HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1923-11-01, Page 271. •
„s-
•STIAR.can cogasoline and b Lshng It
-
on know ilOW many Straineri, AO .the beat way to clean It.: Prodding
er°UrO..neneeaTod within car, the 'gauze With a sharp tool is alMost -
Where each 'one, 41, , k and 'bow sure to break, it Strainers that Can -
:A can be gotten cleaning? not be removed can be cleared by
Thope,,Airorokor screens, so Inngtan hooking the -dirt off their surfaces,
they are intact,are :faithful Safe* With a' Piece of •small wire, or Some -
guards, preventing solid, impurities in times by forcing liquid through them
the:gajiliAlt,t,ront l'eachiPg. the minute in the direction QPPOSiter to the normal
-FrisSageaSK., the Carburetor,*betrucC.
thelPS04- thus Stepping:the engine
by entAg-Off its fuel SUpplY; while
furi4tiOn. of the strainer the
engine luhr,icati.9,11stem is to pro-
•' Vent" solid, Matter, either,- introduced
with the old'or,worn-from.the-nieving
parts, from clogging oil nassagets or
getting into engine bearings and cut-
ting:: them. The more work these'
strainers •have to, do and the more
faithfully they. do it, the sooner they
; require attention, for if there is con-
alderablo dirt, in the gasoline It soon
fihls. tiny holes in the fine' cop-
• yet. gauze, of which the strainer
screen is made and then gasoline can
• no 'eager to supply the. engine,
--.0suat Practice is to locate one strainer
*: the top the vacuum:tank;where
th� draft -pipe :Own the -Main • tank
erit;"ra-lin.danOtherin We-arliirefot• 'esseritra1;-arfd-thilesir'thia•-4s'assured
" tqw.1 at the point of connection of the the entire chassis is unfavorably
• "stluPTY'.1310e from the ACUUm. tank. affected. , •
Both of -them are usually removable A crankshaft is said to be in bal-
hy urieouplifig, the gasoline pipe in- ance when it revolves at high speed
*otsasand screwing, out the ',,fitting between two points of suspension
which encloses the strainer. In some without throbbing. If one side of the
fuel ,sySteras, a combination strainer shaft has even 'a friction of an Mince• ,
,and-Settlingspeeketsis-providedsin-the moreweightthan the opposite the act
•gasoline pipe, somewherebetween the of revolving it from 1,000 up to 3,000
.
maintankandthe engine cOmPart- fillies • Per minute ill accentuate the
'Plea; consist3ng Of,,,,a fitting which unevenness • almost Unbelievably.
Screws Out irnd,, Carries with it or at According to Mr. Stowe, each Reo
Sleast,;expesessthe, screen. The settling crankshaft 18 balanced statically and
;*nel5et,‘If sediment bulb catches Waterdynamically in the big shops at Lens-
•4Aurd"heavy solid particles and requires ing, Mich., before it is passed to the
emptying Whenever, the strainer • is production -departments. The machin -
cleaned. :: All strainers "require, clean- ery Used it as delicate as any in •the
abent. everY, 1;000 miles and great plant, registering its findings' in hun-
eare should be taken not to.breahtlie• dredths Of •pound -inches and, showing
wirea exactly where the shaft must be light-
restlI,,sholein it is no good at all. If ened .to make it perfect;
tow-- Ir-IWOR=filteringisscreensaronnd
the pump intake, in the erankcase; re-
quires Cleaning -each time oil is chang-
ed as; if:neglected, the flow, through
it becomes ' less tan that required' to
keepthe pearl) fu 1 and oil circulation
will become inadequate.•
THE .CRANKSHAFT AND HOW
IT P,U,NCTIQNS.
. Motor car desie meets no 'more
delicate, problem than the fashioning
of a crankshaft, according to George
Stowe, vice-president,of the Reo Mo-
tor •Car Company of New York.
Though this unit of a car has remain-
ed almost without change since the
early days of the industry, it is a
point at which 'engineers are obliged
to exercise their greatest skill, It is
one point where perfect 'balance is
Left 'the Blind Up.
Aunt._? 80, your young man
ofmoney—buthe's- a.
whidow-dresser; yen say?' •-• --s-
Niece—"Yes, arintie—what of' that?"
