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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-01-08, Page 2eseel - - •••••• ••og, • 4 11 \WIRELESSYE7TrCOMEI . communicate with each other, and boats. They used their wireless to 1 b. This matter of bearings' was of im- mense value to u.s in tracking the 11. not see. bat towards which we im- mediately' swung. ; nearly every message was eaaght by the special listening-posta that we es- tablished ail round the coast, . Shell -fire of the Future. Each post reported to a central sta- tfon the bearing from which it heard the message. A line drawn on the chart from the post in the given direc- tion would• cut across another line drawn from another post which had reported the same message; • the point of intersection NVII,S the position of the U-boat. ••• Mike 'Old Tires Pay Yea. If you are accustomed to sell old tkei to. the juzdanan for a few cents •pet will be interested in the way that one man, makes them pay him big The average fabric tire consists Of four ply tif fabric covered with the 'body of rubber. Oftentimes the fabric of ,the tire is but slightly injured when the shoe is discarded. • This man „cilia the beading from thoold tires, and then.with a vise and pilieri he removes the:three inside ply of fabrie.'. After the edge is beveled with a knife it makes a serviceable refiner which will add several hundred • miles to the service of another tire. If the fabric,ie bad in places it can be cut into sections for blowout • "' patches. *The only part of the tire of value to the junkman, the rubber sur- face, can Ain be sold. - - _ To Dual and Poliilt the Car. tated a great deal if a slot is made on, hacic-eaw. Have the slot running in Will NeVek the end of the bolt wfth a' file or a when Battleships the same direction as the totter -pin See Each Other and Aero - bole. Then it will be easy to tell planes Direct Gun -fire: an the right place for easily inserting The British Navy is so secretive that the cotter -pin. - Chenli Casings Are Expensive. There are a lot of points to learn in buyjng..automobile tire casings. One is not to 'buy a -cheap casing, and ex.ers have , introduced small changes pect your money's worth % ' since the battle -of ,Jetland that practi- cally make the„torpedo a new weapon. One of 'the valuable things We have learned in our eleven years With a it 13,Much the same with. wireless, both for telegraphy add telephony. motor car, has been to buy • a new Most people imagine that the Navy's ' inner tube to install into every new wireless is the same as Marconi. It casing that is purchase4 The better is not. The basis is f se same, but and heavier this tube the more wear in miles we can figure from a tire. For this reason, a good new inner tube will keep- up the -proper amount. of inflation, because. it holds the air presdere-required, -and because the tire is not running half flat or poorly FORETELLS FUTURE.. when the castellations of the nuts are very few people have any idea of the rapid strides it made in many techni- cal -matters during the war, says) a. British naval expert. In torpedoes alone our experithent- warlike reeutrements are so difteTent from those of commerce, that the gear used in the Navy now has been de- teloped in matters. Ordetall- on 'Ines 'diet are poles away from the Marconi eyetem. The fundamental differ Is this -that commercial wireless A, serviceable liquiA for Polishing, inflated !breaking -the side walls down acid du t; Seeks to: make communioation general. ate! ,... ,thua,"..Add.a .half pio.t turpene;:rie to, the tread!. 