The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-11, Page 2..fr-rrillbAllAIMPAMirelik.. %WW1Et er'"
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‘
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.711111101WAIINKITOLMOIV
r1,04:174rfirfAVY•17717‘77117417
.t -"MIMMF
are used to
the famous
Every leaf Is fresh, fragrant
full of its natural deliciousness. SoId
In sealed packets only.
-aria A
• '
New and Timely Diehee.
Sated Fillets of Salmon. -Clean
and pick a small, salmen. Sprinkle
email slicewith salt and pepper.
' Saute in a hot blazer. Along enough
butter to prevent tinrning, Season,
with Ienthn juice and aPrialde with
fineiy chopped parsley.. ,. • • .e •
•Ulananion Run Pudcling,--Stialc tour.
. vich;• stale him§ •unbroken, i cold
Water for O minutei",- Press out wa-
ter direfully, then ,add''..,two ; beaten
eggs orta':a pint of milk, stirring all
together. Bake. Serve well milk,
or any 'sauce. The buns useelly have
sufficient sugar, butter and s,Piceii. •
Mutton Ragout, - Beat currant
jelly that it may be easily measured.
Put three tablespoonfuls jelly in hat
-blazer. Add one teaspoonful lemon
juice ,and two tablespoonfuls 'butter.
When butter is 'melted. ,reheat
. aliees of cold boiled mutton in Sauce-
pan. Sewn:in with salt and paprika.
Egg Balls for Soup. -Egg halls
form a great improvement to,a-elear
soup. BoiI four eggs ` very bard,
drop them into cold water, and when
cool remave the yolks, poundingtheee
in a morthr Until quite a paste; then
beat them with* teaspoonful of salt,
• a little, pepper, and the white .of one
uncooked egg. Form into baffs the
The Vicar's Nephew
or The OrphanjLa Vindication
his forehead, Once he got up in the
night and dreseed himeelf, azt fire to
1
heav3K•eyed that Mrs. Raymond was
go into the Vicar's room and ear
• iht141joiti8ekin: lookYell:1)11%, k thIliflisen.'sYuQuellpreisseed4lin' iciboulliliet:
over. But when he opened hi* door,
the eilence of the dark house drove
• Wm back, chilled With fantestic dread.
On Itlenclay, the fourth morning, he.
came down to breakfast so pale and
frightened.
'The boy is ill' Joeialii, he looks like
a ghost.'
'Jack assured her wearily that there
11
CHAPTER IV,
I "There!" he eaid, and twisted tlie
MtHewitt Was very
feat round the handle, "f don't think
silent in school on Thursday morning., grave and
obeli ..ferget that lesson.°
was nothing wrong with hirn. Indeed
He passed over mistakes and . wrote , n i er moved nor spoke. what was wrong with lure he himself
Snotty had begun to etir regain and rould not hate) told her, even. had, he
wrong figures on the blackboard,and
had dark lines under hia eyes, as if whimper. faintly, her tongna banging dared to try. . . •
he bad slept heal)! or had a, toothOlie. out against the wires. The Vicar "You had better not go to school
In the Middle of the hietorv class knelt down and took off the inuezle; to -Jay," said the Vicar kindly; he
the curate came in hastily with an unfastened the chainka fetched •some made a• Point Qf ativays beinA kind
CONNECT THE 1
WHOLE WORLD
• 0111. VOICE AND Mom BY
WIRELESS -SYSTEM,
ikele Tesla. Thinks His Plan Will
Allow Us to Talk Through
• , the Earth.
Nikola Tesla, of ./sTew York, an-
nounced recently that heehas received
a patenton an invention Which will
not eliminate static interference', the
- Mew:* beigaherei.cf Wir•cleeee tele-
ThortY, but would enable thousands of
pereons to talk at once between vire-
less stations and make cit peeeible for
those talking to see one another' by
wireless, regardless • of the distance
Separating them.He said else that
with his wireless etation now in the
I:orogen- of construction on Long Is-
land he hoped to Make New York one
of the centraleXchangeLin__a. Well&
'distend a wirelesS telephony.
T:e4x0.141;ihenlas; been in
n working erkinlearo4n
,s6 ._
,Re has exhibited an article piiblilised
in the Electrical World eleven years
.agos- in ;Which he predieted net only
wh'elves telephony on a 'enpunercial
'basis, but that it would he possible to
identify the voice Of an acquaintance:
Over any •distance • That its Operator
'IT1111.eigcr ofaiainwpansgitet tf°rittitinguish the
at•
ten, Va., was announced by the Amer-, Iles all' 4 Wonderful thing, Wiree .
