HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-03-27, Page 2•
V7.
BOW-LEGGED *HEELS.: •
,Oti,of the-Yery,enrest,"WaY to ifern,„
.01-, Tourautomobile tires in record
t,i j to permit your • wheels to get
alignment.
-'•-•er.e,-; a ntnnher.of :Conditions
hieb'4014eni:1 to -throw a wheel out
line; nPirit'the great trouble is that
fikivirfm,sit4t*Ile„Te he'cannoteee his
i.eIwhen the car Is in •nietion, and
,
Ala)/,' net ,-realle Viet yg4 the
ub1e is until• much , damage has
a 'done., If a meter -driven. Vehicle
against a curb i so' that the
Wherekr'e baBt thou left nie. now
"MaalY & dItitnithti:
174444K414O11.10tliell
,' ":. ,f, , : ..... -, • -- ,
; Way' 0411..eier one illieme •• . ,
t „e, ajn-ings on .yo,nr ear, .take. them • Win thee hacc again7
apartat least once a year and place ,w10,th,n, juroue, and the.tri",0 ,
graphite between the leaves. This will' Thou Itrilt-seoft.a4, pale.'
keep them -flexible and will Ward the . Spirit fn.is?, ",•010u•,haut turi.ut :-
ear • the ,Preteetinli- - for: Which the, All it those who need -thee not,
springs „were, ;,...designed, instead•_of, , • , „, ,,, ;:j, ,, ,,.,.
them ;getting rusty MA stigeeieF I loVesoneW,and-all the forma
very- Perceptibly: .- .` Or' the radiant:0*i:
,. . ,.-,-- ,- •. • • , I Jove araves•,-and winder and stone*
1.,IMIll'IATION OF , VIBRATION ' ' •Everything Alinest ,,-- -' .
' -
LENGTHENS LIVE • OFCAR,' Whilt
,e‘ia'iTatare'S. and may be
' ThenUmber af forme. of ...Oblation 3.,In-,,--4ted.-.'.,b3" tilanA-• Mise`17- •
on -,a ,,motor cat are legion, • • Spree'. of
f,,p,42.,.‘:eouritrietiork his, .`,thene-cen be . hninated:' others :can I I°T° tlitlignil'-netlitud44
eolo, •,-
• e only be lessened; most or thein are '.And
,such society'11:eriible.,::.*OM•thiniViiiltt to.gi4741..
ve, and -
euiet„, we And good;
'i -
_,,, unpleasant and some are destructive. •
Ae IS;
-,.• - iit, something
Is, natnritref.". 4.1113 part 'If, 'Vibration could .be eliminated 'fineBetween thee. and me'
111**04* the ',Wheel in Place.'1,5;--!* '-,-,-.Ter.tireln the car's life, would be Consider,
, What difference? but thou , doet *in.
' leiadriVing• Over rengll, roO•Oe .0.,enR- I al? !, • •
13' '''''411ened. To dream of 'Such a • • •
• . sese -, ' . • •.-. '
. ..
The Minch I Seek., not love them less.
- ' - `' l'able to - - . i-er-.3enuld be like chasing , • . -., . .
indented With 'PIM Is. AtSco l• , thing, hewe , --,.. , --4-- . ,,,, . , „Ar . .h, has
... ,
. ' ,I* sudden strain to 9.1*Mi i'" tainboWs; interestirfg'-'1).2--„'t • " - ', T 1- Le. th h
0.' '' akiwa `Wrench -a wheel 1 e
wituno chance Of success -The obj - , •••;:,liese light ban fle%
then, of both theI designer and tie.
.L..ut aboveiill'Oli4,7;;,,t,ttniiii.'
user . is to geep unnecessary :vibrations . ,..,
e•ipirit, I love thee-'•'•".- .
on the blacklist,. ' '
rn
A:driver shouldrealize
PoArtieniale.,,tOedriVP care-
eipa_rniittinge One ..Wheel to
i rut suddenly,' but, if peg-
0,:eteler.the Vehicle, so that 'all
le will have ,a fairly: Smooth
surfaCale'Pane -one
,wheels _ take the change
, ,
at,e, necessary very gradually:
7tnne5 "a'slight :accident; Or a
• KEEP BATTERY UPRIGHT.
