HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-08-03, Page 2;17g1;711140,,i51107,14 ,••
,..111r•F•711F”..,
aseline Expe-ese Reduelble.
A, writer in Motor Print', gives ihe
following ethiee on keeping deem gem.
'aline expeneee
Geeelireeb cluetic; a gallon, will
drtve eisr almost any 'elietance .Thie
le food for thought foetlirese that'are
.•worrying over the high price of fuel,
by tottinga few simple Preeel1ti9nal
it is peesible fer every owner to re,
"(feett greatly the ceneUraPtiele Per
If the ear is run to0 tdowly or fast,
there is fuel waste -let, m.p.h. is , a
good average. ,
Until now the average motorist has
:been careless about the amount of
• fuel he Used begins() it was coMpare.-
• tively elieap eud was a small percent-
age of the total car expense. -
• Make sure that .you are getting .all
• the gasoline you Pee for; SeMe own -
ere are not. Watch the counter on
• the pump to eee that it registers the
• Cerrect number ,eg gallons, 410 that
the operator deeS net tamper with it
• while filling your tenk,Further-
, more, he Certain diet, you Obtain full
* ',measure.; some gasoline VinnIPS leak.
It is necessary to check the amount in
your tank by freeeent measurement.
•gr, if this is not feasible: it is advis-
able occasionally to buy aerallon in a
Van of your town, and measure the
• quantity when you get home.
Most ears gn be operated with a
leerier 'mixture without effecting the
•. production of power; some .reotorists
MaY even deem it advisable to run
with, a very lean adjustment, notwitle.
"standing a reduction in hill-clianbinir
ability or speed. The exaoVailjuit-
*ea must bedeterminedhy trial.
An abonhary air device which may
• be attached to the Manifold and op -
,rated from the dash should be used.
It v611 be found, helpful when running
with light loadealeng a smooth level
road, or drown hill. When, the motor
is used as a brake, the suction on the
• carbureter is reduced to a minimuin
by opening the auxiliary air device
meterelead and the clutch Mite or the
shifting lever in neutral. If the let-
ter le done, then -the Meter Mott he
started and the clutch shaft breeleht
to a speed higher ton that of the car
before the gear can be re-engaged.
Eiecept on very Penh Mast it
• takes less power to drive a car with
tires well inflated. Use the "thsc
!Page often.
Drive with the spark redvanced as
far as possible; usually thiS isa; the
way, Retard it only 'when the motor
knocks.
Mal allow your power to be wast-
ed valve. or piston rings.
Always shut the engine off When
the ear is standing; A. great-cleal Of
fuel is wasted by idling -more than
motorists nage.•
•
. Traffic should be avoided, 'Mee is
an astonishing difference' between the •
• Amount of feel required by identical
tars" one drivenin 'traffic .and the
other in the eonntry. Running on
low gear, .slipping the clutch, and,the
idling of the Meter wheu stending are
the causes. •
,Pool6rip Was This Kiss -
A, 'Patrol of rrenete cevely has heited inea, rnge waicb Impeeire to be tbe 'native. elace‘of one ot the troop -
Ore 1.1ei Witelia fiCOOttlpa,rii0d WM to the edge ef, the weed -anti exchangte with him what may be the last tem.
,
Warm Nreether Battery Hires, THE SUNDAY StHOOL
,
With the pleasant .days of Sumneere
coines.a -*donee' for ever motor ear • ,
owner to overlie* the neceesaay caro mtEnKkricopAL LESSON.
of certain parte of his car which can't AUGUST 6.
be seen.
One of these parts is the storage
battery, and because of the important
part it plays in starting, lighting and
ignition,. too much erePhasier cannot
be laid upon its care. -
During the sunimer, a storage bat-
tery should receive pure distille
water at intervals of a week or ten
dare This is necessary because of
the evaporation of the solution which
gives the battery its life. If this
solution is Allowel to leave a Portion
• ••••••••
Leeson VL -The Greatest Thing in
The World, 1 Car. 13. Golden
'Qtr. 18. 13.
Chapter 12. • Verse"' 31. -This last erier insight look supremely torelaele..
