HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-11-15, Page 2How to Sten the Squeak in The Car. "Next turn -your attentien to the
"One or the .most annoying troubles hood and mudguerds, Biaeeacb
of au automebile is that reonstant side of the Isooti and see if the etriPit
hhileak that tannot be loeated," 58475 O rewlaide are in plaice. If they ore
an expert. 9t is one of the syrups worn througli or missing they must be
toms en neglect, anh it eries gait to you %Apiece& A little nentefoot oil might
cretin tittle the ear sways or strikes h. he rubbed into them es. an extra pe'.rough epot et turne a corner or stants caution. Close boon and see if Metal
or. etops or eeemO
ingly dens anything ttawa nietal at any place: A ligbt
. else. At eireey raove thete is a ern of touch a graphite grneaee sliould
be
protest, whkh is all the more madden- applied here and there end Patient -
big because you, cannot locate it. If arty along the need hinges and Where
the squeak canted -only when you apply the, rod touenes dash and radiator.
the brakes it is evidently in the bike Now Shane the car again or try it out
bands, but other sqtreaks are not so on a rough road. If the squeak per-
readilybeat d ' sists then try the following:— "
- —
es,THE RAISING OF MINX
lineinintited -Fitishkeg of Hop at Preii
- 401•11kt raard Pekes&
eei choosing bails for hattening
hois, choiee le of necessity more limit-
ed than in the ease of other elasees of
steekii With yoents pigs, whexe ekints
.••••••
••••
41...•••••••%••••••,••• 4•10, • r.• ...MO., • NM-
latter source further nunienent A. witia traw.
May be expected in the near Marc—
Dentiniett EN-peril:Dental sFernisi Note.
SHILLING A DAY." 4
,
British Re*. Array ray After 122
Matte by a Mountain. Sheep as D
eleribed by Traveller in Rockies.
The Wildest lean I ever saw a
mountain sheep take, writes Mr. Enos
STORT-W 'TOE
FRONT LINE
. .
'
Ai Mille in his baelrilhe'Roisn-y Menus Gesemehim iNpoRmenreoN
Years. tain Wonderland, was ' made a few
'
musiallsofanthd epabistgters perrienor mtlasheallest atullueeit eateortieurs there tattle ileritish army a/4 minas northwest of Longs Peek. „ In
vy liete waited pa- chinning down a precipice
• •
I minded GARBING' THE ENEMY.
. in-..
r e r 0 ,g , .. yearies. In October they received their hwhaesiil?oanroawnlingey tvilveideennduoyf fitehoutileddbgeeenI, A Friyate of ten English County Regis They ,Me Assisted byeenEody of Gen -
iv d f am the f rater heap home ,
produced feeds,. With . a reasonable merits Tells ef a Dangerous Ite.
first real inereese in wages slime the
looking upon the scenes man Prisoners Who Seent Con-
anosinst of Wheat middlings, shorts or
YT "95' when
the Pay' of the pr*-
Ing
dj:levtnlia' ehind the rani, who -faced •
va iii soldier VW increased to the belowi The led& was narrow and it - connoitringlexPeditiim. • tented With Thetti Lot.
