HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-08-05, Page 6•
•
l'Oettry Alphebet.
A, utility bird is rerely Worth dace
twinge the •axe being kri• excellent
szargicei inetrument to OPPIY to Sick
fowl%
Belariced rations supply maximum
oi nourisluaent w,ith eniniMeM of
waste.--
CuIl_ .
closely, for it 'does net pay to
• bord idiers. Possibly no farm live stock pays
Do not attempt too mech. to ACCQUI. as big a profit for food as dehens.
Vigil thoroughly. .Seems strange, but tree, that one
Even?' insect left to mature will de- egg Will pay for, the leeeP of a dozen;
crease the profiite of the 11001e. hens one daY, . • •
" F -i -let -h spells failure. A. hen it given a cnauce to forage
Good stock is the best foundation
but it mud, be handled with coranien
sense. ‘e ' ,• - , •
Rens are not Magicians* so 'gannet
Inannfzieture eggs unless , given the'
proper materials, '
Indolenee ' and poeltry.breeding
•• Make a combination which would
bankrupt wealthy financier.
,Just a little observation will prove
that the 1-know-it-alle never- melte
‘Imeee:Isful poultrymen.. •
Kindness shown to foils paYal, in
'Ivrea:zed egg -supply; • • ,
Ljce'Inn1407- raPidir uneleanlye
aurroundings. • • _ '• - '•.
" May chicks pushed to ,MateeitY1
*like falls layers to' ell in ' the time
When earlier hatched birds ag'e' rest -
No mixed flocks can give the satis-
faction of iv single breed. •
One's favorite breed is usually the
Izest'wiele which to win succeSe.
' Pullets should he separated from
cockerels as goon as sex eau' be dis-
Quicklr kill the chicks which . are
dwarfed or crippled when hatched:
. . • Rush young birds towards 'plater-
- ItY If You wish large profits.
.• Select breeders early and dispose of
• all Other male - -
Try' to waste •no feed, either, by
•10
over feeding, earelese methods, or
One-eided diet, -
Unless you give your look regular
'Care, they do net pay to keep.
Very few poultrymen know ae
MOCh that they can learn nothing*
front the experience •of others.
Ilene are Profitable Assets,.
will find a large part of her feed
and during certain .Seasons of the
year will be Able to lay a goodly num-
ber of eggs without any further feed.
This fact has caused the hen in a
great Many instauceg to be neglected
and shift largely ter herself. Of
Of
course when thus' .disregardedshe
cannot he expected to be We profit-
able as whengiven good care and
attention-. ,s••''
The refuse. frOin the kitchen' can
be profitably tented heti,- eggs rather
than given to same Worthless eats
.and dotti he tabie seraps..are- excel-
lent tlieV for,e`feeils. Care moSt4hh
exercised .in 'feeding refuse from the
kitchen, or. s the outcome ,may. be
fetal; If foods where large quanti-
ties of salt were used in their pre-
paration are given to the fovvls they
May gorge themielves. on this _selty,
feed and great loss of fowls may he
encountered. One party who ,
had
salted a quantity of sweet corn found
late in, the spring that this, corn was
no longer wanted for cooking per-
pbseseand thoughtlessly threw' it to
the chickens. An excessive amount
of. it was eaten and in a few hours
many of the fowl had deed. In much
the .same way a farmer loet, a fine
bunch- of - young - chickens by. _feeding_
tlieni salted' Mash potatoes.
elfAN BeTeleT_ITP:INTELLIG-
",.zila.pipAwrivigNz
army of civil, spies, as apart from, the
regular police system, which by 1870
had grown to the number of 35,000.
Ms „emissaries covered the court it-
self, the GovetMnent Officer's, banking
and commercial houses, throughout
the kingdom, as well as "all persons
who were in siny. Way connected with
foreign countries. -
By 1860 his system of observation
had 'been, extended beyond the bor-
Weber First Claimed :to Be'So., ders- 'Prussia Austria*13°hemiae
cialist to Betray. His • Stieber% _ particular duty. in his
-• Friends. z new position was to supply the Prue -
Man. army headquarters pith ‘topo-••
1818. at "Mereeberg, in Prussia, graphical, social and military infer -
was born the Man wile if net the lath -
'Or of the'Pnissiau spy System, at any
rate Was its chief organizer and Its,
• develope.r to .the point ,iit• which „im-
prOvement,,,seeras impossible, Writes
Kr. Morley .Acklorn. .•
TheTarentre-ofeStieber were:of-the
, middle class and in easy ,circume
• stances, and they apparently • destin-
ed their son for the Prussian bar, for
Iie-becameeem---unsuccessfut-iawyere•-•
. „In 1847 we 'And him attached as
' adviser AO a factory in Silesia
owned by two brothers named Schbef-
fer. Silesia was in those. days the
breeding 'ground of socialism', and the
• Schoeffer factory, was, honeycombed
with the new doctrines. • .-
• -- Stiehei' was-th-f-lo-olcout", -for
some Way of advancinfehimeelf in
RUSSIAN PORT IN POSSESSION OE GERMANS
'. N . ./... . ,....,,o .
