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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-07-12, Page 6tha airplane bows its short run on. There wee a sharp stiff fight, with ttelly outosetelmod in strength by the Washars iris° assailed lam. Just AI 'ma the ground in preparntlun to ascend, one of the Apaches larded a shame* blow on litelly's chin, and he fell uns conscious into the macaineas atructure. De Saint and his fair Weenier statt- ed to rise from the ground. The machine wee acting queer end De fieint shouted to- Pet that there -Nati something wrong. The girl turned in her seet, by pertly unleolierting the straps thet bound her, end beheld a sight that unnerved her for the mo- ment, and fully explained the eause of e trouble. Wee liftkP fox= of a man rested on The fundamental prineiple of all one of the airplime's wings, and put feed la the nutritive value of the feed• the machine out of balance. end almost itself. If food lacks the necessery Half dozed by terror, •• parelyzed. bithe surprise of her dis- elements that are so important, it falls covery, Pat managed to shout to De '0 accomplish its miiaion in the bode. Saint, that the CaUSO of his . trouble . *r had been disclosed, e eat in order oat we may work. ' - Time the workers may eat in an intent - "There is a man, lying senseless on one of the wipes," she screamed in De gent manner, it is most necessaryfor 'Saint's ear. I the housewife to know the principles "Try and haul bias in here,” an-'AU,...1 1 =aw•••;, , e governing digestion. For * rphe ri n lathbOoaa; 4. 4 o r , recognising the testa/use while the heavy protein of pork. is. very acceptable during cold But as Pat turned to obey instesie-.1 tions the, airplane suddenly swerved...I weather, it would be unwise to supply rDoes,eS.aint worked desperately at the it to the family during the hot season controlling handles—but to no pur- of the year. Many of the beans and coarse foods that we eat during cold The frail:airship began to descend; weather are actually needed. This with lightning weed toward the lie especially trueof a. person who irround. Pat closed her eyes, in re -i works out of doors doing heavy mau- 1 Won to the f te that threatened , arh uce (lineal) Novelized fro* the fife:lose Pktrav Play of the Saxe Name hy the (faker:al Rho co. • FIFTH EPISODE—(Cont'd.) As Pat walked shout the drawing room: Kelly's admiring gaze followed Ira every movement. s " "Kgit, 'You're tlinsPirig," the Sphinx Said remelt. "You better look out er_yotell be in love." Then as if to reprimand himself for "even thinking of such nonsense," -Kel- ly turned abruptly on his heel, and walked into an ristroming roceras It was some little time before Pat came face to face with the Sphinx in the Crosby drawing romn. "Heat charming you look, Miss Pat," was Kelly's stammered compli- ment when he came face to,face with the beautiful Patricia. "You are even more lovely than yeti seemed to be when looking down upon me as I lingered near the jaws of death:* the Sphinx continued: "Hutal. Please be careful and don't ever mention. that scene again," Pat hat:Orel, as her face flushed scarlet. "I may not mention it, but I shall e'er be grateful to you, Miss Fat," the Sphinx responded; and then to change the subject he continued: "Rather surprised to see me here, Miss Pat?" he said inquiringly. "Not in the least," the beautiful girl replied. She fixed her great eyes full %lea face and continued de-, literately: - •se "I had beard you were called to guard the jewels, and I 'wonder if y011 can prevent them being st,olen." She kept her gaze fixed upon the OPItiree as she waited for his answer. , "Miss Pat," he, finallysestaide with „great deliberation . "I'll prevent the Apaches from getting the jewels if I am coaipelled to expose their !cadet and arrest every gaeet, it attendance have." • - • "How drainatic that would be," said Pat„ accompanying her remark with one of her meekest little laughs. •"This it a rated time to laugh, Mies Pat," the Sphinx remarked, as he turn- • ed from the girl and abruptly ended the ° conversation.: - ...He is just as rude as ever," Pat said td bereelf as She stood where Kel- ly had tio_ungallently left