HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-04-04, Page 2e--eareavertse aaalt
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The tieeiag Overissaliage-IL tit meat: raat9Vit rovoI the
T et cerburetioa systems follows,' dreist plat; *.ft drainers clean out I
Care of this should %dude tercets well with keroessee era refill 'with
air through the feel carrying pipes, IleavY Oil Or roar roroPoundClun
-
daaning of the strainers, removal of. the itait'eruis with hutuesuk dry and
the air block so that cola eir is fed Mack with peen. Treat the rear
but Ito adjuetraent should be caesurae ,fula ** YOR did the traninnuientut ,
until the car is taken en the road 144 Then you attend to the braking sYs-
ex. Title is suggested because youa tem. The brakes may need relining
cannot properly *Oat for new con- or merely adjusting. Oil every eon -
*tons, not knowing vlutt the pres- nection from the pads' to the beads so
*at adjustment will de under these the brake; work freela.
conditions. Telaayour
. adjustments at two places if you can
Before levering the engine there are and not all at one platen Equalize
two vital thine necessary. These your brakes later on the rood.
aro a tightening of parts and lubrica. ' Then get at thee wprings, apreading
tite at small boating* and joints, the leaves apart said oiling them, re-
very nut on the engine and its se- packing the slackIst bolt cups and oil-
ceeeories and brackets should he int or greasing • any other moving
I
tightemed or an attempt made to do Parts suck as oscillating holder* on,
so. You may surprise yourstelf at cantilever springs, etc.
leerning that the radiator import . Get the' steering steam neat, dist"'
bolts can 14 turned the them round.' connecting sal joints, cleaning -with
Oil tbe generator bearings, 'starting' keroeene and repacking'. If Yon whit
Motor bearings, the- linkage at the . to do a goodllaing wet joint covers for
bottom of the steering post running to the steerint.
the carburetor, iiir choke, ignition Remove the steeling Ineueltle Pia
untt and oil the. ignition unit bearings, cups, clean there well and refill. Next
041 the fan hearings. If yen take „ COMO* removal of lall Wheabs and ree
IOW instruction book and check at , packing of wheel bearings, and et
melt oil . p ce as You go * oar Tou e er ing Up ° n allgnment °
.4. will do the Job about right. following whieli is 1 general going
With the elleintit linishod rat coin over the, whole casissis for oiling and
proceed to the clutch. If It runs in tigatening. Tighten the spring clips
oil pee can flush it out and use a if you can, repack every grease cup
slightly heavier lubricant. Dry clutch, and turn down a few times. In other:
WOMAN DOCTOR
MARTYR TO SERBIA
.044.104.10
HUMANE WORE OF SCOTTISH
PHYSICIANt
Elsie Inglis Om Pier Life to Releasing
Viestaded sad Staving
•atrkkeit Lased
they bad letea at se pest pains to
take with theft. Drlaglis woe In-
feeiated. She feared nothing la the
world, but vent boldly up ter the big
eaptala of the invading party. She
wes a essi7 small woraan and must
have looked to the Hun like an angry
en•en.
It bappened that the eaptain was s.
good enough man, said, uulik* other frontier, where. no naval bulwark beret OUT BRITISH EMPIRE.
HUN'S NEW TREND TO THE EAST
DEGREES
Wket the Reeently Signed TreatiesKHAKI FROM
!HUNTING SUBS
COLLEGE1 IN TIJE ARCTIC
4014110,4/0
?dean to Germany.
Severe' circurnstanees in the ...et
few weeks point to a new orientetion
- •
00,44mmlor
of GeratanY'S ImlicY' 14 Passible attach TO BE RECOGNIZED THR09,11- EXPERIENCES OF NAVA.L MEN IN
on the British Empire at its weakest
4'0YIIO UV flat:wed- tU resume Dr. the Ivey to the advance of the kaleee a
111.444.11... VI
FAR Nolan.
