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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-10-12, Page 2••••••••• THE SUNDAY SCI100 The Storage Battery. -tory is not a mechanical proposition, . The 41.000 ef,iimo of .4 e4r Itooklelvilttn4totiehei,trosuacbbsetInanteavOng; Enletro- upon. * storage battery with fear aaft:iiTa'; 0-"ia'"-ra ira-tte icines°mVning4 tbnios tretubling, not becaim there is ehrl mom. ear less than an acid Solatlell. thing imposing about it, but re•thF when you place ye= lirireeleter because' thy dark, heavy receptacial orlage in tile eells, it should read btV• t.ioenis to bo tilled with MYstcri? There tween i u75 to 1, SOO in each one, arid, la jitat one thin g to remember tiborttq e any storago battery, that is to ore Waten,the inditiator ehows a,p,paa ar lova h it IS high time to become Oneonta i'"' it eenstalttlY 'alai OnderlY, W-tul When yon are handling a Set Of er"Oel See that it is not holding up, VA geara, yea ean keep thent Se well oil- ' Sltetilit take inamediato adieu as 811,Y• ea that their me is prolonged lade- dekr la ,extronielY danr/0"03' 444 ill'" 'llnitely. Yon cannot lubricate a. convenient. A .nunibor 'of, SitOatieuP hetterye bovrover, heeauies'us w° /lave elitt eriftwhielf will. affect tlk,'Mnd'' -nleetnli 'etated, it is electro chemical. eney of tho hattury,. '. Soniotinies OW Nethinr, san'llo done towards drawing, are shipped afi'ent the feetOry and. re- .04 tie m.o. ottit,„ ,i.* normally dam 11144 Lris:°44'sIt 4* 'flit21111. 412Y2" 444 wbere steel and iron are Penceracd. " UPOtt their arrival. at their elpsthio. tit* the dealer Pr Wrier does not itna that aa a haheroa enecaanieitie, V. *nee, abattery's life is 'Shorter 'Allan . Izillaliately• recharge tivem. SOPA. mod this paint clear, beepaise When time** .tee, tieW Michihell are allowed lour .betteee. falls you are ^ rendered ' to remain on the showroom floor and boom op, fhe road. you may be *re coastantly taMPered With by pros. P,ective customers, so that, the haw* able to travel an ellaratOtla Mileage, „,... Veld Mittel. de muele to the battery,. but - "nil 4°W11 b'ef°" It is giVta• aliirs• ''".•.i some day it will stop suddenly, just AS _tendon. , Of vourse, it is possible..for an everweieed, beese drops dead, and the generator to be out of order; and iti le e/ee vel* eas1 f°1. bra 'eak er lu°rue NiTirellqiniCtiretabaivt"hearela.tal°aCaxifeonnc101, I ground in the circuit to prevent a Bur- paid out at . the proper' ti,me, would plus current, from, recharging the bat,!,-, have saved ninny dollars and mueh tery. n•Perhapt4 also, nettieetlhas ninVe tkenble„. ' ''• • to do in the deVelenment of a wealc; ' lane, Veterinary talreteona and other WiT1111641:46efy° it4naroVlateeevIrtdireertle battery than any other ciuse. Physic- ' ent from a warranty Of any other professional mon who do a great deal kind. Abuse is not included, There7 .of night driving,. must realize that a are eases where batteries have been battery is called upon for tremendous ,:,,turned .out with defects arid have tnorgIr to keep the lights, the lot- proved latitude/Ai and hi such tionaridand starter in constant running ' ordor, we knew et luny tamers. !tames the maltere haVe never failed .,0 provide' proper replacer/wets.. In ' who.h • th ed the ' most' eases, however, the trouble has :ovum, and, after working all day la been entirely the fields, have taken it out for long the eiknex has had no recourse \from due to neglect; and so • rides at 111411t' "1° eX4n 'ultra' re" the Manufacturer, You mist regard tt quirett for thO, Befit% 1, a constant your battery in just the mane light as . drag tpen the battery, and if the'agri- 'd ' tire. Whenthelat • ealtariet aODS not speed hie ear WI! at ter is: pounded over the road, under nn . 