Always keep the battery in a ver-
tical •position • in taking it out or re-
•placing.it in the par,: Sedjeamit'inay No* Net to Eat: ._.....__,......, . -,..eseeer--- -----e------ . . - „
• . '..Continents and .Seig'.. -'Float on the .Earth'sSurfate;
he in] the lacittorn Of the jars, andtip, . :.,Table Manners, In the eeventeenth .
,..Atrnnicausetity,the'fOree.of' a ping'tlieni ineyeause it to get betWeen
''..bleVrAoie2,,, - '. acto,Ari?the careless 'the plates •and •short-cireuit them. cearslderahle improvement; it we may. ' There
' curveis„,,':Or--:-deseending . ' _,. ' . • ' •__,'• -' .''''- - .t,,4k" 1,701001:y11w 1,11,,noe_..thitt lieheith., -•,;;' *Mt ,,netlong • - -480,..n, Vinient Phalt, •:,- 'Which lii.Still In ,An ,uneeliclifiaff,' Of an Immense puzzle. ''..Itls .not -Paris'
storm- along the crank of '11 &ranee,alonebUted Jandahi
, St 'state; ,. -, . • -. , - .,-'. , t all iahabiwch
, . . hills,'•atalr,higli speed will , ' TIRE SP 'RKAPEAS.:OF WOOD. ' *Coley gave Ite: young, ladiee in -1675; . .
'' "wegerier .hY hie SurPrisinP tYPotlife have the'right to the diaturbing mette
' f. ' • * . • It must be adraittedthat Miss Wooley Yici'leilt.Plal it.'1311(36k 'the Beism°giaP114
ii, . tiel4e.,:er steering rod. ' • ' Tiro spreaders Can be mad of . the wielded a: trenehent pen.'. : , .... , • • of the observatory at the: Parc •., Saint- File, maintains • that fermorly„, that is to, Inuetuat nee. mergitur."
_an:. eniennti, le, me are . used ous sizes to meet the demands
...... , .. , , • , lylatir,• near ' PariS., The movement of say, •-some 'Myriads' of.,:ce.nittries 'ago, "Until lately, our. doctrine • of the
' • -. "G. 7
Precnntinit-,:innnt; be tft:See• that .t)re rePair, 0 0P- ' For, this PurPPSe entlewomendiscover net ,b7 any orvplous, gesture your angry ,oroetite, the, earth was not nearly, 80 great as all the continentswerewilted in one firmness. and ' stability, of: the earth
. . ... • •
0,':''':.ferred: These should be about, 'ten ,
*****:°1''*:t1.6.°.**feC't117.4.aight; 'W"Cl:' Wilt 'SeiVe best,
111141*.b°11g Pr.e.' *Or fix your, eies, tele greoabi. on the at the time. of.the Japanese earth- 'single- bioek; and. if, One .ceUld..put. to..., oottba tho land of last.. dreams to ibis
M!it Mii3*P'0111'Plesslji placed the
that morewaythan .re'irnisti:'-te-ketirifteeeseary diagonal inchee. long, ' thiee- inebe?. Wide : end, nritt before „014, its, if 3,,o,i: .,,,,,out(t, do- Oakes, but atliie csnalhering - the .eie. e4eer 'on vaiinnu mut. coasts of.',111e, one oil ours, . of sentiment and human
•
,,.. „ ii ,, ;: wear. . . . .
