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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-01-15, Page 26 C eotoos Events of 1919 The great event of the year regard- ed tnethe light of its immediate and future consequences was the framing and acceptance of the Treaty of Peace by the Allied Confereece that assembled at Paris on JanuarT 18. Af- ter- long and wearisome discussions and disputes, caused by the conflicting intereste of the allied powers, and the difficulty in estimating the degree of reparation to be exacted from Ger- many for her wanton destruction of property and- ber gross outrages against civilization, a Treaty of Peace was agreed upon, as well as the main principles for the formation of a League of Nations. The great adventure of 1919 was the exploit of Alcock and Brown in 'cross- ing the Atlantic in an airplane in six- teen hours. The world rang with the eaccount of their performance. They were knighted by the'lCing and ac- claimed as' heroes. It is sad to have _to record the fact that Sir John Alcock met his death in Rouen, on Dec."19, when giving what musi have seemed to him a tame flying exhibition over the Seine. JanuarY 1----Paderewski received with accla- mation at Warsaw. British land troops at Riga. German subs being dividod among the Allies. 2s --Germans evacuate .Riga. •.; -Total Canadian for the' ed to be 220,182, of which the death's' were 60,382, one-half in action. " 6—Death of Col. Theodore Reese- yelt, ex -President of the United States. a—Opening of the Peace tonfer- ence at Paris. Georges Clemenceau chosen President. 25—Peace.,Conference endorse idea tne League of Nations. 31—Serious strikes in Belfast and Glasgow. February 3—Strike on the London (England) tubes. 8—Railway strike in London settled. 13 --Revolution breaks out 'in Ru - at' Versailles, and fifteen days given for them to sign or present reply. An- niversary of sinking of the Lusitania observed in Britain. Summary of Peace Treaty received at Ottawa. 15—Big strike at Winnipeg, and 27,- 000 men quit work _ _ Body of Edith Cavell interred atNorwich, England, after funeral service at Westminster Abbey. 18—Australian aviator, Harry J. Hawker, starts on Atlantic flight from St. John's, Nfld. 25—Harry G. Hawker and his nev gator, Lieut. Grieve, picked up by Bri- tish warship 1,100 miles from New- foundland, an accident compelling the aviators to take to the water. 28—Half a million men now out on the railway strike in Great Britain. October 2—President Wilson reported seri- ously ill. King Albert of Belgium and Queen Elizabeth arrive at New York on visit to America. 4 --British railway strike settled by compromise. 20 — Ontario Provincial elections. The Hearst Government is defeated, the returns showing:— Elected: U. F.O., 44: Liberals, 30; Conservatives, 25; Labor, 11; Soldier, 1. On the re- ferendum a large drys majority w,as given. Publication of the terms of a new Victory Loan. • 30—Germans begin dismantling the Heligoland fortifications. Nov =mbar 1—The Hears, Government of On- tario resigns a E. C. Drury receives 28—The U.S. plane N.C.-4 completed a call from th Lieutenant-Gpvernor. fifth leg of the flight to Libson; tb`e Strike of U. S. : ituminous coal miners:. distance from the Azores being covert g—$20,000, 0 voted by Dominion Parliament for soldiers' land settle - ed at the rate of 82 miles an hour. 30—British land at Archangel. ment. June 9—Dominion House of Commflns IS—Captain John Alcock and Lieut. pass the two prohibition bills. Arthur W. Brown, British war avia- 10—The Dominion Senate passes the tors, land on Irish coast after the first prohibition bills. The Prigce of Wales -enters U.S. by way of Rouse's Point, non -step flight across the Atlantic, the time being sixteen hours and N.Y. twelve minutes from Newfoundland to 11—prince of Wales greeted by Clifden Island at an average speed of large crowds at Washington. First an - 120 miles an hour in a Vickers -Vim, niversary of Armistice Day celebrated in British world by short suspension machine heavier than air. of activity of two minutes' silence. 21 --Clash between mounted police andmobs in Winnipeg and the riot act 13—Prinee of Wales visits Presi- read, one person killed and.'manY IA^ dent Wilson. ;at°.the White House. ,jured. German war veesels ^held in 15 The 1919 i.:t�ir� Luau. reaches Scapa Flow sunk'by their'�eibws, a tutal of $6718;000 00, of v;iiieh, On- 22—German National Assembly by tario takes 354 millions. vote of 237 to 138 "`vote to sign the Al- 24—prince of Wales leaves by the lies' terms.. Renown for home. 25—The -Winnipeg strike is called December ore1—Prince of Wales given to warm reception on his return > o London. 