HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-01-24, Page 2es
men tisekproctfrobl
.bur
virOCOlor to the best
at•aulaw'rr7 to'clei'
- • n
ere
.••••
TY^
!IRA. eem.
• , to, -converge; „somewhere' farther
g"t11.,-Pn't:
rguessed could not be very far
freM the,front, for. the noise of the
, sounded • vely near, _both 'the;
844;7 crack of the field pieces and the
deeper boom of the howitzers. More,
B JOHN BUCI-IAN I could hear _the. chatter of the nut-
_
.1 chin' e -guns, a magPle:noth aMong tne
baying „ Of . houeds. even eir the
-• :,,ortfoltyr-star • •.I.Aram.--4t, .cOnvoy to the .ea „
ew.-7•44. -
Cent d.1 • • • 11-4fata: :-, • -. • • - • af
. trying to reach • the ;MOO 9;!..0-•
ka
•(C°Pnigbted- ThOr4a-1 Nelect&Land.a902154.-.44,) _berating of -Russian -shells,,.e onorl,
. •
• •
of
tliehicirts,,efthe We _had 'breatidese ' •"the t sed -1°Itte•
, , 1. p po , . ..e_,.•._ hd,anotherArithe- 0110Wthrough
ptlioet:Tani..iroai:141,.hellificl•-•liszneiti,•';aria iliat-Rellete'•' 'aliatt?lerett -;:iPTW ?.• Mid. .t11P11" Which we.
whip the,..rockaand.sang un, elearly, ranging. sh,ots;, and I•wori.der, The world is. filled with bustle and
•• ••• . a L 'lidera.
Were long han147(1737brodiflifienC4.10tir'eeTnhsel''Pleaearttly near •my head., In thised.if 'the RusSianei- had -Observation, ' -with 'selfiehnesa end greed;
remember, where. the srico -..sii.ppo'iii yWay • vie' coVered three-teurthe of the '109#4. Pa the. heights t9 mark them- it la filled,'with, restless people that aro
wreathe front Wider our feet. •Great
dreaming of a deed,.
distance; .and had. Only :the bare dozen If• so they inight'• ' t Y tal ' '
boulder§ had, te: be cirennirentedi'and ,YArd,-1. WhPre. the gradient ,. eased qtr. and •Vil,V shouldhe. very hear its edge. 'v. '
patehes :of bog,: where, the. strearni :uP to the. edge of thelcronz..„ .. .., , _ ,j•It, woultr.W.nii.edd"troey„.ig:wo. 11.,Can read it in their faces, they
:are dreaming:Of the day:
froth,, the:- •enoWsigrat'''" 41-44§.--;',e;.0.44,41,iiiiirofitgot- hit•-•-ert.A.Liejeg7-:Olir- thetargetet friendly •Shells; • - , , • '
• PrtilS;-"" ....a,i, ; Y.' 0 ;MS ;•Waa, -.P •. • . • • - •
,-,,,a •1.1 „r„-7-•-th,,,,,_..„...—e.-:-....,....'d-41,7"-lt---.hfirt-• to' ear-ry-hiiii,"So.". riiiiing.litiiiTS..endY.. 'SaY!--41t ' We• had .a Yhr:"—rage of U;;;•••. . . . '
•agaih, but tb s, -though' it' hiodered the o,n nayosihdetithltetr.sfa••AndiaI tp. thi,tawl;ti!srahtiQoianie7negtuphs4` wiyeis-'icoonh),c1 hold, 'this pled0
ctlase,,.10eSeried\the ehahces Tot ITtissiti,,.heart,
- was the-
,Iretae:ilii3,,,arird*, ethrtke releS4h,'.!1;h1:iree,...„,,-+•" „t he', 'kral"?.4' and , a. 0104 --Scra;;;Me,.to.atorha, la te;i•.;hiruites.". ; , .•
-about us, but we. all got eafely 'they, get a gun :up. they can '.blow _us:
ok -ix over the- 'edge I; laid '131enk..• I •"Please God -the "Ruseitins keep -their:
. •
:SEWING F • e house as spiek end span.' ''.And eleO 'had. 1;een • h lahdelip "qiiite 'reden.t?
...-00-111. alit ; - '-' illW ;
• • • • - •- ', - -tr4e1C lee 1•4g.'4Pwarde''' ' et• e" Woe inside the tatfrot'and started tP too butiY. far the 7 W
RSES
The TOOonte;., Boopttes for 4 o.