1. epees seereee. a pint and a half of lubrica.ting oil. 1 — • • • I have seen in. the .Base Intelligences Offices of one of , our .principal naval bases great. charts covering a whole New Meath oducing Area The recommendations of the com- mission headed by Dr. J. G. Ruther- ford, of which Villtjamur Stefansson, the noted Arctic explorer, was a mem• her. who `were appointed to investi- gate the Ciuiadian north as a meat - producing area, may open .up for Canada a new industry almoet limit- less in extent -the raising of reindeer for meat. There has jasen a good deal ot at tention directed lately to the poten- tialities Of the Arctic and sub -Arctic regiotus of Canada as a grazing ;coun- try, and the report iof the.members of the commission is that 'these areas are thickly covered with an ahundant growth. of vegetation in the summer, — herds of Alaska, are sufficient to urge a, the government and private enterprise into utilizing these fruitful grazing oasts. There are from twenty to thirty •million -caribou living on these north- ern barrens, and biologically the rein- deer is -practically identical with this animal. Sterapsson, who probably knows northern Canada better than any other man, is an ardent advocate of the reindeer industry, and in his lectures relates 'stories of fabulous wealth made by Alaskan rauchers. The development of the reindeer in- dustry in northern Canada would re - and of the whole world. The value vinces of Canada in. its possession ot present a very important addition to the meat •production of the Dominion wall of the room. on which the move- which forms nutritious. fodder for food purposes is well established, and palatableness of reindeer flesh' for, Coal resoorces. Generally, however, ment of. every German submarine at. grazing animals during both seasons. *As highly nutritious. _With the. ae_lthe,mineral is of a finer quality than in sea during the week was plotted. It- . • In the north of Canada there. is at pletion of grazing lands the woariltid I the prairie province, aiicUthe deportite . was all. done by intelligence helped'by least a million square miles of su h 'd • the ' 1 i ' consist/of a greater percentage of high , Spies to' give us that information. ' -deer graze in the open the yedr'round. for the farmer, ' of the rancher to malie sway , eource of -this mineral is one sixteenth grade 'coal. 'British Celumbiele -re- a th , the su,b-Arctic, which of the D.omirrion's total supply and re - wireless: There was no need of paid 4e over, en e gradualexc us on in land;wh . ere the musk ox and the 'rein, Canada COAL RESOURCES OF BR. CRUMBIA RANKS SECOND ONLY TO 1 ALBERTA. Most Productive Mines' Have Advantageous Location on Pacific Seaboard. The province of British Columbia. weathy in its minerals, rank* 1, second only to Alberta among the pro. Another great development i e reporting of movements by _scouting aeroplanes. In the great "Spider's Web" patrol, which the -Felixstowe flying men' carried out in the- Nosth Sea, wireless reports were continually sent regarding suspiciousasights in the sea. -itytheluturestnis aspectzt_wire- less is going to be ,inore important 'Still, `because 'it seal ,be usedsin. colt - can never be suitable for the growth of cereals, offers bpportunities for al new and permanent industry. - ,,,Iii the seit:e. usenths of the \%,r our 1-' "''-. .- - - 'eg•rslIge gtitil TI la 1 This is the most valuable thing we skilled operators fo....d o.* that thosi could ' le tittle' "Id" when "r war - The best way to use this is with a band spray such as is used for spray-; ,_ Ceduce from certain factors in Ger- men in the spotting -tower on the mast big: cows. First spray the mixture '`'`' -- 'man wireless signals, not only what will not be able to see the fall of the and we have learned many. • This alone will more than save you the - class of ship they were overhearing, shells, or the splash they make. An but actually which ship of the class aeroplane observer will do it from his was sending the message. moving perch in the air...and on his in - Answered in Three Minutes. formation the 'gunnery officer will make the necessary corrections in de - That was 191 very well from our Section and elevation of his guns. point of view', but if we could do that to the Germans, it stood to reason that —........_...