Testis told hint whet *lie thought of legions. This new scheme, berely 4w' 17"".
him Ana an tea anew in aerealm hinted at in recent treatiesonore them Study Courses Taken by Cituadialt Remarkable Wee of U-Boate That
idioms whic4i. he underetacel find did ever calls for vigilance en the part of
not feel better for. Moreover she in- Greatilfritain and for direct action bY •
SoldierWill Comprise a Wide Get Quick Punishment For
The world in these days is full of formed him that, according to the her ally Japan. Azgl if the United Rangeof Subjects, . Dark Deeds.
heroes end aerteacee aereeey stoma Geneva Convention, lie heti no right States wants to realm the NvOrld :safe
'
proudly weer medals for bowery one c. to take their hospital 'supplies. lie -for fleMocract, she ahouleitcontribute Canadas IChaki Univetsity has been, 'One side ofthe world war that is
work well done. But stories. of had no 'strength to dispute her, says the forlhally openeen says a Canadian core, little heard 0 and yet whieli has Aly-
ea-. her aid before it is too late,
e, respondent writing. from London
sent to go and get back what belonget odder of the New York Herald. m mshed some stirring incidents is the
some thine which belonged undoubt. Bueharest, the Rumanian government
at Februery. The inauguration took
place a large lecture -room a Len- A graphic. 'description is contained in,
-life of the lirltieh navy hi the Arctic.
ed to her. Which she did, adding Accenting tee the treaty signed
don Universityiend four hundred •Can -
telly to the German Red Cross. undertakes. "to aupport with all ittl tin official account of experiences of
others are untold, and those vtlinnY-
tiered distinguished services are un.•
deeorated and forgotten.-
e- The war relief work of the Seottish
W ' . .
either cone or dime, may need treat-
ensat, dietated by wasp. Cheirdesig of
the Motion oUrff..40* WWII* suffiees.
But no matter -what the type be sure
to lubricate the thrust bearing, tile
throwout 'collar and the connections
from the Pedal to clutch. Clean the
oll holes and .044 -before Youtfillewith
ell or groom. •
Proceed to the t•rereembseion. if that
words make sure that everything that
can be tIghtened is tightened and that Worse Than Belgium.
can be lubricettel its well supplied with For thie room it may be seenthat
grease or oil. tile condition of Serbia was a thousand
After that you can attend to the times worse than Belgium's ever was.
body, which probably needs a clean- And. it is so considered by authori-
lug atuf polishing and the road test to . ties. The relief fund, excepting the
find oat if everything is ,running acottisli Women% Roaliltali,oliaS never
ismootidy and for makirtg the carbur- exceeded $2,250,000. .
etor adjustment. • All that Da Inglis did for the Ser -
e Is 00 As she explained later, it waS all in strength the -transport of trooPs oe adieu soldiers were present. Dr, Tory, riaval men statioped at or eear Arch -
conspicuous to have escaped public a President of •the organization, and - -
one, as awe," 4
the Central Pewees threuga Moldevia
goo4 eaUse. For she and her *staff
wily head of Saskatchewan Universitte pee- wile long winter eight of our '
know that Da Elsie /signs,
notice. But few in Clundabeaatalrura".1 etiallxieed,_ufourdokr0060rertTlehrtereawvilekenfmoriesia "4 Bessarabia' to Odeesa."
Odessa? -Because it is the greatest Sided, givingan interesting- address.
and friends, it made • nf? MOntlis is drawing to a close, The
pon of that organization, was respell, difference. Port On the Black Sea, the flannel oute "Germany's combination of l
se-enea Moon, Which, each month lias gone
sible for itattremexidoue accomplish- Whoever needed help got it, as long as let for the granary of Southern Itus- and industry nearly conquered the -round in a chele for ave days at a
ment.. Oath BA Tory,emnhaslaing time mithout eetting, no longer sae
This Ithe suppls as Da Dies would luivehsol ies held ' out. sia and, wliat is more • important in world,"
They also eared for thousands of view ea the Run's dream of conquest, the supreme import:Mee of the tech -
sibs our attentim The rosy noon -
le Though she ie to receive pone women and childrent refugees fleeing' it will tap the great iron, copper and Ideal work which the university wes day light has each day , brightened
honors, those ,who Imola' her say that trent their homes. And wen they coal district of ICrivoi Rog and. will introducing among the older forma of . and whitened perceptibly, - and "'IOW .
