HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1921-05-05, Page 64-
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:Whsit; Ponta : Your Car Hook Like From
Beneath? '
What does the worm thinit of your
ear` as he : crawls • under 3t and looks
UP at the curious oollectionof rods
and bolts and Other parts?. Does ' the
worm cissa you as a careful fellow,
who •looks'.after these things seen only
• from• below, or as a slovenly guy,
'who cares only for the oixtwar4 ap-
• "pearanoe of things Do you really
know what is down • udder. there? ' If
you rhave,not inspected it take•a little
time and look it over. .
You will need overall' and jumper,
or old clothes, because iteybe"•your'
. ear has dropped oil• and grease. If you
have a creeper an 'wh?eh to lie • while•
Melting the journey • underneath, 'so
• much the. better. •You can • make a
creeper' in an 'hour with four slats as
long as youeare tul1,, and ,a couple of
cross . pieces on which are fastened
good ball-bearing casters. ;;You tau
double up a coat or make a cushioned
head rest: ' Better put on an old cap
'tyith• the visor turned • to the back to
keep dust and grease out of your hair,
, and perhaps goggles to keep these
• things out of your eyes. '
But *if you are one of those,- fas-
tidious:•fellows who do not like the
feel . of grease on their hands and ' a
see dge on the nose gives you a con-.
n!ip.ion,`'better stay out from under
and give the garage mechanic a job.
For it is going to be a dirty hour's
work. 'Gloves will protect your hands,
' of '• eourse...You can expect to have
h+aeol!Ine,'oil, grease and dirt showered
' clown onyou, though perhaps your car
to insuch order that you will escape
X11 of these • evils. • • .
Getting -Ready to Explore. ,
Before you go under itwould be a
good thing to set the ear 'up • six .or
eight inches on sskide. . You. need an
extension lamp, or .a flu& light, and a
, squirt: can of oil, a can of grease for
the.cups,•and .if you are finicky a knife
'to fill the cups and 'a;gun toforce• in
grease where there are no "cups and
• .grease is used. And then, all the tools
you have in your car and a lot more
if you cart <•borrow them. a11, Lying
wrthor► reach of your 'hand:. Yourare.
going to make a job of 'it. Then, you.
need some waste pr rags; and, a • little
an ' f kerosetreeor kerosene and o11
mime',; for cleat/neg.
You are to clean . everything in
sight: ,It is . to 'be'assumed that the
• car :has been .Washed off •first to re-
r
absorbing the road dust and making
a mess generally. • a«a!gmplp
Took aver the oil leads $or leakage,
or damage of aiLykind, See if the
hose •connections to the ` radiator are
dripping and then look over event. britt
and 'nut within re* ' of your vision,
including the :fender .l'ea's and run-
ning board bolts,:.While you are clean
-
beg the frame, see. if there are any
bends or eracks.. As you work, 'back,
if the, e1utcli' • or. transmission ease . is
dripping oil, wipe it ;off and. discover
where the oil is coming from. It may
mean a new gasket or Merely =tighten-
ing up' the., bolts that hold • bate thing,
together. ' If y!oti can get some , one
to rani iiia
e the c1'itc ° Wet u HI
MART h° 1 v r t+
,o
'pt i�R
can study lie workine•traman un- '; • -
usual point and may d.eteet, something THE PERiL TO WHITE AUSTRALIA
about to go wrong while ,you are Thlsi great country has six State capitals, and -a proposed Federal cap]-
cleaning' it. , tal. AL1' seven are southof the top line. Six are south of the, middle line.
The universal joint es a place where Five, including the proposed Federal capital; are south of the bottom lie:
there is•'sometimes •a great deal of This is Australia's way of telling the world that the,north and centre are
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wear,. Proper lubrication minimizes ,quite unlit for a white man bo live In, •and are only suitable for brown or
this; `likewise keeping it.e1ean helps. black settlement. And the biaack-brown' world doesn't mise the point,
Inspect this yery carefully; see that
t
the bolts' are all tight and . that the
nuts are properly held with cotter pins
or with stiff. wire.: Very often they;
are wired- together. Unless y ti can.
fill the universal with grease ' better.
from above you should use the grease
gun and put in enough to fill the joint,.