. . . . .. 1 vbur. : , •.• 0.'Ycgt .thicult.. tanCe Of the sea in the French; caPi- 'Atlantic,' Me woUld'hnd that -fit-' Vowe. This- land of the living and the
grind ,
erie, 'belt thick. . The step-down for :the ' the recorded . shift was enough to •ted neatly into:ene aiiether, and the , dead, Which wabelleved' to be forever
Varkine• tire siees-Man, be u4eckie:any would s."44°*.. In ourving. avoil, 1,1143.,
I: bring into. much prenninenee the'tlie*Y. evideric4of the underground disloCaz' anchored tO the •bottein.et the sea, is'
lenfag .your fingers in your mouth and gth-that may be :found convenient lloking them . aft6r you . have -burnt of Wegener; tliegeolegist; that the ire,- tion 'Would also,..tit117.: In A ,like man- but an . inert mese' of wreckage:, drift-
theni,•: Close 'our lips when :yogi:, pat ditionally •belleved immobility ' of con- ner the, ''contiiiinis Of., Australia:and nig About on a viscous subterranean
tinents'is,tailaciotee and that in.reidily the Antarctic would be found' to Pt in 'see. - ''' • " -. -: '. .' • ' '' •
and do ,nat smack like A Pig,, , rill,.not
, eo fop, ,oat your oeo: ks, instead • 'of being '• ,firral-Y. •11xed,. -the *to the now empty notch ot. the.Medite.t. ' ' "Stiliwho „knows,' perhaas senieday
,rour. mouth
, Pair Of. Scotch bag- Americas, Asia and .Europe .frodt ante, ranein Sea. -• ,, , • • ., .• :, ,,, ',..; : , ', . millione' of years hence, these drifting
alien Swell like a
btiNE* ;u: do',..very unooulcov to oak,. sc., ,less17, about like Masses :Of' 'seaweed • . This' . 'eetee.eealeary. ° , 44 . auggp a itv e' ••Centinents . may Come: together in. ,a'
rout touo ao, you ere tweed eci , blow: atter ': ' ' .''':' • .. - -. -•., ' . • hogrecgtliwehsitache*ZxliiiiitillibrtZewntihph.e,Teatitl--:14.364srtartirds•'-u7,!1•J'n' a.1a.i.°1.4'" wiiit.:(71:i:1'
large a draught that your .breatli is, et, in the,' Sargasso, Ori a Stratum, of :puld. •:,
Eittengly to re:paver • yourself. .•
• 'Welting under the beading, ,,,,A New 'bed ;fauna and , gore • of continents 'This earth clf. humansorrows, ,viith
Contribution to the ''I-IistOrY of • the :Whieh to4hii'are widely apart-for:Sic:- Its 'tOlitee"..aucl ItS haw,* and despairs,
,
Earth," Charles Nordmann say In 'maple,. Africa' andSouth America:, filrifts
Biggest Concrete Bridge. . Hatin".:,' I' • . , ' •.,, . ... ' ., &MOS*: the ',Ocean • for centuries,
I' ' "Numerous : observations' • ' notably'like Arthur Rimbaud's 'Drunken Shin'
•What will he..:the,.•higgeqt eciaerete - • "Here hi something ' to. Shake our that of . the farce' of gravity' and the 'hnt we : may ear of it.; like the 'Peet.
. . that ineffable ' winds have' brushed it.
bridge In tte.World' Is about to be eon- , Meet; ,concerning 'this planet •cif ours, average density...Of the earth at differ-
. . . „ .
&traded- by France, 'th connect Brest where the mediocre human melodrama ent.Parts of globe, tend to eonlirm•' lightly with their, wings:"
. .
. . •
with P;Ongan;•tei•' It will be .800" Meters, is staged .and which we Call!drY•land,l'..this 'theory. Therefore we are led to
-• . and, , alien Mere' erroneenaly • 'terra ''‘ belieVe to -day that instead of the -con- ; Beauty • Provokoth • ]thieves • .sooner
1( -ng (six miles), •consie•ting 'of arched • .
spans of 180 meters each.' ' Seven- , With the classic theories .Of• tinents. being securely anchored in A .than kohl': :" . .: . , ' .. • : .: .,.
