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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-08-29, Page 3MINE -SWEEPING lett"' itants who gather to watch the fright- WHEN eThE At oue O'cloett their Jialestiss rs. tut glebee. It kieenui incredible,' but turn to the train, fer lunch. By halt. on a number ot ()condone kivillaue past two, sometimes earlierthey are o ' e TRAyELowifikoin, mfriarythiceerepItt-ileuttme OKEoingitteupetn entinx, in the eveniug. They then go ligekto the trn for...dinner. After this comes AND OTHER another period of work •for the Iting, L NOON AND PARIS ARE ISOTH By Nem: who know nothing of mines have en- A • cleavoured to ealve mines tossing ND QUEEN 1 about offehore, and- have beets killed. In one town I vistaed recently, a Aline 13AFE-GUARDING BRAIN's MEW= was, reported epproaehing the brealea TOURS OPeNIUNITION c...•••••• CHANT TRAFFIC. loader Otte morning, charge it had gone eft, Wiling their Majesties retire for the night, and betore the! WAR -WORK CE lecal Voaetguard could come UP t01 ' take 1 -/fignirOF A DIFFERENCE NTRE very often a beery' one. " S. All bueinese at It deepatched, EXPERIENCED IN RAIDS, seven civilians and wouuding tWentY, • for both, are believers do. the early -to- Slipping Clutch is Bed Habit. tice, catteing Olinest •eonstant, slipping, _But There Are Certien Contrelite its ow ng a glee gap n e s one . - , bed -early -to -rise theory. And. though cite person who habitually slips the and the car Will lack epee& frco.over-i No More Dangerous Work Than That el 1 , t t tit t Some' inelmate Details by One Who quarter of a mite inland mid smashing 1 te, , to industrial centres, lite aboard the eays an expert. 1 e ___ ,e,.. ea:rwtha :tit:egadt1024iv:::45°R7e gasi caureng i e mne o over ea * the Way the Sombers Are Met -.7 of Sweeping the Sea -Routes Clean . breakwater, herling great timbers a I Haa Journeyed on the Reyall Train. they greatly extecoy the trips they make dotal io nee is courting danger." . ti • t h t roll In Hour e of learkeese. glase in, vottages for ten miles around. t Royal train isefor them bY no means "I -le 'nor aROPC tha. 1 The Londener in Nile wee not at eue eteng and Queen live aboerd the , atee, There are a number of phases lot BY this thne, however, the clan&W gers el train during their tours Of , the caredree pioaeure jaegt that somhardlY hold at allThen cme day e wear tenfold, ectethat &belly it Will we. . _. , r fail intereeted. He went ealudy to his we noiente w cto promotes* ti ape a' Wei • 1 disastrous .if eon. t hetettreera and PreParell for bed. Minesweeping whittle are not set dime. of standing idly by, =watching mines munition or other war -work eceutree, , , e MaY itnaglue it to. be. . be vvill need it badly to pull him. but- It.“-' w 1 There was a raid On, to be sure. Octli. Is a• so . In the books, and whieli c,tre •of as great drifting inshore, have been well ael. and for a practical, reason. Zote I 1 .1...../prsp.r. *mar.....^.) a a tight place and it will fail entire. timed. It is usually 0. . i asl But he was upimpressed. lly du to .a ,dism- olination to shift gears. Thecar Ilef intereat ao mosttthings which are set vertised and nowadays, when a mine Geerge is °I" °t The ,I)Iteteet 'nett lU'i WHENCU OUR FARM ANIMALS? 1 "There is nothing to see. rve been dOwa in the books. ps sighted, civilians gather up„their the great Empire over whiela he rules. 1. a ' bl • the traffic pproaelling oek /ila -through twenty." he eaid; "sio. If it - "The purpose of the clutch is to -Although he play be temporavily ab- whiehewill probably open if we do net len't too noisy, eleep." Eighty per cent. of irittein's aween. children and liee to the inland hin•ders , t IL • Affierican Contieen.t Had Few Useful eelltiteet the engine to the transmIseion arriVg IWO soon $0 Wa SiOrr. down tAs he ecieinided, the concierge In teame sent front, the peat •of.Governmen e memo) teenaged in keeping. the youta .of the town until the mine has been 1h aa o keep in constantd cr 1* . ttouclawith hi1 e , Anitual$ in Om Early Days/ . . • an o