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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-10-26, Page 24 The Story of Spring inspeneton. n. bzly one of the two *Ikea There Is not farmer uthe cOari. Paw u3 Pr°Jeet41 uPrwil" try whet 16Pet 1/41nilia; With the Cired Mliet Caery 'Weight. that ruts, biimps, end ittleVelt 0Qta There 16 a new tYPe.Q eu0easilert • e• have uron bum or wagon tbai tliat seemo, to he meeting' with a great a being driven over the average con- deLtigert14Y9ribc, litdebrk4lebt!oe,neolamanlbme! try road, and 44 it seems unnecessary for is to state, that When hard -tired, Jteree-driven vehiciee 'Strike any, ob- staele, the force of the eonedssion, i.s ' taken up immediately, when tho rig , ha e come out of qr. over any place not ' perfectly , level, the entire effect past and gene. . This is not Artie, however; -Of autenaobiles, for their springs are built in Ornpenaation with . prieuniatia.tirea in, order that the Jolt , Mar net he ceentiturdeeted at (mew bat . rather spread alter an apPreciabledis- • talice- Before ping any farther, it • might be well to State that Marty un- comfortable jars have: been given the passengers .of''` an automobile by not ,,pondering Upon' thia, We •MUSk.re- Member that a motor car deals and re- ceives 4 far greater blow. We must bear in mind that a Machine twice as • heavy as a carriage and ' travelling twice as fast, strikes an objector de- pression with four times as Much pow- er .and ilet.teuctiOn. e If Yea SbOahl, drive 'your Motor. fifty miles an hour, or five times AS feet as trotting •'' a • horse, the jolt, you can expect be re.; cave, upon hitting any 'obstacle, will 'be twenty-five times as hard as one obtained by an old-style vehicle. This retie, of course, is 'reduced when we consider that the pneumatic tires bring a large ineasere of ease,- and that the ' differenttypes of springs tend to re- duce forward and side action term,end- onshr.. Manufacturers have a num- the former are very flexible, the lat. ber of points brought before them in determining just what springs should : 'he Placed upon their cars. It can be safely stated that -veilflexible, easy- • Moving springs take small obstruc- tions easily, and large ones without a' greet, deal of trouble. Rurtherznore, it is also an established fact that the . subdivision makes it possible to ab- sorb the eneVeness of the road by, spreading theiback - action over more . space than , s possible by employing seolid Material. A very ponder cheap car employs a cross spring,' which, while; not as efficient' as it might he, I it still ' durable . and gives fairly sat- isfacbory service. Other types, are . ittill. 011 ellipticl-Ihree-quarter elliptic , and semi-elliptis. Of the last three • mentioeed the and second, are doubtless easier upon the passengers, but the third ,has advantages in the matter • of installation which. seem 'to compensate for any loss,of comfort. It e$ niinaber of leaves of different lengths . The preference seems to be for thick leaves, but there are ear 'IllOdeld With thin ones. Rach . of tbis construetien is an idea producing great 11ctb1ity. Garage men will tell youthat cantneva takes up 4 Mt and instead o communicatiflg it imnaeillatety .to those eiding- in the car, spreads the imPeet a Tong .distance. Front Springs are uniformly short- er and stiffer thanrear springs, be- cause for eaftey: • Then, toe,Car riential for safety, • Then., too, 4 ear • hob' I141St he Prevented -teem pitch- ing few:it:ed., disagreeably ' 'when • a short stop is made or upon Striking 014 base Of a hill. In little road- sters, of certain. typos; You will And it an advantage to carry:a bag, Of .ssind or a piece of heavy Material under -the, deck at the rear, at times -^ AYSCIIO TNRNA.TIGNAL LSON OCTOREIR, 29. - 14esso #Y,*-4The. Yoyagk7Aets l!Sti, Golden Tart, rsit, 57. 5. . • Verse13. Their purpose ---To reach' Phcentit (verse lig). There isabet*. hor called nine:a, which dew' 'leek seuthivest and northwest.'