•
Real Treasure Islands:
Thera quith a,nuniber cif islands
!mattered about the world •whereon
briried trerteure existe. And people
are always' trying to find it; "
, Quite a Score Of attempts have been
made,' for instano,e, to unearth the
treasure alleged to he buried 011 Cocos
,Igland. Yet so far the. adventurers
have reaped no reward for their toil.
Fully $250,000 has been • Wasted;
again, in futile attempts to recover
the "Pirates' board"'reported to be hid-
den near the hp of the crater of an ae-
iiite—very active -4 -volcano on Pagan
Wand, theLadrone Group. "
Still, as a. set-off against many fail
-
urea, there have been a few succeases. t
There is no doebti for instance, that a
"'"`” '' ' •
-»•:,`Sfs.s
i7;
A Useitd Difficult of Production bit fur VVhich De.
xnanct- Fame& Suppry
. . a •
The Sle$0,...asSeciatien betiteen•mir-' TitE, DIRAbT. ,PROPUCTIOSi FROM Alt9EN0,
'prat development und,soussioonrinereials,Sssass.s.s_ss•rsessaysgsssr
. .
n,,,,-,:44r;i:_w,Mitu:trAP:irki, 1214100; 'W'reeetV.,?The
!rec.
W
ffrhiktOg .0t) In tiiiies,"baseduntlie;IWnufg Of ar.ser.lOs •
-slthittric7SItraenatIr:Y4rnnegteetigUUTlfYnt*' Cbe911'0- 'yPril"Ur.;C!)Intt4fIsil-lePagsiTy° 9:011sCsrible'ffoilf.h
element .of, -
•the product of some one Or more Of technicalstancipoint ProdliCe 99 per
our Mineral resources: issrequired ceitt, arsenic from ariedellyrite but,
• enters the production of agrical-sthe plant installation ancrthe ,preeeik
tural or industrial products , so' inti- are both costly, and, in the face• of the.
• 4 -mately as to Make it absolutely.esseris „violent •fluetuationir ,of . market Prices
'tial that the location -ofsupplies, the -sfid714-iiroduet competition littlesressl,
ioibiHtiis ofsdevelOPInetSti4be-,refin---.1pregresesiirsibia;-brancli of,thejli 'Os try -
.ing or ether. process neeesear.Y.,to,,,e). has ever been made. , 1
'• . tract • the .products- the means for .`TheVroducti •of arsenic in, Uaaada
in:a411:),rb:eer itkninPeog,w''. ta;liedari,nt.adha:r eufaasdeu;isl ys,,°faaavirtihi:tatnibleae e7' arsenicalinelaude-• , an•ei' TilteST,11. g97..,osis ands°ef
mend for c).x146, of arenie has ..ill.P.r.aat4e. Cobalt „
•;'ect -extent astolargely ex.so-
. ,senical gold Concentrates shinned from
: ceed the 'risible auPPIY* :The necels'tY: the Hedley gold Mine at Hedley; BC:, '
i of eradicating the boll weevil from the
-cotton areas Of the, Southern • States .Wtheaahlaihttgetronb: eing, treated: at Taconra,,1
land the grasshopper, from the North- . In 1922 Canada 'predueed 2,576 tons
'
ern States States. and Prairie Provinces, if of white arsenie , value,c1' at .$32,1,037
.., . -in and grain croPs are to be of
was an .iricrease of 73 ,per cent.
,
t
t • •. s i•ved, has, created a demand in quantity over shipments for 1921.
...,.
•-•-•:-.„ which calls for' .greatly, iri-
-'s•'-.1-.;r- ,•'car'elneide. production, while the largely in, the last 15 years between 1% cents
'-ss 4,sf/ .., The prices of arsenic has fluctuated
"Alf,s's•)'',4 s-, ' enhanced price secured for the'ersenic
.s.,,...
and go ce ts per pound; reaching 15 '
, s• 4.-•. m y warrant more intensive develop -
cents in Qctober, 1922, insNew York.
, ON THE • ROAD- TO RECOVERY • merit of the minerals from which it ,
ts obtained. .. ., , .. . .. ; , ......• sins OF ARSENIC. , • 1
. •
,
•
—From the Philadelphia PubliC Ledger. '
rsenrc is used in the glass.' making!