She would feel sufficiently compeneeted 'months in the German nd
were priaoners theytworked for three give a direct route to 13atoum and the study. Canada must • specialize in
oll-welle of Baku. Once established at such instruction if slit were ice hold short period the sun leer down over •
each twenty-four hours we see for a
if she lniew that s/ae wilt 1
. Odessa, Gerraany cen reech out to the her place in the world after thie war. the southern hill's. .
Immediately after this The angles, shores of tae Caspian. 1 The principal subsequently stated that
The treaty. with the Bolshevik deice I
Serbians for whom she gave bet life.
set to work to get transportation for easy Ithalti Mayoralty had the power • Saving' the Crews,
She gave food and Medical attention "With the thaw come the stibmar-
her brave Serbians. She was in Ruse gates provide& that •the political and to greet degree's 'which would be re- i ines
economic independence and territoital
to stareing and dying Serbia. This. and it is not long before the II -
was after the political authorities of cognized anywhere in theaBritish do- boats lutae laid their quota of 'explo-
sia, end they 144 escaped tbere also.
74, ••'' be. aAustrian
rernenlhered in the hearts of those almiera camps' • ••
1
the Allies haa decide4 that when a And it was Walt them that she landed
country was ut the military oceupat at Newcastle, the day before she died,
tion of the enemy, as Serblast November.
ia was, the
enemy should. feed it, though the Aus- Russians Are Grateful, -
trains let it be known that if anybody,/ -Not quite a year ago Dr i Inglis was
t h it
en ungry wouldthe erbians. writing from -her hospital Reni,
Russia:
"It is eery interesting to see how
the attitude of our patients toward as,
has altered. Our Serbs, as always,
were grateful and trusting. But the
Russians could not at all understand
the sitdation and why strangers could
nurse them."
One ,reason why Dr. Inglis was so
justly loved)) all eo I arao h
she worked was because she xecogniz- lin-Bagdad Ritilway, Germany is again
S
Ulan= TO FIGHT AS A UNIT.
tea.
War01500 Maldnit a Distinction Ret
prang Itenorraed Regiment. e.
The British War Office, which net
particular where its fighters ...come
from se long. as they do their trench
Job thoroughlY, is satisfied With "The
Lithe* From Hella' So well do. they
like them, in fact, that the second bat.
talion of the MacLean /tildes is going
to be hurtled to the first line trenclies
ate tackle Fritz.-- Altheagleithasebe
part of the general sehente et split the
Canadian conthigenti into separate
'matte and send theratinte hie Man's
Land along with more seasoned veter-
• Foie 'Fire Prevention,
The protection from fire of farm
properties is it problem which, has
eeldorri been attempted in any practi-
cal way, .aid from the exceptional
use of fireproofitur materials. In a
small town in Ohio, Hollandsburg,the
villagers and, the farmers. within a
eadiuts of five miles have combined
fotces. They have purchased e mo-
tor truck equipped with' chemical ex-
tinguisliera, ladders, etc., and arrange
-
merit's have been made for _answering
fliattallatiiiiy-wheaatin the client -et -1r -
this experiment proves seccessfule a
madear.teaaaeoption:oe the plan Should
follow
biana 'will perhaps never be known.
No country to w ich war has been
brought offered more difficulties than
Serbia for war worlters. Roads were
frightful and hoepital 'supplies elmost
as scarce as food. . • .
This remarkable woman was well
over 50 'when .she ;Red at Newcastle,
England, last. November. I fancy that
the Serbians Unreel her because she bad
determination equal to their own.
She was like some Greek Sere who
wanted to see the "smoke ge up from
his native village and thee die" For
she died the next da after 'she laud -
•
ane, past performances of 'Ilia Ledies , Worth Thinking About.
