HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-08-17, Page 6HE SUNDAY scioht—
Brew t*Cirrect at tight*.
Open elrelfite uttualle' Cenle front
broke* wireit frelet 'Dose or dise04,-
***-04 tdern111141 Ncire4 at one or more
Of the Aiet4ical Unite of the eyetete.
In Moat eonueetor.e. the earee ere cell -
*red when the :system is Wed, endif
ene, of *OM become cli.slodged
due to V •
eySteee, the eleetrelyte being too low
in the eells, or the battery being leefle
in, its container, se that it can move
around, end heeerne, damaged -.
, Current beolok ,0
Another source et anteeYance is
battery diseharge dee to lighting or,
Om solder having become Crystallized tSht"erteinigs lealcavegrleaor e*u'reeltaturaduelelY0 iff
C r Jarred loose,- the wire does noit sheet ejecta eoinewh,ere, the genera
WO lent to Week its *WaY entire'y tee and the entire c‘seseene are called
free ef the terminals. !Often it is upon to furnish mere energy than
' verlselleals are tesen eareeobY eureenee overloading results - in .battery drain -
,.._111610, ,,to And-auch. (lefeeta. , 1141"$,1",!I would be required norratdiee and Ol3
with this thought in Mind, says Motor 1 age,
Theta are many instances A. good •waereio tell if there is cur -
Where a eonnectionfloohs to 'bo all rent leo.a• ge is to ncte the position of
, TWO* but eahiCh in reality IS PO con- I the indieiter .handon the ammeter
=action at all when investigated cleeea 'when he enone is not operating and
' 1r' SebletimeeP when.!. 05 eQuneFtm., no lights are. on. The hand should
I
es all right, the heat lies In the Wel- point to zero, since no eurrent Is he -
tet POMP lint having worked loose. or ing denuouled nor any being put into
halm erriwith the result ,the, the ! the battery. .1.3nless the instrument
borolnal can move *retold erethe..P0s;• is out of calibration, if the hand. iedi-
, coming 4 very poor etiliteett if One; cass that current is being used, then.
, , lee Thee- enisteke simply a burned it is timt to loot en leakage Pelete•
out IMP filament for trouble in thee; TO make eure if th:e ammeter is core
• tleretetne Too often the driver .Wal reetly calibrated.. disconnect one oe,
examine the 'bulb thet doge not POO the battery terminals and see if the
and, failing 't0 notice the broken Al- hand then swings to zero;. if „it does
tent, will cause. himself a great ; the is leakage. But if it remains
deal of trmitee . treeing the cothsece one eke or the other of.the zero ma*,
time throughout the system, W14,4 LA tile, treuige is in its calibration, and it
- reality there. is nothing but the laniP is well to remember how Much it, is
itself to 'blame,' If Yell =Met see off, for futnre reference, in reading
the instrument, . •
• plainly whether the dark bulb is lame -
en or not, try, a kneivil good one, and
If ishat, too fails to lightt it is time
to delve deeper into the Wiring intrica-,
,
•• 'Use Care in Starting.
Xost all' of us have gone along -the,
One a the first pointe to look, is street at some time or other, and
at the light sWiteh to see if there atteeheardet-motor cheer). and churn under
any defective-conneetioni there. Then 'the power of an electric starber -with-
out any appareet results. • ,
• This is one of the most frequent
causes of storage battery trouble 'ac-•
cording to a service repreeentative
of the Williard Storage .Battery Co
He exPlainect that Vere few mottoriste
examine the wires going out of the
socket, for this is a very comnion
point, of open cireeiting,
Veatch the Batten".