leconneet it at the -will of thei slightly. Vie have =choke of severe itywtt.,0 the erst repott of the new GOr. tor coastwise nierchaiat traelic clean of sait'ed. Mille& V I But the greatest damage militia do • Utnieters. Wherever eliis Majeoty li ',We 'are iccustomed lte,._ polut with cularly for shifting gears, to prevent e th ' 11 "tall If We shift' nr/711 t•P•Id ell raris'- .... operator. This is necessary, •Parti -e methods. If weethrottle down too - , he North Sea, wheat a large pro- bite' he stveepersThe . flow of mer . fees volumee Of State hueiness , folevi .. I ct the n ants ; al 1 ar e engine yll $ • i "Our ;aliens have gone uP to lieht t t : e' to e mny vaIable 4 -1 gr.n"Ag.. °r StriPleing. When allow-; to second speed it maY delay us, and' them,' he „4,1 - - 17 POrt1011 Ot BritalleS sw.eopers work; thane traille up and clown the coasts of' Ow him. Ain thie has a bet clesIT oh- contributed,by tlie New Viorld to the ed to edgage, it eliould always be done' then -manyedrivers dislike to shift '""-"" ''''' "''''' "TheY're burning red - prompt y. Censequen ly„ i is use a murkilia...,.the • list including andgreen lanterns." - the winter nights ' are venally about 'England, whidi Gerinau mines are in ed gently, so as not to break some part' fact . gear parentlfor no other reason. in ueceesary that Me eieing. should, as • corn, cotton; ,tobacco, the potato, the tee the Londoner went into Place do fourteen hours long, and elle wind's tended to etop, has nok stopped; oft the ransmisetan. , This caution.' th Stl they dislike it, fOrgettingl la Coecorde, andlliere learned that a which sweep' the North, Sea, 'rarer sub, • , has not even abated This is due it were , etterY Ins °nice witethireand sweet , 2 Poteto, the tomato „ beans , . the applies tparticularly to the low tweed thant try a we le Iaced on the ears - ;Jed 'to ehange without notice. Fre.. OS the ceaseless vigilance of the tittle the Royal train fulfilo this function. peanut, the pumpkin, the •strawherry, *When starting the car front a stand ' e A th• ti • tli ' rat4 wl Parts le' , a . gears x Ie from a spectacular - I Aor juat such ossasion. ir. Me -IvieW, yastlr different from a raid on ft, *Ida need to be fishin -traw. • The I ting works as well as •eat$ ad the red pepper cassave. an cacao • ..• ° onently it will be oeeesea,ry for the I era, .• fN tki.1)Per to take the bridge is the mid, 1 lers, but now have been cenverted int otatieeenight- (ayeeetiebatreir waideatetaineseeeeperso-e-lt it tterribly -xdfO•Ct - gale Whia has swept down neon him, i oue tvork, but tke men who are earry ing Q11, at it heve moven themselves The veseele heve to separate totayold the danget of a collielem, and by. ilawn beroically. equal to it., • e ' they are scattered over ti:. good deal ot the North Bea, , 1 1.IFt OF YOUR HAIR.' They then take their bearinge to t ---.. . e- • , discover *here they aro, and keen"- 'Procees of "Turning- Gray" la a Slow Ing the point at whiehtbey etre to go e One. . • ' to ,woek, they stand aboat, and begin . • to chug -chug back to Join the reit of' . Ilair--the staff we =stir wear -is their group. This' freenentir takes. barring teeth, the moot 'imperishable . half the day, ico that frequently a night or ell thaws' of orgaide origin Afte gale Will lose - half a clay for -the death, the human body turns to° dust •seveepers, as well 40 keep their crews even the bones crumbleig to powder on 'Watch all night. . , but the hair remains uetettched by de cay, • • Under Water Explosions. ' The pigment that colors the hair is All the sweeper crews will tell you an extraordinarily lasting subatence, that their sole Anil' t8 the cutter. This , Hair kept for centuries does not lose . . 0 O.