4 ‘1"41 intervals, an e"*.mleP lu inflated, left out in the hot sun, Or tan it only atter dark, be will fled the. skidded, damage is bound to result, battery losing its "pep" slowly • and and an aditistinent from the rubber surely. Negleet also k ,L. ..._ LA. VI t_,_ $' "...,. company' cannot be demanded reason, We4teniniif Oollthwm when the owner ably. So it is with a battery. If ''.. ataulalastereenfithll ottin4eabachttmeroyntr 41.the Stirs! rOp ;fail to constantly provide distilled tilled Water. /it most ear you AVM . t 1 ignitionswitch e i • . a long time before the starting pedal _ And a ViffitAt a.,13.9.n whieille...:Aograsyea_.,i_pu3shea,.,dpwno...ano.w_*visttors.10.pot -,:eonii4te instructiois, and a warning the fights on and off, leave the car nob to 'forget that the bettor tteds,.atanging for many hours with lights t distilled water. . . •. ' 1 burning and the motor running slowly, When you find that your battery IS you will take out of the life of the bat - rot giving Maximum service, do not tery. the force that, sooner or later you take it to an inexperienced individual ,iwill require in an emergency. Do for tampering purposes, but rather you Make the excuse that there. is au•77 beim some expert charge it, Vho ht- ,thing difficult about a ' battery.. • ter will revivify it gradually, so that child can .provide it With all the care the heat will never be above 100 de- it xecinires, and , do not say that you Vete Fahrenheit, A hydrometer 'cannot' gct ...distMed water, for all 'Cottge is °.°,11°,,t1 i .1404,..es.ei, 04 as long druggists keep it in stock constantly, •as the gravity Keeps rising the eleetri- end should you Ands it,• impossible to • eity must be allowed to 0 intothe. procure a supply a 7 point,. alt battery in order that its highest pow- that it is necessary to do is to leave er May be attained.' A trick charge some sort of earthen vessel Sat in the INTERN'ATIONAL 1ESSON =ODER 1.5. Neen itPileat C01481" • Acta 25, Golden Textr7 Matt. 10. 23,, Verso' 4, roretna., restua et in1PrOVelatellt on VOI/No but be died 'after tWo Years- The province -Loosely's() calledo for Judma ?vas Only a dePartMent the Provkne4 ipnyrvi:r.4q Ate three taitayhos-irflogiepouni Conscientiena adMinietrator4. aeCus. tooted to actproraPtly. 8. Asking h. favor -Compare VertieS 11 and 16, which Similarly laY etr.eSa Olt the fact that to change. the Venue of the trial of Roman citizen vnits• considerable cOncession. FeStlas was not Unnaturally wishful te grand it, TO 4 new geVeritor it Wes reasonably enough - considerat104 tx) coVicniato the men)* hell eeille to govern, But his inflexible. senSe of julitice Made that. depend "Oatirely. on the Prison-. er's conaent, • • 4. Feetue describes in veraei 16, 16 his VieW of the lieWe' request It APPears.,,that• inforinea ' (veree. 2; in, claded an audacious request that Fes - las Would pronounce eentence; they would urge that Felix 'would not have left iihn in'eustocly without graVe rea- son. Probably', the 'request to have - him tried in Jersesalem-mhere evict= ance would be ,pfere easily secured - was the Jews' alternatiVe request, after the fit:stilled been refused. But the audacity of the • termer demand had Rut Festus on his guard. I 5. Them that are of ower' -!.Men of poSition whom the rest would intrust with their cases. Anything amiss - The avord used in. the crusified brig - thk ' ' Ilk\kik\ S"..N -e‘e, e • I • Making Crosses :to Marit• the Graves of the Ciallant Dead IA FTER an advance on the Weetern trent ,evorything that.can possiblit done to Identify the fallen is done, and little: wooden creases are fere.oted over each grave to mark the placeeot interment The acildier •seer' lin. the -above picture is shelling- one of these crosses, .whfeb later be iereoted Over the stave) of a gallant soldier. The French government had !made the kindly and thouglittul announcement that the little graveyard* !where. British. soldtere sleep their lest /deep shall be tie, at all rent4 ohargep,aeter the war, • . ' • . . "KrrcumNvars 110n." The British Recruits Have Fought Better Than They Knew, • • ERZERUM. , Semething About An Old Eastern City. •' Kitchener would have • seen more . Erzeram, ivhich has • suddenly evidence of his preparative toil in sprung into the notice and interest of the personal equation .of the fighting the world 'during the, progress of the and's declaration about Jesus (Luke aloag the Somme. The infernal storm of shell has fallen tin one of the rain- present Russian campaign in the. East, says the Manchester Guardian, 23. 