$,-fer this, it must be admitted, is the mar possiblo. rendering. there. It just at the bolt of Lutro, which 1444 USut.' oily been identified with Phcenixt and. has preduced the4 stramed'ratsrpreta-. tion in the Revised Versioii Oft Mar-' g , • 44.1Down from. it-,-Froni Mount Ida in Crete. Tempestuous—The Original is the Word from which we get our typhoon, The Wind 'that Sweeps dOWd froth' Ida is. described as. coming "in heavy squalls and eddies,' Called Thiraqui10-,44 combination of Borns— east, and aquilo-,northeast; it mune,. accordingly, from east -northeast - The Called suggests that Lnite repeats, the seaman's term; compare King's- :ley's, Ode, "Welcome, wild northeast- - . e$, • • 15: Face "the wind -She would have had to run norbliward'and then some- what eastward to make. Phineka; and when youare using your car alone. If such a gale it wee' .impossible to• three Passengers' are riding, the ac- rah so near the wind, • tion of the springs will be as come 16. Under the lee --S o as to get shel- fortable as the manufacturer intend- ter 'enough for these necessary' Pre - ed, With Seven -passenger ears,AWL, cautions. . „Caudae -Still called Goudo. in some cases, With, ;fiveepassenger We were'. ableeeThe We implies that type, shock absorbers can be eat- Luke lent a hand in a job which any ployed sieccesetkully. Where only the Willing `landlubber" could tackle. In front seat is being used on a' long the next verse we have operations that j$MrneY •Bome owners have felled it demanded the skill of sailors. .Pre-, Wise to einpley straps, Let me close stimabty all of them joined in pulling 'this article by. stating that care with the rope by which she was trailing, maximunt riding qualities are those and as she was, of course, water -log - possessing the most harmonious re e ged, it took some pulling!' The word lations between springs and tires. If with difficulty isLuke's reininiscence can be stated in favor of the elliptie 'type that it takes far less space along the side of the frame and gives easier starting and stopping facilities. The advocates of the semi -elliptic arrange- ment maintain that their situation 'MA clips on the axle are so 'arranged that the spring leaves are not twisted, • ter can be inflated harder and will last longerehut if the springs are stiff and rather unyielding, less air should be used, although by following this your • milage for .the casing may be sernewlmt reduced. YOU should ree menthe. that each siring works co- operatively with the other three, and that when they are in complete uni- son the best results are being echiev- eit See that the body of Your auto- mobile is perfectlylevel under all con- ditions, 'because if one corner shows a tendency to sag you =net provide YekersOlf and Your ' guests with owe measure of ease which is so much de- sire& . Constant inspection of the springs shell/4 'be Made in order that the least crack ,or break in any one Of the leaves may be immediately re- medied. You, fie* give your car a heavy impact to7ciLly and fracture °he 'a the, leavesr without immediately noticing any inconvenience, but sooner Or tater this - weakness will communie, tate itself to the balance of the spring, and you may 'find infinite- trouble in reaching a, destination.. Always look well at the clips, for looseness fre- quently results in accidents of a minor nature.—Auto in The Farmer's Advo- cate. • • BRITAIN'S WAR AMBULANCE WORK no fewer than 1,469 rnotor anibulaiices and 644 other motor vehicles, such as soup 'kitcheiii; repair wagons and ,so The Drivers Are Bray -The .drivers of the ainbulances— , NOW A MARVEL OF HUMA.NE non-cerabatants all—are among the, bravest of the brave. The debt the ORGANIZATION. .. nation owes these men is immense, as some. of:the hardships -that they. cheerfully accept are Of the most ex- treme kind; .When a check "to' promote. one mo- tor ambutance" is received in Lon- don, the type is decided upon and the 1 /463 Meter Ambittances Nosi Work- ing' and 644 Other Motor Vehideit, - , • ' Order placed. The body is ,generally • • When the' present war brake out L Wilt in London, so that, the , Red the methods of transporting wounded.1 Cross Supervisor may see that all de - Jim" the firing Hie to the base hese tailieare, accurate. . As soon as the j• iifaliwere far PerfaVthOntlie conipieted embulence is delivered- it, th6;13ritish•Medical Service was even its tested, and then sent to the depot then 'ec,knowledged to be the est ere- to Omit orders for abroad. . . •gailized of all the emirs in the field. It does not have to wait long. When But the tiltieh get Swiftly to work to the