Jean Telephone and Telegraph Cam- less is coming to mankind in its full
Pal* as the most marked triumph of meaning like a 1:1Micana some of
its communication by wireless tele- these days. Some day there Will bee
phone from the naval radio Station at say, six great Wireless telephone eta -1
dA4ltianngtpoonoto4,P600aormi Hoeasrrbor, Hawaii, a. flops in a 'world system' connecting;
• all the inhabitants of this earth to
tau: e me ein:teintoirntvweento,„oh,niz wai,oent. a. Lametedt this
one another, net only by Yoke, but.hy,
sight. It's surely coming.".
•
electrical
.1 ta exp rinien are naturally descry -
The experts carrying out this bril- REC,0191 PRICE FOR SHIP.
ing of great credit for the skill they German Steamship Valued at $275,000
have shown in perfecting the devices.
'Sells for $600,000.
Thermare of two kinds:. Fir*, those •
serving to control transmission; And,
second, 'those magnifying the received
impulse. That ••the control of trans-.
mush:in is perfect is plain to experts.
from the fact that the Arlington,
Whire . Island, and Pearl Harbor
'plants are all. inefficient and that the
distance of telephonic coinumnication.
is equal to that of telephoneic trans-
mission. • It is also perfectly apparent
Viet, the chief. merit -of-the application.
imams 194--,- aud 544.1.. ecueue-- oa ,water,, and -hell- VILA eine while- ehcbevaltriderarb la .11..,revr-,, ctcyl:::,-.eitt,
. They went out of the room, and for lookin
wanttotaoinspuleuakteitoVryiloinY-,r'' 11 ewitt ? I 41ehtilia.hae ya. 11 Oritgtslita," most
nub:144011. , 441 to
LatinIiittliebni not at hrtmemiatimyseu your
smile 011ie the boys - yawned and
Rclgetted, Tolling at theirdesks. ' manetr.c,tilifiunigintor Ltacrtdoo; gbiuvtel,,Vaa nide:: head b aiculieth.e P:urnbaypessteyrodut'w,Woere 10o
one thorough thrashing, and not need, Jack went ttli to his room in silence.
"Ellikir said .Charlie Thompson,
"That's the Roscoe girl."
who wad- looking Out of the window, . ttl?m;ohe.;I:ahte riye_a.u.zSihaetlhiatobey another Irtiaworsi4em 4ueittirseliebsffuesrseedheabcoeuntldweiteht
• Jim " Greaves Sprang up With. a he was apolo. Well -meant importunitY,All at last a
quick, startled ern, and then Saerlown gizing to Jacke. and turned .ronnd ringing of the`frent-cloor hell and a
. . ..
again Jack glanced earelessly out sheLPIY.... . ' - '` ° ' . , j sound of vices in the hall Sent her
•- . . ' of the window,- Maggie Roseee was • -'-'w.nat. areyouItloing'.-out -of dote 1,..dsouwunneutsaularT7;t:iiseouer:WI,OT'ohlsaede-ettletemitattst",
Rice and Bacon Tasty: --Rice and walking away down the road, 'clinging ,before You have finished /our less- '
bacon for breakfast-Cooleafternoon to the curate's arm, and sobbing bit- ons? r. won't have the ' preparation .ter on urgent' business," Jack- heard
before sole cup; riee in IITater ••• • -.-aegIeatedi '1-#41.-,rve: told' YOU ''thitt--the-servantartawerz-Ile 'shut the ffetir
until ,soft, draln, cover • tightly , I wonder what s wrong with her?" tarea 7. • Mind. it d
to dry in oven' for few moments Wh be theught; and, then after a Mb Celrle m " done before' befclre
,ready to Use in the morning ih(111 °nen° 'Ineveen't:b -"4-n.d ' what's I'' wrong. vrtihthe- ing",aes'whie'tnei, Aafivi'ir.1,1' agnifid, lwefitth$Q cei'sta.end-
rY ay 7 All ,the school's in '.
green pePper and. two medium-size eon' ,,°t - d >
eniene very nue, earleoil for , Ave iVe-Ifeaeint- lire'ame beer and.went-en $1.1SnrneertintYg'Pantthnipa feet.
:d.' °s: -°g
1
• ininates `add to rice '
the r lastr
s . I peasoning t Class; but his hand was 'if • '
geour and began , Q- , or conifert, ` and lieked f t
of' bacon as there k lift
.
f •She'
:recognizedlier• onlY
„etdt aral OPPPer: 11.10 4,• In Oakes ofie. eitekIng.as held.the heels,
t• frl.en • craw ad UP closer to Iiim
Of codfish cakes. fry as inanY Stlips PreaentlY, he pilled himself • •
oo ,
are, qa ete .to . • , irritably ceosti-ea. While erin
„. P . k.ssfers. Then Jack sat
am.1 sat daims glad to • be alone.
(To be continued.),
• ..TRIBILlig TO BRITISH EFFORT,.