&hies. in ltfoitatfoe.with.,,pellevu nct
Allied, ,iloopiteiir, •aw York CttY.
-offers a thrie. yearu'''. cOuree, of- Tretn,
Ins to young. woMeo. hieVine the, re,
-ouirett -educe !qtr.,: and: Oestrous of be -
F
coming nur ee.. --T is; ilotipitat, hes
-adopted; the "eight,; Our; syltem. • The
pupils receite: Mit rote :of the schoPi.
e monthly phoirattoe Arid 'travollins
-te-hensee,tok!attAtrom--.New Tork•-:•;-1ror-
' further InfOrmattoe. apply te 14*
'Pie,' '-'4,7-t-4,....s,44,6g-qz..44`1.41.qi-.;.','•. ,.,,,,i,,,4i., . ,......
P1:eiMi mired lie7t,-.;*10--k.---ati ahd., Pr-
. • tune'and pet all their cares
away., '
And 1 thlnk, as I 'behold them,th�' it'
far indeed they. ream;,-
They'will never. find Contentment save
they".'eeek for it at home: -•
finding the piatli. . •itish Work, and the bullets were pretty "What price shells9" asked,. '44If
as, hiaanswer.
1. .With anxious eyes I watched
The ;nether who, makes. the clothing' 1 t f • 11 If felt elaxed and from the marks. A, larg'ent;car ef' raw
r-ested, arid ready to begin the` la
or herself and family' is entitled to • •
a suitable table It May be -nothing stint of the day's work with .renew
" more than an inexpensive kitchen .elle77" ' B. C.
table. Its chief requirements are ab- • • . '
THE•"COUNTRY. /1A$HEI'."
solute smoothness and correct height.
, If,; in:addition to this :one side is When Mrs'. 'Durkin goes to the ci
, _marked oft in ihchesit this,
save lots -for, a visit, she makes herself at:of)
of time spent looking for stray tape allie of. her welcome, for he alwa
measures. . • „ „ ,, carries with. her What' she, has dubbe
Should the g'i.',9'wni taranY ';;:la' ke a her "country basket." ' .
•'larger': kitchen table necessary, have ' '1,,t lna be lirriall,. lined with a na
the man of the house saw off the legs kin, and contain .only a pet of , fre
or,tho, 9.14,,on,e,,to make it the correct butter, a bottle of cream or a 'lir
,,...„heig__IthatiS,..„._a _:height—at-,
- T,aa'll,3,a4 et:fete, seated in a Comfort- some fresh vegetables dr flowers fro
which, ,ahilic.,L0rAtanay-belarger —afid-lial
,,able chair with both feet flat 'on the the garden, some of the surplus fru
floor, MaY; with \perfect comfort cut 'froin the orchard, a feW huts, a hom
• • t 1,.a ntid taplbaine . hwehriiwe,p8rekwianngd oanlsoitresTthiitit corn or ocr7 goem, ae 4drreseshse,degfis7l! ,seni,e I,
, the correct.;,elethed of handling -:sew_ n a', farm where. these .thihgs. a
img; it saves stretching and muscling plentiful they. are not such luxeries
' ,..the..Hwerk and .incidefitalrY a tot of butthey-c,onstitute a real treat to th
prepare, our defence. . ,, . .
'et -earth had broken, across •tIte hillside,.