26—H. Hartley Dewart elected new Liberal Leader by Ontario Liberal As- Lady Astor takes her seat in the sociation. House of Commons, the occasion be- 28—The German delegates sign the .ing the first to see a woman repre- peace tends at Aaersailles. sentative there. July 10—Striking coal miners adopt Pre- 2—British dirigible R-34 starts on sident Wilson's-praposel, and the men are instructed to return to work. flight across Atlantic. 5—Thanksgiving for peace in Great 19—Sinn Feiners attempt to mur- Britain. L CROSBY'S K1DS . Fox PRAISES_ . GENERAL UNIFIED COMMAND WON THt. WAR. Concerning Rims and Rim Devices. There are in general use to -day t ree haste types of rims, the fixed clincher, the demountable 'clincher and the straight side. There are varia- tierns of these, such as the aniversal, which is a aide ring type, conveetible cannot be forted in place with a norm- al amount of pressure it will do little good to hammer away Estifficiently to bend the rim. It only makes matters worse. If an owner finds great diffi- culty in operating the rims, it is sug- gested that he use one of the numer- from straight side to clincher merely 1 ous types of rim expanding tools, de- signed especially for Aplit rims. One by reversing the side ring. The fixed of the best designs Oips the clinch clincher type is used on only one make I firmly and pulls the rim ends apart of car, the Ford, and the writer under- 1. when the tire is being demounted and stands that the greater part of thel pli.shes them together when mounting present production is going to come is done. This uses a rack and handle through with demountables. The de- control and is operated like a jack. • The Contortionist and the Tiger. It is related that a native of Iudia, who had learned some of the elemen- tary pripciples of juggery and contor- tion, put his knowledge to a decidedly practicable as well as novel uSe one evening when he was walking upon a ridgy plain: When the Hindu had reached the top of one of the mounds, he saw a tiger ahead of him, 600 or 69,9 yards away. Before the man could -hide be- hind a mound, the tiger had seen him and began tO bound toward him at its topmost speed. Having no means of defense, there was nothing for the man to do but to race for the nearest tree, but though he tried it, and ,put forth his 'utmost strength,. the tiger steadily geined on him. • Oration he resolved- upon an unusual Acheme. Just„as he disappeared for -tent and is an excellent type. It is ' Another type employs a'turnbuckle tn. an instant trim the tiger s sight in mountable clincher is used to some ex- a simply an ordinary clincher rim, with , the middle. The accessory shops handle running over a ridge he halted, and , which soft bead clincher tires are used, ' , vatious, types, some of which are col- stretched out his legs at right angles, ' but instead of being fixed to the wheel 'lapsible, and in that condition maY be ended down his head so as to look type generally used for straight side doubt. remarked about the ear ahead manner, like sails of a •windmill. - Drivers who are obserVing have no tended his anus upward 'in a 'fantastic heels'between his lega-to•th,e rear, and ex. the rim is held in plaice by -means of . the usual- lugs. The split rim is the' tires, This type is traverselfsplit and— having_a wabbling wheel and also the, In a few -seconds the tiger hove in the ends are' locked together so th-t—graquencY 4 tent the face of ing apart.'The. universal rim is fitted to the wheel at all, but to the rim, A prolonged yell arolie,.such as had are seen. Half the cases are not dile the Oblect-u-ssumed a hideous‘grimace, there iis no possibility of them com- which is not firmly secured in position. verhaps never before pierced the ear with a detachable side ring -1;Y means poor designed lugs, one -or more lugs mill tegan to revolve backward and date either straight side or clincher s att what the cause, the burst upon the scene. This may be due to -loose, worn lugs, Of any tiger, and the sails of the wind - of which it may be made to accommo- tires not in place, a worn felloe top or a bad. forward as if a sudden whirlwind had The auto-m—Obile °Avner of LO - da ;.