41). In earlier Greek it meant ed villages is described as an "iron "strange,o4 of place," but it wiN, now and lead mine," and „instead of lines bas been identified with the Byzan- tine .Theodosiepolis, which was a ordinary vernacular for "Wrong. ' . of trenches the landscape is hugbly fortified outpost of the Grecian Em - 7 Charge -The nature f h h °--- w I° pockmarked with the craters the pire:. It fell to the Seljakss'in the year may be inferred from verse , w ic great . mt. us have made. On such an is a list Of headings in Paul's sped& 1201, and just three centuries later . impossible battle -ground as this the passed the Turks It had already m his own defense. Prussian guardhmen and the . ranch-- • • men of the, Antipodes have .' met -a on two occasions been in possession 9, To gain= -Literally, "to deposit," as one does in a hank; the same state- disciplined inachine against the no, or the Russians -in 1829, when it was . . t d and held until the peace of, ment lc made off Felix in Acts 24. 27. Before me --Naturally implying "in spinfeat grass: It is largely the pre- meds of the iiiii 11.os steppes and the .Adrianople of that year, and in 1878, my court:1But verse 20. distinctlY fessional against the mspired ama- when it was restored to the Turks .af- the Tr Berlin. . suggests that Festus 'meant the ex- teur. The British recruits have .er perts to conduct the trial in his pres foughthetter than they knew Th The normal population of Erzerum 'entiOir that -it :wolild virtually mean rudiments of military Silence' tveye. -amounts-to-about _forty-three _them - d ten. ' t I tho s nd f hom trial by the Sanhedrin, Festus thought MaY have acquired . have probably • , Per - that by leaving it •in their hands he fallen away from theta before the are Armenians and two thousand per - would • be better able to find .out machine guns and the trench mortars; sians. Its public buildings, with the whether anything in Paulie _conduct • eh_ Passible exception Of. one, which but as man to man in personal had brought hina.within the range of counter theit spirit and fire were un. back to the beginning of the Seljuk Roman criminal law. He was not yet deniable. . EngliSh, Scotch and Irish Ilaried, ara . a nn Particular :dietine- / As new lifeboat, presented by the -prepared to acquit' him, since he saw troopers, new and raw to fighting, • * t t ' ' fro k the slightest hesitation about taking4 , , . • Royal National Lifeboat Institution,1 . the strength tind unanimity of Jewish more than held their ONVI1 with the. the streets are narrow, crooked; dirtY full advantage of the training put at recently launched at Stonehaven his disposal to increase his capacity and better his pesition. A traineci mare aid a wife both ex -11: iwrsiapeThsthecoeh ,piyaessgmenorwc.e Braoefillizimalyayr,mge gathering.1 porno, s iadfotnert of perienced and *willing, are a teamthe National Unioe, have endorsed hard to beat • - • ' • ' • s . 1 the demand for a war bonus of $2A0) 141lien The.'Cbildren Rush inFrom Scli9o1 • to cat!'"‘, out; off .:gentorcins :nlioes. of broad and. Spteact with -, • • CROWN 13, CORISTm*RUP 'Wilier; tile ehildron'a chili/treat 'Seeped for thorn, too-avonderfuny natriehtne, to build. aa than. little•ealloa and 'bole to keep thonewoll and enema es wholosomo food should. • 'The moodeltelous of tablo•ayrurs for Griddle Cakoo, eeeftioe so Hot n.laculta. 'Ercellent fer Oahe and especially for eanclanalenee • • . In 2, 10 and.20 pound tinte-aa0..3 pspnd Porfot Soar' Oloallars, allgrooem Our 'now recto bpi*, o•Posserts And Concloie, show*. the novena% right way to melte a lot f/f 006 thlaieS. WM* for copy to oar Mordecai ()Rico. It's Roe. • THE CANADA .DTARPH C5),• LIMITED 'MONracet, CARDINAL, PRANTFOIR3.-• ' FORT WII-LIAM. • Argker$ gra& WHOP Coi72 $yrup-Benson's Cain Slarcii* 22e • an4r* Gloss!, ;Laundry $tarieli, THE SQLDIER-OARIVIER'S WIPE • A Geed Training and a God -Partner Make a Great Combination. "What makes you thinU you will sueceed as ,a farmer?' The question was, asked of a re- turned soldier who had expressed a strong deiiire- to gei out on the land. "MY wife," he answered. • •o'Do 'you "mean to say she 'per4tied-, yes,?" "No,. didn't need any persuading. But she wants ,to go as much as I. •"Does she • understand what it means?" "She ought: She was born and brought u on a farm; she is not tatoralividofe ir "For t 4 , , FROM OLD SCOTEANO NOTES OF INTEREST pRom =RI pAns AND maga. Whit Is Geing On In the •Iliglillan40). ' and Lowlande‘.Of Auld • Scotia, . Lunacy statistics '• for Scotland . 