1 ' DIFFICinziEs „pi- REFINING. ' '
•
GIOING AGAINST ctaeisiser ii.nwRapolituhdalltpoOmnddunett editi amrae-
• arsesnic 1;:siellr:ece7tn-pedioc!rcirt;%—' iLtiT;IiIi-HsthaVilieltntirtcrirnei '-
SHOPPING BY MAIL heme,,w4icii, a
h put out in his pub- some nature. 'Even now arlenic is the csf the most important inseeticides and
ni recent years has corner into active '
' licitY matter under the caption of "bugbear" of the Metallurgist, par- deinalid,
for - the - treatment of ' boll 1
The Deadly 'Parallel: In one column tictilarly at lead works,. wbere it is a:
weevil in the cottoncropof the United
he listed ,the metehi.ndiee of one of constant source of expense. It- Coin -
States, and - for the 'destruction of
the most-prezninentsniall-ordersecnv-bines-with-otherselements,-principally - giass4opvcrs. . ... ..., .
cerni, with its priceS, While in an ad. iron, lead and Silver, to form speiss,
joinpag, colunin,he 4sted isss, own goods which, until a Short time age was con,- - It isdestinedto Play -an important
part • la "agricillture. in the future as,
, and prides. So successful - Was the ; siciered waste, as no economical method
plan that two years after the time he had been found for treating it. Sul- while it, is not in itself a• fertiliier,
expenimenth have shown that, used in
started his business on a 'shoe -strings phurous gases and :fumes containing
•
he had an $8,000 'stock, all paid for; arsenic from the fur. naces have caused sutag quantities it will sterilize soils
and money in the bank He handled expensive litigation against smelting
____. , and kill enemies ,of plant life and thus
.standard merchandise onlYfid, un- companies, and to . overcome .these Pronlote growth- - • .
likeiorne of -his retaii competitors, he 'nuisance as, well as to save some of. Miring the present: season Dr:A. W.
HOME TOVMMERCI-IANT
GIVES BEST' VALUE
Manner in Which Such .Com::
petition Has Been. Met, by
, Stores in Small Tosirns. . •
,
. orderscomPetition with Sinai'
town Merchants - la by no Means as
dittipillt to fight is it appears, but in
fighthig it. indAt of 'theta do not Make
use of the most valuable, weapon they
have. : This; according: to "Fredetielt
HaaSe, - an, advertising sad inerchan.
dise Counsel of New, York, id the coin-
pariscai et • values:! On firat, thought
adopted the comparison of, values . recent Years on account of its trouble- thedestruction a weeds:: * one
did • hot throw in a' 75 -cent cap with a the metals that were going to waste;' G. "Wilson 'of the Mines Branch, T_
$10 raackinavi just to , make a friend. the fumes are filtered through woolen. pattment of Mines, is making an- in -
Br not "doing so he made ;a better cus, bags hung in special bag houses. A vestigatien of occurrences of' arsenie
tomer: ' • further: development was the electrical in „Canada, which will be supplernenthd
Here is an idea of the way the Mon- precipitation of particles from the by a 'further investigation of the tech -
taxa retailer worked it: ' fumes by the Cottrell treater. After, nology of the recovery ofarsenic, the
1 -
the arsenical fumes are precipitated' production of arsenious oxide and the
Interesting Comparisons. . • . . _ 1 . . .
they are refined in special furnaces or, uses and markets beth in Canada and
this would appear te be a dangerous "In- the heft -hand -column • of '.his .
reverberatoriess ' -I the United States. . '
•i tq44 7
;
••.;
NaUrf$1', Resources
•BuZetim. -
Tho Natural Resources Irktel-
ligence., Service, of the Ilepartr•
..riunit of the ,Interior .Ottawa
1104.1116-st3P1P.Otts
P
Ito 58 per .peat of the value Of ,
.141 acliard ,frtiltif and to los;
per cent. • of the yefue ,Of jll
• "fruits, and , The
• productioir: of , epPles' ing
f. Vitas- 9;662,425 bushels, as Corns
Pared with 6;459,161 bushels in
• -1910:. The r. were: N3,15*
: els:Of inra6bes •Prod4Ced'in 11)20,
as - iffsifirat 600,187 hi1ehs 11!
1910;.538,36/..:bushelS:(4.pluipsi'
.-,,aild.'pra;n0:$ as' coniptired with
„3.46,944 .busluds; , $77,775. hush,
- 'els , of pears :as, en,ftli Pa red vith
•423,563 :3410,r46.