'Lave haeimperiehable, love .be
• Young,.
railethi-Literally, "falleth." Com-
pare.1.*Sina. ,10., "'The 'young men
shall utterly (Isa. .40; 80), but
'eve will never stumble. Done away
'made "idle," a favorite
word with Paul. ;The best confluent,-
ary is J'er. 81., 84, whicli tells of the
day when when the prophet lave noth-
ingnIcire•te since "ell the Lord's
people win he prophets," Keoereedge
-Time and discovery often make sup-
elmise belongs properly to the new.
chapter, which it introduces. •The
way tekes us to Him Who said, "I am
the Vey," whose murie may be set
in each of the jeweled 'places where:
M' the battery plates exposid to elle love is named. -
air tbese plates will deteriorate and cea,peee j3. . Verse le! Tongues--
,
Clearly languages In the usual sense.
This passage is enough to disprove
the cenception of mere abracadabra
the life of the battery will be greatly
shortened. •
Another poirit to censider is the
Wi• de• ' , '•, hydrometerbest to I'Setermine specific which, eeme scholars., have peed in
' The car shoed run 'easily.' All'ihe gravityof the solution. Tins' test the "tonkues" of this. epistle 'Th•e
hearings should be well greased and, sewed always average 1,28Q and in meaning is identical with with tIMI: of the
tree. It should be possible to push Pentecost t -The after -thought
and of angels Merely heightens the
note Of ?corn', and need 'not .loe pro-
saically interpreted. -"Else We 'might
cases where -the' car owner does not
want' to "Make the test' himself,- he
can have it made free of charge at
any Willard ;Service Station. If the
battery is allowed to ge, below ,tlie
grevity mentioned, it will gradually
run down and refuse to turn oyer
starting motor or operate the electric
lights.
By watchaeg these two mostimport-
ant things, • may ear owner may ex -
the car without difficulty ' with. one
hand on a smooth level entfaee. The
importance 'of reducing friction,' ' to
the minimum is showa lay the fact
,
that a racing car in •good condition
mar be pu:shed •with one finger. •
The wheels should spin readily,
which means that the bearings, tritest
be free and the brake banes and
' shoes must not drag.
When descending long hills, the
•
•
car may be allowed to coast with the
• OUR FORESTS AND TIIE WAlt.
Much Timber. Will be Required for
Reconstruction Work. '
The •economic importance of • the
forest resourcee of this continent will
be greatly enhaneed as a result of the
war. • Enormous quantities of timber
• are ecessarily used for military pur-
poses, in addition to, what is unaVtid-;
ebly destroyed in the fighting zone.
The shortage of tonnage has made
it impracticable for the 'needect (sup-
plies of timber to be furnished on any
large scale from •Canada or AIM. Unit-
ed- States, and, as a result, heavy ewe-
pee!! the vety best service from his
storage batteries.
Loxtiorrs sow).
:Is a No Longer Merry...But Paie-
fur* Quiet-
NoWhere in London, says" a writer in
the Daily News, is the traneterniation
wrought by the war more marked than
in; cosmopolitan Soho.
,-"Toeday the Wanderer 'through • AO
streets,' the -writer says, "will scarce-
ly recognize the hustling, merry place
of 'old. , The. War has -macre it pan-
-fally quiet, almost liferess.1 Into the
inferno in Flanders, Prance, on the
Italian front and in ' the eastern
ting has heeeme necessary in the bel- 'theatre of hostilities Frenchmen, Bel-
ligerent countries. While England is - giaase Germans • and Austri-
not generally regarded as, a forest ens who had'eheiiheine in Soho have
country, an as ma e relatively e
I gone.' Those Germans and Austrunis
who have not gone to the war are in
the concentration eamp.
"Salle can speak feelingly on other
grounds of the 'effects -Or the
war. Ib -relied on Englishmen to eat
the dinners it prepared, but now there.
are few Londoners to Patronize the
tripes a
In mode de Caen and to wet&
progress in paiblie forestry, there is
is
stilt' in England and Scotland a Con-
eiderable amount of thnber, • mostly on
- royal end Private estates.-The')impera-
tive necessity . for utilizing this tim-
ber has resulted hi the despatch of a
battelion. of Canadian woodsmen to
cut in France anclin Russia. In Bel-
gium, the Germans have cut aelarg, •
proportion of the timberd • have -th"ative"argilling-the aPecialtt
n Ve e
d escargots. • ' •
used' it in Military operations or ship -
•ped it to Germany. ,"If Yee, vvalk down Greek street,
‘The' result a all this or -cutting 'Frith street and Dean street and peep
into the small restaurants at the din -
will Mean, a ,heavy'Shortage of tim-
ner hour you will see tables immacul-
her for reconstruetioneparposes after
ately furnithed, the serviettes , steckto ,
the War, when it should be, passible
rosife large shipments from this in the glasses, flowers artiscally ar-
continent. This will mean mean a largely ranged; waiters at their posts, mad-
, increased drain teem eanadete foe_ ame at her eomptoir-bet the diners
are. few. There is no longer a pro-
ests, and serves to emphasize the ne-
e eeseity for still more complete eon_ ;eessionef taxicabs at the dining hew.
servation of this , tremendously. vale- 'A brisker business is dem at the re -
able asset, if Canada is to take full ' staurants in Old .Compton street and
advantage' of her opportunities for Werdour street, but there, to, the
werld-seiViee in. this direction,' ' I number of diners has fallen off.
