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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-10-18, Page 6••••••—•...--..."--•-"......-•••-••••••••••=••-•••••••••••.......••••••••111M.kima. ONI.........ealraril.1114......1.111.01,11pollIkerMIP.W111111.41111A111111111E.111•1111.11111.11.11MEMINIM.mkOlMINI.4.1001111111MPIN, rm. °goad** et the Brake. "Oar brake le your hest friend in an ortergencya. says an expert; "but like! every other good friend it must be treated risdet. If working properly, it gives you the greatest sense of oeurity, but if negleeted you may pay, the penalty with your life. °There are only two kinds of brakes internal and external. The internal copsiste of a heavy ring which ex - muds, gripping the brake druin or stopping its motion. The contact is usually metal to metal; although a brake lining is sometimes used. The internal brake is called the internal expanding or expanding -ring brake. "The external brake consists of a steel band lined with brake lining, a specially- wovenfabric of asbestos and Ingo Wire. TliTh is drawn upend the brake drum, holding from the outside. e1t is, called the external contracting. or contacting - band brake. e Apply to Controls. "The - names 'service brake' and "emergency brake' (lomat apply to the Ibrakes theineelvee, but to the controls. Mut pedal usually applies the cone tracting band brake and is called the service brake, as it its the one ordinar- ily used in service. It is not so powerful as the emerge encsr brake and is better adapted to sex- ' vice, bringing the car gently to rest without throvnng the passengers for- ward or lathing the wheels so that the tar will slide on. line spot on the tire; -will hold evenly 'unless there It grease Alhlf DOCTORS WIN RAMBO limy et the Dieenves Heretofore Meat Deadly are Defeated. Few realise how great a debt of gratitude not only the army but the nation owes to the administration heads a the Royal Army Medical Corps. They have seen clearly end the feat that it ern be set, the ardor- have not stayed their hands. It is gamy brake is used te held the car common knowledge that typhoid fever when we leave it.. has been defeated, tetanus is defeated; "Brakes should never be applied bilharzia, that plague ef Egypt end, except when needed,. This sound* the old Pharaohs, is defeated, ilysent- like a truion, but has more to it than erbea are on tile way to defeat, the ter. one May think. The operate, s ha , trible sepsis of wounds haa been de - allow the ear to coast to the Po.° feated, only a few enemies remain and o s where he wietes ttop, letting et . . the war against them is incessant. come te rest wt. ..eu applyuig tbe Regardmg one of these few, the brstke at all. This saves the brake, Louden Lancet ha $ Made the imnorte the tires and theanechanism. "Quite different is the grand stand the Army Medical Corps hal; found a 41 play of the novice. He dashes I'a Y gavotte in the blood of men infected up tf.t the place where be wante, t° bY erencli fever and working from that stop and jams on both brakes vita a has been able to suggest a new line of flourish while Ida experienced friend treatment. ... e The Lancet emphasizes the-importe Brakes were made for use not abuse. 1 , g ce of the obscure War dieeaoes, of "It is extremely important tot tre" . which trench fever is an example. out the brakes every time the ear 13 erheser diseatietreriewidespread a4d. no - taken out . Speed up when you have man can say how long drawn out theit a clear space ahead you and then after-effects may be, but it is etear apply the brekes. Do this several known that euch after .effects do oceur. times with both foot and emergency One of these titter effects of trench brakes., Note Whether' car stops fever is a common diseasi Item which promptly or, not, or if it has a tene humanity is always suffering. With clayey to swing to one sideshoteillft the discovery of the germ 'of trench one w ee o, free an e other OtT 0 ant announcement that an officer of COURAGE OF FREW SOLDIERS 111.1011.1.