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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-30, Page 7• - r • • - the carburetor on a Can the best od.; vice is "don't" So Esys an .experi- awed automobile Man. . ' ' 'Many niOterists want to change the adjustment' of the, carburetor with every decided change of weather." :be • •contity.ies., "They etiem to tit' k ti , • earbureter -ought to he adjusted one . -weY when .the day is dry; -..iteethee . when it is Wet; still. another wift it . ... is hot, and twain when it is cold. , . -•„ "Soneetimes the ()Wiwi hint:101f tries , to Make the adjUstnient, and nt oth- er, . , . : Ines e. terng the. ago over, te.. a , ,. '- garage man. Whet hts:„ should do In- • etead is either to consult the dealer for the ear, . or e the leder repro!. , • sentative ofthe inter conapeeY, ,•,if there is one -in is t yen. • "Now, it istrue that the mixture , ' ' Sheeld. be mai or . lean; eeeordinVbe .• .,,,, 1, (:,-,the hind of Wcather,, _But' adAfatment - :•of the carburetor is the wrong vex to . secure.the limier mixture. This is , rightly and easily done by the attach - M . ent for the. purpose located on the . dash. 'Make the mixture rich when , the motor Is cold, When it warms up • . • gradually make the mixture leaner, , `.` ' but •keep an eye on .it. till ypur,oghict, is hitting evenly.: .." "What happens when the carbure- • • 1)0 Nat Tamper With Carburetor. • When it tomes to tampering with tor has been tanraered With to Secere rich mixture is that 'gasoline iLS wasted and the condition in ,general invites the formation of carbon de- posit.,. bet means lora of Power,' and incidentally it militates against ecerionlY, aide from the likeliheod, of getting the carburetor useehanista out of adjustment. $o my advice i to a,VQ-•the-.-varhurebor alone.' "Troubles are likely le occur from continual improper teiXture of SOP kW air due to a wrong adjustment of the carburetor. if the owner for: gets the existenceof his carbareter and lets it alone to ' Perforit its forte - bens he Is likely to seeare the moat satisfaetory results from his ear. Ile will get better p'erforniance, greater economy and longer service Without the necessity of giving attention of the mechanism. : "Aftek": some automobile owners have had their cars three or .feur months, and 'have prettsr.evell master- ed the li”t of driving, they begin,. ,tq get a datareAto tinker with the mechan- ist* The carbureter generalljr, tempts them lint, because it seems So.acceor- sible.. It Is right- Were biAqra Ahern- ag,i they lift the hood, and they try, their hand at Making adjustments, .41, though an expert ,reptir Man never does a thing, unOcesiarily to a cai-; bureter. MOM PRKES . • • . • „ GERMANS STEAL FOOD WHICH PEOPLE sp9uLD FAT. • ; The Belgians, Suffer a Great Deal, jkit : f Their Spirit Is Yet . • ,„ • , Uebroken. , Now that • the pinch is becoming ' • Mere severe in Gerniany, living in Belgiunele more diffieult, says the ' -..;LondOO News ' The Bel Meg are foring hiCause Geimany is making a hevy kvy on the7:fetid '.ikeduced",* ' country. - •. • • . The French and • Belgian women „• `ci•ttrlio are nil -Rent in this country 'either to join their husbands here or 'in Parte tell'terrible stoties of misery since the German occupation. Though --the„people have to exist on small quuntitles of food for which they "*:•":11:0Ye' to pay ;very high •Pricea, they ' • ' are.. bearing their" hardships cheer- - • .fully. They are, in feet; fighting their:. ' " German oppressors with 'it weapon' agates whtc the Governor-General • ' on/rtniaels and the host of Gerinan Officials in the .country can do noth- ing..Without"Wilfelly,..disobeyieg the . ..