her.. • • Pat's eyes flashed with restitution. She *eat to a low French window that looked out Upon the Crosby 'grounds and signalled to see if t4e Agitate§ were assembled and ready to take or- ders. The response quickly ;tenured The Crosby gaests, were aittenrabl- beg round a monster punch bowl, on te table in the center of the dexter/Oa room, when Pat turned frola-the-swins dow. As she started toward the table there was an, ominous crash, of a -bursting amnia as it fell in the grounds near, the mansion. Women screamed With terror, " and the mala &etas rusted out upon the learn, with excited shouts that an ale • raid upon Perk was in progress. The gues,ts surged in and out of. doors, rushing from one room to the •other • While Pat 'Waited patiently behind ,the . window portieres for her chance to act. • • • 4 Ina Jewels had eust sane orougnt into the drawing room tos be admired :1*- the guests when the erashinrU • the bomb turned the scene into bedlam and everyone began to rush aimlessly about. Even'ielIer, usually cod and • unexcitable, was thrown off his guard. • He rushed out of debts with the other • nem' and gazed wonderingly 'upward. Far above them an airplane circled over head, the whirr of its engine be- lagelfiainlY heard. • The time Kelly had Consumed Upon the lawn sees enough for Pat to ac- • comphih„ by Muck eaten, what the Sphinx had been hired to prevent. She tied from her cover behind the por- tieres, ran to the p.m& howl...tobbit_at a moment' the drawings room was deserted and there, where she had but e.erseeessesseesseetagreasepaesseseteleestIt • gleamed the Crosby gems in plait Pat snatched the jewels. from the -box containing them, and quickly ,dis, appeared from the scene. She had gone to another room, ,when the men • returned from watching the airplane. Kelly ran straight to the table—and found only the empty jewel box. As he turned for a moment to hastily sur- vey the room, the Sphinx saw. a .trim Might figure, .dressed in, Apache cos- tume, disappear through.- thee low A COURSE LIN HOUSEHOL TWENTY.FIV D SCIENCE COMPLETE Lewin I. Why ual labor. . There was a crash of breaking' branches, a swish of leaves and bead -I. When the sedentary or indoor wak- ing boughs, and the airpauta came to, er realizes that his diet should be dee a sudden stop, caught safely in the' cidedly different from the diet of a Then another frightful and more [ • ' top of a 'giant tree, Person whose work exposes him to the open, InUell •ill - health and disease will terrible fate than the one they had' In order to secure good seemingly so narrowly escaped, faced I disappear. behooves us to know just the inlperiled trio. Flames burst sud-' health, A denly forth from the ignited gasoline and beg= to envelop the frail struc- ture with leaping tongues of fire, (To be continued.) + FORMER HOME Or THE CZAR. Sumptuous Palaces Situated in the "Village of the Czar." "Travellers from Petrograd to Tsarskoye-Selo have a journey of fifr teen nines to the south over the old- est railroad in the Russian Empire," says a bulletin 'of the National Geo - area eSociety. connects the capital city -with the carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Carbo- and, teleeietes the al:slily process of 'Village of the Tsar' (which is the hydrates are used to supply -energy or what we. are eating. ' The five principal constituents of food are: Proteins, carbohydrates, fats, mineral salts and water. Proteins are contained in meat, milk, cheese, eggs, fish, grail* and legumes, Proteins • contain hydro- gen, carbon, nitrogen, sulphur and sometimes phosphorus. Their chief use -is thisue building, -repairing waste and making muscle. , They also sup- ply heat. , 1. • Carbohydrates are found in starches d augers, 'green vegetables, grains hi "The- 'line which L.3 a..1... fruits.• • They are composed of IN E LESSONS; We Need Food. power to do work. They enter, to a small extent, into the process of Wild- ing. tiSeue. They also furnish beat. Stara, by the process of digestion, la converted into a dextrine, and then Made into a convert pirate • This change taiceS place in. the intestines. Fats.