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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-5-7, Page 6Th'e AutOmobil0. Itt OLD '. MILS' lt'.t4XVV::k,, being occupied, Traffic, of 'course, ow near to Tee heart was the old curbs encroachments, but en a lonely ,, road, with sharp turns, 'litre is an faintly flivver, • itcola in element of danger. Wls t fond tzeuilcct.una `` Does, the 'average . motorist iteep' to review; !'a ad.,ns far as pos- The renders; the windshield—ah,how, the right of ro th _ .. ^theyr-c'..tld quiler-- 1 sible or crowd over to tlfe middle? was A d h 1 did the rhe even the ctueation considered at a recent n owxete i i i , ye,.,.. , when new; l inve:�tigetioxt. The answer to the , uestion is affected h� the How well l': rememberembe: the very first Isurface and condition of the surface flat tyre, " l adjacent to the pavement. This eon - lights so dim, The first empty gas tank, the head- elusion is based one observations of Hary sweet was the retied when s'he'd; the habits of drivers on highways .of various kinds widths and location. Points were selected" for observation, and the width of the pavement. was marked off with' white paint into one - In fancy I see her alone in the ; foot sections, so that the position of lot; ;barn-foot vehicles could be observed. The paint is all gore and so ars In most cases the ears were not passing other vehicles at the instant the' gears. The motor i§ lifeless= -not even, a hot therefore, indicates the road position spot— preferred aby the average drivel.' Few But the 'fiivver s first glatl'ior has automobile drivers prefer a position closer to the edge of pavement than two and one-half feet and dn:ineetizig other cars. the average driver will ll rather thair'drive closer to the edge than he- instinctive-' ly feels to be safe. • Truck drivers ,who, as a class, are sometimes accused. of being road hogs, are found to be not guilty. Most of them were :observed to drive a- foot - ,width o f the road, curves, ;grades', slope of road 'buck ,and then back -fire -- And that time I drove her six miles on the rani of •observation• The investigatiopr held through the years. The old battered fiivver, The rust -covered flivver, ' The rough -riding ilivver That served us so well, -Tom S. Elrod. THE SPELL OF THE ROAD. Lurking along the miles of high- ways which.traverse .his country is closer to the edge of the pavement a mysterious power known to the than drivers of motor cars, and under automobilist as the `Spell of the all circumstances they :adhered more Road." Few of the millions who closely to the side of the road. • have held a wheel for long journeys Eighteen feet is 'found, to be the fail to escape its insidious influence minimum width of roadway which Some call it the result of Concentra- will permit passenger vehicles and tion, others describe a lulling of the trucks driven in the preferential .pose- senses as though the swift passage time to pass in safety and with a throughthe atmosphere was admin -treasonable amount of clearance,' This istering a narcotic. This, they say,•will allow a distauce•.of 2.7 feet be - is especially true when the sunshine is tween the outer wheel and the edge strong and the skies are clear: of the road for automobiles, and 1.8 The spell may be cast in Dundas feet for trucks, with 1.9 feet clear - or in the wide open spaces of the once between vehicles. Prairies, and the driver on Prince Observations on curves showed that Edward Island may obey the mystic there is a general tendency to shift to the inside of the curve, particu- larly by the traffic moving on the outside. Improper proper banking of, the Accidents so it is reported have road surface, poor shoulders and been traced to this numbing of alert- steep embankments on thy, outside of nes s. Often there is a tendency to the curve all tend to make drivers edge the car toward the crown of the