„Gertnen orders scarcely a week •'oeleiSe's Without a, number of -edietS' in which the term"il est defendit" ("ver- ' hoten") accurs:--they ,have adopted an . , . ettitede which is more galling to the Germans than Ictual disobedience. • 'They mock their masters. And the ' Germans amble to take action for Amtsbeleidigung, can only fume and threaten. - Life in Brussels. • - time. Itotiot, who. • bah aerived in ':London with her famili Of eight chit- , , ^ ..dien; gat* to a representative of The - : , oily News_ some perticulars of life it) : ., n Brussels :under the berinan 'yoke. . . . 1,`Ah monsieur," she said "we have . .. . • piffered.nitelt, but the:Germans have riot. been able to break ours pirit, --'-: - ' , , -theo-gh God knows how they have .' .'., tried, And we await the day with perfect tranquility and, confidence - Wien their Will be hunted ,oht of our • ' oountry. ' Our faith in an allied vic-, ' tory has never, been shakon, thongh. we have been kept in ignorance • Of the real course of the Military opera- tions. ' • -11. "For example ,t we never knew of the British and French 'advance. on -the:Se/me until the news Was con- ,veyed to us by Britieli and • French aviators. How we cheered!HOw. we shouted:: 'Vive la France! Vive l'Angleteerer : The . Germane were. alarmed. 'Soniething had to he doing. And what do you think' the Goverlior- Genaal did by Way of punishing us?, He issued i decree ordering us to go to bed at '7 o'clock!" . Famine Prices. We hear of high. food priceii in Ger- many, but they cannot be higher then "thole 'Which the 'Belgienha in Alt risk had:, pair,ffer ‘:orditittry; ertieles: of feed,7,.;„:41'ine.' flopot gave the fell -Miring ''.. rices 'pr kilo; •whien Is a little over 2 lbs.: Beet 10s; pork `1 is 6d;_bacon, 7s 6d; hem, 2s d; and butter Seld. , ' , • Two kilos of bread it 7d• a lo.weitt allowed to a family of *Persons per day. . Butter, meat and potatoes 'Cannot be • had now. Germany has to be served first from the Belgian Sup-, plies. Whit, la -left is Idiatributed:: by the Food Committee among the pe6-: ple. It is "misere 4a -bas,". said Mme: Bonet ' . . .- - • . . ' "Are' the .Germans treating am. harghly?-- Well, no. We think their" minds are occuniedil•with.;-serfous thoughts just now. They know ' they are beaten. There are very few sol- diers in Brussels. The Belgian garri- sons halm been denuded in order to make good the losses. on the Somtne. There are no German wounded to be seeninBrussels, but it is known that all the hotels at Spa are full of wounded men." . :,.._ * • .• e, • , 7.;`,74 • Ave'l , • 2 SAFETY FOR PASSENGERS It is a One till$,eSLY on „life to SaY' that 'Passengers' are'eete.13' removed before belhg destroyed by Prussian submarines: The above •gives atrldeit' of the safety that most Paseenget's are ageOrded in dild-ocieati.-New York - TelOgraro.:, • • ' • • :; • , SINDAY,SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON DECEMBER 3, ••••••••••••-.••••••T • that speaks." Even so in' the first book of our New Testament we read' at the beginning of Immanuel, "God is 'VI% 0;7,, and -at theAnd, "Ire! L. ant with you." And in the' book % between there is continually the same -free in- terchange of attributes, with never • d sign that the writers -Jews, bred in a • consuming horror of compromising be - Lesson X. Jesus Christ The First and lief in Ged. as one -though such Ian- , . The Last.Rev, 1. Golden: ErUage about the Man of Nazareth ' • • ss.-itwartlyinfaa lettonrt7rvaenrtseitt. Zhwan:_s Text Rev. 1. 