-- they might be doing the samething to Dug Rubies Most Expensive. _ us.. And straightway we had to bend- aeatetug - -4- DittfiY_ PeoPte _Will be surPrised to an our energies to the wireless systems that were proof know that even during the war deal- ers in precious stones did quite good against...eavesdroping- it waa done. but the method must remain, for the business: The reason for this is that present, a secret. , .. while ordinary investments may, in Wireless replaced flag and search- times of stress, -decrease in value, the light signalling to -a great extent in the Purchaser of jewels has a fairly secure Grand Fleet. It had to, because a vast Method of boarding up his wealth. concourse of ships like that could The diamond merchtint's art - bolt is. 'The work will be facili- tion of hot water and. washing soda. Ter all be within visual range of the quires more knowledge and skill than , agship-at one time. • any other profession, and even the , On a sweep through the North Sea, most cunning dealer is sometimes ated, whilSt the smaller material is I for example, Admiral Jellicoe's ships liable to be caught napping. carefully cobbed. This operation was would be spread out over a front of. Yon can take two rubies that are at first accomplished entirely by hand; 104 miles. So his orders had to be the same in every respect -weight, but thechanical treatment 'has 'been transmitted by wireless if he was com- cutting and lustre ---to a dealer to be pelled to make any change in his valued, and after a few minutes with original plans for the sweep. These a lens or microscope, he may tell you orders had to be -transmitted with all that one is worth practically nothing possible secrecy,sand at great speed. and the other a fortune. i i When the war began, our wireless If you looked at them under the staffs were not sufficiently trained in glass ' you would see that both have "team work." The Commander -in - The dimensions of the reindeer Indus. try in Lapland- and Siberia, and .es- pecially the great development of the have learned in tire buying nand serv- sahips will fire shells So'far-that thet • on the body of the car; then wipe it off with a piece of cheesecloth. The result is a pOlisli which is very satis- factory in appearance and quiteillast- leg in effeet. Like other liquid polish- es the spray must be used to get the cooling system disconnect the short best results. piece of hose between radiator anti cylinders. Connect the garage hose 4 • .F wince of the best inner tube in course of your wear on casings. Cleansing Cooling System. To sive a thorough cleaning to the Cut Ski" for Cotter -Pins- with the radiator. Connect a piece of When overhauling an autothobile or hose five or six feet long with the 'tractor -or any farm machine for discharge pipe of the cylinders, so that matter -there are always a great thai it %Ill carry -the- water away many bolts that have castellated nuts from the truck. Start the Motor and, to bC held in place by cotter -pins. the water will be pumped through the When 'these are replaced, there is entire system. The treatment should often much difficulty in inserting the cotter -pins because it is impossible to tell -Just where the cotter‘pin hole in be continued until the water comes through clear. It may' be necessary to flush the system out with solu- tIM•••••••••••I., Asbestos; Production. 6 . The provinces of Quebec is .the world's chief source of asbestos. The lacnsts producigi 85 per cent. of e total out*/ of ,this minef. gradually introduced and perfected un- til large mills are in operation in al. Russia is. the chie 'Traducer out - which the rock is brokert, and crushed aide Canada. the asbestos befng mined it various ways, and the fiberized fis- ts the Ural distridts. Before the pre- bestos taken tip from screens by suc- sent trouble in Russia, most of the tion fans, and blown into collectors or supply' of that country went to Ger: ettling chambers many and but a very small portion • reached this continent. • . The alemand far asbestos is greater i Chiefefot und hat it took nearly a qual- , than tile simply. Varying with the Asbestos is a fibrous variety of the j ter of an hour for an order issued by grade the prices range widely. As .. mineral serpentine. and two varieties i higli as $3Q0 is paid for No. 1 crude . aim through wireless to be acknow- - are met . with, amphibole and chryso- a great deal ledged by every ship in the Fleet. And per short ton. Canada's total produc- lite. 