' • We had little time to do" it ;Out a enemies 'On the' read. Theseernerl;
, the, thin "foe .figures were .. coining-"hav9 'giown in numbers . •The were
him. a sliCe cut out of an iced chocolate were: le waS a .hatarar redoubt, ex- - tered. ',P Then the • i rolled: down On
• cake.. ••• • • ' - . ,- I .,_ i • - . • zni°
„ • . , 1 cept. that there,were•no loopholes, or us againi-aed our prospect .was linciit-
_. •
We stared' blankly for a' second, till' sandbags. We had to ahow..our heaaa:e4 to ten yards of vapor., •;„ •
; ,we recogniZod its hopele4she-s'S. . Over the rim to shoot, but the danger!' • "Steady," •I cried; They rnitY try
ty. r,"I'm ,ter trying the crags,'? / said ; was leSseried by the „superb .field of ;th rush he at_ani_Momerit.„Everyman:
hr •-"Where there' once, Was a way an- Filen by those last dozen yarda'ef• keen 'INS Teye on the edge of. the fog,
ys, Other can ,be found" ' -,- • . • !glee's. .I.,posted the men 'ad weited,iand shoot at the'first. siltii.". . ., •
a • "And:be picked Off at their leisure and Blerikiron, with -a 'Atte 'face, In d Por . nearly half an hour by MY
' by these Markirnen," said '' Hussin sisted on talcipg hie, share anriotine,watch we waited' in that queer White
grimly :- "Look!" • ' • , : • • ..„ ling Wet. he used to be handy with a world, • our eyes ' smarting with ...the
P,i," The akErt had Opened. again, and &gun.' I gaire. the order that• no then' strain of Peering. The 'Sound, Of the
s"' 'glee"' behind showed .1-•°0 Ole' PhreuitAhe to phopt_tilLtheenelny-haa-Ciane7guria-seerned-tet-belititilfed;ifitricrev,
a, Cloeing.np_en",,ne-7--kbey-were how less'kut—Orthe r,ociti On to the glade. The thinsg own deathly i . -,
rthh :th h " e yards off.. , We thing ran right:round the :top,' and:iron s squeal, , as he knocked his
m turned our horses; and made Off east, We had to watch all sides to prevent wounded 'leg against - e. _rock, Made
it ward along tlreskirts.of the cliffs; thein . getting us in ,flank ' or. rear every man start.,
e_ Then Sandy spoke for the first time. Hussin's • rifle cracked . out tl '•
„ "I dont know ow you fellows -feel, from the 13aCk,,so my •precautiehs had
but I'm not going to he taken. There's not been -needless ' • ,. ,• , :.
nOthing Much 'to de elcdept 'to • find' a We ,were. all 'three. ' ''fiti'r • Shots,
re
goo place and , put 11D a fight. We though norici of ,tis up te Peter's inir-
i can IL • li 1, _
ed, wir‘ch th the allow abpve it looked crouching in Coven ".„ .pieee we', .signaliiimg, too, for a flag tint.
Pre_sahlg, and at 'the, same time saves city woman Must dig deep' in
the eyes, back and lungs of the work- her purse to buy them7
er. , through :correct posture. '• • ,
'After the legs hhve•been:sawed off, .4,1, PRACTI.CAL U,ND,HRGA/t$Eino
se -our-- ves-,.-dear y.,1: • "a-cnitali7fitandirfd, and -711e COmpan-
e "That's,: abottt eaid Blenkiren too,;'macle good. practice; The
to cheerf '11 H h
• su ere such tor-
tures on that galloiS that' he welcomed
any kind of stationary fight.
"Serye out,the arms," said' Sandy.
casters shoiild • be fitted,. into
them Next ',give the table a tiler-
°ugh,- scrubbing, dry thoroughly; and
it, not ''perfectly smooth,' sandpaper' it
•.wpil era mak Off one side in inchea,
'th i 1 or black enaniel When this
• Is drY give the table a coat of varnish.
• If -a ilewirig,room;', where • the busy
• mother .niaY drop, her Work • at any
, , •
incanent and 'find it imilistuillea upon• „
, her return,„ is netposaible, 'a chiffonier
wjth drawerifor work .and supliesIs
1greti_t,eonyenience. Much very vain-
• able time, is Wasted looking up one's.
materials • ' •
Hangers inexpensive but are
moat, .,eanyenient and necessary, for
-.after Jim, sections, .ef 'a 'garment are
,sewed together, it it,ninc.h betterfor
: dresses to rather:than folded
and laid' fit Et•drovie,r: .•
iection cit an ;old broomstick or
„ :nhovel handle smoothly. Covered. with
:two or three , thicknesses,. .of • cloth,
Makes •411 excellent 'sleeve-ieam.lotti,d,
mai, it can be '.tilipped Into the slee,ve
/without danger of stretching or creas-
„Mg Diecarded. Eiafety-razor, blades
are better” than either scissors or
.ives•for ripping Pint thoulci be at
hand when fitting times come. A small
,cuthipri, with a' long loop through
-which the belt iiiitYliippeti—is" a '
great Convenience. tiny safety pin ,
•
,
may be sewed to the 'tape, arid used 4547— This style a -"corribination"
when no • comprises drawers . portions,
joined to a long vest. The -top may
•
•
• ourt irrpcioit OUTIN'GS. •be Seished with the shaped shbolder
- 1
. -Winter brings Lniany ...problems ,to -°r in c,amisole style. •
, the mother ora r.',4tter...11. CIA in A.J.Sizes:
..wer---w-eather. Small,- '24-a; Medium, 38-40; Large,
often Makes it iinPoclsible for them to 42-44; Extra Large, 46-4S inches' bust
be: out-of-A:Ion • and even the most nielistire. A Medium size,requires
eomrdea._ „_,, • yards-of-36:fridh niaMrial. '
couectiori-of-playthhwation r
••• Avil1 lose -its charm: • ' Pattern , mailed' to, .any address onOne day' ,
/ tried an experiment.. I reeeipi of, 1°•° in 'Bilv9r or 'Ectiln•Pe, by
had arrived at the coriclusion that ourthe Wilson, Publishing Co., -73 West
, trouble Must be to the lack of the!Aedeklesist.Ifeors, '-rrCtetitotT•,°01.a°11-pt°aiterA.111.1°W two
outdoor exercise and abunderit fresh
air. I decided to, bring the great out-
doors. inside. '• . ' ' SCORCHED SPOTS.
