Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-09-05, Page 640.00.10 • 0' 'ika pi pie Ira or h.'. e,` rind,e44..... t me... • ‘. ' LABOR and CAPITAL SIT DOWN TOGETHER ORK Itialk WHO TELL U$ WHAT Tien WAR IS LIKE, „e Hews a Distinguished Special Ifiritere ilkivea Some heipressient et lead New War Correspondents. duet like eae British Arina, of whose steads he is" tb.e Chrouicier, the Bri- tish. wer correspoudeut luts Ida &a- dmit awl honourable traditions. Lora - ti to the caw% which ti his news - Palters and complete *difference to duster in the exercise of his calling, are *art and Parcel a the traditions bas inherited from the men wile treate4 Oils now familiar tYP4 1111 Top Baer (rtoding from right'to 140.-131r GeOrflo SurY, .Tho-Preoident, Canadian Pacific. 'Railway eo L Wark, Viee-Presi" Modern war. I dent, Bretterhood of Locomotive Firemen, and Inginenteum. F. F. Backus, General Manager, Toronto, flamilten Is Buffalo Ralway; 4*•;4' , . .:«k• .1' Made in Britain. ... R. Shearer, Michigan Central Railroad; J. M. Men; Deputy rrealdente Order of Railroad Tele,grephers; B. It. Pilatie, OttaveS and NOW, The War eorreepondent to an eseen-1, York Railway; S. J. HlingerfOra, <ilenetal Manager, Canadian Northern Railway Eastern reline; W. V. Turnbull, Wee -President, Inters tially British creators,. "lair Russell, siatipnal Brothar,hood of Mainteninice of Way Employee a; a ,A. Eves, General Manager, Canadian Government Railway', Barter* Archibald Vorteee. Benuett Burieldla UAL . . Welt_ aoctrie Wentogton Steevens "4"4/ ' Bottom Row (reading' from right to left). -S. N. Berry, Vice-Aresident, Order at Railway Conductors; AA ICennedy,,Asst. Grand . wee types on waielt the. great Contlat Okief Bnotherhood of Locomotive Engineers; D. B. Hanna, Third Vice-Preeident, Canadian Northern Railway; lfajer 0, A. Bell, Acting lifigiliarsini or Ludovio Naudeati. and _ _ _ ....- e . .1.• - . . re__ _ _ _ ____ _ _ __ __ _o_ _ e_ IOW war torrespondeuts. ouch as 71 Deputy Minister Railwagrird. Palmier J. a Walsh; Gieneral Managerr-Quebee Central Railway; James Murdock Vice,President, Predict -100d or sauway- =en • • - • Amiericons Inca Richard Mardi= DaTi0 , • ___ Ifroderic, Palmen modelled sad TO work trr four rare witle which all Canadian Railways are the application** Cana of the Ma eperating #icaPresident of Ott .0. P. greater Wad, Cheapen and with, operated =wads" strove to avoid Mao Sale of Waxes, as. wells any R., vrhose revert on the railreetts at _ theantelves. . only brief and local iliterrup- end dually •cltd oirarcome by-ereating. tither eentreversiet that may tabu* Ruts* brought him itnighthoota ' „ one *yds the Wee of these great -lions compered. to the choked tree- iiAtle the assistance of the Gevern- between. the workere ;Ad their, ona The picture Wes Wrest In this eallar war oorreaPendents of the pest one „ eportatiOR Of ilelthboring eiThetriee, wont and the labor unions, the Rail- corm. • t, dinar Itailvtay War 13oara offices settee essitet fail b /Lott, that they Pox- . tte be cited fa those *reign countries Way Labor Bosrd of Canada. 4/rhe In the rider* there are shewn mot this group bad fortneeethe Itallwaet teseisect in commou one striking chars*. at an example of competent hing-dire accompanying photograph was takeE enIy the senior executives id some ef Labor Board, of 'Clouds, which will Inebtle„ a conscientiousness in the tam* operation -and tbeu to be after -the 'meeting between railway the most powerful labor orgitalea- handle Ina *turf all railway labor eteroise ot their profession which is I blocked *Humored by labor troubl& labor leaders and the rallwaY Menage tions in the world, but an equal numtroubles and Will adjust the McAdoo . This wail the antl-ellinag which the ere arwhich the new Deere vras einally bar of great railroad managers, 111-, Beale of wa eel to Canada* 147,066 read7 to take all risks. ' endure all 1 ilardeldpe, in the ilerviee of their ' Canadian Madierlea War Beard, undo! form* and commiSsioned to adjust fled*, ffir Georg* Rut% the Merl Wiwi; atli? PYegi % • • masters, ttio Britain public. 'Ibis con. ..