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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-02-08, Page 6TiCael,NINfilArZs:Mtirt r;14MEW MIMI I 'WA • knoll ae INTERNATIONAL LESSON JANUARY 28. Oaks of Freezing Mixtures. Iliktatarig44 Awe be viol coda will require it 6 per cent. solution of la to Wikae and -free** mixture* they 4°1°1 te;Prevent frlesbg at 26 de osa tguard - ESU and *28 per cent. solution will o ageinst the freezing of the ia the take air* of the water system down. to depend upon the temperature. 1.••••••••••••••16 Lessees IV.-Rerersaiee of Josue For. It His Father's House -John 2. 13. 22. Golden Text -Matt 21. 13. k Verse •13. Of the Jews -The Anse ter Ye their ears," says sat automobile man zero. As low aa 10 holey', the solutiori reminds lie new the eel eeeete had , should be 30 per cent., and if thotet I passed out of the Christian's world hag experience. ' raercury happen* to drop to 16 de- . since the day when "Christ our Pass. "The moat easily prepared *elution grog below zere, the percentage will" over" was slain. Is ealeisat ehlocide; it is abiolutely 111. Temple -Not the word of verse the among anti -freeze mixture to use. 3 • 1 t f I li I whereas 10 more degrees below will regeire a 40 19. These suppliers of "felt wants' Vales* One ea* secure the Chemically -animals for sariefice, and temple P* fora, Wel= chloride is *HP"' cent. solution . i "Alcohol has one undesirable fee- coinage for gifts to the treasury - :mighty *ingenue solutiori to use; T otromertial ealeium elaorid tures however, azid that is it a evaeor- were in the "Court of the Geatiles," • ' • • *only sold for in anti -freeze znixture e cm.* a ting P e 1 e. Id a the outer court where proselytes were email einount a 41yeerhie to the al- allowed to worehip. ill kigillY injurious because of the ac- cam aa you prepare it fore tho nate. 15. In view of sante absurd use* trf ten of the components a the vooling tor, you will greatly redace the va- this verse which have been made, it is system. Sueh alkaline solutions aee poratiori rate.' ' productive of an eteetrical action wherever two diseinular metals are utilized, such as the brass tubing of a radiator and the solder used, at the . An ingenious device -consisting• of a obviously the tremendous moral feece points; the iron water palkets• and the magnet carried in trent of each of the that cowed the crowd of traffickers; brass or copper plates, ete. And, two foreword Ixtieels of an autoinobile who would not have foundthe whip a too, I strongly advise against the use and in close proximity to the ground serigin •weapon had 11-iVY combined of *II soluble salts because of their has just been invented, wording to egainte mule harmful *'tion on the metal. ',1) the Popular Science Monthly for Jan- , 10. In the Synoptic account (Mark "In addition to damaging the radia-' uary. It will prevent the puneturing 41. 17 -which is asseeleted with tbe tor, the use of calcium chloride may of pneumatic tires by automatically , end ef the ntinistry-Jesus quotee a orik havoc with the cylinders, the picking up magnetic Partidt$ fiue" the words that make the place "ll pump arid the inlet and outlet water as Chips of metal, teat!, nails and the houea of prayer for all the nations."' pipe*. • tlik• Hie Words here are rauchless severe; The. e magnet is pivoted to the front but they stress the perscinality of the end of an extending arm attached be ePeaker, who cornea to purge his Fathe the front axle wheel spindle eo that er's house. it will swing with the wheel during . 17. See Psa. 69. 9, where the repres- ostfeiet.ring and always remain in front entative Israelite speaks. A tifi. The traffic , was, of courie, licensed -indeed, the shops were called .'the booths of the sons of Hanan (Armies)," 'who no doubt charged a high rent! To interfere with such vested interests demanded credentials! • 19. If We add "made with hands," we probably restore the full, form of' the spying perverted by the false wit- ness an Mark 14. 