I 'got the baby into bus Warm Wraps ' If Strong unlight does net draw ..
and tucked him intelit carriage .
,•,: ...!:•„Nr.plOityz-of-•:131anicetsv-'“-"The,..7oidefehilf
with ..out f scorched"spots-dr,White goods try .
.' dren- Were • bundled peroxide:of.hydi'Ogen ',and/water, equal
into coats, CPS parts, en' spots .and hang in the sun-
• 6
and mittens-.-7myseif the sarrie-aed „ahine„ . uhieed,the.hbre.has been onm_
• • the friiiderrielits- necessary for a quick aged too much the etaine. , Will • dill-,
clean-up caraPa1kr1 collected.' Each , appear. I wOuld suggest a' thorough
Child Was ass:dime& a task that 'Would, ripsiiig. after. the ieroxide treatment,
„keep him busy for ten Or "fifteen min.71.0.therioiee the white materials Might
'• utes. Then mining '.inyeeif .with the' become,,aipiored 4'rid, yelio.w,____L, 1.1.
i :carpet sweeper and citurt MO, I.threw I ' -, • .1, ' , .
open: eery door and Window in the' . , '• ' '
hoUse„. and the. fight ;vas' on: '' . DARNING LARGE HOLES., '
The novelty of the venture pia,de an ...An effectiVe way of mending large
,
„ Instant appeal to the children • and holes in stockingt or knit underwear
they went at theirodifferent. jobs' with is to take. a Piece of net, baste it over
_ a
right.eciod -.'will. ,' 4.0.er fift:On.,./pin.-.,1jhe rent :and-dern,hrough'ity„ •_;...-....t.-
te. a",,a ;merry:, ,aetiVitt 7:cifi'liidi,k, Wei) . . ,- • r.
done and the • Windows .and ' tioorsl''• .
eIesed. ?' Then i 'looked aboutto takel • • '
,
•
WII.EN RUGS dun!, -
..-..14.00 oT4he •reaultr. - -:,.."---• : ' ... -,- , ••. -
.. .• •,.„ . ' , :,
..„ Nothing it more unsightly in a rohna :
all, the. dhildren were 'rosy than', a rug etir101 pii at thecorriert
‘, qyAsi clear-eyed and .lap.-,1',!mg happily dr ends. •St.tch rugs,. should be given
over their new indoor 'sport. Next, a _coat of shellac on the wrong side,'
• -applied to a- depth' of faer ihdhes all
Owl , SPA,* . 11,111111 „has dried yOU will find' the rug will d A iirel...;_• ',,,n around the - edge, When the Shellac ,
Money , Maker. • . ,,- • -_—, ',
, . . .
lie fiat-. • ,-." -•, •
Someone required in every Town In KBERIN.0.7THE7.0HILDHE•kl\TEAT.
•-Canada to-ell'-anecetsary Product, ... ' ' ' .
Whieh is, universally used. You can If. - mothere ,Of tinall children ;will
,
.4tatrta'YOur predent income by secur• arrange a infrior, comb; towel, and so
Mg the exclusive rights to sell this, forth, `within reach of the little' !ulnae,.
new product in your holm Town.
