The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-10-21, Page 6—
y
From The Roma Table. ,
III.' •
London,. Eng., Sept.
eiple that we should ac,tunder orde.rs
to the end of 'the war applies no less
to the industrial 'than the .military',
sphere. 1 appliiiS.10.-.eVerr depart*
ment of notional supply -to the 'agri-
culturist, to.the 'transport .worker, to.
thkilted factorY hand, to the. cm,'
SIAN REINT'ORCEMENTS ON THEIR WAY TO -
THWART ENVELCPING PLANS OF THE GERMANS
111. jVELS -From lie Middle West
OF SHELL MAKING BUTWEEN 011;;IO AND BRIe 441'
not only on men and munitions. It
will, as Napoleon found, depend even
more on money. We have hardly be -
un
-gto recognize this truth in prae-
nee. We are spending more then the
other nations,and- getting -,,P51.-
another article the prebleni of econ-
omy is examined itt greater detail.
Its, conclusion, amounts to this, that
PloYer and his roacinneS to casual we cannot aSsUMe that we Shall he
labor. The activities ci`' 45,400,000 uble,t0 last out the Plenty 'unlest3 we
humanbeings ean . be ce-ordinated get tor more for our expenditure
and directed to A single end only than we do to -day, and unless we ef-
through the impalpable collegian feet ruthless economies in our pri4
which wilting and. loyal service gives. vote expenditure, especially , on =-
Discipline itt essence is prompt and ported "supplies.
..etact..ebedience to orders, And in .• ,The first aspect of the preblein . is
war titne the natio,. if it is -to do Mainly leg-,:ther. -Government.- They
work properly, naustoto 'less, than the alone can'fiecide where eConeraies can
army, pat itself 'under discipline. he .effected in our public. "expenditure.
• But on the industrial plane it Not the nthallest 'cause of waste is
•not be done by law. " The Goverment ;tile PreValling idea „thateverybodY
• cannot give orders to every Individual• and every locality has, a right. to
inake
as ta. how he should. employ himself- ae.,ninch prat as they•can out of the
to the end of the War,. 'llatitatai ser- tremendeus outlaY of -Public. TuOucY
Vice in 'industry '-raust he introduced
,primarily'- by "Piddle opinion. The
„. 'national unity of, perniany or France,
their .,efficiency and sPirit; their
subordination of all questions of
person or CiaSS to the supreme huSi-
AM. Of war, is not due to statutes or
to fear of punishment, but to a sef-
irnposed national discipline, directed
and • encouraged by Government, but
in its essence of popular origin. And
in this country unity and efficiency
will ,onlreome through national disci-
pline similarly self-imposed. Itis
not until every worker,, every employ-
er, every farmer, resolves to•do what:.
ever will serve his country best in this
the day of its trial, whatever it. may
-cost, that We shall get efficient orga-
- nitetienaed inner peace.
sPlritc slteciallY difficult to
That is now. going oti. .That idea is
,quite inconsistent with any true prin.,
ciple of national eerViee. If national,
Service' Were 4carried into u,ninrsal
efreet ,everybody would.. serve the
country' for a living Wage :According
to their QW4 standard of living, till
the. end of the war. But while any
Such drastic revelation as that is out
of place in the middle of war, 'some
steps can be taken towards it. Large
savings, at any rate, can be made at
the expense,' not of the comforts of
-theS-eledier, but of the profits of the
stay-at-hoines, by a rlithless ,cutting
down of billeting rates and contreet
prices and by careful economy of
supfees everYWhere.
The second aspect ofthe finanelat
problem is for ourselves. . The Got,-
erninent has already , declared. that
Intf011oce in the industrial sphere. -drastic persona economy is necessary
..Unfortunately the war has caught the partlyy. SO that the 'sayings effeeted
Britisleistes at the crisis of the strug- May be aiveated in the war loan,
gle between capital and raber. In- pertly So that, by, ralticingthe quan-
HA" MATTER, TO INTERVIEW
dustry itself has become a sort of •tity of foreign imports, we May les -
trend!. warfare in which positions are sea also' the bill we -have to , pay
•
F.d.CTS CONCERNING THE POINTS,.
THR•PRQJECTILie.