Front /tell" have produced such pro- Every little bate makes a tauckle.
found respect for them inside the Ger- The second aeleing is getting to be
num lines that hereafter they will bad form.
tight as a eeptirote unit. . There% lote‘of 'money to' ge round
The War Office had before it a his -
but bacon, beef and wheat can't make
tory ot the peat peeformances of tile -circuit, .
former men -who, ted by Cot Percy A. theFish may not be a brain food but
Guthrie, put the regiMent :record brainy taen are eating more fish.
*8 one of the most dasaing and cour- -
:s ,
*opus of the overseas troops since Waste and want ere twiri isters and neither is beautiful. •
the first bettalion of the famous Pelt:-
cites Pate went hitt) the great dead- „Learn to control your own appetite
- lock on the western front early in, bonrgre. !Mt try• to enlittr°1 Aux. neigh-
„
1016‘
• A gootreitizeat is known by the food
letter from Cot Guthrie/ the ..
. interesting eiewettegarcling the dia-
he eats.
. tinction made on behalf of the Kilties .lialmin••••••••••••••••••÷••••tiloommomm...•
• by the War Officeis announced. In de-_ - A Picture. ,
sertaing the recent movernents of the btraightl3r drives the shining plough -
regiment Cot Guthrie writes: share, waking earth from winter's
. ,.
"Recently the ,bole battalion went dream;
*way; at the sameStraightly plods the faithful plowman
time for a ten. day crooning low' Ws patient team;
furlough, and eaca member was given
.te Flock the whit -winged Mills *=eulot
free 'transportation and lodgings . 4..tx
liands 'were eager for the trip, and J
hhn;
. ewhert it terminated 1 do riot think tlieTii :As a snowstorm all about hita.
in the sanshine'a golden gleam.
lands edit wee ma visited ba a High -
lender garbed in the red taraan at the So Picture on Fall. el
elan- The pipers ionic their pipes ' • e
, with them to Scotland, and the old vale 'When hauting'' Pictures 'always g
leys and glens resouuded as in the hong them -with the face to the wall P
days of old, when their fathers before at first then turn them without un-
- them pipea clansmen to strike a ifalow hooking the wire. This leaves the S
ed.
With her 'hosaitaatinit meddler` -... • situ t!
a on_
I •
Irsit stand at Kr shevata Th -Vete' - Mane.wor -
succesafolly _carried_ on by her - eee, - „ chancesas or'clinary-laborers. Many of_ebeets' bateast
integrity' of "Persheand. ,Afghanistan"
must be respected. Why Afghanistan,
here mentioned for the first time since
the war began? -Germany doubtless
will 'see to it that Russia fulfils this
clauseavalle sae herself treats it as a
scrap of paper. Fromithe shores of
the Caspian tbe ' Huns could make
short week . of feeble Persia, and it
would not take log to blaze a path to PaY these instructors,. ^ • have been exposed for days in„ oPen
i
minimise and that a term of study and sive eggs off the entrance of the aort.
eredeiffials to shim that a student bad
Plumed his examination:I for that term Merchantmen arrive with sides batter-
ed from shellfire and tales of genera:
would be recognizeel as tame put in on actions and hairbreadth escapes when
any counselor any degree in any Can. I the 'Kaiserilsh' passed Inewath their
adieu ;university, The. Canadian uni-; bottoms; Some do not arrive atull-
versities had offered -to lat Ehalti Colt then the trawlers search the face of
lege draw on their staffs for any in- the ocean and bring in a remnant of '
strectors required during the war, arid stiseved and fiost-bitten crews who
.
through tlie discordant tribes of Af- • Experienced' MettNeededt . boats to the fury of an Arctic spring-
ghanistan to the ' confines of India, "'Vila hays eou,got to sell that time. Sometimes they are not found; '
where German intrigue has been at and sometimes .the U-boat herself
work for months. tostir up revolt. • 3C.anOladeayi wantlsar isesniscituaiiiretldiLteicetuotc"olf" • meets.' the fate' she has ' Prepared ' for
Foiled in her attacks on Egypt and Emigration for Canada, as he eroae to others. - . I
the Suez Canal, foiled in her' dream of address the student e in aludel That'..'In the Arctic ice Was found the .