Students or, anyone wishing ' to .earn 'the problem of keeping them neat arid
Money, for •theinserves can offerhi Clean will he greatly redtleed.• ' •
oduct during their leisure time: Only They appreciate haVing' their own
Very email detrital is .required, 9.8 Ith0 things forlifidividual Use. If the titip-.
ere large and a start can be ply Of small towels• is limited, make
ei.
by PiIrChasing a small quantity. them *of small flour tacks, 'herriiiiing
,rite Solar Products CorripaitlY, 38, with Colored thread.
t,l'Orente, Street, Tormito. ,
Manger was the weapon I ,knew best,
and I didn't miss much. The attack-
ers never 'hacl a chance, for their only
hope ,was to rush us in numbers and
. •' he Companions .all canled''rifles the whole "party being ,not ,above twO
• slung acrost•their shoulders: Ildssin; 'dozen, they were far too feW. I think
from h deep eaddle-bag, ' brought out I killed three,, for their bodies. Were
rifles and bandoliers for the .rest of lett lying,- and wounded at least six,
as. As:I laid 'nixie adross rny saddle, while the rest fell back towards the
bow,I saw. it was. a German Mauser road.. In a quarter of anhour it wee
It's hell-for-leitther till „we find a "They are clogsof Kiircls,", I, heard
place for a stand;" said Sandy. "The Hnssin say fiercely. ."Oirly a Kurdish
game's•against us this time" Oriamer would. fire ',en; the li•verY of
• Once more we entered the , mist, the Kaaba." •
and presently found better going on • Then .1 hada • good lOolcj'at Sandy.
a' long Stretch of even elope. Then He had 'discarded:shawls, and. wrap-
earne a rise,,, and en the crest of it Pings and stood' up. the,'strangest.
saw the, sun: Presently We dipped into! costume . man ever . wore in. battle,
bright daylight' and looked down On al Somehow he •had procured field 'boas
bread glen, with a road Winding up It and :an •old pair of riding breeches:
to, a pass in the range. r had expect- I Above. these reaching vvell below his
ed this. It was,one way to the Palan-imiddle,. • he 'had .a wonderful silken
tuken Pass; some Miles south of tbeijibbah or ephod a bright 'emerald.
house where we had been lodged. • II call it silk, but it was like •rio silk
' And then, :as- I looked southward, have ever known, so 'exquisite in the
sit -w what I had; been Watchirig for kir' mesh, with such a -1-----
-. and depth in
atid 'on its top was a raiz of , rockI on 'the breast, •which 'Ole dim light
.It was the cestrot : my • persistent I Could not trace 11 warrant no
dream. '• •„ • I raz-er or costlier ' garment was ever
On that 1 jproinptly. thek . charge, exnosed,to lead on a bleak .Winter hill.
"There's our fort,” r "If wel , Sandy' Seemed unconscious a hie
once get, there we can •hold it for % a' garb. His eye listless no more, scan -
week. Sit down and ride for I neilthe-holloW. "Thaes only the over,
We bucketed down that -hillside like,•ture," he cried. . The opera will soon
men posteised,. even Blenkirdi atiCk- 'begin. We Must put -a breast wOrk up
Ing . on manfully 'among the ...tvvists In these gaps or they'll. pick, us oft
and turnt and slithers.. presentlY We;from. a thousand yards." , ; •
were on the roaiiiipd„ were...racing-I meantime,, roughly -dressed
Mama • and empty wagons. I noted Whidh Hussin provided. It was from
ward and ;few ping hp. Hussin. into his left shin. Then I took a hand
secured ,u14 a. passage; but' indeed our works 'th corriple.e• the Circuit of the
of the latest pattern. . • allover. ' .
days. A little hill stlit the valley, it. Someqitrange pattern. was woven
'putt' iiitirehing infantry and gun ,Titienkiron's Wound. with a •linen. rag
that.most seemed to be moving down- it 'ricochet lahllet, Which'. 'had .Chipped
screazned .some words in Turkish' that ,With the others in, :gettiiig tin earth,
crazy: speed leftthem staring. Out defetee:•. It was rio easy lob,for we•
of a..eorner of my eyes. I saw that 'wrought only with our •knives and W Ore he -Is gathering material. for the
..pingclainctneemed...to..bentrr.a,-daiile•Of• gravel As We worked J took , stock : y• a tit* off most of his wrap-. had, to dig .dPI:l iihMil.:-belew. the, spo*y. Itiiliki, Volume „of _his ..world LTra*ele•
:Among the discoverieS Which • 'havo.
rich corer. But t' had thought fer;„no- of :dui refuge. • .. ;', • , ., ' ' , been ,unearthed by Prcifessor ' Spines
-
thing except thelittle hill, now elm* ' "' The. dcattrol ' wilsh_roirgitircle-:-zolals--irtuthod of excavation; are,
frofiting__usLacrOss--the-7shallow7g1W
about- ten yards :in diameter,, its in- adver,tipeinents.4atinted in every ColOr
•
4o horses could-brettet that steep terior-filled,:yvith boulders • and loose of the ralribow.. There are theatrical
W -
. .