,.. v...„...,,..,.......,„
se, law A oics•voim 4
• VOW, Not.: •Switnt...,, w< t. :
, totem-. ta• : v•ite,,,o - et ••
44,1•CiiiiaowF,',..Vrevieli"
..4.4 -..i. No.i...
...; 1" ..,....00. .**- 4
x AS, 140004.. ' i - ' . .,:••.,,i•••>,..,....4.,,,..0
4
• ,
• , The above `view is of•theliarbor et' igthae, Oaltie Itwelia, -showing the, Russian vessels taken by the
• . Germane when theeeeeenPied tlw placee the" foregrOutid is seen a; tiernme.:terPede boat flotilieee." . • '
France,, Luxemberg and Saxony.
• the social scale, and he not only Man-
-agate marry. the daughter of one of
. Ma' employers ,but he induced ' the
other„ to join the Socialist brother-
hood of which he himself, had already
beconie a Member with the idea of
Penetrating its secrets and methods
for the information of the 'Berlin
police. •
Incited by Stieber, Herr Schoeffer
-became' -such-un-ardent-reeruit-and so
violent in hit utterances that he was
rirsze_stieLantliisoned for urging
• Silesia to revolt.:
liaving thus 'shoWn the authorities,
he" causing the arrest of one of his
own relatives', that he was a suitable
-instrument for their Purpoges, Stieb-
er. was rewarded by being called to
, Berlin and attached to the Secret po-
lice with the •express 'commissioe
breaking up' the Socialist organiza-
tion. le' the capital. , •
The 'enthusiastic.- letters_of _intro-
duction Which he brought, with him
-froze - the Various . revolutionary
=dice, about Bohemia, l• which Bis-
marck had marked out as. the route
Which the Prussian armies were to
follow in their invasion of Austria,
eak which he Was even then prepar-
ing, •although the ewo,eountries were
noininally acting together as _close
friends and aliles.:
" -2• •
• Build Great' Spite*.
Stiebee disguised himself as a
Pedlar-aridk-taking a Peck fall of sta-
tuettes of the saints and pornographic
pictures, he travelled for over two
years along the -routes Which the Prus-
sian armies?riarched in 1866 to Sad-
trwa; niinutely maphig the country
and collecting So Irma valuable`7mili-
tary detail that even Von Moltke was
,••4. eteeinele.dee-••Wheueethe-,-.-wer---ended-
Stieber became a Privy Councillor of
Prussia and National Minister of
. ' • .
•.7 ; •
,•.
.• . . ., • •
THE, •A.,RIS'irOCRAT -• -OF .BERRIBS. LOOTING EGG
. . MY Peter McArthur.) .. • ' ••. .' " , -- ii
. . . . ,
.. . , ..
11
... Tehe .Writer In. a recent, neMeee'.el .:,
th...New Yerk Iedkpenderitedee made. .
;
• „ a grievous mistake, which X. lariaten to
.• • L _ correct He has libelled the currant
WOMEN Ant:* GIRLS. MAKING' -though it is quite. eyident'that,"he
• MUNITIONS FOR' ARMY. libelled it through ignorance. From
the tone ig his artmlel am convinced
that the (Weeding writer is a "nazi
Even the Very Old Occupants of the theweeed -even though he lives in
ew York.: • ..1t.ie• apparent that he
•ePoer-Houses Are - has never atrayed" ler from -a- quiet
• WorkiegMew England herne, and "home -keep-
' • .
.- - big youths have 'ever homely wits,"
She was very old, with as, kindly a He desceibes the currant as if it had.
face as I have ever peenbl
t
She hob -
t t thiis unquestionably truth l truis aseen nothing of high Mei When
the quiring something without paying for
,.
bled up' to the gateway Of the muni- reait • It's a .crime to be 'caught looting
tions works and enquired if there was
our most aristocratic fruit -the fruit in the British Army; the punishment
,azier chance of a • job, weitee James of kings as well as of ordinary Peeple.
is eeath. It's worse than that, how-
Sherliker ,fromeLeede.,,Englarid. _
"Seery, mother;' 'said the ,doorkeep-
er. ."We turn a hundred women and
gills, away eyeey morning. . Wait
till the new wing is• finished. That'll
heyour time." •
• ."A Gernian killed re1,'s0n," d1te•ex7
• • z et, • '
BRITISH le0M/dIES• OCCASIONAfee
LY HELP • THEMSELVES.