A French Rclitor•Describeit Hie Visit
• - •e to Great 'Britain', • ..
„ • . .
The Petit Animal publishes the last
a a' series of articles by Mg Piehon on
but 01011_0:mu dust sake,s lightly with rig boy'an Ruling fault dOWIl on the flags beeicle her, and his regent visit to Great Britain. '''M.
over trifles. He was usually a patient sobbed with his heed against ,her ,
flour and brown in hot bacon fat. teacher, if a dull one; but now every- neck: He had not cried like that since f i;
Pichon says: -It took ;nen 'months
Lift on hot platter withstrip bacon on thing. seemed to anlieY him. When the he was quite a little thing, for an. estimate t? be formYed'Ot the
as -
morning classes were finished,• he He *got through his preparation
quantity of material necessary to called UP Jack and reprimanded him somehow before his uncle came. in to sure victor., but from the Very 'be -
sharply before the school. A Window tea, The Vicar always examined the !Sinning of the war Lord Kitchener
had been found to be broken. : lessons and Was generally,' with,:good understood that millions - of Men
"You Were seen pitching up atones reason, dissatisfied with them; but would be required, and he accomplish.
itr the read- yesterday,. That -makes lie Auud no-fault to-day,though they ed an extraordinary feat. One of the
were done even worse. than usual. The greatest' merits of British statesmen
seeveemniendg to,
takes They hidenothing and apply
aragekg!tdbat the clock weed theyfrankly admittheir mis-
wearily 00: ' it i that tli th • '
never strike • nine. When . bed -time " '
came at last; he went up to his room, themselyes resqlutely th the tail( of
and sat down in the dark on theedd'e. findbig remedies. Conversations I
f It' b
top of each cake. This makes a tasty
breakfast dish with fruit, rolls and
coffee. ' • )
Savory Bread Pudding. --,This is a
pudding that malabe eaten with Mut-
ton, porker AAA, and WIZ vaftPfeceo the thud pane of glass this 'Orme,
of bread may he used. Take hall a Jack shrugged his shoulders. , He,
pound of stele bread, two half -boiled had net been throwing Stones, ' and,
onions; two tablespoonfuls , of coarse had picked up the . pebbles only be -
oatmeal, three ounces of suet; hale a Cause of their colored markings; bat
• - • • if Mr. Hewitt chose to put himself in
,teeepoonflit QI erred sage, an egg, a
e wrong by taking things for grant: -
quarter of a pint of milk, set nci
a-- ed, why should one undeeeive him?
pepper. Soak the bread in cold via- "It eves the eat that broke the win-
ter till soft • then squeeze as dry as dOW " one of the boys put in "X
possible, and crumble it. fine. Chen saw her; there was ,a deg after her,
the suet and onions and add, with all and she jumped and sent a Ace:sere,.
the dry ingredients, to the bread, See- pot through." --
• "Oh," said Mr. Ilewitt.absently; "is
that set° " • .
Jack Went out With the friee
which he had not worn since Satur-
day. What a mean let they were! 'Let
them Once' get,a, spite against a fel-
low; and: they.would all,Kays.bb"roady
to put anything on to him, without
'Stopping to ask Who was to blame.
And he had got to be at the orders:
a an asilikethat:, .
Yes, but he 'Would be a man some
day; and then he 'Would never be at
anybody's orders any more. 'Uncle
and the 'other , cads could do their
Worst; . what did it all ,•matter when
their time was So -short? eNothing
matters when one is going to be free
He had never thought of that before;
now •it burst upon him suddenly,
splendid light of promise: ; He walk-.
ed down the late" with shining eyes;
only a few :more years. now, and • he
Would be a man. , • .
-By, the afternoon 111r. Hewitt had
recovered his self -command. but h
was.more gloomyL-than.ever-,--andgiV
.short, impatient ;answers- -to t'he questions Put to him. Some of the elder
boys seemed' as much upset as the
schoolmaster; and at closing -time the
class .melted away silently, ,without
any of the usual tricks and laughter.
- Sack, for his part;•Shouldered • his
books arid ran home at the top',Of his
speed. If he made haste he could
get his preparation finished, and ebe
out 'before sunset...