thus beeproduced., For the finisbing ,,,
ground ents, good growthy pigs may equivalent oftf from liie to 24 cents a I too only
five, or six feet away He '
. . e
One iiof the mills. of the Canadians
i
more rapidlY fattenintrration is nee in ancient days he, lined to a greet
"The sodger's wealth is honor," for I etailePeil WAY, stritek a belliger
ees i ettitude and shook his head as if .. to
ent pi7c6me ,hwaad;Thasdaeida baltmotmaannaahsvciamniceer
of one of the English . canntY regi- day and night,. and ie . tepidly eating
behind the' trenches in France rues
period, 'however, a niore concentrated, ii. i''''''
epee all a mind to butt, you merits, exceedingly cheelrful deePite a up the neighboring wood The noise
quired. The , swine -feeder at ' once
Hent on promises, and down -to the say,
begs at present feed pewee? , . days of William the Fourth theresape
' ox overboard' y p art was o n tbadly !smashed: femur, "and eve had
ants; "How Can ' I profitably finish• ,overbonesill" He could have butted 4 an. of the circular saw mixes peculiarrii
little r eta-.ine got our position fairly well coneolidets with the constant throghebiong intItheeaaviyrh
,Vorn, barley, qatnetniddlingai' and Pheatre'n'atothlir aehmlieyenpaliyegraeter depart- ' myself beneath. a slight onerbang in But the Colonel vented to 'know caused hai the diechar f the
Shortsitten possibly the -five most de- - • !wall on the nano 1. ledge bet • what line the enemy were helding op- guns. A short distance from the saw -
em nt. • weeli -lmsposite usso he deeded to send out a Mill ire the remains of buildings . • • A
The quotation at the beginning re.: i•if he made a moveVe
' ' 'i t •ol to 'reconnoitre M a oo of -
pa t. sr pl t in wrecked by enemy shell fire. A
arable graine and meals for hogs sin
• fers to the system of stoppages, in' While I was retreating along the
• - • ea . ficer volunteered for the job, and he thousand feet an hour is the average
the words of the soldier. He, from g en mg the
dom of Iteeping my eyes on the ram,
w asked for three of us to go with him, output cif the mill, and it will be doing
stoppeges for damages to barracks,'
he Moved, and 1 flung myself beneath It's not very nice work patrolling" du en better than this very shortly, es soon
Ter everiseein-weekeeenlesalseshed-toltlicfhwelndleh-efeeliKalchtehighNhllien-Ratinwhene-Ai-GerinaneinaYsheilnimen•OthesenTimherehealierh,Pleneisewithin hahge-in
used to build a new banAcks from his Ing the day time. You never know as the new machinery arrives,
replecesworn portions of nis kit from ' thin ram did not charge me; in -Steed,
e Made a wild leap off the ledge. si hie rifle handy. But seeing it wee our of German guns very nattinalIT; haiiiini
his pay, and though he was supposed li
It looked like a leap to death. He officer who 'asked, of emirs() we all of- their Own peculiar inconveniences.
to get a shilling e, day he seldom, saw
down with his head forward, ifered, and I was one he took. _1.01 course there is always the risk of
more than a emallportion ohatisum. Phinged
a and a trifle lower then his rump, with' "We crawled out of our trench and the lent and itis workers being blown
Up to the time,pf Kink Edward
his feet drawn upwerd and thrust fele ; got going quite well at first The to atoms by shell or by berabs from
sum of 3ehd. (7 cents) viras stopped . ground was so cut up by our shell fire .aireraft. Suen dangera are part of • es'
concentrates raay, in view of high .
a. point near the bottom - And came - -
ttently for higher pay for the past 22. prices, be limited and full benefit de -
RIES FROMWAR-
FRONT FORESTS
WORK. OF THE CANADIANS IN
THE FRENCH WOODS.
44414
6 • •
a, shrings and spring ahackle bolts. The lina
s
"The Yliane sem force quantities of it into every Withicorn at $88 to $90 per tote—
springs are habitually neglected and Place where metal meets metal or barley $60, oats at $65, approximates
nee -so rersnree, ____Leoreenite, mean tinn _iwwiT.00at„hinyiterilii, as the whole length Of the
the leaves should be greaeed at leaetriii,ehe',s,„A 1Y, and with the two former 'innate
onee a month. had; up the Verne to iiih hood-.'fatslle-tenbeQtrat,ani-whtellilnlinwingilhat liiiilealt /°-Prr'eare'same-'elmall'
er grain must be used in the finisliing
take the weight of the ear off, the heard and mudguards join, etc' 'Then, ration. Wheat middlings and „shorts,
springs. Spread the leaves Limns crawl under the car and inject oil, even though high in price ($45' ap-
one by one, prying them open with a along the frame where the body
joints a f a , tphreo elms jeotre 1 party) , moufsithbeemr eelaiie dr ration.,
ipoortn, I for
one
cold chisel or metal handled screw- MPaiies it. Sometimes-
' ' ' • - wooden body open up and squeak.] the above price middlings offers di -
"Fill 'an oil gun with cylinder oil Eastern Canada. •
. lialer mroer. This .,arwen ',,iii chili: :ff sernegnz ef Thesejoints must be located mid oiled.
