HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-4-5, Page 611ACREi BRITISH
SHELL FACTORY
.HUGE OUTPUT OF HEAVY ARTIL-
LERY AND SHELLS,
Britain Has Accomplished More in 18
Months Than Germany in
Forty Years,
As a part of the vast organizatia
for making muttitions, the Britt
Government began the building of i
mouse Government arsenals, Ther
are about a score of them), entire}
outside of the thousands of privet
factories under Government contr
for war -work. When the history of th
war comes to be written, no phase o
it will be more worthy of eulogy ---e
cept the etuanehuess of the Illnteut
soldiers and sailors under heavy handl
caps -than the wonderful energy and
caPacity shown by the Munitions De
partment of Britain in getting done it
a year and a half more than German
had walleyed In forty years, In tit
first year of the war. before the Sri
Hell people woke up to the vas
seriousness of their position, the pro-
duction heavy guns mei shells was
not speeded up in any noteworthy de
gree. With all his foresight, Kitchen.
er did not realize the need of high ex-
plosives, and immense howitzers. He
concentrated attention upon shrapnel.
In the Spring of title the British array
was in a serious plight, owing to tack
of ammunition. At ane time It did not
have a week's supply,
A Big Creation.
But in May, tele, alien Lluytl Ger,rge
became Minister of Ieitnnitions, the
real work of organizing a tremendous
supply of heavy artillery and shells
began. Immenso :tow arsenals were
planned, 01,e of these, which is des.
crime] by Arnold Bennett, the well-
known English writer, is a sample of
what British engineering genius has
been able to accomplish, The pro-
posal fur the factory was [Wade on July
8, 1x15, and was sanctioned on Augustm
17. The land used was then a dup-
ing gout:]. Part of it being subjected
to Hooding, &em lations of the arsenal
were laid of plies. The ironwork was
started by September 21, and by j
March 2!i, DKDKpower was installed, `
In the first week of Jdne., In7 shells
were nttfdu. Within a year of the
sanctioning. Almost 17. 48,54e shells
bad Leen delivered. The output now
le Itautio a week, and they are big
shells., The fuetory covers 11 acres---
think of the area-- and it Is all tinder
ane roof, a Wonderful example of con-.
structite and engineering skill.
channels cut Sn the part where the' CHARGED BY A "SET' WHALE.
copper band goes, the base plug is —
fitted, the inside polished and varnish -t Narrow Escape of Whale Hunting
ad, the -varnish dried, and the base Is/ Party of Japanese Fleet,
faced, Then comes the fastening on
of the Dopper batt], and when this lilt- J Ill itis book, Whale Hunting with
portant operation le completed, the Gun and Camera, Mr. R. C. Andrews,
shell goes to the painting department. Iwho made moving pictures of the
The paint is eprayed on, the shell -case • work of the whalemen, describes an +I
put into gas -heated cupboards for dry- 1 exciting adventure with a'rsei" whale f
ing, and then sent away for loading, i while he was with Capt, Andersen of !
The steel -malting and the loading are the Japanese whaling fleet:
faraway mysteries so far as this , As we carne close we saw that the
largo factory is coneeruet, 1 whale was in a school of sardines,
Careful 'Testing Necessary. : which were frantically clashing here
Some of the aperatlons which dile' and there, causing their huge pursuer
for for the 8 -inch shell from those ' tt deal of trouble to follow thea. quick
for the 9 -inch, are conducted only by i turnings. But he managed his lithe
men, as in the forging department.body with wonderful skill, and before
Painting is done exclusively by we',
the fish left him many yards behind'
men. Women excel in briefer opera- w'as always ploughing after them
tions demanding close concentration, again, with his great tail sending the
the men in the longer processes. A water in swirling green patches,
very important part of the work is astern. As he rose, about sixty fath-
the checking. Every shoji has a pa, ams ahead, and turned to go down,
flouter biography on a card that tra- his back came into view. Just behind
vels with it. Every one is gauged, and his fin we saw a large white mark.
weighed, and periodically tested. A "That's a harpoon scar," said An -
certain percentage are deliberately t dersen, "It is a bad sign. Ile may
sawn to pieces, and samples turned 'give us a run for it, after all."
t into bars, and the steel tested for i Vi`e hart been waiting two minutes
Y tensile strength by machines of such (it seemed hours) whets the boatswain
e power that they pull fragments apart, 'shouted:
- Nothing is neglected to ensure the ar-
"He's coming! He's coming! On the
t 'tlilerynian a shell that performs Dor- i port bow!"