eider ponies the car is•fitted with rernedY defecte revealed by the 'stress stretchers, rugs, pillows, first-aid out. of wan Now, by the eid of the • Red flt, lamis and either necessaries. The Cross, the care and transport of. the , car is then breought• to headquarters, .hrounded is a niarvel of human organ --1 where the dritiee reeeives his Red izations. • , , , I Cross armlet; an identity' certificate . The history of the -Motor Ambulance and`dlek, his passport end his, instill, - really begins with a meetieg at the ' tiens. - - ' 'Royal Antoresehife Club on September i '••• 12, 1914, When several 'club members 1 . BRITONk WERE HEBTIEWS? . 'declared • their willingness' ' to plece • thereselees and their eake at the ser- eArchwologiet Traces Recce Frew 'Ten' , i -vice of the -Red Crests. . 1 - ', Tribes of Israel. . , On 'UV 'following day* several cars 1 rr Herbert Brute Harmay,'a barrister' etossed the channel. When they land- 'of the Inner Temple, London, has been ed on the French eotist they imme- • a student for a quarter of a century of the effort. • , 1q. • Undergirding—Passing thick cables under the keel and fastening them tightly on deck ' amidships to prevent the timbers' starting with the tremendous'strain of the meet. This operation, technically known ais frap- ing, is naturally uhfamiliar in our time, when shipbuilders. have learned how th forestall such dangers, Syrtis —The dangerous Sandhank to the - withered: The • gear -L -Almost cer- tainly the raaineail, leaving one or twit, small sails set to keep the ship Steady,: It seemi that the ship was Wined tie near the wind as possible; and While pointing nearly' north, she thutedrifted • a, little north of west. This is exactly the direction of Malta. Furniture (maegin)—The word eis general; they collected • all; the; eqpips• ment that could possibly be .spared and pitched it over.• The addition with 'their, Mar hands is intended to iste gwgaess. w4at, desperate sacrifice, 20e In the absence of sun and start they mild, of course, have no, knouts= ledge where they were. drifting. Tak- away--L.More exactly, "was being stripped off"; one hope after another vanishoi. e, • , 21. Without food --Not absolutelY; the word describes flops of appetite" in the .medical literatere, with which Luke has so. much in coinmon. Paul stood forth—Commentators ,well coin- pareeth,e sptendid-Ode in which Horace describes the "just maii, unshakable," who remains anniOyed ainid the stormsOf "restless Hedrea." It does not'seein that the despairing men ac- cepted Paul's comfort yet. The turn- irig point apparently comes after verse 29, where, having exhausted all pos- sible aetion; the men take -to prayer; see, eeeereeeee teeie•N ees•-• .te steeee., 4'itfesiele • Ileunditia ge EilaChere at an English, Race 'Tracy. . \ A Milita rental -UP Of rafee,g0erS at Newmarket,. England.' An of - 4. ie ' 0 ' %leer, and ,speCial eonst4h1e are shown 'examining a_faah'p •papers . oil ceurse, • % • .•1 RUINED $.1ERS • OF' BANKRUPTCY WHAT AS COMINGTO THE WORLD '. AFTER THE WAR. The Prophets of Evil" Times Have Tnrned Out to be Evil Prophets. • , Gilbert K. Chesterton, the English writer, once wrote that the favorite indoor and outdoor sport of the world -Was "fooling the prophets," The of all the ether Unhappy belligerents. game is childishly simple and is play- All that money has gone into destruc- ed by two charecters—humanity and the ,prophets. The human race sits idle while the prophets ' 11 what the world. is going to do. :then hu- inanity- goes nnd•does the exact oppo- site.‘ It is very exhilarating and can be .recommended , for every occasion, from a surprise party (Which it really. is) to a church sociable. • The inner joke of, the, game is that there aee always two sets of prophets, defining 'diainetrically -opposite plans, of 50 millions, then under a debt of 80 millions, then under a• debt of, -140 millionsethen under a debt of 240 millions, end lastly under a dehe of 800 millions, were beyond doubt, un- der d twofold mistake. They greatly overrated the premiere of the burden; they greatly underrated the strength by which the burden .was to be borne. A hundred instances might be men- tioned fOr every one referred to above, and the depths of decline, the elem. riitictn bow -wows predicted wieilid make