'• •
eighth§ of lis length will cover that fithrme 'ale...al:fled men•thisnnheavai Of the -died. position, the emerging. layer of I •-'-'po- ireat..in,aet?. lia:Yeu have been
1 .'", . • - -
Muck of - the, estuary of 'the • RiVer ,•ceintinentat:mais Would be inConier,e; r.earth le -really floating on another and i4 • thought. :,...- . • •
'Elem.' ' .: •-• ' • e' ' , • • •• ,,- ' ,- • ,Iimatiihle„tut :We have,,Wesengpt,body ' denser viscous. layer, andmwhiCh serves . . - •
This Will :be, the secone.conerete hypothesis,,• • Which not only .exPlains as 'a.siipPort for'the continents. .' .: -He :tires, betimes ' that Annie tee
., . . ,
bridge einee the .war, the other being the feet-- but ,elucid-atea ••', a •drOW4
:that at St;•:Pierre du. yaivray,Whieh eniginaki;. not as' With Trisiotin, who • - e d
of: • ."Se the etiuntriee, now inhabited. hir fast tetinies- '•' . ' • . ' " • ';'.:, ,''' •
. -,-,. , -, : .. • •
,. . .. , . ,
Was , opened. -rto trate last - year -. by so far, has :Only, 7f1.01100317q4 ' With SCA: men o ifferent race, Calor and ' cus- .. The procrastinating -.'man is 'ever
. . .
President; Miller*: ... ' ''' ' ' • ' ' emnity, without results. , toms,' are but the 'dislecated , portions struggling, with.,rinn.,
- • • -, .. . .
•
, •
,Q90)
2nd [Size
$13,888
(..3,000)
3rd Prize •
$4 555 .
L11000
and -2000 other cash
prizefrom prize fund
r las (E30,900)
clonal o v• 11
Limit •
Veterans' Associations' Bovril Posta.;
COMP0109p; whi
closes 31st MARCH, 1924, and while helping
the Veterans you may
Competitors • tirrangements, of the Potters raust reach London,. England
, (address given'onticket-folder postage 4c) en or before: 30theApril 1924, '
,
'Bendyo., onatton".with- , • . ,
•
properly .filled out to any •one '
• • of the . following:
Veterans', Association of Great 13ritaln,
• 2725 Park Ave., MontrPal.
-Greet Wer-Veteralla!-Aneociatlen, CItIzn
Building, Ottawa..
Armi, and Navy. Veteran's. In Canada, 121
Bishop Street, 'Montreal. • •-• ; '
Imperial,. Veterans, in Canada; 700 Main -'
.'-futtetVna
Street,
liVri
cueineitlirga." ASsoalatlan."RoPin
Thou are love and lite! 0 domel' cetleee Building, -Ottawa.
Make 'once more m7 heart thY llama! c L 0 ES MA R c --H. 3 t, 1 9 2 4
-Percy •BYeghe ShelleY. 3-334„
. „
,
elleiese a donation Of $ •••• • 1, /* •
Please send me.....,.......TiCket-Foldens for Bovril 'Pester Com- ,
0ne7T-1oketreider-witl be sent. for every $120 given
-Name, In ...... • • •••.... •••••:••••••••••••.'•••••••••••'
..•(Mr,Mre. or Miss) , ' •,
,
Addiresa '' '''' ' 0.1.6111..,••••e:e1.6.•••••••••• ' ;et”. ' •;01,P.P.••••••••••••
•.•••••••••••••••• ' • ' ••••••••••••••••••••• ''' •
Make Cheques•and Money Orders to Veterans' Association, .