is the question e often put to
,:oung . telephone buoy of one who had•raissed
men who seek my advice about go- her Prey' arid, coming too close,- her- •
ing to Canada. I ask them if theY - self became the _victim. The buoy is
bale had some apeeheeeraining„ Can only let go as a last resource, when ar ' -
served submarine is sunk and is uneble to
thee' lay brickst Have they
Y P Pe nic ("74 an ,Oriental empire through the Dere-
ed the rigats of all. -
reaching out to the East, and the povr-
"We have hmight," she wee' Writing or she has acquired t•here already and
tures) ,for the wards and the hospital
in March/ Intly "ikons (sacred Pie- the potential power implied in Ot
treaties just coecluded surpass the their thee as printers? 'What pl.act rasa It has a watertight telephone
his hem' blessed. The in sing their wildest visions of the most imagine- tical expezience have
ward the ikon in their ward. - a .hear . they had WI upon it connected witlathe hull of the -
ward
hymns with their:faces to- tive Pan-Germana How long will the firming? I impress upon thee the . sunken submarine, and by which com-
• .
them now as I write. I do n, s p,
, „, h Allies delude theniselvesewitletheidea , fact that the.eteained . man in what- inunieation canate established fromi the
added. wistfully, "that the. coenuaPe' idea' that Germany' is exhausted and con- t ever line it be,efrom blacksmithirigito surface witbthe inta4serie4 occupants
will approve. of this. at means ao tent themselves With,talking while she doctoring, is te ma
• n we want ,in It beareati large glass plate, uteri
much to the Russian soldiers. And t 15 acting. • . • ' I Canada. Re. is the man who will get.
man! -.
which is inscribed .the legend in der.
• . .• a-- ' '' along. ' Men lackin some s eclat ..., . .
have been touched at the way the Rus,
qualcation or wittout capitfil or a 'Undersea boat the 'e'er-. is sunk •
• CANNON' TO KILL CANARY131RD.
elan officers have /turned to us and • • -
g no si a oe n eve, are plain-. ere. Do net touch, but telegraphcat
• • Dr: inghe'a broad 4 hu • k The onb' Sall/tine for Paelterate _ly told be- Me that they go taking their once te the Cernmendent of the -V-
67 colleagues of the Hospitals Uaite •one of the most curious. of re- you viten” YOU, return 1: to Canada- will - Submatine Meets Death.
held three months prisoners -in • Atm;
trim camps, but .aseeped .Russia
with a Nifty of valiantSerbians Even .ptraz-vm.ARE FOR SPRING FLOODS.
, •
then Da Inglis was mortally ill, but ee..- •
she would not come tape until she aad Winter Conditions Point :to Vouble
secured transportation for °these men.
They were with her on the ship com-
ing home.
No Conveniences at /land. -
When Dr. Neils arrived at the time
of the typhus epidemic sae found three
in France a canary bird was the prize; do?' Training in the Khaki ill -liters- urifortunate, though in , a - different
Auother sebmarine was • equally
cent happenings • on the battle front be . gaited the geestion tWbat can you
cleat actor. , • . ity will give you the Poeter to answer way. The 'submarine rose to the sur-
' It was a French bird, Liberated by thee question satisfactorily." . feee to then a -munitiens.shia which ,
aceideeteat flew out: into No Man's Get Practical Instraction: '
f i. h first shell exploded the ship's cargo Ot
she had torpedoed; but the submarine's
When the Spring Break up Comes • Land, between the_ opposing hnes Of
'ti nebes Derailed on a tree and. began arlaki thiiversity, o w ic the niunitions A large motor • lorry On '
All this winter' Snow tuts fallen in e • --' - n University -Of Vimy- Ridge is a battle- ' '
to sifig in the bright stlestine. . .