Murphy -Got Away With a Freciouis
' Egg and,. Fell in a' .4p•
.• Mudhole.
Looting is a military term • for ac -
Listen do what this person has to say: 'eVer, if you're Caught by the owner.
' -"JulY - -.opens with 4he.cuerant, a e I- don't know what the -German.
humble sort of fruit but beautiful and '"gas" is like, but if it's anything like
wendeeeene helpful, - The bush ,give the hot anger .of an indignant French
the pioneer no trouble, for it would
grow easily anywhere, ebore neglect Peasant woman, it must be pretty aw-
humbly, had ese haughty manners and fLuein'dwrenit4pinnireirr, S'
. Harris :Dere in
plaineciin aeshaky etheee. iq want to always did its best." ., From reading
mr would imagine that the cure ' Perscwalbr' I've only had one experi-:
make a bullet tOltill. a GeXinan. ''. i -you
tent "had never walked farther than i ell"' and that thee& my nerves se.
'APpen I'm wrong .. 5. , !openly:it's:
wicked to te ,ev such a wish . • , ,; . Fifibury;" had never Sethi' court life, in that now 1 alwaysputIllY hands
but, a • German killed, my ' son." ' • " •I nd had-heenille_ conMenioreand
fokeereof huinbre ifeimie whc;cenid--not-I
com_ , in. my , pockets and whistle whenever'
pass anything that doesn't belong to
' Rene lit UP her eye as We:Eh-ebb-Mat
Saverie and all great chefs. .•-•: Did the Shades of ene;---111ileas; ' ide-ceniele; itlookslike
an 'orphan g,1 that wants cherishing.
'away with • the renewed intimoticn. afford' • anything better.
. s n Canvess-back -duck? •Ielo-
.. . . • ''' vem o --or•
t poor., mail who- wrote that zieVe ' t ' About 8 o'clock one nighte:. "seine.
where ire Flanders three ofeuewent
that ,an oportheity . for. work would
come evithetheeaddition. of ' thd
tver •suezeededin getting away With
an 'egg from th gUard-roonl.
Spud Murphy wila •bis naMe.
had to wrie'gic about 00 Yards across
innddrrowgrerougclliPealractibBe 0114eTteli
in the" doer to get t� the Net.- 4eet
as be WAS ftOttbliO0 in the dark, the
guard heard Idm,Ing turned out,
Rimd Made 4 hUrried grah, got an
fligl tbuyr 'Tee glidn arr44. ft°1:4441had
4
strict ordcrs .to prevent routing, and
they Meant entitling •Murphy and get.
thig that egg. They'd have fired, at
him • only the report • might have
brought the lady farrier out, with the
'risk of her claiming the egg. They
thaced Murphy over three ,fields and
through four ditehes before they gave
up. • Andthen they only gave, oP be-
cause Murphy fell in a midden, and
they hadto fish him out with • long
poles.1-.; -When. they'd rescued him,
they laid hirn under a pump and
• p.ulowpaevdewykoilerboroixkheniin.
the egg?"
.they
inquired after they'd pu'mped on him
for 'ten minutes and could..4et near
enough to .cenverse in Comfort. •
. "11 -no," said Murphy; "I reckon it's
a stale egg, it seema:protty hard,"
That egg beuxiced Wee,. before it
broke;' it was a China nest egg.
ON BATTLEFIELD
.By the _courtesy of the manage_ 'chef would think of serving these :out to 'win " a sailed. It was pretty
_ _
ment I was Permitted to see the wo,:.
men and, girls of. Leeds. making the.
war material for the men at the
front, They week day and night in
turns; and they -emelt on Sundaysas
welle. There is a keen competition
in the matter tie output The whiners
hold a challenge shield, which is de-
corated with the fiagg of • the allies
and hung in a' PrOntinent position . . et Awn* eurway_ to. the barn wher‘ We
oVer-theAriachrtiewch tliej°
on. the tablet 'of the riceCend. eexciu- VTere
who owned the farm. She rooked
quite effective in the moonlight; her
ileemet_were turned Un and she was
leaning on a pitchfork. She had the
air of an avenging 'angel, except that
. •
,The war of 1866 thus insured the
triumph of the spy master and led
to the perznanent adoption Of the
princielee for which he stood as car-
dinal institutions On which, in the
'future, both the military and civil
governors of Prussia Were to rely.
Not 'content with -his other multi-
farious activitiee Steiber else_iindere
bodies inSilesiainsured his welcome
among. the Socialists Of Berlin, and
• he 'apeedilpbeetrine ari influentlal and.
trusted Socialist leader, on one-
casion heading at great procesiien. of
goeialist societies through the streets.