Shaking of the wire due to con-,
. tenuous road week will oftea everlethe seemed to realize the unmense amount
Wire end leose from the binding Of electrical power which is required
'Sere% which is a none too perniare to turn a motor, and what a coiiiide
ere) connection, anyway, due to the erabk amount of driving at charg-
shtece liMitntions• ' • ingSI),eeiljs,xleeesSarY to restore same
So ear, we "teem devoted Atm, amoiiiit of *cermet-W. the battery;
tion entirely to these troubles. that A. hetle care an. Operating the self -
come to the -ugh** system when staifer will obviate thiatrOublei, The
the •engine eis `- Haying defier shoakiealways make sure that
' -touched neen practically every Poe-. the starting 'Switch thrown before
sibility, that could cause this Mind: attempting to operate the self-etartel%
'ten, we efoi now turn 'teethe things Semethriineeebhe tank is ene•
that, miiebt Preeene -theeliglite•froire pty, •ane .under such conditions no
behaving properly when the engine is amount: of Craniting- would start the
not• . motor. •:
,
The first thing to expect when their The, ignition button Should always
go out gab dim .under these condi- be pressed hi firmly and all wire con-`
-lions Is. that the battery becotne nect;ons. should be tight. Occasion -
discharged through iesonete cause. of allythe gasoline mixture is. weak-
• causes. • Besides short circuits bat- and on most cars this can be adjust-
teries can become ieliachaeged, in, a ed from the dash, The coil end dis-
number of other way; the most coin- trileitor should be kept perfectly ery
. e
mon of Which are the result of over- in order for the :current to reach the
loading the starting or the lighting spark plugs. ••
• that takes." '
INTERNATIONAL 1.1e4SON.e.
AUU$T13'
•
04911-' Villeeethe Grage gf Ghting,
• •
g COP. 9, fildeti TXtR—
heti ge, 45,
Venal.
Te iikilltt44004'4 People.°
aS we 1100 earaehresed, flIeresehiena •
where IMpreverlehed largely by the
fanzine (4eteU willeh had ec-
easiened the fernier gitt Of the Geetlle
Chrletlans, Bet aVet MUst not forget
the cousequericee gt their expoteraeet
commuaism, Undertaken Irt the en-
tliuslaeM of their go.nvie.tecelethat the
advent wOUld b seeedlly acceinplisie
'ed, and provision ter earthlY needs AO.
• ‘orflinglY Was neeeless.
•'A1 &MT. Vau k was RY'Ork'bOnSifill
Inen—abOut•other people's good deedff.
RO kept theee miatable .Corinthialle 1110
to tile meek emenetting them in ae-
• 'fang% in. talk Withether Chrlettens to
generoelty they.liad enomitied, from
which it -is cleer• eef aefew •of their%
were, in charigero reeding. Mace'
doeig—Iachicting the' Jar more getter,
oils and high-minded Philippians. Paul
Used their geuerositY as an incentive
foe the Corinthians in 'the preVious
chapter,
Stirred up—Paul uses a term
capable er a'bad n.eaning., just as tlx
writer '10 -the lieerews" daringly,
speaks of the "provacat.ion pf 'eve.°
(10.' 24:7 -see last `we.ek's note.OTII,CQr.
1e. 5), It Is tile one field', in which
rlealrY, Is a good thing, or love Steri -
Ikea. all Its' microbes, •
• The brethreu---Esriecially titus
and "his •brether" (so render 2 Coe, .8,
18), who from. that Verse ars to be.
none other than Lulte. The notable.
'discovery of an Inference from the
'Greek, obvious when once pointed out,
eneedentallyshews mi why Tits is not
awed in the Aete. We must go to
he: Epistles •to see how .IMportant
hese two brethere were, nieclestly
aying suppressed theft regime whe
we ehould have expected it to figure
argely. •
• .
5. Make up beforehand — Superin--
ending suCli arrangemente for celiac -
tion as Paul Sketched in 1,• Cor. 16.
Bounty, here ane Ln,arSe 6, is, literal-
ly; blessing; pee note there. Extor-
tion4.-The word Usually rendered
eovetougness. Even tholigh they had
roreised this gift- to a good work;
eel was aturly sensitive to the poi -
P
P
sibility that b postPenentent and" hur- • . KITCHENER'S KINDLINESS, •
fled chllection the money Might be got ' 4
,---• •
..
ultimately by'metheds unworthy_of tile. Personal Ineedents Told by- One le he
. , , ., ......._.„,_ ,
., Canadian, Guns in Actione-A Red Het Day in Flanders'. .• ..„ •
On end of the bembardment which blew German defences to bits On the western front,_ and peered .the way
. • \ .,
•for the advance. Of British infautrY—in the present big adVance. Gunners of t.he Maple Leaf, ,Stripped to the
waist, sex the guns irk a warin.•corner of the fighting me the yvestern front Notice that the gun is in a crater,
bDraitlyugm-oirurt,oran.pdhoitso.7reened wi• .th boughs. in Order to escape the notice of the prying 'Oermlin aviator.—(Lendon
, .