, redly to the finest fraction. The en- In a second the water began torho right way, I mote from one another.
semble of the factory Is wonderful, swirl and boil, and we could see the We know of folks who pay a hun- In a United States plant the powder
- Net a foot of space is wasted or out of shadowy form rise almost to the sur- dyed -fold more attention to the bed of is conveyed from one building to an -
joint ie. the wits ie. eleven acres. The face, cheek its upward rushand dash' lettuce and garden sass than they do other on flat cars drawn by electric
woolen week in three shifts, the men along parallel with the ship. to the trundle -bed and the little chap motor cars. Six one -hundred -pound
in two. Lt the mirror of my camera I saw that sleeps and grows in it. That open boxes are loaded on each flat
• the enormous gray head burst from isn't you, though, is it? car. The wheel trucks have to be
( TIT FOR TAT, the water and the high fin cut the sur- When he was well along in years ablocked by a wooden bar, which the
'
; -- 'face, Andersen's harpoon guts crash- farmer said: "I have grown' some big brakeman adjusts before the motor
How an Englishman (lot Even With ed in my ears, and before I could sea crops in my life, but the crop that starts.
the Grand Vizier, through the veil of smoke the sailors has brought me the most satisfaction One day last spring a brakeman
' shouted, "Dead!" The next instant has been the crop which eamo from failed to adjust his wooden bar pro -
WORDS OF WISDOM. PERILS OF POWDER WORKERS,
Frost out and grass land nottoo i Cool Daring and Great Carefulness
wet? Time for the roller then. Neeessarq for Safety.
Get up a little club among your I Smokeless powder is made in stinks,.
neighbors to buy your lime, grass- something like macaroni. It goes
seed and fertilizer. through a number of processes, and
It is a good thing to follow the pro- for the sake of safety those processes
cession when the procession is headed 'are conducted in small buildings re -
Woman's Effective Work.
Gf rile site thousand men and wontett
vho labor uncea Ingly it, this 11 -acre
factory. nearly Dile-half are women. t
large proportion of thein are ynuue,
nd have husbands to the army, They t
et only help themselves nuanciaiiy
y so wnrkitg, Ent. more important,
hay- also help to boat the enemy, and
stave 13:itlsh e i;,-ts-pert:ape their t
own husbands. Women are in tho
sof contrnUing the overhead electric 1
t'slitle, cranes that command every
of of the floor space. Each has a
pe to slid° d•r•a to tit,, fluor with, P
and for pracden rile is obliged to slide
down twee a week. other women
drive elr, tris carriage., va the floor it-
self ---mile- rt lino- sitting in a st.rt of
easy cbah•. anti pnllt::g leters. Six
and nine., bolt shells carnet be lightly
thrown about. The latter weigh mete
thee a hien, and either wee:vicity or
two noon use required to move then.
i tet. ririts daoa 9n per ee.:t Many
other women are in peg -tap :tv-ttsern,
but these du not hide„ the femininities
that shine) from the delicate. gimes, or
the blon a and tie, or the flowers in
vases decorating the immediate neigtl-
borltacui.
1
f The Turks in these latter days have the black cloud drifted away, showing sowing kind words and doing good perly. The car derailed, and the pow -
lost a lot of their old-time arrogance, the whale lying on his side motionless. things as I went along. Frost never der was spilled down an embankment
and are by way of luting more. I tried to change the plate in my cam- cuts that crop down. No blight ever No guard happened to be near, and as
Charles Alison, at one time chief in- era, but before I could draw the slide strikes it. The harvest is sure and quickly as possible the brnkeman and
terpreter to the British Embassy, and reset the shutter the animal had big.I the motorman shoveled up the powder
however, got one back at the Grand sunk, Apparently he had been killed In every home there is no more de- and put it -back on the car. In a few
Vizier, to whom he had been sent on almost instantly, for the rope was lightful hour than when the folks, moments the load was delivered at the
important business by Sir Stratford taut and hung straight down, young and old, meet in the family grinding house, and no one except the
Canning. 1 In a fewminutes Andersen gave the circle before bedtime. The boys and two men knew of the accident, Un -
In the middle of a rtiscuseion the word to haul away, and the engineer girls grown old will forget some fortunately, they had shovelled up
Turk rose from his seat and said his started the winch. No sootier had the things, but they always will remember some gravel with the powder. The
prayers on a carpet spread for him by rattling wheels ground in a few fath- this tittle tryating place in the home three men in the grinding house heard
an atterdant, emu:hiding, with a curse ours than we saw the line grow slack when things were talked over to- the harsh crunching of the small
on all Christians, very emphatically and then slowly rise. Faster and gether heart to heart, and when the stones as they passed through the
uttered, and going through the motion faster it came. with rho water dei thoughts turned toward the best rollers.