° Still, as the strain is then exeeseivee ed is to allovy the car to t by leePs aboterd it 'Sol doeo tb.e Queen, wbich yields the chocolate bean. etAsethetclateth te-engegedetbeneeelera- throwirigeontetheeclutchr-V14--vnea--eal-t--A raid-On.:Paria thriffeie 'la h f thi -1 ------Ilef th ' CeeaS London. . • _ ' I • ' , -ay aa---a---ina .1 3° VMS War andlng or Le um us tor pedal is, depressed slightiy to give n';'-eYs demanding her attention.. , none of these plants was known iri the the engiee sufficient pottier to. carrtr - • Old W 14 II I t Like Ordinary *Passengers. or , ow peen e ge hl d A As ea the train Itself it is made up ena OU ern. . e a es o i of Me saloons usea by their Majestietl, ' It eeems a ,puzzle. But hoer, on • which. are alwaye placed abotit mid. the other hand, ehould we to -day get t • - a ong without the•arninals which the war, and a few first -clam' carriages. The train belongs, not Vs the King, 'Old. World contributed? Virtually but to the railway company, and all 'Of our farm animals are of Old , •Maiesties pay ,fares• just ite any °retie whilst they are travelling on it their AWIrerdic:nri*eeinntinenItaWiallsi,stor6s4tepretetwitthhe ary, passenger woufd, virst elms, rwrTehtcehleedlhyltdPoboaleen h?rses in' A'in;rica: r iiith the customary mileage rates. for , a ' special ' train, is euargee them, ptillei0ntty0nofetti , Everybody, else, except. the reilweY ell eel': n; t ibnue!nttheyiolong g b be ee af onle: tehxe- - olliciale aceomPanYing the train has first humaretnhabitants arrived. There to be paid for also. In fact, a special triiin is not .an appanage of Royalty. During peace times any ot their sub. jects Vilw care to spend the moneY teen mut do so smoothly, speeding up gradually until it moves at the same speed as the flywheel.- It is evident from title that the clutch slips first 'and holds afterward, "Slipping in this manner is a neces- eery evil that causes the dining to wear, out in -time. The length. of ! time may be long •or short, depending on the 4iriver. One of the most seri- ohs faults is to cliive 'with the feet -on the1 t cl tlkbrake pedals. The gaging it again. Ode gives 411ter'i drama, for It ilea. lights. That is the inittent motion to the earteo which. they objett, but it -nevertheless ;belted London raids. which begin and ef difference hetween it and the re - end la darloleSe: Alone the sounding of the alaem- the "alert," as they call it In Pari, the "take, over," eae they saw in 1.40a - don -is an affecting event in the French capital. Instead of the bicycle - policeman. with placards of London, we have the hook -arid -ladder autein0- bile companies clashing througlx the streets at •a furious -speed, with their h.orns seundiug a rhYthallic. hut al- e moat diabolical.screan, and the wheele thundeieng,. h d superior to the following met, hod an he last one that should be employed). This coesists"' in slipping. the clutch: and Attiring the car at a speed Wert mediate between high and second. This should never be dene. Erther, stay in high and ete,oli when the oh-, struction is reached or eke drop into second gem', 1 'Take good care of the• clutch, pre-) vent slipping either through wear or, intentitm and you will, be repatd a /cue s "art y released hy this prac- thousandfold. lthi 1 irF • e ep an s ear y ypes 2 (Mammoths and mastodons), but they] - , I..... likewise vanished very anciently, , A I A NEW, FRIEND, THE SHARK. meet useful beast is the elephant toe!' . ____. .. , ' Me little craft which blows UP, its came The whitening Of grown* 'charter.,oee •Just as easily, • as the daY in parts of the Old World. !May Serve Many Useful Purposes in wrecks at the- bottofn of th,e war-chan- hair le due' to a failure ,c0E pigment sup- Sovereign aiul. irie Clonsort, Wealthy There had been camels innumerable • the Near krUtUre. net : The •gettee's Omar are all eenert ply, end not to bleaehbig. The pig- people used frequeetly to do this: in America, but the last of 'the was 'divers, and whetsems to be coinielett g ' the cutter has been meet glands have ceased to- function, Whilst on. one oft* hie peewee a fossil egee before man app red OnThe hark see ' • e • • Searchlights on, 'Planes. - ...- TRENCH DISEASES. e • _ ..t.a. ,. The air vibrates with motors. The Maladies ,. That, Are Caused By Un. French aeroplanes ascend from inanY eanitary Conditions. , , Iplaces ane circle the city, aisplaying • great arcs of green and. red and gold. The insanitary conditions in the Occasionally they go low, and turn trenches have been responsible for a their great 'Cyclopean .