•••••11 THE SOIL OF FRANCIS IS $TEVER A SOLITUDE, HE SaXtd. r 40014 Forward te the Release of His In erchated, Fiat- and Gardrit. When picking ;ryes, londle Aare by the stem and avoid inhering the blooin on the berrite. . The bloom add* to their` looks and selling goalie ties. Last cell to cut out the tad rasp- berry and blackberry cones! The cut - tinge should be burned preinptle, in Order to destroy insect ond fungous pests which May be on them. Currants and;goeeeberries may he pruned as Ewen as the- legatee fall; or , Food Control Corner MOST DANGEROUS Pelated Petrograph For People 'Who OF A14, SPORTS vv. to Win the War. ' 6` To -day's motto: 'Don't stuff your husband, but husband yew stuff" Stare the garbage canhind nourieh the nation: ' „ Food -control, to be a countrywide, success, Met he a personal matter With every men, woman and child. 18 TIGER HUNTING ON FOOT IN THE JUNGLE. OP Ilow in-Foolhartly Hunter Saved Ilini Beloved Lend From the Grip '5 contributiores to the cause Life by Taking the Dealt e. Of the Barbarian, . the work miter be left until early Jr" spring: Cut bacle "ope-third of 'this unterouo, eNtklot one ia $o iine . . by Surpriseea , , portant as her as,sistance in food cou- year's groWth, and thin out =pima 0 ,,, ,„ Of allelic greatearnivora, of all the trIlletestw°111:71. wrngitteielrra Ffrench. .stohl- dieeased or unthrifty shoots,. Old , (•.) b b d r big wersc tee royal ziengid uge-i, 1,4 ne 1sti for every o y eve yi dier who had been On active servlieer pbVresebeee3t IllyeattrY's growth *moved. • i have two-thirds of the day in the week 'would 'establish Ate , and about its Agave jungles le prob. since the war began. In civil life .144 The various kind's of small fruitsria,xe1cfeeteedsill I": writer is a simple stone mason; , will not' cost Much to plant and vall ' - ea the coat of sea aud WY the inOst savage, the. mok,to be . I feared, the most terrible in •itti` swift ' "I wrote to you only. a few day give You can Prevent ' waste be keeptng i enilTlicietiognr. iozfeyineaunrdy, oxtiadifitsitfobees.ars ,a What you spend; . arid , give an abundance of fruit the season tea* of ' auto's elleudtb: yi0r:iiireew:.algreiteinTirietil, mayt 4shprp;h: Ilan for it now;. rant next', , ., ..e eTho e .h ou(e)eukneeeepse rot,hteolods tahveedhlenytitioe' ttlbi....: Iti zee alonera.reutt:: .igi. cog emr. pam el ne3voirthe . be some time before I $ all have tn. u14.' othoTerhechmanocree. we gam upon the enemy a mello.w apple from. the cellar orepit. Of course there is nothing ahead of wkviiiihnetnIzazellioninir 'catloakosuezdirts cof eteeirnt!,.,..poerViseorfnultolle;res taigreoPlocrifittisooldtathicrost- tacks as and lays hold upon us, suck-, and close upon him, the more he at- nwehden4ipthpeiessni cidwriiesdbaanknel:stdeep and the 1 The waster is as Tench a slack. as , callefeeklea_of. beastseis-thataPae-.111, Eat more oat, 1 nese and fearlessness, 'while the so. re in our fire _shines bright, but there are can, t rifices that 4 cannot be 'told, . the a il ehettart°14 likereltethousaild'ter, `apple. sauce, apple preserves , andl hPffitieehlite'eanyeone OW be. ' - - ----'7----'-e- -e--- I ellahia.tie- appearance and upon un - ii , tentiielei of ectopUtS.', Ahl when bit ---9 -9-- add graciously to our larder supply;cana /l. liforcei ga t iy091 lu tthoalti7neo The sigaed !Toad Saving Pledge" is , evertley evidence,' really tlipnetob,ut votuuterlaf! mboaldtchaenad trrailinleell'- erlarteillsigteLWiltigeenr being less • by bit;tet the price ed fatigue mid aa,e_ Weed apples: for the table, that will lest untileblesseens come and go, which shall have been retaken by us, Wrest. on your honor. ' ' • I proved victorious, and singly he kills nail of of the boots of the diggers, ale good thinisti and when the crop. is picked is thee time to be busy seeing this store. of I eagerly accept ,athe substitutes . for the lion or any bear dares to tackle. ' f Ma* millions of Europe,aps would, creatures • far nior.e formidable than ed. by main force by the soles and the the united forces Of the offensive, Iv/fleet, bacon and beef that are ,so •Yakliulls and the great nilgai bucks • wherathe waves of the aveault .shall It is not safe to stoke damp grainOr 1, plentiful in Canada. [feel victims to single tigers, but one be only a meter from the frontier at hay unless you have adequate facilities;.Food-siving and substitution must lion fears to „beetle with the African the border, of Belgium, she, too, will. for freiVent "turning.” Pew. farmers ' be persistent and consistent to bring buffalo and