The greatest enemyof•the, forest I "There' le no doubt about it -the
°is and always •has been fire. It has war has seriously affected many of
been estimated 'that the average an- • , the restaurants in Soho. And not
nual forest fire loss in this: country only the restaurants. ' Those who
• iii,sufficieet pity the interest on the deal in alimtntari Mebane:ma char -
recent Dominion lean of $100,000,000,e 'enteitie •ii.leacienne devoutly wish that
TO reduce this loss, it is 'necessary the Wardogs in Europe were tied up.
not only only ter grant larger appropria- Business is so quiet that madame at 5. Unseemly -Perhaps the leading
tions for fire -ranging services, but also the boncherie, -who dearly • loves the/milt *is of the pitiful exhibition
to reorganize such services in a nem- e„flowei•s,,• has to send a rose seller Selfassertiveness often makes. Love
I never loses dignity when she steeps IV. Widmer, a leachng Liverpool cot -1 e
- her of eases; with a view of securing away.
Say that the "angels" or "princes' of
ofethe -nations in Daniel, might be vile
posee to speak the languages of their
peoples as well as the oect language
of the heavenly world. --03enbal-'-
Specially used .rn the 'orgiastic Wor-
ship of Cybele, characteristic of Asia
Mysteries -There .is more than a
half reference to the sham mysterieskhe, rendering "know-N.11y" is now
dis-
1 came across a "gnostic" in Jam-
aica who fixed the "Millennia Dawn"
for 1915! •
9 . We know -More exactly, we
learn or come • tieknow. •Phophesyee
Set forth God's Message, which in
nature of things we can only partially
realize. Hence the progressive.
character Of Old Testament prophecy.
11. Put away -The same word as
done away.
12.1n e Mirror -Ancient Mirrors
were of metal, and Jo identify 'objects
must often have, deen like a riddle
(marghl)'. Paul's figure reminds en
of Plato's femme allegory Of the cave-
men confined in a cave, „with their,
backs to the entrance, kid knowing
the external world only through the
shadows east on the inner wall. Even
so Men try to read the "Riddle of the
Universe," and fall the more egregi-
ously as they show more confidence in
their powers. e Shall I know fully -
The Greek verb is a compound, as
against 'the simple form in I knew
[learn, come to know] in part But
the )people of "Knowledge" were al-
ways peOfeseitig to have fathomed, to
the ecoen of plant folks who coultil
not see below the surface of a stone
wall Knowledge,. or rather insight
(gnosis, whence came the latet naine
roved; the compound verb deals with
particular kiowledge, the simple Witle
knowledge in general. It was known
-Ey Ged. . •: "
13 Abideth-It is a greet mistake
to suggest that faith and hope axe less
gnostic), woe the special boast of than love because they have no place
these clever people; to whom Paul at in heaven. The real distinction is
tribute& "the falsely named know- that they belong to the creature, while
ledge"' (1 Tim. 6.. 20). •In its full love belongs also to the creator. The
development it answers exactly to the greatest -It is perhaps not superilue
ways. ,foolish and often teut stuff OUS t'0 reiniee the student of 'Henry
now called theosophy. But Paul's Drummond's superb little book The
weeds would still be true it the "my- Greatest Thing in the World Pew„,
steries" and "insight" were true and '
divine; even the deepest theology is
tutile,mithout love. "The heaxt,
makes the, -theologian." _ Remove
leounta•ins-The. phrase. of aa.irse,
suggests Matt. 17. 20; but it may have
been proverbial. The question might
be aelted, how, such faith is possible
nealeveless question often
recurring in these verses. Paul does
hot say it is: he is only isolating these
graces for comparison: ' •
3- All my goods -The rich young
rultre-vms--teldeeheeifor doing this he
would.have treasure in heaven. • A
Christian thinkers, have been !nail
fitted to comment • on Paul's master-
piece. ••
• CURIOUS WAGRIZS,,
The
King and Court ' Witilesiettei
Freak Performance.