} ',1A- -on rapisny • titer I: What, lie (Endo- • and tide g Tribute Paid to Insight of d inimater British Leader. Marshal Foch has written tiut fol- lowing introduction to "Sir toupee Haig's Dispatches," according to the "Manchester Guardian." The intro- duction was written for the French' edition of the book, and is reproduced in English with the Marshal's permis- sion and approval. Marshal Foch der Lord Prench, attacking him Nyith writes: the 'tic then s reads the rim In ing tires, especially after the rims Rim lugs give a lot of trouble, some a ferocious s an. p , ficulty in mounting and in demount- 11 have been in use for some time and rust because they never can be tightened gentle against the sky. Its vise -like hasi,set in the locking device. Also the in place, others because they always jaws between which those fiendish e rim -may be slightly out of shape, or., squeak. The ordinary lug on cheaper rbars were issuing,, were actually if not when the tire _ iis demounted, ears does not last long before' it gives! placed above the two fiery eyes. Its when it' is ready to be put back on.. trouble. The owner may cover the lug limbs were furiously clamoring for ao- The makeshift method of forcing a with a piece of leather or shim it, but tion: and the man he had heen chas- usually looseness sets in and the rim eplit rim into position is to use a lift,' squeaks., If the owner wishes to get ing, where was he? Already devoured "Ing jack and two blocks of wood. One ' new lugs he may well invest in thej.by this terrible beast. The tiger did block is placed uncrer the jack and one , type which cannot be lost from the! not pause to reflect. He 'turned tail, above while the jack is lying on the wheel; and as he disappeared over a friendly This lug has the nut in comel_ridge. a last awfal yell caused him to bombs and title fire en route to his! ' Written with the- strictest regard doing this the blocks must be so placed type does not squeak as much as thei peThrmis_! redouble his pace. He was conquered floor inside of the rim. Operation of binaition and the two parts are home from a visit in Dublin. One of 1 for the/ truth and scrupulously exact that the pressure is properly dis- regular design. . to tl smallest details, thege reports Carelessness in Handling Hens. tinguished by their unquestion- acts are sometimes set forth mania. Allied Powers decide on new 6—The British dirigible R-34 arrives .... itamietice terms to Germany. at Mineola, Long Island, at 8.40 a.m., /4—Constitution of League of Nae a flight of 3,200 miles, the longest in tions drafted by Peace Conference. history, in 108 hours. . 17—Death of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. 7—The body of Capt. Fryalt brought 27—Marriage of Princess Patricia to Dover. to Commander Alexander R. M. Ram- 13--R-34 arrives at Fulham, Note say, R.N., at Westminster Abbey. folk, England), from Long Island, after March 1 a 75 hours' voyage. 2—Demobilization of Canadian corps 19—Great Victory parade in London, begins with the first eitit of the 3rd Eng., witnessed by millions; the Peace Divisio sailing fr Liverpool. •holiday is enthusiastically observed in ea nce Cominittee on Canada. posed from power in Fiume; undecided atio estimate $120,000,000,000 21-250,000 coal miners on strike in as to his course. Paderewski resigned nation, whose feelings must be cones ; stilt: It a war is to end ip victory, it. is the ambunt due allies by the enemy. England, causing the stoppage of the - Must always be -given a character dife rrom the position •of Prime Minister of sidered. just as ' the enemy must be 1 18—Deaths in all the armies en- teel and iron shops in Sheffield. ferent from this. •-:' Poland, takes. his seat as member of ',kept from gathering infortuation of 1 gaged in the Great War estimated at value. . None the less, to read them. is : -Inthe course of this struggle for a • his assailants ,shot dead, but rest es- cape. Sir John Alcock, the first avt- able ator who made a non-stop flight 'across the Atlantic, dies at Rouen from in- juries received in the.fall,of his hydro- plane yesterday in Normandy.' 