-
_, e ,eygea jt6 In into, the _hollow; and stones, .end its parapet about four, potters; posters 01 politiciant„'who'beg
tbeh hastily clionou.nted,' humped the feet high._ The nnst luid cleared fat
— the people to elect, them to the city
packs, and -began to stniggle up the a dolisiderable space, and li"con. gee
aide of the geilltr.ol. It, was strevvn the 4irionediate surroundings; west, ,councii, apt! letters frOin' Women adv
the, Wall tivo ladies recommend a
With 'great boulders, whidh ;gave a 'beyond the .h011atir was the road '-vve eating the, choice , .01 their feverites.
kind of cover' that very soon *as- had Come,' where now the remnants 'of
needed. Pori' snatching, a_glanee,hack,.
• • • •
• •. (To be continued.)
•
'Oeselondfibefore•the norther scud•
Across the ilntry„ sky, ,
Like sails•in rthboni blown away
- 'Prom' all the ships gone by—.
The ships that labored. In the wind
'..And wallowed in. the foam, '
And sornetimet never' taw again
'The harbor lights- Of heme.,•• •
Brown •shilt of barks from tropic .parts,
Bel�wthe stormy 'capes • "
With cargoes...Of ,inaliogenT
", And parokete •and apes— '
Gray sails of schooners Odorous
• Of Ilsh and briny tete,.
White saila or.clippers- sweet With
,„ • . • • • .
. -scents'
• , .
• ,01 bInnannin and ter....
• ..•
The. snowy cloths that towered aloft",
. ,
.0n 'frigates. proud and„tall,
Patched canvas lost from dingy sloops'
In hurricane or Squall; • ..' •
Tepgaliants; royalt, ,flying jibs",
•,'Ballooriing in the plata., .•
Ripped front- the'Staya and swept away
To black abysses vast: '
,
. .
Borne the ,tiempest's thrashing
, ,• •., „
. 'between -the sky aed•spume, '
"-They 'rode -the -elemental Strife
• :Arid .vanished in the gloom— • •
The clouds before the ,norther',.fly,,
ghosts- of, sane
:biotin -long age Odin • hablesis ah!Dri
-That, ionndered . .-1.
nina Irving.
P •
'Row the ompeutna.
Advertised
The Pompeiahs were past masters
in the art"of, potter advertising, writes
Frank G. Carpenter from , Naplea
tbe pursuit were clustered: North, pertain. 0, Lolilum as Chief otthe Pub -
the hill fell steeply to the Valley bot.. lic Buildings and Reads. New Paint --
tom, but to the, south, after a :slip, Ings have ben discovered both on the
there „„was•,:a -,ridge -".which 4 -shut , the inside -and -outside -of-the-liaises and
view. , Edit lay another fork of the 'especiallyen the walls of the "Street
streain, the chief fork I ' d, of • Xbundance;" where mast of the
wisps arid streamers of mist, now it was evidently -followed by the Main work has been done. • ,
lung 'about that hollow. The rest road to the pass, for .,j Saw It crowded -The. method of exdaiation," Mr.
,11
I saw that our- pursners were on the
road above us and were getting ready
to _shoot.
'At normal—times we would have
been easy, marks; but, fortunately,
ISSUE No. 3-24.
Idinerd's L.inlmont wisdi Cid*,
?..
•„,
.•
• - • - Carpenter writes; "which, 'p:get
Pter
, • ,
Spinaziola has ehiployod for '..the last
ten years Is as different !rota the,' ?Id •
*ay as that of the steam shovel com-
, pared With the fingernail. ...The old
rnethodwas to'go with Welt -and spade
straight down through the earth • Into
a hous br street and dig. out the de-
' abnrit:p' satv°ePdPifulgeOors7.loyr. ;.sttrtehelS8. w'Ita• lilts
• , ,
-now, the -ground is .CarefullYsurveyed..
and, then takiii 011 in layers abont as,
• thick as a finger -nail, Impressione, are
„looked. for,andwhen-fountatte'Model-
• 'ed -and the parte of the houses' which
• r 'have 'disappeared. Or been burned are
reconatrildtethas they were in the past..