In the "good old days" extraordine
ary wagers were more common, than
they are to -day. In 1,670, for instance.
Lord Digby staked fifty pounds that
he would walk five miles round New-
market Heath in a certain time; bare-
foeted and stark naked, and had the
good illustration of the danger of
misfortune ef losing by the narrow
propaie literalness in interpretation!
margin of half a minute, the:King and
To be burned -The mem-heal reading,.
the Court being witnesses Of the Per.:
that I May glory, differhig only •in a
forrinince, says London Answers. '
single letter, is !ether better attested.
In the latter half of the eighteenth
erttaheserfire dtrananad
But heighteningutt,le pein
t soceentiZ brother scientist that he would read
century a Liverpool scientist bet a
scornful belittling of it Both read -
a new:simper by the light of a farth-
ingS ire: well illustrated 1:lei the tarn- '•
ing dip at a distanee of thirty feet.
•MIS story of the philosopher The wager was cheerfully accepted.
• ". • . . who to be deemed
The 'first scientist merely meted the
A greed leaped fondly into Etnaflames, inside of a shallow wooden b'ox with
Empedocles." : • , ng pieces of leoking-glass, so as
.
4. Suffereth king -Or is patient, is to form a concave lens, placed it slopibe-
rendered in, 'lames 5. 7. Is Kind- the
his farthing dip, and briefly read
The word is One Often used sof God, ii: smell priet at the distance named:
who "is Love." ' Puffed up -A fa' vor- e winning .of the wager was wit-
ite word ef Paul. Omni:ire 1 Coe 8,4 ,
neesed by a Liverpool-doOkmaster, who
I, ,whiehewe might ecilloritially rendet,
1'Itisiglar gives swelled head,
love that builds up."
FACTS OF SCIVINPE,
Holland's mines tire now producing,
,
coal at a.rete of about 2,0(10,000 tons
a ' Yeaf.
The produCtion and distribution of
electricity, in Edinburgh has been
Made a neaticipal monopoly.
Span - has been practicing irriga-
tion for more time century, its first
cmrial having been begun in 1814.
Rusdia, maintains it Moscow an, PC"
.peTiment station for the study of Rae
cultiyatioe and inanufaceere.
A factory in Frence drives turbines
with water from a reeervoir on a
mountaire000 feet above it..
A dredge built en Holland fot the
government of-ITruguay crossed the
'Altantie Ocean under its .own steam.
For peeling Oranges there has been
invented a curved piece of bone with a
nick at one ,end to cut the skin. ,
A Breaker! city uses a trolley car
ambulance to transport patients to
and from hospitals in its suburbs..
,The gel/element ef Swath Africa has
erectee a large sugar Mill to' ene
01404,1i.
n Incident .10, we or the 140
. Lord Strolheoug$
It was eharlieterlatie that 10;
tiered all his life to eld.fashioned
politellese in letter Writing+, Ho long
shrank from ths use of an *oilmen.,
ds or or a typewritor tie being -a each
of courtesy. He patterned 09 oPent
ings and subscriptions of his letterd Gee
on the old lindson'e Bay model, UVen'
the lengest most official letter bu
persisted in -writing by band at.an
most incredible cost of time and, P.a.,
tienee. On one oecoolonf which
teckles, not !n VS otifo
Lord Stratlicona and Mount noel,"
at least) considerable phyolcal. suffer..
tug was involved. Ile had had , the
misfortune while he Scotleedi. to, frac.
ture one of the bones of his right
wrist. His cirin was put in splint,
and while chafing Under the reitraint.
be tielaeel the Oectislon to Make a. yoy.
age to Canada 1:4 the way of • New
Turk. In transit his, arm became
worse, the inflammation. spread, .and
be becamb unable to leave his berth.
On arriving at New rokit was Met
by litir Van Horne, who tonna
htiu in, a very feverish and dIstreased
etatee' Nevertheless he Imitated on
accompanying his fr'lend iniMedlatelt
to Montreal, where he eves lamed to
put himself in the care of ,a surgeon.
What preyed upon his mind meet Waft
that le' lad a number -of lettere , to
'TAX. HT.OIVIINt)„'‘' ALVaift.
AthrWEII, ,01,E,th ,
answer.
"Butr ikrged hie friend, "you can
employ an antanuensie."
• "I've never *done such a thing,"
Lord Stratlicona declared' eniphatical-
ly. • "It evould give great offence', 1
assure you. have ,always• Written
my lettere myself, mei I must do so
noiv." •
But after considera'ble argument he
• consented . to try the experiment.