He jumped. over the garden gate
with the •Icing„. easy.Spring for which..
all the Porthearriek,boys envied him,
alighting on the gravel with 'perfect
noise and balance. Then 'Ire looked
back to measure' the length of the
ill= with hiLeysee....,ILwast a eredit-' had --begun to hve,. and liOw'ifnele •
able one fbr Obey of fourteen, and he has never 1*On:the richest niouarch
it and it • would - • •
the conscionsriess-of+it thrilled on. die. • . in the world That honor has always
to have, every limb so strong' end surei..beAdwaking next inprning he sat up.jn .s
belonged' to the Czar Who his ac -
to
• .
with delight. ;To be made so cleanly, i
ple,-is that not a jay? He looked . and wondered arnezedly what it cession; came into the Remaneff Pri-•
clown at his •fixiii, brown. wrists; won., day.
that hadbappened to, him yester- vete estate; yielding' about ten million
It seemed inconcehrable that he, dollars' a year. Beyond that his
dering haw thick a bough- he
twist off from the fuchsia with . one .•
could jack Raymond, of all boys in the ary0 amounted to another ten million
world, had lain the whole
turn of the Close-knit muscles: But - evening dollars besides many profitable ' bl-
and Until late into the night wide- ' d • ' .
when he put out his. hand to 'try:,
:beauty :of -the slender crimson-, buds • •
th-e-.--sw_ake-4117the-darler-tellinp estanents_ni).roa
sonittg to taste. , Then stir in the egg,
, age of a walnut, roll in flour, Mul- frY well beate24 4714 the Milk' ' Grease
a
it pale btown. ' " ' tin, Pour in -the Mixture - and bake in.
, fleet Balls. -Cut one-half pound a het oven tilL it is done' probably
about forty-five Minutes. Cut it into
beef from top of round in one-third-
•iitoh, strips:. Iktut scrape with rather squares. and Serve it with bet gravy
dull knife. eonve 14 sae, pare of poured over it, •
. beef from freshly Mit side, Turn and
. ,..
scrape other side, Season with 'salt •• • Hints for the -Rome '
2and pepper and shape into email:balls Crnshed bananas spread over cream
about the size of filberts, using as lit- toast make an agreeable dish for an
tie pressure ad• possible. Drop balls 'invalid. . • ' ' •
1
' into a hot blazer, generously eprink-* 'It doesn't ,seeni possible ever ' to
led with :Salt; shaking pan' constantly have too many pickles stored away
,,., „
. ulna- the .ePtira surface Ais the„,b 11 for Winter u . •
Is seared: Serve on small pieces..of
buttered toast,. •
Oyster Bisque --Two cupfuls white
stock or milk one cupful creani one
' egg? -Liao cupfuls oysters, one tea-
spoonful chopped parsley, ;two table-
spoonfuls butter, blade of -mace,
pepper and cayenne. „Cook oysters in
white stock 'until edges curl. Strain
„ • As cold weather approaches give
the chickens ','hot water to • drink;
they will lay better.
. .
No fruit in the. market has more
possibilities than the grapee--either
'cooked or fresh. • •
A .charming crib quilt for a child
is made of squares, with. a letter_ Of
the alphabet -in each. • -
reserve liquor and chop oysters. Press Put .glyeerine on watermelon stains
through siev; Add butter and. flour'. and leave it a...little while;- then wash
. cooked e togetheee seasonings and in clear water. • _ .
'Cream, , Cloak five rainutes, add to egg 'Pat salt in the oven under .your
iightlybeaten, serve. • • baking tins, and the dish Will not
- Baked Calf's :heart scorch on the bottom. .
.well and wiP$„ it. with..goOd dress•• Dough ane. dumplings help
•",' ing imade of breadcrurnbs, herbs, kit'. :to eke out, the Meat dish' where' the
ter and seasoning. Allow dressing supply 'has run, short. ,
tooth, enough to swell. Tie strips of Never pUt too much food on an
salt pork over top to keep • dressing invalid's tray, but serve it" with the
in; . Put in pan ;with e ,little • water, most perfect- daintiness.
:pie sliced onion, one carrot and spray 1, 'Add a little minced celery and
• or Vivo, of parsley. , Bake. two bouts, , parsley to the filling- for chicken. It
`basting Often, .Remove from pan,andwill leve a delicious flavor.. • -
thicken gravy with paste of flour ited,Ljeo_salty.iteip__
water.7--Add little`kitelien-bdifquet. adding a few .slices of raw potatoes
heert-ere:pkstte er--ePotir-terrie Of end .cooking a little longer. .
• gravy over, garnish With boiled onions Many- people forget that grapes can
and serve zest of gravy in boat. • be made into delicious cobblers and
pies just like any other fruit.
Cold lunches pave the way. to in-
digestion, se wherever it is possible
Jet the children have something hot.
king-oheeseedishese-it-es-
well to add a tiny rdrich of carbonate
of soda, as it renders them more
digestible,
When slicing bacon from the piece,
the knife will. cut' more smoothly if
It is dipped in water' before cutting
each slice. • ' '
FREE
tie French. 'bb,pagea,
tego'birer odid wbereto„bruP
end ether valuable Inforrea. '
t fon teethe trapper "liawfor
' rode 1.1"' "rut style Male! •
boutitlfUr aettand gar -
ments, also' "Noes nid
- Siloitomars Suppl catkci"
iCluMb Tine% Animal Balt. Flah Nets, att. sit bka'eftt.