amusing reading. But there id meat for a long meal of thought in Macaulay's last words. It ; triay be that we do not evereate the burden of the Present time when we add in Ger- many's debt; and 'France's, and that tion. ' Nothing has been made nothing .built, by a sum too powerful for mor- tal imagination. Money has, 'indeed, gone into circulation... Certain classes have become wonderfully rich and a new , creditov nation, the United States, has come to share with Eng- land., It may, be that the bankruptcy now predicted may not come for a hundred years. It ,may be that' the burdea of taxation will prove too heaey to be borne. Bite between Mac- ao that the world ivallY has to follow aulay and Hirst one of the two pro - one of them,:or both of them pare phete must be fooled. Way . One thinks of this i,n connection.It is in the second pert of Macau - with prophecies of whatii coming af-; lay's phrase that hope for the world . We are fascinated by a wonderful "artificial honey.' The i ter the war. The ablest of English ' really lies.- The Strength by which the array Of 'economists, Francis W. Hirst, • has hurdens of the world have been borne fisclnation lies in their mysteri. We , just resigned is editer of the Lon- is only a feeble •promise of the wonder what they are; what those, ,don Economist, and in a ..seet of valeel'strength which World can develop. ingredients are which those wizzards dietary has foretold disaster and ruin It is ‘a' pity, to ‘bp sure; thatlit. should of chemiks have excogitated. In the for Europe if the ,war does not end. be for ,wer and' destruction, mit for Berliner Tagehlatt, Ernst Colditz, of soon. The greet nations, • he fears, happiness and'cteatien„ that the world •Leipzig, advertisei•four dtstinct varr will be bankrupt While it is 'true that should pay its heaviest debt But out ieties of this honey:, (1) Solid; (2)1 °there have held the oppOsite view, of chaos creation may come. And the Resembling lard; (3) ;Fluid; (4) Pow- , You NV4iit .a Sate In.vestinent Let uo 8041 you milt Sum of ai invOluteut Hutt never deprociAtes and never -oletaultulln 4ividend, wunewmfeomc. !Mid inveotownt Polley In the With.0,,CroeWle ;Alfa ."Lindted raymeat We koliey " you not have *0 die to win, Tour Iowa:ice is fully iNdit Goring. the years or yoUr heot eenring power. . Let us 544 you .00mo new inouranco facts. Creiv\n: rielte Assuranc . mono,- , Aeente,Wented In lenreeretientert Diattletse 1 THEY MUST AN ANTI -GOSSIP FIND StBSTITUTES 'CRUSADE BEGUN GERMANY. IS ircow. III :A:. VERT' AN ENGLI$11'ORGANIZ,ATION'HAd ° , :14:D. 1:LSI7ION, .. -1 . . - . . . , Wood Meal one iit • Thing! Germano The Society Oils Buleti•brawn Up, to l : .1.1a, vepTairale.tadbt F.ind . ' ' ' • . Put an EMI,. te • . . Scandal,. . ... . ••• • -$ No more. convincing testimony to the effectiveness of tele sea' • meas- ifres against ,Geemany °in be con- ceived than that afforded by a stady of the • edvertIsement columns • in the leading newspapers , of that country. , In the remote days 'befors the war these columns were tIlled`With matter which differed only slightly from cor- responding columns in British, journe als. The stress of war away up in the Mists. of the northern seas, have given an entirely differeat complexion to them,. The want -of the' Getman -nation now are not what they were 18 months ago. - The eager demands t:$ purchasers all over e gamu o desire .have been concentrated into one strident' and uniform demand' — the demand, for food. Before the war we 'nevek.encountered the advertiee- ments of traders in search of food, or advertisements from those with. foed to sell. To -day the advertisements are a good indication of the grinding ,pressare on • the. Gentan nation. 