,or in accordance with the manufactur-
er's ,instructions. As a matter of fact,.
you should have studied the manu-
facturer's • lubrication chart and in-
structions before 'getting under the
car at all, so that you know just which
places to be iubric'ated and how the
lubrication is done:
• You may find a brake drum on the
transmission 'shaft: If so, this must
be gone over and, cleaned and .exam-
ined, with 'its linkage. Do' not make
the . mistake of oiling •the drum or
brake lining:, because you heed firic-
tion.rather than slipping in this place.
Work back along • the: transmission
shaft to the •differential,ecleaningg. as
you go; everything as far as you can
reach on either. side. A dripping of
oil at 'the differential . indicates that
Something needs tightening unless the
ease is :cracked.
* Toward the ,Rear.; '
The 'axle housing andthe inside of
the' brake drams and every other. part
which ;is . to be seen from• beneath
should, be gone aver very carefully,
looking for Wear, poor adjustment;
' broken parts, of other 'undue r'obseness
�•'move
is much mud as possible. You of any;kind. As fast 'as a • .part is
°leaned it should be lubricated
will have' to' do"'the rest. with. the ...accordance _ eti _-
cleaning rags. 'Clean, eve thin accordance with'instruebtons given. in;
thing. a the maitufaeturer's buck --In•
•e extra ric� ed. about every, place manufacturer's instruction. • book
that iiehibricated. Get the.dirt oft sof .
the joiirts; Screw down the grease should be,the ••ehart, compa,es,' pilot
nail: you can see it. ootin out ane �unznitug lights for your voyage
• cups u
g ; -under .they' ,. JEoa:3fete :can:.be_sire
•:-around and-Wipte off - ail the�dirt and _,
,x „ithatthe man_ ... o - ..tt ..s.:.. ..
um wit :.-' _ 3 tic lou to :knees what
g h t, acid as yyou' clean .each .
• part examine for si s ofwear,.
he, was writing about. By .following
! ' it you will know where toexamine to
cated by play or lost. motion, and
' i breaker es -for see-rf • the torque'. tube is loosening;
that•the radii scrods if Om a -are.
,r {
You -will -note •heat neerlyeeverte int-: .._. - __ _ t� F : _._ akty,.
are doing their -Work.: : • '
l under, there has a cotter pin,' or per-.
After 'going over . the_ mechanism
" haps •a ,piece. tet Viee as a si bstifut car,
e. 1
.ham s -, .. • . .__ ... work over to each side of the ca
hould all: be examined to see where the bolts which fasten the,body
whether they are about to._sh•ar-off
- r to the frame will : '
.and--whether._the... �ill be found, usually
Pim are properly theywill be in -the • channel of the
spread, so that they will not drop out frame• . v
;tee- , from: vibration. Tf :tithe' nuts' have _ ._E„ery. one'of these must b
kept .tight to avoid. the squeaks an
.. , worked Loose and.caninot'be. drawn u
tight . • .put •a leek w s er F rattles. which come.. when, there is play.
1 + P , a h under each
The :Net' Result.
ICrassire Bolshevist envoy to -Lon-
don, has hurried .away to Moscow' just.
as the' English” begin to get•concerned
over the probable Soviet•stirnulus be-
hind the recently threatened general
strike. There are' many' indications
that the English effort was another of
the Loraine, hopes.. ; If so, it is.a lost•
hope and a lost cause:. •
Things haven't eono . so well with
the Third Internationale ` as they
might have. There` was a.bime when
Lenine sat on the eastern horizon's
rim, a breeding Meiace•to'a civiliza-
tion built up through •patient center-
ies. Germany any was almost' his, Hun-
gary he' had for a time and in the
whirling chaos of the old and the new
Balkans seemed opportunity made to
.his hand. ,
He tried hard • in German and' his
Y.�
best hid failed. In-: France there was
never a chance againg�st the.lan�del�ovitig
peasant, Czecho-Slovakia marked an-
other failure. Heng±ary was lost with
its 'whiskered..little Bela Kun. Poland
rallied and turned back the •rolling
Red menace: ;Came last September
and he made 'another vicious effort,
this time in Italy, where the•extreme
Nationalists are'now: blindly harrying
• Steering by Sound.