001ra Of t!Wi AliVoCICO. Wrattalwt
Manufaeture Of •
Everybody knows that the Modern
shell" is one of the most diabolical of
man's inventions; but how inariy Of
tis realise*that it iS also one of the
MOSt delicate And complicated?
Recently, some Arms holding eon-
trodt$ for making high -explosive
Shell took upon IlieniselVes-'10---4corf
italiod,et4a411.414re4seutlati,1 4i ne th): tea isnP etcuirilecaati
`was' "inipeeved,' •They[Will never do
aanllYttlihrig WIrictlAWealSdlirClejerte4din: T1411°6:1145;
Per,ene absurdity -it is, in fact', all
absolute absurditY, from an engineer-
ing point of view ---,is deSignerl of set
purpose, says Landon AnsWerst,-
There isWaitshotettattNaeimeeilar anout,,,
uly in the big shell for penetrating
armor plating, which .was intredliced
in, consequence of an accideet, One
day lest Shell was fired at a piece
of armor -plating from the soft side,
-
and the projectile went clean through
it, and exploded after impact; where-
orpvx."9...cr At. 44reir4E4g as, a surdlar, shell, Erect against the
Xik the engagereenta'arolind•Nlina. the itussiair-eitY taken- ;no '-oernal' fins- , huge -liediee-ei:GerManre-- av-a14-; front -the lardeeed; aird Warier°
'endeavored to dut the Ausslan arndes retreating from the city in the vicinity of 'Pvinsic. which • side -shattered, and left art indenta-
,-
Ss no* the centre et attaek by the Teutenie forces. Countermoving tbe Perinea pima, tile museum, •
tion of onliea few iriebee
• . .
sent Olen. cavelry with alt haste to the 'vicinity of Dvinsk to defeat the plan of the Teutons. - ' Thia singUlar intident set somebckli
•
••••••""••••",,•-•,,,,•••••
thinking, and, in consequence, the
EIRD VISITORS.AT. aid, "who told ins he Meat see Sir E4;.• MERITS OF CERTA.IN WATERS.
Werd GTO. I was imperative, as he , • -,!- ,, ''' lime given n soft 'nose. To the hard
high -explosive armor -piercing shell is
. ' could put liiin lip, to a thing two Bath .- Have Made .Me1 \n whichattachedaliion it,PWiff through
' --Or - S' That - ivi - a- and- point• i?: , , la e_...2 9
-sg
' R. OFFI -
, _,„;,,,iii,,,,,,hsc,ailn-14--j111, -about---makta'ail-' • ----'Citie*:-.4amous.----'--- ' -
ediatelv send thousands ' ',,,,_ ' .._ .t_t ,....• at .6 the toughest piece b'f"--. armor-tia.-
.4.4„riren tohelp the Allies at the Front!. . . and --,-- - • • • , - %Lae act or bathing nes-usuaoY -•e-et-ttl What 'happens on impact seems to' be
When we told the man he_± had better 1°°Ice4'1AP°4 -ae-'nerelY74)resSe--an ' -thie: The -eall-'ePrea4sr:hehling- - th
write.tifeteeretarY for • Foreign .kel.'"7. attained to teem 'either beea140 el plat th,e shell is •revolving- rapidly-7-
neeessary, but not a few. bathe have point, 'end so .enabling it-remeniber‘
fairs concerning it he got very much-
some- incident vidnea leak place . - e to 'force its way Unbroken •thiongletlie-•
annoyed, and. ;finallY wanted to know
whether England. wished 'to win thfs, the bather wasengaged' in the et Of '
- a - hard face of the plate ;by a sort of
°ablution or, from some other circume
won or retained Anlyafter long and abroad. It is for us now to carry LORD KITCHENER. •
desperate fighting. In consequence, these orders out. If we are all to do
to a large proportion of the popida- our share to help to win the war, we
thin duty to the State has 'been al- Must set about.economising in • every
• most forgotten in the more Pressing possible way ourselves. - In this all
t Claims of duty` to their class. Sud- have a part to •Plav,• No economy IS
denly another and more real wer•lias• -too stnall, 'whether it be in food, ma-
r
intervened, with an imperative de- terial like petrol and tires, 0 xur-
mend on both aides to abandon their ies, for it net to affect the balance of
strife and bend all. tasir energies to trade. And to sum withheld from
increasing the output' •of .supplies. exPenditure Op some private pleasure