58, and alluded to in Prevent Tire Puuctures. well to note that the 'whip *only for the animals. To talk of the Lord as using force en this ()costa" is singularly beside the mark: it was -"A summary of the opinions of motor -car manufacturers aa to the value of various antiefreeee solutions shows a decided preference for dena. tuned alcohol and glycerine. The pro. portions for the use of the alcohol TEUTON FORCES TOTAL 6,516,10 6111.flar • RUSEIA, TO BE ANVIL VOR GER- MAN' HAMMER. • Hindenburg Has Nowt'2,700,000---Men Opposed to the Cznee, Forces. • The London Times military corre- . spondent,' commenting ori. 'the Ger- Boman AND WASTE PAPER., Fortunes in Material Once Regarded A* Useless. • A week or two ago a couple of men visited a little out-of-the-way tom; in, Mid -Devon, England, and made a house...to-house -canvass for old bottles, the Epistles. It was clearly recent: says London Answers. They took this Evangelist is not concerned with everything they eould find, from medie the order of mere history. eine-bottles to big glass jam jars, 20. The forty-six years count up to paying eagle for ell they.were offered. the time of speaking,. for it was only Eventually they filled two railway just complete. Temple -The inner trucks with their purchases, and one building, Holy Vino imd Hedy Of afterwards confessed -that their pro. Holies. • Thou--Amphatic. • • • fits on the transaction were over ten a 21. Continuo diem 1. la (margin) poupds. .As they were only two days and note above. . Man plans, writes: "In mid-December at the aab, this works out at %fine- 22. The scripture-40bn 20:9 is the there were, not counting cavalry, 128 thing like five shillings an hour a key, showing in combination with Acts e 2. 25 that Pea. 16 was 'chiefly in mind. German divisions (2,560,000 men) }R on ea"' ' the west front; 106 divisions (2,120The glass famine gets Worse every Note how the Old•Testement and the ,e ; 000 mett)e on stile Russian. front, of week, and at the present moment old Words of Jesus arePut together - Which 65 are German and 39tan, ! bottles are worth more thee they have, they forMed the Bible of the first *Ans and two Turkish; 29 divisions . ever been Jain jars also are rising peristian generation. , •: e OM men) on the Rumanian front in. :rapidly in value. eluding 12 German 11 Austrian, 4 Perks,. toe. Even before the war QUALITIES OF A TRUE' racIEND. Bulgarian and German, divisions; cork:Was increasing an price. •Good, • 12 divisions (49,000 men) On the Celled "OM can be • scoured in very` Friendshipe as the Most Admirable Macedonian front, of which 8 or 9 are dilutedeacid, am used again; broken Ting in Haman ;me- - ' Bulgarian,. 2 or 8 German, and- one te°1ones ground, pulverized, and Used A friend is a person who ' is • "for Terkisli; 38 Austrian divisions (660 inside shoes • ezel boots,' for mak- you" alwaye, under any circumstances 'e II' 000 'Men) in the Italian theatre. • Now col* lino, for bath -mate, for hat-: . She never invotigates you. When that the Rumanians have:joined the • linings, for bicycle -bandies, and other charges are made against vou ere Humanise we must intlitut that there are 135- ellen* divisions (2,700;000 • men) opposed to Ittissia. Hinderiburg's Next Mom • tohoo two to make peaee.. The writer is only conceraed ,aa to what, Hindenburg will do if the war theme. We can put the west out of • account First, because the' Germans eliacr such a gruelling in 'France, and, secondly, because a German offen- sive -in. this quarter would saiteis, •so- • Well we cannot dare to hope for it. Verdun and the Wahine have given the enemy no desire whatsoever to . recommence hisexperiences against SAMS , substance. Paraffin drums, the armies .of France and Reeterri• [drainpipes, ornamental, bowie,- furzeie Meanwhile his Plan> is to:amass heavy ture; leatherette,, trays dishes plates, guns, shells and Men So tha his in- :-.fefierity- in the We Maybe a Teli sensible in 1917 -than in 1916. "We cermet exclude Italy as . the • destination of Ilindealsurg's floating, balance of reserves,becatise 20 divi- sions added to the a3 Austrian diva, dons . facing Italy „ would give the •elleaser a good ehazice et doing .fionie- thing. The situation in Switzerland' also needs attention. ' A