•eyeseetheir• rue Out to Where a mined ship has and- new hairs in steadily increasing visliff ,t9 munition. works, etc. the Icing. the seene... On this cozitinent• there •Its own atlast; Having alevays be en timber of diseases that ate iiew or • li t h h• . gene to the bottom, the divers are numbera grow out white.' . icept informed- bY •means of tele. were no .useful annnale of the genus regarded as the principal aquatic ene- xtew aptetarance, to the medical of. the star -filled heavens, ' hanging , gr a sent down :with, eynatelte`tp blew up Thwegreynese in.ereeses.as haire. a s. of all war habpenhigs, :And as Hos (the•buffale being hopelessly un- tnY . , s o .be . iii - • . .. peers ox the arnXiee, So fee I our aft pended 'like new hnd,•11aming eters in .• the ehip; nod enue keep the 'channel normal': &doe ttre replaced With:white: semi- ttlie, Royal -train. 'Puna.' bite a _ . .• . . .. . . tamable), no. asses, no available goats, ', loOked %km as lefriend,.. • . ' fectie.ns iteein to be 'traced dellaitelY the low shy ..., , teivr.'-. , - • •• •: . > . ' ' '.. ones. • The prim* Is slew, though .it siding Or the eight -a special. staff-ot no eheep tint. coeld bet denaestieated, i .:. Leaving. aside the'impo.itant 133041- ' . , t - tli t il ii ' etiench fever trench . - . • • . . - - .. ... : `hie is 4 tokilich job, for which' the may be accelerated 1»' grief or Merital telegraphiets cohneet sue their Ineteu. and no c a . .. . .„'• 4 f it t ' • . Two 'or tIttee .are' alWayi in eight.. hieketes. . , . , • .. - mess.° • e mea .(as advertised by the 1U S •GO i Fisheries'i'oot tren•ch leg •or• trencli skiri, and e The only uSetul aunties tolown.to .. . vernmen . Bureau). ft ' ' • ' r. • • ; and tbe spinning noiee ‘pf tb.e. metoes ", • trench hand. ' - e - • • • = makes you feel that !there Inetit. be, the _American ••aborigines. Were i'. the. has reemitly• deVeloPecl 'a epeciel war value through the utilization of its perhaps oie. most -cleatriy defined ds• scoies abort, you -a ,sky full,of ;them Aimee, the turkey(in-Mexicci).; Old thee for. the meking of swerct eirips.• e- trenett fever, •it. begins Suddenly with Some ily east, others lowly, and the dog. : They did • then farming -and - hide ,other Work •urialled., 'All the gigantie•I Tens of flionsand of sword handles'. ewer. neadaelte,' 1).tihis In the bones, , Thleh --..--' :red and green and gold .lights are. alt structures. of stone erected- in Mexico, supplied • foe the present conflict will , he a few,.. and a feeliug et prostration.' .leattro days elle vertfC acute symp- , e• changing, . sometimes with the . make up Math business -nee receiveti. t .• - d d . t b. il• ' . dip and rise of the aeropla•ilete emgen . • • • from such matermla as men by their ; . . • • .. , Central •Anierica end .PerAwere built he ,etetered. with leather derived from 1 Florida sbarks. . • . • `. Mimi at the touch a the aviator see& s. Items of the onset subsiee; and. Men „„ . • ; .0inipOns Reqiiired. o. . . • es . . .• • • -- . h• • . . - . . eolloWit ri, period marked)* fever and Ina a Inoesege • ' The; tdoiritt'ph•Citler" - is dise, ' 'tele' • - • well adapted, inairgueli as it is • not When the 'plane comes .16w, these own unassisted efforts were able to F t . . 'pat lc ar y, qUarry out and fetal togeth,er. : , , by the Prostratiet that a-ccOM. ,panieset . . _ . MAKING :A„.,LIVING• OFF, A TROE, With. a hard. roughness, being _covered Peratiire. .That ,Coeditioa•laitte setae- 2. lotietcontiuued elevation of graphed Trete the train . eat:101104 by tem- i niessages are •distinet but riehitellig- . one oe. his. Majesty's equerries, -.en " ' ' • '" • -- a ' '. • • ' • - • only very din able wateteroofeeer :emir thecae for seveial. weeks, Mid. then the ihie, and •• therefore -ineeterionsieealid ' additioe to the. •membees of.•the•Royal ••• • • • ___. , .. - • ' it. : itb e i. e processes .