--- • , - eclientiousnees Is seen right througli 'authorities on the sleet they keevrthey "MOSUL, THE MODERN NINEV,EH. the records of our great Braiele war „stood a good caance of beine sent *.• n eerreepondents, from Arobibald Forbes twelve . The Scene of Many Events in' P est , . Writing the story of Sedan ia the old l The email Africa?. Way was. the last . History. . Mosul, the n2odern Ninevaltetfard " .4,Tiaily News" ealee, where he lied just /ewer ia• which war correepondents en- arrived hot -foot frora the battle, till lie ; joyea the freedom ofthe old days. Tao droppodeoff to sleep from exhaustive, I motorcar had not then Mada3te ap- which et lest Ateeeell•te the B Well thros were movingi down to the gallant Steevens dybag so pearance in war, nor tad the lirother,s , s a Pieturesque but net altogether attraetive cityac- pattently• in beleagtieted Ladysmith.. Wright begun thoie gilding expo* •, Alwala Obstoies. ments in °late watch were destined to • giVe the world the aeroplane: at Was The difference between the war core boot -and -Biddle for the war coins-. ' reePondent of the poet and tile war Pendent titill--longrides wita columns oorrespopdent of to day is the differ- across the treelese veldewith occasion - Once between the world in, vrhich they ee dashes, roe a remote teregraph ot. lived andeceir Modern ego; With the floe. to put an, exclusiv "story” on the progTesse of mallet% inveutione the wires In tondo • . World. hasbeen drawn closer together. e • _ . A New, Lease of Life. . The telegraph. the- wirelese, and the' telephone, With the aeroplane, have • Then Came the Itusso-Japaneee revoltitionieed evm,rfare, , an ape and: With one- Emmet the war eorres. when tbe Primo Miaister in London P°11dent8 -liftedeurctheir *vctiene Pr°' , elm ebat see the telephone with the claiining that the glory of their profes- Cemnianderdiaentif of the British Ariake on the Continent, the move.' 'Monts Of an array caintot beeicreened -.err 9 TAliee•AND LIVE I -ONO- STRANGE BIRDS 114 AUSTRALIA. , . The Length of a Man's Life Seems to Ctiatom of "Bird Day" Might Well Be, Depend on the Work He Does.• Followed in Canada. ' ,.,. •Somelieople say that tanners, on_eee it may not be. generally known that , Far eleft• in the atmosphere there *Whole, live longer than any other Mese a certain day is set apart in Ausralla ' ceniTe no WM. thing as infection. of workers. Whether this 15 So Or not and celebrated as Bird Day. On tbis There is no dust. mid' no germs.. Fresh is a matter for*rliscussion: bet men dayethe boys and girls of the Cora- air and sunshine are available with-, 1101111ITALS IN TIM AIL wlly DENmARK &Mena Scetek -Pitygieista Saglgeste .Aerial Operating Reims. A remarkable suggestion has been HAS PROSPERED ele offered by te Scotch phyelcian of eminence, to the effeet that flying r00.4 witAT co.opgRATioN Das DoNs chine* may be utilized for betental P, urTreseelerg* eon, above all de- tatiaa end money. He needs it for Nine -Tenths of Farmers Own Their ..vmerPee, sires a germ.free , atmosphere in which to do his work. It le an ideal ever eought, but rarely attained, dee pito the expenditure of endives care, hi# operations, and particularly for the healing of Infeeted wounde. At WO levels in the air this ideal belt the laze of New Brunewie• la ce°ansceUtgekllirtnelit issritttliarriesreiniadrettsilt.9 414* 0Qrsatuirad°4runtlecsil. adattaYW4t1Vie'601:taelfai,717)101: Make airplanee big enough and tiOu Of tile mainland and the neigh - table enough, atud there is no nausea boring isdancle were cooldered fit tor • why wounded soldiers or other per. agriculture. In iddition, the coun- RenS requiring -operative treratment try was was impoverished by the Noel - should not be kept Weft to be surgicale eon* were and by the robbery of -the ly dealth with. Conceivably,. Shea province Schleswig -1104e* 14/ might even be It.oPt there while infect.: Gera:may in 1860. 