'
Presented
•
• - was �n this occasion that he was
presented to King ,Frederick William.
, . He. notes in his memoirs that the.
•
-supreme delicacies -of-gastronomer art --
without flanking them. with currant
Jellye-Without currant jelly you can-
not hope to catch the best flavors of
. •
game or of many of our best meat
dishes. It is found with all the aris-
tocratic dishee and is even served with
the most delicately Wrought, omelets.
It is quite tru.e that jellies, jams, pies
and tarte occupy the larger part of its
datkeeso eee_picked _the _pled eby the
map," having charted the ground
earlier. • Young 'Ills secured the let-
tuce; Scottie found something which
he insigted 'was sorrel, though why he
thought it was sorrel, or what led him
to suppose it was edible even if it
was, he, didn't, know. I -this was' not
heroism; it was Simply lack of
thought -I carried the onions. '
successful . girls. .
. Soldiers' Wives Work..
If- girl- isetakeneilLer-feelsefaint
she is at. once helped to a cosy rest-
room, • where -a charming matron and
a trained nurse wait upon her. Up
and, down the big yard tramp armed
sentries in khaki; and a Boy Scout eheesel MY lips suffuse at the bare
Bar -le -due • jelly and petit Geevaise
tonducte the visitor to the official Mention of that most delectable and
whom he wishes to see. • - ' aristocratic combination. But enough!
---411-sorts-and--eonditions :of --woulen-FThe---currant,-k-the-aristocrat-af- our
come here. It is difficult to -day in ' berries even though it is never absent
Leeds, .ata. the suirounding districts from the ta,bles of the plain people.
to get a servant because domestic. It is the true cosMopalite of the fruit
servants are giving up their 'Work to family; found everywhere, and instead
go and make bullets. Girls of good ofebeing humble -"Too 'proud to care
middle-class families are here. Sol- from' whenee it canie,"
diers' wives are here and. soldiers',
mothers; and it is fine, •to see the •
ire THE NEEDS OF THE•RED CROSS.
smilesof satisfactionwhen they
crease the oetput Ladies in all parts —. •
of the country write asking toebe al- Tdhe, Red Cross need is like the
en ow s eruse of is inex-
lowed to helpin the work.' A clergy-
enan's wife has offered to come along
and bring her daughters, antl appli-
-e-atinnee-ctime frunr-places-as-fart-di
tent as the Channel Islands.
I am glad to learn that a film had
been made shoving the women and
girls at work in ,this munitions fac-
tory.- f trust' it will be thrown
on -every kineme screen in the -coun-
try. -It Will help. recruiting, I am
sine. These women are not working
for money atone; they,; are working to
help save the lads *he are saving
them.' -
._ "What abont. the rimer I asked._
' Paupers Harping., ,
"Well.," said My local e friend, With
a laugh; "if-you-ean-find a -man under
eighty out Of W.1-9ile round about here
you will have clone more than I ,can
de, 'The war was not very old when
dbe 'Workhouses were 'iiiipettled to,
and now hundreds of men who were
pb.up,ers are helping to sere the guns.
Hundreds of men who left their Work
Years ago have returned tie it Turn-
ers and fitters who believed that their
Workirig deers were -gone sewn tohave
found a new lease of rife and energy,
The habitual loafer, the street-doiner
man -they are an missing from their
sive. No hostess can make a pre-
tence of epicurean hOspitality without
lentiful-supply of -currant -jelly,
which may be used from the first
meat course until it makes its last ap-
pearance with the cheese.
took to attend to the French news-
______papee epresseduritiget,he-war- ofeleel0
and in. the ;two .-yazilige-
Threugh Bismarck he • alined. for
and obtained a subvention worth
$75,000' annually for the purpose of
making important French papers'
"tzilk Prussian,' azid bY-1870 he
claimedete &petrol- nearlyea'hundred
writers in Paris and PrOvindal dauies
and weeklies. •• • 0
- :When -the invasibri of France wee
an aieured ;success Stiebpr took up
his quarters in Versailles -near the
Xing of Prussias and organized a Mob
of hie apits intd hgenterwitlitirawn
froni the alieady conmiered districts,
„into .0.. _crowd_ who -used . to Iine_the
-sereete -arid cheer the King Of Prussia
whenever he made his appearance: in
public, thus patting an artistic-II:MA
to his work by creating the impres-
'sion ie France that L Was
being acclaimed daily by enthusiastic/
'Prenclanen.
