eorliotnhattrotohpe that tackled that
epoch-making inventions, ein___the seine, gashes ee it late th_eli_evll
'United States, was made by Cather-
ieneeseLeiivtteldefiietlsd eGemrepelneeteofia09eao:ggamv.eSaiet deep..
The Tereible Tiger. e •
days a model resulted so perfect that e
to Eli Whitney to construct and inten As we heard an old circus man once
sey,• "If a streak ofelightning tried to .
all succeeding eins, have been.' based get busy with a tiger; it was a pretty
upon it ' • . sere thing that the electricity would •
get clawed up some."
ParfTheectinioonwtor. alit ree,11paerrzfewtells/latnsnfilangt. . A Shah- of Persia once trie4 dila
She perfected a system for the , corn- thing. betWeen' A lion' and a tiger; •
bination oh teeth and cutterS and selecting the"very best -that he could
LbascItezitshpeateinnyteedntedby, ashmersehhinusebafned;
thiee, the big cats; however, not killing
get of each, and the tiger won eaery,
each other, but fighting to e finish all •
the same, leo being glad to quit eirate ,. .
-Mete the -odds, are very' great, thie •
.sort of thing geherelly happens, few
creatures Will fight until one is !dead,
fog punishment of the kind that such
the -_ „Aaria-e;isaahethaleeneeha-esteal hymn- ingfeeliogs as well as tee more -gentle-
, ,,, fighters Can give each other te net to
be relished - even by -,killers, they hare -
--
,had toafell •the •places of men hi... I
factories and shops and who have bons ox imporzerice weld'. are wo- creatures. • . •
cleaning clover. After her husband's
death slat made •other inventions in
firm nfachipery; but they were stolen
and .patented men. • Straw .weav-
ineinduatry owes its &tie to Betty
Metcalf, when in 1798 she _ invented
her wonderful, weaeing machine.
'GreittestafIne Ate:- •-•
had to assunfethe duties of the men men's 'work are a volcanic furnace for But, despite the savagery of the big .
uponethe. farms.. The farm -requires- melting ore, an imprOved wood -saw- cats, there are better figlitSrs still. Ase .
more- understanding ; of mechanice ing inechfne, a ghtldt. Painted screw; Spanish -bull has been known- to go • upe
than it might • at first appear -what a wool 'feeder ane weigher, is] against n lion, and, thoughegettinge-
cared for and to be kepi . in
be one of the want ' delicate machines badly gashed; disable and kill the so-
properlyever invented, an . improvement' -in celled king of beasts. A pasang wth all the farm• -machinery to
billy -
repair, ' , , ' nee& 'areeiters to • be applied to lo- Vat also, matched with a tiger lies the' 7,
The reETiOii-Women Were aaa' '• long comotivee, a raid change hex whech above mehtiened Shah, butted the
barred fronr the field of mechanics is
dee to .the nincompoopish idea held
•
for so mansi. centuries „that women
Were totally devoid of a mechanical
sense. When sifted down to its fuel
meaning, the absence of niecharn
feat sense ipferred that they had no
predilection for tinkerieg, little aesire
to see" Wheels go round. and no desire
to make them • v. , • .
. , •
Yet Many Succeed."'
or iTghi ne. abl a ganind machine
eueis ibayv efnatri °nth. e,
tirely,out of the class big cats,
Yet women mechanics there are and
most
•there would be another story, ' • .
7 against A Radiak bear,. or a grizzly,
many of them. They can take clOwn
'machines and build them up again machine, for its eompleeateh apechan- En
1Ft and extraorclinerae ingenuity,. has
;•!,. goats and even of bull's .are two of the • •
They can consteuct airplanes and en-
gines and submarines.. Their work in •brought spedal-mention •to the an most massive of all existing animals,
the munition. factories is becoming' '
rnissioner. o patents. • , latter fears no creature' that exists,
venton•Maggie lanight, from the tom-
. . ,
the elephant and the rhinoceros.' The
indispensable. • The beginners at first
Mrs.. Mary Walton, who , invented and its lack of intelligence is such that
are slow and tether awkward be-
the noise deadener for elevated red- it cannot comprehend man's superior -
cause they do not know mechanic's
roads, made geed on something on
and- because their' hands are not ac
is a marvel of eimplicity • and con-
venience, used in ' restaurants- and
railway stations and invented by , a
striped „aloodletter , not only ni a LI
standstill, but nearly killed him. Then
when the bull and the goat were .
.girl 16 hears Old; a ' syllable type matched, ..the goat had it all his own
with adjustable eases and aPparetus, way by . completely .oddging the bull
signal. rockets used in the navy„ deep
sea telescope, method of deadening
sound of elevates!' srehroads, smoke
eonsumer, bag folditig mathine, a
submarine and many more and in-
numerable smaller inventions for the
dress and household. ° . • .
and butting the other's ribs until. the
bull eagerly bellowed quits.
The Paeang of, Persia.
Model* within their class, the big :
Persian pasting- is reelly, the king: of ,
beasts. •'No doubt, however, if this
redoubtable _creature were toego up
• . ity with deahly 'weapons.' Elephants'
` -'llesseareterhileheieteles'ehartaalgahewjeaadvaliciage**17'a• -ak-ala44*int:7" o'Irt trut offensive 04ors aTorn iaCl. cognizing that the almost bulky and
• ' tories And gaie works. 13ritish ' of- more formidably armed rhino cannot •
ficials have said that • they consider be much harmed, but can do a lot ,
this invention •the greatest of the of damage ij a determined charge.
age. • • ' • r . :Probably, all things considered, the
,
eice of this."-
"What ,for?" • •
That's our family tree. That's
'what hes heightened our ideals. and
stimulated our energies. That Arne
furhished switches for five genera=
,tiOns of us." • ' •
there . will not be ,such a :preponder-
ance of. male Inechaoics among us hu-
man beings in the. centuries to come.
Even as it -has been, the number
of patents for inectianigal inventione
of primary importiotee which have
been granted, to women are many
..,
4stiono,
rhinoceros is, therefore, the, true king
The filling of.reastlowl will be rich.
ea..........cif 'beasts, if fightinsealone nto be con- '
er if moistened with whit_e_s_t_ocl_c_._ . , ...4 sidered, though a rattleinake oneobra,
a Ititio or even 4p:eltayr-nisic'llfc bieneds'Illtakigeh'talnil lichee
'fight out of aiin aor ii time. • .
. .
GUESS l'.14.114Row"
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IF I THROleVIti 114
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1416fil srop LIP Tom •
.;
Often Read The Name...
, English school teacher one day
took France as the subjeet of the gee-
,
graphy lesson .••
"In this terrible war," 'she aid,
"who is our principal ally?"
aFranee," came -.the chorus, .
aRighta' . said • the testeher. "And
noW• Can any one of you give eine the
nameof n town in Franee?"
"SoMewheret 'promptly shouted .me •
email boy. '
Irlotbees. Worridi,
'imother haa worried that 4 Man
knows nothing about." • „
"Ilow stew?"
• i ;"t have jest learned that my wife ,
has been .watelting our boy tor years,
to see that he earrielehhe school books
Wider his right arm onMohdayst, Wed.
nesdays and Pridtlys, an4 under. his
left arm 'on Teesdeye, and Theeddevs.
doathIcaTieriiiiilirget eine
vafure of the spine:!'
ate-