21—Dominion Government repeals these reports, written during mast of the war orders in Council, in- • An error often made with one type the nature of fowls by the method in A poultryman can readily change . tributed, otherwise the ends' of the rim The rims th mselves should always will not properly come together. .with a light touch, which does.zrot take of rim is in getting the lbcking means causes: end to overlap -the wrong -way. This may. us down to the Underlying some of their results, • it is because seem like ali impossible error for an made very frequently. When .a rim protected by some other paint. course of the war. and addressed to eluding the restriction of importation be free from r st, and to avoid an ex - difficult (especially -the side ring viihich he handles them, It is surpris- cessive accumulation which "freezes" painted with graphite or kept well proApe,r,lryu•sher,„ ing how quickly fowls Oalei confidence in their keeper_when he_handles them one who hurries- and the tire in place and makes operation type) it is suggested. that the rims he Battle . of Cambrai and the Ilinden--• fairly jumps while attending his flock, burg Line—September 27, October 5, in an appearance. On the other hand, nsiocoanndthafvlyei ntghethef°mwolms enetxLitapbuitesi 4th, 3rd and 1st armies, wkich ended the man who goes quietly about his in the breaking of the I-Andenburg work does not in the least alarm his to discover haw remarkable wae the I A uecisio.n ta necessary phase, be it . . 35,000 birds, and they naturally. become very tame. It has been proved time and Line and in the captures., of /Prisoners and 3$0 guns. again that tante hens are the most profitable. liens unaccustomed to trapneste will becoMe greatly alarmed at first when the attendant reaches in to release them. 'It May be seme time until they understand that there is no' cause for fear. I3ut, after a while, they become the British government, were destined -._ • eventually for the eyes of tha whole ing gain to either—a war without re- 31—King George signs the Peace the Polish diet. t\... • 9,000,000, and the cost in money at Treaty arid the Angto-Vrench Treaty. Commons prttents the proposal of the unswerving purpose which .fashioned'. said). Gernrany freed herself of the/ Battle of Flanders—September 22—Lloyd George in the House of $197,000,000,000, or $11,000,000,000 August. Government for Irish Home Rule, - • , the Britieh army- from 1O17. onwards more than the total property value of 5—Prince of Wales sails for Canada. ivhich would create two Parliaments, into a magnificeet instrument of wan. North America. one in the north and one in the south. "The resulte are briefly set farth, 19, --Marconi Companyeannounce the 23—The King's proclamation issued their ceases are II: t :explained. - All establishmentof -Wireless telephone be- ef the new •naaasure giv hig India' a mention of the liemi,terhich guided the tween Ireland and Canada. . - larger degree of self-government. Italy _instrument is' einSted. NVernay beat- 1—Cevenant of the teague of Na - fates. • . ' " lowed to make good this'deficiency, in , April agrees that Fipme pall decide its owa IP which the all-iteportant part played by Easteen front in 1917 by -means of the to October 14, 2nd "Army. Russian Revolution and -the Treaties Battle of Le eateau—October 6 to of Brest -Litovsk and Bucharest. And 12, 4th, 3rd and 1st ,arirries. when 'r -she turned the mass, .of her Battle of the Selle -October 17 to formidably equipped armies, _more 2.5; 4th and 3rd armies; 20,000 prison - than 200 divisions strong, against the ers. 475 guns. W t r.n front to deliver the violent • Battle of the Sambre—November 1 and in the first instance, victorious to 11, 4th, 3rd• And 1st armies, 19,000 accUstomed to handling. I have had prisoners, 450 guns, • ' British array achieved greater results waiting for me•to look at the numbers in. attack than in this unbroken of- on the leg bands. (Trapnested heni fensive .lasting 116 days from July 18 are known by -numbers.) The moral to November 11. The victory gained to all this is that in.order to have was' indeed complete, thanks to the, fowls tame we must avoid carelessness in handling them. ;The man who chases hens about the arardrin the hope of catching one, has cut out a hard job for" himself; be- sides. he stirs up a spirit of resent- ment that ,seems ne-,-er to be forgotten by the fowls. Gentleness is ther rule in the poultry yard. A "helter-skel- ter" sort of fellow really does more harm than good, and often gets the stock so unnerved hy his hasty action* vator' at Port Colborne kills seven men, injures sixteen, and does damage to the amount of $2,000,000. 15—Prince of Wales given a mag- nificent Welcome at St. John, N.B. 17—Return of Lt. -General Sir Arthur 2 ---General Allenby restores order Cerrie, Commander of the Canadian 24—J. D. Rockefeller gives $100.000, - in Egypt. General Kolchak reporte Army Corps, who lands at 'taigas and 000 for medical education. cne-half of .sieht. .. to hirre control of Siberia proper. is presented with an address on, be- it to raise the pay a U.S. College pre- i ' Thr Pgrion of Attrition. 