• set ''eteised to (Watt Ira erta ee b .1- th ... stele,. alt of whoin have their. especial The Cocoanut of the South Sea Wands ,cleae •logether.. These proCeeeee, ,curi- gid-.. fever ITO f radually. begins', to sub.. i e 'The period. of autelioratibe eleo. e , ciyician ill the street: Who' Ittettne itteke to do, the, KW and.Queen. Caere; • • ,Serves Many Purposes e ' ' Ouely enough 'are •similardli structere- . 0. • perhaps a meseage Of new ridden!, or - two Andy . eetretaries • on the train. . • • • • : . :lasts. some weeks No Onetime salts, ainstruetio,nete eOr ,,attackingthelle; •••?n," : 0 the teeth et' :inarranals; ;having, an. ' . . . These, tittered: ineneat teilmernede eds., • ' d t ' th factorile. determieed the 'exact nature • perhaes mews' of :ri. Victory over -a Hini I The neayeet theiug nor!. ays . a , e inner .pOrtion. of 'dentine , covered with •• 'tomes., , maY -be mein =by the ea1.3611 Gardee of Etlen-is 4 South. Sea islend , 1,-Exut- always M a taid.on Pare') literals of disease. • • Setae obseevers re. an •outer layer of enernel. - • ••••• • ' I windows busily Clicking out the Royal Missichuiries • have Pereineled the .tet- - . . - •• ; • gm. i as ma ar a i, i •d 1' • 'I 1 le others leek uptin.:` activit ter the .0 e i t 'r t, t -ill •••••• of man it i n w. -beginning jo sweepers -are especially greteftd,..fer ea there is any exigeneyewhiebs sweep- . eer creWs. „swear ' over, moteethan • any • .eitlier, it le.ythen Uwe' • tiweep,wire parts on yyreetc.,ee •the bpttont elle wer-channel. ...• . • .. ". • It ie. .s.eveep 'around a wreck., ,foiteenyeway you. try to WOrh, it your sweep -wire will mach, . and been grey -Ake disguising of which. 'Peet. • But ttie''ontter takes '• ProniPt• sign. of advancing. years may reason,. %care -ot •titeolts th# chanuet .1014. ably be euppesect to hayeoccepled the Charges:ea tleaantite carefully atteetioe 'Of her' "Meer women" tip • around: it $134.1 ;then witlideavrtng .and to the:thee •of .beeirepresonneerit. •.pusliing diring.button • • The *deer Woteen, .time. and time again, •have . :bulges 'upon the eurfate M burionsle, gone to.ehospitale have. .major • " .siletit enannek, as the charges go • Off; IneeratiOns 'perforated •anel, coming • out; .bet -the • bottom 'of the gie carriesethewith. hair turned snowy ewhite, have • sound so well that, • =although gratefully ,eteCepte4 the • ayrepethy of :Preeticelly "inatielble One the surface, their friends. . ...06u,re they have •. it -,coevey's .the .Inipreseion to .ieliebieI•acquieScea 'in the notion that ethe • tants on the olore that heavy ,firing change Was, due to their sefferingseal- t. Is going .761i 'ethpewhere. out to sea. though, trestle. it was attributable to • -••"' •This teompletelee. finishes • •ehe. *rack, legleet the eu.stomerY.Itepple of . die. : • • • •haceeeer, and eaftet., MI6 blow up the ' 'our • hairs aro Much: shOrtereivect. 'ettweeinWire 'pewee- ovoi•-•` .:fhall We. enagigete.The long 'hairs • ;itiough •thom hae-.never _Mime a .wre,ck woman's head lastefroint*e.tC,' foul ipitlits-774.- • , , .i-yedxs beforebehig replacert the •Itert •• . Another Hen: Crane! • ' 1•enes, foue to nine ineeths. The life. • • an • 'eyelash* "is only three .ecfceir eBet the particularreason vrhich..0.- • • • . . distressof any'kinde Stories -Of people ruentS• with. ltt.end 'inesseges be.gineto whose heir• pas "ternee evhite In • a ,hum to and trb..over the Gethe eight" • leek authentic . didersenient. telegrams', telegranoe 'code,. replies No case of sadden blanching of the to Ministers, and the hundred:end 'Choi hal:r has been proved ' • .• ' other •comieunleations *Mich go to The hair of. Marie Antoinette' ite said to have. turned White tie night be fore •her execution.. Ihit eheautd long ••• Cites tee' envy of the minesweepers lu•euthe' • et .• for the cutteriethat the ,ConeessiOn or; ' the puttet's elenanitfe • Mlle endless '11•' ' LEFT HAND.. „ • . ettantities of fitiliejust asthe old Jut. ' . . , . hark ea er-already• use eorrespoiedenee op- stein -running type. tivee to wear elothese but there. still 1 tewei boxes, eard •ea'ses, and V .writeie.t, BOtlellte Xingandthe Queen remairis the ceectentet.