—The source ef fats is in beef, lard, chicken and other compounds of ass animal source, and in olives, corn, peanut and cottonseed oir of vege- table source. Vegetable oils ere fee from all disease. Corn oil is superior to all domestic. oils, it is the by -pro- • duct of corn from whica cornstarca is made. In composition fats contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Fats in the body fuenish a greater amount of heat than starches. They are used also for building tissue, A large amount of fat .xnust be used during cold weather than in hot weather, for the .beat radiating over the surface 'evaliorates more quickly in the cold, or, sin other weeds, the cold oxidizes this bods fuel. • Mineral Salts.—The source of inor- ganic salts is principally in green vegetables, grains, milk, meats, *gel •and ash. The salts found in foods are calcium, iron, chlorine, phos- phorus, magnesium, sodium,. sulphur and potassium. Salts are used to re. gulate the. bocly; they are also needed for the formation of bone and teeth strneture tand appear in tissue' build- ing. Water-- is -the- inost neces- sary of all foods; it, forms. a part of all tissues and is -the important fac- tor in the ;blood stream. It is Pre- sent in large amount in all body fluids: It carries nourishment to the blood meaning .of the hyphenated name) through. level country ° dotted was constructed in 1838. It runs - • Cooking Green Vegetables. betTzbear, for green peas and liina with •.The use of •salt, bicarbonate of soda, fertile fields and rich pasture land. "Forty minutes for, asparagui; • • wrsarskoye-Selo has taken more Vinegar or lemon juice Willie cooking Thirty-five •eiinutes for core cut than 200 years to attain a population velg'3tahles is strictly forbidden.. The of -30,000. It was an insignificant chemical action of these agents when 7 Fins:deli village when Peter the Great combined' with the mineral salts con - assumed control of the mouth of the Mined in the -vegetable! produce A River Neva The monarch presented , , compound that le -not desirable.. the the village to his royal consort, Caths cellular tissues Of the vegetables hard- erine I., and began the construction -of en, and cause a lois of valuable 'men- the" Geeitt Imperial Palace (usually , real salts_ in the water used for cease desienittect as the Old Palace, to dis, in... - Steaming is the .ver, best tinguish it front the New Palace built ' method of cooking' all succulent yege- by Catherine IL during the - closing tables, but when, this is not possible theyarmy be boiled. , • , , , Thoroughla demi_ the vegetables, einsing them in plenty of dear, cool. water.' Now place them in a casserole aishecoversand.bakeinstheleyen:es — years of her retro and of the eight- eenth century). The edifice was com- pleted just • a year 'beim* Peter's .aeath, but it was •greatly • beautifi.ed •by his daughter, Elizabeth Plitroyna, betwee,n-1747earid-1756e------ asesea "Some of the ,. most magnificent royal apatiments in Europe are to be found in the Old -Palace, notably the bedroom of Marie Alexandrovna, 'con- sort af Alexander II.,. with its sell- escent glass walls, ,,its columne of purple glass and its mothered -pearl inlaid floor. The Walls of another chamber are pellea with amber; a third apartment is decorated With • silver another has wonderful tables rel cileadelisesewhiolseelew-witb -the scift•light a lapis -lazuli, and there is eteballroom which glitters with 'gold and mirrors. The agate room of the palace _was. the bedchamber . of • the. great Catherine. • "With all these sumptuous apart - meets at his disposal,' Nicholas II., go recently deposed, seldom, occupied any of thesis, but.preferred to live in a modest 'building no larger than the cued from scenes of carnage, destrec- country home of the average well -to- tion and • destitution • and taken to do Canadian. , Paris, -homeless as well as frigateried. erne exteesive gardens and peeks In countless instances the homes of are among the chief beautiesof Tsar- these boys and girl* were utterly de - from cob. , , Do not add any water. Have the alien tots •- To steankiuse n regular steamer, or, in the absence of this, use a stand to fit inside of the saucepan in which the vegetables are to be cooked. - This rnethod may .be • used for asparagus, cone potatoese beetse turnips, eta To :cook in . ordinary saucepan, add one pint of boiling water to each •quert of peas, lints beans, celery, let- tuce or cabbage. Put an asbestos mat under the saucepan and cook..., Remember that using large amounts of water lessens. thanutritive value •of - - -these-vegetables, . . • • • • • S VICTIM REAT CO SOF- liFLI RESCUING. LITTesk 0 rirntao , NES FROM RS. , • Ilk a+ The Peerless Perfeellea Pose AI or ;4 111 "I" r '• Inividan your 144 ittidtbdt atm Wje_rfe yon pot theta. T if 11 •t,,' yr' ''. bawd cant *erne 304 WC Mt U . 