crowd to the inside. White linesin highway. And so gradually is this the centre of the road were found to done that the driver seldom realizes be very effective iii keeping traffic in that more than the allotted space is its proper channel. touch as well as he who travels the longest trails.. Much depends upon the motorist. Clock as Beehive. A new clock was set going in the tower of Wolvey (Nuneaton, England) Parish Church recently. The old clock had an interesting history, and is supposed to have done duty elude_. the days Of Charles II. Originally it had but a single hand. The second dial (-of wood) was put on in commemoration of the British victory at Trafalgar, and the second hand was introduced about the same time. There Is a record of its having been repaired in 1740. Whet the old clock was removed recently workmen discov- ered at its rear a'hive of dead bees and between forty and fifty pounds of honey. A still more interesting find was that of a valuable item of fifteenth century glass. It had ' been reduced to fragments• in the old mullion of the window, and was covered* by"the wooden face of the clock. ` Tradition has it that the Cromwellian soldiers, marching from Coventry to Leicester, knocked out the glass of„the window, and that the portion recently discover- ed was left lying about when new glass was introduced. d. Solution of last week's puzzle.. D FL L. p Wisps of Wisdom. . The man who gives- up goes down. You are rich only as you enrich the lives ,of others. Avoid. the pleasure that holds the penalty of future pain. - • Half the Value: of anything to be done is doing it promptly. Don't be content with taking things' as they come; go after them. Flowers bloom whether anyone44I Iooks• at them or not. Have you lees! sense than a flower? ' 'The royal road to success -would would have more travellers if so many' weren't lost attempting to find short cuts. _ It is one of the "beautiful compen- ; sations of life that no man can sin -.f cerely try to help another without helping himself. CROSS -WORD ''PUZZLE ] TNC tNTEANATIQNAL SYNDICATC,: SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS -WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling iii the -•„words of which you feel reasonably sure. These will give you a• -clue to other words crossing them,'” and they in turn to still others. A letter belongs in each white space, words starting at the numbered squaresand running either horizontally oryertically or both. HORIZONTAL 1 --Charge -6—Thoroughfares (a`bbr.) 8—Got up ' 12--A' suffix meaning "pertaining to't 13—Pound again 14—A vegetable • 16 --Ire 17—A limb 18—A weapon 20—Conjunction 23—Abbr. for.tftie of a physiclah 24—Frequent ?6—Mending 28—Kind of tree 30—Eagle 31—Parched 33-A serpent 35—Part of the foot 37—Possesses 39—City In Illinois. 40—Very large city In U. S. A. 41—Tilt ' 42—Brief poem 44 -Thirsty 45 --Instrument for writing 47 -Emmet 48—The reply (abbr.) 50 -Removing dust 51—Reverential fear 53 -Toward 55 --Con junction 56 -City in. Nebraska 59 -An Incalculable period 61 -Join 63—Small rug 64 -Shrill cries 65 -Bag 68 -Open spaces 67—Consumed el—Happening_ t a of time VERTICAL 1=Musical Instrument .2 -:-Traveled fast 3 -Mass of cast metal 4—Make a mistake 5 -Watering place 6 -Large city In Canada 7—Total _ -- 8-AdvertIleements (abbr.) • 9—Musical entertainment 10—Ocean • 11—A planet 16=Letters used to form comparea, tive degree • 19 ---Paid (abbr.) 21—Proceeded rapidly 22—Finish 2s—Style 26—Feared 27 --Getting larger 29-A_common bird • 33—Perform 34—The seed of.an orange 35—Also 36—Point of compass (abbr.) 37 -Coal -a uttle 38—Firmament 43—City in Michigan 46 --Fruit of a tree 47—Also G8=Snake of the boa family - 49 -Condition .51 --Get up 52—Upstanding • 54—Exclamation; 55-tJ pon - • 57—Blemish' , 58 -Silly fellow 59 -Reeled 80—Formerly • 61 -Employ' ' - 62 -Reddish `brown BRITAIN WA RR QUEEN The Story of dice