.
.Tesins. Christ" (2 Cor. '8. 9). It Was
God' a grace, Which never \gen stay in
a heart unless it is always flowing Out
,as fast as it 'comes. It pours out Upon
God's people, and it rises back to God
in. -thankfulness •for "his- unspeakable
-
gift." •
15. Unspeakable—The same sense of
the ina.dequacy of language breaks out
In Rom. .11. 88, Compare ET,ik. 8, 18,
19. Gift—"In the redemption of the
world 'through our Lord Jesus Christ."
itis the word Of Illph. 2,' 8, and is
found in the Master's saying, "Freely
ye have rereelved, freely 'give."
. .
•
mgh-privileie Christian 4.1iIng. new Him- Well.
might come ati*an irkichte ..daity, and • •
God Would ' kribev those cake again• Sir Frederick Milner relates the fol'
evenerthey did Meet the need. Heim leevingeeeFrom many notices I have,
the wise proviiion of the weekly gift, read of the late • Earl kitchener • I
a regular sacrifice hallowing the Lord's think thati people may be likely to
:day. Nem Wesley was wise as usual inferthatwith all his great qualities
evhen he ordained the penny a week' be Was somewhat lacking in goodness
of heart. Those who knew him at all
eitimately -would- tell you .he had —a
heart of gold.. •True, to those who
itnew him oely, slightly ,he appeared
stern and somewhat told, but this was
far from, being his real nature. He
was reserved, and pony may he sur-
prised to know that he was'by nature
_shy, but behind- all there beat a heart
.as warm and generous as ever man
erally pain); •• (3) •absolutely spon- possessed; 'This is borne out by the
taneous, net 'enforced by any kind of fact that those. Who knew him. Well:re-
preSsiire. God lovetb—Quoted from garded him with a devoted affection.
the Greek version of Prov. • 22. •8. Of all' my many friends /know of
where theie is nothing resenibling it none 'from whom I receivea, more
6. Bountiful -7 Paul applies • the
' thoughteof_G7eto_oneenor-d-of-it
many fields. That large4ianded bounty
Is a 'tblessing" (See above) may be 117
lustrated by Shakespeare's great' line
•about mercy :
"It blesseth him. that gives and him
SE M.D.'s PLY
TO IGNO
ANtONE MAY TBECOME A Pam-
, .
CIAN THERE
•
•7` , ,
The Methods of Operation and the
Fees Which the Medicos
Charge:
The native Chinese doctor . is a
curiosity.- He passes no tearrainetion;
he requiresno qualifications; he may
e---Tee'nepireeileiaree-In-hieerievr profession he
'
requires little, stock in trade, medical
;instearrients being alinost!inalinOWn. "
Acupuncture, as it. is Called, is one
of the nine branches recognized in
medical,ecierice among the Chinese.; it
is of Most ancient .origin, 'having been
itt ride from time inimemorial. There
are. three hundred and. thirty-seven
body markings to be learned; every
square inch on the human surface has
its own name, and some relationship
to the enternial parts, purely, imagin-
*. •
belief in•heredity, but is based on the
supposed yalue of. old prescription
beaks •passed on from grandfather' to
grandson. ,
•'Pees Vary, 'according to the PhYsi-
ciakett social' class tend that of his pa-
tients, and also aeording to the physi-
cian'splace of residence. The enema -
7. Giving is to be (1) caloulated; not
merely. Impulsive ;- •(2) an act of
"eheerfninese," not of 'grudging" (lit -
sympathy and kindness—especiaely in
in' the ordinary •Hebrew text. et is a
regard to the irifiimite.which has done
somuch te wreck My life.' He Was
lwayseloing _things. tesliow• his-syme.