VigOreus Campaign, purposes too numerous to mentuin. • does' aot ask proof; she asks the ac - As tea paper, •everyone knows by ewer- to dear out . this tittle that Neer 'imports of *pod- She likes you just as you are She pulp, from which paper is Made, have does not want to alter' you. She likes been tut down by ' onerthird, with a your:moods and enjoys your peesi- poseible further reduction to follovr. mini as much as your optimism. She Most people have a notion that this likes your success, and your failure affects nelpdy but the •owners - of and endears you to her the more. ' contributors to papers and petiodicals. She is, better then a lover because Never was a bigger blunder. There she is never jealous: She wants nee is not a men, woman, or child in the thtng from you "except that you, be country that the paper famine does yourself. She is the .oneebeing, with not affect directly or indirectly. whom you can feel safe. , With her Paper houses have long been cola- yeti can utter your heart, its badness mon; ceilings and wall -decorations are and its goodness. , made of paper Motor -car bodies and There are Manic- faithful vilves am] railwaY wheela are coneposed of the 'husbands; .there are few • faithful friends. FriendshiP is the most ad- inirable, amazing. and rare article instmg human' being Anybody can stand-by -you when -you arearight; -a friend. stands, by you even -when you • are wrong. . Like the shade of -a great tree in the noonday heat, is a' friend e Like the 1ione port, with your country's' ' flag fly g, after long journeys, is a friend. A deed is an impregnable citadel of r in the strife of existence It Is she o keeps alive your faith in human nature, who makes you believe it is a geed universe, She is the anti- dote for despair,' the .elixir of hope, the tonic for depression. • s 'When you are vigereus and spirited yea .1iice to take vizir pleasures With and a hundred othereirtieles-.Ofeeve day use are made of paper pulp. - We say nothing of the thousands of toes of brown . paper used •by the tradesmen in every shop in the coun- try. There is perhape, nothing so in- dispensable to modern life as paper,' and it asialie duty of every one of. us to -day to save every sheet of paper, usiate as little' as , possible -16r fire- fighting, For oId paper can be made into new. The commonest sheets of newspaper can be -worked up into • "We well believe Hindenburg, who cardboard for boxes, while recently a always 'Writ -mai the greatest danget method. has. been perfected for demi- sthreatehe from Russia, -Wishet pri -ted paper of. the . greasy Continue the campaign broken Off in Printing- nit and manufacturing her; when you arena trouble you want • elaNatereen of isle. ,Wittatitie diVie aftesh bite white sheeta, fit &r writ- to' tell her; whet) :eau aieedying You tons on the jusii irorit n hase.the ling ena-Printingra-- , wentheresearea-Itungivete-her-viitli a/L:13E4f Mb:kjei.,.5_t-i,Iie„_4,;y.:4;;:c:rii;:-itiiixiGir.aut,,-rek4wrezr-a-rrd-burmw-lerinia-t hei fresh campaign with vigor. • Gerinana Therefore, again we urge) all ; our without embarrassMent. ' ...• " declare the Itaesiaa etinies are ex-. readers. to save all the old paper, stuff 1! you live fifty Years, and find one hausted: and short of war iriaterhei, it intO sacks', itatileep it eaeefulle un- absolute friend you are'fortunate. • and ,the Aware -German railway sus.. til ereingh --------------------------- eete No Machine Too Intricate -for Britain's Women Workers tWomAitt working at a cutting machine in an iron foundry in Great Britain, " She is may one of ,the thousands of women who are taxing the place% • Tof the, men now fighting at the front. Women are doing everythfng ;Great Britain, the men'e work has almost entirely been taken overby the •iwonen. The women are now the wagemearnere of the household. Their ,pay for working the munition' factories to .remunerattve, and for that nelson woMen and:children, of the poorer claiesee ars more prosperous now than eyes before. TRIUMPH OF THE SPADE. • A Very Humble -Implement More • P,o.. tent Than the leiggest Gus.. Three factors saved the .Allies