1,11JC $ $40. wfd or 1' Powelnen loca. varieltwavilly .nadvset , tho Oconee*, down. ntaniit any wontber. .r.scie at weenwily Ueda wItle in fe.rne. OnC0 UMW icCka kW' gi$41$21$400, ' pg rout carm,001 cf on Muds cf tracitPit ter toms, ruin*, c . mow, poultry yards, ornamental teachog gpa Sato. deo Ole •Pow at your n,ent Oakes. await waraal .1:13 CIPIli intencry. THE WEI.1.-HOXIE 'WIRE FENcE cOMPAhtift Ud. . Msalteira Haintlson. Ontario 1,0,134.9 "SW SAIPENCit ft ie port of our Service to worry for you;.0,1 why shot*, you worry about tint high own off wins internaing with ma. annual vocation. OUR Ocoellent buyint facilities coinbined with increased patronage is salliginX " " fir. the high coin Of living *black nye. and with our assistance you ecu te more for your shipence,theo you can elsewhere. , .Thaels why. _yeti should spend your vacation inToronto,Canada,,or send yoar w.eille end, swan. 4.6L they MIR be very much et home at the. Walker House, tne *a m"' inanoSeMeet Skye sPeclal attention to ladies nod , thildren ,..ravel onescorrect, „ I putesoriergis WEI • ahltitocarr Puusi ittistortari Pulite oixesten. The Walker House °"411,1gIotsf. Toronto, Canada A -2 in 1 Shoe Polish" is made for every use. For Bleck Shoes. "2 in 1 Meek" (Paste) and "2 in 1 Black Combination" (past:sand liquid); for 'White Shoes, "2 in 1 White CakerAcalre) and "2 in 1 White Lepel." (liquid): for Tan Shore, "2 in Tan" (paste) and "2 in 1 Tan Cembination".(paste and liquid). *100 • Black—White--Tan 10c F. F. PALLEY CO. OF CANADA LTD., • He:nate:a Can. _ _ a•• QUICK— HAN DY— LASTING mother died of a painful illness during the bombardment of Poperinghe. Nes- tor 'Was the youngest of six children. Where their father was nobody knety —sie the frott perhaps, or himseft lying dead in a long trench filled by °thee brave soldiers who hadfallerain defence of liberty or ,a prisoner per- haps; a Germany. • , • Fatherless, motherless, with little to wear and nothing to eat, the children were obliged to beg in the streets or to starierapd they came near starving as it was. *But a good angel aroPped down out of the skies one ibt, an angel in ;the shimeeof a member of the Franco -American Committee for Chil- dren of the Frontier, and before his baby mina could reason it out little Nestor found himself on the way to Paris with .fifty other And 'refugees from the north. • • Then, before lenge he was taken to the Jonchere sanitarium, for, owing. to • , leek of proper food he w s too pierced by shells and .only fled when child.o excellentmentidity, with it f ° ' ' their honses were smaehed to earth; smile which wins all hearts. And best their villages aflame. ' • ' of all, his physical improvement is , As Might be expected, not e few of is these boys and girls suffered: greatly - 'Preparing for To -M aceotible. " , • .. morrow frem nervous sheds. • During the first It must not be supposed that : the week or two -of their life in the village— quiet. and 'Neale* earainittee- made noprovisionleis the Those in charge of the re- d Ordins they were nature mercifully has endowed child- future. of a8 fie Chilaren.understanathee almost oad witletecuperetiye-peteers • all Of than will have to earn . their. aitent and within: two months all of the refugees sheered marked imProve- living, andatshardeliviegatt that, s. ai until the walls of their bedrooms. were t • ' a- • weak stand or wafk He Is thereyet,a Most Pathetic of _War Stories Are •• .