pathy with me. On one occasion
when I was going to Egype bo join
the Duke of Fife, one of the kindest
of my friends, the duke died sudeerily
while I was on the sea. - Lord Kitch-
ener asked the Consul at Port Said to
meet me and give me A letter from
him breaking the sad ne s ' an I
os -never- rget-his-thoughtfulicind-
nese when I reaphed his hinise, • In
;connection with this I sin perinitted
to relate en incident„which will shave
him as possessed of almost a wo.-
-nien's tenderness. When the Duke
of Fife's body arrived in Cairo, e -fear
days in advance of the princess, 'i'ehe
was travellieg,by dew stages) it was
placed in elle Guards' Chapel, awaiting
her arrival. 'Every morning Lord
• Kitchener sent from his garden fresh
flowers to put on the doffin. How
manymen would have thouget of • a
till:fete as tender' 'as this? lb was
only one of many kindly, thoughtful
actions of his that came to my noticee
The„ rector_ of the' English Church -at
Cairo told me he -could never suffici-
ently appreciate the help and kindness
he xeceived froni Lord iRfchener der -
big his residence there Those wile
reallY knew him. would have gone through fire and water for like and I
know that many. a one beside§ mere
self would joyfully have laid *down his
life to save one so, precious bo the em-
piee.• "-His remarkable services to his
ous sum of. perhaps fifteen American -good illustration of Paul's regular use
cents or half e dealer at the most may of, the Greek Bible. He does not call it
he charged- for a 'via% if the doctor tytati
comeir.119-biS sedan chair. Of this
u o ,and- he -knew- the:-Hebre
may well have •remembered it Was a
aliment,. a large proportion goes for mistranslatiod.•
the chair. Should .the doctor belong 'r.he figure' calls' up a flood of
to the humbler ranks and come on foot divine bounty, • which after satisfying
his fee is proportionately less. He !is- every need flows over into the •mani-
sunies a solemn air and an owl -like . fold activities of good then. Sufficien-
look as he peers out of the semi -dark- cy-etlie" everyday- 'use of the word
;liege of a Chinese bedroom • through
great. gee le-slia ed las - w
nc eseacross----andeeset /Ill 40 H.. phere.
eouth copper 'frames.
9. Quoted 'from Pitt' 112. 9, - Which
Believe in Large Dose rs- , establishes the familiar Jewish' idea
that almsgiving eeteblishes pereetuee
-AIM important. in diagnosing . a merit See Mite on last Sunday's les,
caser according toChineseideas, is the sore verse 3,, for New Testament quali-.
feeling of the different pukes of the fications. He who told the eoene ruler
human system. The pulse at each that it would save bile—for it 'meant
wrist is eeit, and each is divided into &lee abandoninent of his own besetting
three; which, according to, the light sin—teld also how limited* was, the "re -
or heave charactef Of -the. pressure, -_
ward" of almsgiving that was preceded
indicates a 'different organ of the by "sounding 'brass" instead of love
body. By thus feeling the pukes, the (Matt. 6: 2y
which in -Phil. -4.. 11 -Paul has with the
firy*, assigned to it. The user iS fates Of a
dozen real or hem inar or-
. cautioned against wounding the . ae, gans are - 'determined. ' Having the
learned by the pressure of eheethre
•teries- hence he Must know the 'poet-
. ,
dee() at each pulse, the seat of the disease
tion Of the bleed. vessels. By
e study of.o. inaiarnir6F6iir with a fete euettion5. may he tasked be
-
the Chinese physielafi learns yeeeee to these are colisidered scarcely neces
drive his heeales. • Parts Of the hotly earn A prescription, sometimes call
are selected, -which may be pierced heeler the most horrible and riauseet
ing compounds, is prepared in laig
vvithbet fatale:. reSults, e'Sometimes
does, for the native believes that the
heat l‘a aPPlied to the outer end of the
needle and this is celled het acupunc- larger the dosee the more likely is it (
F Y •
'
10.Seed to the sower and bread .fol•
e food—Quoted from Isa: 55. 10. Paul
turns it tete a parable of sPirittial hus-
,' bandry. Seed for sowing -A single
I. ward, thatof Luke 8. et -which is its
coinmentary, • The fruits of • your
- righteousness—a rereiniscen:ce of Hos.
SAVING DAYLIGHT.
Row It Was Managed in a London
BenateliOld. •
-Iteeenia a 'simple mattet te -set the
clock ahead -an hour, aifIthe people of
Europe !mare done third summer so as
to•exChtinge an hour of morning sun-
light for an hour of darkness, but a
writer in London lei:anion found it; in
praetice, rather' coefusbeg. • He says:
• I rose early. I had put the clock
forward exactly orie bout!' as the gov-
ernment had instructed.