"At reaet I must sign the letters,"
Vise hie stipulation, "Put the pen be-
tween my Angers, and, although it
will perhapa. be a little difficult and
painful, / mist certainly sign the let-
ters myeelf." •
So the 'letters were dictated, and
when the sheets were. broughtto him
the invalid begged to be left alone to
consider them and affix his signature.
A. pen was fastened between two. of
his disengaged fingers and e. bottle of
'ink placed on the table.
• When, a couple of hours later, the
secretary entered to dispatch the cor-
respondence, ' he found that to every
letter Lord anthems bad added a
postscript, scrawled slowly and pain -
'fully explaining how and why the
-courage the cultivation of cane in ‘'writer had been forced to depart from
Zululand.," - „.• his lifelong practice of Writing his own
' ,Rubher-coyered canvas disks that letters and apolegiztng for .doing 50
prevent Slipping ire lettailied to the 'And in event case,' concludes the
Soles 'of new shoes for yore' young narrator of the anecdote, "the post -
'children. ' '• script was longer than the body of the
'A wire clip, to be screwed into , letter."•• • -
door frame; ha s been invented for
holding milk betties at of the reach PHARAOH'S PALACE; -
of cats and dogs.
The world's largest stone statute, a Diadovery in Egypt May a Home
figur of a patron saint that will be • ; of the Oppressor.
240 feet long, is being carved teem a
rock on an•island in japan. The Museum of the University of •
A, power loom has been invented Penneylvania has made pubic a re-
nege port from Dr. Clarence S. Fisher,
that is aid t� 'weave oriental
that So closely imitate the genuine
handmade ones as to defy expi3rts.
The Argentine government has
made a large appropriation to finance
• campaign against locusts, chiefly by
propagating parasites of the insects,
Driven by re kerosene motor, a
motorcycle has been invented that car..
ries font petiole seated ahead of
one ,antelier and is -Controlled by the
man On the back seat.
To lessen the smoke and' gas' in
tunnels, Swiss railroads are equipping
their locomotive stacks with lids to be
closed when a tunnel is entered,
steem••being elchausted beneath , the
engines.
0 .
P1811, BIRDS AND GAME.'
Special Bulletin From the-CoMmiesien
• .qf Conservation, Ottawa.
A report just issued by the Com-
mission of Conservation, "Conserva-
tion of Fish, Birds and Game," directs
attention to the great value of these
resources to Canada. The voluine„is
a report of the proceedings of a con-
ference of the Cemmittee on Fisher-
ies, Game and Fur -bearing Animals of
the Commission, and contains a fund
• of infor,matiqn regarding the present
condition and, the neeessity for pro-
tection of Canada's fish, birds and
rnammals. •
Canada is taking a prominent part
in the ifiteenational movement for the
protection of wild life. A Migratory
Bird Treaty between 'Canada and the
United States is tinder consideration.
Through the influence of the-Conerds-•
sion of Conservation and other inter-.
leader of the Eekley 13.-Coxe, Jr., ee-
pedition to Egypt, in which he tells of, respect for authority." This rash
have been written with specitil refer -0
what appears to bathe discovery that
qd
r•rro441
e
BRiatiOnShIli Vetween h0
ficerS sail Men Of the
"Ozies
If the Czor 00. generSlisaiMO asitk
Oen. Alexisift his ,chief a Alto* a 6i.006,4 \
then, Sind if the reply is la the arrirow ,,,,
stive, Gelle AleXieff leeYe, "Tek Toteltol
no," which moons 'lust so." If a soot
ond lieutehout interrogiktea a VtiVitt, '
he will roceiVolhe same slie,wer. MI,
through the Rugslan artily this pilralle
le in Constant use, writes Ilarailton
• "Is this the
man?" aTalt
liaeie you
. e
idtlraall'°°"helle4;41dinn.lageer's .0:1;1
'vent?" "Tit Tete no,
' "Have you billeted, your,),,men Calj
( ,,
lein?" 'Tek Tetchno."