17, '• Verse 1. Revelation of Jesus- bTehtepfiranstdleto.treirgienf the Greek "alpha - ally -What !Tans reveals, as hi shown' bY Semitic (compareliebbrerrwo.weAdlefetin): the next clause. „ The Gospels tell only,. pmega--Mere accurately , 0, the id - what he "began to do and teach." The ,jective mega (big), having been Acts tells what he went on doing; the added in the Middle Ages.. There are Epistles are merits of his "living let- gebrew parallels for thus using the ters, known and read of all men"; and first and _last letters of the alphabet. ,in Revelation he, and no other; tears Let us not forget that if God is A and away the Veil ,and shows himself at 2 of life, as we should say, he Must he work in history. Which Must come, all the letters between. to pass -The first . of ,innumerablei ,seta;!choilieso*of oDir "4(2t0;11‘128;10219.6)x;citinhve hiof61.w.71;h:rill,ixdhLahudikageirvsigenh:41i;hfpa71:idn:iehtdelirtiosi:.qhht apoeilyptie „writing4 naturally ttfile'athhAci passed for hilt). :017.leAkbP ,Oeit'' TaatantenIF 0.e.0 word"' charteteristic ^•of hmtl Short' -A 11C: 1411' Writer,'gorfp. us,a:Roo 9 same:.the Lord e art* inig t • must also eonripare Dan. 10. 19 and. context, ,ithd Mr the words Of conifort, Isa. 44. b, which again remind thitt eliding; "pi right:titles ,that be- long to Jehovah alone. • • 18... The Living one-J‘ehoyah. is• preeminently "the livingGed,"M con-• trast.to the dead 'v.& of idolatry. The contrast is here, More amazing far. Alive -"Living," :not a new word. Unto the ages of the ages (margin), -.- Ages whose movements are twee, the d . trsi. But we Right.- They • Were. , "New, boys, I want, to see it anY .of you can 'make a complete sentence out of two words.hoth , having the same sound to the ear." First Boy - "I . can, Miss ,Smith." Teaehen-- "Very well, Robert Let tis hear your sentence: • First Boy --"Wright right." Teacher-4Veet • geed." Seeond Boy-•"SaY, Miss Smith, I can beat that. I can make three words of it -Wright, write right." Third Boy (excitedly) - "Hear this -Wright, write rite -right." ,1 PIE FARMER AND LIFE INSURANCE -The--farmer-oi--ettnada--is-rightl • • -said to be the backbone of the court- '• try, but. we wonder if he is taking ad- vantage of the many opportunities to 'better himself. Year 'after year there is being perfected labor-saving de- vices and machinery which ultimately eause not 'p▪ ly a saving of expense in thetnanagement of his farm • and the ' husbanding of his, crops, but also • • Oble.,- • ' 11--you-a.re-a-meclerfrand-pregressi farmer you should give this the same consideration as a modern • business man. To -day you are the brains of the farm, matters run' smoothily en- der your guidance; should You be taken off who is to assume your re- sponsibilities •arid pay off the mort- gage? Is your, wife or children cap- able of taking your place it once, or ....fmnstanrosone....1) ' ' o hired _to....tahe . it? If so, this meant; an additional outlay. The Good Book tells ug that "a con- tented Mind is better than riches," and no doubt your mortgages or other outstanding , obligations are a source of worry to you, but modern business methods has found a way to meet just It has been said the farmer does not take advantage of new inventions ' I f ,t , and - • there may be a good reason for this. • In, the first place, if a manufacturer secs ine n hieli ma o : om en o w 1)0 y 'such worries RS yours, and few, if any, has not -the ready cash, he can 0' hen ed, to take advantage of it, '''. , •of our modern business men.have fail- , , go to his banker and ask for addition - Every. person recognises the uncer- tainty nf life, so, if this is one of your worries in accumulating ' a fortune, why not melte provision against it? ,It can be done by %hive^out a policy • advantage t h' his business, and al eredft, explaining,What- he -needs • ' the Money for. • The fernier, on the other hand, who •• hail truly made his money by the • ..