It seemed strangely dark-eeyideet1
It yea* a an and cloudy. morning
stumbled downstairs and lit a match
rt was eight o'clock, and the su
'should. be well up., There wetene mil
at the dope and no PaPer.:" A pretty
start for daylight giving! The teidet,
men had eeiclently•161-getten to alter
their doeks islet night : I eerenee,e
wake Mary Ann. She opened he
door With sleepy, frightened eyes, an
welded to, know if it :Was a fire 0
Zeppelk'ns. • •'' ,
I went out in the garden and pot-
tered about -until -nine. Net -one of iffy
neighbors was out—not even Smith
son who is always out at 'six: in the
min:ning chasing slugs. At nine Elsie
was down, and I rallied her about be-
ing so late. We roused the two boys
and Miranda, but it was flee Minutes
to tee before we sat down to break-
fast. I talked seriously akeue the
lateness of the hour -e -especially hav-
ing regard to the new -tact of Perlia -
meet. And I went on to suggest that
if I hadn't thought to alter the clocks
We -should not have had breakfast un-
til eleven o'clock,
"You put the •'clack en, indeed!"
said •Miranda. "Why, it. was who
put it forward. We should have been
n hour -out iiinuie time—if 1, hadn't
hought of it." -
• Elsie said nothing, but burst 'out
aughing. I asked her what she was
aughing at, and she; said we must
eve all dreamed We altered the clock,
or she Wat the person who had saved
6' from unpunctuality. And then
�ar Ahn brciu
oped-she-lenizet-taken-e-hberty, but,
eeing that the Daylight -Saving Apt
ad come in, she had alteied, all the
locks last eight to keep the thne
ight!
And so it appeateethat we were-sit-
ing'dOwn to breakfast (old time) or
even o'clock (daylight-eaving time)
thieking that it was tent eecloche
It was not until late. in the after-
oon that. I thotiiht abet't the, time.
he family were all out, and ' Mary
nn had laid my solitary tea and de-
arted to spend the evening with a
friend" who Was in the Royal Flying
orps. I carefully pet back all the
clocks three hours, and heaved a sigh'
Of reliek that the mistake had happen-
ed -env a Sunday and not a business
I woke in the, middle of the night
•••.
Miranda had taken the precaution to
put the clock right; and Mary Ante
after retiring, had suddenly thought
that the clock was three hours fast,
and -with, sleePY-eyes hademoved- the
hands of the clock three heard' with-
out fully comprehending what the
right time was.
have now.put up a notice in the
hall that anyone who alters the clock
without my express approval in writ-
ing will be summarily. shot.
ABOUT PETROGRAD.
Capital' of -Reside- lie a' City. Beet for
dlente. , • .
Travellers speak of MOseew as the
'heeetot. Regent the :reel Remake city,'
!gind-dieinien'Peirogmd as. -an Imitation
NEWS FROM EN
NEWS By SAIL ABOUT JQJii
41/144 AND 1110 1$01Mitit....
Occurrences In 00 1.4411 Thni
ileig!"1:04relleenil °W..lourir •C°1116
Warwick Prig% Ilse Nen CloSed cniee,
ding to the diminution of crime in Ithel
•county, I
•Finebley Council (NO* London) tof
driAveW:valailteris, en: etneloYed VIS\
•
The anelent sen at Chatinet:
rankti; ihtatneuhseueninmselrigthimile*, sh.Ifted • to:
Birmbonun children whose fathers
have been killed in the war are to,
bo sent bite the conntrx hell"'
is now bearing over 500 hunches of:
Palace, which was planted In. 1768,1
The great vine at IlamPten Cour0
,
1, •
1)0• a8 Ice:011143n Twill:jeer% wh ii*nr gt wt corgi'
bn the land, and 595 are. already
ployed. „
• Notts Education committee has
• Eingeidmeyi:ofrotkro:theme tup.9ofna,ty:07m. enlartgote
—
'Sunday labor on the. held wag
'stroingly faeoeed at a !meek] Meeting
mefitteheee tliteiptavviSeff.4011t A•gricilltuiel Coin. ;
' ,Netirly1,00 Men may be seen
• the morning at Ealing gardening ,On
"waste 'ground placed at. their! die( '
posal during the -war.' • • - •
• A cheque for $250,000 has been
sent to the Red Cross by the &Mali
meat and allied trades. • Large cbg••
tributions came from South America .