Unusual interest has.been aroused
by the' working of the "radio`' piloting
cable laid ,at the bottom of the Eng-
lish,. Channel leading .to. Portsmouth,
which- enables fog -hound vessels to
steer an accurate manse into the her -
her .by means"of sound: '
This ,cable, which is about twenty
miles long, is laid from the :entrance
to Portsmouth Harbor to the Warner
Light on diel, Channel side of the- Pile
of Wight. • It is beneath the;'exact
course to be followed by.vessel'§, and
its "free" end lit out at 'sea. .The high
frequency electric current in the.cable
entitle a certain "note" in Morse Code,
• The navigating ofUCer• on beard ,a'
ship wears .a set of ordinary wireless
telephone :receivers. These: are con-
nected to. a battery, 'a: set. of "ampli-.
fiers"• similar to those used in 'Wireless.
telephony, and•two coils, the latter be-
ing hung over each, side of the vessel,;
above the water:line: - 1
When appioaching, the harbor . the
officer listens first, through one toll
and then through the, other 'for the
?`note" .of .the guiding -,cable. It.: may
come to flim• through the starboard
coil;.' if. so' he knows:•his,•vessel is:to
the left.of-the cable •
Anarchist, ',Communist and Socialist ' As soon' • as 'he, hears the "note"
:alike. • • equally loud through both port and
England surely was a sort of :a last
hope. English labor is;about the
starboard coi]s,'he knows that his- ship
is directly above:the cable, and in the
steadiest and sanest in the world,un- correet:c'h'annel; - •
a _ ... A-simi"lar cable -has .been laid in one
less the war changed it. Revolution of tate channeleeiP l tela;.yn
xk-fIa-mbar-,-•
-' • ante o Naive its.flInn. and• these are 'the only tyre) en' use at.
there; as it urudoubtedly had hi the r'
Continental 'nations... The'. . workers p stent.
everywhere have definitely:.re e
j cteil-
the_itioscow• label: .. ,
The-'�ne -;result--erf-}-three=. reare-� ot-
meaces; threats, :propaganda. and
actual violence';is that Lenine and
-Trotzky•still .hold Moscow, -
ttussia,
fa t e_. os t
>`~,, h . .art :a _.
. _rxt. ,. _fi theixseta=exPeri-:
•nrent With, t the.Duumvirs seem to
begetting, a little -weary'; ,The,fa'ni-
'iliar--breathings 'of •world. • revolutions
'sound .a little, hollow.. They. latae -the
old frenzied' zealotry. y
The World' Wok.
The Tatanle, a fly >.g'beat destroyer;
or aerial cruiser, is being peekacted in
England,ra The new "ship" will be used
in long''distaatee patrols, 'having :a
range of 1,500 miles, -.rho xnetive
power is to be two 1,000' horsepower
Cub motors. The plane will 'carry, e
crew:- of• ten men, and in: peace time
could •be devoted to carrying fifty
•passengers.•
* :* • *
The greatest subject of discussion
to -day An .aeronautical elegies is the
coming duel between Airplanes carry
ing bombs: weighing, from; one-half to
one ton and useless German .battle-
ships turned over to: this country. The
Mr Service officers cohtend that one
airplane can destroy with a single
bomb the most modem, rno thickly
armored'' and most expeensi 'dread-
nought ever turned out. • . • •
BRCOLUMBIKS
TIMBER SUPPLY
MINISTER OF LANDS RE-
. VIEWS SITUATION.
•
Enquiry As to Visible Supply
and, As to Best Method
of lColtiservation. •
Writing In a : recent Number of the
Canadian Forestry Journal ,on the
"Maintenance' of British Columbia's
Pareste," . the - Hon. T, U. Pattulto,' ..: •.
Minister of Lands, says: `
Hew much mexeltantable timber
have we . This question is being ,,
asked .today theworld' over. While rI.
write,, an Imperial, Forestry Center-
That:commercial wars in the air are encs iu • London England-, Is trying to
coming.• is indicated by the €a t that find the ,answer; *so far as the British
the airplane rate between,' England Eiilpire is concernesi,' ;
and' France, which a year ago was To the south of•us,`State Forewaters'.'
$75, has now been cut to'$17.50,°Eng- and timber experts are seeking to pro-
ldsh companies declare they can'. no vide Congress- with tin answer tothe
longer make a. profit on 'cross :. Channel ' same question; as well as answers to'
flights.. French' companies are receiv- further questions. `arising out of, the'
Ing a subsidy, leading, query,
* * * • There has beer' • considerable coil.