. , gestible. nutrients at a lower net cost for suPplementary rations, the ratten
nut 'place he struck was more than . that there was plenty of °cover. We the ordinary business of the day in -
,
e ge, .
the .pnint, .tait Met es enenoidaniei 'GO over every part repeatedly, forcing
pressure . into everY! •
. , .......__, i Igirav;tzsinlinnei.mtinze iofy the ogorr;tiniss jneat ona aztaipiamiLat triei4.4 pqr ilay
for the soldier being one pound of
twenty feet below me. When his fere, must have crawled nearly three hen- these part The trees -with which .•
dred yards -before -seeing -a live •Geresthisspartieular - milleisedealingenhave •
' Then sniead• • rahliitin grease bettneen .
- s g P . - . 1likely plebe. It is a dusty soh anu meant the total cost Of - i ,
a hacksaw blade. As you cannot the direetible .
' the leaves by means of ti. tlainninufe or and the stoppage was -for the provid-
rench all the way to the centre 'where
the ,clips held the springs firmly to
use cylinderileil mixed with a
little flake graphite, rf springs are,
t badly rusted they•shauld, be removed
' and the rust Med offe-a dirtyjob
and a tedious sone. They may then
be properly greasen'befere- replacing.,
.: "There" is a special tool on the mar-
ket which may ie used to spread the
spring leaves without jacking up the
frame. It works as e doublenvedge
and is. very satisfdetory. e
) ' Hood and Mudguards .
"If time prenses use the following
• method'—Wipe diet off 'slayings With
- eswastesiandeliereSenei using-plentysofileshakingeoneseornereofsethescareen- the
- . kerosene and guiding it down the sides other and by. that means. have the
" so ethat it may run in between the noise pretty well located.:
leasiii. Tine it does readily, as it is hThe treatment ter a ricitieakn
not !repelled by the rust. i Wipeieff
, ,
sthe • surplintsnantnithen pour- '
fee rue , is s eu er blajdes aM-'
med upward' as if they were about. to man. There were plenty of dead been."strafed" bY the Beebe inter -
()nes, thougle lying about in shell-nol'm
es mittently for onths. past, which
burst through the skin. A fraction and bits of smashed trenches. It is brings another problem to the workers
of a second later his hind. feet also
only, when you go .overs the ground in the mill. Chunks.of shell fire ere -
the par will bevel% be cleaned after , nutrients, less there manurial value. ing of the other necessary kipplies.
it, but you will priabably stop the.
Oats, or barley, one part, shorts and This was remitted swith the object of
equeale i . ni • middlings, two parts, with some milk giving the private aoldier a clear shil-
Uee. Care With Brakes duct or, lacking the latter, ten per line an is ae t sagged . violently,
, pro a 2 . (24 cents) a day. Since that .where our barrage has been busy that bedded in many of the trunks, and In .
"A general idea of where the noise' cent. oilmeal should supply as econo- paled, with the exception of repair& .
• his bell h
y must avis scraped the slope. I •
you get a true idea of what our guns the course of -months these i arras
is located mat bontetimes be obtained mical a growing ration -as is generallY to kit and,, naarnack damages and 3
by jettncing one end et the car at a available. With the likelihood' of n cents. stopped for national , insurance
tune n Then confine'your atteetion to, material 'drop in the Price of oats einn the private has collected his pay in
• proepect f s
eu Pwarct and ',warct like ' can do, and wilietthey are costing the have in many eases become over -
Met had eltecked hie- deadly dropHis Germans ,
,
a heavy chunk of rubber, This con -1 - . 1 grown and cliffieult ofs, detection
the parts wItere. the nose sounds the more Pneblematical IL
second striking place was on q steeply ' ,
: " . --,, 0
Oily One Escaped. . [through' superficial inspection, Icense-
loudest. This is not 'always a sure eteaper corn, when the new crop ar- inclined buttress; apparently in hfs "We were getting along quite nice-
.iquently there is trouble when such
. •
guide, as you caimoteshake one part .riires, the above ration could be em- inernentary contact with it he altered , IY :when We suddenly discovered the a trunk conies under the sawBut
pPite of this and othed difficulties •
'. - '
of a car withotit disturbing the rest; proved, Corn, snorts, and oats, equal his &mese with a kicking action. of his ; Germans. They werekir'''
. holding a .