Damage amounting to several thole
sands was caused by a fire that oc.
curred on the promises of • W. .1;
Smith & Co., woe' ' spinners, Leicess•,
ter.
. The 'Keil- k-Fishei-,- headmaster ;
of Repton, at the annual speech day•
stated that the number of Old Rep-
tonians on active service is eow
1,003. '
Carl Theodore . Menke, formerly
German Consul in -Binningham, wee •
charged ai Birmingham Police Court •
with trading veith the enemy, bail be- •
ingiortaefutosectops. in. •
Berlcshire, North '••
Hants, and Oxfordshire, will .136 un-
usually heavy this season, and: the
high prices now charged will he con-
siderably redueed. •
• The Roytit.Tersek Agricultdral So.
of ethei European capitals," declares .eletY have offered , the Admiralty a
Jahn Reed, In the °Men-4011km, but quantity Of potatoes for -:the Grand •
Fleet in appreciation of the protece
tion of --
After certain alterations the old ,
General Post Office, Carlisle, is to be
opened by the •Liquor Control Board •
to mePetrograd seems more cermet,-
teileticelly 'Russimiewith• Inamense
facades of Govemnaent buildings and
barracks marching along as far as the
eye can reach; broad steette and
neglaty open spaces. The great stone •
as a "model public house." Beer will
quay's- along the Neva, the palacee, • .
cathedral° and-lieeeefal avenues paved melee, but no spirits..
with cobbles, grew under the hands A conference is being .arranged by
be obtiii
of innumerable serfs chained lie a the Railway Clerks' Association to
sheen') by the will cf,,f 4 tyrant, and consider measeres for improving the •
were cemented with there' blood; for condition of • women clerks on rail;
where Petrograd . new sprawls for ways who number- about 2,000.
miles and miles, a city built for glaiits, Th; u h the overheating. of Mete
*As nothing hut a feveiese, marsh a °a g
hundred and fifty , years ago. And - •
haters a fire occurred at Thcentor
there, Where no roads naturally, lead, Heath on the 'premises of 'Mr. George
the most desolate spot, the Most eel- Mattheen, a poultry breeder, some .
nerable and the most remote from any 2,000 chicks in incubators being de -
natural -centre of the etuseian Empire. stioyed. • - :
Peter the Great had a whim tci found By order of the Miniere Of Muni -
his 'capital. Twenty thousand slaves tions the work of erecting . new of-
fices for • the MetrOpolitan Water •
Board in Rosebery Avenue has been -
stopped: The twO 'ground floors had
-already been completed, and Over - •
workmen were employed. .
•
a year for ten years were killed by
fever, cold mei disease -in the build-
ing of' Petrograd... Wee tides • the
Court nobles themselves conspired to
wheck the hated city and. force' the
Court-to-retiftri-TO-MOscow ; three
times they- set fire to it; and three
times the Czar hung thein at the doors
of. the palaces he had tweed them to
bend. A• powerful section of .the Re-
actionarY party has always agitated
for the restoration of Moscow' as the
capital, and it is only In the last twen-
ty years that the population ,of Petro-
- . telemeautte„eee,
THE tirIppoin OF MOSES.
His Laws Were 'Muertll - Same as •
Thee of the Present -
The ,sanitary laws .of Mesei - were -
THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY.-
Let us be of good cheer, remembex
Ing that, the misfortunes _hardest t
bear are those which never come.