Sfleber did net eease his activities
King was ;uneasy at the appearance
pf
foe the Pressummation , of Europe
such numbere" of Socialists,' and
that tereatisufect.theinonarch by tell- with :the col?ssal'emP or 1$170-71,
remained Itisitarck's .clOseat Intimate
ling hint that every preeaution had
• beefi taken for Ins safety. ' • and by 1880 had worked out a scheme
• Whether the fact' of their leader
having- Spoken AA-40SW ;Miade- 030
Socitliste-suipicious, his
ithiSper of his duplicity came to
• fait or whetlaer in other ways some
for the military orgazuzatiori of the
Binopire, _of, which the effects are sjall
-Stiebee tied in--3.892;.-wealthy, fear;
ed, and theoeeticdlly resp•eetete.
The rekulti of Ills ayiterif are coin.,
their tars is not eertain, -but it ,
fact that from this time nri was mg . to light daily.. 'When the isivailL
intr army of 700,000 Germans entered
Brussels last year and. proceeded at
.once to distribute thernselees in and
around• the eity without confusion or
delay ,the world aplauded the military
gestind of Von Klucic, whereas it
should have paid ita cernriliments to
Stieber's suecessor, Ilerr Steinhauer,
and 'his agents who, as keg as two'
years before the 'event, had Marked
down the hotels in which the staff of -
fleets wer6 to'be lodged.
frowned epee . by the Socialist clubs
and that he wet ,shortly• afterwards
takeir! into the King's personal ;ger-
•'. eke and made ii` apolimitat," Or po--
• lice councillor. • ... • ... . -- •
• In this position. his 'business was
•: Poo longer to orate to deluded crowds
'
and preach the abolition of pollee and
monarchy, but to keep a close watch
on the police officials of the kingdom
. and report to the Xing personally ,on
• their cetivitlts and loyalt*. This
business of spYing• upon spies suith
1,i him te well that when the eh d . 0
i
. police complained to the Xing o $4.1
',her's interference -and accused 'int of
• lieink .a. traitor Prederiek 'William
. ;bluntly told the oftieial that heyu t-
,.:,$4 Skic.Delz, rnexe 64111,0 One in t 0
ICittgdakm.'4.7....,,;., -,mv•• ',',,, . .
' ' Shortly afterward Stieber *al .0.,
F4etted official - head of the ,Secret'
• ..eervico and pet abOut•orgabizing that
•
4 • •
-
,
Should, be Off Duty. , •
A sentry, an Irishman, Was' oti post'
duty for the first time at night, when
the officer Of the day approached. Ile
valkek •'
• , `Who conies theret't. '
Officer of. the ao3i',0, "Aria rho TO.,
1)13r.
"then whatNire •Yez oin' out lit
night?" asked the seri
,
IteleeiveS, Who Weee Enemies 'Figured
' • • .in *ming Irieident.
• A *being encident is related by An
&ellen .sOldier• a letter home: He
evrites:ee• • $ -tee:
'The other 'day, before the, morn-
ing mists„had cleared, one of our pat -
rolls found themeelves opposite a
trench containing about 20 Austrians.
Our men' eight in number, charged
with the 'bayonet, and taking the en-
e,my unaware, put them te flight
""Six were taken prisoners, and an,
other. tried to hide. One of our men
saw him, and gave chase. The Aus-
trian fired at his pursuer, who 'fired
back. -
"At last the Italian came up with
thee' fugitive and sprang on him to,
take him Prisoner. They •pitched into
one. another for some minutes, and
then the Austrian surrendered.
The two men looked at one an-
other, mid suddenly. 'rushed into one
another's arias again, aiid kissed Meth
other like long -lost, brothers.
It turned Out they *ere brothers -in.
law from the frontier district. The
-Austrian- hadeinarried__ th,e4tatian'n
sister. They were horrified when
theyfound: their had been shooting
at One , another, , bet delighted that
neither -had. beensaceedfuL
•
G °FRC
DARING ESCAPE
From the - Middle West
ITETWEEN ONTARIO' AND BRI-
• TISH .COLUMBIA.
• .
Items From Provinces Where *any
Ontario Boys and Girki Are
IPRO1V4 INTRINAIENT CAMP AT.
' LOPTIIOUSO PAWL
Mooted .RaFapo Through: CloYer. Ruse ,
, 44.Crossed to Rttr.OSe as
Sowawals.
A rerearkeble story of an enemy
prisoner's escape -beginning like a
chapter "Monte Cristo" and end-
ing. with the narreter's safe arrival/
in a safe corner of the Continent, is
told in StockheIm.
On June and the. London Daily -
Chronicle published the following
nonneenents•-• .•
Two German prisoners who " •
caped from the internment camp' at
Lefthouse Park ..thetweee Wakefield,.
arid Leeds), Friday; May Milt are -
still at large,
. The two men are Fr•e,derick N.