• Bovril Poster Competition. •
ClitAsmp, LIFE OF, SPRINGS.
l'yon'' -Would *ineteise the Iife of fpr the work. •
Id be Equip
adio,-Sets
. ; ;
The army acrinl world tour will be
te.Cvi,I9eu.t.'„the:ueo:ef rialto ex-
tOthe Con•
erVattati",•OCWeiglitif. the chleif of the
PAX. has EMCMM°4
eePerts,', and some fliers, be-
at this 'le: an, ,anfortunate• .dee
iiee.'Orciiigh, the wile.er- hullo
cennection.WItkaylation 'greater ate
ftighte7and,.the
safety 1,7coultect
ilight,do not
• der, 'radio: eseefitial. • '
„mitt.
c•nietigency :tallir can be 1+013611/yd im-
' anellittely bf.igilete on raihoiqUipped
_
. Pratte and; mes-
us to progrou poMtlon and
eitingee in ratites as ,Weit'ile.requeita,.
. for assistance, Pealtionreaertsarui
de-
sii-od , infertiatiOe:. • •
ipae• plan* :it 10.1iONV• pia:lined, wlllbe
equipped with a..-traneraitterand a re,
-•-eeiver set itt ifnH, England, P but *hat,
_Ohanid,
crash' is ' not announced. -The •radio
„telegraph transmitting • 'St .li, a,200
vele 'ndnenehi*no4e , 'rotaryspark
with a plane to ground' ?wipe of about
• a' hundred Miles. The antenna Will be,
sdn,gle .weilghbed. "trallIng wire;,: and
tho. *hale 4eot w;41;*.eigh approxlrnate-
17
. .
1.0 pen*. • Sit linadred Metres', ,The °1J menof the,
, .
A laperheteioyne..reeeiving set will • Pd°111°P810,•.• • ,
'also be carried In the Ornate-aloft:el The, old, plea Of.thepoor.h,ouse alt atorte,
ple.ne; but no 'redid -compete., The Aniong the. grayeatenes , in the
au-
. „
tunan sun,: • • . " •
One needs- a 'little' maple, 'stick, 7and
•
A brave Man, Were he seven times a
king, is but a brave man's peer.
I were aaked to 'name the -three
Or Harold Wismer things which were retarding civilize.-
,
London specialist, who has discovered tion. inost, I •Should say--eignorance,
a means of diagnosing certain types of , self-indulgence and selfishness -0 S.
disease through -k -ray examinatione of ',marden,
the head'. His method is, an.exemina- "
tion of the stlienoiclal cells: • ' • '
,. tranpariltting. set 18 .capable of being
&ink/erred to another. Plane' if nenes-,
- ,.:Isary.01 ,.speree and some replacemetn
t
• apparatus .vrild he carried acrosa, lie.
. ,
, •• .
, Atlantic. . • •
-L Brod
For bours • they had been together- on
Iter , trent' perch. The' MeOn• east ite
,
.tenderS,„glennt:413Walon„,the....-Youngeen4
handsome ioup1e who sat ,sitranOelY,
far, apart. • He sigb.ed She sighed
,'1 4vilsh 1 lutcl Money, dear," he, am&
travel 1
.IrePtibelliely„slie shaped herhand in
to bra; , then; Ileing, sev-iftly,„ She sped
tate. the houao., .
.Aglutat he looked .at his hand, In,
116 tralM ler a.`"nieltel.
You cannot pull hard with -a broken
• ,
In;a,bedrocan built of glass at Gay'a
••11tial4tal,'Lloridliif; patients tava been
kept hermetically, sealed ,up for ivo
•
days i in , an • atmosphere containing
...->donhte.thansnal quantlty of oxygen.
.N9'ith a' clay 'Wee lealie.,ferward from
-hiS, stone . • _t
To point out where the first wild geese
,
havegone •
Over -the-ineadOW, past' the golden
On grassy euietudeS--perbape.his Own.