but it is worth tryiqg as A. guide when insets with eltininnilk is an excellently feet ' : • . i ly well organized line barely- fifty the mill constantly ,terns out Re•
startingAnother help will be to balanced ration The addition of corn, cents a day,that was compulsoryon innfoot action waslightning like yards ahead of usThey must have thousand feet an hour, produeing big
notice whether the squeals 9cCure even as i'small preportion, to the married men: The navy men will re- • god Mom that buttress heveeredoff , seen us cording, and just let us collie
e
balks for head mending and for the •
. • . .. , s, .
when the front wheels strike a jounce, shorts, middlings, skim -milk. - eation eeive- similar increases, and in " their and. -Came, down 'violently, feet first,' on, hoping
, • • to do the whole lot af us btiliding of 'dugouts' nighter stuff foi
- Under the war Cabinet scheme lie
will receive • 2 cents' a day extra for
every day he has served and only have
to. pay 'pert Of his alichnient. of 12
• • d fi pitprops tied trench revetmenti, and
midi es a water Oar, QV whenthe rear would distinctly improve it as afinish-
wheels strike it You might then ing ration: Corn must, howevene re-
ducessmateriallyeirehricestieheseonni
ered an. economical hogefeed.
At the 'ea/Agent time feed Wheat, as
preeureble in -Western -Canada', -forme,
medium: bodied cylinderoil over the
• rings, 'guilding it down the sides,' in
e samemanner. The oil alone would. purpose, as the excess Is •teadity
be eepeiled by the rust, but the Ike- squeezed out and SQ it /let dringeroue.
mine has an Affinity for it, thins it As intimated, -there is danger in put.'
• and it runs in fairly well. Stand on ting much lubricating Material ell the
front epring hangers and dock ear. or hrake bands, as they are intended to
do. the same/rem each rurming board. held matead ,of slip/ Applysa little at
This action help Spread the Oil a time, trying. the brakes meanwhile
and so find the squeak If, it is any- so, thet the danger point is not Pass-
. •
et21121 in the springs. • , ed.":
ease they Will be provided with • new upon s optygsriaenaittep,owWoit,hanedspwl.ietnih- in, n g P
did show. of. timber of every kind which can be nut
re 011
'kits an the Government exp,ense, and us one from either side, and they laid,
to any use in tire business of the War,
innee_saniedesperate _Wert he gotehimself-to-ah put eyeryo e hu mself A bi shell annadditioninnirde to their-
lowariee. • - stand with stiff -legged, sliding bounds ' hole was close beside me,. and I jump- n ron roes Winner.
The ;nest to the Exchequer ins h estiniVonegeoitilid, esptiie6th. stHerepreedout`heps
a.nbrdiot ed into that and lay quiet, listening ta A journey. of many miles s from the bullets wg hackinitt- the, edgen of hero -Into -"ane of the fairest parts, of
-
mated' at $25006,000- per annum,'
brae band is to place ia little ,grease an excellent hog -feed, as has already which, tickled to the present expend], pen .
heennehing
I • • • - ••I r:
the shell hole , , • France, into a pant where the peasant
at "After aeminute or twothefiring 'even yet runs into the road to stem ,
ed. To tinesmeneinsiree jersingpaynesnand
the. ;wheel revolves, Some rime= central and eastern sections this par- allowance,s for the heray and navy to r scrambled unnweliiiinninannirien-inn: atopn4d,-aud71-7torok--a-peep-over-4 . at the
he spectecle soldiers-in--
montory 'from which to 160k down side. A German patrol *as ,corhing reveals still more of • the Canadian.
.se, •
Feeling that he must be crippled, •
_V
•
men' reeonimend linseed lolls for thin tinder: feed is not generally available.'