-*Weat of his brow does not as a rule, now Mule about an ng excep as a ,,epltice (*aft his saving!: in. Ile • : asks for credit, and as a .re- ' 4106Ult &ten goes' without things which ch In Agee of behig a luxury are a real • : heCeSdir. His great aira..nae • .been to build up not only a competence for his old age, but tilob, to lay aside some - ' 'thing for his wife and family. . • Should he be one of our progressive -frrtMerS, lie is forged to have good buildings not 'only for himself and ; • tathil3r, .but it is equallYelledeasary to • taiY good barns and stables for his • Stock. This often necessitates a eau- laiderable capital expenditure, and the -Usual mune of plotting this (if he hoe • .not the capital himself), is by placing. O 'Mortgage Oft his property. *Should you live, and 'should the years prove • profitable, you will no doubt pay oif , the toortgaget On the Other bando 4 ahould there be a eticcessien of bad • Oro1ni And Should you die, What Is ter 00111e of your wife and family?, • • • .70 u C nadian Life Insurance Companies. The merkient you pay I your lit et premium yeti have created an estate to the full valUe of your 1 policy. A life policy is nothing more 0 than, a savings . scout, with pro- tection added. Should you die after t the first payment "out 'estate will re- ceive the full value of your policy; 0 end therewill be no'delay itt payment. e 88 soon as yoUr death eirtim• papers q are received, a the& will at once be sent. , • 'pheey, of which- apocalyptic; and the very distant mbuntainpeak blends its (*aline With that of the near foothills This human perspective must be es- peciallY ,recalled. in reading the "Lit- tle Apocalypse" of Mark..1.3. Much of the phophecy of this book was'be- ing fulfilled in the writer's day; much triore..isheing continuously fulfilled in every age. It, is sheer absurdity to think of the booleag meetly concerned with a far -distant end. This is to take it out. of our daily practical.. use 'and, deliver it over to visionary--rex0 tremists, who have always misused it. Angel -No, one iingel: the messenger is lost in the Message. John -Who does not call himself an apostle. There can be little doubt that the 4third century bishop , was right, who first showed' that he is not the John of the fourth -Gospel. '•• The Greek of this book is rich in vocabulary, but very incorrect in grammar; that of the Gospel is the opposite in each respect. 2. The, word of God -Who is the Original' Source; Jesus Christ "testi- fies" (the same Word) of • all things that he saw and heard'from * 3,. Readeth-Puhltely, as in 1 Tim. i Is. Hear . . and keep -a. re.:. 'nuinincenee of ,the Lord's own words; in Matt. 7. 24ff.; so also in James 1. 23, 25. Prophecy, not 1 "prediction " which is a real elentent in thalteok:but_th sniallest. • The peophet is one 'who "speaks for" God: so the Greek usage of the word proves, and the Hebrew Word it is used to translate..• 4. The seven • representatives churches -The symbolic nuniber helps us to see that "he that hath an ear" everywhere is meant to hear, thought the message to each exactly fits its special need. Asia-TheI Roman pro.. vince as always, the southwest comer of Asia Miner. Him who is -The use o t e • ree nominative is symbolic of the divine Changelessness. The title is from •Exod. 3. 14. The seven spirits -Not mere archangebi, who could not thus be named between the Father and the Son. The One Spirit is Seven,, much as the One God is Three: ' So are we taught that diversitt within the Godhead is vitarto true unity. 5. The faithful witness -From ii_j_Wisdom 7./6. Wis- dom is an unspotted mirror of the working of God and an image of his geo.diiess." • (Compare Heb. 1. 3.) The function of. the mewl io to givi3 us sunlight when we cannot see the sun; even so "God's 'only begotten . declared" Him ivliotn "no man hath seen" (John 1 18, margiii). First- born-Psa. 89. 27; Ifeb. 1. 6. ' So death Jig really birth: at the "regeneration" we shell eater the new life which he has entered first "to prepare a plate for", tug. The ruler-Psa.89. 27 still. Compare Rev. 19. 16. Loveth-Note the beautiful restoration, of the pre - •'Loosed -The addition of one etter made this was e in in erior MSS. The phrase an:nes •from Psa, 30. 8 it was altered fit recollection f Rev. 7. 