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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-10-11, Page 2.6,4 .44. • 44 01.111010.00•4.44 Ceres FSatokieg . Iinition. occur* and the engine CANADIAN errAcK or Carepreg 111E MAPLE IIAF BOYS AT LOOS FRENCHMAN'S DESCRIPTION OF .1.:41=1.4.11 1,snioke from eeo sneoreoeue.eoraes knocks. The car must then be taken from two sources, burning too "much 1 to a repair *hop to have the carbon Prusehme Ordered to March on Gun **aline and using too much lubricatburned or raped out. Tide is ex. in Closie Formation ligainet .. • ing oil: usually the latter," sayis an ex- PenaiVe Work, SAC besides, the ear is Terrible Odds. pert. "Excessive • use of gasoline eleid up and one loses its use while the • comes from faulty carburetor adjust- I seraPier je being. done. The own" Shortly after dawn this morning I ment, er poor design of carburetor or Will glee that he has been spending a • saw the Canadisais finish up a battle inteke matifold, or keeping the engine lot of money to supply patine and i begun in Septembeis 191.5, the battle cylinder atleo low a temperature, be- oil that he didn't need to tem, just, to I of Loa, then only half won and now calla of the water being too cold in make smoke and carbon and. expense, ' entirely so. I have looked Wert 'Ito - the cooling system. e . . . and that he is out all arouml. thing more spectacular in * V was a real coaeloination„ tbs fightieg poilu and the fighting. Csuadisine put- ting it *crape Toward noon there wait a lull. Ap- parently nothing in the way of added counter-attack would talre place for a little while. The artillery fir. resum- ed and great shells passedirom be- hin me far off into German lines. With My officer escort, I left the ob. servation post and went forward to meet the first of the incoming pries Quern. The first bunch I eaeltee0m. prised perhaps fifty men, that met us POULTRY DISUSES. Ressionsible for National Less ef MU. lions et Dollars. At least /lite Per tent. of the chick- ens. young ducke and turkeys and ten per cent. ot the adult birds 'die ORO, year from diseases, many of which are preventable. This is an annual nat- ional losa prebanly minima et de1. lens that coold be 'avoided tO a large extent. War conditions make it imperative that farmers end poultrymen, ae, far as in the ruined street of a ranted village, poirellite, stop this leak, and in order TIOW but remere blot of crumbled sterie to assist In Oils conneetien Dr. Wick - •in the landscape. I noticed that with ware suggests that every breederpay perhaps the eXeepti011 CI five, the lot strict attention to the general condi- 1 soluolegud uarTI'vjanedrebao;Ine 1,XteUrrethtf. is9e; ng birds may be immediately isolated,. tions of his Reck in ender that any ail. chtaa of the 16th Prussian "velem' When anything unusual IS noted in a I wondered bow they bad been mixed -fowl, it hi advisable to Place ,the ass fected indivitliial in aepaxate quarters. It within 4 'ehort time reCovery does • not take plebe, it is mewlee to destroy ,1,-"- AIM CATCH. "Smoke should not be confused with: war's work, writes Henri Hazin from up with the guard. Ni one will ever "In the latter cose the carburetor raw veporixe the gasoline properly, but it condenaes in the cylinder and eldes not burn well, and the Pat which is not consumed parties off es black alteike, which _issues from the exhaust Pipe. "We must have a tertain amount of Oxygen to consume the gasoline en- tirely. The size of the cylinder limits the amount of air (from which the oxygen is taken) which may be taken In, and if the carburetor is adjusted to teed too Much gasoline there may not be enough oxygen Present to con- sume it .41. Practically speaking, whet is not consumed forms Aarbon or. smoke. "The obvious remedy is to supply heat to the ingoing air at the mixing chamber of the carburetor, so that vaporization will be complete, or id - just ,the carburetor se that no mdre ; gasoline will be fed to the engine than is required for running. This latter, of couree, is the economical thing to do. • • " "A lighteblue smoke coming from the exhaust pipe indicates tog much lubricating oil. This May be due to ., feeding too much oil, or to running. the ,• engine a great deal with the throttle nearly. closed. In order to draw 'a charge of gas into the' cylinder the_ piston travels partly out of the *cylin- der and forms a vacuum. With the , throttle wide open a high vacuum is not obtained because a large amount of gasoline and air is allowed come in and fill the cylinder. The engine is throttled down by Cloeing the throttle 'so that the air comet get in in such *large quantity, consequently there is a decided vacuum in the cylinder on each intake atrolte of this Piston. steion which issues from the 'exhaust .1 France on the 17th of August. These pipe in cola weather. One a the 1 soldiers from across the Atlantic I products of combostion. in the gas stormed and tools.the whole of Hill 70 engine is water,* natural reault of the famous in earlier days for one of the breaking up of a laydrocarbon. This ttoughest struggles `• ever fought, by usually- nasseeeeff at a -high temPereeemen. -• There sur now, the_enemy were ture as an invisible vapor In ,cola in, the main, Prussian Guards. Onl 'weather it condenses Immediately strikes the air, and is visible in the form of what we .call steam. There - P... do not let the policeman take you now 'they were tlae veriest cream o all that is left of the German army. It was. not any. tea party. The Cangdian attack , covered a front of in for having a arnoking engine, when two and a half miles, extending north it is only steam issuing from the ex- from Victor Hugo avood,',where the baud pipe. If be doesn't know which Lens salient begina to outline itself, it is you probably can convince him and reaching full way on till mouth to by the color, Ifs -it is white it is Lens itself, embracing the whole of steam, if it is sbIstelt it is gasoline two villages, Cite $t Emilie and Cite smoke, and if it is light blue it is the Saint Laurent. Something in ;the last smoke front the lubricating oil. There-, fore, wetch yo•ur exhaust. THE FUTURE OF THE HORSE. The Heavy Horse Will Continue to he in Demand For Some Tern's. AS far as the light -legged horse Is concerned; be is Practically doomed. The motor par has taken Iiis place. Although. still of some use in court - WI), he will go out of business as soon 'name for a Canadian, through wlioae land runs the St. Lawrenee to the sea. : A 200 Nerd Advanee: The depth of the advance before me was perhaps 2000 yards,' and the go and come, the glossa and take, to be compared to naught else than a crack- ing whip in its , sinuous tines and curves of fighting men. . Most of the .Boche , neither fought nor surrendered on their part of the field when they broke. before the rie the self -guiding car conies on the bayonet onslaught of the Canadians. market. . And as I looked from A height and ;For. a numbeir of years the heavy witnessed through mi glass the guard horse will be in demand, said Dr. .I. breaking I saw some of them fall in• a G. •Rutherford, In an address before barrage fire—they ran into the very the Western -Canada Irrigation Au - Mick a it One beconies accustomed sociation. He Is keenly in demand' at it° seeing men die, and one takes as the Present time. Prices Vete never I Part•sof the game.. I thouglit*thinan so high. After the war Is over, there 'I 'looked and shuddered. a bit at •InS will he 'a great demand" for themsin nonchalance. Out *ere mothers the: countries now ravaged by ware sons. were giving their life blood. My publicatIon from the Belgian Govern - official .mind-wentsbackte the mental.imPres- sion it Wald have Made upon me two I have in my possession an remit Wing anY barrosting details years ago; and it frightened •me.., I had not hardened. 1 hacronly seen so very . often, %. • how millionk - of men Consider Sinner greater than love of life and made no hesitancy of choice between. ' ., ' ‘ -. Heat Mixing CheMber: • • as to what hapPeued to the Belgian This vacnurishas atendeney to draw ihomes. The hreed mares and° foals running in. fields were slaughtered, ell up past the photon into the cotnlaus- tion chamber, where .it burns and lorme smelte. That is why, when the machine is left at tlie curb with the engine running for any length of time, it will often, „ise, found to Start away iyith clouds of smoke 'tailing from • the exhaust, ° "In the same Way eihen the engine is running , steady, aIr paging through the carburetter so slowly that the gaits- lirie is not broken up into very --fine Germany, They sent:their extorts to parts, Consequently it does not fully Select the best individuals, giving to vaporize and i's very easily condensed. the Belgians for payment orders on It fornisliquid gasoline in the intake the Republic of Prance, payable at pipe or,cylinder. This la called 'loading Paris, These orders ,were • In German up' and is responsible for black Melte and were often .for the most •,trifiing stuns. I have had Integviews' with repre- sentatives of all the large cartage Companies In our cities and they say - • , being often" used as targets .44hy 'the ,Gerraab. soldsers. . One pure-br stal- liori;. valued at 310,000, was