'e former much the inferior, j in a quarter of an hour. This having none of the fineness Of fibre, i tion in 1917, the last year for which I can happen in an action afloat, with figures are available. was 153,781. tons. the tensile strength, or the flexibilityrepresenting !. :1 ships moving at nearly 25 miles an ' a tokal value of $7.234.- , hour. of the chrysolite The Canadian de- ' 077. So intensive training had to be in - posits are of, the . variety chrysolite, I ' , -, 1 - aad it occurs only in serpentine rock,st - • *.:*------, . i troduced just for that one details the to which it Is easential .in chemical I acknowledging of orders, with the re - composition. The present workable ' Egg -eating Snakes. suit that soon any orders sent out *spooks in Canada ;:;iarth the ex- A queer African species of snake,T from the flagship could be answered caption` of the Danville quarries, con- which •lives on eggs, has a toothlike' by the entire fleet in a little less than *Med to the townshiPs of Broughton; spike projecting downward from itsthree minutes. When one remembers Thetford. and Coleraine in East Que-1 backbone, just behind the it ead, which' there were. 151 British ships at Jut - bee. The total length of this produc- I Is tipped with enamel. I land, it is clear bat the•feat was no We serpentine pelt is 23 miles. with - When it swallows an egg the lattereasy which breaks the one.. a width ,varying from 100 feet in the passe's dOwn the gullet until it eri-4- HOw U -Boats -Were Trapped. eztremie ezxterly part to 6.000 feet in counters the spike, Wireless telephony afloat made lisr-tk Lake area: Actual mitring shell. Thus -no part or the &rid Ton- giCat stfides, 'too. The AiffericaCishipi 'began about MO. The deposits are tents is lost, as would be the case if which operated with ours, and particu- worked by open quarrying, the long- the snake were obliged to bite the egg lolly the submarine chasers that work- - &bred asbestos being readily separ- with its mouth-fhangs. ed from Queenstown. made consider- able use of it. The telephone was fitted in the chart -house of the chasers • with a loud speakilisge. ampet. The eaptain therefore did not have to wait for.an operator to send him that the provinces of Quebec. Olitatio th4 nyoiage after it had been written and Manitoba obtain 95 per cent. of d. it was spoken right into his their central station power from the . He could carry out. without an {same source. Norway alone of the :estaiit.s loss of time, any change of '.countriee of the world exceeds Canada bearing that 'was necessary to bring ; in per capita, water.power develop- , him and his cargo of depth charges ment • . ' on the track (If the submarine. , Great as is the mesete if -water- . I heard these telephones at work on power in Cseerla,the yowe:- developed more than one occasion. Their range , repress:'- 1.•:t a swan proportion of Wai short, it is true. but that was Of • the a..• eilee Supplies. As has been ' no 4nnsequence with a flotilla of shoWn, bowevei this develepm'ent has chasers all codcentrated in a small , increesed mete than proportionately' 'at -ea. and it *as uncanny to hear a • to the d* mend, in Canada. tn the ex-. voice suddenly bellowing out of the :tent of .being etee stiPpiy seme of , distance news of a periscope on such the 'nerthern 'state. The' develop. and such a bearing. tvilth another voice niest ef • new eke tre-chemical and following a couple -of seconds 'later eleoro metallurgital processes has ; from another directiongiving•another lately 1ns:1'6(1e-ed the demand. and its bearing. growth will,' no doubt. be further ac -t• A great dial in front of the 4ompRss (*uses- railwaYs and raantslaieferrers-to.Fthe two bearings, and where they in- made weekly to the Western Coast, experts repor,4. o . rejerated as the increasing cost of fuel enabled the captain at once to "plot and the East, big shipments are being Subs ti tut, hytit9 for fuel Power Where-, terseeted was approximately