1916 show a .decrease. Inspector Livia of the Glasgow Po lice Force has retired after forty-tw years' service • The Grand 'Duke Michael of Russia And. Countess Torly,, and suite, have ard work; and she prefers arrived at North Berwick. •. the country anyway." • The Glasow Magistrates have. de -1 e children's, sake?"' , ..clined to accede to the request alba, "Welle got none worse luck. No, ieblicans to employ barmaids. she likes it better 'herself." •• The constables connected with the: That ,man's battle is half won. 'Stirlingshire Nike Force have been' •• He was not a farm boy himself, and granted a war bonus 0. 84 cents per he does not imagine that the little ex- • week. perience he possesses is ahough. He On the ground of economy, Sunday, is therefore taking advantage of the • opening of the National Gallery of, elementary training, in 'such MatterS Scotland has been suspended during' as gardening and poultry -raising, al - the war. ready started by the Military. Hospit- Since the outbreak of war the total als Comznission at some of its Con- " number of Dundee men who have valescent Hospitals-. and he aims ati,bee.n killed in action or died of wounds taking a course of! extra instruction .28 1,142. , later on at one of the . agricultural . •schools. • • • Very few Scottish hotels or restau-, rants are now including .`grouse On A' --annmaced-s°1"--Aillm ag°'-th : theit-menu on account- of the , high', Government makes special monetary allowances, in addition to the pen- . 'Prices of the .birds, , Gunners Allan B. Wilson, Trench sion, for the maintenance of both thei Mortar ' -Battery, whose home is ati . soldier and his family while he is be- , Rothesay, is the fir* Rethesay sol-, ing trained,oecunatl.if he has_to SO 110 nian should a have Li, i -'-er to win the Military Medal. • feeling against him. He WaS bound best the Kaiser could Send against" and badly drained, an e ,e ere few to sift this, if only because it was avid-. • them. ,The action round .Gaillemont . trees in the neighborhood: ently a danger to the public peace;Imeans to England more than the cap- ' t - however innoceat Paulrnight be. 1 ture of -men and guns.' It means that : - 10 Paul knew the dangers of the soldiers comparatively untried have 1 ' road, and knew that the serious mat- faced the veterans of. a long-standing i 1 Enlightening the Sergeant. . is very in g se Mrs. MacLeod, '80 years of age,' . ter than Festue suspected. But his system and an indurated ' discipline . A, sergeant was entering a new en- ..,-,,„as fact has been recognized in a ' was harned to death at •Lintrao, near ' d t i ti n to c lete the einanci-1 and compelled thenvta retire. lister into;his book. !L'And where do most practical way in England. There, / Th i I away quickly; long, I 'li . • . • e erm na o °nip • I You hail from, Angu•S• Macdonald the -Govenanetit decided a few months • • three Other dwellings and e names spread were: • England, Scotland or Ireland?" he riga to start, by way of experimentai destroyed: • . , . - All He Can Attend To. asked, • with a sarcastic Smile at the three pioneer land colenies Of ex-: • A dijsa tr fire. d I ' even with Nero presiding -:-a fairer •Un(elle--And ..what does your yoneig six_eoee• brawny giant witk a Scotch „soldiers., -or rather "exeseryiee men," • ness as a result of which the bakery, • trial than the Sanhedrin, and he wants •. his liberty, if Gad will, so that he may m , the ' and 'confectionery premises belonging o en with his preaching\ One who ' • aNnie:e-fo-Whr aY,1,1v1unnegi.°'..Y.mi'l °ail . ____ .. ; te•cion:co,t.ery lgo'tte, ' 1.. ex. brgTuaen: of? • for even the man now ploughmg °"1:thehirtics'k' -was the answer. sea :Will have his ch.oiee of ploughing: _g • open air where it can gather ram Neat. t - fames out me way it enters. Yer- rips we have gone too far this .er that i fre f' metrar o s eA rom an le trol. The dell court will give t, pa en o the Faith from Jewish eon- tanunation.