it's Fight for Freedom, ' Many Londoners •see evert. day la ban's) and ooudonttied it to a similar life, set at the ,entrance to. Woatinin- fate. No quarter was gk°Veil, s'ter Bridge, the statue of a woman in But the .British triumph was short- a war-clxariot, We know that this is • lived: Roil ab colonists lead extricated Boatlioea,..a British; queen of old; we themselves from even tight�er.corners: are vaguely aware that she did some. Swift messengers sped alolig the won c,oi uh'. reports are received of.iii- thing for the salvo of British Inde- 'derfiil Roman roads. through the fox creasing " numbers of visitprs, "arid pendenoe••-•'but thaxe the knotr°ledge of eats -lo the uttermost camps. in the 'merle' points that' have heretofore not most, of us 'ends, says nn English outpost of Empire. By the -end. of 61 been active in looking after the' inter- writer. Her story is,:in truth, obscure, an army of 10,000 Romans had gather- osis of visLtors are' cotiimeneing to but It is one that every Briton ought , ed together for a Anal -Struggle against recogni4e. the advanta e Af providing to know. the emancipation of Britain, and Sue lvcceiniiol1 tion raid a welcome, It ` Buddtig or Bodices, better known tonius,'craftily occupied a position in would be'exceedfngly difficult for any as Boadicea, 'was the last pa,tive ruler a narrow. valley where it would be iut tourist with an eye for the.beautiful ^ of l3ritain. Bueld'ug is Welch -for Vie - torte, and the Welsh claim her ; as their heroine' and haire placed her among their national worthies in the inarb'le•, gallery of Cardiff City Hall, though there is no evidence that she ever travelled so Ear as Wales. ' When the Romans Came.. In her day the greater part of Eng- 1'and. was a jungle, the .Andredsweald choked ooliinunications in Surrey and Sussex, vast' forests ,including those of 'Epping and Hainault . stretched. northward from the Thames. 'as far• as the Wash, an( the only' facilities for travel were across the ., military roads,. of the'invaders. Until the great call came for national 'indepen- dence, Boadicea rarely left 'her, home an ong the warlike Icenians, who occu- men, bidding them have no fear of pied what is now known as Norfolk the multitudes arrayed against them, and Suffolk, . 1 multitudes' whom he described' con - Caesar, the first 'of the Roman in- temptuously• es a; mere horde of wo•' vaders of Britain, had thought it wiser 'men. vents. Justified his confidence.. me to -terms`with'the Icepiens.degenerated i t to co The battle ' soon into rather than invade theta in their butchery.• Sheep .could' not have been sylvan fastnesses•, and he made no at- slaughtered more rapidly thane, the tempt. to exact tribute .from them, Bzit'ish. No. fewer than, 80,000 of them; ey abode by their engagements and went while the Roman casualties t went well until the year 50,, when were returned at 400. • i it e aggressive policy of the Proprae.tor l ' ho'• titeie' was the queen's chariot the beautysols' in our own.conntzy. s revoked a national rising. ! P •Ostor u p r i fleeing away Into the forest. Siieton Many of us spend .our vacation across' The Icenians were acclaimed, as .the ius himself galloped in pursuit, deter- the line, when within a, comparatively, Natural, Resources Bulletin. The Natural llesout'ces Intelligence Service of the Dept, of the. Interior at Ottawa says: One of 'Canada's natural .resource* and one that is becoming inerettsiiti - lir important Is her attvaetioes for tou•rirlts :and• tray.elle're. In this -traffic Canada la now coining. into her oven, Froin all parte of the. possible for the British to employ or wonclei;ful in scenery ,to visit Ciaii: their usually ,successful tactics and ad<'t and not find many spots within a outflank the enemy. It would: doubtless have been wiser if Boadicea had waited; and starved favorable to .her arins, morea theM into fighting on conditions