'Tit „to -day,-, Deu- - ed *wounds were 'healing, if proeleion; mirk, in proportion to its. populatlela 'while to talc* aboard gasoline and It is ese an agricultural come- Woteureer made fesor, alighting one in a le the w *West. ()wary in Europe. try and verty is very rare. Owing From a Phrielan'a potrie of vievasto the excellent systent of /and tenure, , coneuraption the deedlieet scourge of 89. per cent.. of the.families own tlaeir temperate cliinat,es, is a preventable own farm houses. disease. , But it as,notairevented. In! One of the chief reasons for Den- e the vain -Talon air; eeities iaiitiot--MaiiiIi•--PliellOiritunr prosperity- is - be prevented; foul its cure is difflealt be fotnid in the sYstein of education. largely because ',sufferers are cone,Tbis includes the long-term- element- atently reinforcing themselves, taking ary school, cirettlating school, tra-, „into *de lungs fresh supplies of tub- , veiling experts; echeol and state bul- ercle /*dill with the air they breathe. letins, ifarMersi clubs) educational The air we breathe is dirty- If camp meetings and the University of you want to realize how dirty it is, set ; Copenhagen.. 'There are nciw 70. 'high a glass of fresh *water upon the man -1 schools and 20 agricultural colleges • • tel-plece and leaeve it there' for three Denmark and old as well as young ik • or four days. NO the end of that!'people attend them -the formet for • °, tithe it will, be vovered. with a scum I •petiods of a week otetwo at a time for which, examination. with a mircrocatlie purpose of studying social prob- eePe, proves to be a mass of living lento and kindred subjects as they op- • • micro-organisms. Marty of these are pear in other countries ail over the , viorld. After \completing. the high school and agrieulturat college courses etucients enter the University of Ccip. enhagen, There they Ow to unaer- etand the complexity modernebusie nese and to tegard agriculture\ not. only as a science. of production, but. as a system of distlibutien. . dpiutThneissuinccaesyseryof4arrugrcaln.leeen-soupreerailertoote' ^ • tbe terms and conditiOne of Med FOR TUE DANES Land and Country Lead" In Dairy Industry. Denmark Is a. little liner° then one. ' ' disease raakers. e • monwealta receive special instruction out 'Melt, The conditions, in short, with i•egard to the habits of their na- for hospital purposes are ideally per ive 'birds and their economic import- feet. cording to Mr. William Warfleld, -who who work at tanneries *certainly. do describes the town. booka The live to a green old age ' Gate of Asia. The houses are built of 'Cis a remarkable thing to discover. irregular blocks of stone laid in thibk how the length of a man's years 'seems. mortar.. They are usuilly covered with a white;atueco, made by aurping, the loose gypsum rock': The roofe, qt to be.:influenced by the character -of the work he, does. . ' Setivengers, tortate, araameng :the same materials as the walla are the "long livere." Thiele a fact' betb. neitally figt, with b. waisterigb. Parapet, Mdispateble and: '.ineaplicable,. ' for 170 are net infremiently domed. , poor. scavengeeing among glitters . and ways are often made .01 .alebs• oe the sewers, and such unaleasent places, is- , .eesily carved gyPsum., - ', • - not exactly the sort of work which one -- e and creep of magpies, cuckoos, cure e The streets are narrow' and aimless,. 'would select•with a vie* to living long. lewerW,i,lir duck, Kukabuires,, and other .typical Australian birds. • - forming a maze, ca•tangled, lanes. •As 1 :On the other hand; channey-sweeps, ' 1VIeund building bards' that do. not Bien bad det'arted, , • -• . there Is no • ertem of eeNvetage what- as a rule, do not...reach any great age. . The Japanese had made. a Profound ever, they serve as revottitories for If 'you nottce, You will fled. that bar- sit on ilLeile egiO.i. ctiOr°°°.• (one of tb° or le .Australiaii species of .. diet bird). study of modern War, and were keenly alt the filth et the houses thateboraer ,.berte rarely reacaemore ahan. thirty . • from the emexa, "lees the ebeeeete ARCS to the emcee/Ail of screening the on them. •'TheY are rarele so 'wide • forty. • • . . that actually -cendeseend te lay in their. , anee to mankind. Bird songs are ming The Scotch physician above -quoted by the children on this day and bird 'is of opinion that at no distant 'day Stories are told to them by their teach- every city will have • its• aeriad oper- ere. A quaint feature of a Bird Day celebration. is Mil) bird -call competi- tion, in which prizes are awarded for the cleverest ineitetions of the. notes , • control of publieltY audits •agents Is 'movements of tater, armies:from the that ' more than. two retie can walk 1 ' Statesmen . etifially : attain their ita I .121 the halide et the belligerent Goy. 