Wiener, who was transferred to Loft-.
house Park from Edinburgh Castle
on April 29th;' feed Alfred KlaPPrethr
formerly • an officer en a Reniburge
America. knee, and. german, naval
reservist.
Wiener 18 25 years of age, atands
5ft. 11in.ele dark, and epeaks English
fluently with an American accent. ,
e•The other is 30, 5ft.,• Sin. ia_lieiglite
stouteol hand, and sPelske• -Nrig/ieh
imperfeetly, ' ' '
A Clever Ruse. • .
Reuter'a Amsterdam correspondent
supplies the fallowing interesting
version of Wiper's adventures as
given by hiMself:- •
The Frankfueter Zeitung quotes
from the Aftonblad of Stockholm an • •
account from Lieut. Felt 'Wiener,an
Austrian officer, of his experience' hr •
escaping from the internnient at •--
Wakefield,
• Lieut. Wiener, who had: settled in
America, was on his way to Austria
when captured toy a British warship
, and brought to Kirke/elle being sub-
sequently interned in: Wakefield with
-a- German 'naval officer of -the -name .
of Alfred Klapprotle
These two officers' de4dea, to at-
tempt to escape together. Their first
plan, to dig a, subterranean passage .
to freedom, had to be Abandoned, as
it took uploo much thee se they re-
sorted to other-tactirivelraide•
ed sporting costumes frotii .the camp
tailor in order, to appear as British as
possible They were also able te'"Pro-
cure-46I'd entbr 230.
Then they asked to see the 'censor ,
knowing that weld& not be in .hit
house at the time. '
!faked His Way to Freedom.
From' the -censor's -office ( says -Wie• •-t
ner) we • went to the -guard-room, and -.
I was -able', thanks to my perfect :
command Of English,• to give the•iiii-
preesion that we were Britishoffigers.
A. 'few generalities about Military
matters to the inen'on duty complete-
ly dispelled any lingering 'suspicion
they may ham had, and we .sticee9tlect
,in escaping without molestation after
elimbeng_a park wall about eight me-
_ _ _
tree high. • • _ _
Our first objective was Leeds; :the '
nearest big town. There we bought
•. Living.
Janc_brides_numbered
234, while -in. Jane, 1914, they, •were
370.
s'Edmonton claims , to lead •in the
average- school. attendance -of -the Do-
minion. •
Annie Anderson, Calgary domestic,
two first-class ticketsete_Manchester,
without, however, malting use of them,
but travelling instead by third -glass to
she hadn't Much of an air of an an- both _feet .through falling under Liverpool. Of course,, we were in- '
1"sttreet car .
gel. Thie -was the same 'lady Who had clustriously searched for in Manches-
pnrsued, a few "days previously, • one a , •
Edmonton is gathering.. many re- ter, and .thus gained invaluable time.
of our number into the gun park, with cruits for the 66th, battalion from We went to London frorn Liverpool,
acropedokerhern:al.z.seeru!an_t_l_az!in...g_t!i.arLh_e_
n o the hotel, _fearing discovery.. - We,espent
Ith_elvinnipeg city council's gran
It t but did not venture to stay at ' an .
northland •
' A Ten -Minute Job. _ • - Associated Charities this year will be a week living over nights in restau-, •
ma_ $12,000.
'It ,took the guard, the -sergeant.
Lieut. ..T. T. Faven, Of Moose Jaw,
•
. •
• •••
jor, official interpreter, „end seven
had two brothers killed at Ypres and
amateur ones, ten minutes' persua-
another wounded.' • • • ,
eion befoee they get rid of he"ie and
Lethbridge street cars take -children
even then I think it was the Sou they
to the lake for One cent' durieg July
gave her more than the pers-uasion. •
and August.
As sooni as we got within range For having, had aduite'i ted• milk
she opened' fire and as the wind was
in his possession, E. Muyhart, f Win -
blowing in our 'direction she did greet• nipeg, was fined $50. '
damage. • Twelve new 'grain elevators of 5,-
haustiblee-Felly-te-meet- that -need -
we t'IY''' 000 .capacity,. will be ready for the
would require a puree like the wid- "No compriseidiatw
ow's cruse. • au& a Purse is 'a fin- ortunity'e but we were like :three .
eat,- of Alberta • this year. - •
eencial mime e u ee iteci ro °eters o o ' ed
rokenevaded
to a "Jack Johnson."
Young 'Ills, with lettuce sprouting
through his tunic until he looked like
one of those earthenware 'figures they
must ask the Canadian people per-
forms'ethat Miracle. •
Ever, time you read a report �f
battle 'do . you realize that ,it means
a fresh addition • t� the tesk of. the
Red Cross? ,
. Do you loam- that eeery bullet fir-
ed is only one more drip in the Red
Crest cruse_ of inexhaustible obliga-
tion ? -
If the Government, whenits Gener;
aleStaffeelemanded fresh supplies
munitions, replied: "Why de you' want
more shelter'', would yciu 'think the
Government - 'insane T When the Red
ross s Trion supplies do you
not realiz'e haw inuett it needs them'?