In civil life the expression 4 .
scarcelY;ever heard. It is a milita -
speaker tuft:40i in rank by way 4
expression, used alWays by th
showing respeet. It is part of the eg4i
sellout dieelpline wilt& primal% troll
Wheat to lowest throughout th
ILuNsaelt" a fdoircei;:iina Obta'ined biharelt4
neheishse_ifik berutedllitonNitt wahrieihg14,manaketil,
mon hate the methods 'employed to '
enforce it. ‘ the Russian nature itt
too gentle and kindly and sweeter? .
blooded to practise seed -emetic bullY1
Ing. It finds no Pleaeure in the
feting, or the .writhing under indig4
nitiee, of unfortunate Men unable td
defend themselves or even offer preri.
test. It can be rouged to sudden fury, '
goaded into Violence unrestrained,
but these fits poor) pass. the Russian
nature is its essence genial and hu•t
Mane. Nowhere an this be . mores
clearly 'realized than with the army);
This discipline is based less On sever -1
ity than on good feeling, more ;mon '.
reaped than upon fear. In a word, •
It is -"discipline. without team"
• e -
Excessive Discipline. •
. r
keep' their hands at the salute all the
The obligation upon Privates Acri-
time they, are in apeech with an • ofe
freer may strike Areas excessive. But'
circumstances alter. cases.. Methods('
1,
-which suit es "are not of neceseity
suitable for others. The , Rudsidft
peasant cannot be appealed to on OW
side of intelligence. The obeervaned ,
of milltaty habits must be, driven 'eV)
hint more or leas rneeliankaller.. An,
the proceee assuredly doe* him goo,
-tacky was no enthuetatit for c
saription, but he was obliged t,
mit in ."Denioeracy and Liberty" di
"a peeled ,of steady discipline is,,
many • characters, an education
great value, producing results tb$tt
are not ' likely in any ether way . to
be equally ettained, and esPeeitilY
useful. in Communities' Still in a GeV
stage of civilization that have 00
yet • attained the habite of order an
Meremptah had in • his palace . at
Memphis an archeological mutitum
something like those of. the present
day. Meremptah was the Soh of Ra-
meses the Great, and by mailY is -iden-
tified
titled tte the Pharaoh of the Oppres-
sion as described in the 'Book of.
-Exodus. .
•
•
• The palace was discovere early, in
ths present year, the report said: It
was large and 'elaborately decorated,
but at some time Was destroyed by
fire, traces of which are abundant.
The palace was about 180 feet • long
and 100 feet wide and contained about
20 rooms. 'The throne room was
magnificent chamber Of about 60x40
feet. • •
In describing this room themueeem
announcement stated that "it is pro-
bable that this throne room, if not the•
is similar tc) the one in which
Moses and Aaron confronted the
Pharaoh; dentandieg that thp • people
of Israel be permitted to go. The
'authorities in Egypt admitted that a
great discovery had been made.
Ii the roonas -were found gold orna-
ence to Mende. If it were not ko
military iervice:thete would be i
this country. no inoculation of disci
line -whatever. The army does whit
patents and school -masters, prieste
end officialte _ail. leave /undone. I
term awkward, shambling* • peasants}-
slow-witted, ignoeant, obstinately re , ; • .
*.
sentftif against • improvement into ---
compact figures 'moving smartly and
with their outlook entirely ,elinnged.
4.‘Tak 'Tatelnio" helps toWards this. It
cultivates a readiness in answer as
well as regard for authority. , -
•
Soldiers Called Brothers. • )- A
. . - • •1
•
Generals eddress soldiers collective-
ly as "brothers." I have constantly
heatd this. - Wherever any bodyi," Of -
I
troops, smell or greaterneetea general, .
officer the men shout in. unison, ,
"Sdorovia, zheleiem, • Vash •Vnisokoe •
prevoskhodeetelstyo," which" means,
"We •-wish • your eitcelleficy - good,
health.", "Thank you, brothers," saesi
the general, or' "Brothers, your
health." If he speaks to one men hei. -
will be sure to cell him "enolodiete"-,
"good lad." • 1 drove about a good -
ments, scarabs, vessels and vases : The deal at one time with an 'officer who,
most interesting find, the report state when -he asked the way of soldier* •
ed, was a collection of relics, partly ef always addressed them as "My dela)
'the Stone Age and partly of the Sixth
mat -
Dynasty (about 4500 B.C.); which in- fellow." • Yet• he Was a bit of a
tinet, and especially down -upon anY1
dicated that Meremptah was a collec- Man who did not properly salute •
ter much like Modern meta or nations.
The stone implements included knives, We did not find many cases Of -this
razoire'sickles, end arrow heads. kind. Saluting is Most punctiliously;
observed in the Russianearmy--too
•
KEEP ON THE SUNNY SIDE. punctiliously for the comfort of some b
Russian officers-. I have known then' :
• '• -• driven to walk only in the side Streets
-
Pick Out the Gleam of eight leen; of .'cities, and to drive on fine warm, ..