. • 1 ,
NoWlYver-theattibble .gelds the,dineer
• Sounds through thesunshines where
, the late, bees pass. • -
The old .men leave their stones and
• tnidge along
The empty road. 3uit treze his plot
of grase'
Still the old one giooding does not
And atill the gray geeto, ary alongCrhe
Etlitlitbeht: iitopil'• where indolence
Jaegini ' '", - I •
"Wegenees ideasiniplerthan isgem.
eraliy ,believede'is„ ea -follows: The
continents are not,imniobile; they are
fleeting•on a sort of layer, 'denser than
the, earth's- artist,- and Nottsi. eonstk
tntes At the, seine time their snPliert, partnient,,of the: Canedian'.Nationalifirst, Year ;of the library!? bletorY,
and the hettein, of the sea; and saight•':Institute for the Blind ia located ,at; soine 790, volumes : Were leaned; last
be likened to these light pebbles 'Vilitch• 142 College St,' Toronto, It ocet4dea Year 13,015 were sent out And since
readmaket, throw on • the heavier as the ,Whole of• a sixteen-rooin building every book going out means another
< .
oppasite' the . Conservatory of: 'Angie coming in, approximately 20,000, vole
•
adian National Institute for the
Library and Publiehing 'antes hack to the libritrY, •During the
My .neighbor, Smilax, was in trouble, he ined-Avro-troken--
. ,
lintbs; and to him went • old MrS. Babble; with trade and helpful ••
hymuSe- And to his', lunneewent-litanye..neighborsi -a-good; kind-
.hearted crew, to hone he'd • seen' resume his labors, and ,be as ,
--good ae new rhe aptimiat proceeded Ws hire couch
of pain, and tiiined-iiiine-iiiiiiShine'lobee and Pleaded that he
wOuld smile again. The ..brethren his lodge were, present at,
every to make the siCkroom sweet and, pleasant as •
any maiden's . bower. , And. I, alone refrainedifroan calling upon ;,•:.;
that tOrtnred, guy, though', Sympethetle, tears were falling, at
•tircies,' from either eye. And people sild,„"Yent 'h,eart Is hardened,
you Visit not Aiele;:beiLIele 11Si), Yeti Arilficit be pardoned • for
such an eill.triok.. You hear your neighlior.SMilax Yelling until
his :larynx cracks, and yet you visit not his dwelling to 'ask him ,
.
how he stacks'. ' You carry him no pies of:cuetard, ne bowie of
-Wholegoine soup, you pack ner eandwichee, with Mustard, to
Snillax in hitecoop.." But when ,the invalid was better, and 'feel-
ing pert eud smart; he said to Me, "Oh,, donnerivetter, I thank yeti
from my beart! When sickneas Iald)ts shadow ocr me, 8119
made Me' wilt and droop, you, you alone reftiged to bore me with
sermons and with soup!".
• '
and is a department of Which the In Umes were handled.' • '
stiiiite', is justly -proud.' • . : Doyou know What a volume for the
• When this library :was first organ- Means?: The-, Bible comprises 39,
iZed,At,Owned,:a,total•-of,..g1r,volmnes. volumes :and . requires .inore than six
but its catalogue now shcieis works of fed of shelf room. • And etheriorria
literature and music :aggregating_ axe proportion. Each volume posts
nearly 13,000 numbe,rs.' The whole- a the Institute ;from two to fourdollars.
the lower fleet of the 'building ,is de- Think, then •of whet a. library for the
voted to , the hanging, cataloguing,! blind. represents in cost of books
Mailing, receiving; etc., of that large alone! - . •
collection of „books eernntising -titles' • Our Oubiishing Department prints
on almost every ,itibject_from_the "Ar- Works of various kinds from Ontario
abian Nights" to "The Cprning of , Public ,School texts to stories of the
Evolution," and from "Nature Read-; calibre-ot "Maria ChaPdelatrie," that
Are"i'' ."Theses on ; the ,Atentintbeautifullstose- of -.lifer:- in -the
Theory." ,George • Elliot and John; frontier districts of .Northern Quebec.