This they have so. far been Unable to is too dealt to invest in the national
do.• The ill -feeling between employ- loan. *In the aggregate the effect will,
ers Jabal°, is not abated; neither be immense, and our condect for the
side will make much advance towards rest of the war may determine •whe-
eompromise, and, in consequence ther we are able to last out an end
strikes still occur, and the output of which is decisive Months ago the
supplies is grievously delayed. In Gerinans began to work for victory
the industrial sphere there isasyet in this way. We have now to Make
up for lost time' by still greater, reso-
lutipii in the task.„, • „
Finaily, in order•Acezenforcesconse
onw, as well as to ease the industrial
position, drastic new taxation may be
necessary. This may mean -it proba-
bly ought to ineari'L-the sweeping of
all special war profits over and above
the average pre-war rates into the
coffers of the •State, a. tax on ' Wages,
a still liigher income-tax, and new
,•dutiee on, sueh articles as tea and
tobacco imported. from abroad. Of
the actual measures necessary and the
complementary steps which may, be
needed to deal with the unemployment
drastic economy may cause, the Gev-
eminent must judge. It for us to
accept the burden cheerfully and
without complaint. '
'
no united frontle the foe, It is' matii-)
• festly 'shared by both sides.- . And
fundamentally the reason is the same.
The war is: not to be allowed to en-
danger the positions they, occupy on
the industrial • battle -ground. The
rights Of property are not to he .serl-
•onsly infringed; the rights of labor
are not to be seriously impaired even
• during the war. Neither side, in feat,
is willing to make the sacrifices which,
rnust inevitably be Made if they are
one and *ell to do their own full 'duty
in the War. •• .•
•It • is obviously-. difficult for -two,
armies, to suspend their quarrel and
to substitute,. spontaneous ahd•-,
ener-
getic do -operation for competition
• and .suspicion. It therefore; the
:.inisineet•Of the State Iceley down the
terms :_of.'• a tentOrarY- -settionent.
which, by guaranteeing_ to, each,. side
' as far es, po2Sib1e.the essentials of
'their* own ',position's „after ' the war,
will justify it in Calling upon both to
Combine to increase. the output Of
munitioes. to the utinest Possible
ex-
tent till victory is. Won.: ;Tile princi,
• :•-ples-of-tae-seitlereent. are not difficult
to see. On the -one baud, -all special
War profits, of 'whatever kind --,that 'Allies:- • •
is, profits over and above the average. "I've been MiXekup with the Bri-
.
•• af the pre-war rate -must be diverted tish soldiers for ,some time liev4" he
• from prieate poekets into the eaters says, ."and I tell you there is net. a
- of the State so that every Man should cleaner fighter nor better gentleman
feel that if he is working harder, he ot the world .than the average -.11n -
is -working for the State and not for tither. They know how to Win and
private gain. On ;the 'other -head, t110, they knew how to loie., They never
• right to strike and regelations re,. forget they are gentlemen no'inatter
' stricting output raust :be abandoned, waat'they. do, and they.have the coar-
se that the -output :careheinereatedte ' ge--that-knows.no ending. Napoleon,
the maximum which efficient organi: said -'The British nation is rate of
zation and hard Worletan give. Ilons. led by asses,' and he .was quite
- NO settlement, however safeguard -
conditions when the. war is Over. 'The'
war itself is changing thera perma-
nently. The totally new • • economic
ir which, We' '5111 111 ttion litre
,eitarlde Them, atilt more. With the
best Will in the world things can ne-
ver again be as they have been. But
even they could, the that both
sides will ineur, of losing something
The Strange •Callers Who' TeV 'to Se0
, . ,
'Members of the
Cabinet.