• slope without even the s' n• ly'troubling to bend their heenseeven.1 interesting body nf. essistants-h•Boche
tor bit-Phoduct: knOwn ad netickWneat TOO IVIA. NY. TONGUE& , I think they•imagined that we "were prisoners. The German in the French
ecreeningse nifty new be purchased.
laid out. popped my rifie• out vroons seems 'happy in his lot They
I:nether information concerning the - • . •
.i..T.,;hi:ree Thousand Known Lateguages'
• • and teught 'two of them .different.1 seeizied tractable enough, end went.
, .
Food Conttol. Co- filer BOTH IN BERNE
-- -
Meri From ' the fielligerenii Nations
A I tithed in the Stelae e
—
Beef and bacon are needed oveeseas
- . in increasing: quantitiee, They' are
.
foods especially to the empires
ments of the mei. ;who are netting
and thine cloiug IleaVY physical tabor:
Thiesearcity of /Odder and the greater'
' call tor .ineat have compelled the Al-
lies prince the beginning a the -war to
. - kill more than 33,000,000 headoftheir
etock .animals;" Thus the source of
their' meat is. decreaeing. , ' At the
same thne the . needs . of .ths soldiers
and vrar workers naive ineretteed the
necessary Meat tonsureption. • -
Imports of - beef and bacon into
.
Great Britain from Sweden, Denmark
' - and litalland have been reduced to a
very small- amount, whereas all three
countries fOrmerly . -supplied • large
quantities. The United Kingdom is
thrown more than ever .upon the
Worth American dentinent for these
easmodities. Moreover, tbe en-
trance of tine, Visited States into' sthe
war hes greatly increased the renuieg-
hients of both beef and bacon for the
United- -States Army.*
Mho' :Aok•liorg flood hoof owl 1-o.'•40".r.
and the Lien 1 b supplied 'f th
.---,--"CIVATirik paieWittatnil if "Witl Ili''
'United States will reduce their con-
shniption of these. foods. A savings
i of one ounce of meat her person. per
' • day, and increased production of beef
end hacon oe this.continent, would go
• a ' long Way towards '. meetitig" the
armies' requirements.
--n—enene-4,—
. Girlie!. Padding -1-3 cup.suet; in
cup sugar, 1 . g, 21/2 Cups flour, 3ne
nalt 2 te.aspoons Inger, 1 cop milk.
ecl
teaspoorne bakin ' tender, in teaspoon
' Turn into. ,a, buttered mould. 'Cover
and steam two .hoursi
Are p pilel
- any thee -of tlie day linthe -Ssisiss
eapital. one sees the -mantras of both
sides on the streets, -for there are
thousands of French British, Ger-
mans and. Belgians interned in • Swit-
zerland, and aecording to the rules
of the game they must wear • their
uniforms, in order 'to.make, the beeak-
ing• of 'parole harder, saya a War cor-
respondent . "` • "
My first sight pre.---Genmen Fritz
clumping down the streets in his nett-
traligreen uniform and his stout mili-
tary boots • gaveinie a, kind of 'a -reek
of surprise. It •is three years now,
lacking a month, since—iii
I last beheld a free man Mat- German
uniform. To day ksaw dozens of men'
in, French uniforni pass other dozens
in German uniform. Each .party • to
these meetings would look.. straight
ahead, pretending that he had not
noticed. ' - •
' For the benefit 'of the Entente peels
nles nee -aliens are displaying such
signs as these :• "Swiss manufacture."
"Same composition as i the Ger-
n1;350,000 000 a year,* • .
many tocalities, however, an eleva- upoithim. He was trottihg down • a- towards me as cool as anything, hard.. foresters at work. They have a most
distribution of this material may be
had *one C, E. Austin; .mgr. Govern, and Inaleets oneThis Planet- • - NATURE AS sh-PACkEii, Then the rat -tat 'stereen •again, and II &sent the work with at least a' show s
in Neat Spherical Grow I had to take.cover. . - . .. a interestAll were sturchenfellows;
ment Terminal Elevaterse Fort Wils.
.