Buchan, Sir'Walter,,Beott And Robert , also issues for ten menthe each year
'Louis Stevenson,. Charles ' Dickens and a monthly magazine ;known as The
Conan Doyle, Daniel Defoe' and BraillaCourier. This journal.°Pontains
andraDumas, lane Austen and Char- news of the Canadian ,National Insti-
lotte Bronte, W. W. ,Jacelas and Mark tiite for the Blind and articles, peems,
Twain rub shoulders most amicably! eith, of a general and Interesting char -
on the crowded, shelves when not out, acter.• The Braille, Courier Is a huti-
oaviSits to cheer_the blind book -lovers !died per Cent Canadian in spirit and
In all, parts Of the Dorninion; source. of Material, and • the oilly
Books for the blind are carried free Magazine .for the blind published, in
by our Governrneht,' which, .was the the Dominion. Through the coUrtegy
first in the world to, grant' such a i of Canadian readers many copies, are
privilege, ",thUi Making possible the.lOrwaided to blind people in 'all' parts
fullest 'clevelepnient circulating of the world, so that the. nanie Of our
library system for readere, without • Institute is known :wherever Braille
sight. Books go and centre in speciallSr is read. If you eeme to Toronto do
Ilevised-barives'4-verappers',,which 'make- not -fail to, visit- the.'Library•eind:Puh--
it Unnecessary' for a blind Person' to lishing Dept. of tile Institute at 142
call Unori.sighted members of his fani- College St. YOU will be weleome; an4
lly. ,to negiet Min in mailing., hiq. vole yeu Will be interes
1 , >ti•V.iT SWAGGER I NG
RABBIT FROM
CA (313AG exoWNI,Doc ?
NE..s , -ri-tict`r 5 A VSUMIv)
Rom rtiacRoE.,-;.r5SELp,LillNDG
SUITS
0 0
IN RAB13ITBORO
01) c -A1•1 ALWA‘f5
. TELL A KA51311. FROM
C"613"G E.TOWN1
, . .
es, ekrr you cAN'T
-TELL Hui Pit).% -1 1!
Do -0141)91,Y.;„
W011
,
.J.,:nalifaxLis..L.seuartited from
rail: '"••I When ',this ,,•distanee;is
compared With .That Of 'MP
miles froM Halifax to LiverpciA,
some conception of the inagnk
„
tntie• Of Canada' •my be tppre-
eiated, And at the same time the
thinking Man : will r'ealize the
problem which-iiiinfrOnt0.7Can-
ada' in keeping her:people,lionio.
•geneous and: those of one Pore'
thin considerate of the welfare
of ,theaez of other 'Portiere!. Nova,.
• Scotia . has her advaritages.'nnd
probleins which are local to her-
self, while British Coluinbia else.
Must Provide for ancl.,:evere9MS
conditions •ef, .which, the enstern
proVinee kiieWs'nothing.?.•These7
sea -bordering, provinceS, llice-;
wise, are free•frem, some of the
problems :and lack some of the
' edvanta es, of the inland •re,
...„
vinces.
That the people of 'Canada
May be kept fully tafornied an
itsbonipenent parts, the Natural
,
Resources Intelligence Branch'
of the, Dept of the Interior has
published' a series of pamphlets
on the provinces and portions, of
ptoVinces and territories of•
Canada Those at present avail-
able are Nova Scotia,New
Brunswick, Manitoba, Saskat4'
." chevvan, The Peace River Dis-
-trict, and „Ceritral•,,British
utobia. Others are in c,ontse of
preinration. ' This branch has
• also 'published. a ..nninber of in-
teresting maps Aiming the na-
taria re§oUrces, of Canada.
'Copies of any of these pamph-
lets or mane may be had free on
request to • ,the Natural Re- ,
sources '.Intelligence Service,
'ILIA. a ite Interior; Ottawa.
. .