. The need of the army is for shells;
and still niore ' • , , •
The need of the Red Cross is above
plaitt Virith grass seed, pointed toethe
demanded for frait in that:eity-
•moon, and did the goose step to ink Calgary considers it will be -able to
cate We -had been* for an evening
stroll.
--Saskatoon public -schools -showed at
enrolls -sent, of 3,301 pupils in June,
slightly hikher than in 1914,
Prince Albert Board of Trade
charges that exorbitant prices are
, _ supply #ee i hooks for the ,public
•sehools at et edst of $10,000 this year.
Scottie, ' who had the Sorrel' in his
at Vernon issue a Weekly newspaper
The Soldiers: of the' West in tamp
but bpd for the salad--Wilied, his per -
cap -which was cooling for his head, of
the _47th Oyerseas Battalion, C.
spiring brow and tried to indicate; -el "John
vireit . wis . Ana 01 a oat.
without being 'ten incleliceeei-that
We -;a.:y•-•for- -us---ing:.'it' -C:'-;.--R!-. -t. ie' k'et which.
had been „for a bathe:. ,
'which he had lieight of another man.
•As for me, not being a•' linguist, I
-Teat* Iliirdinan, inkuranee- a
just stoedearouzid•tryieg-to-keep the
onions quiet. of_ Calgary, suicided through Joss of
gent
° In the end it was the onion: that crash.
. einn Y . m the Donumen Trust
lo ment ' • '
gave us away. We were all four re- • -, •
oohing in a circle, with the - prongs Isl
all for money, money,. and still more of the pitchfork as the axis,. when a
gust of wind carried the odor of
.money. .
Every dollar You, giye to the Red onions towaeds the farmeress, and
Cross is a bandage which ties, up before we could clap a respirathe on
some 'Wound, and there are ad- mat* ;116r we were discoVered.. ' ' •
wounds to bind up as you have dol, •She l'iaikmaged '-'" tiva-fr"eii'fi)r
lin to give. • '• . * that Crushed and scrubby salad, and
..
. Send your sub-striptions to the of- ten minutes later. the S.M. came in
elletomeretehantitseeeghey-Rre too old -flee A.V.-tho‘Treasurer.F17 4uog .Siraet and trod on it And ran' us all in for
East, senate. .. . , 'having' -aii." Mifflin/WM lifter -"lights
,
thejein the .calors but they are young ,
enoughtoMake thin& that Ina tef - - - - --1' • % - • 0 "
most to -clay." . , The ,Great Temptation: - •
the world come from the bottom of
n however. 'As Lew said, if you go
The eggs WO a great teraptetion,
- &Ma of 'the finest 'grindStelieki I '
the Bay of Fundy. The stoneeuttera, in your barn arid find a hen% been arid
there have a simple method of ' tnee- laid an egg • on Mir bed -well, you
.ing them to •the shore. Workmen aren't going to tread on it. Certainly
quarry the stone ,froni the solid rock not; you pieleit up and carry it, °eel*
When the tide ie out, and fasten them .ta the kitchen and give it to the
cools ta look after for 'yon until tea
His face reddened as he spoke a • Generous Bay or Fundy. • '
the' charges of slackness made
against the working- Man.
"There may be a few men who
slack," he said fiercely, "but Pll swear
we've got none in Yorkshiee. We've
got men here working iegularly 1.10
hours a Week. That isn't slacking.
Take for example, the men who Work
in the Panary Cage."
I smiled. ', •
41\lever heard of 'em? Well, the
Canary Cage is the room where 'we
37/ialce lyddite. If yoe emu& jneide
It for long your skin becomes he
yel-
Iov as a' tAilareS Viringat But we
don't gruiniale, never etirl"
' The l•pciter*,0 quarrel.. •
Both • catudej..-**pcft '1,.• Wonder
What it• v7.4
Sunt now?' .
Consider the bald-headed Mani he
Comb's not,. neither, does lie.hrtislic good hushande „•
.
to a' large flat-bottomed boat.
The tides in the Bey of Fundy are -lee eel I 1 1.•
'the highest in the world, they rise %lie finical nen, roost was next
from fifty to minty feet, and rush door to the guard -room; all well-dis-
i with great swiftness. The tide ciplined bpi went in there to lay;
it Was only the stragglers ,who laid
§ilt
1 the flatboat With the atones at-
tic isd; ..t•ko workmen bring ow boat about just .anyWhere' and gave ,oe
ashore and melee° the stones /,,t, thew others a chance of a • Stray egg, I'
leisure when the tide is out. '• ' • .1.11Ave ItrOW a guard guard 6° wen."'