unusually large quantities.- There was -- fielkoffshoot, was 'organized by the oaetboard and -landed •ori the upper
the upper deck of the vessel. pitched.
eft "Jar -wary thee and no marked Wheteupon the :hest of thee Preside -
Tata • ettAtior Itaiiiirig the troops, 'his- deck of the submerine, sinking her in -
Marksmen began to shoot siatt..Why? establishments in every Canadian' area,
thaws in •Febtuary. It has been a Because they hadtto: It was a matter -tin saintly. - Theehip's boats were already
steady winter -with- the prapect of it • • , England; end. has started at the
so crowdedthat it wasinunanla
or four wouticletaemethe genie izn-
tres in a small building,. on
ce a remaining sit unti'l the spring areak- o Utmost
volvine manv hints= li
yes.
. mosi elementary studies in p sm e o ta e ano hee teael t to
seriousness, Possibly -ellitifront. -The subjects -range from the 6 •bi t k t • -
se oo..„ use, whieh the Setbian Gave
ernraen.t had given to s the hospitals, At. up. Then the rains will.descerid and -
the winds will blow ia the most Bibli- f h
u ries are comment used to 'v
four days in them with very .scanty
coMfortable quarters,
et vermin arid reeved the. patients - to
much damage at points along the ca
arirryienecet era
h (in cages) into miCies ,
varieroutsa atepaeeleasi4irnriaeao;uepdataionresdehrotthme taadny wdere ext. h
we itto.nent
eavee
Y Kisglish, etc., to university students'
'arithmetic! thein, aria' as it was, their er
1 rnamier and floods of unusual pro- v more semi- z
work.. ,VecationaI train'
mg s a big vi t_-_ reaehin la d
warning e :presence of deadly
Onea she ga smother small huadings t will b the esult. Alreada
, men receiving theoretiealand - i4
tLeature ' '
Other lubmarines hidg them's
ting games of
had them pitsitevtashed and cleansed
nmlean11! Februare y tharar , 'has eansed iltuhneurnabeinceg5ntoewasityliatvaosi
paactical indstructdion in latrningi and among ,
the iee floes-fartherenorthaand•,
rivers in °Mario- - • e -an -see a ye in t ose wa-
The Setbians, while eager to learn, Th . • to test ‘the air re the undereround
a 'braes and Grand
liad no notion a mode itati Ice jams forced the -water over some eki ..,, , --e -different bt•anches. Germany leas, score ters with' only theseais d a
mi. san on. artie i i b
Moreover there Ware ahnost no con- a the e a em anitments and vie . 'We a very acetyl! b special ' te i i , an gr m-
g ' p a ions or m' itary pure - Y" y --a n Pg, puss for witnesses.
venienees- to be had. They ditl not much /*se and discomfort ' resulted: puses are .444 4.„1
cone/a/ea on :every exten- schoels in various -trades. - - 'Togs both 'n d ' t .'
dare use water from anywheie near lire these %stances `merely a foretaste I ei eee in s e e y eller - - • , , 1 summer an win er,
Growing Large Onions. are a very terriltle thing in these'll-re-
. ve s e pre en - a vz e in
the typInis camps ati4 had te haul it
of What is coming? In any event, Arum/ea' '•Tirmeels•ef greatelength are. • • tie waters. The cold wind bloWing on -
from:spzings ..840.rea, or four miles is bistter to PrePare 'for ouch. eon- d t the To grow large onions • the Pound the warmer water raises an, eneene.
away. • tingeney with evera means available. Such tunnels.are testel for /cagily the must be deeply trenched and well en- treble Mist and probabl use
tebeeIltig,•soaring, darting, hovering o
:a -was a shire in the.se tight liatIe le -
Dr. -Inglis saw -their couditiora and
ffered lieta to the women" and 611-
dren. This was accepted very cautious -
at first, But ni the end they woul
ave as many as eighty 'bullock wag-
ons outside, the hospital tents with
eople Waiting for medical attention.