Reports from agreed indicate that tr:oversy in the various trade journals,
four air routes' running out of Berlin' both as to stands of .timber and
have been established' and are• in Op- best Methods of handling •them eeouo• ` •
eration. The longest of these are the mically: .One expert makes an esti. •
Berlin -Dortmund and the ',Berlin mate, and another. intiimdiately .pro-
.Koenigsberg routes;. each about 300.. duces widely different ,figures. ' .That
miles.' The others are the Berlin- 'the experts`dtffer is not the important
Bremen and the Berlin-Dresden.lines, point -that they are both making a .
genuine' effort'to arrive at a,'fair esti-
inate, is the vital fact, .
One of the . good results of the war,
is that a general stocktaking of natur-
al resources •is ,going on, and .it : has
been found that this is particularly"
eN\
Destruction of the. .power of Mad'
Mullah, ruler.:of Somaliland, 'Africa,
an aecomplishrnent the British author-
ities have '• been working on for . the
last .thirty-four years, was finally gee,:
complished fn ..a compaign of • three necessary in *regard to timber. After • .
'weeks, it was announeed.recently. Two four years of destruction;• dui•tng•
'hundred air' officer$ .:and . men, ,with which ordinary work Was at a stand -
eleven fighting planes, did the feat by still, the world is hungry for timber
`it'erial bomliararttents. ,; and its 'products: " How • long will our
* : • * e * , ' visible supply of.' raw - material •last? •
Edu Chaves,' Brazilian aviator, re Frankly, we do' not. know: Fortuhate•
Gently flew from• Rio Janiera, Brazil, ly, we are trying to find out,
to' Buenos Aires,; Argentina, in less . Reforestation Methods. •
than it
five days. ' Flying. a 'Curtiss it has been
Oriole with. a `K-6 -motor, thepilot de a habit for ears Pest e
: think and speak of our t9,lnber 're- .•
covered the 1,735. miles on his rout mn sources as being :unlimited, the
twenty' . hours : ,and. ,twenty -minutes. result that we l'a've' been mining iu-
Several previous aerial efforts to link g
steed' it, as is 'done, for ilk -
the two.oapitale had failed: • . stance en. Sweden, where every•
avail-
*' .. * "' • "* able ,stick of timber is 'utilized. The
'Airplanes of the Canadian Air Force unlimited .supply. idea. has depleted
during' 1920 Made 398 flights of a ,total Wisconsin -forests; hes left very.little
mileage of •33,612 .without 'a. single �tintber iii P jchigan, and is .rapidly de -
death or serious inj.ur•y to.. the fliers. .pieting.,the stands of": the. Souther''
Flying .,operations did not. begin' until Sta.tes.. It : is es•timaled that the
, late :in August; but among the expliots. original ,stand. of •••650 billion,' feet, iu
,carried out was' an. aerial strip from, the Southern••Statee�has been reduced'
Halifax 'to •Vancouver: et.o 139 billion feet, d
'" * * * There is no occasion Por 1'rYsterla,
A new ad �-tio to
ap n the ' arac}iute i bi t we, •.:i
p has .....t e, in British Coi,umbla,,�must,lciok .i
been experimented upon b : the Unit :fact
v-•-•-- �. red s calfnl`v"an th'g�'a.ee-and.=.]ay--ot'r •:. `• .,..
States Army Air Service: •.This eon- p ac
.planscordtugly, '.N;'e ;'bust, after '
lists .of berrying the parachute in the careful survey, • decide on : tJie . bee -
A
rear'of the fuselage with certain. see nt,ethods of °timber censers attoti
tial • "'
equipment.. When eeciderkreakes• . blush le beteg said, these dees af:.
Ancient -Bathtubs.' .., ,4-741-fo- .h; . _ 'j `ti
"_' y ' t e .Lit•tot-�to-hYave lua-fvicestatfbn,atrd-extensi •--_-----
,, ._,�--,.. ,- , � ex�tori:ments :._ .,�..