. Reversed. . • till Ilia turns OCheirig on guard, there
41.if Miard guarded that chicken heuse,
fi it hadn't leeeti for the feet that we
*al°
. ::: beWoutiOnn vg ohytt years."
ae iss,t0h,e,st been mar- itrouM have been a mutiny. , . .
, Men 'Whom a "jack,lohnsore Would
' "Did she vatic° him a good wifer" Tini4 e'Nvinall(cgruehP'' f°orrdilitteriirlr'elifle7laat Su, titihir. pawit tap; eini e e
at weld , you dumg in tha
"No; but she Made him MI aidullY .soune, or 313 egg -shell when on guard. mob,. marbly . passing away the
• t Only' one !nen, to my knoWleclge,ithke.0 ,.. ,
oted fossil hunters are in Red
Deer. dititrict, where Alberta helde
retics of animal life of three million
years ago. •
The postmen of Calgary will no
longer be ,carried en street 'cars -for
$25 a •year per man, $35 is asked for
the service.
--------
Ratepayers in outlying sections of
Saskatoon will he. Allowed 10,...gallons
le•f *her froiri 'tang,
Which -they 'buy keys,. •-
The ,Ottewa Government will es-
tablish 35. demoristeation farms
Alberta and SaskateheWan for ex-
perimental farm work.
• The Province of Sahltatchewan has
taken' out a bonding warehouse li-
cense for liquor -the first Arm' is-
sued to a province' in Canticle.
'Tint Perdlearis, a -Greek was. ar-
rested at Regina for illegal entry into
Canada, I He id, vented in his oven
country On a charge of murder.
Dr. Toreie Of Alberta•University
Using his efforts in the province to
get law strident recruits to fill the
depleted ranks of the Princess Pate.
The Alberta and British Columbia
feta convention at Calgary adopted
a resolution calling foe reduction in
Minh -Mitt weight et express Car -loads.
That's All. '
rents, night cafes and dancing sa-
loons. •
From: English to French. '
Meanwhile, we read with inuch sat,
isfaction•reports of Oar escape in„the
pepere. As my description in these ,
reports stated that I spoke •English
with an Americen accent, We now
spoke only French, and gave our-
selves out to be Frenchmen. • Inci-
&Molly we dropped the -commander •
of -the • camp' 'a . posteard stating that
e wererso longer. speakine "Am-,
ricaze-brit Frei&
After Various vane attempts to se-
cure passage on, a cargo beet,. we
were finally able to steal on -board
the Danish steatner Toinsk, where we
hid:in one _Of_the-holds, crushed bet
tween bales ' and boxes, without foed :
or drink. We spent four dreadful
days and nights until we reached Co-
penhagen,:wheie we again made pas-
sing acquaintance with .a prison.
Companion has already gone io Ger-
many; and. Dp.ropoie,going on to.A.uo-,
tria as soon as I am able to eamplete .
certain personal,. affairs_____
• The Fighting King. ,
• e`Good-bee; I hope you won't forget
me," the King of Italy Once said to a
departing American. Most monarchs
would' have taken one's memory of 'a '
friendly meeting and a cordial hand-
shake for_ granted but the Italian
ruler, by nature humble, lids never
learned presurne On the veneratiOn ' •
of his fellowznee. His training as
a boy was calculated to keep him
unpretentious, for it 'Wad a training,:
ot,exttaardinexy_harshicsa,andsever,_
lty. He did not rough it, like soine-
Princes.; merelrfor 'thebenefite of -the" -
public, ahd relapse behind the seenes
into the spoilt child aact pal -fleeted
young man. The thing. that thows
the real worth of the Xing of Italy is
the absence of reaction since his ac-
cession. The Spartan boy when he
grows up and has his own way, often
makes amends to himself. TW t King
is the rare creature, a 'Spartan boy
who has grown to be a Spartan Mats.
The King qf Italy, swim has taken
his place •at the, heati of MS armies; '
his never cultivated the martial as-
pect 'dear -to his father. The exag-
gerated mousteche and fler're 'wow of
the late King, were inherited, or copi-
ed, from Victor • lernmenuel, rind did
net indicate any real military experi-
ence or p4Wpi.. : They solved their
purpo:Ne, nevertirless, on •parede° aed
in iircoositoU. 'The present Xing is' •
of o•mlior typo. Alivays rigidly
t stra;r•Ilt, anrlqoldiPrly in a. nett refit.
timnrogono wnv, lie is (mitt
0/4, it rho tallleat 'of I ;•11-opto.n rat
Iam, • • •
,