of spitting over hi right :shoulder and ping in little streams from its vihrat_ things. Every powder -mill ' employee re -
left in utter abhorrence.ling surface, A pretty good thing for neighbor- ceives minute instructions about what
Alison was quite equal to the octet-, Lt a few seconds the whale rose ing farmers to do is to band them- to do when anything goes wrong, and
sion. Presently he, too, left off busi-: about ninety fathoms ahead and blew. selves together to help one another one of the three, following instruc-
ness to pray in a corner, doing it in He lay motionless for moment and out aboutbutcheringand marketing tions, threw open the door to make a
i
urki:h, and inseking curses long and then swung about and swam directly
deep on the followers of Islam. To toward the vessel. At first he came
the scandalized Pasha he explained slowly, but his speed was increasing
that Christians also had their religious: every moment.
duties, and that he had ne doubt the "Full speed astern!" yelled the gun -
formal curses of their prayers meant' ner, dancing about like a madman
•
1a to way of escape.
be turned off. -Almost always there The crunching continued. One of
will be some in the community who i the gravel -stones emitted a spark as
are competent to do this work in ex- the rollers crushed it. In an instant
cellent shape. there was a great flash and a roar,
Sometimes it is necessary to cut a I anti the building disappeared. Three
as little to them as they did to the "He'll sink us! He'll sink us!" Joint of stovepipe, and It ss st ualiy a'blackened and mangled corpses were
'Mohammedans. The whale was coming at tremend- very diflicult task. Try this method: I picked up. In order to save them -
Two rival shops. in a certain town, , ons speed, half buried in white foam, Take the measure of the pipe and - selves from rebuke and perhaps from
titely indulged in vituperative strife,' lashing right and left with his enorm- marls it where it is to be cut, and then 'discharge, two workmen had saeri-
tryinp their level hest to give tit for :ons flukes. In an instant he bit us• take a can -opener, drive it in and fol -1 Reed the lives of three other faithful
at. For a long time they ran 'a neck- I We had half swung about, and he low the mark. By going very slowly ; men and placed the lives of thousands
and -neck rare, but -they were butch- :struck us a glancing blow directly you will find that you can do a very' in jeopardy.
x1, or, as they prefer to be styled, amidships, keeling the little vessel far satisfactory job. In another plant a young man
meat -purveyors -one of them put the' over and making her tremble as if Seed -corn can be very easily spoil- +operatic a cuttingmachine in
ed between now andplanting! g , which
tical lid on anrt set the whole town i she had gone on the rocks, then bump- time. long sticks of smokeless powder are
aughing by putting on his shop front ed along the side. Turning about During warm and damp days corn cut into shorter pieces, saw an iron
he noble motto, "Cod Save the King!" with his entire head projecting from will absorb considerable moisturefnail coming down with the powder. He
But the sting lay in the feet, well the water like the how of a submarine, and then a Bald snap will injure the i did not have time to stop the machine
naw•n locally, that or the previous he swan parallel with the ship, Sud- germ. If possible it should be mov- before the knives struck the nail, If
ay his rival had put up a boastful , tlenly, however, he rolled on his side, ed to a warm place now; this is even he tried to snatch it out he might lose
osier saying: ' la a are Purveyors to ' thrust his fin straight upward, and more essential at this time than it a hand If he let it go n tl ' but a
L• '" was last fall, Plan o est your seed- miracle could prevent an explosion,
cora. Inc the nail would be sure to give off
It takes a lot of time to sort over a a spark if struck by the knife.
quart or two of nails of different sizes' There was only a fraction of a sec -
buttime you want a particular size; and in which to decide. With the
but if you make a nail carrier out of coolness that characterizes those who
A
a
tt
b
to
rt
trA
fo
r0
e ung. ; sank. It had been his death struggle,
A certain notorious deadhead got , aur} this time he was down for good.