from annihilation in the anrly days of the, wart -(1) The power of the spade (2) Britishmarksirianship, (8) the French millimetre guns. - • " When 4h:-.;... ftSt. invaded PL. bloody slaughter we lived in. hell. and yet held an, and then the Kaiser is- sued his famous proclamation to.. la trams; "A cniel hour has 'struck- for you and for the Fatherland." Britt& pluck Lied British marksmanship 'bad won, because our men were well en- tr,enched, and thus able to level up ehe appalling odds they had to face. This Battle of Ypres was thegreat gitun sweeping remorooly forward issue of the campaign which pinned,, like Attila of olcl, the Belgiehse oniy. the Germane to their ground: The thirty miles away. at Liege, were dig- ging for their lives, soldiers and Civil; Jane alike, digging against time, says London Answers. • The first German attack om the Bel- gian.•trenches was made with 40,000 power of the spade had broken the Gentian offensive, although work in the trenches goes on unCeasingly. Im- provements and extensions are con- tinually called for. The raost important part 'the splide men, the second attack with 65,000 is called 11011 to play at 'a stage of is inemining, 'to mg saps men, and the third attack with 93,000. the war and. shafts underground to &rift a men. Bach. attack was met in turn, and each hurled back, shattered and Pushingtdf Point' for the 'attack, -dr beaten, the Germans losing efifty per perhaps carried right under a Ger- cent of .their strength', because, ale Pan machine-gun emit!itseitleat though the Belgians. were nuMerically inferior to their.,foes, their trenches; • e • skzlfully inade and well held, made up • : WAR AND INSANITY. for the disparity numbers. • „ " • johTuATinnowilititoyetdheinfirtehtepaGrtretaate,wBeoiteri Statisfics. Since. Wer Began. Show_ Marked Reduction 'wheeze -during- the week -end ---August .22nd -24th, 1914 -our e line stretched Probably the average man is under tend - from Conde on the west, threnghse.ellin°cyjnitoPitnects.seiciansetlbuanacy. It is indeedt Mons to Binche in the east, and, dispeied inetwe ranks behind en - was i generally considered that anything so trenchmeets. ,These trenches were. I odpesprlitoctiveip 714 "sl,Tlif4etoraned, property,wooidhave an hastilya.conatitieted, certainlY, but all exceediegler perterbating effect upon the 'inig4t Of Von Kluck'a army could ;the human mind audeCallie inntaner- not ,break-through-theity Until he had ?‘ able cases of 'irientitcleningernent. forced the passage of the Sambre and . Paradoxical: hoevever, as it may flung the Fifth French Arniy beck on seem, Neal: has just an opposite result our right, thus torching us to aetire 'According to the .returns issued 'by At Cambrai, where we sere isolated the various .asylime authorities since from our French tiAnlidi.SS;;Siutr.stra,senal,aelsl :4thaertatirtbeeorinv there haty.e3.3esa.1, males_ saved us again; through the Great Retreat, • I It. might, of course, be suggested Then came our victoey at the Marini"; that this is due to the factoof so *natty and close -upon this we forced tne --men drawn away' from the dis- passage of the Aisne and drove the trading competition of .the industrial Huns - to entrench theinselves eon -tlia--wentd eizito- the -Army,- estereelifee-if Aisne Plateau. And what trenches more , precarions • is more varied, they -were ---straights With high pars -arid intetes.ting. This Po doubt is a pets, which could be seen two miles contrbutory cause. But recent returns :away. „ . ' a reduction aineegst women' :Here, on the other . band, -Oui lads', as. well as. , shaw theinseIvee -Past-niasteri.. of '4 What, then, are the general reasCes thert, ail a one pouring wet night, adduced by the experts for .this sat - they got all their gene and transport isfactorY state of ethings? Well, in across the river and dug themselves in • times of peace they tell us that life is so efficieptiy that, when daylight came dreary and znotetonous, and, in order the Genhans Cotad not see any other , to eery their existence, people resort soul on the plateau butethemselves. !to forms.of amusement *MA instead . Followed next the desperate. thrust of affording them genuine recreation for CiVais and the sea, but that, 'tool or gratifieation, only produce. languid - was !het, The Belgians • evacueted nees and ennui .