-bushela -of, cherries aisagainst
-446,440. buslielS in 1910: • '*
Grupes'• yielded ' 33,114,464
• peunds in I920;, being a Slight
.aciirlince,, on the 1910 figure of
,o2;54,481. notinog..*.The;:straw-:
'berry is the ino4 importantiof
the small,fruits, the Yield being
11,362,941 'quarts' in 1920, as
'against , 13,094,462 ,,quarts in,
1910 ^ The, production- of rasp-
• beri in 1920 was (j,212,2
qUarts. ,,ctirmaits and goo
berries totalled1,083,623-gearts
in 1920, as ;)compared with 2,-
420.811 •quarte,in 1919. There
s
were 299 of Maple
syrup:, and 63,919 ..,peunits`
Maple. sugar .preduced in 1921;
as against., 166,33.1S gallons of
syrup and 251,088 pounds • Of
auger in 1911--• - ••
Z.17 -77
We inherit. and inhabit the Same ,
-world, and We cheese for ourselves
what we shall do with all that it of-
fers, whether Meat or poison' foulness
or 'fairness, vice or virtue. 'One Mary .
sees, the thing to do,' and does it; the
other is blind to duty, insensible even
te his own advantage. There. are •
various sorts of genius, roaming the
I • pwritts4';'; aaBrKaihpmlins rxialZersiternsilsicaTitian,
Gaudens inodels;sand each Man prea--
ents what he has felt or heard or Seen.
Yet it is " the same' ;World for all of
theM;:the same world in ,which there..
,are-eininnonplace,sdull minds ' as well •
as the live; brilliant intellecta who con- •
fer glamor. and lustre on existencei
•where they corriel. '
What is the great advantage rich
men have over the 'Poor?. As soon as
the rich men out of his houses aways
from his grounds and not an occupant •
of • Vehicle, what ' has he to .enjoy,,
"mote than the poorest? We all have
sun andsrain, -sea and land, trees" and •-
Vrapi and flevvers. . are subject to ,.
,the same laws of health. 'We' have the •
same allotment; we AT must go.
through. the one narrow gate at last •
It is SO strange that the "wealthy".
should Set' such . store by the number .
of --Miner; they collect What is »the
use of Piling up great possessions if
thevy;ectiojawtadh Onintt dheeliskohutl?to a .alvaimra
golden eloquence; we read a book that •
depict a an earthly paradise; ,we Meet.
those who are "blest" with a large por-
tion? of this sworliPs, goods 7f.' 'And •we
imagine that lif:e deals far more. ten-
derly:with• them than with us. Often
Wesithagine-they -a-re having.'
time, while we are relatively, raiser -
able.' 'But the truth is that we have
is valuable a Chance a's-they had, for
,
between the extremes of comfort and •
diacomfOrt .the range is surprisingly„
narrow. itri mairhas some gnawing-.
,Illness or some preying sorrow, . what ,
does he care for anything else' ()there
may envy him, but he has no.immuri-
ity from, pani and gild. He may by
anything the shops ' sell; he canricit
buy 10; for it is . not in the market ,
at -a -priee. `,
Instead of•enVy for those whom the
:fates seeinqoPhavemsed-letterslet
be mindful Of the rich "blessings that
abotind' for us, if we, will but take .
them nnti make them our oWn. There
is as much ' for each Of uas_there_ is• ,
for any one anyWhere. ,,Sen or land
Before the 'War Great Britain pwned- or Sky, the elements are Ours, for equal
'nearly 44% per cent of the, WorIcrs profit-sharing. The life. of huriranity- -
total tonnage of iron and steel steam- is round about us; and we may mingle
ers;, now it has decreasedto less than wwoitrhs,ei.t,aTshweoincchciotiosaeii,tfieo: of
tettehre orfor
88 lien'. cent worse
not nearly So impressive as the preva-
Eeheme, of Which ters,much is said, are
Which. would change jts.. lsey_gshArl,c
A, ' mUsical attachnient to scales
thetpower,OfAh6
. , • ,
lent equality, the diffusion of nritnin,.