•."1.1e.RefUted.tai
On, the etinipus .of One of ,tho large
, • P., • • •
universities in the Middle :WA.st of .the
tini.ted States a niemienent has been
set in honer of One,of.the. Students' who •
died 'fighting In France. On It is thie'.
, simple but appealing; inecriptien "1,1e -
played . On the[scrub three. years;
refused, to qUit.'", • , . " • ' '" '
Day after day the bey-:4I-lansim was. ..
his zianieHvireat mit and, played 'with.
the :41iicktrb.V'. to help the, •• "varsity.".
Then ciuria the Mimnions • to
sterner genie on the,:',11elds, of ,France,
and he took MS place." . '.• •,'
" Onthe- battlefleld ho exhibited tbe
seine, lidelity as. On the football
One day WS officer • called for volun,,
teens for a'•hatardous• bit- cif ,scouting. ...
Hanson went out ;with- 'tile party. but
he . .
never returned: , And, to -day ,..thate
little-iniseription.on the, ro-
oalls
to :the fitudents'-' the '
story of ,a'man Whe refused to Mile'
"He refused' to .quit!" V.That finer
tribute Can lie" given to any manr
When. Jesus .named for ,his diseilileS • ,
those qualitii3s which he ,• regardedsits
Most '-esiientitil. in a ofirls,tien' •discinisie
he put at :tlie-.bead
tiesie;• and he closed his 414064:Mese with •
these, Solemn Words , Aaat Carry, the',
game sense, "No Man; having • pat hie ,
, hand .to the plough •and: looking liaek;
is
,- • .,
fit ,for.the kingdoni Of (ilod."..
:Restores Sight; Lost in War..
There „is Atill;hope.tor
' cording to : Dr. bonnefon, whose ex-':•
periments on Men ',blinded In.:
have hit] been Made the subject of .8
• report to the Amide*. of Mediane.'
When lie read a PreVious • report at
the 4,codeity Zir."Bronnefon • presented "
,his•grst ]successful °patient, ,
, an •
• operation; thisman could' see wtli his •
right eye.' Since thenthedeaur tas
operated on another case, a Man rblind, •
ed Pat as the ivaf ;ended; who' neVei
• inontna:' persistent treatment: re§torea
his Vision,lland in a letter whieh Dr.
onnethie- arodithee the nieMielle 'of
. his delight :.-at heing able to See hi§
, ,
711-• Bildr!:elltionnefen 'offers': to perfor'in' is
..opel-atIon.,101,any .aoldier , blinded in
. the war after a. nev‘medleal &amine::
'-tion NO dotibt, the' voluntoers will
:
Burial Place of Richard LIS
: • Heart:
• A controversy has arese over -,the •
1. iies buried. ,.Whlie the French say it
'rests beneath the ot
t
-L--A-H
dr I-- -Hallo 5 lurch • In
-• I iv -
„.
tin;g, o er. of -; oxide:lie-in- .4.
gists it, fa* Interred: 'fn ite • 'Original
chapel there, end is fa ting a banner
bearing the Words: ,
, The old grey eberch by the Toe-er hill
1 Claims Richard's heart and yeuF good;
'TradifidnInis it that Richard's 'heart:
vnt to ilea eh ,-th o u gleeNty-or-e even ty
, yan.r.§ af ter, h LS' "d eath -01.ton toles aver-
red It wa at Alt ilplk, ri e een-
' troversy was revivetity a workmaa's.
; discovery- at All ' ofl• What
neay prove 1,6 be the altar stone of the
original tbanei: .There is et least one
pint ere Which all ' eetherlties" are
,.tiereed, that elVic rogtr. m l•'•?nden,
and ' Mitten rl began ,Rb • ItIc bard of •'
tire Llon'A Heart,
Sake;',.the •favorite Japanese bever,'„
aga, Is distilled fibril riee, and has a
pleasantly exhilarating effect, Lager
beer is Also poptlar in the land of the •,
chrysanthemum- with those dan
afford it,
' .,..,,,i'•41W••••q
•