- uto in annex's Advo - article without explaining that b t ode. . . • SOLD FOR $1.50 NOW WORTH $25,OtN AMOVS 4oNE cwt. erAmP =trim GUIANA. •••••••••1•0•• r " It Was Sold Ey * Youthful C011ector• - Wilk) Was Short of ' Funds. . • and old, Being •shert Of money at the . , c. ' pect Jack to do anything; for a livmg "Do ye ken .whaur Aberdeen is? Weel, time he .decided to sell some stamps can write as he does in 4,602,13 Of the while wie're engaged . ; . II come tree Aberdeen." . Out of his album, and among • those gevernment who acknowledge no . ,.. ., . . 'chosen for sacrifice eves, the uninvit-• more ,the eight of the Jewish 'rulers leg One Cent of 1866. Mr. Vaughan t° a "lee hi matters of religion which ecimen- he posseshed he thought -he their courts, he determined ta take . . says that though this was the. only the Rointina had: always exchided froin -kLUMBER'.011 'METAL CLAD BARN4111Cill• would easily •be able ,to replaee 'it- ' the. great ihsus to the highest court of I.• • • ' , . . would Travels of the One Cent. ' • ail; 1 . Id.. give hien the supreme op-, , • eportimity of his life, even if he were Mb teak .his stamps to an old col- condemned. It should be added that rector in the eelonY, who bought see.: he NraS now clearly a money man- eral, but who • would tit first . have • Preaurnably by the death of his,father; • A lielpfol Discussion of a Wry Subject. By A. A. GILMORE, ' the soil. The Presideht of the Board of Agri -1 •Mr. William liarper, REIS., for culture has just announced that .in -52 years parochial' schoolmaster of selecting settler's for these colonies Cluny, Aberdeenshire," has died at e Castle street, were "preference will be given, as between rRuby Cottage, Woodside, where . he men of equal merit and qualifications, v retired four years ago. Tain Town Council have sold the • to those whose -avivea or sisters , or : sta daughters have acquired proficiency nding timber on their estate at in milking nr other farm Operations, Culpleasant for $10,000. The Council as .the. result of ,their employment en begun to pay off the burgh debt ,..ehiatIv7 the first instalment . the land either before • or during the I • Rothesay member i of the National Reserve may now resume the wear- • e d s ao or et a new barn, he -naturally wantstprices id ' . nave taken a 1 e d , nothing to'do with *the OneiCent; its and he had deterreined to use his • As a matter of fact women in the . • ..When a farmer d ci e .bad preservation and octagonal shape money for this Nasit to Rome, so elf:. h , o country e t e d erent materials %at will be used in the nilding. The local leinaber- even e.xtraordinary share in •gworkailnl ing of their badges, . which was pro - prejudicing him:against it. Eventhal- ten e•agerly anticipater4 without °II StantOe that Can el 11111 to•he absolute- 'shilling.8 en it, but pressed on the tee evety Citizen, was impossible: All her Thee he goes to the hard!eare :man or, his builder; and wants to get the farm.. which the war has 'dep-rivg- *At a gardeli fete. and Sal h ld t " There are in. exiStence severali'lY he was persuad to '-"riak". Motley the appeal, in theory allowed 'Nhc.vib'thtdrawn. ; lined:or a time by the Army Colin,' men quote him a mice of $ 5.00 per thousand- on a pretty good grade,of lum- s uction which has jest been unkint_ttt. s _ „ — Prices on metal: roofiug and possibly siding, and • is quoted a price -of $5.50 -or -ed of so inany 'a their usual laborers apecnnens of their ruUligster the fact that he wns any; this; Of coerse4, Was determined by the $6,60 per square. • Very likely the intention is to erecta frame at wood. poe- Viremeri of ev'ery social rank -have vol- . • . • e e a kind, sars Leonard E. Goldsmith. 411 ing it as a "fa'reeL 'The sttanp visionof the Lord himself in Acts 83. siblY plank constreetton, and cover the rOof With metal, atid the 'sides unteered -w u. di) thiSo and haVe kePt Ab - • ‘.4.0 u„uta untitled in hi.; poeseeeine ea„. 10 yes" t it ,• ".._e_eaeLeeeeneknoweet.