matter for the small merchant to 'deadly.parallel' he ran the -mail order
• '
touch upon, inasmich as. it is the ap., house's descriptions and pribes of local Merohants cembined in 'the fight,
parent, advantage' ti•re' mail Ofder goods,: taken directly, from its cafe:- and the comparion lists showed the
houses hold inthie respect that 'brings l°gue' In ' one •ot ,. the camparlsonis
the 'great bulk '• of their' busineasstO Rein " Ng., .1 of , the.'mail order ,house . ;
mail order houses up pretty. badly,. in
spite or the fad that 'specials.' of the
them. - : . • .., • ' - - ' was reuredneed: thie'.wal''' `(See• nage home' merchants were not , permitted
On the 'other land, if the ,compass 423) ..41F 707—Bib .. Overall,. extra to fiso-'--re iwthe,coariparisons.. The out are Made 'properly; it is the in•ail heavy s weight in size , 38 waist 29 .,
standing point of the whole affair ,was
ounces; no union label; cost (to • cus- found to be that although the. mail or
tomer) $1.39, plus 17. cents parcel post der' houses 'undeniably ,undersold the
three-cent.,moneY order and two cent local .raerchants on certain • artieles,
stainp% cost laid .down in Rnnn4un. the total cost of various, combinations
$1.61, . . . . . ' Of .articles selected from sthe local'
. Opposite this he ran this descrip- ss
stocss and the mail order 'catalogues
'dors of his ovira goods: • '.Big 3 Bib Over at regular prices of both favored the
all. union label. weight in size 38, 36 ' home . merchants• -anywhere ' •
rom 17 to
nces, or 7, ounces ,more (than the 22 per cent In other words, the home
ail. order house); sells here everyimesshanis Were able, to demonstrate,
y for $1.26, or 36 cents less than—ithrough.,.co-eperation '. and publicity,
he mail order houie)...In a similar
5;;Srs, :showed hoWshe-seld a." 12 -inch
that*persons who 'patronized the mail
order houses ' that, come out on the
short end, , .and Mr.. Haase cites in-.
stances to show that this is So., They.
were obtained, -from •experience a
few years age as Director Of the St
Joseph; Mo., Service Bureensfor Re -
afters, a co-operative organization for
ncreasing the business of Wholesalers
:Liverpool, sailer named John Adams in that market. , Daring ,his. tenure of. en
anearthed. treasure lo the amine Of le,..;:ioffiCe Many „instances cane- to his at sin
tween $740,00 and 41,00006 Onn AlichILtention of how -semi! •merchants had da
Ind ..Island. some years ° hack; . while smet successfully, the menace of. Mail a
Williiird;Watabirii." shepherds rotisitersorder competition ' , ' • ',... ' s- --. , • : • • -.• via
. . ed in 1868 nearly a ton. of ,gold that ''There Is no doubt' now . abOut, the hi
. Old Aunt-7717irhat e Plat? . He's ' one had been hidden on .one of the Queen average' °small . inerebant's ability tO le
• Of: these linnOdebt felloia that always abariOttosbaandes . .. '' • , ' ' 'meet inait' order:.. competition,:.:on,.,a„,ge
forget to ITO*0',the''`tint0",:'1'.8111k'"'Likewise, two i•iiaiiay • seamen 'basin- of comparison or vaiires,"•-sald in
p080 named .
.... „-
named' Handley and -Cross, success; Nr., Haase -There" are hundreds • or Pa
fullysIocated and;dug a: Valuable---ernal tOwn, merchants in•esery,fiv4tion. . ..!'Other merchants nius,' goo B.C., .7110 devised a Schenris'
..etstlie.: eeuntrys who -nto.::prOvinv day- : In. We: western a...matter. on which Many snialtstewn .
heard onsOalcLIslaird,seffStheScoalf2,of. halt et the ectuntry_Alsomade:•ipterestaiiiiiiit-ii-fifiiiiiiii4ii;iiii-43,:-Laiii=e-i1-7ot14100:' sigarisfershiSSOWnirief'Then-
bhalldige OVer that ofthe mail order the local.merchants had other reasons ., cere's fanious Oration in the Roman
otherS.had faAled. . .' petition that angerous to themall.":
g top man's shoe for $2.63. a _pair
ss "than the mall order house,. and
re bstfer ;satire as welt,---Cither: sav
gss marked' -his - 'en tirer,Ifar tom=
ripens. ,
•-Animal Ages,
It...was, reported recently that a tur-
.
ths.had been found in the Tonga ,
lands that was branded bY. Captain
Cook In 1773., The. report. Stated: It
; blinds aid. When walking it creaks
like an Ox -cart." , •
Tiiio is net, an, extraordinary age.