There .arqehree thousand -known . • itWenhen I looked over ;again - they 1 some elderly, but the majority in the.
lihm, Gilt, or the Live -Steck Branch, lengueges. and dialects in the. World. Brazil Nuts .
were- trying to work round me, crawl -'prime• of life. One wore the ribbon of
'Departmefgrieu
ent .eAlteree oitfi•we• Na eillinginhl tongle exists. by Which aBoxes all _ e . n. . - ,H
..... . eis ini as flat as they could, I hid not the Iron Crop. • '
Analysis of this panticular grade of its inhabitants, or 'even the vast nia- -Everybody is familiar with Brazil fancy being taken a prisoner, • -so :--I-- They were all in German uniforms. „
nuts (sometimes called ; "monkey thought 1 weed try a run for it, es- i Of field -grey, but nthe head-eoyering
nuts"), but IOW peopleithove how they peCiallne is our people badly wanted was most -varied: ihK end iiiiiiis 1144- - -
grow.. • . . - '. ..... :. nethe information I'd got. "I got our of the round cap of, the German infantry,
„
' Nature furnishes them in ready- the hole and -bolted off as fast as I •others *Ore trench helmets, one • or •
screeeings.meveals the following, cenei jority, may • make . themselves ntelers
-stituentst Wildenbuchwheate 58 per estoed•uenicied-bn-interpretensoretrans
cent; broken wheat, oats 'aid flax, 29 latiOn. '
per -anti Weed heeds, 9 per. cent; 'chaff, ' llow' rietieh:liMee tree -bless nndinnis-
niper Ment. • _I:review .of.the weed seeds. understanding . coultlebe avoided if. one itad‘...-viatag. 3, .
present- it should be as finely grounilneeng,uege were adopted 'for intercom-
aeaseselble. , ' n ' • •-: - lenunieation between the . Powers; is
by ,sWine feeding tests; et the. Central l ware Broadly sPeaking,, there are , at
. Experimental evidence, is Afforded.' coetinually beinr illustrated in this spherical .boxes that are the fruit ef hinn ine;IiiitiI weeehrithin a yard. Or , such as. was sent out to .our awn men.. -
a' tree and that eontain then -tits; Which ' twis of otir i trendies nefore . they.", iii the ...Winter, . a 'fehe wok ;Ordinary
are seeds.. ' .' • 9, . s , t knocited Me over. ": . • ". - civilian cloth caps Here ann. there at..
e i.e., niit up in neat,' could:, j -hettrcl tee eaenee stair: .atgleeti:.,-t(wif ii.: had the -woolen_ acornforterneenalie -
'Experimental Farm, wouhd :non to least a doeen hingtiages tO be reckon-. Such : a box, the size of e cocoa-' ir:sOlineediofauwroouffinrisHeeracticdi ettt. e. it tin datttr-jertio. isnoflictliiit::, .
net; with a rough ,coat, ie it :quarter en d
prate that thie material is of non -led. with on the Continent at the pre -an inch thinkend contains twenty -odd me back inst then; for the Germans hettalione. The guard was not nus•
' .
siderable value 'Airing the winter of „sent time ' Tommy pores. oyer French 1 . nuts, se nehtly an elinely pecked that had their machine-gun Playing on. the ''-inerond. One manwith a xifie is- cap-
biethrow, light on the value a . fiog- , lisle ones Friends meet who Cannot] can
1914,16 in an experiment Calculated i gingen, and, the 'Ponta pores. over Eng- if they Are taken out no tientitsskill spot. • We had just to lie -quiet, sand it feenilleo•wosf 1.:hokoineganixifottersuam•
. . ., powonerv.ieutchi'hi4s .
feed of elevator by-products, as renre-lconnerse! Was there ever enythien.
. . put them all back 'again into the *as a good thing for us we had "haver,
nenten by the various - grades's. eif more absurd? • ., • . weapon among them..