-_Thee_eakael aVell, if, the cost is not WO high, but Mr. Partner cOnsiders tliese?pricee care- • piedee‘Lthough_mail th ercairny, near Crieff, -VY Capt. and • , Chime, •• home iiid-flirtify•comes to the condlne. on at e um er - • .• Y °f tez»ihe-H n -Mr D .orarcse at its dictionary value, all of anti Was sold in ISM to a London deal-. -used is •not that ',Arhich. implies inform, „fluffy all the .11vay not only quite unaccustemed $1 500° • s. relmnon-; ..cr. Moray, over was raised in aid of British • Fires ota- a out 2etc. Der foot, and the metal VA or 6c. per foot, or more manual labor, hut free from' any ne- : • • theet mutt plaecal sane er- for 1:425. .The .stamp „Was" ugairi ation- it is to the Clear:sightednesa of t au twlee as, much as the Weed. It eertainly loois itebut- Miners'. Union is cir- prisoners of war in Germany d f . et thelth lit'lwet`ereie einetie, a re:11 htax.1 of in a letter from the greatest Festtihe appeals 'S . . ' Let us- talte tWo barns., size 36 ' wide. 56' long. side wall. 16' higb, having cessitY to 'werk at all. . Red Cross Work anor • old The Scottish • isette freni "way hack,'" the °there of Vitterian stataP dealers to Judge" I refuSe net•-•-e•See ,the /earn- gambrel rcCf, and eampaye them_ We wilt von,s'.der the frame to toa b•ailt 'Canadian women, the vast majority being in the netttre of errors in. stir- agrent Collector and preel- 'Phrase adapting the feimula en Eng- of Plank constenetion in bothens, barn te,-,12.e covered cbmpletely of them, have never beee in that posi- cularieing all he '-•-•coal 'Charging, aidle eertain ift$taa&S dent of the Royal Philntelic Societe. judge uses when Prisoner. has lumber; and the other covered on the wal:s and roof with metal. • - 'ton. Work has always been familiar workers ; • throughont Scotland, urgiri th' t -t.o tient, and a very erge number The Mealier in the frame in either ease will.cost $500.00.. and- the bellowing g em. es 'tally 'one copy Dirrt. -stamp • has'. been 'It was offered to hint. together' With ... been found- guil'ke.: of' murder. '''‘.Re- • - ire short list •of the materials reqnired in*a meta} clad bean.: . , . . -- , agree to a Aix daya! working 'week to* Prepared he inkier, thate e fietiricro Jeur ether stamps, for 43.0; a' n'd at- •fuse" in Our modern use is inecin- . , lerame„ includiag, doors, ete. --• ., .• .... :. • , ''Ne.$ 500.00- • J • • even, of The townedwellera among. • , ili's Cue -Memo in blaCk on the - is Oil - it he delayed until too late...and the gin• ---See note on verse .3, and the 'squeee. ; ' • .. • Many of our returned soldiets, there- ; suPP i" 9fle°a1" 1- „ thia, while °ally fix,'. stemps surcharge. Cell tor, Raton )S.Reitritie.re von Fer- • • - • • . - . • • • square . • , • th ht f q • _ value might be pleteea upon it. The though be fully intended to purehase gruees.•.' • Grenb me h.Y 'fever (mar- S7Z)7 s, 2e ga. Gale. Ceer. lren. .4 $5.50 per , meet the immediate need for increas- 1' ern were roug up., on arm.... ed fore, Wha �f going "beck to the • Elvers Preteetorate is example of star t•••••ees seid to the greet French parriphraAe. . • . 366 s 2"$ ga. Gale, Corr. rect. $6.00, per 411 land,” will hare a „great advantage in • ' Electrics. for Dairies eitilet rina to:0 hi red were pre- key, for a.priee thrtt hate never been -12, Couned,-His personal retinue.' 5S lin, le. Ridge, V .13 •• 217.14' -• • 3,44 •the experience of their' wives as in . , Eight deiry eompanies in Lundon (cehore in Latin). who acted as asses- lie •• eale .12 . 13.,92 . the tal training offered them pared. • • .. made" MN:ie. . som - Festus inight parhaps have of • . 116 - Eave titterter, tit .(4, 5.12 ; '' Special training is giVen, of courag, BesideS being . a aplendid advertise - (4I$5 . use electric vehicles' for dairy Work. - . worier os,...ir, Rnxit3.... .. A phtlietenst remarks: Loie onn ,.• , . . . . . 4, ,,,tivaibd a:. ate c.v.ats .red., isi.,{;' -: --cis ge-tne:••life,;..retarztia...11 an acquittal at onee, and ' 1-16 ' - gable Sornice, ilt .11 ... ”-.. . . . 12..76 - fie` a Variety of other induetrie.S. The, ment, becanse of. its dignified and "neat ••••,.., .0..`•••t.),7 \VMS that' Which he ex- ,. 