When the Austrians finally. - took
erbia, after her brave' people' had
ade.. the gallatt, stand -whith allathe
Engineers ebould be placed in charge
end ice jams should be dyeamited, be-
fore they have had a chance to dam
back the water: -Weak places in em.
bankments should die properly. rein -
use of canary birds. mehed some time before sowing and marry loseee as the enemy's best ef-
' The bird that escaped into No Mants . the sowing nrabt be done early so the forts. ' --'
Land was being einployed for 'this put -1 bulbs will have a lang seaters . of l . ' . The Suinmer Season:
pose ' . g 0 p e t growth ' ' ' . ,,, I . "Simmer, that :short six weeks,
, . . Germans.- The succeai of the opera- Select a 'well •dreinedespot, manure • would be a delightftil season but for .
forced. Food kept in - cellars in the upon secrecy. and trench deeply, then give a stir- the mosquitoes. LiterallY, one: eats,',,‘ .
low leads bordering streams,shouldhi Dat
ifdetphe:daeedtmwhansollywere,40
hear and tae'e dressing, of wood ashes, linie and drinks and breathes inoseuitoes.,
removed to upper stories of hopes, so . catch sight Of -the eauavy they weld& "Scotch soot. Leave until sowing :thee!. "With the, end of August cothe the
ae to prevent Its destraction Or `dam- ,i then stir tie' lightly- with a garden:kales aggin,_„to_jae__ wowed, Aiery. :.
tat once suspeet what wai going on.
world knows of and analands, n.___
.11 but der and grain
age • ire flooded cellars. Similarly fod-
in barns should' be. e. •
_ _ .... a .
'Hence the'activff't of th4 'Trench -fink, then ealte-dettelefirietatia level. tt " soaffiry snow, • arid the whole country
fire tbeennies bare slid 111.161c grid terre ' -• '
ewo tia.itiS of the Scottish. Wimien's ,.Ps"- " ' •-' -- ' -
. ;.§natoiliagttra the' t kin th st . After sowinae if the weather is
canaty _at any oeSt. -Bu a. canary is •sprins e vn E4 watering ean- seVeral a s ngle night, Boarding • beeofnes
-41 :- 1 - 4--ipti•-•zaut-iirs-,V71#7--"‘'M.7"- - t
telt/Arta ai-atafit at teitaatuatifeath'i'"etteetteatitattflielainatsaiie, Me% et -wee-e, des-feetilieetto-the riots-, not get, trawrera, as ' they sweep ' veSsels
, for chorea . • . -tette twitted im 4114 hciak mul when m
- - antes ete_ee 2 14
time lassieee and. aeme tom to -eamp
lueng this way -the jarring •of the
house win aitive ao effect on them.
. 1irtzq „___: Itl....-,,-2,14a-- .„,...... ...1„::„.., ,f,—Lx...„,,,,,,,,,,-.„,,.....,....,,, _ 0. etieited: unparear
. ..
..
terve see Scotlaud arab but trimly of -want to
g ,o.:-dinie
' -ere4Mg-TXL4 11141.S. berg* a uiva:" ritt`"'"1 if Out to benefitb t ss
y
them will tre doubt take oemeion•after
taitag Wounded mei through hospital to
go hack °nee mere to time hills aud re -
'taw' their Mesas are' .
The letter item Col. G•attutie. -ttand
Irate Parearata: tea frond those in a
position to ArZak: -With anthotita it wee
"teareediehat the lailtive wila at, in the
, in them, as the tetineral -matter ia
near. the skin., .
,Greeri herbs make a emelt better
iseeioning then dried oees„ ami should
, be sited -when it is toible to Atari
'Use Lame manure, not eow inanure, 0
t
on elar 'sae, .Do not manure the
tel ttia ef the fighting 'le France ley geed lad evliete SeditingS. • Are to be
the peee ri_Irt of May'. i igeowa, . - a
„eeretate ...tepee ateraateeet
Bv a opting as many preventive_
_ _
of eahric //lois soyed.•• with will possible panic and serious • • • - . • •t
pe,rate situation. A last Teen re- ting it on e bulbs. During. dry through the reined rea IS '
' th •
her medical contingeet and thousands
of refugees she set out for IC:rustle-
vat's: On the wag all•oxen and horses
died itemise they had bed little food
So the women hitehea themselves to
he carts and pulled. the supply vrAg-,
as int* the village. '
Confiscated Their Supplies.