heavily sat on lately. He wrote to a; We had had a narrow escape. If
famous actor; "Barbie heard so tmich'the whale had struck squarely, he
of your acting, i should he glad of an would have torn such a hole in the
order for a box!" As the actor had Steamer's side that she would proh-
seen this gentleman's ads« all over the ably have sunk in a few seconds. The tt hale hon, say ten inches or a foot spend their lives in the presence of
town, he replied; "Hating hcnrd so only thing that saved her was the long and eight inches wide, with small danger, he snatched the nail
t t nothin
much of the splendid and everlasting . quickness of the man at the wheel.
furniture you make. I should be very i
glad of a suite gratis as a ,ample!"
The Bank of England.
Boy Hero of Gallipoli. ( Th c P,suk of 1''n
compartments for each size of nail, der the knife and put it into hispock-
andthen keep each compartment free et. So quickly did he move that not
from any but the particular size it is evert the skin of his hand was broken.
made to contain, you will gain a good'
many mintites that would otherwise — _ _
gland is not. a t;ov- be wasted hunting for what may not
John Bradbury. a Holloway lad, en- ernment institution, It is a very be in the box. Sncezin I i•1
listed when be was fourteen years of flourishing private company, founded s g C 1 s Aviators.
age, in the C,loncest •r:+• giving itis age in Del, which owes much of its sue- Hence the Delay. Katherine Stinson, the girl flyer,
u rr•
Complicated Mork. t t the tt. .titin„ sage
The factory creates its own slat-
tricity. Steam is at file bc.ttrm of it.
In some sections hydraulic power is
used. Inside rife far•tr,r;r, tare the
forges which receive steel ingots of
551' poinids each. Each ingot is
dropped into a hydraulic maehino lu
which a preS.,nre of 73a tons is ap-
plied, and c•.outes net iu the shape. of
nineincli shells. These aro put i
through a score r;f minor aperatiots, 1
ih which the rough carcass is 'tem
tred," ifs nose bored, cavity bored, ! filled them and ret
screw•thread milled in the Cavity, the through the eurtitin or hof hostihti°s, was $,3,2'0,000,000. i, !., gather up your remains,' g �,
_... .. .:._ .. . .._. ..._- pt); yester]ay to practise on! (loved ores had been reported mailing,
ant try nineteen, r cess to tate fact that it le actually ie c ay.
says the i,nntlon Chronicle. He went Britain's hanker. A yearly salary is Paddy slierDolabought s watch from the might frill, replied that sneezing was
to Gallipoli, was:in the secnnd landing ' paid the ]lank for management of the Loral jeweller with a guarantee to keep the only thing she feared, She Be-
at Suvla Bay, and took part in the hat-'' National Debt of England -$1,825 Per !t in order for er Paddy took. Aback Glares that nine -tenths of the accl-
tle of Chocolate Hill, where he die- !million pounds of such e debt upto six .use it after took it back, dents in the air are caused by avi-
because it had stopped, ators losing control of their machines
fingn}slut] himself with wonderful five hundred 'Millen, and at the rate "You seem to have had an accident
roolnese and cm.uage. With another of 8500 for every million pounds with it," said the Jeweller, while sneezing. "Tiro aviator," says
young soldier, he went across "No above this amount. Assuming, then, "A stnnll one,I Miss Stinson, "passes through nun-
1Tan'. Land" for stater, each taking that a War Loan realizes 812,500,000,- sure enough, sir., emus strata of air of different tem -
About two months ago I was feeding era
twelve bottles, Tlradbury's compan- ! 000, the Bank of England would re- the ,ligand it fell into the trough." a tures. He often catches cold
on was wonndal and fill, and Bred-'reive an annual sum of 81,250000 for g and sneezes violently. When you
airy proceeded alone with his own i this work alone, to say nothing of the "But you should have brought it bo- sneeze, for the moment you lose con -
bottles And thoar of the albs. ata I'ntotne doily" v fore, Sergeant---llthy did you salute nee?
y, .1 derived from managing the old "Sure, your Honor, 1 b ought it a9 trol of yourself. If you clo that while I'm not an officer! Recruit -No, Neo, T
arced safely National Debt, which, on the outbreak s°air As f could. We only killed the; in the air your friends are going to know you're not; but anythin will do
fire i
when asked if she was afraid she
CHILDREN'S GAS HELMETS.