14. ' 6. He made tia kingdorn-We are o "reign with him but it is a still. mth eter otiight that he is to reign ver us: "even so 'in'. 2 Cor.. "2. 14, leadeth triumph" -foes con - tiered by the victor Love. ' T. The great eaying of' Dan hi& originated the t Loral own hosen name, "Son of num," claimed y .him at his trial (Mark 02), nd repented by angels after his ,as- ensien (Ads 1 9, 11), That pierced See Zech. 12. 10. The stteceed- ng verses give the next elause. ,nven Yea. Compare 2 Cor. 1. 20," td Itev. 22. 20. •8. The most, impressive Met about his majeatie utterance is seen in its epetitions. In Rev, 21. q it is 'heard ain, from the`,Tbroi4. But ni Alm 2, 13 (as 10 shows) it is, aitlostis, Sickness and death entail heavy ex- pense, and ready cash is often hard to 1.) seeure,. but the prompt payment"b3r e a lifo itistrance company means ready c cash, which will enable: your 'estate to li pay, your debts, lift your mortgage, i and, if your .policy is Irate enough, ,8 give them something toget on, with, :While WWII'. not soften their grief at , , your lima, it may make " you 'unyoke; t kindly reintimbered end it Will cer- tainly &lake their path through life a smoother. • 2 %- • c.; * ilouniu4,0 eittiEviths INFLICT. ; ED ON PRISONERS.' Read), to Risk Lives for Loaf o Ilreadr-TOrCed to 141/0 in PUth.. In spite ofofl the •effeyts of;•the , Germans, revelatitins.fif /the life- -in Germ*. prison camps occasionallY leak out. . The folloW' ins details of life in the prison' camps "„of and rearhed me, Writes a correspondent to the London, Daily :Sketch, from veryeurosou.re.es. This Was the deil xtinY "We get up at:6 said the. informant, "and were given our • cup of "'wart coffee -mostly breadcrumbs and bad chickory-no milk, of course, and just 'a slice of blaChl breed', We were forced. then to Stay outside Until 11.30, • "It was very cold, in . winter,. We Used to he soaked throguh often with the sleet and rain, for the Germans had stolen all our, emits water- proofs, oolJen IerSPYSi When we were captured. • "One man had. no -shirt for months except a: potato seehe had managed, to procure. • Minting .for Potatoes. . "Outside in theprison yard we passed our 014 trying to dig up Stray potatoes, for the yard had formerly been a potatelield. . ."An odd Potato was a great find. We used to hunt round for acrapg:. of wood, tee, in case we got a chance to light alittle fire. • .. "At 11.30 came the next meal, cont, sisting of potatoes and Water or car- rots or turnips and water, a very small quantity for each man . and no meat, of course. • "When ,we had emptied our half- filled dish of this gstuff, we used, to line up at the cook-heese door to see if there was some left Over,,. each man in turn holding up his little dish. "But we never knew when the cook,° instead of pouring a little in; would thin the hose -pipe on the next man _his German :way of showing there. was no more to he had. • • • ', Bayoneted For No.Reason. • • 1 "The Tafternoon was spent much • as. the morning. had been, gad in match- ing for the bread cart, M the hope 'of being able to steal a loaf, for we were simply starving Men, ready ' to risk Our lives for bread "Many of us still bear ilias-cars of bayonet wounds inflicted in the prison campst sometimes forstealing a piece of ',need; but as often for no rettan at all. • "It was in• • Janother cane'. where conclitione were pretty similar • that I hea.d of a starving ' Russian • W- ier 'who parted with.,..his military most erephattc. of the expresmonsof modal,Iii one treasure, the conspehl.,, ,eternity. The keys--4.:Pompare Rev. 3. sation for all he bad endured, fir a '7; 9. 1; 20. 1. In Wisdom 16. 13 we read, "kor-thou,,hast auth6rity...J:1,4Yr fife and dee*, ankthou leadest down to the, ,gates of Had, and leadeet up again.' It ig the siipreme comfort of Christianity that no other hand opens those gates of the grave. to close be- hind our loved ones. • 19. Therefore --Even Job's diin vision of his Vindicator made him long that his words, should be "graven in the rock forever" (Job. 19. 