_
Dark Paths. • • •
)• days in dosed, motor cars to. save •
sts, bird reservations are being creat-
• themselves the perpetual lifting of
•eV, where the birds may find - safe
• mice we all have more or less mis- the hand in acknowledgment. No Rue.
•
d' 1
eian officer ever fails to retuen Bele; „
tees if he sees than'. Heti eilite ,
ready to observe discipline himself as
to enforce it. "Tek Totchno," as I
have mentioned, runs through an
ranks.. In any ease, his native petite,
• stabil up beneath its weight, no matter nese would not -allow him to .pitsfebif
"..ue surest indication of the great to the lowest service -how- supremely ton -broker, was presented witlea pair amendment -of -the North-west -Game
ultimattlyeapplied the ideat•to lightenesting nd , . 4 ]) g Pee e ' , fortune to m' tee let us 'strive to meet
louse requirements, ande'evolved the ' line Tar-pearinranimit's 6f S4'rtn: it, in the right wain Why sit down and
modern reflected light. * ern arid Western Canada, are being i bewail the, ill hick that is ours? ,Why
About two years ago, during a rapidly exterminated. This is clearly
I turn our Sorrow over and over again
yachting trip of Members of the Mer- shown by the 'present report. To se -1
lin our needs, seeing in it ever new
.. . • Cure their more edequCommisaon is date pretectiovocating hn,
sey Docks- and Harbor Board, Mr. A, phase e of riiisfortene? , No! Let us'
•a ' dollak's Worth a protection for Pee ..
; withh our eyes fixed' on the, glimmer of if he shoeld fail to realize ,that the
on eompeterit authority that at pre- be found in the foreign 'paper shops.1 the twelve!' The adjective answer- 1 another member \ of the &aril offered lig t, let us Walk swiftly out of . 'the mark Of respect is paid not to hint
_to contribute,* Silra, of_money to two' Parks
ministration upoii the Dominion
Branch, Which already protects
elark-patbs into the sunlight. ' -- personallye' buteetiezthe-nniforne - he- -, •••,-
------ -sent--more-money--is-wasted on- forest The-Freneheandettalian journals areling as opposite to the •word -Ire is• .
' fire protection, tor lack of proper charities if Mr. Willmer wOhld go to , the ariirnals in the-Derninien National '
. Once we have ICarned to walk on' wears
rive as usual, 'but the salei have fall-- ' the usual Greek word for- a gentle-
, en- e . weause a arge number of the man" (as in Acts 17. 12). Provoked the Cotton Exchange 'wearing theni. ' Parks.
leipervisiqn, than ; is eXpended ad- . ly ) • 1 • i • '
I For sweet charity's sake, Mr. Willneer ; . , . ' the sunny side of life didkrie4
4.0 ! The future et the fisheries of Can hae,r*e no further teeror; for es, fse'rwvivle'
Can .Cats Hear?
, . '. 'The importanee of the forest in the
vanMgeously; , . tegulat readers have gone to the wee '-The corresponding noun is ten'!'
will carry mil. sunshine Around with us •
At present the principal customerh ' fl "sharp content'on" in Acts 15. 89. So : appeated on • 'Change wearifig the tide. is Aealt i;vith in an able manner
--7---intei nal' econotny of Canada is shown o
himself "walked not•livooden shoetir'and th t k by the h'gheet . uth 't. ' th'
e s a es were
gn paper . shop near Leicester ' at least once aul P
hoe/ heavy the load may seem, and, unheedieg 'when he is saluted', even,
of wooden shqes for•ine birthday, and Aet:te place responsibility f -or -les ad -
every dellar spent, it has eeerestated change 'that has come over Soho is tol regal was Jesus washing the feet of
in the depths of our hearts The Sun- The. actiteeess of the average cat's
crime ate English. "•. in love -ha was hurieuil Takete I handed over to him. . icountry. , That they. are of great ore- h. .
s ine or the mind is far warmei, and" sense of •• hearing is preverbal; but
- bY the fact 'that the average total ne fore' e •
•valiie of toren products of Canada is',1)- -ereh • h , • • • I Perhaps the limit' wee reached en a eentevalue is eeeognized, but there L'3
in the neighborhood d 0000,000,
tty for the moment, but' the h Love's ledget has no -debit, side.
e grans etre-Jost their coun- not AM:runt-A eommereial word.laa . a.
