HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-5-17, Page 6SUBMARINES ARE
300 YEARS OLD
DUTCH SCIENTIST MADE A SUB-
MARINE BOAT IN 1620.
Interesting History of Experime
on Undersea Craft—Used in
War in 1776,
nts
foot. At 200 feet it would
six tons,
Under Water Many
10 1
be at }east pigment down the. outside of the fed a little atime and often—say
t a
PRODUCE MORE shanks all the better. With melee five times daily. PATHETIC SCENES
!lours end fennal'es such as describedthe ire First feed, bread crumbs moistened
They can remain under
many heirs, and if they c
the periscope and conning tower out
for a while, they cau at least renew
the air supply. Still, Recording to all
accounts, the hardships of underwater
navigation are extreme, and very ex-
hausting to the nerves, The air is Number of females—From ten to ,fuse sprouted grams, o a other
water far POUITRY PRODUCTS snits should be satisfactory provided with milk; just what the chicles will
I Age of males,—A well -matured wig- 'thick grit; second, finely' cracked mix -
t -
they are housed and fed properly, clean up on a little clean -sand or
ON SINKING SHIPS
tions eoekerel is usually best, TIe ed grain; third, rolled oats; fourth,
ADVICE OP F. C. ELFORD, I?OMIN- gives batten fertility than ar older y NEW METHOD OF SUBMARINE -
bird. More hens can beamated to a
ION POULTRY HUSBANDMAN, , TELEGRAPHY.
cockerel than to a cock bird. IIo should h' k
be well grown and matured,
moistened bread crumbs; fifth, fine!
cracked' mixed grains. If too early to
getthe phis s on grass,green feed
is supplied in the form of young let;,
r p g r any o
oppressive, and b damp, owing to. Expert Information on the Selection
twenty-five £emotes, depending on tend'Hundreds of Horses Swm to German
"sweatin " that the interior has to tender succulent feed that is accept
be lined with cork, or other absorbing
substances. An overpowering ten
itself ten-
dency to' sleep seizes upon the men,
as
When history is making . o and the confinement and constant anx-
swiftly as to -day, past conditions re- iety are terribly• wearing.
and Care of Fowls to Increase breed and condition; / Heavy breeds, able, After the chicks are ten days
Egg Produttiai, fewer; lighter breeds, more. The more to two weeks old, coarser feeds are al-
free'range and exercise the more fe- lowed. All changes are made gradual-
There never was a time when egg males, I ly. The infertile eggs are boiled with
production and increased egg pro- Time of mating,—An egg, laid two :mashfeed and the bread and milk dis-
Raider and Beat Hoofs
Against Her.
What happens when a German sea
raider is scouring the Atlantic, sink -
like the shrinking track of a duction was as necessary as at pre- days after actual mating takes place continued. Hoppers in which are ing merchant vessels, is graphically
treat platform .of Groping in the Glooin, sent. The demand was never as will be fertile, but to be on the safe placed grains and dry mash or rolled portrayed in the story of the' destrue-
railroad from the rearOnegreat boon for the submarine
express train. A few rushing, good, and prospects indicate that this aide it is advisable to put the male oats should be put where they can tion of shipping by the'German som-
an p is the
rapidlyinto the er- gyroscopic compass. This en demand will continue for some time to an the breeding pen about ten days have free access to them: As soon as merce destroyer Puyme, as,related by
years stretch P I ables the steersman to set his course ggtheyhop.; Capt. A. Anderson, of the 1' Norwegian
spective of an ordinary century, Take, come, With the scarcity of meat, before o e are wanted for ineuba- becomeaccustomed to the ho p t g
instance the story of the sub- and to pursue it for a long period Canadians are eating more eggs and tion. Use some selection, trap -nest if pers the hand feeding. is reduced to steamer, Hallbjorg, which. was sunk came in a confidential report -last Jan -
for without correction bythe mash feeds, and if tate chicks are
Jan -
marine. Who can realize the actual! surface obser- Great Britain needs all the eggs that possible, and hatch early, by the raider while on her way from 'carp when the United States was
nearness of its beginning? Germany 1 vation. The ordinary magnetic cont- we can supply. Therefore, as a bus' Incubation. P
protesting vainly- the
TO TRUTH ABOUT
THE BELGIANS
STRUNG INDICTMENT OF HUN
BRUTALITY.