• their trenches an the hanks -ef' WhenThoweN-er, great wax breaks River _Pyle, covering .Antwerpes ana: out it 'elir,pela niosiotonese Of our retieds ser, e hves. und gmeaUfl serious and prapti- tho • piitigi Amy vrav, moved right.- cal things to consider. Bence; in- namilrance..,from the Aistie to its eteee pewee ' R • retilt".011b#'.'4714? es-neavl:' mar - hey crossed the ,ty.s jute Planders,i*uni energies., and 'occupied Ypres, and, se asual; en -1, trenched themselves. . To hold tine ave had •anly a: thuusand rifles to a bailee Ageinst this perilously slender line, nt • ' tem is far superior to. the Russian: it 'worth sending to the milla • ' . Sn/PS' NAMES.. in eiraid father-inelave. &tenet ' Russia must certainlY'be preparea to Rags of alt Sorts are rising in price,•* • °' find herself in 1917, the aneil for. the. Old woollen stuffs bave Owe Yee heenenenaeyseeeelames. ..._ , dernitin-haiiihioe,-- es -- . - - -ea- r- %tenth ---keepTig------ 'tot' the Purposeaa atif ,:aroe.:Favared..ibriha weeleert a itsieffijoototthro.avith ._ ,ggsluo.gskAttootinealseeidethe.youna . . , , transforming 'Into .shoddy ---e. meteriaea , Eritieh".Admiealty. Franco-Belgian eight, 940,090 -.:Ger",„ man- - Re '' find e feta . with moat • Se-guaiereti ire our secrete that ‘'Ve •filaaheldsOZer'aenPronehtinedutdb. utte;rii.Bilititeismb-i7herZtenbseinguseI,f.f.Q;eplied. bus wife... You. - .1wIneh has a worse name than it really THE moofi OF THE OCEAN.; , desarves. Shoddy cleat forms a useful al.° 114 i allowed' to know even the t , • -____ - . - fertiliser for bops and other crops names of the scores of new . Airio. elves 'in. ; . , . . , . a .:eteket imoe• leis viaye, He is treating 164 Mie 67:e. of the fatally " reist ef,,lileteontes Foetid at Bo -Keen Even 'cotton r: . , ags now neve altar , '' which are being launched :• almost' ' 'Through '' • -se...a - . '.. • •• • tWeity-three day- of ,ii6t, g , --,, . ..., ..-... .7.- - .....,...- .. -, ...."1"..r.', - . ...- '."-!'" .. _ . •,... ; . -.7 - • . ..:.. .' - -- .• every day for the hTaey..Thit it is safe, -of Deepest Seas. ihPrice. e They erne be *leaned and used r 11,11 MI turn° 461111..r.e.W mew enaaerei;kaa IP" (464,1iLl iNtrt avunrina CARRY*MARMS THOSE MOST SUPERSTITIOUS OFTEN THE mon mom Mascots arid Weinman* Rohl an Ini. Portent Place in the Soldier% Life, Of all the auperstitions in the Brit - !eh ermyeeand they are many -the most popular has to do with the jar that contains the ration et rum, .sayit arBritlali officer, -tot. tom: Rumor hats it that once, tong ago, a party that wee bringing up rations for a company in the trenches was • tempted by the thought • of a • good drink and fell. 'When all the rum had been consumed the question arose as to how to explain matters, and the gorilla; of the party Suggested break- ing the jar' and pretending that it had been hit by a bullet 'When'the party Med into the trench the wait- • g emaleary waS shown the handle of the jar and had to listen to a *vivid tale of ho* a 'Guinan bullet that had just mieted Pte. Ifirerkee,had :wasted all the company's rum. Ruinor %leo bas it that the unsteaclY gait of one member of the party- gave the lie to the story -but thie in beeide the point . From this little incident there has, sprung up a far-reaching supeeptie tion-Germen bullets; the • mea, have • It, swe'hve instinctively towards the nearest rum jar. A few stray shote have helped to strengthen the super. stition, and the convictions hold firm down nearly the whole length of the • British line that the man who carries therum• jar runs a double risk of be- ing hit. • . Masots and talismans hold an ite- portant place in the soldier's life. I • knew of one num who used to carry, in his pack a rosary that he had pick- ed up araone of the streets of Ypres. One day his leg was fractured in two places by a large piece of a trench mortar bomb, but In spite ctfehiasuf- "feting he refused to be takeradaVen to the