e` :`SPme daseeett ebody will`' write``eeeee'plehe•int ildnif he sttri;pplypiills a lever, along tiiis..line are: bean I
dysconnecti'n• • 15 made - by ;
tery of the evolution of .the: bathtub,-., g• himself and a.'Section-. f 'eeree• of the -lei -0, ' r
Q rge •ulp and paper •cczjn-
Itis=:certainly a very'anc>ieiit ttttit-
the 'rear=of-tat-e-fuseIa fremthe rye'i's'sues in: '-C -- . ''- a-' _: __
. rem , _ sire (,anada�,; E•xpefts
Alone In the ruins of- the palace ,at of the plane. are net -agreed t• at tai li
,�;..1e. o e. fort ,
'i<ryns •4wht'eh ante'dtttirtl-�rlryj h"as., *... - - _._.::. L .»-•,--x,••-� ,
.. ", * future �'1ies:- eintaxo�y ;_i.i� . reforesti:ng: ---
been• found a lnuch-darnaged•_`hath'tub, Lord Montagu as Beaulieu, one-of.They seem' inclined to'th
of terra -c rthe belief', that
' the forelmost aerenautical.;experts•;of., le will''prove .r
efts, which,: had a plug in, `the. 'titer as alit- -�". , -.'••
En lan ylIr a : manta..
bottom?, to'be.:removed after: u^se, ]n .. g d; recentl.` stated that •one;. of ; to the forest to' reproduce tint i • -
.the -chief drawhacks_::of. ecottixi',ercial'-art--ottt.er v orie=:th t rally,
order .that. ; Ore water Might 'Pecs rd at nattirai-re ro •l. �---
through a hole`In:the• floor aviation 13- that` at present only-short"tion' of t . les 1? due
It9. speoles'native :fo .each °10
During the..'M.iddle Ages -•bathing .tourneys aye attempted, such' as that' cality is the •
• .. ... _ _ .:.- between goal; to.'be aimed.. a
e .. __. _ _. ..;_•. �.. ,., -,.......: nor:seem _ __„- ,. - - -.. ..._.-..,:.._. __._t,:but ._•:.
Fe;,rtianes Given Away does not seem to have been faa ion London end Paris, 'where. a :that, where necessary,;nature 4holtl
cl able; • aitd in Europe at the present saving of only 'three or four hours is -be helped' otie b trtifi i d
' Seine inventors : make, fortunes :out ,Y . c.al means;
. ••.tittle•"comparafively, few 'houses, even .'possible', A.W. tiansport,e greatest e : ;In•' natural r
p epro�l'tetio
'• of their inveutfaiis:�ut� i��nia rl :. . , . :.. _.., _... ._ . ... Y _ . -- ..__an ratite,
jo t7`y of the - better: elan, -have bat ortunit : -he b 1d pfd
- of alien:. tiot beings bus:ine�ss `ni'£n" do bathrooms`, P. _ 3', a qe3 es, •'sill . be: in gro'dth; the coast of $ritish Cal
is. ; - ,. Thisis, t �--- ' •. .__ orb's
h,.
a S
ilii' d'o- not-+epeet; this to-- take tile`
otng n'er •these..ia .moxa.or-less •ted3
lr# ous, 'but 'it is very necessary:and it me -
p ce of the cottei pins :, xatiline the of London to day, here: tat longei ,trips, ,.uch as Landon
het- a to Italy, 1-., peculiarly, fortun.lte
well to. get acquainted with these: . _ .. �_ Lrtable:.tin 'tub - With h E t
��'. t a'_ Yidee
i brake_.lhnka: tri ver :.carefull ,:. ... � - ,... ._. . .
:. _ .. - .. .- . _.. _._. ._, ,.._ r 3ttg of.hat._.gYP._,_a. _ _.x-ntu. •:-In i :; _:. ,thanks ;o•.ber
,, g•Ae y.. Y,T- t p:la . _.,.1-.._ ,, e.„. ,I ... , _. p p aid.. d a. moisa•e
Y thins sltlre .usually _h ears ago' a,wo•rktntan fa_ • -.- n#i•i• w!i'nt-t(r ,t
� , ere .'s whe'"e . .. . __ .,. ; ,�wate>~ usually .sen,es,,. the', - . . , . - .
Purposes of -
• :pr' wqr parts-. • -These :'sill usually , . :: tore .invented new esa]ntaof ilia and
you • mutt • look for . eause. of :ah a. , kind of glove t wehuvo” b x;.000 s Oars
hay,-, _ the . e. . __._ _, ,.all tion, . •.. 0
to up t,eadtly when• •they, are them -- • .: .: fastener—a : ar _ - _ . ka .. .. .,' To „Canadians _gods the .`d'isttnetion n>rles of
d .eft Buie metal looks pro uctliat fort3si =`I r• ici `sod
op ii.iy cleaned, noise which annoys• : , t ,The 'modern, bathroom, indeed; with •of 'proposing 'one , of -.the. m
If there is a .;second or buttons; and .a piece Of cord about
" ' . _--_--; .. universal, at ats. porcelain -tab and other lux r nse•s eve .cone t
•
most oval the ;o mda rex; 'young tine.