13—The League of Nations Commis. half of the _Corporation. lessors,' wfth an authorization th de- ' "The period of attrition coincided, sion aecide Germany must pay $23,- 25—First trip on the Paris-Londo vote -11. part oe tile gift to prewar. - in fact, with a period of weakness for 800,000,000 for losses aml damages air service. medical education in Canada !the •Allies. -which was the result of caused by the war. 28—Death of General Lduis Botha, a 23—A Blue Book at Ottawa shows Premier of the Union of Sduth Africa. that Canada's war expenditure during September. 1918 was $343,836.800. 6—Canadian National Exhibition, 1,.. May - Toronto, shows a total attendance of e 7 —pie flace terms of the Allies 1,201,500, the record. banded to the German plenipotentaries 10—Austria signs the Peace Treaty. Curious Christmas Island e;hristnflis Island is located in min- cane over, 15,000 feet high. Rising Pacifier, close to the Equatoi lnd due precipiteusly from tbe sea floor, the south of the Hay/1111E411 archipelago.. A cable station la, the're located. Very surprising. then, 'Might seem a recent news dispatch which seid that people living there nad only just learned from a 13ritish warship that the war was at an end --their ignorance in this regirrd causing them to thtraten with firearms a landing party of men whom they imagined to be Germans. Explanation lies in; tbe fact that the Christmas Island referred!' to in the dispatch is another island of the !tame name. 190 miles souilhof the weetern end of Java. It is a rather remarkable bit of terra firma, and was wholly un- inhabited until 1897, *hen the first ar- riving settlers found it .tovered with • dense fDrests. At the present time its converted the 'carbetiate of lime into pepulation consists of about 250 Euro- phosphate of lime, •ino•st Valuable for pans, Malays. SikliS ,'ind*Chinese. • t fertilizing purposes. It was the dig- _ Tbe Island, twelve miles long by covery of this precious resource that h vol. attacks on the Somme in Mach', 1918, en the LYs in April, on the Phemin des Dames in 'May, on the Oise in June, and on the Marne in July, who could perceive the signs of that fatal attri- tion, or the dawn of victory for the 28—In a, supposed Sinn Fein attack t'etheir incoMplete preparation for war. Entente? Where was the advantage claimed from the wastage of the Ger- 'excellence, of tbe commander* of upon the Vice -Regal Lodge, Dublin. a i To the battlefields of 1914 the Entente man armies during the preceding armies, corps and divisions; thanks, CiVtlian and an officer are killed. I had not brought more than a British wag thereszeo danger that tbe i above all, to the unselfishness, to the Seventy-four• livea_and nineteen_ Kea. Armee. oriTie divisTonr end' a Freneh Years? el:inflict of Armies. even armies of the:_wise, loyal. aadlenergetic pellcy of 'sell; lost on the great lakes during the army lacking in\the artalleri:And muni- - season, the largest number since 1913.1 tions required for modern warfare. -29—Death of Sir aVilliain Osler,"the . "With these inadequate means we world-renoWned Canadian physician. certainly did Stern the -invasion in the at Oxford, England. •Detnand t--.riirog-, frist year; but so long as the shortage turn of events, Ole to take the troopl; perienced and enlightened ' cognmand- • I in our effectives and material was not in hand again, to reorganize and so Ws- er which led him to intervene as he 30—Strike cf iron turtiller, In Eng- made good. we were nbt in a position mse them that they might first Wing did with his •oin gosernment on finest quality like the liritish, might their comtnander in' chief who- made end in disaster,epnless they possessed easy a great combination and Benc- e Higher Command capable of domira tioned, a prolonged and -gigantic el- ating the situation and controlling Abe fort. Was it pot the insight of an ex - land, anvolving. 