'rime sunflower oil" takes the place of olive "oil, one of a score of_ sub- stitutes, some of which must be ex- tremely nasty: "Pure linseed oil' is chemically deprived of its pecuher taste by the "Continental Isola Fac- tory" ef Birkesdork (Rhenish Prete sia), and to the oil so purified is'add- •ed "that peculiarly delicate Raver" which the hest Italian oit Possesses. • Artificial 'Honey. th t f A young' girl recently killed her. self in an ..,Englieh village. The On( jury, however, brought in thsi verdict: "Killed' by idle !some Thsf girl had been guilty ef nothing actuahl, ly wrong, but "the gossip, dis.seaninati ed by the women of the village b1ue)P1 ened her name until she could bear OA suspicious' lookti and spoken taunts no, lenge; and so she ended herlifee' The event caused an anti -gossip crusade, an account of'which appears in Pear - son's Weekly (London): "A 'society ha@ been formed; and rules drawn up. The entrance fee has beim fixed at a nominal sum, be- cause the society desired to embrace all classes, both rich and poor. Our richer women are just as adept at robbing others of their character as are the woman of the working classes who chat with each other from their tespectve doorsteps.' , Talk From Habit "The organizers are quite hopeful of minimizing the number of gossips, 'because they are ,convinced that the worse :offender's talk scandal. more from matter of habit 'than through. any real malidous desire to injure alk•i other. "Members must take a vow to avoid • either starting or spreading, any ' kind .remarks about anyone else, new will they listen to a person who tries to tell them. • To repeat what they. have heard, liven if knoWti to be true,' Is equally as bad as to 'set the ball! rolling. Por the,first,ten breitclies elnins law a .fine Is impoeede graduating' from a shilling up to the maximum ,finecif ten mhillings. After ten slips the' women ' are to be blackleilled as incurables. ' If Wp pick hp and throw it at • .fashionably dressed lady and spoil her, clothes she ., can get redress through the ; no well -brought -up woman, however; ever dreams ' of throwing, inud at her .frIends. • ' ' Does Great Harm. on the Other , hand, We imagine that she -is too flighty in her behalf- ionr, and; in order to strengthen our belief, we repeat all her trivet little indiscreet actions, we are flinging mud at her, character, and .she caw get no redreas. unless it •should happen to interfere with the earning of her live- lihood, or can be proved a mallcious act: dle gossip does more harm than anyithing else In the world, and if the organizers of the anti -gossip crusade have only the perseverance. and ebur - age to make it universaAkey will di) inestimable good for ,the general Otte - 'Alien of the .coinmunity. - • "Charity, like all 'else, • shohld hegin at home, and those who cannot Join the .crusade [should begin tbeir. own familycirele and resolve not even to thinld .111 t;st their-••friisiihs, aCquaint- ances, or those of Whons they have knOWledge.• When ugly tales are told them these should be immedi- ately forgotten. "Before making a • statement'. about anyone -do not forget to let it pass the three golden gates : 'IM• it true?' 'Is it needful 9' and qii" n kind ?'. "These form the motto of the anti - gossip crusside:"' • • • ' ' Mr Hirst's background- deserves world can ttill square its shoulders der., They are all "excellent,"and study He is an economist, and he of ftelth to pay. the debt What has they possess an "unapproachable na- is appalled by, the terrible figure of been destroyed is material made by tural aroma." The "Nutriment Face England's debte At the end of this- men's bends.. And man' hands have year, ak the •present rate, England's not lest the aliening to nialse their national debt will amount to $13,000,- work aver again . tri two years 000,000, and besides these • thirteen France paid iii-ihdemnity of a billion there Will be four more billions which 'dollars \and flourished. .The world has have been lent to her 'Allies. It is use- only to pay an indemnity to the god, lass to try to understand these 'fig- 'of war, an indemnity for being defeate ures.$-Let us take them for granted. ed by hot passions and uncontrollable It is a little tee easy to say that this desires. It, tete has a chance of sur - war is so unprecedented' in magnitudel vival. ' see margin, and note on Acts 26. 29 that eoniPariscms are ridieulous. 