. -•:.. Where to. Began. six iuches long: n airplatre: bertis the e8 alter previous
u acus 1 e sed ;for a
needs the.: same an_pect'on and .care ' ' • •• + equt in'ents owes; its'deYelo nieirt to ' Wfnni e intsn "are
. ;lie. tltottght so ltttle of .it that he : , y s P g reported: to 'be' tion of cite er e, b f10 _ r,� .
In +loing .thin work. begin at one •end as the first; altheegh in manor of the Amet�cans•.: 4�. rutin the i o:r aittzt'
parte. thou it fora• k present gen ,!; • i g ah • aerial ir,'ri ati w.cora- Wil i oggti "
ilea]'' soda drink' 4 e..ft is true first much' oP',. }
of the car • and ` go•-throp'gh .to; the 1 recent , models the rear .un'kersal ts- . _ , . : , erattmr it has been evol - ;: '
ved> , pang, The atm n to a c10 ;•raid.. di " }'I a 111 or 1(i i
. r '. to a ..fallow-worl.man•• Th -
'Other•.• It is' :tot 'a bad` idea. sic work , noththg• more .then two flanges with a nowest'st style .t b' s r� Y . s it al"le f nee 'from
V _'"wa , .0 -• - _..i late lit to deyised_by . i? Y ng.11qukci.art Iii, the=claucir frcrn' Present
t� iratetrterl 1t , X u
Y .P uttdet the .engine, first re-� a: piece of.iublre� or con(ipos::ttaan be - ..-L a,_elever_manufaGturer- of - ,fieri•air I m?a. of ttperat_ioti iy;ltY '.
two-tlla litteli te_test in his plambet . pane, thus entisitig the moisture tit i:e--_-1:'t a '.
up7ies and • des'i ie has, reic:hed matitrety*; ;u1
rnvving-tl►erip }yarn and laying tTiat!'ween. • It merely requires :that •the. , oate•n'- got`- P gt d esliectall for to condense::listen
0,000; •vtrt,th• t1te, further: st ul . . i y
tp anon _ . s.i.as.tht:own, taneesyCwii•1-.have d'3een short '
outside to a .cIealierl before it is 'r -e_,, b its e e F.. 1 ` ,. __ lists. ,on. eau sued
: .... _. --• 2.._b ---,t l#�..1zt.4I?ez' y_.t;ightened. .,-• -• -.. _-- . -• �-•- . ,-Js..pror�tded..-a-G,-one-etci--,w•.. ;.f-r-om--an-iii• 1' ,N, _r,_,-..,.; ._...,•_tear .:.,•:i
._ e t _ ._ b . _-- ... ._ .__ trut..tlin_.. r_'1 _ tlh-a p axle on --•the c90 r .r -
`raced ile . r hi [5fi c ta,ser houTd put $k.OU 000 � , c s. a,Optt" lay j ea' : • alis i'tn "7 `"
!r atrmg the'drt;P Pan - You will. hka lyenrer e -from ' - fait-
led e• -on -wails . ,th Y Itt tent lioiiit ts_'La ti
r. p g , the •into. a•'facto'i for rte e..' b•
., e. bather may. sit .feet high in' .an ultsucce'ssfnl aft the :t' .:
that .
e. examine. it pretty carefully you may car a , ood..deat dirtier than l; Y • *educing daetng the :fast dew it 1', t in P empt , tniber.ts there, while. it Is e :lel ' 2:°=•
Y yea have tee,. tub—Half • of ..the , tq cause•: rain:.ii11 lY•ti..•':.
find that nttsin c r trade i suer. TiTlie cute vrortrtrian..ts'. now. a, >
a lilt;toltant that it Should rematii .there, ,' _ .`
g 31 r • o' 7orne ,even been, but a Q deal wiaPr aei :•caltliw nia;t : tub, that-ts. t:o Say, buns• twine I rlrep n:I'ietort * , _ ^.
i other..Itart;doivn filers "_,. to ..the, wa the as tai 'o �, ,� ..