tt she was'- , ol3portuinities that are s unexcelled ley flushed by...slUccess and encouraged by any other country, and the vast the sight of her vast hosts; which con-, lengths. of good highways that'have temporaries lave computed at been constructed ighng the past fort 000 warriors. She' decided to give years have opened up areas hitherto battle, and we can imagine the en inaccessible`"by auionroUil'e. During thusiasm as Oho anti her daughters the csseble,season ballade xviiL• no drove in their .cha'riots 'through the doubt be visited by vastly greater tram - in lines•, exhorting her `subjects hers of tcui•lst�s. The Natural Ve- to avenge the outrages of their tyrants Sources Intelligence Service is already and strike a final blow for the free 'in receipt of many -requests for maps Re- done and happiness of Britain,' . and, other . inforniatiozi concerniug Death Before, Dishonor, motor tours and canoe routes frons -" Meanwlii.le" Suetozi[us harangued his' all portions of the 'TJnited States, in- dicating the growing interest in this country,• Canadians have a well established reputation for courtesy 'to travellers. During the coming' season we will be called upon many tinier for informa- tion about .the particular' district in which -ire live and about,Canadn in general. •.Let us .welcomeeour-vlsltoes , and encourage them to'r'e urn. As Canadians, we also shouldvisit very short distance whore he could fiad-i•est. and recreation or otherwise satisfy. his 'desire for a change, By the' sea or .inland Canada offers natural lead -ere by' reason of their mined to capture flee British warrior superior, intelligence and - martial queen and parade_her at his triumph. spirit, but they had trusted. too much Nay, but lie was too 'late. Boadicea to "the good faith of the'Romans, and had taken poison from a secret hiding were caught unprepared. The rising place g her ring, and when her foe Was emeiled, the''Icenians were forced came upon her he found' that her to pay tribute, and' the Roman general proud spirit'had fled. Prasulagus was set'up asp king over them. - A Poet's• Mistake. `a u- more assured) Pf s sen , eke peace T fn, 0 p One .-of the finest sonnets in the e lagus. married Boadicea, the .heiress of English language is that' which' Keats g their royal line, and all went well until wrote -after. reading Chapman's.'trans- the year 60, when he died, leaving his lation of "Homer." The poet com- great wealth to the Roman Emperor pares his' -delight with that which in -trust for .hiss wife and daughters: ,,stout Cortez" must have -felt when Thus he hoped to :save his . kingdom he gazed at the 'P.acifid from "a peaks few miles are' places Which ., the for"- sign tourist Vets and s(dric i w,•e.have never seen, Let'us- this year. plan tq spend, our, vacations in Canada; we will then more -readily. appreciate the, reasons why so many• United 'States tourists are visiting this"country. All=Steel House - Erected in London The sight of a hou<e..'seine ,builtin Grosvenor Gn�•dens, close to Victoria "Station,' recalled vividly the war per -- lad when the officers hotel, runs so and family from molestation.. But ahs in Darien," and lcuew that in all prob capably' by the Y.?Vi.C.A•, occupied Roman officials disputed his will andela�biiity he was the first white man most of the `triangular plot_of< grass • But 't t declared all ..his :property forfeit to . roto had seen that ocean. beneath she trees. u i was not them- as representatives of the Em- peror: Vigorous Womanhood. Boadicea protested, site ,Mexico, was .also'the discoverer of the When Queen Boad P -- .pacific,• was seized and publicly flogged. Real yet: he :Una swring.,Heoughtlien that they wee facedwith ea- to .have _writtNunez, 'for- it was g,termination, the ieenians decided to.just...over� four dred years ago that Probably Keats has 'done ;more than anyone' else to-.tmpi•ess' upon people's