300,000 lianls. creAtes , to• undertake the, long sustained of7 the enemy to a E tamist ill, then attack March 24, 1918, and with the Allied repeated blows as were never stne the 26th, to the end that tile French that it ,requires considerable time to hens are very sensitive. grave at preheasione. and •Lloyd ' fensive 'which .alone could foree a de: him with such violence, dash, and such goyeriments assembled at Doullens on restore confidence. Don't forget that passed? - , - and British armies : might at once be Carel.essness bordering on cruelty 'e'qual to their task. thereb suffer?. is often exemplified in the way fowls "At . every stage both- higher- coin- placed under et single command, even mand apt staffs proved more than' thongh his vereonal ;position should are carried. The only preper way to George seed to' intervene: • cision by arms. We. were limited to local and spasnuidie 'engagenients, and reeas of sh. haw., . „the best that ceald. lie done ,wasero en- • ane • heigfit of 1,000 feet, and all'around it I. •the Ocean in its near neighberhocteis more than tv,arand a half miles deep. I ncientl • this tropieal isle Was of shaped, eacircling a lagoon—in other tion of what we call an "at011." The ring appeal's. teslay ;ow eellet central plateau with e raised edge": Much .nf phosphate of lime many. feet thick. The mountairfaoh, before it was. up- lifted above thr; water:- acquired a covering of_shelly ooze that later•be- came limestone rock After its emergence it tiecano• a'relsort of multi, tudes Of seabirds, whose droppings submarine mountain an extinct • curious inventions while 'yet a boy. . . One •cf these ,was a.toy mill that was Anether idea of his was to attach paper lanterns to kites, which hefiew eir, dark nights. They made a great selesation, being taken for comets, which by the ignorant in those days were regarded as warnings' of dread- ful things about to happen. A Marvellous Offensive. . "That is the expla• at1on of the peter sie order to estimate the ardor and results obtained ap to t!he year ,1917. endurance of these troops during Happily fpr the Entente the eeanny was final stage It will be e obliged during these yeers to eope i tat!' dates and impor ention nee; ef the. main ous to anticipate and move in perfect ., carry a bird is to tuck it under the rigiht fremed by the new supreme and the feet held firmly with the rittht not become Startled, ar.d can he held hand. When held thus the bird doe3 pot prove, that he was above all atilt - harmony with the general Allied plan, 1.. with the Russ an en t len. . i . mend?" -- • cen- for a considerable time. When the Bettie of amiene--- august 8 ao 13, in position ie reversed, the fowl quickly Rumanian armies in the East. Cense- ii ""ts' . "In tbe events that o o sitith heed pointing blavrard, • .quently he had employed on the West - Starfish are used in Japan as agri- cultural fertilizers. Dering their ceremonial dances the natives of Papua, New Guinea, wear probably the tallest hats in the world e --a headdress varying from six to eight feet in height and most gor- scares, for it faces objects that are 1 which- the Altli Artily .took,22.090 priSon- Ptenty of' Lead *Pencils. continually approaching. In core's - ern front.- only a part of hiti force,. in- • • • tinfficient to gain a definite victory. or quenre it will struggle,and make every , ers and mere than 400';guns. . • The world's output of lead penells only a narroa and limited co cep on nes's of the two opposing lines threat - Battle of Alio! crai'pe atigict 26 to, , or more than eight optic+. too r .14c* of by ths %inns e crue • ially with heavy birds. of the 4th Artny; 34.01,0 priF.etiers, I. eat guns. - States -niakes about 750,000,000 a year, 'est'''. ened to prolong for soine.time_rto.come severneer 3, is? . ‘riny , 14 ,500 . p ri 4 , I 1,41,,, tntroittrent„„. . , • Carrying fowls Ity the legs, an old- . A -----1 r°6c "'Pls)arinnorelusirttitnh.e: .1.. .y -i'. t:41411-"AtiY Iilf• she,,,it:fsi:t4.1cilisstt (7'1.7:11::°1 iv::oirrfii )6selj'z'oesPe 631 - what has been called the war of at- .oners. 200 guns. • and *neustainel advantages, Which September 12 to 18, 4th and ard 'ate ,...,t,"ii-viri'ng 'tii;11, .h _ kird- as it -is -to' lie:Tprfi_t. 7.1. Xin Battle of ..Bapaume—August t had put into .aperation. as at 1 erdun, September I. ard .141.my aud left wing year. half of which are made from elf fort to get away. o amounts to nearly 2,000,000,000.000 .a Picking up hens and ha e BRINGING 'UP FATHER • AMY' CeieNtaCE. ME GITTIta• OUT Aso FURTHER Hel.RE. -TO t!4E SURE ibt_T-41 ALL `10Ult CLOTHES To -nit YOU OuTs• cliet) N's 'IOU ARE 'THAT 1 CAN'T 411 ouT- to 4.0 To THE 01. StiArlr.• ALL is se 111 WO III ell III II ore Ire bill CAA imirmr.......nrommos •Cci . — 414704 \ ti • • . titsiases of Eye. •1> has So, 111Liiiy eat- 111,e 44hat e• giqe." fetirefoill", w.rol the steel ones -with belt- lac'e, Tlie,n see pill net need to talcs In zero retatther . I lung a:,4 the crowd X goirg in the must etrike out in a nelv path Mt alone. lie may be lonesome for a UMP, bet' if be ;s right, ite will soon have plenty tlf good eoreeley. •