the posh both to the Canadian and United and C 0 hi 111-E31 v"-'411 in tlfe introduction of dteliiee ever preeiible. I Con of the submarine that we could States cities. I eevering varibus- ee'Wons of the cretin. Canada's Water Power , Figures eliel.eited ay the Dominion Water Power Branch indicate that the istal, water -power available through - mit the C'anadian provinces is more %hag 18:000.000 horse power. and the Mime table illustrates the fact that Mot ten per cent. of this has been de- veloped throught the Dominion. Not- withstenditie teis. the prineipal cities • sad peartice!!y thie smaller towns and v111,gp7 supplied with hYdrc- electric and the surplus. pro- duction allows ;f fetportatiee fromsth% Canadian • pee: ::.c4.4 tr, eijoining States across •ee hie eer , exien• wh't '4t..,•1•• power en- ters into the ereinary life of Cana - Mane !::::i4trated by the " figures give! -en-eis shows that . more than !! h:r'-;ewer was derived' ft •er psf.ver, whilst • .steara prov ale -4 Ise ajea power, and other si than 12,000 bor.., =hown minute air bubbles in them; but in one stone these bubbles will be dis- torted and will seem to flow along de -i finiie lines, while in the other they will be spheTrical, aed will, perhaps, be arranged about‘the centre. This is just the alhimportant difference; the former was mined in Burma, while the latter was made in the laboratory. The 'Burma ruby may be inferior to the manufactured one, which hag been produced by artificial heat in a blow- pipe; yet you will have to pay nen CROSBY'S KIDS Tallest Structures in the , World. Colossus of Pantheen..Rotee ' St. Isaac's:. St. 1'.-'-s1,arg' .. Industrial Investigatiom • the 'Caoadian Reconstruction Association has beeu conducting. gen- eral campaigns for the develoiniithitbf- ,doniestic and foreign markets, and r 0: seieittiffevestigationsendetitiliza! ! ieeeesf 1Y1-. been aCtiie nin"Stiiiiiiiating-Ptiblic 'in- terest in the national value of indus- trial development. To this end it has made extensive use of. motionpic- tures, and it now has liadf a dozen films in the picturehothies of the Do- minion. The pictures deal with vari- ous industries and illustrate not pniy final proesses of manufacture, but al- so stages of progress ftorn the em- ployment of raw materials to the finishe .prodtztdb products. Theythtitve7rieg uslucb- i,einus1i . inelude*.the iron and steel, woolen, ag- riculturalimplements pulp and paper, sugar, and Cocoa and..chocolate ingot's - tries. The pictures are being shown in seventy-five per cent. of the cities, towns and villages throughout the Do- inleion Which have motion picture theatres, and it is estimated that they are, seen by over three-quarters of a 'million people weekly. The character Of these industrial films has made thein acceptableto moving picture houses throughout the 'Feet country. ,'Being only "a thousand feet 105 in length, they can be shown without 150 any pronounced interruption in the ... 36a general prograinmes, and tie:: have been so well received by the public that they are in great.deinane al m • 00 exchanges. 516. , ses se..— Great Pyramid pf CIie..ps 4504) St. Peter'e, RoriVe' 400 Rouen Cathedral Cologne Cathedral Washington Monument Metropolitan Tower. New Woolworth Building. New Eiffel Tower ..., presents 1.023 of the. total' estimated ource of the globe. The total ton. tage of the deposits underlying British !Coluinbia forests is 83.828 million tons, which is made up of 970 mitlion tons of anthracite, ,, 77,290 of bituminous. -an-d868 of .-lignite. _.Thes.actaal and - probable reeerves,in the province" are semi -anthracite, 1.9 per cent.; bitu- minous,. ti5sil per cent,:, low -carbon bituminous, 3.3 per cent.; Caniiel,-2:4,per tent.; lignitic, .7 per cent. At e,r, salt t' f( are 'three enala'distriots yrt:ssze isOoote. ItO.d.ls are le.ttrig actively. 'Pursued:. 