minds that Cortez, the •conqueror of ey Vasco Nunez -de Balboa first saw the Pacific Ocean, It was - almost at. the very_ point where :.tk_ze Panama Canal crosses 'the isthmus that. Balboa' also crorssed it,. or, at,'least,climbed ,to its highest point; , He ` heard. a : wonderful story " fromi o theat es. f n, v They said. If, you climb those mountains • you will gee. a sight of a mighty sea on the other side,'_; and it was on September 26th, 1613; that e3alboa actually beheld- the Pacific. • Winds Are Strong. "How strong was the wind?" is the question. asked -after a destructive storm. The answer to this uestion`• s like - q ly- to be. misleading, says' Nature Ma ;: their . hands. . They of the alkaleds is' six, and of the oil die with arms in _A Peck of Pepper.rallied round their queen and made Many people imagine that . white .one Pepper has frequently been found to .'alliance with elle Tsinobantes of Essex and differentand black are two ant sP : du means of a clever and Middlesex, who had suffered from • Rbe adulterated b3� the tyranny of Roman.veterans quer- pepper uar- and tthivarieties of se. trick.: Pepper dust composed of faded the case.. Black . tered at Comulodunum (Colchester. cies, but this is not leaves or linseed meal, husks of Mies e ler. is the dried immature fruit of ...even ground olive The,moment-was. auspicious, for. Sue- , ue- p pl l.tard, ground:z.ice�or the plant Piper - er, while white a ed to thegenuine article' teniae Paulinus, rho rroman Governor, tones, is.. dd was- away in .Angleseye laic garrisons. pepper is the same berry without its In all cases,. -however, "adulteration .black outer husk. f The p PP Ing glass or ,p were scanty and scattered., may easily be detected by a Magni y In. those days the women of Britain -menfolk. differed" little"' from their They: were brought up to "the same physical fitness, could draw a haw and e - erworts are a small group... a microscope. found only in. the hottest parts of the world; but they provide several useful Practice Hard, Hard. 1 r- - Pianists Who - Bank Notes. plants—some w ith medicine grope ,. Greater privacy surrounds the mak- The plant itself may be twelve All the great pianists; practice hard:-. endure fatigue with equal vigor, were P y - 1 fees. P • -, • . - e It.•is the only way if success is to be not behindhand in intelligence. The Ing of. notes for the Bank of England feet in height_ Its berries• are atfir�t ' I - stage won.- These great : performers, of queen prepared her plan of campaign than almost any other - undertaking, green, then red, when at this course have . exceptional :gifts• ` to ;with rapidity, and -,carried it out tri - The with that great institution: they are hand-picked, and left in the , tart with.. But no• amount of gift ab umphan Marching through the The a er on which she notes. are.� yield the black peppercorn. s _ paper sun: to printed has been made in the same f It flourishes -in the valleys and"on. salves. the •artist from the necessity forests; she imtediately'took Coichest factory aversoe, t at L t k Hampshire,- or the banks o e rivers , - ff thin Java Mai of immense and long -continue wor er and r tze'cI it to the- round " Then ..: - . over •two hundred years. It is 'pkey-board. Rubinstein was'a she stormed the Temple of- Claudius, re- secs, Borneo, and Sumatra, whence at the pared entirely by hand from specially is sent to Britain under the names of tremendous worker. Padereve selected rags, rags, and is washedand re eve'war eties—Malabar; Penang, Sum 'fesses to seven hours a day,_and- a and: -five -finer ala it scales g washed in spring seater used for no ! atra, Tray, and Tsllcherry, j, good ulg f 1 exercises: Pachmann, Hefmann, Roe- other purpose. The heavier the pepper the better The formula of the ink used in print- it is...All varieties are exceed- entiial' all the eminent players—have quality spent many hours daily at the piano Ing the notes is known to only half ingly similar in but the a dozen people. The chief ingredient practiced merchant appearance, s them in pun suit of the enormous technical I n skill they were determined to acquire. is charcoal obtained by smoke drying by their weight..