: You have hard. work indeed•to • get
into. the War Office nowadays When
you Wish to , eee anybody important.
there. For a host of 'guards of one
sort, of .,another have to be satisfied,
passed, and propitiated ere you come
to the men you want to see. Nor is
,this provision unnecessary, for eyery
day sees ,an eccentric 'Man or woman
trying to get an interview with some
notability in the various Goverernen0
offices abeet Whitehall, says a Writer
in London Answers. • , •
"I want to See LOrd. Kitchener,
that's *fief wictitl" exclaimed re-
- cent viellOr to tlie'Wer`Offiee indig-
nantly, -When he • was stopped by a
burly polidentan, and asked to show
Itis pass at the Whitehall Avemie en-
trance, ',"No, I haven't city nasal But
• I've invented soinething which , will
,drive all the Germans sant of Belgium
in • a fortnight! What is it • ,Nevei
you Mind 'What it is, young men!"
' • •
7,WenliCihte'• ...t,ie':a.' .,,a,, n. evvia-e.,k.i.ii74.,:ust:tvnee'ebeeer seeteed wereitheeietliy-washhislOirrthfiero,-e
bemently declaring. hat I was Pre-
sventieg. England from winning' it by tion, such at the one which Alfred
my stopping him 'there; and,.finally, I Jingle took after his match with Sir
•had to summon another, officer to re- Thomas' Blazo, after Which he "had a
bath and went tO diener." . Then there
move him altogether outside. P,allice
Pen -
Yard. ,,,,_ven wiltert 0.0 had, boil cioe, ,Wits the bath taken by. Arthur Pen -
he stood beyond the railings shaking .x.d_cetaerirliall'et.h°alib„imelle'thmeitireoaftae4ioliwimsset,
hie' fist at inc f" s"eral iniallti ere and which he had scented.in &dee ie.
he finally departed." . ' • , . make it rctore efficacious. ,, . .
iS‘1VIlt•e=g'LPlaY'roda°1140c:vilgeY'6su tbe411157 ifeithr?I'l *Priinitive peoples • from the earliest
Bathing has been the custom =tong:
"said's' jaclY to xrie*as I drew near to times; and indeed the animals ,recog,
Street the other day. I happened to skin
the Minister's residence, in.Downing nize the necessity of keeping their
i healthy by cleansing them eon -
be going myself, to see Mrs. , Lloyd steals+ in some way. It was said that
c4e0rge• on important business. 'the Merits of the ,Bath springs were
•
"Yes, it is, madana," said I,. OS.:_*e ._6t,sf discovered by Prince Bladucl, who
came -to the door. , - , ,suffered from -a •-shjn. disease,7by
,• Therit'her 4yee, opened _Wide as, Site watching a sick pig,Willowirig in the
Saw me ring the bell. , - ' „ .. • pin& -7---,7- -.- • •
- "Oh, are you going to see Mr. Lloyd ' Sick eniinelsr.;•teo, led the:traveller_
Ge,eimrgeey?';.a:ekmeed ishher.ithI nodded. to very to discover the merits' of .certi4n Wa-
ters in Africa icir curing fever, for
'Much, desire to tell him something the banks of river g bordered by cer-
about the drink question I think' he
'ought to know, is it is extremely ur-
gent." , '
went on'the irate visitor. "Just take She Lost Her Temper.
-what? I 'earn( dee him? ___ene this .ie , -L had LO explain- that it was. 'quite
impossible for me pro coik her in with
called a free conntryi Well, then, rn iniP
just go along to Buckingham Palace me; that she mast ring and ask for
an interview. on her own account.
and see King George, and. tell him
about it, thee what- .
I'll dot" • Whereupon she got very angry, dalled
• Me many unkind names, anti, as the
ne teiCitelieeer's room, that's._alll .
w
atitopr Act' con-
cerning thepointsof such -projectiles.
After the heads have' been worked,
the.ehells are left for *reeks before
they undergo the next ttage, because,
atetrosengep.as _they look, they are
liabIe
. • , Steel is Easily ilY "Tired."
(1,4 .