'eyes of thcenemy. They heti no Use abreast.. As. a result. of the fine dust, lotted three score years ,and •ten, '.. or ernmeets, And thus the aritdox hap. for the War correspondents, and ttleY the .111th and., the glare ot • the sun .on theteabotite. slayd - week seems . to . • arisen that vrhileattelence hoe steadily were kept Waiting for weeks at Tokio the white walls, ordsthahnia and lune , agree With men in politice.and to ada wwItarilaiottl,ihotagruenait soepar ivinegr.plata4t4tlineso ovflatshee!.. diseases abound, The files; . whicheYearii to thief • egee Tait& of Palmer: .• - ".',. WerilrePeoriTimeolsonay..thdeen't°ebilletacf.tleleet5:P7ehtletihadt-ht: biteketin the •cipen -ranee heaps in as„,j ston,e_ Gladstone, and Ba4onsfia1ds ...004tane• with,. •so the .1:fluttery censor; Thema. eventually' both sides allowed. tonisheng ntinabers, swarm over every- to mention 3ust three .of theni. . -. a-- - . • . IMP lute porter& placed even greater :War dereeseondeilts to go up to the thing; They &wee theakneflon, coin: a Beanntary workers cannot' be coin= oasseagefele the evay of tae war cor- -rivet, they were always,. carefellit,sheli- mon else: in AlePPO. anki:3agdad; an pared with •gardeners, terra laborers, 'eeepoedeete , wink the armies In the :herded by Staff adleeese . ' ailineet that resembles e carbuncle and. shepherds, where length ef life field. • • . V • r • . Ialooked atilt indebd the -day of:the and that persists for several raentlis is 'concerneli The latter °testae; of ,At. the begimeng the war corree. Warcorrespondent wee, over But , it and leaves an nig4" scar. - . . workers,. • and' other similar outdoor poudent was .1:Lathing ,better than an *millet, as tile - European • War , Was Opposite Mosul across •the river, are folks, loclUding • soldiers. and. sailors, eVeiltuallk•deatirted to peeve.... .•'• ' the last .vestages, of Nineveh capital Invariably live long in the ordleary , unconsidered and wiwanted camp. fol- . - lower. - Sir 'Willie= Russell, the. great. -- . • - --e-eaaa..---e-,. .. .• .. of. the second of the world's great era- Way of things, and are frequently as . , Qt 01 all war correePoiideetse was only . . : ' . a-. • .. ., piree. ' In - Pleeeee areeitaivelle-Orthaliale.-ateixty.live-as-rth,t-elerle.-of -forty. - . . .7 ' tolerated.with the a y in the Crimea : ' LAUGH SOMmixIME§..7 ' ' ancient city built of tremendous masi4. Years, of ;age: These outdoor worlieriP , "-- atizig rooms and wardteaboard flying tenure. Co-operation cannot • •wel . Machinee, this service being establishe eacceed •in a country where tenancy ed as an integral part of the minim- peedmainates. In • Denmark, . pal Itostiltal system. , tion has been in operation for a num- .: , , •yeareaproviding ter the acqul- feur, pet cent. .At this rate a laborer MISTSIN BATTLE. sition of lan tirkm 5 -----------ns eta Who has one-tenth the purchase price of a parcel of teed eau borrow the, other nine -tenths; either fermi a state ' bank, or from. one of the 136 co- operative savings banks. There are, approximately 240,000 farms in Den- • mark,. averaging a little over ad. acres • , each, and yarying, in size from '11a • ' actes to. 100 • ores, not including. it . • •Germans•ehoose a Weather Screen When Starting an Offensive. s • • The first requirementgor a German own nests and to ' hatch -their own offensive seems tote a weather screen •young;' bifdsethat run but cannot fly;' which will hide their movements and mocking birds and. laughing 'birds; enable them to nushanadose to the brilliant honey eaters and flower eat- pivoting lines. This screen on oc- ers; ventriloquists! These are to casions bas been a . snowstorm, but be found in the bash: . •• More- usually it IS •s, morning mist. The lyre bird, -.whose- curiously Of _course, ne.inilitary_ laistom there_ Wrought tailephimage fetecasts. hise-are Many_ examples .