is said to. iivoid-the -male realize . how semi' - a percentage- of e results. ... . al, , .. ; eland. , , ions sweep, over her. Then ()illy shall grain be impatient to feel the torrent of her moisttite will- cause otherwise good ,, . , . . ' . The hunting of the tiger is attended we celebrate the feast a'the ella, !rain or hay- to heat ad cleterierate. ' • Ji • _ a ap. END Ole it FAMOnS LINE 1 bY'verY greatedanger, nnless, which shall be both her salvation' aml While it is often p rable to 7 orally, thebig striped cat is shot from .il . ,:„. ..e ply lime to a Aeld Whe rewiring the Affah.s in Spain have hrought King Mmt - Beautifdl of Edens". • ' ee, to spread it during the fall ol. any Line }lad Its Inception . e beating of drums and other horrible be ng driven from its- fungles by the' Alfonso lately into considerable pro, "However, we must be w:ise. Let us time.during the winter father than to , minence. He is better liked in Eng-. ' With the Complete merger of the r°1ses. Bet the Me IS COXIIMOnlY with brake equalizers the two sides ,awaiit whatever fats has in store -for 'neglect et altogether,..„. GeoUnd. lime- eal L. ' i , . . ,, . arch,.,and is repfitedli the best -dressed turns away with a pitying snide. foyer the antidote alSO.,Was.`foUnd. dragging. - is possible that this disCovery may Test Brakes Often. lead to wonderful results; it is being "Once a week a thorough tot and inspection, should be given. Jack up, both rear wheels., set the emergency brake tin, until it binds and era. both wheels.- The teldstance should be urti. form. If one side is loose it must be tightened. If the car is equipped watched with eago interest' hy medi- cal men. ' The King Of Spitin's Waistcoats... her pun cation, eiephaaes Or raised platforms ft . seed -bed, it is better, when hadly nettle -Almost a Century Since the Allan ' "r land, than any other European 'mon- 'wearing it await. Aa, implied by the on the brakes or they are worn un...' 1 king in Europe. _But Once he receiv- Je g eating eenemla, We A good huelung- ur saves tit themb 'There have been a. 'few letrepid and brought to even length. An simeei of our enthusiasm and imagine pin. Take a 'Piece Of hickory about euthis first little brig, ehe Jean,. from eaa-hilaself from the late King Edward , - e. , • Greenock to Quebec. e Soon after he ;sportsmen who have tiger -hunted' sistant will be necessary to aPPlet the ,forgot. - that he never - . eation, and without stifling our joy elites and a half. inches long, cut afoot, d i ad some of hem leave loot The Young king brought' with hien to.: yet us advance only with'dignity upou fairly deep groove amend' the Middle, a had fiere ships in commission, and areal foot brake etrehilrtlt is being tested, al - this suffering oil, which the batba sharpenone OA elit'a ie e Ile thet that daY to this the Allans have play- their lives also. „This;is not to be though a Sad; might be used tor hold Buckingham Palace a varied selection . .. • .1 g a I. -. P 4 9 A ed a large part in the develQ9nient of f fancy waistcoats of the Medea wondered at, consieering the fact that the p I in'case he assietant le pail- ° us n the decision of our zitmander, stoae Botinjure either the winter 011it the .Canadian Pacific ver Y e unter afoot, with - who: lays plans while app ring to bet wheat Aelds or th ..emeadoive. e cemriany, one of the oldest of house' oid e'er); greet, 'chance of the, besst's „ . tie . flags disappears from the seas. • ,It °hefting. , - a • '• - te - sub et to tr ' must even is rust ourselves and the nails woederfully. Mak our own • . e - nanie, the emergency brake is only ev, eigY• used in an emergency to stop the car "The two sides shoulld he measured euddenly. It is extremely, powerful Arid may be aPplied too suddenly, caus- leg the co. to Odd. "Another r.laseification of 'brakes ite bye-elocation, eta is, transniission edg„ gentle hint on the att 'of attiring s 1819 that Alexinder. Allan sent , Tiger -Hunting Incident Ian, in emir forced to renounce, ex- from ale old bootleg, lint it around. the heeds his rage upon in Martyring.