24). 20.. ,Mystery -As always in New Testament, ageeret revealed to the in- itiated; And the- initiation, unlike that. Which Was central in Greek re- ligion, was meant for all. Seven eters -It is possible that the imagery, as in a few other places in this book, 'owes something to the religion of the Magi (Matt 2. 1): A_belief that -i enduals (Matt. 18. 101 Acts 12. 15) and communities (here, and Dan. 10 13) had heavenly representatives, who share their rising and falling, and are on integral part oNheir personality; is elaborated inthat religion. The seven lamps have the function of shin- ing on the figure of Christ, that the world:. may see him. He ' said; "Ye are the light of the world," but the, light that shines in those lamps,is his (John 9. 5.) Compare the symbolism Helnunr-Ifuntirwerldz a ous pa n ing, which brings the sevenfold lamp, shining on Christ, into the picture of the message to the church in Litodicee. ,PAINS AFTEP WIND IN ifilE STOMACH-WM 'HEADACHES -CONSTIPATION , . ARE SIGNS OF IIIDIGESTION. Incligestion-40.,Complete in. 'partial PAWN of the digestive processes-fre- -Attently, throws out of gear the -whole mathinery.of the body. You can't enjoy the vigour and 1.itality of good health ' unless your stomach, liver and bowels do their work regularly and efficiently. • OTHER - SYRUP As a digestive Mete And stomachic. remedy, Mother Seigel's Syrup Is esteemed .in tens of thousands of tomel, Wherever the English language Is spoken. if you stiffer much or little from disorders of the stomach. liver • of bowels-, try the,c1Tect of faking 15 ' to 30 drops of Otis famous remedy In wafer, after meals, for a fetv days and note it!; beneficial , .ASSISTS 4015 tthenA4.00ilte toetatod three teni,i as meets • atIttg1idtii14.111.00 Ott wile. • :piece of breed. : • Pity for Russians..., • "ft .was 31firesatne camp 'That,' nioeed With pity for the Russian pris- oners who Were suffering terribly, each Britirth prisoner, as sciOn as his parcels from home began to arrive, took ohe Russian under his protee- tion. . "Their sleeping accommodation, like that Of the British and other prisoners, Was 'simply a -heap of rot- ten etraw on the ,fioor, a blanket, and ani .amount of Bee." "When," said another informant, ',the Russians who .had been driven tett of the earep some time before and forced' to work in the German firing line, had been literally worked to ileath, neeasierally some-Were,*sent- back, but oelY when he Germans found there was nothidg more to be got out of them. • Teo Weak to Eat. '\ • "A. party Who Came beck in 1916 were in a lamentable state, dragging themselves wearily along. Some could ,just crawl; others. were being helped by comrades scarcely more able to walk than they • were.. Everyone had to go straight to the hospital. •We collected a • e soup pow- ders, condensed milk, tea -everything we4could possibly spare out of our home parcels -for them. . They were glad to get it, poor fellows, though mai4 of them died before they could ea! Aa mf aovuotrhi ft eu 1 . • punishment was to make a man lie down fiat in • the dirtiest Part pf the courtyard on his feet: for hours at a time; and, of couraihere was dlso the' better- known ene of tying a man up by his harfds to a past, and then kicking away the block of wood beneath his feet on which he had been made to stand." • 7 ' Firtiv Notes: • does not pay •to carry unprofitable stock through a long wintier. Get rid The fernier 'who -depends upon the dealer for the replenisluttent of his dairytgoes to a dear market. Buckwheat cakes and sausage gravy r al olig the-'things-tititt-riralte-tit hog so very Popular.. Pedigree counts in, the seleetion of Hire stock,btit bo pedigree must be added performance. A COW