% the ewars of all song, ae strikingly beautiful. Form.' nations where attacks were carried eider . a more . or less charasteristic out under similar screens, • but the feature of Australia, it is now linter:: _Germans have deleloped,this. to a sci- tunately comparatively ' rare. Per- once, and it carries'a new significiinc0. haps the most melecliotfia songster •In modern ;warfare against trenches, the bush, the tare bird is also a hum- wire and heave; artillery,. with aerial' oreus mimic, and is locally known as observations going -on overhead, the the mocking bird, The bower bird_ is mist acquires' a hiah. value. The ens. anothee of rare beauty and wave emy can creep up Unobserved, cut habit.. -Its name is derived from its wires by and, post machine_ guns arid quaint practice of, construcing it bring up light Aeld pieces within -very or 1 house of inte oven ,clase striking distance of the front • • owing to the hurtle se Pettional in. ee - es of sun-dried brick laid on a high, stare with Me.dital- - •t• thence whieli his groat -edger, 3'ohri These: Anxious Dfirs we Need he broad -stall of out stone, are still trace- men. the distinction of Using nearly • all their. promitied three -score. years , Doane, of - "The Times," poesestied • Medicine of Laught,er • • able. Tlie city was further protected , . '..: VW the' _Government of the day. ,Leviti and frivolity' eon • 11 . -, by a moat: min which the waters of 4 and ten -in Most caeeie anyway; • • tYrigs, lined with flowering grasses defending lines, And nothing but the • , edgese and hidebound military bureata war upon sober-minded'--' Anierieees Was hewino a depth 01 twenty feet. Dien Who are net long livers by any 1 pebale , and •even small. bones! ' defenders Can avert i serious *break eela Y -as smell river could be conducted. ' it Millers represent another class of and decorated interiority with _shells, very highest skill and 'courage of the . . Wen' petty "holm" ' to 'Which: an applied to the ' actualities of the - sracry could subject him was *Metes' and a width of fifty Yards and, like the manner •of means. ..' But shopkeeping ' One of the World's fatneee ' song- through if the attack is in force. • Illa this impetuous, generoesbearted whe' feel at arty ou • walls, is ire -evidence today.. . ,SeetaS to . encourage long life. Shop- 'sters the Australian Magpie, is, like • As a preliminary to the inorning- 'Tillilunan. But nothing daunted him, not centred upon the present ctisis of Two mighty Mounds, situated *a kirpfinfo,whether in , a largo or tonall the l'yre bird,' a clever mimic, There Mists _the Germans ap12ear, to like a . sni4 „when the ,tho emus .he expolied, the tatieti and- the world is a sae* tie e :nays a United StateeneWspaper. milii td the eat of the riVer and some- way, Maiiiny live to a, good old age. is thee giant of the Kingfisher family, spell of ;fine weather, AS this enables ' a- .---,-e-t-elee--e---: '' - . the Kakaburra, a lard that laugheAnd there to handle earditieusly the nn- - th tearless candour the diegreicefel . what mei.° than .that ,distance apart, . potence et the military authori. They are rigbt from one important contain the principal ruins. • The More . -, •• „ • • •. - , , • . " ' therefor*, is popularly knownas thelmerise mass a tra sport Which le nee- ' ties responsible. tor the preparatiort vt. , dint; but not altogether: right nortaerly is called exuyuniik, the . . LIKE GURES LIKE.: . - ' eaaughing jackass!' Hei(ts - greatly essay for tli folionring -hp of the and conduct of the Critnean .f.ixpedie . another - • , . sharables*, because here a party of Yee,- ' - . ' ... ' bekried. by Austrsilians a d is ,quicidy :firet" blow. IV Very . broken -weather • tion. • • - . Onne of the most femous,aCabinet - idisefleeing from Xurdish Persecution Remarkable ' Recovery ' of -' a Shell- adapting:ielf to eity life., . '- .follews after the morning mist or fog • i.ald the FoundatiOre. ' , meetings ever held in the White House to take. refuge • A curioes blid is the alallee foWl, the transport over the shell -pitted area • in. the city, were over - ' • 'sh k d tie' .n S MI la. _. ,Y.Ing gook et? gentienitin, a briliiaist. with his 'sterii-faced, gloppy eicreter- mains of Sennacherib's palace., built talten - and slaughtered. '*. . .. .,.. . .