112' - End' Cerniee, „Et • •„.15, - , .. ••,••••• 15.68 greatest rare, is taken to choose the . pretses in verse .... n le. aseessers . . . Must be Worth t5.000. - .ing of -resprinsiMitY; After definite': . .' 2 Barn Veets Ei 25. g•i• IS lb$ Lead Washere. --Efe • 15 .' , rirttrsh Gettina of ISM This stamP, a eireaaftluy .poor eery?' - • ?advice, he ,deciA,.es to -accept the slate with its relieve, the four tents, wee - ' stemewhat in the natnre of '' a pro- •• • , . 1. Roof' Windovi• This is utdolibledly the (Inc„ -Cent trine as anything.ever wits _levees • • - 4- • ai , 50 .iie- Gale. Nails., 6 .5,)s .. . 4.50 4.•te e4,..empaajan. beati suited tu each toao,s appearance, the electric. is superior to- - lv allowing the rairesil..ii 8anitat in law, '2. Clieble• "Windems .$4.ce • hat ' 4 e• of e - vieit•Cutl, peepered daring a shortage . strange earl t -14 - bee nO longer therenotiace• a wee.' eee oue wee roue ‘4-rilsoos of tbe n grent lied of the early iseueie of this et eceeeteee ieeer eel) • • $ . leiglitebag eteuducters , entre-tit' iseue: Tile design is very eesiona that wits Maxie SkNrat' :Mar's ago, a • . Ilse office ef tbe Oftieial Grieette. 1'3 uP- Printing' innet -• • •• Citeergetoese„1: The eentral design is a have leen made. er fce:Stl•Iy the Wotei 1,•ilt)PtISINe; WITH A SI'LA-S11. • : satall threeemaeted sailine ehip, With "One- was a. rriket's error fel: e • • ' • To Itere.k. Jar (IN er t;irrs •118a4 is . . he woo. .-norAns lietimos -Qat, Vi. • Tear. itieh N'tillS tit Ilea 3101. 0 -Mt • • • •• ns leeeow rI Ise."tett• . .p.ria*o tar -en, n,s- • • • • Aratie4 al of 1- was outotrxd - frtan rzYtTr-41to this tin) r'seee. ree,--l'ef :he TeresearS lies due ' heed of 'the shippie•,,g ett'llar.se of the 0'4 nlefrue Plactng it ns. ate ee the ee eleree. feeee '; ; s • eltetale-Weekee-- , Hardee ere for doers. eta "... .. . . • 'Nal:5 for frame and Coore . .. , . ..... the` h.orse, in that. it is • capable of • More ability.' Bute eepieetionably, •ageicul., .ture is the great national . industry. sereice, and• at, the same. time holds' speed,. an importaet factor in this e';e0 11.10. 6,0a •.'aad needs. the energies -of every ,own against the horse, as Well as . • • trealified to undertake it . •. • -- 00 _ the gasoline truck, because of, its stem-. eany-ofe'operation, and the absence • ° -572;6:175 eind*iff o disagreeable odors. In the daisy Th 77geCes:e; sat°mIlea"le oak hihrahs eiselhviiNriceeiPaNaNe'nehdcoljfm-tainnintYP:siltit4:petselse:rteircictlibils' de - 3/".i.0(• • , opinior, of themselyes.” .... Ere:nen el 'wood and meta': 'CS erk .e.tette. ordt. Central portion as °, • arether nt ileaatatih • t7 /be •• '‘O...V;•:.".; • 1••• - • f•e;- , ieesea ha; a 'frarte: ,eaf 'it:hefts r•DN's. Flt"' ".1. retioh reneee the trairic. • .rael e•Q• vo€ C•11.:t. reettei 'rim the kieiele, in cep. i'te if', 4 eatalagee of Wit•te':i'd, " ,• " . • ,4 " -Fear ...Cetts 'tees rz .0-110. I 1tt'i•Cr Kir t-- ,•• repn " eenrot vein eeeth, 3$ . • kiihee tee e • .i.It . ee. vete. -penee. peet^ereeri 'heck thtM 1.1-;.- ee:ee teeetee eevie te• rial'ateliete 4ree :ete tat. se"- ieTre- Th -•s "ate CA et o rae. eeeect s „6. eee, e•„; tir't het NT4' - ,sree the P'osleafri:e 44 • her ;•,• • hl • • ,, ; .nStat.t1 ea ;..11. , vl . 't ,S 4,.-3 e , et' r • --eer - • - , • t 4 Tezel• • a, .. .. The 'Acme nre actent. "%glares etereratecea• Whete. ateriderir.g hareSend While the pri:es metal may hare edvareed- a lie:e ser.ce . on tias et:tie:ate was Made. :hes diqeretate. is nee. great in n.barn- cf ties .siae st el resteriiil reqatred fore yeeemplete..himtetee!Id eziem . Freeze area , fio4s • • . , , • . 3. f.ese all cover.r...e Ciere, poerer ' are- .',•• 'erefee.Stieeeizrater-eeee.-.teep, eel 3r e h.:eh rerr...itate • •• • • f, ref 32; •,:$j pe .e M.• • . .t.e•re'Woed •51*.e*-1.4:44.• $4';••'.• INcrmO.7 se ors rear! It •i4•• d W' -4'-.r 7l $2. !c.* -i- ..r. . . • 4 •;,..• • -1'1 CVTe• leieree"ee.1e, teeee _ ' 26.e"i :eat enriti; ara re.e4- : ece,netteet.q, the F•••••fiel. , eleee rn I thnte the 121.,•••'f t4'414'1 h heti-cabal'. ieriet:Sre wraerliard•ix ate far aeon.,e.e , - rye yea- vezeetere ' 111-5.S01- tl'ess is ?411 11t".1`6.14'' site Prearettt, the Triras- rereetioa . ... .....,•.. ...... . ... . ... • '250 OD it"; ierie wee tete-tag ."131-7 •41 14.taSS. the .