He who (lees wrong does wrotig
gainst himself: He who acts uniustly
idle unjustly to himself, because he
makes lilinself bed.—Marcus Aurelius'
Wit must grow like etagere • if It be
•
o mole, • at, he eomeeases, in ad
Vance of them, according to a conteme
porary. The Jew, a thousand, or two
years before Christ,' settling in a 'themi-
. tropical cmintry, was forbidden to
0 eat pork or shellfish) and Failk was de-
• scribed as a source of contagion; -The
- Talmud prescribes a method of slaugh:
tering animals that to -day is acknowl-
edged by our market men'to be , the
•• Most .sanitary.
taken from others • 'tis like plums
stuck upon blackthorns e they are for
e while, but come to nothing. --Selden
When free from conjugal and- par-
ental ill -temper the. love of wife and
•.'Nearly four thousand years befors
Koch gave to the World bis 'reseerilies-
: in bacteriology, the elesaie, law point -
'ed out the danger. to man from tuber-
,• culosie in cattle, butelhenot forbid in,
feetedpoultry RS fame It Wes only a
'few years. age -that speeialisteeleeove
ered that foil tuberculosis was
bxrm-
iess to man.-. • • -
The Mosaic law alio enforced the
. isolation of patients with "contagious
diseases and 'the burial of the dead
outside all cities. These lents the
Gentile World did not fully accept una
• til a century or two ego.
Moses not ohly prescribed fasting ee
Certain periods of the year, but com-
manded whole famillea to into
• camps in the summer, where, for .a
time, they could live close to nature.
Many of the laws of Moses were noth-
ing elielhan hygiene prescriptions for
the health of both mind and beey.
h I e a wodian s
charms and endew her with Mane dew
ones. •. -
A man capnot speLlt but be judges
himself. With .his: will or against his
will,. he •draws hie portrait to etea-eye
10. 1e. , dreaming. that I heard the milkman. of b a companions by every averd.-t-
e Liberality—As in Rom. 12, The But on looking at the clock it was A,:ieereee•
noun is derived from the word single only one, In the morning, and. although
ture, but the needle is never heated to prove efficacious. In prescribing
before In Some cages the for natives, the foreign doctors have
needlehas been known to tweak in the to giVe: the strictest injunctions that
. body. of the patient and has had to the papel. box in which the pills are
contained is not to be swallowed.
• remaira there until exteacted by some
Clupese-eareditilles, besi ee
skilful. Western practitioner.
.• • tbat are to be found in our West-
, .,
The Needle is the ,Thing. I ern Materia „Medici, are snake skins,
touch fossils, rhinoceros or hartshorn ghee -
The needle used lOoks very,
• like a sewing -machine needle, but it ) ings' silk -worms, asbestos, moths, 'oy-
io ongeteae toarSer. Some of The .ster ehells, and other things. Ahnost
anything' disgusting is eeonsidered a
Chin* doctors bavc, needles two feet
inirers to be able to drive these in- I
as in "the single eye"). The sugges-
There is sonie help for the defects'
• it looked strangely, light, / eves se-• Of • fortune; for if a man cantiorap
tett to the length of his wishes be may
cure in the knowledge that my clocks
tion is that niggardly giving is from
have . his reined,' by cutting them
trying to look at two things at once, were right; so I, went to sleep again. I sheetee—cewley,
personal advantage as well as the woke at six, and on getting up found .! -
-neighbor's need, where the "single-
• • *tied mat "Litt- only see •the latter. country. have been fietiney recorded, it• • broad daylight. • • '
After breakfast / lingered rath•er •
• ---
According te Hee Cool( Beek:
Through us—Paul is to have the privi- and he will live in history amongst' toolong over mi paper and had to Bride—Merciful heavens! That pie
bub
1 ,••
• tet.fG tB' run for nly.train. To me horror when is .burriing and can't takele out!
that gift meant • it is well, r think, that- the :World'
•12.• Ministration of men who remem. shoeld keine...that this straight, trie it wee., jest noon. It•' vitas certainly ifousewifSe-"It seems to me that
ege of telling the rteiulents how milch. glee s o rea ritain s sons
•• ' I 'got there the station clock 'showed 10 miriebas yet!"
e' useless to go to town now, arid I went your pintof i
bered coming "not to be ministered stern man had a heart aa tender ese
unfo, hut to ministee." servicel•-•:oreek his will was' strong.-
•
• s very erne)" " Milk
ome to emand explanations. man—"My caws are erthe, smell kind,
geed medicine. Apothecaries" shops lit
orig. and are supposed, by ardent ad -
abound wherdifrescriptiOns are made
" strurnesrits entirely through the pa -
The manner in which the •Chinete
: limit's body. • The great ,size of tlie •
needlee is in reality intended to repre-
treat their physicialutracterl
stnt.th.e.giame.44 of fTio,ovioei-dree-i skin eShould-a-leidedy, cure not resultfrom
and reputation. The needles used c;
'
are t the- doctor'streatment, the patient
i calls in another. If he does not inn-
* „ , of eight forms, as follows:" the, arrow-prove„,he calls in a third. Thee the
,. heed, blunt pelletering;spear-pointed,I.