- 00 e , 7., 0 _ er. . . . _ . . ed in the tereible battles tif this war, fiedgea • and ready for iminediate 'slaelceits and he defenders' have time 'tar Russell broko ground, as the Civil Ware when Lincoln gathered , In this mound•Layard Mend the re•• hiany,a soldier has been shell -shock- • whose young -are hatched out fully becomes so slow that the advance „ tee* place in the .darkest tide cif the - WW1; utterly; learlesa, ivith.an- thee -ies, tor transac_t_anionientous husineee etaboute 7-00 11.0. Its finest- troienti of ebut it is sate to say plat ievr have been .4...diught.,,I6Tho parent birds, however, to mass: , . • , , part in the aatcliing proceas. In rainy weather over marshy ret., charm Of manner, he establisa. The President came in, picked. Pip a -. Aaseriali art are now in the British started•on the road #1; r4300Very in aa 4 '''' eel' all day, ail . id for himself a position with the 1 book hy. Artemus Ward, the great Museum'. ' Layard was followed by the singtilar a way as Mn Walter M. /ones but dePend'rather upon ansimprevised gionslilce thoseeif thaieeorid.offensive aria that eiventuallr overcame ael tlie liumorigta •and prOceeded to- Toad a equalli thotough Prof, King,' wheal= 0! 411e 69th New YorkRegimenttable 'matter, tlie heat Of decomposi- but .the advantage of this screen is incrthater composed of decaying vegel a covering mist ratty prey while ,he was in a . trench at tae • the cause ot Our suffering sOldiery had e_e palace except dust and a single broken front a 'saelt, Irene the Gernian„ lines tier' being the:means of incubation. -counterbalanced •by the holding ep of *OppositIon Which Iris championship of chapter aloud. ' The atmosphere. •was left nothing to be seen ot the old . ceeated,.. And be laid. the . fotindatioi aPPereeT t'lrig-, UY l'Ue he' tria" bas-relle destMed ne doubt to be fell elose besIde him, killing two OH- 'The gorgeous heney-eaters blond transport over the mud, sloughs. This tense with angry disapproVal at this . . „ , , ..a. tune - ' • ' - ' - ' - ' 'whioattend near arid woundinghim perfectly with ::the• flower ;aiming. dele,ying effect is intenpified by hem* .---- - - . • • - Which the- hover 'like beautiful hig artillery barrage from the defenders,. te fewiarg6 estates. 'Thus it will _he •-• ,• • neeit that land _IL/wt. _se evenly •dis- • • - • " ' ' tributed as .to, destroy perienal .initia: •ae: aaae • the contrary, co-operation in Denmark • . • • • • has 'enco' raged personal initiative, • . ' and, In d pg se, has ,checlied the evils:. • • .• • , Of individealisna. a 'meet important '• - and beneficent result. • • • • k • ' .• 'Results- of Co-Opeetition. • .' • ' • Agricultural . co-operation began • in Denmark in 1802 when the first co- operative ..detireery was establieheda *- ' Peactleallit all' the mille produced now handled by the hundreds of : ea.; .0;; ' operative. dairies ghee°, with the aid . • *: of covi-testing asseciations, have Made • • • • • Denmark eit oef. the • leading-Aairy emeitries of the world. Danish •butter '4, has, for a generatiOri ,at least, coma • a' • ' . • e mended* a prernitim ' on the _BritiChe • . • e •seas *a • 'market, Then,. tee, - Co.--eaerative . • ).; ; "a" ttt ,•; r - • " e:. . . of the position of war correspondents. linished. •• • used for niortar before hong. • /.t la thanks to Ilim that in this *iv of , `With tt' deeP eigh, he laid down the ee The • southern li • . ern mo nd covers. th . a In the• leg. He was reraoved to a hos- . • evr eorreerundonta . at Beta* beak,- "Gentlemene" he gal& ``wo.'T i mina of Baarhaddon's palace . Be. iitterfinies; while' the plain "light and who aim at VriPleg out roads and raii- • venue! Efeadqnajara_ ars 'sego - area* you lamb.? *With the fearful cense it is the site Of a village:it; which Pital„ Whets! It Vaa•fonnithathe could lb ittither beer -nor gpiat in tt'sp 4 r...,,sbadow markings of the birds that Ware Without adequate transport aiii With a regular irellice Of able an strain that it upon Me ' niyht ,,3 .end ,is the reputed twill) of the prophet altfet.e.F. _he.391____tel_ -neethInghtoehesateldheheei 't ' ' * 'G- I"a einhabit .t'iie rocks arid cipen• ;, evades no array can advance deeply enough dire? .neutralize their effect with their Bur- . . . with sufficient enaterial to make a de- er- • out soldier*. • *. . and you need this medicine as Much I . . .. • *Mt he.was 'sent hem°, hopelessly, in- " roundings. . • .