Why? Think of the razor. Con-
stant stropping twists the grain, -with
the result that the steel gad "tired,"
and will not yield- a keen edge. • But
if you put the thing away a' feW
weeks the grain will return Oita nor-'
state, and You: can get a satis-
factory shave. In a similar way, the
grain of the steel affected by work-
ing, though, of course, to a much
greater extent, and till it is "set,"-tiet
Makers Intuit go. cautiously; •
Steel shows a, hike eccentricity in
themaking of test -gauges. Smile- of
the measurements of shells are very
fine, and the • instruments- employed
are • so delicate • that, they have to ,• be
tain shrubs become impregnated with- used quickly, lest. the heat of , the
their juices; the extreme value orqui, hand causes the metal to expand,
nine as renieay for malaria was first Now, when a groove .is cut in a
recovery ' of several animals . , a test -gauge, the work is ..laid • aside,
dtbiseco:ue,srbeecli,t is Saic1;•hy.,,,N.vatching Pdece of steel which is to be used . as:
ranr.Of.:theitirsttershich_flots.er pastifc
Baths 'among some nations of the
Beet have dome ,to be recognieed as
curingAnentel ailments, -.1111d-- the
,whO et:eight everywhere for the
"River of the' Arrow" firmry believed
COLUMBIA,
414itifem,4
Itema ,Proirt Provinces Wbere Alan,
Ontario Roys ,,A70
potlide-01)411°onlver-34,61100svfeelleta.t '.6184127
000wRiTilgiier67°C8itay4Waavteel'r8le dllitty8;4)..°°'"
The mile., pplice alarm systent of
Calgary will cost the •eity $4,477
year. .
Regina citizens, have paid $50#9.00
te'tne Potriotie .giand in Jess than, a
Year, . •
ilR4Feline.ileekasyeaerti.c47asech. feerefor pede
Iti one week 11.,t t ,S,asit.. 22
dogs Wore 'poisoned' by unknown
Bdmontoks.gantlet. afford, to rUn..:.
night echecle this iTtl,i't.„0:e0Q1'4.illg to
the SehOel'._,Board.: • :•:-
clittle1,41314Poilghat '$3:410,7040Pn:lto.vtli.7.1elnivglemr6e: '
J. :4Ficcato111117;114cY0 'ef
has been appointed . clerk' of the Mani-
toba Legislature. -
Six mail clerks on the C.N.R. Prince
Albert run have denoted $53. to a field
hospital fund.
The Government of Saslcatchewat •
lo4;4thSelerl3'5.Qth° Bt9otbtatIlYlob:antdRinegstirianents
i,
Prince Albert, Sask.,-bas contribut-
°(11.11riliatccte°114tithnea°011-IrCfuttablirlritat:t7:ef tft6-trillibteW Cana-ar, 2
lnhers of the •Regina City Hall
Footbell Club have ,joined, the colors.
liand
cros-seirdolialionwton71_y-loehect 44091!4/
Gefihneatii.3°:;:l• A14. grMei.V.fAl.;;
• There were 167. rural telephone
• compaties organized in Satketehewan-
, ^ -V f •• p 9- -•- 4, • v,
lest•,yeer, nialciag incraztail'Uf 4,743
phones. in operation. •
The, Customs officials- of • the Pro-
vince ofAlberta Will unite and donate
enough nuiney to buy a machine gun ,
_for _the ....mrscat ferees,
Inatead_oLai surplus" of 552,588 in
the Waterworks dePartment, the spe-
cial audit of Regina civic accounts
really show tenet deficit of $2$,728.
-Pte. Stuart•Pox, back from St. Jul-- -
iee, is wOrking On a ranch near Mtue. •
Son, Alta.,. with a mechanical hand,- ,
replacing the one blown away.
In Saskatchewan the war :hoe..
. .
caused a large 'falling 'off in rear-
riages. .Aegutt, .1015; 'there were
281. marriage licenses issued, against
$26 for taesamemonth in 1.914.
• At ICerrobert, Sask., an auctioneer
assaulted an editor because the latter •
hinted that the former ran ;,it gamb-
ling joint. The editor •got broken.'
nose and two black eyes, and the enc.-
tioneeria-16.0e.fine.