'These are the Crows Nest Pass region, in the south. eastern part of the province: the Nt.' cola Valley district in the central part, and the eastern side of Vancouvr Is- land. Besides these;.other coal basins are known and more or less prospect- -ed,. but the lack .of transport .and come munleatien has hampered any exten- sive developmeht yet, . though they constitute a reserve of great:possibili- ty% ---The-erifie&S-Nest F etd The Crows Nest coal field the most important body of coal being mined in British Columbia, ando in - 'eludes an area of 230 square miles. The .coal iS high grade bituminous. ocs casionally running into. anthracite, averaging c4 per cent. fixed' carbon. There are !.)2 workable Seams with a total thickness of 216 feet, .160,feet of vviiich estimated.' ss -Workable. In additipn to this there are other coal - bearing areas in.southern :British Co- lumbia, notably at Princeton, where there is a field of 50 square ?niles, and at Nicolte_where searns from 6 to 12 feet have been nrined. The Nicola coal is sub-biturninous and analyzes about 47 per cent. fixed carbon, 39 per. cent.. volatile. and 4 per cent. moisture. • Vancouver Island and Other Fields. 515 . :York,. 7ee . , . For, Muscle Measurement. York .. 730Crippled soldiers of France 'Mtge 984 •pensions _varying according to .the ex- - World's Biggest Cheese. . A cheese weighing 31,964 pounds was manufactured it Aetpletop, Wie., June 17. This enormous product re- quired the milk ,of 12,000 cows, lo- cated on 1,800 farms. Seventy-three ,cheese -makers, representing fifty times the price for it, simply because tac- it was dug from the earth. tories, took part in making the cheese. The container weighed 8,000 pounds. Paste stones are reddily distinguish- and when the top was forced down an able from the genuine by the fact that ice -house was built around the cheese. all spurious gems of this sort are soft; After aging in the ice -house the cheese they can be scratched by a piece of was shipped to Chicago, where it was quartz, and no veal gem of the +-Ins- exhibited at_ Um Natinnal De'ay. Show. Fashions in ladies' dress in Japan parent sort can. - Since the eaes rlit times twenty-nine, have remained practically the same tons of diamonds have been taken The Malmaison carnation is Queen from the earth. Aftei being cut and Alexandra's favorite flower. • for 2,500 years. • tent to which they are incaPacitafed for work, and a machine has been de vised Which is said to indicate this. It measures•the muscle fatigue • Mother Remembered.. Father (very severely): "Now. look here, Jenny, you must not encourage that young man to stay so late every night. It is simply disgraceful. What does your mother say about it Jenny: "She says men have not al- tered a bit, dad!" polished their weight is, of - course, considerably reduced. A box three feet high. six Leet wide Oil Development in Canada and eight long, would hold the world's total output of these gems' in their Since the -termination of the war, I try from .the Okotoks field to Peace finished condition, andwould have a resumptionof interest and activity in i River. market value Of about P.000,000.000. oil discovery and development threugh- , On the top of 'this prairie develop- . out Western Canadd has been very ' ment conies the news that a large New Fountain Brush ' keen. pti Was first struck in Alberta.; company, known as the Amalgamated alany are the uses of a new fowl- at ()Woks. near Calgary. October 7th, , Oil Company, Ltd., of Canadtin cafii- tain hrusli._with a. hollow handle from 1913. In the TIbertaelields, partieular. talists, has been organized to develop which any liquid or paste can be fed :y iu the Caigary.-Oklotolis .sector, the Kootenaylield of British Columbia' to the bristles by inet,i-ei'et:ng a valve where for some years there•have been which has been so favorably reported with a thumb. •.. paying well. there has been perste- on by government and other geo- ceive large orders for butter ^ front ., tent and continuous progress in de. logists. This company has acquired velopmentsduring the hummer. which a large area in the Kootenay distirct, reteet:y horeiruit in,the striking of . including a government lease of 30, - abroad, creameries contieee to re' desonfrsiognm.mEednmt ownatosnintaodeBkiel; oil in'a new well, On the