dressing stationeintil we had hunt- ed-throUgh his pack,end /mind him his rosary. "If •I don't .take it With me," he said, "I shall' get hit again on, the way down." " "Everybody Has One. ) And this is by .no ineans an isolated example. Nearly every min :at the front has a ninscot .of some sort -a• rosary, a 'black cat, a German button, a lucky elephant, Or a weird sign - which' is hupposed-to -keep him safe. - Their superstitions, too, are many in member. One Mail is convinced that he Will be killed On a Friday-; another man would rather Waste a dry -and therefore viduable-match ' than light three cigarettes; another will think himself lucky if he can see a Cow is he marches up to the trenches; a Ankh will face any dap - ger, 'volunteer for any patrol, go through the worst attack Without. a qualna'simply because he. has "got a feeling that he will come through it all. unhurt." • And he generally does. trice had a servant who used to wear a shoe -button • on a piece of string around his •neele At some vil- lage billet in Vrancese tiny girl had. given it to him. as a present, and he treasured it as carefully as -diamond merchant' would treasure the great Koh-anoot Atone. To you he England it lienet ridiculoue that'a man shmfld hope to save his life by Wearing a shoe -button on a piece of string. But, then, you have not seen thc. strange tricks that Fide will play with lives. • - -"" • • Innocent Child: Flossie, jag fresh froth- college and taking a course, in naturalliistory,. had beenepresented by mother -with anew silk blouse. . She'held it outbefore her, eclmira ing and fondling it, and murmuring at intervals: •• .• • ' • alloev beautiful! How lovely' Jiou just toe awfully sweet!" •. •f "I'm 'glad you like it, (Idea"' said 1 mamma. . • "Ole I do! • And isn't it wondez:ful to think, materna, that this ,exquisite creation af silk is all. obtained from! 'a Meta; ineigehleant worm ? I've! been reading of--" oMe, futerrupted her mnthpr; from wood aehes. from the molt etove. eternly, "is there any reason extiy you ' has often been noticed that where , •shatilt1 speak -so elierespectfullyeepf ealyeajayra,aaaaanareekepae.saefhetahaa;:;;;,:'aea wertestlyee teetete-----1--- -nit& soaps furnish a considerable • portion of the feed, a higher -percent- , • ememaserameeF,oRaessaammajne age of eggs ere produeed than in a inthgeition that"the proaer feed -for a layieg„hera Fl ? ' tetN - eareeeptistreeteeteeesats-e- Inereased Egg Produdien. 4 With eggs retailing round Ave On Apiece, the he is receiving a good d of publicity. -If it hold* true Met th supply and demand rule the market it is a safe conclusion that the mai° ity of helm are off duty at thio seas() of the year. s It is really •unnet for a hen to lay eggs during the eolil winter months. liewever, by care ful Selection, breeding, housing. an feeding, birds have been- epreduce , whichlay'everY month of the yeer. It.; is especially desirable that "biddy" tna indueed to lay when eggs are high irk price. To do this it is =Mary' tct, etart the bird on its journey in IWO early in the spring. _ •-•It , tea beezi proven that the April.hatched pulletit) , is much more.likely to lay during the slid weather than the. cilia hatchet!? the latter part of May or June. Th. . pullet eniust be developed before' slue can turn the feed she receives •to thet production of eggs: With good' teed) and atteritien this develoement should , be reached by the. time tho bird is, sinl • months of, age. However,. many pate - leto do not commence laying at. this age, for the reason that they have not rec ived the proper amount of the right kinds. of feeds. It is. too late now to ,, rectify any mistakes made along this line for this year, but an " ,. endeavor can be made the 'coming spring to batch 'chicks early and feed them properly. There are certain • treatments which are essential , for . winter egg production, wren with -the - early -hatched pullet. In the firsI place she requires. to be fed feed' which 'contain the material found in thef egg. Wheat and corn make eat) isfaetory grains ha- whiter feeding), but good reeulte foliow. the feeding of a greeter variety.' Gate are an i excellent grain for ' poultry; . 