• ,•ireices;viutpFititrated4 Sent X Addreae;
JOHN HALLAM 3(1.144'n2B''ficunig
LIbstrEO.TORON7
—
s„ h..
crate
•1:4‘,...it.--nectio 'looking ttftev
Y4Va0e1Ie$ earboltitko(f svii
oeuvit to ited1' quICIZIk arid lire.
vieritirick Itiffection:---Mrst'u-ut
treatment with •
•
CARBOLATED
'.1ic•treldxsci'../011y. • ."
Medo Caned&
It Is a rtiot effective antleentle
eresteng for cut; btuioeil,
oltip ittitations all kitele,
such an POitiori ivy arid
barberia itch. Alto good for corns,
WOO) 'sunsfityrtg, Twist oit
lide"' fit ntiftinal pacimgra Uattinfrth
rime,
/No ti.u601i(lated: For tale •at alt
C'titta8iti via Genera; Storci,
rtet bcolatt On Netird0,.
CHESEthtOUCK MPG. CO
meokinciated)
Sao elteriert AVE,* .14490p0.1.,
.evuelikaev..
„
Ta'peeseiwe patent -leather shoes
anct boots -Clean With's-rig .diPped. in
. then polielywith a _piece' Of old
• velvet, This Prefents- the leather
-ffOrit eeecking,-•
' ibe inside' of the oven (ince
every week with hot water , and soda,
and scrapp_Afiany_htirnt ,rnatter_y_ith,
.ati-Old knife-, A !dirty oven mini the
flavor Ot feed cooked in it; , ' • "
If when making Soup or beef tea
far aniesialid it is _necessary to cool it
at One'e: peas it though a clean cloth
saturated with cold' watt z Not A
Particle' of fit 'will be 'left ilteheet-
tea. _ •_..'
.Most housewives kriow that •sager
will 'disseive more quickly in hot
ter than in cold but very few •knose gle much. and only Moaned arid growth :of tamarisk arid fuchsia.. As
. the evening he, had been Watch-
ing his uncle's face, vainly trymg to
see in leagain the face that he had
seen in the etable-yard: Now sitting
with a •hand over his eyes-, he
could see it. It stood out of the'derk-
nese the .4AI:int mouth sharpened and
quivering, the nostrils full •ofe• life,,
the eyes awake. • .••:
..There was, then,. one thing in the
world that uncle really enjoyed. FOr
have had with Mr. Lloyd , George,
Lord Kitchener and Mr, Balfour leave
no denbt as to the unshakeable firm-
. .
nees of their decision. When one has
had the opportunity of exiiinieing
closely their efforts one feels that One
is face to face with a people who, will
never cease_ ,its, endeavors; a people'
who will continue the fight _until the
day when Ger Ian militarism is come
it pletelY exhaneted. TO this end it will
wee pleasure lima in the face -I -employ -all its reeefircei; 'AS deter -
not anger. lie.loaked, quite ,clifferent mination and all its 'bravery; and,
when he was angry, . He would look come what
Angry, for instance,•whee he should may, it will go otito the
rai matter 'how long the war may
414 °l'it 'al'eut the stelen knife-- last,' All the atitherities are assured
Cold sweat broke out suddenly, all
huehenedsealin,s eheieeied...__,..e.e put up bath of the,,final tfiumPh of Great Britain.
- ConehldiAg, Pichon says: -='‘At
At last he rose, ht his candle and the banquet which terminated . our
undressed. He lay” down in his' bed; stay in London, . and ,at which +Lord
and the forgotten candle ,guttered ell :Robert -CeicliVIVe•Oarnbon,..nnd our ex --
"ewer and -we'll out With -a . of ceIlent colleagues of the,British.Press
acrid smoke, while he stared tee into
the darkness, as still . as though . -
Made such strong and reassuring
speecnes, we expressed to our friend• s
As he. lay, the horrible thing that our great gratitudeto them and our
had come upon him hammered itself full confidence in them. ,Irepeat this
down end burned in Upon his under- here, so that the representatives of
standing. When the theft of the knife the •British Admiralty, by whom we
•oshoegfigipad.1,/erideis,evireeoueride: _hand he too would la_iwg4eriet_Talcoe04.4idectergd„,...amAt.gkinowoviir:_ithtattiwae.,
=0Ssnreerttryhtebdaregnirehendyndlnledenetahn;d .gloated
nik ternal eamninnion which we passed
whein tin tQueli hadbeen laid since the together in the emotion and serenity
of the same Inniee! - „
maws- flew away... AS for all that had
happened eai•lier,,,it was, of • no bio-;
rued; ' he. could 'look back indifferently
on the self of a ,week, ago, as on a
stranger; he had lived jest five days.