•7`n:.417•5 041 31“;terlt zenel.T7Icri7i. th•T • cheof suf- see yehiele, ae it is capable '• conserite.d to remain in their employ:licientspeed and is more ciaickly and i'ct•-tliree or four years, -So they feel theAreai silY started aria :ittapped, than any erstitled to think that .y rather iv-aother type of tainepyaiite. niee people-"' -FR PRIZES--T-011-RLS- Beautiful Doll and :Doll Carriage. ' This let e,ly Caned ai_Le.,...peeljatejel innhoat orelland-lcoks- e)::.1 fate:Le ravine Zra'aes welb •••I'l.t.t5-:.•:'Y 1"•••••••-ir atm.1 n ilereeige; firra it greet fiend Ir. a beat • - tZiet1:41‘Nrt" 21 14'',1;1•4i.''it 41'.'7471".,AtIS Insf4-rel ef a • -0, . • ' • tre .$1127 .1,5 ,•• ;ns: late •be.plelure She has jointed,arnis and legs zed natete':-Iieoltiag head. handand feet She hn • a pedtty dress witielace and ribbon Iritantings. The Deli carilage has a steel frame and Wheels and is revered withleutte. , trette. • It .is high, lust the rtght size ter life' big 'doll we ate etving Any".girl will be Pnand to own this.lovely, Dc'll and' Don:Carriage. ^ " .ttett vend -es t -our notria eta 044rege and we will eerqa ao .ese ievor nixls snot ewered 0110, ertn:la lestros. 1,4 soli to , --•;.r "frit. nds And ‘'s at 0 et - "eeey aro pe•-tarel ty the; t Saar • ON.14`,_V )100$_,a ante ten "..ev• are seete•yee eone eur rt enee .erhree ii4sitarsi .,. I t, \-• anal! wit*, •ehoreos nil prop hte nod we sent: Viat4 th,y. ck,r3-;_ez..? as r .atx tr • s; u zo‘rtf don ,to year ftl. tuts load . •ta-41;, throe 11 ItA'"-ta tt 14'4 • ur 01, n.:;ae:•s n a lee- f...tia`.'4'f•.4 ' • -• • • ' ' " - ••• Aezeneleg 4.44' A altseare, cif the Itistrate* Cer.ipaneee the: ,nee. -he etre ••• a 44, ,0,1,...ez, eeee,„„7, .,,,, ei..e., „se- •.e.ee ..,„ . e :f eh..e ens:..4!: t•-••. 'fts" 'a L'Ilr.• ,, a'll rtarlett, :tr.!! ,:11. -yen ri: .h.Irtat'.: g ' :r.". , ta.'n‘r....1,g' pa:es:fen on a reefer:: clin" healtg leer:aver grerater tha..m. iteetee, leer ....1 the ''..-te•e_.•e'ega:.....lelteeeta, re:3 i:itere' e: • i'ee eeeeeee • • - • wh!.rie er, g •eeee.,,er, telleeireg it is tate:tete tan 2teee. reel tete:. eeet• el the ' . ... .. .e"a,..ea'.',... ee .• • ,-... ..,.; . -. 1*,,,,,eetee . '-,,e ••••• • ,'• e• *v. --e• 4% - '" A n ereeed• ' 're.. '''1* ,-,--,- -1 .i.,- --•.1-e '''' P4 -" "'"345 1-,,t....- :`,4 $1 '.'k.r. V•5 tt1.1'4h . At. 1:44"±''t la*';:."' ';', tit CI p.i 1:-.641' ' I, • eees.--A '',.-.T.1•• ...."-ci ''s .. 4,4.- ... -.4 a .. . '''z' '''''''' *1'0 r -14k -a- --- ,-/a-t.,. ,,,,.,•--t ,.• ''' te ',." ',;:tf,1# g : . 4, Tqr„ tee nee e 4*...d te;.-, elghte years 'hefaire. ,tb.e templet. eett ern0. ex,„,...,e-ralee en eevasea • • -, . . , g,.. 4 7. ts.:...".•f,';',-, ;1'1, te. ..*.-',4 • :% fi !': - - : . ...•Z•Vti "Iter•AZ fit t.he' 'Wsri,:"•tt,T-7.1 lead. hat:. . - 1,...0 ,,,r.'.... • - ' — ' .e...,.,o, • ;acme Irts lee:el.:4 wi'.11aet a„Mreei naras esare be:free, th.e etietee:etie cage hes . e •;,,,,,,:- efe. : •.; . • . • r•t"e••-,t Lan]: 1'4,0 wear "trefileitae etteeld =vett te $2111.".' - 1-,,,yeee feieeeit..t.te5 tr. tea,ter,es. • 7:1- h.ae eeee tati the "eiftelerfei af 'the =eta] clad ". • L-.. keg" -.See:- '''..,..,:'et.' -1--.= '' ,.*.• t, e:'..-',3 . ..'s .et *A0 ettal L*ire-aite.e, be., e..... e.... . ,.. tee...4.e_ ev, ..,e,.....• '44214' '4.O :N.' nt.'7.;...: n'F. :, (-La.'. 1: t•-;•,;•, - , , " ,; : lc "3 • 11. 'IS tstre,:,...1' tl.ltit :LIS, nntl "e1.1.'" reeraire est a tee:eft:et tet,:,2iiiteg gret".ee's :4' ieeeeee ''!'..Ae-, !•*•.tr4 1;4 t,) 4.'!:::'''' irol'''''.e' 4.• ,,I.V.711 •• 4 ': 'tz. ':- .4.. 47.*:.:1., ,-3,!,,n ,:-.1 z...•:._,...,...,.,c.,,f,:f.-...,- z-zia...!:-It ,Ir...--;•t-lhi. .... . E.-,' .: .. • t) •',, • ' ' ..t.,s e 4004' , C.- oi•-.1X ne0 extee wet: a fre• :41,,trl.r.g-prstvre 1`1,-? bettee ep:A,:ereeees eiee. ee, a vti. e-ateltlerad the cheled VitteeL,d he at, leaer fee /lee yul.F.c't. , • .t:ar 01" nal Tra 5t;•.1 Vet .0 e.s -60 a- ts ettt , 15,A6). and Doll 4Nar4ti-1e:011004Y. Hit,ittel.ER-WAMRZN CO. Dept. 101, TORONTO e• • ; • •