NEW "JOAN" VOWS
TO DELIVER FRANCE
PEASANT GIRL TAXES PLEDGE
TO DRIVE OUT INVADER,
Site Has Told the Kinsmen of Soldiers
Where They Could Be
Found..
Under the shadow of the great
Arch of Triumph in the Place de
1'Etoilo in Paris, in the Convent of
the Sisters of Wisdom, is the twenty-
year-old girl whose story has stirred
all France -tire modern Joan of Arc,
who has vowed to deliver France from
the invader, writes a correspondent
in Paris.
When the came to Paris in Merclt
her first demand was that the be tak-
Kiddies Protected Front Hun Poison en to the summit of Montmartre, the
at Christmas Entertaimnsnt highest point in Paris, just before
Idawn, There, standing. before the
An interesting article describing Basilica clu Sacro Coeur at daybreak,
how Christmas was spent by the New as the first shaft of sunlight pierced
Zealanders at the front, written by
the mist and caught the top of alta
Mr, Malcolm Ross and forwarded to great bel] tower, she took the vow to
the London Times by the High Com- deliver France from the invader, as
ntiseioner, Sir Thomas Mackenzie, the spirit had directed her.
contains the following: No one has boon permitted to inter-
contains
was a very kindly thought on the view Mile. Clotiide Percha d
art o u , Car-
p f the New Zealand Division to dural Annette, Archbishop of Paris,
brighten the Christmas of the children who, it is believed, is acting under in -
in the villages where we are billeted. struct}ons from the Vatican at Rome'
An officer was sent post-haste to -had her sent to the convent in the
Paris and came back with a vanload Avenue Victor Hugo for a period of
of toys and presents such as young observation. Every day the priests
people love to get, especially at and nuns who aro watching the girl
Christmas. I have just came in from 'send complete reports to the Cardinal,
one of the entertainments provided by
land it is tumors] that he has already
the division, and never before have I?sent to Rome a favorable preliminary •
seen such an enthusiastic and ex -'report on the genuineness of her
cited throng of happy children.' visions and powers.
Many of them, poor things, have lost I waspermitted to stand at a dis-
fathers and brothers. Some of tante and watch the girl as she walk -
them even have had sisters and ed in the convent gardens, several fol -
mothers killed in • the war, lowing at a respectful distance'. Clad
for the shelling of some of the vil- in sombre, baggy, black robes, the girl
!ages along this part of the front has nevertheless seemed to be walking on
been very fierce. air, with her head thrown back and
But to -day all these little ones her eyes directed heavenward,
were ]nappy, for was there not a The wealth of filmy hair, which is
great Christmas tree reaching nearly said, because of its fineness, to float
to the roof of the r'Kapal" Theatre about her like a cloud, was ]Hidden by
(built for us by the Maories), and was the religious headgear, but I could see
there not also a real Father Christ- the great gray eyes whose impelling
pas (a young Frenchman of the gaze first attracted the attention of
Corps of Interpreters) bent down with the village priest at Puy -Saint -Bon -
the weight of years and the great sack net.
of toys that he carried on his back? I could see, too, her hands, which
The hall was packed with some 400 are lily white and tiny and tender', de
children and as litany of their mo- spite the fact that the girl has done
thers and sisters as could get away, chores which, in peace tines would
and every child went home happy, belong to men, oven on the French
with some little gift from the men fame whore the women are accustom -
who have come farther than any other ed to help with the hard labor.
soldiers to fight in this cruel war.
In the village near the guns, on the
eve of Christmas, I witnessed a simi-
lar scene. Here the children not only
received presents, but something tc
eat and drink as web. The Brigadier -
Her Book Perplexing,
Although I could not see the book
site has written, partly illegible and
entirely illiterate, rudely illustrated in
a sort of futurist style, I was told by
General and the A.A. and Q.M.G. no less a person than Deputy Dela-
graced tho entertainment with their hays, who has seen it, that its con-
presenee-as the Divisional General
did the bigger entertainment -and the
cure in his black robes made a charm-
ing speech of thanks. But there was a
difference. There was a great rent in
the ceiling of the building in which
tents aro no loss wonderful -than per-
plexing.