Every article folind in ,a house Is left
• Intilde. that house an it is sarnetinies
'Possible to redonstitict the 'furniture'
and Rut it back Where It ttocidi• Iui ohe
garden tho Old fountain fs'plaYing as
lt -didlin the days of ,the.Cheaars .and
'the very aithio.nlants,7whibb.grew-there
then' are being repladed by the ,aid of
botanists of today."'
MY BROKEN CHAIRS.
When had 'chairs with 'the hottoins
liroken Out, : l'ised- te -get new ones
at the ten -cent store that lOoked well
but. WOuld not last • Then the idea
striick me to try heavir tin or • gat.'
, vanized „iron cut otit to fit in under
the .tcn-cent hotter*, It • makes the
, chair stronger than ever,—II. 'M. T.
Tat
Of MIR.
,
- •••••44..‘ ,
•••••
'.'••••••
•••,
f •
•
ICATIO,4111
• '
40.L.
• .1
'Olkst olve.
, .
`•ta.t4Itt , LInInient Me Oandrull,'
Per the peace that IS the sweetest isn't
„ ,
born of .minted gold,
And the joy that tette the longestand
,
• still lingers when we are old,
n� dini and distant pleasure—it is
not toanorroWs Prize, •
It Is not the end of toilingL-or the
rainbow of Mir .sighs,
-every day within us --.-all the rest
•
'end the iiheitiP1Pedtbarbtmis6—the gladdest:is the
•
soul that build,L•atdbgare.A...,, (jue* si.
==q,
ST. JOHN, It,13.,
NEW DRY D
CANADA POSSESSES T
LARGEST IN WORLD.
I ancette trea
portant POsztiOfl=Qf P
• . an Atjiitltic •11
. A . recent., event 'of outstan.ding
.portance was the opening: et the new
,dry dock at ,Bi...lehM
sign:at-Oat.
setril:14ntglP• "thPeQ.rtiatrhgeesi,!_driY°-tditqlca;it?ifn''''Pt7;"'
World. .-itls.,an evehthf•particularsig.....' -
.nificance preShging great:InAindss.on
Canada's' ,Atlantte • coast •end. ,
still • aeetlier .0s:dinghy. theniany• , •
evidences of faith le:•Cane's, future.
expansion and: development 'of, mer-
cantile trade' Mid' general' Atlantic
coast activity. •
• The general.,dinienstona ef•the new
dry dock ere: --Overall leugth, .•,
feet.;,..:clear width at :the entrance, 125
feet;• With 42 feet of water, pver. the
entrance sill at extreme high ,tide. .A.
comparison oflthese,,-of with
thos.e of other modern 'dry docks ,dis•
!closes:the fact that the Vt. 'John dry
deck actualiy..the largest the
. . ,IiraorgriOde't vet:J.:pal toing In M.dleady. 1..sth4tiy, ,th5;
,
A' Hard Job In .WInter.
, .
1St Bird—"Whatclut:lookin' so, gluth
about?" •• "
„
2nd_Bird—"This is New Year's •Day,
an',I want to turn over a new leaf; but
where in Heck am I going, to get the
leaf?" •
,
. •
"The Tewer Of London is safe for „e„
'another 1,000 • Years,: despite the
alarming stories of cracks, etc.," says °
an authority:, '•
• . a
are generally"in 'agreement in coecud-.
the that vessel. dimensions have now.
.reached their' ecohornic maximum, it .
would appear' that unnecessary length
Is 'provided in the pt. John dock. •How-
ever, as_ thla ,dock provided •
iwith",-an. intermediate sill, Which, Will • •
44
permit' the •hple,Acink-to_be....div-ided
Into two. entirely, separate chambers, .
the !neer, 500, feet in 'length and the
outer 650 feet' in Jength,' it will be all•.
predated that this_length is padded
la that it provides for (he accommoda-
pee at One and the sante' thee of af,,
least two -:moderateiY, sized. N;e•S'Sers'.
and stih;Can'be when the:
•Cp91012. arises :•. as •tt Single .dopking
chamber With suilicienf capacity to*-,
;commodate the largest veSsel ',afioat
• today.- •
•
• „'.; • .0tillitquip ed.
An all:thiportent 'a unct to stitepied:
. . •
rit'dfy dock Is a cemplete,and-readlly
7deestib'le rePair:dhant, and consists
f, 1.;? olopo4 -to' the 'pewer.house,, aj!
achine elioe• • hiacktinith
nd'fabrieatineelloP,•aa,weil a,s. a ear:
penter -shop anirstores lui1dthg, with
seatintkatorey, adconalhodation•2'.for'a .„
inould ;loft; An:iirldergronnd ti-;
cininec'ts. all boildings, With the. 'po
se„ that el"nctrical. energy, iteat
for heating..and uoWer`;,:etunpre.55,,ieti air. '
and water will ‘ he . supplied -•te each,
and all.with•nothing the.riature .of..