pus lineage which does not make good •at. the Milk -pail might as well be a. scrub. • • We observe that a. gteat many peo- ple Whoowii automobiles Still keep theie driving hortieS. One man eX-, ploined the situation by saying that he likesto drive something that has in- telligence. ,• Profitable hog raising is beSt attain- :eit by •providing or two litters a year, something that seldom happened in fernier times. The new efficiency de- mands that everything be kept on- stantly moving. \ ••, • Small favaro, are • thankfully re, solved and oftert tinthankfolly retneni, fitted. , Two thousand Cenedlansarestainted for the ROM Navel Ca adian VoluateerRaterve to meaning the new ships of Import*, Ro701Novi, Immediate ovoreeas eervIee. Only men of good character and good phYslcina accOtaeL •• Pay$1.1O MiniMute Per 'lay-. _Free fat • $20.09 per Meath Separation 14410wenoet •Apply to the neareet Naval Reeruft. Ing Station; or to the •et the Meet. -.07TAWA ,645; or,f- SIPE BY P* sAD SCENE WITNESSED A FRENCH cgungitr. Soil of France Covers the Bodies of • . Two Btraiitivile. 'Mehl • counted • in one tiny c;orner , alone - eleyen white oresSea newly erected. , Nadi .of th4e treeliee. here the liable of a young Irish officer, and in but one instance alone watt the recorded • age PIM' than. twenty-five Years. These young- ;men 'came ' front ,the North ^of Ireland-aed from the: Sod* with the famous Irish regiments, the Connaught, Rangers, the Dublin Fusil- iers, the Inniskillinge, Or the Royal Irish. They Professed different creeds. They held different "views on polities and public affairs, but they,. 'were' knitted and welded Into • one by cominoe cause. They fotightlikle It is in a cemetery •in France, one by 'side for their country; they died of those eeineteries which have sprung ,side by side, and in this little French, up during the war, and Where the cemetery, With 'the great ones, they ' graves are quite new.. All around the little crosses bear the names of meta belonging to many British regiments, and here and there are French names; under which are Mscribed the words: "Mort pour La France," Two graves yawn open, Waiting to rebeive the dead, and close by a group of officers stand, 'while the men who have made ,the graves are, hi the background, leaning on their spades. A.littIe Way eff •en"qesid men•ired some Woman are busy sagingla ileld of corn, and the Whirring noise of a reaping nniehine sounds` drowsily on thenir. • From a 'greater distance comes the aan roar of ,guns, • and overhead an aeroplane 'circles like some giaet bird. The group of officers•hy the grhkreside includes two chaplains, one^ of the Church of of England, and one 'a QOM-. lic • priest.. They have come to bury two young offfeair.--,both kWh, but of a :different ,faith. Presently a lit- tle precession arrives -ii motor wag- on, looking. strangely' incongurous in the cemetery, and behind it marches a • he side by side . in their last long . Sleep: " ' And soto-day de Irishmen- rest by , all the fields in, the long -stretched battie-iines of Europe. Mould that all , those who,..Stin MAYharbor bittern* and renew against any of -their own countrymen in in. Ireland,. might , stand for even one Moment. and *ead, the cross: inscriptions in'the cemeteries ;of tell of ti*glorious",,and eternal Unlink France! These :inscriptions_ of brave Protestant and Catholic and and : Northern and Southern 'Irish hearts: . , „ • :IS YOUR iforiE SAFE? Many of Canada's • Fires Are Dwelling HoUriei. The fire record for 1915 shows that of 1,625 fires '•reported, , 676 were ' in the hom,e*Of our people. The -.great ' majei4tyof these dWellingjeraie fires occur ,at'night,i-yheri:ih* lives of the occupants are; endangered. little company of the men belongipgFrom the 676 homes the greater., to the regitnent . of the dead- ,efficerS; lirat:ic'tnighnbfI- in wintry- weather: In the families were turned They stand around the opened earth out these fires 141 lives were lost. , tike 'statues, their fades set in an:ex- „ii,„ pression of pain. Some illicteh;!rls,neyetv* a:r-.0-":"vc-eaurleeAsesifnuer illfteogivittrgmec;efitte4 are fillekwitb tears, for well aiia loved illeir.leaders-young• tive chinineys to exist; Carelessness indeed, they were -merely boys. the :overheating : of stoves and • fur - As in Life -tiacei; carelessness in the use of .' ••• matches; 'carelessness in. many.