The record for long iife Mating land
tortoise.animais belongs to the . Offen
.-•tdirorable ceriditionssthis animal will
hivo between , 300 and. .490, years. In
r-1906 one .Whieh died at -the London Zoo
.to. have lived-, • at: ;least 454
• 'years:, -. The Orocod e anotherong;,
liver,' for, given • fair play in OS 'netiv,e
it can exist for 304 years.
Among 'domestid epithets. the horse
.
hives longest, twenty-seven years be-
ing its • average .The cow and
plg follow'. closely .• with, twenty-five
Yearit•ench. The dog and goat usually'
manage 10
• teen,; and the Sheep twelve Years re-.
. 7 . •• ,
•Th,e elephant ,clairna the , greatest
•. age .artiong the larger . ininiale,
Well treated, It should live to be a
...,:lti.undred.q,1,The.-...lion-;,-and,:ihe'•=caittel,•fall-
- a long way behind, forty years being
•
-
.r ••••••••=nuse mow
414.r. '70/11/111111M
• • Down in the beep.
1st Fish ---''Were you frightened?"
2nd Fisii-;-"yes; I trembled' like a
JellYfish." • ;
' The -Story of AOrthand:
%Although. shorthand is SO Widefy
brder houses .to the more or lessi, iener; sd today, probably few people rear
ize that, itt a different" !Orin,' it 'was
al exclusion df the home :dealers were -
paying from 17, to 22' per cent of the
cest,otAbeir,p,urehases-for..,the,privir
lege of -buying out of town.- ..".
"Mention of co -Operation brings' up
popular 14 the days cif Ancient Rome.
The first mention of an abbreviated
systenr oUvrrttinglik- made, in connec-
tion with the Roman' peot Ciuintua En-
Nov,a Scotia, and: this -titter niany after dayi the superiority'of their mer- ing • ceraparisons, which showed. that. we have Pletareh's statement that Ci-,'
can't or Won't operate to' fight: cdm-
•
flav-e.yeu. ,seen...the wondrous glory 'of
• the ' trees,
; And • the. shining .splendOr . of- the
' • • golden rod? ' •
,Ilave, yea ;felt Autumn on'
heuses. It is needless to say thi.t in to expect haute htlYing than the howl e . , Senate, in, 63 B.C., was reported in
these seetions, there is little,: or no
business going away frem home
The Same or Less PficeS.1 1 ,
customers son in a Scottish schOol when sud en -
"If every mei‘chant in till blanket to one of his male
s country by convincing.hlm, through a comparis' ly she caught sight of a little 'boy niov-
i d d and then putting his
,so many Small retailers put,upocibont •
•
The, :Wrong Finisher:: s,liorthand;,. • •
the ethics' of trading Out of town., • In . • 'References to ehorthand were msdo'
-one case a, merChancl knew sold' a teacher -was one day glying"a-lest the works if Cicero, ,Horace, and
Pliny,' and the poet Ovid bears testi
many •to the fact that by means of
• these Characters' Caesar's political
secrets were borne far over .land and
sea. -Evidence gOei to show' that,the
Sermon on the Mount was reported in
advertised .to his. trade that was soli
of the tnailorder blanket with his° ng up an own,
prepared 'to:fill any order taken from own, that the later was the•better. The had under a desk, and then up again.
It worried her very rapcli, so She
,.• ....the_breeze=-•--------- ---"•-•.--- , g a e
TO get out and view. the handiwork same or less prices than the mail or comparison showel' the ' mail-order
0
of God? ' der house quotes, and Also ..to give .the
. tbhlan4ket ito he'ahfourti,nchtesashinoarhieera tohz.n.
•teer an ,a,... sy.
If youShaverrjust,..comeWith -me, - Same or- better -service--tharethe -Ma 1.4- ower and • .._ .