A Prisoner's' Mean. '
, receptacle , • .. n .1 / told him. what we had noend out,
1 There is ; ,another kind ;of tropical and he shouted the inforniation over is • . •
screenings, buckwheat compared fiens The urgent necessity for n universal ' tree that has its nuts inclosed in •a °Iii( gin's' ...• Worh was suspended punctuallyt
. ' e
,voribly with a; Standaed-meal and Milk' tangust was particularly - emphasized sie, a "pericarp," popularly.known to one ' chaps the teench.
started shelling . the beggars -shortly ,
midday, end' theeoinpaisy.troopedoaff :
retion.. Two of the.. eations noinparedi by the late Inter -Allied Socialist Gen- I as -h -ii. r
movable lid- which; It
taken off, afterwerds, it_red while this- was, e_oi:ng.
derthetrees Ian the prisoner cool An
the "Monkeypiot." R has • a re- to . dinner:- It was served -nut hot unL • '
were' as follows : No.1 shorts, ' three; ference, Where matters 'ended •ini a . -' - - :
parts; cote.; 3 partse•Oil' meal, 1 part; ,: deadlock, dee largely to the treineed-1
went discloses an opening just nig enoligh ic-m- they 7-t me
in;"-. ' v . :. 'imperial. "officer . accompanying ' us ,
. . • •
;plus "skim milk.. No i -g finely ground : ousebusiness involved in *coping "•"' for a- monkey to put his hand in. To ' ' : 'Fotty Years of the Tetetilione. : .
(vette it -sentence to the ,Mon in 'hid own
buckwheat screenings plus • skimenilk:i the .-rihrriberiess dinTects, tongues, aed1
!grail) the coveted nuts he closes his ' '.• "it seems hard to believe, ha I can
tongee and iearned that the prisoner '.
Without entering into the details ' of, patios spoken by its Memberii. - The fist, and then finds himself -unable ,to. was a Cook by trade, nn spealthalf a.r.
this test (see. Experimental Farine.Re-1 War Aids Committee -devoted an en- withdrew it This is one of the most reineinber when there were . no tele -
dozen Indian tongues, but I believe Lt
pori, •Vol, 1, 1915 it Mayibe stated.: tire morning to the mere translation phones," said Prof. Alexander Graham
that the Inge fed buckwheat screen -1 of the doeuments 'concerned, thourit painful embarrassments fo which a Bell to as lecture andiende the other.
is the first time hliaire tried to speak ...
MINS, While -not so fat as those "fed the, all this trouble might_ easily-- 'have monkey can be exposed. in - - . day... Whereat, of peel -See there was. n Geiman
xint.iiked for
.officer, seventeen
dully' . tee: '
. , .
• ; ' Ait Inexperienced Marshal.. '. slinnt ef laughter. s -
the telephone transmitter and receiv-
regular • meal ration and 'standing, been avoided if one language had been
. .
cetned their portion ire then' tine; the
i, ... A Plioto of the original models -of - . • . •
thenefere slightly tower in totangains, used. • • .6 - . .
.
erisoners squatted 15 groups' unner-
!need fleet' in -en:mon-neat production : According to the neriptures our .• • ere taken at the Petent OffTen, shows - • • - •
_ r leo teens- nees-ennethesese--renen,-einine-enee-sewerhee-ne, „e- ees. seined, nee Then, for!, of .4! 1,41A,g, to 1,01, the jabbeiedway to one
n=,,,preparabii,o, sCriitly r - • •-•,,••
Aft
e -31 npers-.. on. _ _ he• seineneeneneitimineenetseneineeinseneeneneongedesirsien- of- nfficisals Leseeen- tenth,. sis etweienemesieeneen all?1,24_1• volublY• More potnnes were ---
English material.". 4Cpowingly td buy
German goods is the one cardinal sin
among the Fifinch, American , and
English gelonies here. , •
Oatcakes with Date Filling... -Make
ontmeerhookies with the following:
cups flour, 3 knini 'oatmeal, I. cup been
dripping, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup sweet
milk, 1 teaspoon salt, 1.1evel teaspoon
soda, 2.1evel teaspoons creath of tar-
tar. Roll „thin and cook. Make the
follownig date fillingenlilbdates, en
cup sugar, juice of a lemon. Boil
until thick, and sliteed between. oat-
meal cookies,
orw: smostorar
hineesreand the buckwleat screen -inlet that-- viertinthenileyesiseforenthentra- dignity, who warn -finally aPPeintel idea wa-s
s it ett
at $14 (nominal) the cost per pound
gain was 4.7 cent l in the case .of the -
pigs fed* the former and, 2,7 cents for
those fed the" latter ranee. ()n the
actual prices paid or charged formeal
skim-milk and roots, and figuring on
,the basis 'of tete]. entin.s nroduced by
gedy of the Tower ,of . marshal in a parade on the ',king
, lsiethday. Veterans, bandsmen and
Aeon children lined the streets of the
Lee' Chinked . Blow --Bubbles.