'Let . (deteber 22)., It is at least sugges- iliode who feel this condidt a Most en- CAVALRY NOW. PLAYING PART. tive that at that point Paul _virtually gaging chapter in Macatilay's "His - takes command, They 'Prayed for toey ,of England," from Which the fol-. Older Army Mounts Take No Atice' the day," which no prayer would hast- lowing is suminafized: eri • and God instead sent them a n The national debt, says. Macaulay,' of -Shells. • Although • opportunities for cavalry wilt, his with about him. Have te has become the greatest prodigy that [ :work in the western area of war have ten—Literally, gained. The word has ever ,Perpi6ed the 'sagacity and Con, been few and little has been recorded irony in it --it :was the $edelee—te ee g founded the-prideetefestetesmerneeemd ,'-ha ient-thrdeinge of'-therindispensable--- minue quantity. :injury—A word philosophere. When • the Peace of horses, they are, accerding to an of - often denoting a criminal assault on Utre.eht was-doncluded..in 1713 Eng - per ificer who. has had a good deal of ex - the -person, a coinbinatiOn of intuit land • owed 3200,000,000, about 16 erience with the mounts of the allied. and injury.' •,' ' . cent of its 'preient debt, and that in- l' P by mo_ , armies, playing a Much greater pert 22-. And now—Emphatic:, he recalls cumbrance was conVidered his previous neglected counsel, Which found tit's* permanent io , in the war than people imagine,' espe- cially wheh 'road traction is almost an events had justified, only to induce Piing of the hotly politic. Unhappily ; and let coot 'The result is. easily them to listen now. , . for them, Englund prospered.. At 400 imPessibility. • . e digestible, and tastes as good -•as . . , He relates one curious fact — that 23. Anangel--Tothe pagans whom million the case was pronounced des- ' ! England take a very long time "to, get bees' honey." What is VVOod Meal? " many of the horses sent out from . ...,. Paul. was addressing the -word would .perate: • After the wars Under: 'the simply mean a messenger. The God •elder Pitt, with a debt of 700 Million 'tory, Apis; -Nainaleu: in Mesta; tells honey powder .at ; a packet, both- of them "analyzed by Dr. Way, 'of Breslau." ' •• ' • Famine of Fat. • Of Course, the great -trouble is to get, something -to spread on the war - bread. This war -bread is not very palatable, and must have something on it to alleviate its 'asperities. Bat- ter is all right, so is goose fat, so is lard, so is any sort of grease, but there is a famine of fat in the, land, and that is eyhere the artificial honeys and jams and Artificial mare gerines,.. etc., come in. . Better the most artificial of honeys than plain, unadulterated mar bread by itself. Ifere-is a-recipe-foreartificialehoney advertised by the manufacturer, of one of the ingredients: nTwo pounds of sugar, half-pint of water, and .a package of Sales Honey Aronie. Dissolve over a fire,. boil briskly, used to the altered rule of. the road, , These chemists. We produce ---Note peel's delicate consideration dollars, David Hume declared that• which on the Continent is -"keep to the the advertisement , of . one of them for the men's religious susceptibilitiee. England's madness had exceeded the It was. en !,right," and will persist in cariyiiig offering his services' to the publie. A,nother day he would plead for hie madness of the Crusaaers.' What is wood Meal or flour? We God as the one God, now it is enough' over. Better to have been conquered il their riders, almost 'unconsciously, to • to identify iiim• as the God to Whom by Prussia and Austria, he cried, than I find it advertised in the Berliner Tage- the left side of the road, in accord- ,. his own life and service Were given to be saddled with such an enormity ,l alice with the English custom to blatt" and in other 'journals of lees „The order of the Greek is "Of the God of debt: Macaulay then -mentions i which they have been trained. note. It, is not sawdust It as clearly Whoee- I am . . . a Messenger." Adam Smith, whose exact words are I While the newer horses \ are alarni- an article of food. Some months ago . .. of the fascinating branch of archae- The, whole stress js laid on the God; worth inserting here. "The progress ' ed bY ale shells, ,the 'older , armY a prefessor of chemistry declared that' diately coremenced to• search the A concetne wit t e messenger is no mg. of the enormous debts which it pre- ' mounts take no notice of them, having' there were unsuspected stores of pu- - , and that a L emintry amnia Boulogne, and rescued e logy -which i ' 1 d ' h h the • ' th • manY :wounded men who must other- origin of 'races, sa 'tit ' I ' d ys e ..on on • . 