Itesidepts of Alida village ,and
dis-
trict Sasketchewan, are asking
the. Railway Commission and the ,
C.P./t: for an •agent. TheY atinn an
nut, shipment of one hundred and .
seventy thousand bushels of grain
alone.
eeks.,:perhap_smentini.- Why not
linieb. A At once? Because the groove,
though dead true when Cut out, may
be otherwise in a sliOrt time, 'eyen
thoughit has been- -absoletely un-
• ,
trniehed. , •
. :(Te. tontintied,)
. Constantly . Inspected. •
. ,
. he Tact. nudd acheitted- inciiito No. II, -this
Whether the angry an went to
the Palace or not ..,the •police-
man never learned. But it is 'eertath
that his chance et interviewing
A YANKEE ON THE BRITISit Violent Women...was told by. a poliee- that, When lie had bathed' in it, all his -
man who had jest sauetered up that • uld b Bathing CiOncrete* proof of -the etebor-
in the Ganges is Credited with the
same virtue by the Hindus, while vial -
tors to the, Pool Of Siloam in Biblical
• ' •
, .
days believed that no mbeent couhl
. . . • -
survive washing in it waters. Many
tab.* Welleare -credited with still
stranger, -virtues, since. those .who
Plunge into theta. are said to obtain
their wishes if. the proper forms are
observed. ' Stories have been .woven
roundeortain bathers which gild their
act 'of .bathing with . romance. ,The
bath taken by Archimetee,'owieg to
overfilling by e servant, led to the dis-
coveryof specific gravity. ,The absent-
minded' philosopher, leaving the bath
-abruptly,- ruslied-through•the .streets
of Syracuse shouting "Eureka!"
-THE.DIPAL-EMPIRE.,
'tiniest GerecianY Wine the Eitipire
CURE FOR HAY FEVER.
aleanti Itelief_fer MiniY'
Thousands of Sufferers.," ,
The successful treatment of ,hay. •
fever by calcium salts is ,the subject
of a short Sketch published in the
-eurrent-noinger-td-the--Arrierican--Ite--:
view of Reviews.
Tinto ' Munich scientists, Drs. Ern -
smiling sins -wo • e washedaway. g •
k*
if she didri't . quickly clear out of
Says That Average Britisher Is a
Cie hter she Would have to be'forcibly remov-
Downing Street; enless she kept quiet,
The fallowing • leiter, which is'. appointment, made 'long beforehand
quoted in theLoncloreSpectitor; is by s sheet. as as his 'seeing in
young American fighting swith the ,the flesh the presed-Sltair of Fefraliir
Another crank did actually get into
the Home Cake some few Weeks ago,
thbugh how yet remains a Mystery.
He must liavesmuggleti himself 'itt
Somehow aniongst a number of clerks,
..-
etc., Omit -eine a.m.., when there was
,quite it little crowd entering. Be that
as it may, a Clerk on arriving four):
this Stranger in his room, and was
blandly told by the Visitor that he,was
-wai 70g-to-beAsaken to Mr. McKenna,.
with whom he had an . apPointment.
Luckily; the Young official qiicldy
1
right., They, aretheught to be snobs,, grasped the. fact that this man in •• his
-adinirathera.' I have Seen the room was at -least "a bit off"' it, if not
'snobs' out- in France, and braver mea altogether a lunatic, for he began to
nor .truer gentleinen • never lived. say such strange things ei to reuse
They share the hardships with the suspieions. • - • • '
em -to --
they ' wouldn't do themselves.
. and will follow
• The Instead of raising the poor fellow's
inen worship them,
them anYwhere. I have yo la wit. temper by refusing to let lim,see the
then Home Secretary, the clerk quite
nets a Germain officer leading his men- 'calmly ' asked:the'Men to follow ' him,
in a charge. They follow after. But and led by deelont- stairs •and eor-
of what they have fought for all the. British officer always leads -his lectors -until he found-- hirriself *hewn
i
ed elsewhere. , • '
It is.rara_indeed that any uneuthor-
-ized-perton-does-aettially.-get-insid
the sacred place, Whether house or
Government office into the presence
of a Cabinet Minister in this , Way.
But it has been 40ne.
1, recollect One of the former „secre-
tarks of
how he, oilanee:nret: are:. _rwitiannietteerrain;tnea7aziennirgoemonnite,
found a close by where the Cabinet was hold-
ing at NO. 10 Powning
_a
The Stranger quite politely explain-
ed that he wast an American visiting
London, who had thought he should
like to see .the 'famous- house, had
found the door open, strolled in to ask.