-. Y. things .look down there t ti, ,; ` theether half, and the total. leugtii' i''tgures' recently 'subsoil' ,<M.,•
'—I ' 1�-a N'.'sot; w - -IW .lie—7"-77._.®m-:_ .. .. - y, ,w.cloWnw .-w—.•w,. .,;. $.11,, . f• .n�rt�,t.k7 h�. at;'44+v°'i`ghir"..,' :.`FR"V'+'.%'iS, �•ilw'.",., ,e•.. +wa . �, n+:lih :.•vL' •
..�:.... - .:.�'. 1. . . maw,n✓+ •-'..-,Ks.i,-+.rte by
741�t - irrwvv •41e' -eon,,, to , , ` , . e of putting a metol to e : r... fJrei'tcg'�tsrri tamer 'liar` y''a S�oeFtty, t is hies= Fti acfrivre.
...Ton wall: see the base of the .engine i arts; which- ca g on the end of a the tub occt r nc?leafs
g ne, ,P C n be seen to no' .other-boatlace.:was. oil toolI les a minHp u 1 .of space ,that. the .pre.,ent • eost .. of :• 1 fire d I
jibe paYb In which thr. tilts held, winch w'a and; if., only the deeper at t l an rla►ne .: a fni f tg machine invented in ^
y glad to tails•
p p re filled.: ;transport ts;abbot $s. 'Sd:.per ton Mile, Fingland cohsists , in a saw ,that.'i.
Y•, ' ' $400 for has idea More than, twice. with, •ater, the 'arrangement. is can as compared' to 2 s `; '
lubricates the moving Parts: This ,is this sum rewarded tate stent a of p fid, to„3d. 'per .ton
coatinua.tion of. ' the
. held. to the Many cam ers and' hunters acid patentee' the venient fa> .a foot iitith thefor I?. lolston. ,rad.'of t
r ,,. ,mine: iry. bolts,. • P e �..hatlr-: mile .h _.. rail. .
,_- t'bber encfl�tat: who:.l , t1� Y n The.'adv t ste
;usually v'''''area.,.;'::-:•'-‘4 T.greatla-ta the danger'offorest fires p •.. l,_tettght tirefele'_ . . ,, 'tags' of the. ani cylfnciQl; tale steam:'•'c'i sir '
,1 nu,ts and.. sot ..:... •.. . i ...,._.ng oP a child.
from the atwitter inventor for -12..5..'.- ,_oarplane:lges-in, its speeri; -plied- hkrroit” tilos '=.
ter -i iia to`hold titer tight, Sesif the
by.'heti carelessness`:` They are: n'ot 'g
�[ err lit . a of ti%l t
`for which the public -4 always .willing Kotler: n�a P
•
P all i +asked to,' curtail their enJoyn'enc of. ,Keep' it•' Dark.:
cotter' ins -are n place; tf the o a e f'
t.he. forest 'but -just to• exercise, .that ` ~England 'and :Wales tostilet have.. ' ius'en'et-"IIow esti oil
J g
nuts are really tight. If they e Moll
are not .. , the ' _
1... .. care':wluch 'the Iva d00,s -ca , t, Ici{ s
Y, ys use when re^ i.scheole .for the. b.mcl, _6 for imitation earls: freta tete •e ,,,, c a a? e • not ilio : s 'Of
. o
:oil., will surely Fvork• out from': the 1' l..al._.otres, .._'..Ca d h �► . ,
y �., a a. a greater area th'an.tke. their 1th the .. r. i.:._
:'eas�ke$,"not" si'nly cai,i�.in.ir avc�•tr, but hand9tng fir'' about tlieir,oivn prt�rt� .tale deaf .and •
24G for otherwise de- Sal,esmat'. Alr;. tad' �. , g , .a, c.. flashes of It
u, sc... , •'y . • ;. Madan), Sou do not United Slates; , but 'a " 'o Opti 't
s fectne ch�tidren. ;' �- ,
P p o i less. %ioni .the : Oita noti n,— t.
__-. .;:,:.• :.. • ---• -- -- __ _._.._- __ _,.....tell___ ou.�ust-.k � �, Ilotbioa. �u�itit
Y-P...a%s xo yottrsel�
'- r pan 'New' or Slate:
'son; ,
pie"
3
t i ot. y ktNow
$lir % 11-t iK• p�
caw. GtVs Neem'
•EIGHT o -reo
goPsi TS• :.rs `IiAY
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WNP- • •• -THQSE
'THP .&rtct�s
ov-c Of mite cows '
NOES:: tie.:
BLtstcl, ``THEM: .
Bar
' otz or aria. •
At'. a^`rIN1.E.
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