Alberta -Min- : 000 acres. and. is already firtlEng abroad, one firm recently shipping fogiuunir .carThloae Ws- ho7ienge near Nanton. This well • through two leases to American sem- is prodeling from 40 to go hs,erels, per panlesltedications of oil and gasso of 200,000 fifty-six pound boxes. The day and '.nereasing teoidly in ceesciry. ' .far. have been reported as entinsetly same firm shipped four hundred thou- 'Tile imperial 01 Cenipany. which,. satisfactory, and the analysis of the sand boxes to Belgium. With steady for the i!a-, few year,i h..0 hal the. best oil shows it to les of high grade en:: outside demand for butter,' Alberta geelogists arel nil expert- prost rahle • of greeter value than the averege see• t.. in .e:bett , '!...,: T,his extensive scope of develop. farmers are being kept very_busy. rn investigating pi . addition to, the S h i pm en t s for Europe been indured, a: the !.,..so •ot2th.!.i., .T,..it t.nds to show the prospective • •'.e western oil flelde ocetipe. en 1 .!•. there is -a tremendous regi tnnly Thee total in Vancouver Island un- derlain by coal seams is about 600 sqtrare miles, and these cdal fields con- tain some of the best steam coal on the Pacific coast. The coal of the Co- mex field Is coking bituminous, and contains 57.2 per cent. fixed carbon. the highest carbon content of all the Vancouver Island coals. The Nanaitho field has a productive area of 65 square miles, though the area underlain by coal seams is larger than this.Thecoal fields cf the Queen Charlotte Islands range from semi - anthracite to low -carbon bituminous in their deposits, whilst lignite is also found Itt Central British Columbia lignite is found at Alexandria, Quesnel. and Prince -Naze° river, Nechako river, Dean river and Lightning creek. Three rich bearing seanas exist on the Morice river, and three on Goat river. In the eorthern part of the province the most important coals thus far dis- covered are the sem!-anthracite and the • Anthracites of the Groundhog Mountain area. Here, an area Of 170 square miles is assumed' to be coal. bearing, and contains eight seams with an aggregate thickness of 30 feet. The location of the British Colum- bia coal fields has great bearing on their importance. One of- the most productive mines of the Dominion is situated on the seaboard of the Pacifies coast, which is of the highest impor- tance from an industrial and Imperial standpoint. The mine has a conalder. able Pubmarine extension,- and is ,for- tunate in possessing a fine natural harbor. Another fine field, alio, is ad- mirably located in the proximityodf the metal mining industry and within easy reach of the copper end ies saietting centre e of both 'the seuthern nail of tar Province and the .adjain- ine *states to the south Why Rings Lose Settings. eweiting proper developmede tie o.eler tally is tt that we -metes rtngs lose. '.i, .1t.Prrnirf. its possito.111.ies. . tTivir toll's 10 -much more frequently ..b....* til'.•,$;1 men:4i- even if the sett!ng is' idea- -As:7. I sza!?. As. a man's ring usually re- mit-see -es -rougher treatment in the counts oi:Ilt• woit than does a woman's, the etppos,' J rculd appear_.logical. The I..Nflobation is that rell.ninde ric.gs .e.'....rn l,e 7 2 t S even uuder reug0 ,i-,ig., ull,fis 'Ile l!ttle puiqta whic4 ..O1 the -ftoties r :0 wen, saci tholq og' • - • - 1 women' r.ugs Agar 'faster. Mts. faster v.ca: Is .duei to the fact that Ni•O- cuell Nue- k;:,-.... -..:3 E.4 rnuth more than I of. nthrto,s'l egiove it ,itaib..ite rii.li cl‘o.,:in:rtisost,%titriyettilithe! ! :1:01:111e4tigt:t7z: mnsgh.c\ r.:,„.Q7Ifing.trt:46.n trly r:A. 0:ia,:du. :riodf.3"t., awal,er at ' bkRE THE. GOLD - • I., F.€011 atm Ci (,"Ck re:;•R 4.511-o+ Ssoot-44; BRINGING UP FATHER ebEA!...mrt.A.4.s1• - t"..f *.-4k,jebe;,11J4t) CJAiskOlo•O 'TelET-1 LL 44ET Tr- EN., • root.- thq) 401.0 • NNE I.L • THE 4000 ARE it -4 1-1EFte 81 - 41 1er a ,pro- a r6ps •; o .ie theslOss of the stonos DA)* re itroirn- the worn condth siou of oe.4.1i,..ol o.ltsv ;.- • ,.:,nAt.osinnegtoletts_roraif nw.votIndwUI go audyett: • • , •• J • A r. ^4 4 •••