.someone if he might look round, and
. had walked from room to room, never
across this secretary. But, of course,„
that curious chance could scarcely
happen once in half a century at or-
dinary times; let alone ,when a Cabinet
meeting was in progress, so thorough
are the precautions which are taken
,Lagainstunofficialin#11..?Ps'
these Years.,-bY.AbselatelY suspending_ Illenf and , se. dee! 4,14e- French. ., through-0-$to-,:dooniatn.thn,,streelc-:
- --their- own . industrial battle ler the tl or art example of the. average -What the demented one said when
War, is PreelseIY the sacrifice Which. British officer let 111113 ,tin you Of MY that happened the -clever clerk did not
they ought tdetuake for the sake of ednIpariy commander, LieutScott. ivait to hew But' certainly the eccen-:'
their fellows and their Allies and the He is only a; boy or twenty, arid it trie visitor did net,pais the keen door -
cause for which we stand., So ',Ong as direelidetemidant ef Sir Walter Scioi:ii.„Lonly
Vre look at the problenijeom the dint II.Cycis .ia onlyentust, one of the • if' yq.1.01ixre njetter_sen_you
• keepers. again that day. • : .
. of view of or :own interests we. shahproudest Ninnies_ in Scotland. 'W
.-, never zle our -duty.. Those who-.hcrite there wiii-any-risky' werle-to-be -done da•
en 1 showing the acttial appointment made,
gone to the, frimt have offered their he would not shift it off on to a ser- ; you get -admission -to the room. of a
' all., It is for thote who are left be- gemit Or corporal, but would ask tar I Minister at the .House of Commons
' hind to offno less: ' It is not until Voliinteers, and when he had those ho visit
When -I recently' had to pay
offer
a visit to Dr. 1Vlacna;nara of the Ad -
we 'approach! the industrial' problem wanted Would -lead 'himself. His un. ' tit -hit -1w; 1,-,:,--hitTioom at the House, the
Will Moat lien) to Win the war, ,that tred his duty And quiet Courage in the satisfied, on ,
e°11614' 'policeman on duty there, after being
in the spirit. that we Will do'whatever flinching devotion to what he
seeing my tredentials,
:diffictilties , 'wilt vanish and' the performance of that. duty Was some.
I
etreight and narrow. road' which leads thing beautiful to witness," , told me about the trouble -they had
with unauthorized visitors ' almost
- to. victory will become plain.. t - -..........4......t4
' The 4 is itibia 'inhere in which we roil is' used by jevrellers undeethe . . . . ,
every week,
•• r •
Did England Want to The ,.
...luilik-already..tn.4.0. on ,nationat sor, „totting .of ..preciouti stones, to • add
vce' VidVory i# • tbiA,. epetat 4 lustre.te them. — •
•
,
A C. 4.4”.
.„.„„ _
' Government Factories in japan.
'the British commercial
_
Yokohama reports that the japitnete
overnment hatt tecently appointed
a conunissited from g
officiate of state, to eonsiderthe,aues-
tion of transferring private own-
erehite the various governinent fac-
tories. The factoriet include the
woof, army defiling, steel, :weird and-
printieg works.
Wise it the man who•,realizes that
he 'hi e 'fool and tried to live it chillt.
•
Abbut the only difference in babies
'is in thepersonal opinions On their
"One tanie a tnOnth or Se beek," ha mothers, : -
;
ate neture of projectile me ing, take in,erieh and Lome have -recently been
d
the ease of the-sheapnel shell.• The 'studying the effects of these salts in
steel kortion undergoes about a score -various specific diteaseso says the ar-
of operations, and the brass cartridge -
case ettaelied to the base 'requires
allot sixteen, counting from, the disc
of sheet brass to the finished article.