„ middle Anger of the eight hand to get These mutilations of the last 'hour the length, Make a hole at either end, make. it only (fearer to us than ever. run the Aare, gad ,orf the pin thrdugh It air at dicuble tine by the scourges of , put en—and go a ead. • is thitugh it -mere beaten like an theseeinakiAg a for the finger, the adverse arinee or were like an an -1 All tomatoes showing tcolor should: vil for the perpetually bursting.shella L be picked before feost. Stored a which' leave nothing but -the surface I shed .ot outbitildiegi they will /soon the crust, the outer shell of the earth, ,! ripen. Wellegrown- green- coxes can the kernel of all the germinations; be picked, wrapped in paper and Stored. shrunken and nude, ravaged, scraped ;in a cool place: ,When wanted for of, tormented, plundered. Even eceit" use, they can. be ripened by placing. tippeareato Us the most beautiful of theni in a warn). room. It is, true .Edens. e ' • • that scene of them will ;,be soft,' but itAll the trenches , and ,their: what of that? They will tast§ good branches cutting. into the earth repree; when frost has laid lo W In tenders seat to is wide open furrows, toady; things out-of-doors..-: for future harvestaeboth materiel and There are always Spine burst heads Moral, The earth is the miner -in --it -erfebbagee Theft alieuta be Week& are all the veins ofe countless, treas..; up into kraut, or sold for that purpose, iirearit is the tea, the be,the :Along toward themiddle a the month foundation, solidity, abate all the there should be a good demand for suprerneerealitye-When,-one heseathe-ekraut---eabbege, and at is it good pliin toil. one has all.. ; to start hi early:end get a line me the brakes and„wheel brakes. A trans.. able. +0. design. ° He wore one of thase' gar - Meats -when he went -to have a Clip of mission brake one that sets around "Brakes may slip because of grease tea ineXingeeEdevard'e omoking-roone - a drum, on some part of the transmis., gettieg onathem from the axle liciue- shortly aft he arrived at Palace. shin, such as the brake op the plane- ing, wear of, the lining so that the tary of the Pod car. It holds, the meets are teaching drums , stretching ' Oat rigidly, hut allows the wheels ofetlie brake rods, looseriese of the to turn different ways, thus, inereas. parts, These should , be gone over Ing the danger of skidding. and remedied as far as practicable. "A serious disedvantage on him "Bo ,extremely careful not .to draw cars la that the full driving force of a heavy Car is applied to the differ-. ential, uniaersal joint, drive nhafteeand other points, strioningethein severely. This is not ee serious objection on a light ear. . • Put Brake on Drums. . "The only proper place for a brake to be applied is On drums on theater wheels. The emergency. brake Wad- waas applied here. • On account of „ • ea,•. • . SOLDDate'S FIRST 'AIM capturing -a toche trench, I discover- ed *Man who. had been lediege in ea „Knowledge of, effoiv to Use, Iliii First .funk hole, with both legs smashed, but - Aid Packet hi Invi104b1e. , Inq'Ing applied 'first 'aid 0 had ,sirc*ed .• . , his, life, though his legs Were after - An elementary knowledge of . .first ward amputated. - aid is absolutely priceless says Cap- • , • . • ae---..e-e--- telt David Fallen, M.C. ru my experi• - ence it has been the means of saving •. A Beak About Bees. . , numerous lives, including my OW11 011 When bees become queenless they niatiyeetcasioha. When a man Is dell- have the scienceto rear a 'near, queen , -gerously wounded incl. firsit aid is ale- to save the colony from perishing. An. Plied, immediately there is every ordinary Worker -egg- that .is .just chance .of his life being eayed, but if hatching into the larva ' is profusely tecteve, declares that it is.nearly ime ,stemleling frOm. the midst of ruins and quality is then never so g ' ood as when the blood allowed o escape from fed with royal jelly, a strangely bre- possible or the average to give , debris, they themselves but ruins and it is. matured in 41qool weather. /n ...the hedVe and there is )40 means of pared food of which no one knows the simple, meet information to -a lawyer debris, -f.raginenth of -social cia'sso,latudying the matter of 'blenching it is stopping it, the body is soon emptied :exact cofnposition.