• . cision possible. . .......,.... • . , Froin t is reading •we can take ' it .0,.. . iaterestiug aecounts .0f tlie delegs o . clay, ; if I.did. net laugh I shoal die, '3"onah.it has been jealously guarded: . tvt- tura ee roxv‘re w . . , • • , VW( ift Rif iloL. depended yery !erg* On gait. table near hira and draw from War Orrelp eut With' a' British Tben he'turned to his ten bat lying I . 'CleoetitraOt Pearl 3,10A persons inurYi the Awl. told : 'On the honneeard 'forage the, trans- port was titta'cltecteby a German elite, . 11-.4.. ,.carlada F.00d,. tor. ,d. has asked shallow penetration, arid ik the enemy " ''Sugar dontiervation Imperative ' . ' In the old dayi the position .of a 'es 1.7' . -_. capacitated ter.notdierly dntiea. •', . , --7-7--**". . • . that zany derman offensive- push' ea terward in wet weather can only; have 17* 141, tri,s# kiquielt. 4 taticiel cop. It what' filieceetarY• Stanton. qtr. " 0:00 .4404 Iflui bat tisTsiliii eineli in wee& deperibed as a tt 4,, Gt Cleopatra to illustrate her litxur• The soldier was •standing lipar one:Of Marine, and. a lively fight followed, sti,onlict?ia7s how desperate is his, otin. fersists in assaults despite the weather , iblelfair t'14ea 'often duds Ithn' PaPete Tit° little mblt° paper vas ..ed in: her wino aPreOlotta Pearl- NO, shot wee fired, . a in the priesite householders of Canada "II le w "'''f ious habits Of hiving, that she, dissolas the big nano. Of the transpart when a further to restrict their consumption and ,..... ' --.0 'exploilon of roar for tiorionit op, to I% • .,..„- ......0,--.... ' • ""It thrown together viith a men who the Emancipetton Prodampratelosnen, t• of• one scents -yet to have questioned and concussion 'that ensued, to. his ,. : • %littqc rrogrie eble, aud glad to be The application to the pounds .per mouth per person and . tir ' • ' Grow a Oaeh Crop. . _,,,' lel to WOO the .eceopersition of hie „, this histerie incident and. the exernple what Ind beve been 'the etect upon amazement and delight, 'voice and . a . • rattier. 044411.01011. Thus the reputes 7 of the. Great, EmalleiPatote demi not possibility Ot• melt solution. I. present ill 0 balm hoepital, undere- ..._ u e a greater Proportion of brown The' meet euceessfut dairymen leave the drielt, bet scientists Scoff at the heath* catee• fleets to hita, . Ile le at •ee - . . lion et Mars thap one war correspori- nee& pointing. out. • • • The tad is p hi ere net toluble in teeatment for eerVaits disebilltee ;but, gar The.Board tilts watiisagrilinit - - . ... , . , , , _ Th.o Cehatt gall' besidee the prat Of the dairy. The __nue Ye era 0 tla S. .hearding,. as. tutfidr* e Oet4elikr 4"4" Mem to have one: =rad or cash crop , contrary to the lave. 0 sugar, lam fihort by ° V ' inerbased fertility that ii brought On dint tan been Mnde °Wing to his : e, "friliadelilp 'With feat of either of our : ". '.,,, ,..- •• wine. • The rues ,.• powerful *IOW hopes for an.early recovery Id return i affects tfient Slowly and never entirely to duty, ' " : . .. . • . • . tens of the previous estimates; the to the farm from the use 00ncentri. . glomerate Nideolis# steep, aim permission .• '... ' ilefori the chafe. . • . dieseltres tam, for the organic Mato 4,,. tad feed littlffs more titan ofteetti the , Teutiii With menace the time. orawis apungy Mess that is larger than the. ' , Ainericaa sugar beet crop has also The olght fp itill.ond the Air IS keen., far remains behind.* the Outlet tit a • •. .• pedal Canning Dooldet • • proved difiaPFolutillt 43 hoe,the_Littni''''' eeleeiit Of fertility reenteved bY. tilt% • 4, - .. original pearl, • . .. 4 li a p itula'• Ca" Crop, re71.413C4n; cierni" side of dairi products. Another fad. The Canadian Foo oar has . r , . 