; There 'wag no escape; and no one
would .understend. No one, no one
would. ever understand that he was.
not the Same, how as last week; that
the boy who had been'flogged se often
and had hinghed-, at it was dead,andthat the new Jack in his place had
never yet been touched . or Chained.
.There was riabope.for this Whiteun-
epotted new self; 'onlyedast Saturday
4.
• 'WEALTH OF MONARCHS.
•Czar is Richest of Old Woridieingee:-:
Britain's Ruler Poorest.
The Westminster Gazette of Lon-
don, says:-.,' „
' "We have beard something of the
diminuation of the Kaiser's private
fortune owing to ,t11 war. But even
with•hia fifty rOYal.r.esiclenees and in-
tereste_in„ all manner ,of,businesses,
A
• 1 A
THE $TANDARD ARTICLE
- SOLD, VERYWHERE-
. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES
for transmission than any wire could
ever be. A wireless telephone con-
versation b� • made' as .secret LIP Oki
thought, •
' "f have my.self erected a• Plant fori
=the purpose of 'co/Meeting 'by- wire. •
less telephone the chief' centres, of
the world, •and from thie plant ale •
many --aW-4 hundrett-wilt bernhite-W..-z-
talk absolutely without. InterferenCe
and with absolute secrecy. The plant`
would 'Amply be connected with the
teleplrone central exchange of New
York eity, and allY subseriber will be •
able to tiiik•to any ..otlidr telephone
subscriber in the. world, and all thia
without . allY change 'in, aPparei
• ,536 tone,
sixATInh_peornsottfilletas.monfsg,h4oip,i.75::itime,
auction the price of *$600,000, an in- "
crease d ;275,000 over. her price of ere
a British prize, ,recently brought at
which was the Meth, GerMail Lloyd!
Schliesien before she was captured as, et..
•
ing ;825,000 indicates 'titnhea:''sexh. itpenet7Hott
the present shipping boom in Great',
Britain. Even a half year ago veSseits(
Imes*nthe magnification of the micro- werepeensellingoboom abt;eaa)clisrearlir'eltidnsuint' tthlite;„
Phonic impulse: - .• • .history of shiPPing.
got New Biscoveries. There have been other sale e as
. k • • markable of late. One steemer, which
' must -not be imagined that we was bought for 1225,000 at the e
deal here With ziew disceveries. The ginning .of the wee,' changed hand's! ,
improveinent simply 'concerns • the at $500,000: Copenhagen. (meat_
control : of the transmitted and the Who last January bought a 4,23‘toif
inegnikeetien4 the received impulse, steamer .for ;44506' resold .bar -tine -
but the wireless system it the same month for $200,000, ,
This can never bechanged. • , These vessels are freighters arid he
"That it is practicable to project Passenger vesscla, Excel* when. le
to the GoVernment on 'charters as
transporte, passenger ships are MA
-particularly profitable. But the (wag.; •
gerabel•price for freighters, often fee ,
exceeding the, cost price of gaper-', ,
the human voice not, only to a dis-
tance of 5,000 •mils, but clear across
the globe, demonstrated, by experi-
ments hi Colorado in• 1899. Among
my publications I would refer to -an
article in the- Electrical-"Werld-of nimat-ed slilicsOrdiMIO the Mee*: -
March -5, 1904, but describing really tion of hage.profits. '
tests I made in 1899; The facts which ' The clean sweep from the Seas oi
I pointed. out in the article were of German and Austrian -vessels, aggro.
much , greater` significance Allan that gating more than 4;000,09' tons,. left •
of the 'experiments reported, although an unprecedented chance 1 to rivals.'
this should be ,taken in a scientific Neutral countries, , especially e the
sense, arthe experiments were simply Scandinavian. countries, have had tho. •
scientific demonstrations. painted advantage over England and France; •
out then that Modulations of the owing to their comparative immunity
human voice tan be reproduced more &ern eubmarine attacks.- • A
clearly through the earth than
:through wire. * -• •. THE IMITATIVE STARLING. i
"These testa made between Wash-
es
ington and Honolulu will act as an Imitate Whistling of Rifle Ballets' in. -
immense stimulus to wireless tele-. ..