•„ soon as the war is over. • France and These of Countless Homeless' and ment. Then they began, one after an- ! Betgium. pareicularly wells be bad put rarentiess, Children, :... .. other, awn games and sports; to teg • From the frontiers. of Belgium, gave toy's, end now the children a , - an Ansericen friend Who visited thein twit to provide for ordinay affairs. ' re on 1 heIlithere afiodritiotlrdeenrechhiiadrreentoafugsuhffit citehnet France -and Alsace since the beginning the road to health„ if not to happiness. rudiments of trades easily learned and of the war thousands upon thousands • Some Pathetic Cases. aequiring little' outlay of money for of children of *11 ages have been res- . One of thearroblese countenances materials, At the 'colony of Oulins among all the rescued waifs is that of basket weaving is a favorite occupa- little Georges Surdeau, aged 5, who tion, and here many girls. are...learning was on his way to Seek a•- tool hi how to do work with which they may grandfather had left in a field near be self-suPporting M later years. Else - their home when an exploding shell earimis forms of work are bee cane ensiling aut of the sky. e Several ' wheTe. ink taught, and thanks to -wide men- the-, or mother or both were killed, civilians in the field weed injured and agement the • einunittee is building ofteri befere the very eyes of their little Georges's right leg was eo badly ,skoye-Selo. stecturesque grottoeie arte, istic•bridges, chaining arbors and de- liglitfui swan ponds 'are to be found oseeeeeaasethalestesesasetspr artificial rein which captivates • the eyeriakeetkene'itilagleatline- "The fainoya Alexander lyceum was ferineette Ideated. it Teareitosie-Selo, and here aome Of the foremost lams • slaa literarygeniuses, including the great Pushkin, were eaucated. - -"BessoedtheSemperial, gardens and ateansle. the Otreate•ef the are • broad and straight. There are • sev- eral Iff_arrncitA antleheaVittllealtd -eight and -roofsntoiceep off the Storms. 011 - every. hand death, shattered 'bodies of them:. they loved, on whom they de- pended t en every hand ruined hornet; churches, saxes; where once the lit- tle ones tended flowers M garden plots shells had torn up the earth into cavernous, gaps. . But strong hands and stout hearts �f unknown friends were ready and Willing to help them, During the very first month of war, in August, two colonies were 'established in France fa the dare of these desolate children: • . • Gathering tip the Lest Ones. Since then a stream of the ‚War's lit- - tie sefferers has been pouting. from the shiftilig fighting fronts back to- ward the interior of France end ten • other colonies have been established:. Into, theni have been gathered ep to the presnt approximately. 1,200, chil- dren. • • In the colOne at (Mins, Prance, are some fifty children froni bomberded villages of southern Belgium. Mena of heSe little-eneeshadreiturieed tab colititleSFi. liiststneets- eseeseeesseaa.........seesseasessesesaasee usgeometeeeteiemedstheTrasaereee. eseepaysientasseerseeesuessesneeseeeesee. segereareeiled. eteherrereweeteds„ childish eyes; agonized cries plercia their childish ears; roar of Cannon, rattle of small arms, engulfing waves of smoke overwhelmed them. No won- der they were terror stricken, he wonder they suffered from shattered nervous systems, when added to, the . becomes more than he can bear. • , One pathetic instance of many at inferno was Jack ra food?. lack of the Sanitarium is that of adelicate elothing, lack of beds in which to sleep tie hey named Nestor Delanoye whose ssettehataeu.stam.etseeesaatstli wound has not yet healed. Neverthe- less Georges hops around on. a crutch, he has become fat and chubby • and cheerful, and he seldom complains ex- cepting Wheri, the pain of the wound French -window. . churches." • • • ' • ...s--. e. Pat elsaa gone into an adjoining .,---.: roan. med. hueriedly .divested herself of . ' MIDS1131MER TIIANet S. ' .- the evening gown site 'had put on over . • lier Apirehe costume. 