„ether: ways. , , ' , Before winterireather sets in;the. honseholders. should see that the heat- ing equipment Is fire -safe, that there:- ' are no cracks in the chirenek to ailotir. „i sparks to enter the attic; that furnace, Pipes 'are. thiiroughIr'ekiin. and at safe distance from ivosid,w,ork; that- ntoves, ranges and stovepipes are in', sdfe'ttondition and all surrounding . Reverently the bodies ire lifted to the grave-tbere are no coffins here. The 'remains -are swathed in. the or- dinary ',gowarmy blankets; and so Imp lowered into the graveside' - by side, .olicitilder to shoulder, jystas.itt life the boys had lain in their rude shelter in the trenches for many a day and many a night. 'Thechaplains read • their respective- burial services. '.fAshes.-M-ashesend--clustto dust - The soil of • France is shoveled into the graves, and semi the little group of mourners melts aivajr, . As -the men of the dead Officers' regiment march off they gaze up re- verently at they pass by 'the great crucifix in the centre of the ceme- tery; It is to them not alone a sym- bol of the hope of salvation, but .a symbol of the glory .and majesty of death when it is suffered for the *Ake of others. And so th • o ' aim*, more reconciled to the loss of, • teacake/zit* protectedaild-thit4elnP-77-. and lanterns•arain,geod condltlon- Carelessness With matched caused. 69 fires last year; overheated stens and furnaces, Si; defective and over- heated .cbitinieye, pipes, etc., "62; elec- trical defeces, 65.- These causes are ' all , 'Many avoided and should' be. guar' ded against in future.- - • Homes should he made reasenably, .firesafe by taking•the simplest neces-' eery precautions. Safety First, is as essential in the home as t -77,7m7 their two young leaders,for they cer- tainly did suffer death bravely and most willingly for. the sake of others --for the sake of those at home in the country they loved. • . . • Left Careers for War. FAMOUS I• N HISTORY. After 500. Years' Sleep Balkan -Towns Again Developing. Constanza, the important Rumanian seaport. and ' fortress gm the Black• • One of these gallant young officers Sea, which has figured .so prominent - was twenty-two, the ether but twentY- •ly in the news of late, is one of those one. They left Ireland with 'hearts new -old towns that, are so 'character- , overflowing with the joy of .life and istic of the Balkans: The Balkans are, with that glorious spirit of youth of .course, replete with towns once which fills the world .with a 'seemingly famous in ancient history that are, to - never -fading beauty and happinessday; either little more than villages 01 One boy left hie:university, and thehavetaken on a wonderful new devel- other the threshold of a great ,profes- opment and are expanding, once mere, sion, and they 'went to the trenches •into gisat and pi esperous cities. The of France, and they met death' abeo- long. 500 yoke of "Ottelnan sleep," • whielZfell upon' most Of these:. places °VAnd iti 1°Sel ta Sat' aet thousands of all broken, and a g .tury, has 'now; 61noerrasiolm.ene-a. titsnsn,ce . inr:Thousands. in' the thirteenth or fourteenth ten. . rankr7dYring-v montht the for the lifst 2 TOFtY2 -"or 'fifty ; -Years, " cemetery; where the, writer stOod by everyivhere characterized., the liben, tile graves of these two boys, he idea -FOR. PUDDING S: PASTRIM ,f ADS .ivie CAKKA