considerably lighter The
See. the, perfect. harmony,' , .. .°rIer` h°u" give.s;%" the financial' Pe ' ,prlee 4. the -'mall' -order blanket; - was
0! the red -gold leaves ashining ii. the Pboarrtsevoifsetdh! lIatttiser7rnouerlachsaonodniEtheaytutao, but
thtly ..k?wyfeeirghttiLl.abnasitshethleoualrgummaenn,
tion in which th,e united power of mer- ).on u wohnicha the local merchant made the
chants' associations in every part of
the coilutr.,y sligizl_d_,ke_broughtinto_ine sale, the hatters blanket" was much
--rthe better -value of the two. ---7-
Lion to EIWilli the, out-of-town 'tide of „ .. ' • f
mail d h
See the dainty asters in their purple
frocks, "
-T-Gaze on glowing yellow purnphin in
the field ---t
e_thesrliseseorsisinsRasstately_sho
And the bkintiful display of .nature's
' yield. . '
When you've seen this you'll agree
e blessing just/to he • '.‘ merchants in that ,locallty are work. goods. BeSides this, the local goods
AliVing in a wender-world like Mire Ing along the same sue. The plan is were 3 cents cheaper per pair.
, Thee Currie file seine in: either case "'One of the best inoV*ements of its . • . s, an
• In another comparisan, a pair p
Women's stocklags offered. 4?3, a mail;
Order house was found' to he lighter in
weight. and about two. inches shorter
in length than the lecal Merchant's
burliness fa•Vor-,of.,•the• home store.
The, individtialseffert,otionemerehant-
:in a locality; of Course, does some
good, but results can be'accornplished.
more quickly and effectively. if all,the
went up tohim, and Wfi& just going to
ask ,him. wbat. Was, the matter when
-
she 'saw him -with a big reund :Sweetie.
She told him to,. go and 1111161. it in the
eorner.
As she went on with her lesson she
saw another little boy crying. bitterly.
She Went up to him and asked him
whet lie Was .crying for. Be-replied:-
"Eileasei,. teacher, that was • My
sweetie what that boy had, only let
-him lave-alen1 of if to have ir soolc"
The bamboo helda the record among
'plants for quick growths It has been
known to grow 2 feet in 34 hours.
aborthandsbyt.;Isuke,
The writing was, scratched on to
coveree with -a layer 'et Wax.
:The tablets were afterwards fastened
together at the 'corners by..wire,, thus
forming, a sort of book. ,
•
, eig1mt were. bemnjr given, is one ..sugs, op thepoor° _
oe lth
In sacred ilviritingsfrequent mentiOn handed, lights agairiat • Mall,: Order On :a "t corivarisiin value ' basis ter- :a loud thunderclap will'. kiiknieny.hun- .:gestkin ;for preteeting easterners .frOns _ ,
• • dishonest 'tradesmen.
their usual limit. • , • es " i's made of neediewerk. "
"
,
t,ttto
t
WHY WHAT ON- EARTH
ARE LL THE. '13Att-iE16
fturINItsr FOR GiVE:
I E.,,Li)
•.
'houses, a.ewell as one cif 'the Most 'tie; loWs.: "hi thiS ease a.sitiiiiber Of the 'dreds of them.' .Not Wiping .to Commit
. .
-RABBI
4.`
014 PEAR - DoN'T yOU' KNoW
BE.AcH )5 DEMoRP0-12-E.V! *THAT
1115..RAI5LE. BEANY _THE BUM:, sMs5,
tuRN et) .. BAor: AN.!
14E., 51-uFf•
. . 1•
, • • .
• •
cesu_s,
HAkE -ToNi le • t
30.
••••
4NA 4411.
•
The • a.rt of „writing 'something 'that..
shalt aeeiii to he..4i1 -answer: witlumt...,
itetually being on net:. unknown ;
among th6, sehoot.koing• kola), nt this'
land., One boY' \She was' a., ready prac
tire
ti-401111Cifit OniiStlea, ".kylach was 'the,'
t:Ione!' of .the".'a rt. was 'taped wit
.it
greti ter -general, daesur or Hanrilbal.?"..
The boyssalists.,solne-the,Aght, •PrOS-
dimed ' this; "When wis Consider" the.' .
tinies 'in Which. these great' generals
hied, the co d tiring u 'Joe whlen they
strug/gied,,, the people . v'ei whein!stliey • ,
rifled. and the dIftleutilos tinder..whieh
they rough t, ;we are e'rinbere:d , to iti
Swer in the.aftIrnuttive," •
,
Mean.
,•
teaeli•er's iiW;
fully mean," " ' • •• '
Mother--"ituslisirlystear; yeti' Mnet
tint.8ay that." ' . • .
'Well:, she lei' 'who, thinkt
Shio hotr.0.-4vOct
leileirtd-gliie-M-6 a had Mats,',• •
, 0.•
4,
.3.••••