0 . to In trent is the town and its homes are . . , •*4_,.,__,,- . .....,,, • 118110 a veri ktitriietive ' li Ul . 4111_ Wee 4 ,,Ort Or 012" nr, otiP tor is that the fl a help reutiired. . . . , little hoolt.i4 o ', the canning, pry rig snorter) es a Mtge beet utter 171:01 properly ;conduct a delta Can And tie. Biker in Outillie against the shy, . Xgeerts. what have eaamined the an4 storing o fruits trot vegetables., '0416rion 41°4 Mon/ lIgAt lOotence time ()Abide of routine ••dairY *oh 4 oo Drofito it la being 4iffix-fh 4 ' at • fits scab 40040 edt ' Tiltonc et Ohof s , ot,,, tt bio ..hitoitott orc • • a . coal 4e. colt" Ofilpitzbeigen have esti. , . • Tim- ti. leavoi- &cat hi- the-- s'ghlug--Mate4--t, • rilain-Inot bnii - - _ - ;---",,-- a_ -0,. i v • _ Ver be a euhvarluse n . . iii.. 14'--J7- co- t , I, per---coyy- on coo-o.0ELM-- •, -Ilk • a-.8.- . . art '' • 000.060,000 tcets of fuel of remarkable • sitaildr hOOklets dealing in additiee to itieledlnif 0 la rti frif Teet0-atit ---- . ' zits WM .. Diudoitigs Moves- like a mirtain P411tYt • • ' ' -canting With the subieOte og bread.. f0a$ eft the itgltutfli =Pi 4 .1:444§0. 94. roilefi Oookectnes3 often • • &awn; . • - . 4 ' ep% I bUt. COMPlets Motion pie- ' making, cooking et vegetebles, and yatlen of ,4121161 iii Ilnfleativih T. into,finnhejoi straits, • e A, veil Web the xdornarig sun will tore m WO .whicit Works aiitonastie-' cooking of Atiii. The sat of four 'may hi SylOar .10.parintla for evirrhodli IN A basdosil at for having , Front the fare of . death. We fiethres ht store windows by dale Or Provincial renvitnittees of the Canada charge et dawn. ' night, • • • .. or haa ea *rented for disPlaYing :, be obtained for twenty cede frara the inederetlen,, rut trg:4 ter ceitramant 'Attires of nateresiiieijiv too ol 44 Toe, 'for -wasteful nes cr for iThegal 1 inte tile .04,11er been Wen by ., ' . - ' • I .../ Foca board.. • . ' Iteard14 ' th. • :alio*, • bacon -curing and eag-exaort societies have develefedthe perk and poultry industries- respectively -in splendid fashion. Co-inddent With •the growth ;of co- . operative Marketing there has • Ae- veloped co-operetive ' pure - clias!ng of Snell' commodities as seeds, fertilizers, machinery, and, 'in fact, every necessity for the operation -and „ upketei of the farm. eIn 1905, tha central wholesale ageney transacted a -ea' • • buititese valued at $17,500,000. • ' • -ea AN ALPHAIIET•FOR CIIINA.• Forty-two:Characters Are 'Ref:Mired to. • Represent All Langttaie Sounds: .• .; • , • • . Chinese ri9helars -who are ,; diss Stift - • . lied 'with the ideographic characters, in which their language has always been Written have set out to form an al„ phabet which they hope to see grad- e • . ually adopted by their. countrynien, • • ••• tt Was Choir Hi Chu, scenery of the '. • , ChineseLegation akRome, asaisted by Wan end Chou, sulasecretarite, and Signera Rivetta'professor of Chinese and dapanese atthe Oriental Institute • at 140.1.esi who began :t.e..PrPiect4• To reprea.6it exactlY theileiliulk' Of the:Chinese, language it was tweet- . fairy to draw 'upon almost all existing • abliabets. Tj ompose .. in the preSibti ease &indite of forty. , • • two ehAgetera,, of. which twenty-61*Se ere #Oweli, and nineteen eve tensone" • ii, Of be vowels .four are taken be Cieek four ;from the' Una. • • an, Pre treit the Latin and one .frpm tIWOhlineae. Of tho nine others two Whst gre - called "modified" or: vorgomar eto seven are reversed... • Of the -consonants fourteen are tak- "lien the Latin, three from the tins - Oh Ind twe'froni• the Greek. • • • to loin hie forces and aceorded hint 404.ittee wbiule 41120theirlan Might net Itvie obtedno4 so cell*, The parr of Romance. these ilfiY0 War coricepondente lEetn free-lances wilhtht Straw. Xac,Y ,dt ibOm. IPA latOwtoftP at to tOttailf trkba W0t144. SI to th ilfp7 fa their Artipjair t,1;1 rest, it ya$ a mate* 9)1W-POil Wein tiot tOithissik t1e 1041141/1199 4 in ttitul, ri.19rfrrer. it rya liuostto Of OAP1Ite„o071 ter if wrote OnYthta. thgt Watt atilqUA cutorop 466 11.`, sea. G V • • „ 7-7 Ilovitte e4a4a tor the nettltry'yards ti!ttlaiv warm Iteither, r. • r te•