'their chief Sault being that they contain • too much hull. However, we knowe - of poultrymen who feed no other; grain through the winter!. and yet; they ate. able to were It Urge per- . '- * - i . t -- ceantage of eggs. One o the beat ' ways of feeding this grain is to criesN 2 it and keep it before the birds, Meek hmtPePher.'of tbiliseYmwatelirisael.1".71te"seettri: ' strange that two poultrymen on bel located side' by side, keep the same; ' breed of fowl Installed about the same', grain ianndthfeeesdamtheprollapitertiVeanrsieataleds yll'ettl • one secures a large percentage of eggal;- -. . while the other gets hardly any. ,te. Give Poultry Proper Care. •'' ..." ' There is se good deal in how the birds areelooked after. --It is the lit- tle • attentions which count. , a good deal; for 'instance, one' poultryman a.. will heat the drinking water and give, a warm reaah every day. Another; will. sprinkle ea little- pepper in etheittr- mash, and it possible that this may; act as a Revenant to .egg production,le although' 'one -muit be careful not to overdo it. There is a 'difference in:' the way mashes are prepared,. and it is believed te.b,e ati essential' to MAO • feed appetizing for the bens no it Is: for other kinds of live. stock. % Tool - - many neglect. to supply' meat and - green feed during the winter. With; ' out these „the -bird - cannot produce ma e ' s e en h. 1 6 an • y „let abundance of grain. There are - various ways:9f stitmlying the 'meat.' Linseed meat...blood ',Meal, or beef setae), was; be feed in the hopper or; _ inixed in -the mash. • On- many fermi. . se animal is slaughtered ; for . meet : durieg tae evinter.and there aro cer- tain" portions of the carcass not fit for,e'. human exonsureptiont May -he-' cooked and hung up' in the 'poultry..:_ house fer the birds to pickat So ggthoughs e times an animal. is accidentally kill- ed .and • the carcass -Can be cut Up and frozen and- row t� the -birds during the winter, care being taken that the meat iS not *eased.- There is usual- ly a supply of green feed about the farm aVlangels, turnips, cabbage, -clover leaves, etc., are all good. .The ratioe may be, varied by sprouting some pats, which will be l muck ere : - lathed by the leirds. A • little char- coal might profitably be added to the feeds. . It is reany necessary to ,the health of . the birds. This material. mey he purchased 'or' it maY he rsecued ••••11M. larger' flock. • This goes to prove 4.• • is° similar to• that on ;which humans and . I subsist. lowness • Indigestion, biliousness; head- . aches, flatulence, .paiiis•-afte,r eating, constipation, are all corn, iiion symptonis of stomach and . liver. tumbles. And the more ' for hospitalawork. No old handker- t° aaY that, ewhatevei• names are be- „ - :You:neglect them the more you . i.,suffer, Take Mother Seigel's 'extent the bed of the tleegn ig egvere" Bones have altvatis 'f It is believed that to an enormous . thief is so wean but that if has a. uee • ,verp shv 'vat thoce of 'reptilee says. . mg used,. the Admiraltsr,,are fighting , bovvels are slightly detanged or Syrup if your stomach, liver, or with lava and pumice -stone. Still- in glue and fertilizer factories. One' Laridt`a • sentiaa and it is advisable to cover tIe floor with about a foot .of chaff' or. straw. Scatter the giain in this J eta ,the' Weds` get iiecesiary eXei:cise in :Switching far, their 'feed. If mine. is available, by all incites let the posultry hew a liberal supply, tied this will 'permit of decreasing the ameunt of- Meat feeds. A large portiatt •• the egg is water; which points to the fact that the hen requires a eaten:ant supply of clean Water. • Grit, oyster thell and a dee; bath are ofirer-thinga Which should' be felled in every poule , try 'house. ' Poultry reqiiiree atten-, tion and good care if it is to be a pay- • proposition. -Farmer's Advoeate., • Breeking:.%ite Nowa. "Can you bear it if te-tell you mull& thing serieus?" Ventured the young husband. •• , • "Yes; denft keep,. anything from, the," gasped the bride. •• • • • "Rereember, thie does not roan that tay IOVO for You is growing lege." "Don't break my heart, What is it?