-. instead of grow-. or deteetive. He gives as an example and remnants, ef families. In this ,fa„.1.4Well ,tc, remember that a great deal of ok. its priceless fieid, and death. fol. ing in the oreitaryetele th------------ice 'bee' who was asked, "Did anal desert ill is ready for a riewe celery grown hi different pots ottlie up the brakes too tightly. ':They bind*.and prevent the engine, from cheering •the car at proper speed, thin ',wasting gasoline. At the same time the lining is worn, requiring replace - orient all the sooner. After adjust- ing the external brake you should see datrlight -all' around the drum, show- ing that it is not tout -ether anywhere.. "So giro close attention to-yone brakes, as their failure at a critical tires mighteeasny mean death." :.- The late Klieg, in the most. taetful. Meaner, pointed- out to the young monarch that in England waistcoats of so remarkable a pattern were not avornae King eAlfabeg• thanked King Edward for this hint, and sabseeueht- ly gave away his Whole stook of fancy *enemata to his Valeta. ' "The Waist- coat he King sate' he confessed eubiequentlye"waa the qttietest One of the lot." . _ Lucid TeStimeny. . • - "And' 'afteit the -eitokiteaeataprompte ed the lawyer, itwho, represented the plaintiff in g reccent trial for assault "Oh, there :wasn't any choking -thae. I -saw," ,agidelheeeWitziesi. " "`„ -"No :choking? But didn't you tell the officer that the accused .sprang neon his aictim from behind and seis- ed him, by,the throat 7" "Yeseoir, surely. But there wasn't, any choking. He. bet squeezed him` till he couldn't breathe" wasn't that choking, .Id like to: know?" ' If the court was not enlightened by such et, finely, discrimingted point, heither was the tt.iithebe-clouclede But Mr. William Burns, the famous di- - -- Eitemy-Raw Taken Nothing. -- business. i' Only - the -hard,- fullye "The German in his hesto9driis iitzi developed heeds of cabbage should be that he has left it desert. He ea mis- ea for sale. this month: This, will taken. The soil of France is never a give the soft, innhature heads time tr, ,solitude; this least of all! . It is pm), gain in weight -I' Pied by a* glorious throng, Which our I There seems to be a wide -spread enemy is too gross to see or perceive.' inapression that celery blanched with It is inhabited by memories, by tea I earth is crisper and better flaVoteil thee that blanched with. boards. This shbdes of the dead, ancebe the living' all may be due to the fact that.boei.cls are troops of veterans of the earth, ber who have remained faithfuL to it; who,t /.0re.generalleused for the early -crop in order to go before • us rise ill; 1 when the weather is Warm, and the tide a.betwile& Gt,rneatteinrelaisahne3 services, to:Philadelphia: anel to Boston, but the, line -remained. essentially Canadian. - • Although it was net •a direct .7cOni- ,ietitOr with such great lines as the Cunard and the White Star—for the .former remained out of the Canadian -trade for mana years an& has only re- cently returned to it—the-Allah Line was nevertheless a pioneer in 4:num- brr of improvements in steamship con- struction which travelers /have longe taken as 'Matters of course.,. Thus the first steel steamship to cross the Atlantic was the Buenos Ayrean, built in 18,79, two years before the, Cunard- er Soviet, The Parisian, built in 1881 was the first to have bilge • The Allan Line left others, to be sure, the amazing increases in sizej and speed which have marked the leatteookethesoaereible-eteet-manewithen 'eluarter oe ae century! It did. not an with the Etruria idea Umbitte and and a lot of beaters at so' mucli per:. jab in the rade for records :which heei wiseacre reirefle:wiSat Mar.aWoreaheisreeidenaeellaelevee which led to the building of.the Tea, and he Utterly refuscid to ,,be bothered • ytoonkc and el tticeeittiyce,othe City of New I with an elephant of toget up into any', Paris (now the, rand of a safer plebe than ,theigOod, ?lid ground looked to be. A Surprise Attack. TlieY Iodated a big, sleek, !stead brute in some manner' known to the tigers, Pursued bSr,many, Minters,: have charged elephants, leaping. on their, heads • or sides, _Pulling 140_1:Dahl:Mt from his seat and' killing him before being-. riddled with bullets, even in Main& wounds upon the .occupants of the koWdah, wpuld, dare face , slich oedgenless gorneree, and rarely eVea- except 'lg. break through a • ' - ring of tormentors. But 'even. the tiger may be s� nitioh stirplised that ;the savagery goes out • • of him, for a brief moment, An ince dent of this -Occurred prheiyoue 4entY, Watt an Ameriain importer of Orien- tal ..woods, iiiterrepted the- monotony '4f his business by going tiger .hunting and on foot of course,' as he had al- ways been used -to going after rabbits, cpietil, deer and bear in the good old. ;united States There did.