Report of the American Minister to
Belgium Recently Made
Public.
A bitter indictment of German bru-
tality in the deportation of conquered
Belgians for forced labor, written
from behind,' the German lines by
Brand Whitlock, American Minister to
Belgium, was made public` in April by
the American State Department, It
treat -
did
on -good range it will be found that New York to a French ort not begin to build those terrors of i pass cannot be used because of the Hess Proposition, increased production after a time they will get. careless, It was the Pu me aceordut to
the sea until 1906,when U-1 was disturbances to which it is subjected of poultry products should appeal to Incubation or hens, which?—It all ' ab,put coming when called. ' The mash Capt. Anderson,y which sankg the merit of the helpless people, but the.
from the metal of the vessel and the • depends how many chicks you want may then be dropped, and dependence, British steamer yoltaire department did not dare publish it at
launched. Now they swarm like flies,; more than_penal. a , Georgic and that time or until Mr. Whitlock was
electric machinery. A feat dfsadvant_ and whether they are wanted at the placed entirely on the hopper feeding. Mount Temple and accumulated her
bred in the fetid atmosphere of war, , g' A Slight Export. one time or not. One hundred chicks Place grit,water and ifpossible, a
and their novelty is swallowed up in . age is the gloom prevailing under prisoners onahe Yarrowdalo, on wh}ch
I the sea surface. The submarine must For two years Canada has been or less scattered through the season ash of sour milk where the chicks will , vessel they were taken to Germany.
their progress. feel its way about as best it can, Producing a surplus. During the cal- ,will be just as well hatched underhave free access to it.
The idea of the submarine is by no : endo ear 1916 7 161,031 dozens ofI Among them were many Americans,
:guided by indications', y hens. If more than one hundred, the The mash may consist of equal since released,
means new. To say nothing of Jonah's ; g ! athered from ;eggs valued at $2,037;294, were sh}p- incubator is the better proposition. parts bran, middlings, and cornmeal,
yearsunsoughtld adventure, it is at least, 300 ,above. But if it can tocep its peri- ed to Great Britain. In 1916 the Sacrifice of Animal Life,
ears old. I scope out of the water, a height of p How to buy •an incubator.—In buy- _and half part beef scrap, but the com-
p amount exported was 5,481,958 dozens ing an incubator buy a good standard' position 'is more or less dependent on Pathetic scenes attended the sink-
pe
feet, it can command a view e.a
ava
most are ilbl
Dutchman and Yankee. , around it to a distance of more than' with The first the feeds thatth a value of $1,892,843, and there make and pay a fair price.I ing of, the, Mount Temple and the
"A Dutch scientist, Cornelius Van two miles. Of a neutral color and • is no reason why the surplus for 1917 price of a good incubator -.is nothing! Grit, oyster shell, charcoal, and dry Georgie, both of which carried hun-
Drebbel, who amazed ICing James I, only three or four inches in diameter, • should not be from five to ten times compared with the cost of keeping a mash are kept in hoppers constantly ff dreds of horses and doge,
of England with many exhibitions a periscope projecting out of a gray what it was in 1916. In normal times poor one supplied with eggs. !before the flock. Fresh water and f The Mount Temple, said the Cap -
of natural magic, made a submarine sea is a difficult thing to sight at Great Britain eats a million eggs a Get the incubator ready.—Don't l when possible a dish of sour milk is. tain, "had on board 750 horses and a jested to a more'terrible regime
boat, covered with a skin of greased Ruch a distance. day; she would probably eat more wait :note you are ready to set the also supplied. In the morning a light number' of dogs. When she was sunk would learn what war' was The
safe on French soil.