24 Fear not—The form of ' the vent oppress and will in The ion- been specially' trained to 'face loud g run , trinnent in wood and straw, ' - • , Globe, and he'llas now embodied the Greek imPlies that even P,aul's stout probebly ruin all the gfeat nations 0fexplosions and the like. This officer wise have perished. . ' • ' . •f , slight 'admixture with potatoes and • - - The faster a man's gait the sooner misfortune overtakes • • e - was noe untouched by the fear- . Europe has 'been pretty iiiiiforin." For ! ea14 one of his herses merely used to, -rye need not necessarily be indigest- • ',.• Standard Design Adopted. reault of his researehei in a volume spirit •. . . * furperil. Head ._spef_it _a. night. and A _hundred. -31ars -that -pr-edtctton •-has- ' But what•has peeved of inestimable entitled "European and Other a day in •the deep," and he weft not a been as antiquated as the leng "s's" letieht,rwashutreerth-e-yircerehrei:e-Origime"--telile erives • piquaht hie • Race Armageddenefor he cometi•to • er. 141ust--The little word that! ile- In 1768, says another Miter' th Wrest from hid bearing upon the pre- phlegmatie fool who can despise dang- used in its printing." ' roperly used, the metier ambulance was witheut,t peer In t e., wpr o. termtned all Peal s acpon is to de - the conclusion. that the leading peo- "Otaggerieg burden" of a twoebillion- meter There were 20 cars in this. - , • • • h terming! hie human deetiny, Granted 1 •te , 4 . ' „ Pie Into Force in ,England hy King- Warne bad naannbrs is a standing.myse ' ' ' • • ples of Europe were m.antiquity,-hot ' - - , • dellar debt was the ( e rmining racier ' thee—Cod did net alter his Will as to in Edgar. fiery to its watchful parents. These fie.elq. •and . half a ' doyen ambulancea , . . . , . . , • - • racially and politically the aristocrats • peace negotiatiens. Earlier, 1 . , Were s,oeti linked with them, -but it • ' ' - ' the life or death of these two hundred of that eitst of which even to-dey they ' G ' ' • ' ' d li ' I ' eorge Grenville trie to. re eve Eng -1 The first Prehibittve ineasure in anxious reams of the young are of- ' wes obvious that motor transport • and seventy-six men becauie l'aul ask- •- •-• - • . • ' j h t • • Would, hay'e to be organized on a colbsoe ! . . , • • Mr., Harmayi w o.ta es t writing ., . , on the American Cotonies; Causing a Edge; who 'nearly a' thoueend years - „ ,.. . .. . are the overlords and truitoes, • • • • - land's debt by puffing a part of it l3ritam was t a 0A the Saxoe King] h k h7 ' ' ed him for their life aS a' "favor" bo . ten heard propounding Ala query, hut renera y without result. Once in a II• • Sal, stale •befol•e .it •could •be . of any himself .liis 'prayer Wag' an owever, out Of the deep . se. , ef .81S•ren• Turner as the datum'. line alne war which rolled up the indobtodnes8 ago, on the advide or Dunstan, put while, ' ' 'real gobd. •. ' • • . . , , , 'or all hitecalculations eCeins to be oh- 7 wrought supplii,ation" (so read James' atilt -big -here eekfter--tite• Napoleonic'. -down="many-eiltlieut.--Tesee enTY- liTIoWThif •-lenee ---eorries --tut Altiminating-anaw ------ ' ' • It i%.,aS' iinnerative .that it Standara • - . ' "--- -"--1-/ -i--1-----6:16);•the unconicious reaCtioitif Ifie le Id d f .b • '''' village • ,. . Johnny furnished one just the other .• . - • _•• ., ,------tseseedeby the- -lust . tribts .o :a ae , wars ..ng an , was one, orevet— er , one to extst in. any or Omit ,i,„y P• Whielt was a great catiee ef literery ee wine upon c uman seine , w ic l• ' ' th h ' ' 't If h had just finished a narti- - -.design shis6111-be-allanited-; and for finest Statesmen lind economists Were tOWtt, and at the :smile titne limiting , "“ • . Be- - , interest a rew years agri. ' ' ' 1 is the very esience.of the truest praye sure of it, for - England owed eVer . the draughts of the drinkerti. ... , the • eularly toothsonte dish of. apple ptid4 'w•eek the :lied Cross; Society aral 'the .1 on....:11,,eor.s of the , Royal Automobile • • ,.... .. .... atilt . .. , - ,n .a • 1 en ,. What, then, did, Paul's prayer ding, which. he ate tte the lase morsel. .0' - • • • Dens in the n or tat • rit ont n four billion dollars Yet in the n k •• i 't V . ' . e neek when -a shelh burst elose trele FT iiiimuurrioN Act .