* seem to him " to be anything: about Ertiger that - New York and Philadelphia), the Deitschland, and finally such -mon- sters as the .Lusitania and Mauretania, the Olympic.and-Vaterlancl.,.._ But/in I.A81 the Parisian was the most , famous ship of the whole' Medic fleetfor beauty --a fine staunch wadded into ane across the Jungle to shikaree -and .then the line of beaters vessel, still afloat in the service of the, high woods, one end -of the line the British. Government. • And: the later and larger shipseethe Virginian Was the first steamship ' in the At- lantic 'service with turbine engine— were always Well equipped arid vim- • *coming out first. But eh tiger; , Watt .,. hediet.seee one nor had -the shikareee the. eataevideatle meant to brea:k beck' into the jungle again, Then suddenly.. they heard a cry. ,from the beaters, who haee been dangerleisly' evennuled ear its nursery. Tows inevitably., have own men given one of these.great waken cones Mr:,, J'Ones or his parther 'usually reach birth; the and lestead of haech- the office fi t 9" Win spring up in strength. -At' each eduntry is blanced with boards and, fertable. ' These will brobablyeeepse and, though the scared sbikaree ' seta' for fencer prices. The.important the ocean for many Years to tome caug ht him by the arna, Watt kusted ibitent teed the grain alike,: • application. of this. knowledge of first beao. ie. latches in sixteen into. aefullY ing and'stammerieg with exeiteinentri,..covetpus of the deep, distant robes Of • • • rs e done at the least wepensee • many. will regret that- a name with sight'. The tiger had knocked- "down and have saved,their lives by:a slight ing in,tweitty-eme (lays into a worker "Well " said the boy eegerly btush- step the furrows 9pen, yawning and thing is that the blanching be well under the Canadian Pacific flag. But forward :and came upon a fearful . eld. Eachleoldier supelied with a • • ' first ad packet and should beconie e ge virgin queen. The first pre-. aMp. !Tones. at first weas always last, the toe which eouldnet be destroyed. paratiott fot 'swarming is the seta:Ong but later he begetnate iketeeirliee, till .TheVare forever deiedeM tilde Orde of a.batch of these queen-611ga' so. at last he wee Ara, arthough before' found seeen,in the dust of the detrast- that the colony. shall not he left queen- he' had always been behind. He soon ateclmhurch-7-in the evenings they rise less when ehe queen departe•With elle. got later again, elthotigh af. late. he like the/ bronze mites -of dreamebelie, swarth," and the -Swann Ooes n,ot leav'e has been sooner, and at last he got be- 'We. The eneiny has destioyed all till some a the -cells lire sealed over. Man's Whenever a queen loses herlife, • 3141i Wag ...71/P.11:2144 No apreenfeatieeneeeileeterelitarted ree place her. The only exception is when a queen CUSS it. the winter, and there ate no "eggs from whiela ao. new • one can be reared; mid then, unleig man gives hap, theSOPTony qUickly van- ishes'. Frank Lillie Polock tells all about this in "Wileerness Honey," •whichjifi just ptiblished. „ - • queried ef their powers of reproducticee field dressing onto tlie ttivinindS. ' . they 'can yield under reaeonable emi- tted •both his legs together with hie Let -the rats and hike do the starve trol a large and contintous revenue -puttees. On another oteasion, when g*• • an ihdefiiiiefutuve. lamili r with its contents and applied- such a record of honorable twobeaters together ana lay on thera, . Ment as Allan is tO be oely a enemory. ivrelor7evyvlarnegaththeemburtostitifte:t • tion, 'This is one • of ,the priceless Forbidden Song. ' -ea-, • bustler! he stood faee to fate with and hells raonudahwhthe; • . gifts to every man. . , • Promoting the Cat, AS MO did much damage to his papers, a Hindu clerk, . who Was in charge a the official documents in one - -et-Where -is -one Oubjeet /WM men - staidly he tiger came at' the hunter, ot feet front . the,glant One sliould.he awitad.'of liotv easily- pould not eying his to: Ids telxne -In „ea., _ enteleg.used inethe applicatioriAtf-iitst one's own Clothing anct accdutrementse hind as better& But-IjniesSii.e.'11 he but. he. has take.n.,,i' °thing; awny The of ,the more. remote Indiaia Omits, , aid it -remitter. in the dettee brueleeend so etiitosnueadtrititthealfroncat uttnItteiss it be wba or getting earlier sooner or later." . • reel desert is there, , ine the !neuron' tataed .PermiSsiola to *km, (Mr: 11....1n_!.4.f1anntla Wei. point."