Hindenburg Policy Cruel.
"Int August, von Hindenburg was
appointed to the supreme cgmmand,"
says the report. "Ile is said to have
criticized von Bisaing's policy as too
mild; there was a quarrel;. von Bis -
sing went to Berlin to protest, threat-
ened to resign, but did not. He re-
turned, and a German official here
said that Belgium would now be sub -
leather, in 1620, and King James
I now if she could get them. Canadian eggs before you think of looking at feed and in the evening a full feed of it was painful to see and hear many prophecy has been vindicated. The de -
took a ride in it. In 1776 a Connecti-, Kc --G EDWARD AND THE KAISER eggs are at a premium in England; the incubator. See that it is perfectly mixed grain is given in the litter; at hundreds of horses and dogs strug- portations began in October in the
cut Yankee, David Bushnell, made an- I !the prices paid for them have been cleaned, disinfected, have all repairs :noon, green feed, and if desired a feed gling and swimming about, a confused Etape, at Ghent and at Bruges. The
other submarine boat, intended to Cause of German Emperor's Hatred , several cents a dozen higher than that ready and get a new burner. Run it of moist mash. When sour mills is mass in the foaming sea. policy spread; the rich industrial dis-
tricts up the British warships in New paid for eggs from some other coun- several days before you put any eggs not available, green cut bone may be Another appalling sacrifice of am-
'
tricts of Hainaut, the mines and steel
for English Sovereigns. mal life took place with the sink -
York harbor. His boat was of wood tries, inside. fed alternately with the moist.mash, ,
in the form of a turtle, moved by hand An astounding story of King Ed- Increase the Export. I Where to place the incubator.—A : or coarse beef scrap may be supplied
power, through projecting screw- ward knocking down the Kaiser at; Canada should be able to supply a moist, well -ventilated basement is in the hoppers.
shaped propellers. He had attached Windsor Castle is related by Edward ; great many more than she has done. best. Earth or cementfloor is better I The mash mixture is equal parts
to it a box containing 150 pounds of Legge in a new book, "King Edward,S' Canadian eggs are good eggs, but we than board. A room in the house may corn, bran, and middlings, half part
powder, to be exploded by a time ma- the Kaiser, and the War." I want more of them. We have the do, but more moisture will be required. !gluten and half part.blood flour or
chine, after being fastened to the Here is Mr. Legge's account of the climate, we have the feed, and though Prepare proper sitting nests. — : beef scrap. For old hens, either bran
works about Charleroi were nett at -
part of her cargo, 1,200 horses. The tacked; now they are seizing men in
horses were maddened by the ex -
some
Brabant even in Brussels, despite
plosion of the torpedo which heeled some indications and even predictions
the Georgic over, wrenched them-' of the civil' authorities that the policy
selves loose and, uttering terrifying. was about to be abandoned.
bottom of a vessel by a screw worked incident as described to him: I labor for other lines of work is scarce Trouble and annoyance with broody. is used in place of the regular mash sounds; plunged into the sea. Some Many Sutter From Cold.
from inside the boat. When the box "During one of his visits to Wind there is plenty of labor suitable for hens will be overcome by providing or the hopper is kept closed except at of them reached the Puyme and beat I "As one of the ironies of life, the
was securely fastened, and the time ser Castle the Kaiser and King Ed- I poultry -keeping, for those who are suitable nests. These nests may be certain times of the day. with their forefeet on the vessel's Winter has been more excessively cold
device set going, the boat could cut ward had an altercation resultingcomparatively old or the younger built in sections large enough to hold side in a frantic attempt to climb than Belgium has ever known -it, and
loose and get away. from something said by the former. !members of the family are quite sat- three sitting hens. Set that many hens
Escape of the Eagle. So exasperated was the King by his I isfactory for this line of production. at once.
how's grossly fnsu3tfng words Put sitting hens by themselves. —
Matina and Breeding,-
The Turtle, as the boat was call- that, losing all control over himself,
ed, undertook to blow up the British he sprang to his feet and knocked
frigate Eagle, anchored off Staten Is- the Kaiser down!"