* "Well, my dear, gettieg tired 0A angel • food eveir day 'for dineet. s Would it be too entell to, ask you to latveliver and onions?" min a market ' .• more remarkable is it to find the floor• !fr, ,of the oecan covered hi many parth e • • of the valuable by-produtts from bearing the names of reptiles is al.: The ill -lurk attendatit on war-shipa: MOTHEg most beyonireoiacidence.. The Ant of t our fast. turbine destroyers was the Viper, .Blze was only :312 tons, but, lied engines of 10,090 ' horse -power, .and could do thirty-five knot. During naval inanoeuVres she ran into fog,„ Attila the rocks off the Channel, IS. inildSt and broke into three oleos. Three other Vipers,. have been lett at different times. ' The, Cobra, a tinnier vessel to the Viper, broke her back in the North Sea. Sorting:Jay she hit a whale; some that it was metely force of wave and weather. In 1890, the Serpent, gunboat, went on the rocks off the ltrorth Coast of Sid% tetrible loss of life. , glycerine, ow - with the dust of meteorites. - Theee „leg; to the enorinpus amount reradr- brelies eviiirl abort in the beavees like ed for explosives, has reached a price iminiature cornett, and are for the .hiteieete bnbeaett of se 4)y all means most part. broken into innumerable save hones: After they have. given fragreeets. We are all familiar with up their last ounce of food.velue they these heavenly visitents aseshooting- !are sehl worth money. stars; hut 15 ha q teen lately die- n ... /covered that tit!) x cosmic dust forms,: Leer.: at the bottom of the deepest Doivnan Out ea. Between ifonoltalu and Tahiti,; at a depth of two thotteand threetheta-1. .10 ett)to-fs 'Mr. Downan in? tette eta eve eeteeme_eate tee, tree• Steneg-No; ,he went out to miles and a helf--a vast layer of ttee materiel euitte, perang ?veil lase, Jo lie be at eater lunch.? Mt, ii:-.413mraua dast ieelistiegeSt- retnd erg -No, that's What he able; but, nem-au:at` g for eciaturice ver.it 'after- • in CDC, deptil, foms weeetetee,) Some fellows give their last .shill- stoee of the ,eontintmea bombardment ) ing tbelt faraiffeei and that's abet „et. tee; /*met by cometary baliect Soccie other fellows. give to them. The deatlaroll tale PM , Don't let us complain that girls gig- Three other Serpents have been lost • glle , so much when they are single; at diffe.rent times, three Liearde two Doomed Te Reehelorlieed goodnete I•aows thesr won't have Inneh Snaheo one Baeilisle and one dreco• • t • eine never marry utileat r to' giggle abetit after they are rear. dile. Does anyone wonder, then, that flea a wornae who le my eeabt op. riledeven the modern "matelot," wile hag patDte. fewer superetitione than his predecee- tliet -Yee wili eiever find so per. Two Months is the average "life" of sore earefeily avoids ships with ft:A a being as that iterrez. at the froet. "snAy" names? - GEN. lelVaLat, WHO GAY 0 VaAlt Of VfOTOFIV18 terGal , Oen. etivelle, the Lew etteeeseanikeecreereer cf_.1 *we 'reenter Mies leattatten Desert 136, C-1:4.10 r2,72 Stomas', and neeretery ottlLe Peettati ttee,te5, itee, tee,eee, wrem tithe deter -Mee as "a modem Witteeketeet" fe sr 0 lint ' 'Mpi)earalico of eat ewe Tema/erre ona tai aseilena.i. otisava :•,••••••••.111111111. • syguP have lost tone. SfOthepSeigers Syrup is made from thieurative ,ixtracts of ,certain roots, Imam, afal leaves, which have a rp. tnerkable tonic andattengthoe big effect on all the organs ot digestkei. The distresefiwiymp. toms of indigestion or liver traeblet esea disappear undet its beneficial action, teity ttottie teday, but be sure yen get itte genuitie Hotleet fidget's 'Syrup, are messy Invitee Wes, but tiOt SUS that glee...I the ltealth !tenant fete iithe . Neu Remedy * wee asvi two v • $61.1.1110,0,46.1..0 Illettgird,PileeEte Thankful. - "This is the lett. time I ellen bring thia hill," elaid the 'enraged colleetor, teplied the impeeunione • debtor. )"You are so.lieteli more eon. SidPritte than the teller felloWthe '‘ ausitinitoottrojittemesetteetweeee pitegointe come ligaiin" , -7* 0 ' A••-•,' •