'Watching her For all the golden glary of the peon • rtii ehe eh ed throe hs the t - OPP° nitY0, Plt For buds and. blossoms and full - fruited trees, • For tiniet landscapes. deearning 'neath the moon, ' • For peace and laughter anddomes- tic peace; For altiele'reell her sister Poesy, 'Fa" what great pees have written, ' great Men done, • For 1:opening's lamp, and , prieeless liberty, „. • • For life renewed each morning with the seen; ' window Red was fleeing toward her Automobile when Kelly heranded, from thaCrOsby mansion het pareuit: Straight to the airpiene bargee Pat • was. driven by her )feithful ,cleetiffetir. • As eleee hake& as be could speed Ids machine came laallysin eagee chase. . "I tVe..4 gdir-g VIVO tale packege to yen,". Pat &elated ee she•eeaclied the -• bengal. et -3 seas met ba De mitt, "hut, eta tee earaely spurseea to get away •myself, Se 'Veall 'have ,to, take, riat • avittie zse ta seir vad Istad toc. st tea make my way; • To Its .111:ef maii,onlent, Pat 1'44 taken, to ele1=1-1,, tad l'echeel 'the teagar Mel twee lrto,rying intb the ezt-ottz to •tho terthetes wt e vsese etr•ed, rtited 1,her C.,,-;1,1-4* vas co_rpriood by tto cr....14:?Li eat p&'..tl.tmt.od and leefetsty etteteel tee sarereeseet Eta twtEe. 'Ole -v.1 tr.,AT•tn& 1),a,t ,s5d TJC ;Sent ,t0 eaten -fa- -sate. e • er friendship linking tend with • kindrea mind, .: • I For hope and cOtirage meted for the .... •' strife, . Fee toil and torrow, tutors grim but , • ' For all of these ten tharske, 0 .Lora • ef „ A slice of cucumber rubbed 'over the face will cleanse it at welt as soap and es 'better for the skin. If the face bas that shiny, oily leek which is so unbecoming in warm weather, add a few tirePs. , of lemon ,jutee to the weeps water in which you bathe it. TREASURE HIDDEN IN OCEAN'S DEPTHS \ RECLAIMIKO LOST SHIPS MAY BE POSSIBLE. Many Sunken Vessels Lie in CotsParst tively Shallow Water and Most • oe Them blight Be Raised. The Germans (acconding to tho news dispatches) have a same tor • fishing up the ships their subMarinee have sunk—in the aggregate a huge Merchant fleet. It le a bully idea. f'` Let's makes -them do A great meenity of the sunken Vse- se: sels lie in water ef no great depth. It •Its ouOt to be a matter of no very aerie "", os difficeity to raise ,most thema- or at all,events n large percentage of " .4 the "supra:wined" tonnage. - Very many of the lost ships have been •sunk in the North sSea, which might'be described as a vast shallow pond. It is so shallow that if itsbot- tom were raised, by only 150 feet three-fourths of it would become dry Iand. • • ' Other .sinkings by submarines have been mostly in waters to the south and west of the pritish Isles, particu- larly off the coast og Ireland, in rela- tively ahallowseetetenejtas only to, *lance at it hydrogeaphic. chat Of: the soundings are not. of merle faths othmast. region, in order to perceive that The Atlantic "Bridge," • Fiont Ireland there runs across the: • ocean to Newfoundland an irregular belt of relatively shallow water which has suggested to geologists the notion that at some future time a big tares - trial uplift might conceivably create • a. land bridge betweenNeeth America • and the British Isles. ' '• The -fishing banks far eastward •oe • the Newfoundland coast—thallovis etch in melluske and .other forms of' •:A Lost Trade Secret.. life that attrect Multitudes of hungiae ableco, fhaddock,food-fishes—are shehs I iabruet parts -of -the s otheroftb ie reel; It has frequently ,happened, that above described.. •One of these harika, :saleable trade made have been lost Flemish Cap, is 300.miles out in the beyond recovery, .For instance, •the North Atlaritia and the water that best watch oil, it appears, cannot be slows over it is lewdly more than 300 'obtained •te-day, because the secret feet deep. • - • process of 'mixing it perished with the Six hundred nines out is the Saint- a inventor. It ts said that , the last hill. bank,' which'elieseeto within 000 quart at this famous fluid was .sold feet -of the surface '*he elite sea, and . fa' $260, and that • was • thirtyetlye the Milne hank, lee miles filether to - years ago. Since that every effort *gird Europe, is Only 400 ,feet' deep has been made' to analyze the pro- just about miderets between the News' ductssinsan attempt to reproduce the feundland coast • and Ireland are thee oil; but without seccess. The male so-calleas Faraday -Hills, Which •are who made it and Who. alone knew elevations of the: sea bottom a,_ little its comPokititin died, and, it 'feratee over • half O mile beneath the waves appears, not even hie name or the I • As' for the. North Sea, its shalloW- •• place of his 'burial is• known. 