land. Unfortunately Bushnell was The Kaiser's antipathy to England,
not physically strong enough to man- Mr. Legge thinks, undoubtedly had
age the craft himself, and General,its genesis in the "bad blood" between
Putnam selected a soldier named himself and King Edward;
Ezra Lee to take his place. Lee'
I "The Kaiser's envy and hatred of
started out on a dark night in the , his uncle led him to long for the
It is the early -hatched ulletirthat Don't allow the sitters in the same
P compartment as the other hens. Put
make the best winter layers, and it the sitting boxes in a place by them -
is the winter layers that give the best selves, if it is only a box stall in the
returns; therefore, the breeding pen stable. On the floor keep water, feed,
should be mated as soon after the first and a dust bath, allowing the hens' out
of February as circumstances will once a day for a few minutes.
permit. I Select good eggs.—Use no eggs that
Hatch as many chicks in March and are abnormal in shape or size. Dis-
Turtle, and got under the Eagle d! time when an opportunity should April as possible, so that you will not card eggs that have rough shells or
tried to attach the explosive box,! for humblingthe 'Peacemaker' have to depend on late pullets for your that have wrinkles in the shell; also
but he neglected to detach the bat- i and haughty Albion. In. King Ed- next winter layers. those that are long and thin, or ex -
last, the removal of which would • ward's successor the Kaiser imagined Breeding females.—Yearling hens tremely round.
have held the Turtle firmly against' he saw a sovereign "infirm of pur- make the best breeders. These should Don't chill the eggs.—The fertility
the ship's bottom, and in conse-,pose by comparison with his father not be forced for heavy production of many eggs is spoiled because of under the hull of the ship or else, be-
uence, he could not force the screwwe found -that the cover over the :at Antwerp returned men have died,
q l—one who would be willing to through the winter, but should be kept being chilled. The strongest germs ing aimed ata point between the sot•,
into the planking. He cut loose midi'knuckle down' to Germany at a time active. If possible, allow them the will be spoiled if eggs are left in face and the keel, nine feet below the Puyme's emergency steering gear their. friends asserting that they have
got safely away, and some time later of crisis in European destinies, throw run of a sheltered barnyard. Keep freezing temperature for many min- surface, it is likely to broach to the concealed another big gun.' been victims of neglect and cruelty, irf
the box exploded, but it had floated I his influence into the Teutonic scale, them not too fat, but in'good vigorous utes, Don't leave them in the nests to surface and pursue an erratic course. After Capt. Anderson and the other' cold, of exposure, of hunger. I have
off with the tido, and the explosion, and, so to say, range himself along- condition. If there are not enough chill or standing around in a cold room Of course the torpedo may strike any prisoners of the sunken vessel had had requests .from the burgomasters
occurred at a considerable distance I side his Imperial cousin. yearlings, early -hatched hatched well-maturedpart of the shi 's hull or may been placed on board the Yarrow-', of ten communes from La Louviere
g �Y after you have gathered them. P, y miss en -
from the ship. I "To the amazement of William II, • pullets may be used. Test all eggs.—Whether eggs are tirely. Torpedoes can be discharged dale, the Germans went cruising with asking that permission be obtained to
Bushnell's Submarine. , KingGeorge, when the fateful mo- I Selecting the breedingfemales. on the surface and sometimes are, the Puyme, and the captured British send to the deported men in Germany
g under hens or in an incubator, test the
Bushnell's device contained all the Invent arrived—Sundayafternoon, Au-' Breed from those that were the best when e.- submarine has nothing to- steamer St. Theodore. I packages of food similar to those that
2, eggs dor fertility on the eggssevecbe g "We noticed,"said the captain, essential elements of a submarine.,gust1914—gars proof that the Brit-� layers as pullets. When the pullets eight day. White -shelled can be fear fi:om-the target ship.p , are being sent to prisoners -of -war.