• rt ropelled in town ip Canada, rith where a ----.--- ' arid inland watealso a potential value • in otir'upon ' Oceanic brighter than the sunshilne vvhich'we it is a Proverb that needs qualifying.'
er aft av4rage wealth produetion . of
sr aVe
de. see and feel with our ohysieril senses. Poe eitample, enaity White cats are '
Once have gain d • .
t 1 n their revenge in Charlotte • 6. The Antithesis of this is'. seen' Pa green pea a, rs which;
about 425 per head of population. pick for about eighty yards along the veloptheet would mean the creation V41!) fiouregth etilgehet,idelat •
9 ga nsaymg t eir in OMe. . tai sun,sheinethweetlwiTehean,re inaballUa
of, real wPmee tpeplYeardeenhes'uttr
street, Theee is h • ' R 1 82.
Nearlir $8,006,000 in direct • revenue navement within half an hour of the of new industries. To meet this con- . •
victory. there. ' Instead of the at 7. Covereth all thinge (margin) is - tne means to pull ourselveri out of le bellevee• by; soM6 stedents that.
le received' annually by the federal
d t t 'th L. es tel b the t d la at' stipu ate time, an won is wager,
1 d ' d h'
t ho an ,reS atlian wi German awful augges y e grea et r 1C011 the color tyg a Cat is asoociated with
ditiop, the Commission is suggestin
vocational training.and simple demon-
etintion stations for the fishermen,
every slough of despond without any
'oetskie For just as Bun an's
ari term g there are eetablishinente named after
' oale'or lease of cutting rights to pub -
And there you natty
Hely-owned timber lands arid from Belgian •tcrtins.
sea Belgian soldiers on gave drink -
royalty and stumpage payments made
upon timber so eitt. orite 5,000 ing coffee." .,
weed -using industries' in Canada are • ' •
ditectly dependent upon the simply .of
thnber cut from . non-agricultural .
'Her Idea..
•that love "covers a multitude of sins".
(1 Pet: 4.8), where, • however, the
word used is different,. We must
rather go back ;to 1 Coe 9. 12.: love
pets up with4insults and injuries. Be-
lieveth all things -The words inight
be misinterpeeted • of (hoer good -na-
ture( credelity; hence the turn given
lande, • .•
' iniperiance of preventing the "My dear, I've an idea," said old in, the paraphrase Above,
gjt1 ti Unction of this great re- Mrs. Godart her caller. "You 8. "Aye, and when prephoey her
eouteo can acarcely, he cover -Alpha,. know We 'frequently read of the sol.
diera making sorties. NOW, why not
make up alot those sorties and
•send them bo the .peor' follows at "the
trent
sited ,in 'Conservation.
liting rentembertid in a will I a
uncertain ur,i unlaid egg". 0
. tele bath finished,'
' Knowledge hat' withered. from
the trembling tongue.
'•• Love Shall r,4urviver, Anil love be
• ' undiminished. •
its•sense ef laering. Among several
t al of Ouvjeurneys throuo cake from shoed, not ono white ane
a man has the ptice he can get mOst praetical and modern methods of me What we really accemplisii.muat in -the nembee hoe been able to heat
anything he wants and the way he . •
their : first be worked out iri mind. •, • the slightest "semi& • • •
The report is repiete with illustra-
wants it."
• Everything But; . ' that they may take advantage of the l'reitress" was inerft3, 00 imported Per; tins,' or long-halreil
"Don't khow about that. .T.htro is
the Medium soft boiled egg.„"The London Morrill root quotesir
dns o'applieable t� the .subtearninglo pick -out the gime of
ter.-
• ject mete light from the . dark path,. learning':
a ow r a... r r a. 0 . .' how to avoid the 'sloUghs of despond
and how to walk le the sunshirie, is
„eiGay dogistitrhic.id•l;littailn Trid•ar have ward of heppinese and peace. leVery.
hot. easy, Put even the attempt at
learning these lessons larlegs its re -
been in, the olden (Jaye" • little effort in the right direction
"You're • right!: • Thirrk - of : going brings such beautiful reteres that, the
only wonder ,is that 'so few of us• make
. the effort
, !Magic Women Lack 10061
•••.
A man's ability should be rated by g. eat member of Gorman pinkie Wee
what. ha Wallas and not by what, •he men have arrived Denmark seoltin$1,' •
begins. •
• A reputattoe for honesty is it employing/it. Aetording to the eteee •
moat, the women Day that it is tioskr
man's best Seeerity. It'e the only
impossible for wortien, except Mee le PP
with 01111 cle en to got feed ;in (lee.e
'ineity:' • j
`Danish Statement to t e 08'40 that a',
aseeeon ,which banks will loan' up to to bed by the ,Iight of the ' Mullen
its full value '1 dandier -