'Helness doubtless much to do with its never revealed to anyone the details popularity as a feeding ground for • of his process, and it was not until fishes. Its bottom. is Overspread by • after his death that the real value of ever -renewed supplies of detritus, rich' • the •oil was appreciated in organic material, poured Into it by many elvers, and this detritus fur- nishes- unlitated food for the „mollue• e fur - Valuable Tiniee • Can and other forms Of life on which • Ralph's father is a doctor„ and :the she subsist. Ralph naturally likeesto play he is one, : • • • too, using, la old medicine case and • The'Pishpond of Europe. hat of his father' to dress the paiti Ger- properly. One dey the telephoilarang, Thus it comes' about that the Ger- man Ocean .(as the.Teutons call' the North. Sea) is the, great fishpond' of Europa . All continents! Europe, • as well as the British Isleseloaks to it for a. verylarge fraction of itS food - The most remarkable thing &met this Marine fishpond 'ire that . its eta• , Eaurces seem literally inexhaustible': The, more fishes _caught the more there are -left to -catch. It is nos sees a aggeration to 'say • that -1n peaew* tiMee: et: all 'events—virtually every. *- square yard of its bottom is scraped' repeatedly by the - "beam -trawls," from: which no finny creative can well . escape • • . The reason Whir le simply that mans -utmost' e.fforts. at fish. destruc- tion in that aqueous area accomplish . , only a very small fraction : of 1 Per - A fraternal -and browse* -1itkf did% acenteof•theltilliegelehebithe natural et'cititt °ember' 64-"cOrattn" with '8341 .salt -water enemies of the Species. con- iimitarinSbiniefigi9verneednoensiata"1" Si'ck• '" cerned. This is ,particojarl _true ' Airest"62"rs...."(esehire*till"sestslurs,:rai‘thr2...a..„,e.. „me -Isere ereeee tbearrarreerass alleseei e ' caug t a him& . tiehinh Ito heal tar, c4 aeon vend. 'lithree insailitlieddtsanof cured .inarlset by 'barrels, but a single • linonowingrt"sofficastdet%144317" dit°4, t° a°7 °I th! • elaiitateifileffOr them inight-(11;a11—' were captured) meet the whole annual : ..Y.W.Edwards.M.P. P. Montagne Ghia Gum ger:order demand.. Man's. „influence on their esee • numbers, or upon the perpetuation . .1. Nil, M.D.. CUM Organizer': . annul Medical their Species is so urempertant as to HAI4112°N" "YAK° 17-Bneeftirleg'ibvelrey. 1011g. , ev. .• whereupon Ralph called out, "Some, bode wants me," and caught up his hat and case and hurried out. - "Come back and shet the screensdoor, Ralph,'" called his, mothee. Later," when he came in looking very sober, she in- quired sociably, "Well, how slid yoir find -your -patient,- Ralph VaraDeade' he replied, asiel then added pointedly, "died while pante back to shut the doer." • . coMMAN °pop 4.49 404°Fittfo. CHOSCN FRICNDS • ^ "Redpath" stands for Algal quality that' is the result of modem equipment and methods, backed by 60 years 1. experience and a determination to produce nothing unworthy of the name 'MEATH". "Lei Redpa. th Sweeten it." tiottlaortoTags, Madein one grade only—the highest! _Leo Ji&another _kinds of the -see- — Nerth Sea and nearbemiters. It will besahuag' for ieenfimaringsaasieps, and the issue of the war willdecide for whesesbeitefit the fishery will be. A Singular' Orange. • The five -fingered orange of japan is one of the freaks of the plant world,, The tree -cas which it grows is found only in japan, and; even consid- ered apart from itefruit, itis one of - the .queerest -looking members of the vegetable kiegdom. It eeldem grows to a greater height than six feet, and • it twisted gnarled branches aie. se • eritengled with its trunk, which grows knotty and awry, that it is not pos. eible to find tvvo inches of stem grow- ing in the seine direction. As if to protest its singular end delirioua fruit still more effectively, it sendsotit a, multitude of hag hardeleedle-pointed thorns. • . ratooth raises kis caused by Ohl penetrating a cavity, . T•he *tin ettriveleerelieyeil by tiegleg the mouth ..- ..sill a little. baking soda sad water, •- . ce. ....441111111