France. .. / - ••
...... „........_
lilleaY, and W0i1.41ct' be. 0 Mileh. more '
But they are not, Even now, fifteen
of the transmission were understood that ec -etarli.riga In the Wooded coun-
tr3r *int SOucliea are imitating the to the' o 1 '
princir whistling of ' rifle pullets; for the
years •afte.r the fundamental
ples have been denimistrated and the starling is the most imitative Of birds,
says a writer in Landon Chronicle. I
possibilities shown, theke are many .
experts in the dark. Chide recently e •heve heard him imitating a blackbird ,
have described in • a patent eireints so closely that a casual listener 'might
which are absolutely imninne to static have 13mi•lek- '
and ether interferences-so-inuch SO 1.1-‘--alir a. song is net an elsy thing to
that when a telephone is attached I imitate. The talking starling seems
there is absolute silenee, even light- to have gone out of fashion, for which
lovers of birds should be duly thank,'
ning in the immediate
No one we forget the paged starling
viciaitY ,not
ful. He has his place in.iiterature. ,
in "The Sentimental journeY;° whose .
pathetic. cry, "I can't get blifr I Can't
gettreaotu,tn' dt moveden.4erSetsetrnoei trihisoneepefisid't
Sterne's starling , and , the raven in
-113arnabY.-Budgere-Jai birtlii-4ii÷-
2iigPhlirsehno!liot:ty*wtir:;
thaattpaiiiiervtivimee .fo... .
bidden by-law, tes-b-eing dangerous te.
ments•that, the earth is niore suitable religion
---,..------------ .,--,;....--,..,._;_-..e.,-„,e-e-,-•-•,-1-....„-4.-:•--..„-'... .
MOtj,i6081101ZOOMEMVOSEAM*0011PIZOMin
over and °vet. again, as if it were "1 'ere were small eXperises to. be
restrained him; he had never before 'something new 'and terrible, that ha deducted, such as some 2Y2
noticed how lovely was the droop with wusmulilon
,Which they .hung, how protedingly griing to be flogged. He shrug- ,dollars a year to grand dukes_: and
the young leaves were pread ont
ged hic shoulders and jumped Mit ot. duchesses. But when everything had
sb
above them, like the curved wings of
a'seri4till. He raised the branch
gently, shaking ell the fairy buds, ,
-A horrible cry broke• out suddenly; drew it across his cheek. ,
and he let the Theism boUgh fall hack.
The cry was repeated; it came from ,
the stable yard, and the voice.- was; 1
Spotty"s: Sone- strange -dog - must
have set on her-elite:I Spotty Wes '.able to wag her tail feebly when he
ed h . I must we gone daft!" he
thought, and dismissed the subject
from his mind, as fit for the consider-
ation only of. old women, girls, arid
molly -coddles generally. • '
As soon as helwasedressed he Went
Out into the yard to. look After Spotty.
He had rubbed her carefully with
iniment yesterday, and made her bed,
eleft as possible; andshewas now
blinds He turned and dashed head- .stroked her. "Never' mind, old girl!"
long towards Vie yard. The old.s.1.9.g.'„4,...heesaideconselinglire,-"he'e- a beast;
cries sounded his ears, and but I've got to put up with him too,
More piercing and lamentable as he ' and I -don't care .0 hang!"
•cathe nearer; :now there Was appther Having given Spotty what 'conifert
sound as well': the sharp, stinginge he could, he went into the garden to
regular hiss of a whip. liestopped see how the puppies were getting on.
slept an • instant by the •gateway, j• It WaS a lovely morning, fresh and
cetchingebis breeth;„Ahen..qperiect theedewyvand- the clean -salt- air- seenfed
kate and entered the yard. . ['to sweep the remnants of last night's
...,Spotty was -cowering on the- ilag-: niawkishines out of his head.
stones, muzzled and chained , to her 1 The tool house, where the puppies
keeled.Shcou1d no longer strug- : liVed, :wee almost hidden by a thick•
tn
ered as the whip cae dowel with its : Jack stooped to lift ii a fat and
jest as quickly air when the water
thatsaltwill 'dissolie in,cold water en'
.‘,
eiekeeirig thud. The- --titer cheerful. PlitiPY, footsteps 'crunched
la t
•When the overt_ becieneS • too hot.
plate"te'hasirf-ot-441.iWater- into- it;
hut de not leave the door open, •This
seemed to put all his strength vase the gravel en the other tide of • the
every blow. • .
cry. 'Me deliberateness of the thing,1
the muzzle and the careftlly sharte
<Tack aP•Fang'ffirward with a furious
• ed chain, hed:aet.ltis bleed
Tha blind creature was helpless
,eriaugh without ' all that, 'In one
More instaet he would have snitched
the whip and struck his Uncle adoss
/
the face with it. Then he saw "„what
'the face wee and drew *Lek and
stood. stilt • .
The Vicar looked twenty' years
'Olinger. The • lifektie eyes were
shining, the nostrils had dilated,tit-
tle quivers of delight, played at the
corner; of the mouth. Ile was like a
man who has drunk the elixir at life.
Suddenly he looked up with the
whip lifted in the air, and, saw Jack's.
White fade, He darted violently,
pained an instantr.then brought the
whip down with a Anal hiss and thud.
SpottY did not even moan; oho was
quite still now, •
•
The vicar stooped down otter' the
dog, drawing a long breath. The hand
holding the whip shook a little, then
grew eteady. When he etoed up again
his face had returned t6 ita grey and
lifeless habit.