It enclosed sufficient air to furnish,' ish Empire was ruled by a veritable are put into their winter quarters in tested on the fourth or fifth day. The businh,
ss is difficult, With the `that on the following , morning - Thus far the German •-authorities
without renewal, good breathing fork counterpart of Edward VII. r j the fall they should all be carefully
Brooding
TO FIRE TORPEDOES.
Method Employed by Submarines at
Their Deadly Work.
The torpedo is discharged under
water, leaving on a calm surface a
white streak of foam The depth vii
to safety. At last the • crew ,were .while many of those who presented
ordered to shoot the horses with their themselves were.adequately protected
revolvers. This shooting continued against cold, many of them were
for half an hour. 1 without overcoats. The men, shiver -
System of Telegraphy. I ing from cold and fear, the patting
Desoribing the appearance of• the from weeping wives and children, the
German raider when she sank the barbarities of brutal Uhlans,-all this
Hallbjorg, Capt. Anderson said : 1 made the scene a pitiable and dis-
"The rail of the Puyme suddenly tressing one..
ties, but is never very great because I
the target to be hit is not deep in the dropped and the vessel which we had t Men Come Back Dying.
water. If a battleship, the target lies taken for a harmless English mer- I "I am recently in receipt of reports
between her water line and keel, a chamtman revealed herself now as ' a from all over Belgium that tend to
modern German warship with several bear out the stories one constantly
guns pointed at us. We saw several hears of brutality and cruelty. A num-
torpedo tubes. There were two 6- ber of men sent back to Mons are
inch guns, fore and aft, and two of said to be in a dying condition, many
the same kind on a lower deck. Later of them tubercular. At Malines and
distance of maybe thirty feet. If a
destroyer, drawing only nine feet or
so of water, the target is very diffi-
cult; the torpedo is likely to pass clean
periscope fully above water the sub- strange apparatus with long wires , have refused to permit this except in
half an hour; it had a compass, a "The Cabinet met twice on that banded, trap -nested, and records kept marine may sight a,..•liattleship five attached was cast overboard at dif- !special instances, and returning Bel
pressure gauge, water ballast, im Sabbath day; informal Ministerial con-; of their laying for the four winter Artificial or natural.—As a rule, the miles away. The next step is to de -1 ferent places and the wires connected glans claim that even-- when such
pervious valves, and tubes for dis- ferences succeeded each other; at 4.30 months, that is, November, December, kind of incubation determines the na- termine the course the battleship is with the Yarrowdale's chart cabin.: packages are received they are used
charging foul air and taking in fresh. the King held a Council, and as soon' January and February. It is from the ture of the brooding. No matter what taking and her speed so that the sub- This was a system of submarine by the camp authorities only as an -
But mechanical science was not suf- as possible afterwards the country ' pullets that lay best during that per- kind of brooding is adopted, hear in marine can toll whether it is possible telegraphy which would transmit and ;other means of coercing them to sign
Rciently developed to take advant-
age of this Yankee invention, and the
submarine idea remained awaiting its
time.
Perfection Came Recently.