."11vert • - dered them, can itr4tlieir levee by,us, fag their puttees as a tnefins of band- age and a.bayonet as a tourniquet. in one Of my midnight raids I ceme . eiteroseen man -who -had been -lying in - • • No Mat's Land with -a bullet wound through both his thigh, aria his life had been saved through his Own pre - aerf - privIalkANTAL.V.5-474-4-570 4t4.ntvitlt.4tien-nddea:stailitii.W4 .01eN-10.,0thO.letetennetilo Teacher—Who can °tell what were Pe Is ede inepunehed the big brute in the fab3. At "" somewhat. ter t ons than theeoth- There -7i; so much, so verY eenuch, the words of the Angels! Song o - %Tome,' If a_ man that the tine tacked 'off a little, .P0s:.T. - springeor perhaps -tlie hard fice Delbhietrecerivaecli this dispatch: Were taget up at.a sing-sthig and singi 84131Y 1.'hr e • ee. A few weeks lath; the head of- that little • 'weed . .Christmes =midi*? Patriotic Pupil . "He that turneth from the reed to would be !Iron butt piece hurt some, anyway It "I have the honor to inform you -that, !Home,: Sweet Home' his life —"The Mepie Leat" Forever!" rescue another, tutneth toward, his ;tb . f b ith t I e senior ca • s a sen vv eave.. .allether A.10.ekaPthe Seals are probably. among the most footpath:of mercy-LOad will bei his guide."—The Tribe of. the Helpers. , hat shall ledo?" . To this problem the Offiee vouchsafed valuable. Unlike inizietal wealth,: answerea" Aftet waiting 'a few they need hever run out, for, consea tlays the Hindu sent off -a proposal: aence of inind in 'having applied his St lielena was discovered. ba the ' Tehel. Naiad 40140.6.1-titAlmstER! wa-Kr. witi; WIC oP *KA- I. DIAeleeetar -.60 team CtUie .1' y r or onslaught and in the nanepeaeled._ His audience would rise and annihilite him, because ft ould not give vent•io its feelings in an,y.-11weeta"pone•e6tkereVedhe-Tanhiidis•illiteievshitohwoust etradtti,illni goti bullet. crashing 'Into the other . wave. There are some • things '..taiegaateas rraaiv:, . that strike directly at the heart, an Matte?' how_lereclotte.e. beaet may be,, -- PorttigUese in 1591, and rene,aiped tat.. ain_ re absentee eat, _. I altopose to this- isone of -theme). _ „ hlatehn tte ether nations'/O-------------- the junior cat, and .in the' • ---------------* of eighty-seven eears. It was first meantimelo take into government ser Dragon flies feed on a large variety Inhabited by the Dutch in 1645. e vice a probationereat on full rationeenf_injuratue 111Seeta. _ i've saw; HiRE clutri A 1WM-A- RE 14A0 A VOILE gow -rmtsatle MR; - 'LW or too* Ar. TOFF WOULD- 6E3' ROME. flIE OFFICE ToMIGHT TtOrsLE. srA*4 OUT 11413 • AND HAD To steO/ VegStf .titerCerfileeel OrfElar St4I'ALL 14R3 Dli1201' some:4110 MUSt Be BURROW., Vie1:441116AVrgerStcalit'i 11,4 * rek ve7 .114 t 11 '014 -A -Mi 101) INIZY Eim MISTAleem,i; Lf eeeei.e..;Cettiesteree. • 1 a" hard crack mi the snout may Make It stop to consider for a moment, „ • yo, that _beenp heareinsteed o et_e'a tiger, though brehe would not have , been so' dangerous to pursue. in the -.fire( place, it wouedlitee 'intently chatiged biases with, the- man, alto- " gether. to the .latters For nn Eight4lonr Day: When the 'dawiaiatinethe -slteee Mother busily draws nigh, Shattering the drowsy- spell That precedea the breakfast bell. Busy still until the noon Brings the dinner, 'lone too teaoh; .Busy still until the chime k Gaily rings for supper time; . Busy through the twilight glean, As the stars begin to show; • Busy still, till .prayers are said And the rot have gone teehed.. Even when to sleep dee goo, Vigilant in bei' repose, She Will hear him lighted can That from childish lips nifty fall, - Yesterday she paused to sinile, Saying, "Maybe, atter while„ An arrangeitient we will see For an eight.lour day tor me.0