Savants and students of religion
tvho have examined the book assert
that it shows a knowledge of the pri-
mal principles of theology, which hull -
the children were gathered together, rates that the author has tine clearest
It had been made by a German insight into the fundamentals of Ro-
shell. Yet, braving the guns, Santa man Catholicism, but is apparently
Claus had came to the front in not gifted with the pn vett Itt t t tibato
French Flanders. those Ideals Into fluent Feenctt.
And there was this further differ- Throughout the work there at, pass.
once. Each little' child carried, handy, ages in Latin, Greek and'Ilebrew, yet
a gas helmet, neatly folded in its she apparen%ly had less than the us -
khaki bag, for was there not all this ual French child's schooling,
morning prominent in the village Mlle, Perchaud has always lived
street, the big board with the painted whit her parents and her sister an a
sign- little farm at Puy -Saint -Bonnet, a
DANGER.
DE GAZ.
ASPHYXIAN'LS,
just because the wind was from the
tiny hamlet eight miles from Cholet.
Her peculiar personality and disposi-
tion led her parents to agree with her
teachers that it was better to lot her
direction of the German trenches? stop her schooling when she wished,
Every week these little children are Sipco the age of 14 she has been
taught their gas drill, just as they studying by herself. A year later she
are taught their spelling and their slurred the construction of a rude
arithmetic, so that 'the tiniest tot fieldstone altar on her father's farts.
knows just what to do if the alarm It immediately attracted the attention
sounds and the poison cloud comes of neighbors, and then of those fur -
along. Santa Claus and Poison Gas! (cher off, until it became an object of
And a little girl of four with het ' curiosity for the whole region,
gas mask handy. What reflection
upon the methods introduced by our
peace -loving friends, the Super Men)
Crave Clues About Soldiers.
Mothers, wives and sweethearts of
soldiers brought photographs of their
dear ores at the front and putted
them before the statue of the Virgin
Mary which adorned the girl's rude
altar. I -ler advice to wawa whesa
.z.- .,-... ,•.�.ar,.nt_�,.�.mc®, z�n- .7 ,g= , tnt.a•tn ,
'= '" °'a"^* r. :mo ,:. .:, e„v which frequently resulted in h:' sol -
MCI be ID rn-@b^' •� • ' "e° ...-..��- _.. diers being found --often in German® �, �' `""' ti "^ '`'`' •ax . prison camps or suffeehtg a shock of
amnesia or aphasia in a distant hos•
pital-was the. first indication of lh:
psychic powers possessed by tit- girl.
Recently she announced t, her par-
ents that a spirit had appeared to her
charging her with the mission of de
-
liming' Franco front the invader She
Was taken to see the atsinet of :Poit-
iers. Ile appeared ga,.bedin ordinary
priestly black, while on ordinary
priest wore the purple robe of the
Bishop. Without faltering oe hesitat-
ing the girl ignored tl bogus Mahon,
and 1. deeling before the real lii:sltap
kisrtd his hand Dint ttld Trim of her
tniegion
A nothetpriest aced' %flied the girl
to Paris, where she made her strange
vow of Montmartre, gaging in (lie
hitlf light of daybreak across the rn'et-
hidden t tpital of Frame,
Everybody wants something for
nothing, yet very fey( .anie ora nat.
isfitai with things they get that way.
Many a than hots won not becnime
of bit inability to retlizn tach he wits
Whipped.
HERE COMES PRANK
`1
HELLO THERE Tom-
Nool Uo`ioU DO
f`lR
rWLL Told IP Yo DC1N'T-
ALL
LYHANK3
171i1NK MR, B1AKE ISSUck-----�__
$ yl« `�''
I'LL PA' YouTHATT N 6LAK>=
A PERFECT GEN-rLat4AN WE Lis, OFALI.
e•, a .
l'/ANT lY DERHAPS
,
AND HE owes ME
1 PO R0 lEp LAST
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.......*....*•,.........
A nothetpriest aced' %flied the girl
to Paris, where she made her strange
vow of Montmartre, gaging in (lie
hitlf light of daybreak across the rn'et-
hidden t tpital of Frame,
Everybody wants something for
nothing, yet very fey( .anie ora nat.
isfitai with things they get that way.
Many a than hots won not becnime
of bit inability to retlizn tach he wits
Whipped.