• . -• . • - Other aeticIes.-es des•tinect before nee very 'pleasant and sociable with - So far as known, the onlyernPottant! to be rituch inoee widely employed •their. e, seat, e• No hedge Of • dteinity advantage of •resideriee lh the Garden I nia. . makes • an atniosphere - of - aloetnees of Eden was that . e_ „ , , one inigh .. .. . ' t • devAt 2 ntaYrke4t' and •cohnuandinee a -high Price ami - tare, more: Wettest. here .than , a Lon.. oon see sharp s in ea-0es on. °trench foot are nu deopeictil ee-linliibig119.:_sc,'•f_. ti;)111eu:e_frt:ts,, 1 -don raid. gives- pretett for to Landon - ',for it .as rioua eratbite fever," and lay •the re- i In Maniways the Preneh people are „ „ . ••. sponsibility on the rate that .swarfa : affeetedebY the raid like. their London °jig the trenches. ' - . • :•• ones, , We , The • mese column • •Seteptoms of ; Though. there is moratallx, noire gas. •eroundetheius . In their. bureaux .they -there Without botherMg to work. . e--• - f h . • - . proo quality Sometimes. nuinerous• . small.blisters i ere,. there is here :the Seine sellilarit.Y are jest a ahoughtful, bouiteous" lady equivelent privilege seems to ' Meer, • . ana durability r. • The _U.S. Fisheries' form", ated_e_ine _the : worst- .caseseet and geetleinen, with a' loi-oCworrieto. itself 'silk -where in hotedatitudesathet I3ureau hopes to render fashionable femoralea. • • s • . ' . pig thr•Quo it . • ' . ' tree • . . ;•-•et, " • .. , ., ' e 1 t•he hide of, the small shark „called of. •au 'yen The 'cause, of t • •e are nebr.e oilees extensive areas I • . '• • ! this dis- • • de and a bueineeelike. Method Of get, is suitable for pianting t e .. ' '•- ti he codoanut • .. • - . . • . theie . t 1 No Two Opinions; "uogfishr, as -material for the uppers .ease de the 'clef etive cireulatieu that : - .T.he Pregelt people, the women and ,.. . *Whilst on theRoyal erein then Mee I - it Foleiteelare proverb.' ia-i7Si, ,`,"lie ' e ` child and old lithe : the soldiers • ' ' Jostles live iti extreinelyeeimple,teeha -Who plants' a cocoanet , plants 7 vessels a ,A0 whale eharle"„ yields' as Much. etater end mad arid train wearing the.1 home on• leave. 6111Y have l'eltilitilt)(1•4 oinp's Mots:. ' . * .' comes from standing for hours. in Cold, • relle - . , - fon:. They' earre, their meat coupons • and' clothing, a habitation. for Iiimse:f .as 125 gallons of excellent "cod liver same shoes for da at a Ume with Po ! the fires 'of their deteinguation to hold • 'with ..thein Jett de eheir. subjects have .andtaeheritege for his children." 1 • oil," melte equal -to the product at the oppo t it ' t lien • e` The ecinslitimi ' strong entil, victory, end the fires 'oe .. . ', to de, ' end rationing ii itrictlY bib-, • The cocoanut yields food both solid • . . . . r un y o ,c g . . . o le •t le (with the possible ete es not so common •as• it was in, the eat- . their ',meted foi the enemy, endewhen. -..e•hd-lina trick :used to do in the yeike 'make yourself ve offleieni by served • Ne wines or liqueurs are - mid liquicle-the latter a -very'palatable , • • • . • • .• . cousin -lakes• , before . Wisconsin. det• ,e • • . .. . . . . , . ------------------ands Equally • • • ; elered it. illegel. And. the cutter bast e • , • • ' •• ' to do ie to etealn: back where the weeth • Wee shouldn't you be. am.bideetrotts t ' • , .. . .. • was, and scoop. them • up eft the: sur The The eine*. exchteive use 61- the .right ' face,- Then it goes beck eo.the eta: hand le all a matter habit. vile, Ilse, • teen fienn which. it set .init with 'della.: 'of both hands': is ineiely , a niatter cif Meneteietiebly Put one Arm , -mite' an • lio,ur before,. laden down' with teeieing• freell tise... ; arid . on the 'sweepers, al- I first. through an teetn•hole, endtwomee • though oceaelonally• these do •a, ' little ' jest . the other 1 aria: .' Reese!' for it? Habit). Womenbettongarmente froth When I was privileged to travel lie'the ' The thefts Of the • . , . . p o e asking shark). the ly days theawar, for withethe in- •• they say ?sale. Boche today ,the served. at their table, Witere the fati•e Its Oil, aressed• front the dried Americ,ans, who ire tiow in the citY,. largest °fall fishes; andeentirely harm: 'creased nuMber soldiera on the la always 01 the •Plaiiiest.