meekal skill of the whole neighbor,.
tusiforin, rotind,' capillary, long and
•;,the
depth and the direction are a11 -import-
ant. • The ,method is usually to drive
the needle through the diatendecl skin
• by n bieve•froila a light nifillet
If he can get an old hoolc of pre-
actiPtions from, a retiring practition-
er, so *melt the better for the Chinese
doctor., Ite is now equipped to `killor
owe, as chance or his ignorance may
dictate. The doctor most entitled to
confidence fit, the sight of his! coma,
' **men is 'the Anon *hese father had
k -, a doctor before Confidence
•n news rio bounds,. should his In ohs, recent year 5,267 boys and I,-
tgranalfather have loliowed•the same ! 12d girls were admitted to such in -
!is, not a more fatuous Stiintions,
heed iinty.,be drawn upon, •
• Let the Majority Rule.
• A well-known surgeon was irnpart-
ing clinical inseructions to' half
• a dozen students wile accompanied
hirn on his roumes. Pausing at the
bedside of a doubtful ease, he said:
vom.. dv...govrvvvel•oa,vvv.
In Great Britain there are 221 re-
fortnatory and industeial schools; and
the niunber l yoUng persens arid chil-
dree in theme school's, is about 25,000.
urgy, word originally used •of a •• ••
service to the Mete, but now 'beginning • "ffee-'" "
to he' applied to the serVice.'ef God
which color8 its use herd. • Aboaindeth
• --e0 veep eves tt gal n • -.- Its seem de ryl-
effect is beyond its primary impor-
tegee. Note what struts Paul !aye on
the ettriclitheet that crimes' from grati-
tude to God.. •
IL Proving --A favorite \vord, also
rendered proof and Probation. Thus
In Itom. 5. 4 it is the outcome of en-
durance and the producer , of hOpe.
Obediende—The Corresponding' verb ;
In I Cor. 15: 28 -speaks of the stlbje�t-
ing all things to•Christ. Confeselon
--Compare 1 • Ti). 6. 13; • lieb, 4. 14
Gentribution—This rendering misses
the great feature Of the word, fellow -
sharing. A true gift brings giver
\and receiver to ra Common meal. •
14. Grace, the same wOrd' as thanks
fh vers6 15. In this context the Col-
location is. barely' accidental. God's
trot6bbliniY"tiPSbt the OSSetaill idea
of grace—was evidented by the Cork -
generosity, Which showed that
they" knew the Once of 'our Loral
It appeared ,that; coming, home late, muml"
*ee•
*Electrically. Heated fi;r tee _tree ot
• Ailtatir's.
. , .•
HEATED. op:w.r0.',
*02
1.0.9 t$ v ,vvISUPt.
4' 004 ,
Stores From Ordnance Station.Being Loaded Onio Motor ,Trucks at Ca gap 8orden.
• A 13ritish firm has recently intro -
duped 'electrically -heated gloves... for
*aviators.. Cold hands and • feet are.
among -the prime discomforts expere•
enced•by airieen- fleine at great alti- •
tudes, and it is obvious that nuenbed
hands in particular may lead to disas-
ter. • Ordinary. gloves, irrespective of
their thickness, are of littte use. The •
electrically -heated gloves, on the oth-
er had, maintain the hands at a com-
fortable temperature. As in the . in. of the • electrically -heated
:Ogees foreititoniobile drivers, eleetri-
cal. connection is made between &call
brass clisce on Me gloves end 'Metal'
Ogees on the steering wheel Of air-.
•
• craft. • • . •
Mrs. Ronnie—aleow do you like nil?
• nei'v 'gown?" Mr. lionnle7-"Iterninds .
me of a 'crowded theatre." lqra.
nie----merowded theatee! /kW so?" Mr '•
noeniee-"There stwitiS, *0 be starling ,
ro'Orn only."
A