• • • Where the carefully trained thild ' •ible. this weed metil the respoese7 • 'Johney's Manners. • heniee who ...,ettled 'neat the ' u er ° din'? ' Why, it wee, God'a inetrumetit ry_tnghiriit:0;perekolesratt• tt_atie t_t_common dun cup of that dayavittol_tit,..fitt_tite_fact_that_t, . mid about two quarts; • and Edger . • . . . , com pony at tne, table; he deltberateie .CItih 'refused to send •out More -oil's. . . While they 'worked* on this staiuluril ern ana eine . not i achtev.ing his purpose to ',save t em, earthly ,expectation. A sum exceed- had eight pegs placed at stated• slie- . . de8tgn a" "an's' ilecided on ' °"°. 1 • • h$ th fth tu b for Dad hot the centurion and the soldiers ing the entire debt at the end of the tames in each cup, heavy penalties - ' nielted • up his sneer and licPed it being imposed on those who drank from ono peg to another at each time. - Neither the Working nor .the result of the Act encouraged Edgar's success- ors te further aetion, and the next 'prohibitive legislation on the sale of liquor is due to Henry:VIT., who, by an Act strainst. vtigaonda and beg- gars in *the year 1495, gave power to any ON justiceS- et the pito to stop tlie eOrainOn selling of strong ale in twee and any ether- Wades they thought necessary. • MEI the reign Of Edward Vt. all marriages were solentnised in . the chureh-porch, • Theiloit a week, but they ev(sIved ati Christ, he 'ands a LatiniSed form Of '•antiralante which has withstood the 1.the ratline Birneon; About 104 wear en4 • tee)* • 'd,conseeeence ot furioue attacks by --.atrociOas.foadss, , vilIt'n :Manaus" hostile tribe's, they crossed witir inte t1ii.',disehrnfert,...to theewounded • . •• . . entnill Albion, ab at ditferent timea did their alliesfrom Gascony and At meall6a At this juncture the todon ries They were already kneWn as he pol. ePene4"tta fnious fund9 tiflhl Ifl less .gie, the' halite WhieFt Caesar 'fasteriecl thert, thiooiveoko more than 509 ten- for ell .titiriOtipoa the ,Celts north of ...bulaneetrhad been purchased... Indectl, geolo, If • • • $ 0110 thte: the .dernand for ambu- lances was Sa.:Iirgent .thet the •donor 'a check for -4450 had the satisfac- tion of knowing that .the anihnlaltee 'Inehed paid' for was actually at work soundof the :firing Tine, There 41,54 fl,o;te Working ander the lied Oralts The Nornians, it is suggested, Arq. the lineal descender& of the tribe of tlepjarede, who, in the fourth tetittgt before Christ, Made • lair vf, pV 18 i COnheetiOn elDanube a Er 0 tilt raid front l the mouths o the 1$5 the fjords and N inlets of orway, tut away that hAttloy recovered beat (verse 81) 44 Palo; Instance, they vi$041d not have been saved after all. God saved them by The lieeeridencY whtcli that Win won over his ship: mates—end his prayer iion It. 25, 1 believe God—And therefore "am of good 0600' exactly ao • in Acto 10, 844 They needed a further ahd "ettontior appeal before they could fellow his example (verse 80). '26; A. certain island—Quite indee finite; 'the nate° Of Melita WAS no part of the revelation. . • It is easier to agree with "the ever, ago man then it is to coneince him. • Anieiten Wars' was willingly expend- ed onInternal bnprovement'andtoots- Oen. actually became. lighter. .Men- tionirig these things, lifacj.,ulay indi- cates that there is a 'difference be- tWeeti pet -Serial debt and what a sa$ ciety owes' in great part 10 itself. He ends with • this extraordinary pre- Phie ..Y i .. A Wig experience justifies tui in lie - Roving .that England may, ill the wentleth century, bebetter able to f ear a debt -of 44,1300,000,000 than she at the present time to bear her pre- sent. 'mid. But, l,o this aa it may, those who so confidently predicted that she tenet sink, first under A debt • Pr.14.11011110 dean. "Johnny!!' exclaimed bis mother, after 5 horrified gasp, "who did you ever see do a thing like that?" ."Dogs," "replied. Johnny. • 4*• Substitute for Gold. A substitute for gold is obtained by conthining 94 perta 'of copper with six parts of antimony and ads:l- ing a little magnesium carbonate to increase the weight: 11 18 said that this alley can be drawn, wrought and boldered $very much 1 like geld; And that it also receives and retains a golden polish. Jt is worth something like 25 tents a pound. •• tiR.EADS CAKES PUDDINGS STRIS " ?Iwo* flout publicly and . unt4'aci4/5dlY1111drItetet4 ,nut bloached, not blended: •-• eeeeeedeceille.e.rawaximemesmeeme.