There the Aestriane descended live*
hein and took nil the supliee which
elp AS 1 haitterala
treleS nOtrii,ERe. •
saett 'MAT nE.
Wallah PIEET
AT ViRS CeRZieft
loss' may be averted to very con- mained.. wasle 11-PeA big gam° !weather water -with a watering,. can time of it. ave no y:
siderable extent when. tlie rivers cern-bleace their, great "spring 'drive?' _ The.gun Nitas _loaded ,with A bigir ex- . or hose every evening w Give . the. "In a howling three -days' eels a big
'Aka to de- Russian ship, which had streck a mine,
e • -e--...,-.4.7—:-- .„ for, A cldng mightY fortificatiota. It veloa. • • . awes brought safely into harbor by four:
plosive shell of a calibre appropriate bulbs atriple sP.ace 1,......,..._4.....n tr wi , , _ h ..d d t i,. ,
.`.4Whet hird le it, . Asked an In: was red at the . canary, or, more 1 . „„ -I a ars, two it ea an • wo astein,
'spector of a dais of young children, strictly ePealting, at the tree on which e BY rOfrd Order, the celebration of and each with 600 fathoms of sweep.
"that, is found in Africa, and, although the 'bird was perched. Both ..tree talc Arbor Deat lies been made -oblige.' wire Ont. Very perilous work it was,
it . ha i wings, cannot Sart" After canary -vanished, ' . t ar, tory in every township and municipal- but safelyfaccomplithed, though to ;sea
oome hesitation .little Emily put mitt
bet haild. 'Well, nilf dear, *het io the blevriag•his enterprise was. a sue- _carried on Unoa a =Ore extensive scale ',breakers, with her -foremistig uncial.
That ig' all there'is to tae story. But tee in Spain ,and tree -planting hl to be wall/or eeto.manedinhteorlfsatiehrotelibtettobr:atIliree :ti:riat. ,
it?'" "Please, sir, a dead orient t 1 case., •
_ - - •• •- - - ' than heretofore.
' peered almont impossible, .Then. night
. . ..,
oArchatriagaealheOrieseie .:
• miti day work for everyone to a week,"
transferred, and she
12.e• ricoixffess cog 3r3-azin.
09 atm
Allt • 10
ten
HOW DO YOU, DO ME.
DUFF, ARE IOU 4itinvisa,
Fon sotitetoYi ?
DEW
anirrate
slact. stir
ottecK rog
Tom ,
itA5017*
6110,04 OP
tfala
. WHAT YiNiE..
WAS it -MT 'Yoor
a TO
fife 6Alo ita
Mexrr1ov,,
/ou 4ANY
• e
while,her cargo
is •conducted a
trawler staue :Iymitileaai
iu ten secon s, only One of her crew
being saved, with the nee at freezing' --
point. • . . .
"And cis,1 the dark Winter drags in,
. .0
the day a beeome retorter and shorttr,
until' the sun no longer Ascii, „The last '
.ehliellea left Aram/gel, homeward
Ibouti4, but the Arctic scputdron goo'
farther west and nettle to the iee freta
watere of the Kole 'nat.', . ,
"Strange to say, insomnia ie Very
prevalent, veiny men having to be .
treatecl by the 'doctor for it. 'rho
&flown toul leek of news. and frame ' .
este With no poeeibility of exereite,
makes, everyone's nerve:" go ginglert '•
Vineger and • salt are ateelleet tem?
eleaning braes.; Allow two table-
spoonfuls of stilt to half a phit 'on
' vissegar. e .
0.
-,••••.-.-••••-•-'_ •
14