—the heaviest bel g the wood of Rhenish vines. Each note costs the bank roughly two, cents to produce, and the average period of circulation is two and a half months. Malabar, the lightest' Teliicherr.y. The mixed pepPer is ground; by mill- stones or in a coffee -mill, care being taken lest the heat destroys soiree of About 60,000 of the notes are printed I the aromatic principles.; if this' -occurs' daily, while every year 20,00,0,000 old the pepper is, known to the. trade as notes are collected and destroyed. °Ikuxnt" The important constituents of pep- per in a physiological sense are the, two alkaloids-piperin and piperidine It must be admitted at any rate that Sage grows wild in many parts of, the horse is more nearly fool proof bouthern Europe. I than the automobile: Nig Ili' A D,. JEFF—By Bud Fisher. There is no royal road , to efficiency as a pianist.' But the necessary prat- tice ' need -not be dull. wlirk. On, the- oontraree, the real musician loves working at his] technical exercises and sometimes, even, prefers them to hie° pieces. -ii -When I look on •beautiful furs, . I think of the fever, and the thirst,• and -rand its oil, The average percentage ,the pain.—Sara Teasdale:, which had been set up ee a monument of British, humiliation. After two days' siege sir's destroyed it so utterly, that its site cannot be traced to this. day.. • The Capture of London,. Suetonius, the Roman Governor, hurried back fromrAnglesey, 'to• -Lon' don,.collecting legionaries on his way, but he, soon realized that he was not strong enough to facse t ee.British in the field. He Pied -from his. capital, and the ,way seemed open* to Boadicea to. drive the hated tyrants. into the sea. She advanced on London and -captured it�,.almost without- re istance. After he had reduced it tolashev ated left an- .war which was the cause of this activity. It was none other than London's first steel house, according to The London. Morning Poar Tile -''newspaper understands that it is Lord Weir's.project, and the object is to show London' what a steel -house really is like. The building is known as the single"bungalow pattern• and will contain six or eight: rooms, all on the ground floor. The process could hardly, y be de- soribed as building in tho accepted -. sense, because the house i erected. in, sections. , There seem„ to be four ,• � ''f ,te . . steel sections .in` eachend o t house,and six in each side. The hoii:se, is three sections long by two- -ixide: so ' the sections are .built It .up iii two. tiers jointed *together. '[lie roof . also • - is- made in Sedtions. Half a- dozee- boards,:nine or ten feet by five,are put together side'by gide in the work- shop, making a section. The reof,. �.Ynposed oea:seiies of these eeltiens; is hooked on to the main beton run- nifi'g•.the length of the house: C1 ,er all are laid reel tiles of a waren eh .de, this gazine; because it is ,nearly, always ingeniously fluted so that the over- ,: stated. in terms- of speed rather than:lapping shall not let in any rain. .•- force and the :two the ' a . are not, Among the recent' \�i_iters to'the i�denttcal,-:" . ' ^ ' • �. site�ras .Sir John Baird. ',,What Attuels ,The force --of the wind -can be incite the -onlookers most n-as'tbe entire ab cited accurately by saying what Pres- 'sence of the litter usually associated Sure it exerts ail pounds' per -square with;building, There' were no. mortal. foot, for, example)- upon a surface at plants, no'brick dust flying about, no right angles' to its path. This pros- scaffolding, no cutting of stone fir sure varies approximately as the window -sill's. "' square of the .speed.. ; One.'thi-ug Seems certain: With. a Thus a wind oft twenty miles an hour reasonable number of men a to -Nil it W y blows about four times as hard ass one could be built'in a week. One was e 'of -•ten miles an hour, and.a wind.