From 1863 onward various nations Two days later Great Britain was the time of starting to lay of each pul- the small brooders on the, market. In- I place of high clanger for the ender -
at war with Germany. pet, and those that show early matur- I door brooders give better results than • water boat. Then there is nothing to
"Thenceforward the Kaiser's in- ity used. outdoor brooders. Make sure brood-, do but to sink once for all, crowd on
tions ripe to make it one of the most sensate envy of Edward VII. wits' The birds that pass the test of early ! ors are clean. Clean and disinfect, all speed, run a couple of hundred Commander Samson, who has been
fearful of war machines. The in- transferred to George V., worthy son maturity and the trap -nest should be after every brood. Keep the heat at yards nearer if possible and fire the awarded a bar to his D.S.O., and
of a worthy sire," says Mr. Legge. carefully examined for vigor, and, only • 95 to 100 degrees. Heat, cleanliness carefully aimed torpedo, trusting to whose engagement to Miss Honor
boat when awash, or afloat, and
terns] combustion engine for driving "Never hail the head of the House of those that are in perfect health and of and fresh air are three important fat -f the accuracy of the calculations al- Storey was recently announced, may
Hohenzollern been so humiliated. Hisfair size for the breed of which they tors in artificial brooding. reedy made. justly be termed the father of. naval
electric induction motors, supplied hatred of England now knew no are representatives should be reserved Natural brooding.—Provide broody! --- _ flying. He and Mr: Winston Church -
with power from accumulators, for !rounds. He had expected to find for breeders, 1 coops for the hens with the chicks. ! New Altiscope Rifle.the chief keys to present success. ill between them got the Naval Air
driving it when submerged, are among in George V. little more than •a roi The breeding males.—The first •re-' Put them in a sheltered and conveni-! Service fail- Iy started, and brought it
f t— d lath 't b • 3. 1 that 1 i ent lace. Chane the coo t et The altiscope rifle, a design which en-
I k h h Id h • breeding i ground da • Have th abies the marlssman`to fire without e
learnt that the Government had taken iod that the breeders should be select- mind that the brooding is even more to overtake her and if. so where. The receive orders at a distance of 150 the;agreements to work. It is said
control of all wireless telegraphy,' ed, as experience has shown that those important than the incubation in that submarine usually travels at moderate
miles. V3 a were connected with the that in spite of the liberdi` salary
while the Admiralty called out the Na -f are the birds that will make the best in the brooding so many losses occu1'. I speed submerged toward the target, Puyme all the time. If anything sus- promised those who' would sign val-
val Reserve, including pensioners un- I yearly records and will return the' Artificial brooding.—Have plenty of rising occasionally to get the range. picious appeared op the horizon the unto fly, no money has as yet been
der the age of 55, and the Royal Vol.' greatest profits. If it is not possible brooding space. Do not crowd the The last observation should -be taken 'mews was immediately forwarded to
unteer Reserve." ! to trap -nest, note should be made of brooders. Fifty chicks is plenty in' within 1,000 yards of the battleship, a
began to experiment, but it is only
within the last three years that the
submarine has found all the condi-
the captain of the Puyme."
•
A Gallant Airman.
amean a wooden at panted to clwst e m a breeding male is a to P g P o new
But inventors are continually oo like iron; the merest shadow of sou have the proper bask gr every ay. e, coop bl x`
searching for motive power which Great Edward. He saw opposed to of him. He should be the son of a large enough so that when the chicks thaposing any part of newest inventions to be offeredeof
the
can be used indifferently for both him a Man." hes winter -lain hent and his xis- are weaned, theycan snake the coop
purposes. Compressed air, sufficient y g American army.The sighting is
to provide for the respiration of a What He Wanted.
crew of many men during a period of Henry, aged five, had been sent to
two or three days, if necessary, can a store to purchase a pair of stock -
now be provided, and submarines are fngs, "How long do you want
made stout enough to go to depths of them?" asked the clerk. I don't
150 or 200 feet without any danger of
having their walls crushed in by the
water pressure. The ordinary work-
ing depth is said never to exceed about
fifty feet At that depth the pressure
want to borrow them," replied Henry.
"I want 'em to keep."
A broad-minded' man never Loses
tern should also have shown their abil-'their own during the rearing period, ' o
done with a periscope.
ity to lay well in winter..
Besides this Ise should be carefully:
Feeding. -
selected for vigor. Ile should be of No set rule can be laid down for
good size, with a head broad between feeding, feeds and conditions vary so.
the eyes and well filled in in front,.I The following suggestions are given 'when it's all over and we can get back
ending in a stout well -curved beak, + and may be " adopted or altered to to work!
IIe should have a bright, piercing eye, I suit:. Canada's aggregate trade is now
and should stand on legs that are Chicks should not be fed until they well over the $2,000,000,000 level, more
show positive signs of hunger, which than double that of two years ago.
will be between two and three days Canada ranks third among all nations
after hatching. They should then be for the output of silver.