• town, patiently waiting the signal to
There s is no better exercise for in- start • „
ducing nostril ,breathing than blowing Suddenly the menthe', on preen.
nubbles. ,It is a *leer Impossibilityleg chigger, 'dashed . up the
to breathe through the inenth , and to After inspecting the procession, he . • . • • .
blow bubbles. In one of the big chit- gave his horse a touch with the whip,
. The world's greatest -wireless stets
tion has been built in Italy, powerful
enough to comMunicate with. North
and South America when sheltiti. eta -
tions are erected on this side of the
Atlantic.
the two, lots, budkwheat screenings
showed a comparative value of $27.60
per ton.' , i • . . - e inree's hospitals you may Ste thi14reii
vise& in reeking inquiry into this par„- expand the lungs and induces deep
The swine -feeder Would be well ad - 1 daily . blowing bubbles, afi it helps to
'dealer tied, the eastern 'distribution. breathing : .Children Who, lifew'beb-
I
of which -is% controlled by the Live bles frequently at home are not like
Stock 13ranch at Ottawa. From the ly to have adenoids. en
. .. .
-Incint tense ofeeerinerennienn-enns
any people a
• The first telephone was patented by consumed in London during the peevi- •
Professor Bell 187in: But other in- CMS couple Of months.
' t is, • articular] Eniile erliner,
Another long journeh through most
the originator of the disk phonograph, beautiful -country and they reached
were largeIyirenPenailide for its devil- n third. nailadian ntifl
Save for the .
opnient, espenially :for long distance villagers„the Canadians have the_dis- .
Met pretty *weir. tOA themlelves, and
here, again, they are rapidly letting
'daylight into the woecle. '
, In So\lid Form. '
•
Arnong a squad of 'policemen who
Were undergoing a test in ambulance
work • was an h•ishman, with whom
the doctor had the fallowing collocnity:
"What would you do to a man wha •
had a cut on his forearm?"
. "Sure, sori, I'd bathe it with warie,
soft water,"
"What do you mean by soft water'?"
-"Gehl *lust soft water, ghee; wet• •
water," .
Stood up in his stirrups and shouted:
"Ready, now! Every one of yen
Impe shtep wid the horsel Marchl" •
Teasing a baby to make -it laugh is
a crying ehame: • •
o 1314criatzges.af 436.00 31:11sazires.
•-•1•ftki•••••
I
1 supposa Iiio4e -Poork • 1 siloVO SAY
nee -PIERS nann IN euRoPe Not sONIE 0
, 0014#1- OM' 'VeRY•f ANC( ri-(11EI'EASMITS "" -
r"° 1.4425. DAV.±,s1 OYER 'MERE, 0fillii rihrPe
lime MEAT ONC£ A
✓ marg.
11- •
In HORSE. MEAT'
VER -1 °Firth
JiksT
Or, EAT I
HOR3E.A4VAT
Now Dp You supPosp
seRVE A
tioast STRAKT
ieneeneeless.
v
• •
, "And what is hard. water?"
"Tee, sore."
,
Protecting Cathedral. ..
• 'The stained glass winch:we -of the .
Celeriac Cathedral, neeordien to Ger-
- man -newSpaper4, aft bding replaced' .
with /slain, glass as a precaution in . "
• ease of Air rends, The Colognie Cathe-
dral is one elf ethe most magnificent
Gothic eilifiees in the world. Some ef
its stained 'given windows Mete from...
, 1508,• but most of them are modern.
• The older window:1 are among tilt' Mk':
teuStrryexatilt.mp,leo of early sixteenth cons
1
.