.Then there is the .fuse, • the delicacy
of, the -work in which resembles watch-
making. • • ' •' ,
Altogether,. the shell is subjected to
,about forty inspections, and. May' be
rejected at any stage, .. •
After a shell his survived this or-
deal' it ought to he, one would think,.
perfect; but. a test shell istaken from
.eyekr 1291 and actually fired from a
iun into •I,Valik• of sand. It is then
again examined, and if the contour
aboutthe powder is -iexpanded, away
•goes the whole batch,' because if they
--ir` ere • fired the "groovingbe •torn
out of elegem ' ••• , •
-- Perhaps. the most-striking-illustra
• :n-ef--
Projectile .making is that every shell
is weighed over •and over again;. if
you produce an ; eighteen -pounder
high -explosive shell; it Must be only
a few Araelirns over or under itt nor-
mal weight; Otherwise it is rejected.
-- There it doubt' that the .peo.•
foundest discontent with the war per-
vades the high mixture •of people
known as the "Dual Empire," and un -
lees Germany wins a sweePing-vietery.
the Empire Is deoined. The Empire
is. made: pp_ot-_-prgbably two, score
iteretit-tatlinialitiei; 'each -ifeIfiably
straining to get, the advantage of the
other and tugging et the leash ;which
;holds -them together. On. top of this
is the 'decadent Old firistortecy;;• with
the senile Emperor at the head. :The
"iftlt-Arehdukte-of-A-ustrininistleng-
been a byword in turope. They have
only .succeeded in maintaining Their
ascendancy by playing off one rade
and' one religion against another.
Now •when they are. using the sops of
the 'people at more "kaniumetifUtee
-cannon fodder -the anger and re.
belliorY of the: people grow hotter
every day; , • ' • '
'One bricklayer t att lay about 1;000
0,1,600 bricks in 0 dity of ten bouts,
leaving the jOinte ro0g1t:i • • ,
A Creek Rifle Shot. • -
• , •
' A good story is told si • certain
calmer iti.conneition with an insPeo7
,tion. of a: Crack . rifle, corps which he
:Conurianded, The inspection • pasted
fr-satisfrfactorityk-there-were-rio,•cdm
plaint, and the. regiment ' was evi-
dently in good Order.- *But'," said the
inspecting general, al UM' bound to
tell • You, colo' eel, that riiniors have.
reached Me of gambling being carried
on inning your Officerii."
:"That may have been the case,„
said the colonel, "sortie months ago;
but I can asStlid 'yen that nothing of:
the kind is in vagui3 now, Wettest I've'
WW1. all the ready Money in the regi -
„moot, and I Weald . ago* any
gnmbling on. tredit, .
stiele which theri mentions temunt
in a Berlin newspaper. This is sum-
sitarized.frOnt_ainith r
article says that astir:illation of food
essentially increased by an.abund.
ant =provision Of caleium salts, which
Cali be due :oely to an inereased for -
motion pf enzymes.' A quotation ' is
given as' fellows:- - „ „
- "Bet this is an activitrof the cell: •
nucleus as roved- by the expert- ,
metts• 'of 'Hofer. --:, ruttier reaults
thereof are the strengthening of the
body, an increase in, the bactericidal -
action of known -mi "-the
•plicigotytopis and in general an in-
fluences Mending?' to prodnee illness.
.Caleium salts also igoothe the neight-
'deed' irritability of the nerves and
the tendency to- sneezing;.,etc," .
. qAccording:te, the- article hit .
loaf's. say. • e view, -"there. are
very few of the sore:ailed coestitu.
titular diseases which can be so
quickly controlled ' any.: curative
process as :can .hay. fever by calcium,
Chloride, g laCt•Whieh Wilt spell
lief, for nearly thousand .sufferers, for
*hone the.Eaderered and Other pot.
lenebtaring'weedie ntitl",-Iltwea4Vhieli.'
Line eur.roads. in• tate slimmer and "
early fall are signals of hardly borne •
terineit lininunitY by
flight." . . • • ,e•
The' conclueing paragraph says that
any.uther-,IPAatigatore-are-rOt,,e4-,— -
ing evidenee as to Sticcesstul haridling •
of diseases of the Most diverse '•
acter • 17- :the . caleiuni treatinente-.-in
Shor.t claimed •that.this treatinelit: •••
is highly effective. on nutrition. •
,
Australian bower birds construct
galitilies Under • hanging branches;
which they adorn with highly -colored .
feathers, rags; Whelk bones, ole,.'
These 'bowers are Anted. for mating
itt
the breeding season. -
-
r • •
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•
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