Tommy (trench digging)—I'zn about
fed up with this. Won't it be grand
straight, not too long, and that are
is over a ton and a half per squareany sleep because another man's opin- set wide apart, with no inclination to
ions fail to agree with his own. knock knees. If there is a line of red
of t® la la. a* .
received in Belgium from workmen in
Germany.
Fire of Hatred Lighted. -
"One interesting result of the de-
portations remains to be noted, a re-
sult that once more places in relief
the German capacity for blundering,
almost as great as the German capa-
city for cruelty. They have dealt a
mortal blow to any prospect they may
ever have had of being tolerated by -
the population of Flanders; in tear-
ingto such efficiency that it was far the away from nearly every humble
better half of -our ,"overhead arm"• home in the land a husband and e
when war broke out. That event took father' ora son and brother they have
lighted a fire of hatred that will never
go out; they have brought home' to
every heart in the land, in a way that
will impress its horror indelibly on
the memory of three generations, •a
realization of what German methods
Samson to the western front, where
his skill and daringsoon made him
famous with our troops. The Kaiser
offered $6,000 reward to anyone who
could take him dead or aliv9, The All-
Highest had seen what Samson could
do in the air, and had been impressed mean, not, as with the early atrocities
by it, On the last occasion that the in the heat of passion and the first
Kaiser visited England the intrepid lust of war, but by one of those deeds
airman performed wonderful feats that make one despair of the futury
above' the Hohenzollern. Doubtless he of the homer race, a deed coldly
,
would give Hunch to get the Kaiser as planned, studiously matured and Je-
well within bomb mange again. edtelt' and 'systematically execut-
eda deed so cruel that German sol-
• •-------°°"-•- diets are said to have wept in its exe-
cution, and so monstrous that oven
German officers are now said to be
ashamed:"
SA`I,TOM, ARE 'NO
I GOING FISHING UP To
THE LAKE AGAIN This
.UMMER..z 1 su s 'tNE
BUNnH WILL GO
1 SURE A16, IF 1 CAN
A.RRAI40E 1T. 1 GEj
�EXcrtED EVERY 'TIME
1 THINK OF IT, _
REMEMBER SONrEOa
THE 91G BW3 WE
•sA`l, HE1bN,: HAVE You STARTED antees up'-
DINNER `IETf 1 KNow WHAM I'D: NOW?
1-IKE To NAVE. come, WALK 0YRR
' "'����t n
-':--
_ /i -4IT
= i--- ,
G
iES,»ES 1 II
KNOVI, BUT IV
80I WAIT- AS I WAS SAVING--
I WORKED AD EL A NALF t4tIE 1
WITH This FELLOW AND. WNEN
I.lIoU1-0-MR f& IS TNIS PFllaH
' MARKET oR A
HE D OoI' +"stoRV CLU5 NG
tsbooK FilTIL Cuugz
1'g THE COR ER WITH MB AND , ani,
�.
;
YOU WANT
I FINALL LANDEDee, HIM, HE. WAS •--
I 'HATS
-TNI, ONE EAsfIY TNA7 LONG 4','; c
'
WE'I,I.GET fi
SOME u Yi ,c, 4,
LIELLYbV n,
AIT AND i''
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e
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sella AT
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BEREFT OP OWN SONS.
French Woman '''ends Graves of Bri-
tish Mothers' Sons.
A pathetic little episode comes from
a town in France through which thou-
sands of our troops are always pass-
ing. T"nnerals ale frequent, and the
authorities noticdid that a woman of
80 years attended every bullet of a
British soldier and placed a wreath
upon the grave. She lost her hus-
band in the Franco-Prussian war,
and her sons and grandsons have
fallen in the present campaign. So,
having lost het own men, she de-
cided to r eproeent the mothers of
the gallant British lads who had
given thele liven Now a place at
the praver'ide is always left for her.