,Wirea.or pipes' ahove'grinind to:inter-
fere With the.nioyement of rhaterihis •
between ihe and,the"docks.
'These buildings are 'eciiiipped through;
out with all.neeessnr,y machines of euf='
Sclera size to ,:hanale .4nY daisef., re- ,
Pair werli that May origibittefreniany..
vessels which .fiie dry •doelc itserf,can-
.77J7. dinat. that:the 'NOV'•
B ns -
wick r-itiiovernment, t•---Valleing • the. de,
helencies Of Bt., John in. this 7.reiPect#
and •rrtindful'of ,the •niedi 'of"fully de•;. •
,veloping the ,Ailaetic suceeeded •.•
'WOMEN! DYE FADED
THINGSNEW AGAIN
Dye or Tint Any Worn, Shab-
by Garment or Drapery.
• •
Each 15 -cent •Ritertage "Dlartiond
Dyes" contains. directions :so simple
that any woman can 'dye (jr tint any
wern,faded•thhig new, !wee if she
has "never dyed .before • Choose any
cikor at drug store.
JIG-gAVIT'
• PUZZLE
;. FOR THE •
CHILDREN.'
'775en thlour• •
• Wrappers hem
y • •-
hi iiitefesting.liritish.ctipital under:,,
taking the constrifetion ',Of 'a ,hrs&Cii
drialpek and ,repair Yard at.St:•Jeliti.,',
CoestructiOn Begun in . , . .
„Actual•-coristruction?"-operations7vere;
cornmenCesl.M. 1912, arid in 1914, at the •
outbreak •of the ?I' War, ,eitteitsi'veaera- ••
--7-ticintr-wertr7inrat-'-rthe.`exe.ava•
tion and ..preparation of the .dry tleek.
Site: :Like '.niany' other projectr, this .
soon •felt the-Pinch:of War tirees-,'With
the, resultant ithertage .and ; high::: price
of both -labor and Materials,: arid after,
atruggling along tlireughthe hrsi two ,••
years ef the war, further „oPerations,.*:.
becameintptitSibriej—NOT.until the end,
-of the &Mid further iinterestbe .
aroused in this ,tindertakint,nrhich, lay
'hormaid.until the Pall. of 1918, when\
• aanaditin eapitalimiderteek to resume',
the work and,carried it thrOugh to eon-• .
The, new dry . deck „presages- a " Yet,
enhanced trii-PoOta rice • (0 r POk
John. Already it has,' an hip.ditant
place in CanadaV'ecoziomic as,,010.
.princliiar,,,•yilutlet on the Atlantic coast, •
, " pert 'et „whiten' shin-
. at • eXports • arnoent •lo nearlY„'::
$106,666,Q00..per year 'arid its. iinportt
td $5(1,906,006. A./3 the terreiinuf of two
Canadian ', rallWaYs' With` 'Wrenches
•
I radiating. from"it, It can,„.W.c.11,arid. ext.,
t.,,oditihr.iry'''''Sefriv-e' the DOM Ilti4O '.
toadh, with the. United States' IS ado-,
matte through 'fine .serVices:niaintatit,....;":
-ed &last ports,. '
has connection Willi prectically--every
4ouncry .of .the: globe:through' 61.1,1.ce....a-
notlatained With the,t.inited
li7rarice, Solith
-:kustritira;'Nkiv -Zen find,' 'Herrn 'Ida and
nianiv Other localltica. • ';
4.4
sr
1%
Is this:the-best
Bovril- „Poster?-
.
A cup of hot I3ovril
pages the gap between meals.
,
,yoraftantled, •
• "Ir0w,did4tubliis1y make Money
eo,quiOly?" .
'Why, he eStablisited lir,erich junk •
shops close to. all „the 11446g grade
cr9saiakaaf,fhe : ''
• wHEN MASHING 1?,(Y•rATiOiti;
A pinch Qf baicing. i)ellMet beatlnto en
potatoes while mashing thenimill
mLke theni lighter 41)(1111116m. In tip.
pea/lane° without taking- anything
•.front the..taste.—r. W. S. :
otfoii ,
' rounded atieee,ss, •
1.
hell,
•••••••
*?-0