• •\
.Ml_sv2"--erkl-tbeP011/080-.of cooling the
even, arid the rising steam' prevents
the food from' burning.
If Aeh is found to be slightly taint -
el. a good' thing is to steep it for n
short time in a weak toletio.mi of pet%
tuanganate Ot•Pdash,_ or boraCie acid,
which destroys the .tainted particles,
and 'leaves the fish perfectly Sweet
awl wholesome. • .
. Choice of HostelrieS. •
10 -What is the best hotel?" the nesV-:
• corner inquired.
"The On'e down the Street)* replied
the native, redeetivele, "has the be -t
diniogitocen for dancing.. But the
one around UHT earner has the best
root _garden and. skating rink. And -
oh, yes, x nearly. forgot-there'San
old-fashioned tavern up three or tour
}Abdo, where yoe, might get 80410 -
thing to eat, •,
1
bushes,. jnd, his uncle's voice sounded
closeagainst - his "Have' you
seen My 'nephew 'this . morning, Mil-
ner 2" ,
T.I.ere-WaS Aremendraisehammr
beating 'somewhere, beating so that
the earth shook, so that the air was
full of the soend. But` that was only
for a =anent; before the postitan's
footstep a had died away along the
rietb, he.re lized that the hammer
WAS beatin , in his own pages, •
He leaned 'dly against the fuchsia
hedge. It iwa all true, • then, this
dreadful fCnc3P of hid night, It was
ridiculous, it Was 'impossible, there
was no understanding it; but.it Was
true. He littd thanged, and the world
•.had not changed with him. The
things that were ,daily commonplaces
to every one had become death and
damned=to him, •
1,13ut the day paseed, endnothing
happened; evidently the Vicar had
still not mimed Ida knife; For three
days jack waited,hourly, momently,
for the thunderbolt to fall. Every
sound or' movement in the house
caught at his heart with a told hand;
the very lifting of hie' tmelea eye;
lids Would .bring the aweat out • on
been.. taken into account, the Czar re-
mained the .richestmenarch• in the
world, 'far ahead of' the Turkish bid -
tan, with his 75 million (Mare, or
our own Kipg; who is .the -poorest itt
pelfand palaces.:0:011 the Old World
potentates." • ' •
• guasto rothirrainviE.N."
Soldiers Learn to identify' ;Foals_
• • Through Touch.'
,
Experiments are being made in
Englandinteaching poultry farming
to Soldiers who have lost their sight.
A group of fifteen blinded ftollers
who have be-er :Neer:ATI iii-etruetion
hem a poultry expert were" -taken.
recently by Capt. <„' Pierson Webber,
who -himself 16st his sight in thetoer
Were to a big poultry filen in 'Rent,
iThere the blind pupils identifiedvari-
ous"bfeeds Pat before them
.by examining the comb, general con-
tour anctlegs.ef the fowls and by test-
ing _•their. • Weight, • They also identi-
fied the various poultry foods by the,
.sense of touch,- sonie of the wounded
iliwing lOirthOefiCe,:of Cineir as well
as their 'sight: '• '
The poultry raisers expressed the
opinionthat there WAS rie difficulty•
in training blind soldiers:. for the
work whieh could not be oVercomeand
the seperintondmit of the firmoffer;
ed to train tee men, A • COUrae ix
poultry raising willbe painted ; in
Braille for the use Of the then. .
• ,
What ,He Used Them For:
Ciistdmer-I want • rinother Are-
extinevisher. •• Used the laet one: all
11P 'Itiatlilelk • ' ,
Clerle-Glad to e11 them 44. you,
air,but aren't you rather. <careless at
your place? This is the third 'one I've
sold you in a weelt,
Customer• -.0, X don't use theta for
'fire. They"are the greatest things on
earth for elmeing out your daughter'
late canoe. •
r •
producing a dick of the diaphregle,
while in the Ordinary telephonic cOn-
vereation there are all kinds of
noises.-, , •
• - '•
A World System.
• 'Another .cebtention- is -that -there:
dui be no sectecy 'in wireless tele-
phone conversation. I say_ it is ab-
surd to raise this contention, when it
-ill positively deinonstrated-byeMPeri-
ar tipon Pain!
rein visitor to every home end
.• usually It doilies quitdennexpeetaft:"
But
•.,-.4ink.tirmptapaietLfax-eyety-critergeecY it
Yen keep .0 anvil bottle of Slope's
•L'Llnimenthafedy, It is -the -eves est
everditcoverittl.e_ -
• Simply laid' on the skiti-t
rel3hirit required -.Jt Aitivcs,_:
the priin Awny instantly, it is
really wenderfill. •
11 ara's
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