• fiere.are, a: "meat"' Is useful fOr. freeing and other,. n - ang • o it, i of dote.? and Who were •. year . less 'Matte. it eernetimes ainuee" it f e t ii e Cat teriand e neatral critiee a , couple:CIE hreakfast .meziuses'erved re. culteary purposes, er, may be co. yer . • self • by • rubbing •• against at passittg can be mede more frequeetly.e. • - i Ago., can underethini- what 003r.Illea4..-. eeetiy Iii theft lialeetiee en the eiathe ed into soap. and can 1. s,. . . . .. I - • by dirty. Gerthan " ' ..• . . 1 boateSnd upeetting the occuPants ititoe Tretich shin,•er•treach leg, •does not - - - • ' • • • ' e - „ .. • • - ti .- :The buds of, the tree are good to eat, tht tea. .. .. • Reed fillet of plaice,. or bloater,: • :Sevettry Omelet* or fried eggs.% .-, GiilIed whitingeor kippers,. . • Serene:01ga 'op••poached eggs. • • " headache chills, lassitude arid malaise, Only twice le ems partieitlar week, beverages: • . ',And the reason simple. Tteprisar being usuallY prePared. like, cebbagee F nem the sap and feuit are obtained!. - both 'etemperrince" and • intoXicating • - ' •• • -• • •seein to be a .strietly local affection, 1 One, eking is mesenoticeable in.. as_its name, would implyfor the t comparing Lenclon and Paris regarding e • : . ; a -raid an4 its • aftermath. ' et is the 413- : patieht suffers not, only from. severe d•in Parisi pains M the •shins but else from. fever Bence- of cry for evenge Pelting,: they. actually buy fish at• the• - .• . • • • • - •• Tire xis ike at of e nuts• s u • h furni c ps -------- • •• • raids are expected • as a mat r of who as occasion to ' c e • 1 th • tree 'h f ot PopularA' • base very often: Imagine a lot 'of *Cale side, men- from tire opposite. -I- train, did thelr eeajeeties etti a meat- The4Oarse.and strong fibre that Foy ‘r•ate.• 'to averageemedieecee •venthees • seems: to be long standing in •cOldrind 1 eelq8e- - • • -- • : • 'fishermen eabeaed' iirshitig:traWler 1•10 -It' again' • • ' • ' -••• hietO• - " . ere there afford§ epaterter foe ining,: thoegh Some ,.e " " • .• • this etatemeett ett think it le a mis- wet cd the trenches, al --e buying' fish! • • • t • • - - • I Alen whoesbave themselves evith Ing.- take fo thiA that audiences like oril elo Pleasure Jaunt. - 'cordage,' fishing' lines -and • . o Y. army doctors regard it as an acute in- • - -- ordinary razor use -the left itaud equal.' • • . • • , • . „I Might xidd that- (Wen when the. • . •.• • • • • • ..t • • .-work % with •• them beeins• 1V-1 h ••• d • f • • the ••• • • • .' • • • ' • -c 1 • • • • • . • ' ' - ' • ' trdshy tunes • if there are any such fe t'ous didease like rheuniatic fever" . The Happy Warrior. , • • , 'rhe•leaves. of the tree' supply a .watei.. : • • • • le, With the right Teaehing. them- • • . • , • eee- - • -0 --It-proof 'thatch for houses an • 1 ein e. Iet..us• assume :that Avhat -we- term. • sweepers • explode -A „mine' instead • og.. die_ Shortly after The. !mirth et these new diseases is , niy• sandy 'dugout bythe tett eelves after afriviug et the itge• of • •a•ct: •the King t$ it)u0 Ileat-ribs • broOtne tuid • brushes; are ettopultir" mimic is sornewhat• trashy. treneli hand,'Whiche is merely stiffness -Of Seros .ba d 11). S' Mier ' • 'sluicing it-inewhen •bullet accidete • • s • • • ri wail hie eorrespondenee. A brief 'in. . . • • f •••t • ' - 1 the a of yon p am ace', •Iiiiecks oft• a, detonatmehorn in- oration, they have aet11.1 IA'S. . . gest 0 _ it shows gi eat elell in ni dedee 'et -the -hand and ecohtmetion -et the !