°of res'isltibly reminded ,of. tine films show - thirty howthirty' miles an hour -blows' about' nine tag Canadian settlers cunning un a times as hard. -as one of teff-miles"aan prairie church or town hell. hour.: ' •Windows and vines. -..We' can never beethe"better for our Masonry ;vallls re' only as' safe s' scarcely' one stone &tancling •upon if our neighbor be the 'worse against exterior Miosu•es as the win other, she . took •.yerulaniium- ((St Al- for: it. -Win.:: Peng o dow openings in them. The Worker, "How many; cows. ate ye' witkin', Ili? asked henry' Mr.dge, in passing uy , "I ain's a milkm any, Hen; but the IViissus, s'ho' , Militate ken.” Please Start Something. -'What time is it, Maud?" .boomed her father from time toilet the stairs. . "Fred's watch isn't going." "How about Fred?' Wait and. See. , Fresh --`Say prof, low long' could I live without brains?" Prof,—'That remainS'te bo seen." Wanted a Change. Auto ..Salesman— Whal typo of car do you'-iike?", "None°of'em. I just cause in here to .` enjoy being among a,;, few that I don't. hafta jump Item." - Achill Island, off the West Coast of. Ireland, has a population of over 7,000. The total produce of the land' and livestock waged by these people only affords food for two n►onths in• every year. •:1.:�'_'.,<.,' '.::"tea • TT '•3!Y�;.Xq1$ 4,4 t 2 , ! t+ > -flea tri ` Tills (• f]tiE:'S,'OA.A Ne'r ` f ] r Vjj :lei r>{"-Ss.fi,��,•,�r ' ✓k.r' x l�J'.! .- . a J' 9'`.^' '!, 4 (t di 7 ttti„ t. Y i �: "Yy:+i;.°�.�:4s�5]. �! ]..,pl.:@•;4::4v t ; ]' +Y �2. �y:•N ]t,]'t a �t ,>:.r .Y. x.<.:.. 06)6M INAcT1uti' A t Jr /�...44;/ /No %t)tii(„ se pJ/rr" 4:4 144 rf. , 1, t;,+..1.i i I �%a)ft%fn le! q 4 M r F4� •:.:.. ;! :re cots: s h , � .y :es.,r /..901srtio 1 4: e>I AYf. rl.} Cti4 4'}Y2'f ,. tl 7 .i,.;..t/'`f.y'''.(G^:..r1• ��. :. , & . r Lit-OOle' PALLS Sol -DOER AND J y rt4rl . _l �, 7l.sr+.....::r .:. ,`5t1:u''r.:.f.;^,".'.:.i4frr.Yrryk''�'ti.T'f I j{ 4✓ .„'i ]r]$ p di f L�, IIIA k%r aj�sD . ON , fi yy Nri�. yNrrY r% .:S.•r.•;✓�i:vS'::S.�4'i.a'bM !r'ai1N" ,%tw.:+..:T�rir.J:./te f, • k i� 9 m!a?/ Jy �`fs 5j '�]r4� R• .• r rSY �`. 'J ] R /! 1 al �<. $WHAT ti '4 c sr ,. 3%lty]�as f�t° I `I. t I , \ „ ? ii i ,.•; - 1. t ~ A 'et.,tiv SOFT: A JOB as Pott TMG AND rivk A Kota" Neuf:- 15 A 4 �tffy ' ! t .!::'.�ri.%.. / ],.r. .c/^4r, � /+..',�WYJL r :!>:r}!r<r: 'I/r 1: f " ] ) a ;r r t• - S ✓ P�, h j y � i yrs ], G>t ,VG f wale "CoafzCSi'oeibeN eitelsVIILe .BUCLE' GON4MA SHooT PACE 'fast' 'r}kvi Ratio Lkel- (Ace (4oAETtoN i. v'' '' '� � h 1 v 17,/'-''I�rf, w.�• !7nti{,✓� . ,' {/1, i•�. '} i reel, :, ,i '�, ) (L .,„xy s •2 c, r �;�✓ ]. j a r. �irfnt r - _ _e, 'a ,,, i 3 �! r,� ,-=„_i�w?...ta 'ENS CistGetT tole At ALL' !�. ' },'.��•�',:.,"ij/1a'•A .t.,'d/:KJ ]/ ••'(Y1yM;]$Y rf ,4: j . r 4 ,r? by /�i y 5 it r ,"r ;:+a .y`i�,''q,:k`s-;N:N?:.r../.u!� r YY a, ra g ' / Y dow openings in them. The Worker, "How many; cows. ate ye' witkin', Ili? asked henry' Mr.dge, in passing uy , "I ain's a milkm any, Hen; but the IViissus, s'ho' , Militate ken.” Please Start Something. -'What time is it, Maud?" .boomed her father from time toilet the stairs. . "Fred's watch isn't going." "How about Fred?' Wait and. See. , Fresh --`Say prof, low long' could I live without brains?" Prof,—'That remainS'te bo seen." Wanted a Change. Auto ..Salesman— Whal typo of car do you'-iike?", "None°of'em. I just cause in here to .` enjoy being among a,;, few that I don't. hafta jump Item." - Achill Island, off the West Coast of. Ireland, has a population of over 7,000. The total produce of the land' and livestock waged by these people only affords food for two n►onths in• every year. •:1.:�'_'.,<.,' '.::"tea •