-I'm-astimppy intpleyeanehee • • .wood•o 'the runk .seit . • - e . • ' te •. /stead of boring it hole- MO the mine's . ienteoeterity? eo fax act ..this, partite- terve'. for beeakfaeteet., ben affairsec. Minh! N. -es admirably for hatet-y-hnilairiginitr;.3, arid' in' many Cases serne ingenuity in- fingers, evidently cauSed, likeetrench 1, And I'm bent upon washing ray face - his Mitiesty's attentioi- wan t . • lar o elation Is eeneenrede without' et., . • g • - oses as well as for sea -going Canoes, liarmonic treatrnerit• and ..alsove all • • ' I • • ' • ' beoemicy.cliambee 'ninety • er cent, 'f • • the. tilde, is running --------ttta,deetination , , g postale o o d and 'Before go into my tea, - fort arid probably without even matte - thee Mineet eeplesive ferce goe's intO • • • ' • 4, • h k • the pia•nkt of which are:fastened tot, these times. ate written in the coinmOn• • w.et. , R•eneost freqdently ettacks soh ' that the. water's'so.scereeein thid•lande. • . . . .• . • e peps. is secretar es hard at- weak eth with eecceinut twine • •I chord% sa hat -thee • are. nee huh .. doers- wh-o-h-ez e ad • to etand. or lie • That we 'do •all' oUr • Washing'. With • •-••• • • , . . . • . tise Mr, end. is rarely thatathe con • , .0 Aferatliat mut he deed. ifiteetunetakilse •The-queenethrring•tele tone, reads, ehe = ' d • cus&l.rni e s ng any, 0)1. ,.. a ,ris they are paleited. • The 'woese ;can -be, done 'voluntarily. -,Teach Your.; pewee- anti atteneds to varkeis niat. .• Wasted Talent' • long holies in a geld rain or anew- I • d • • • . " PelaYIng Wit4 re' *. self to be 4dektetoiisly' ambideetrous. ters that • 1'14 -vet claint ; • 'thing about many. ettehe, songs of the itorm- graspMg a rifle Nvith ungloved I. And we always have sand in our teas • sett Upon her • ."you waste your tinie paintinaenes • • , • . t -h - • • . • 1 •• . • , • • e 1.populai variety is. .e .somo. of hands. , . ; • .=•••• A geed -many mines' Which : have Start eenekinienting.. to day .• It. le, laTettally the more formai ,perteefetbe tnres, ., . . . , theni being •Scarcely fit to sing. eine • - ----e-tole-e--e-- • e• Inekeit•:edfite trim 'their moOririgs '•af.. rare tun, • And yon 1l1 be ettePrieed . daY 'ste eta. abed ,•li) -ate., wheneeliel ---,reed arc terongeet •Selt My pictures" 1 polite•Societti.e • The. werds• are prolel , -Watches small enough t • • ter,eleaale .0Yer the -North Sea, wash et We result. manifSsted in tineree,sed. series ef visits .to differertt weeks. be. "Welch fart' Coneieceseine 0 be,w.0r:11..iti1 LeearntarAfltei;.fitelledhqdyficignOctutgryt‘9theli.. taeoae,.... -----inshoro,- and; aftEnt-roning Around lir efileieecy Sell tlitatleTteithig of fetlgue giliti-•• TWO-. generallee means three sal anything.: Wey, not take up en. Y°11 citn t ebbe to blame •fer -the bad reituth• bfl a.rilan's aeat lapethavabeeti invented. Both -the via and Colonel agree ,.' i • • Me shallows, finally go. off, tuifortuaa- in tehatever• Joh yOil Jilti..if 1.ye,At...13.0 StrenliOtig: hOtirS'..With 1•..g0cfd • deal 'of • ectrenee or Motors -0e something with .1. setae . . He who steal • " NV: 't h . cl t' .' ' That you' Must have some semblance ethe,, nureie a *. the.: SO -called. pepular . • tely killing some of the local inhale- left, Doti't get left ' • welkieg. from One. place te Another. big raoneY in it?" . • • - • . sa. ae may o ime • . • later. ••• • • • of grace rag)3.33.nos air -owe. Ira -aiLitrai. 514 WAsli Dia .18 • A A -01464# :h• 6c.t4!/* • In MIND IT 4= .141• iR RV UP; I'M AffEAD NM 1. • 4.1r , WRAY* Mb. ttRot.$4e Tom 7-7-1 1/10Wr. fk) Mft some. OWE. NNAS Looxi ,Me. 1!! Aineminnminoili At brealefast ,at dinner, at teat IsTo prevent you from dinening the eyes Of the. savage and pestilent fties-,- - For you always lip-vo, Mee in you teat . • le my shell swept dugout by the seat • Of Sates, • beyond Santothrace,• I'm as happy as happy Can be, The' the 'Shrapnel Comes Oing apace , • Over Moorland and mountain midi lea -- For- I wish you to quite understand, • Tho' the hole etiave eeceeted the !and, 1 Yet we always have shells with per e - tea! ' • -M. R. (Anzac), . "The &tare COMSS not *OM beiMei,‘ to meet us, but etreems up fronethet hind us (ever our heads,"-Raliel. 11aritleI, perhaps best knoivn "Messiah" and "The Dead Marciel'It from Sanif Ad in -1150, hnd Atte , buried in Westmineter Abbey.