burned up In hoic while . the grpo'm and. his wife and children were forced on their knees to watch the 'agonizing death sof the noble apinsid. Then, the Germans reelized that they were artaking a mis- take in destroying these .valiia bones, and began- to ship them to when the machine is started. • "'One way of overcomiog this sto supply a 'larger amount of heat than usual to the mixing chamber.. Most know, perhaps. The. Old, ,Stuped Bebe Way. ' I saw one thing r had seen before on the French and again the British front and whith 'I expect to see still again. The Prussian Guard double counter-attack after r pulse, &miter - THE END OF GREATER GERMANY NOT ALLOWED TO RECOVER HER Loo botkaliF.s • Because She WaS Cruel to the Native , Tribes- and a Menace to Nearby States. There are two reasQns why aer. Maw cannot be allowed to retain her colonies. In the, first place Germany is a supreme failure an a colonising PthQewQcro.nfiSdhen(ic-heasan'tidt" of win e 12,000,000 natives Who came isncler her rule. The rigid, uncomprehending -temperament of the Germans, their --, the fowl without first ascertaining the inStinet for bullying those they have . cause of the disorder The Prevalence An their power, their insensitiveness to Fishing Fel, Tarpon From a Canoe ' of diseases ie more often the eauSe of Other people's feelings and their pas- - s- EXCitins5Persts - poidtry-keepees "failure_ than is sion for systematizing, everything Ne sport offers greeter excitement the leek of practical knOwledge, The, made them from the start -quite' horw extreme , Unportance of keeping the las as governors of African natives than ,fishing for tarpon from a canoe. quarters clean; isolation of all' ailing There was no give-and-take - 'about Tim six-foot violist& may throw' his • I, foWls and imiaediate action in *regard them, no power of sympathy, no ap- gli . ening body g your out the cause cannot be too aast! to finding strongly impressed upon the poultry - straight dt:wwn' youswma mililYrorf straight out to sea, where the. , roan. . When trouble eccurs, forward to the 12. rough, and then- break away, or, 1 Laboratory, 'Central ,Ex - g to e' bring ile' I Bicil°gIcal but sick fowl, or in the absence of PmearylmAnver in taegowitie ystruu perimental Farm, Ottawa, Ont., a live such, a deed bird: te the Interval, (lisirifect the quarters, runs, drinking fountains and feed dishes to check the spread of any infectiofia disease. Disinfect the poultry .houses by spraying the interior with .ts limewash solution 150 lbs, stone lime slaked in a barrel of water, plus one gallon of a good commercial disinfectant). I. Fill cracks. and crevices to destroy mites, lice, etc e If a' smaller amount Is re - Wive ft may be prepared by adding him alongside, quivering and exhaust- ed, In The. Book •of the Tarpon, Mr, A. W. Dimock recounta. a thrilling in- cident that happened on the Florida fishing grounds, • ' As the outgoing tide ran low, says the author, we put off in the canoe and anchored where the tarpon had been rising, I let my bait trail. eft with the tide. It had drifted scarcely fifty feet from the caribe when it was caught by a tarpon, which ran out three hundred feet of line before the a half pounds of lime to a captain had the anchor *ward. Then two and the paddling became fierce. / put a pail Of water plus half a•tea`cupful -of disinfectant. twenty -pound strain on the line and worked the handle of iny. reel as if it Keep a crop growing in some part of the yards and alternate Phltry and crops. If the rens are small covers - with* a coating of stir -slaked lime and had been a windlass. -After the fish had leaped three time I supposed that had tired it, , but it started away with renewed vigor. • were,being carried :toward the breakers and in two Minutes - were being tossed about by the rough wa- predation that st is the human, and not the official element that is at the hottoni of all tolerable relationships. Germany lealBed Neighbor. And there is another reason why the return of the German colonies out oftbe qeestion • -In-Africar in China rind in the Pacific as in. Eus rope it has been found that Germany is a 'bad neighbor. 'Her first thought is alWays.to build up a strong military power. Her next is to use that power for aggressive purposes. The Ger- man. colonies have been so many centers of intrigue and unrest From thenr Germany -has, tried to stir up dis- sensions in nearby States. The solidar- ity of the white peoples, the coraity among the ,celenizing powers,, the standardirthey have grown accustom- ed to observing in therr-telations with one another— these. things have meant nothing to Germany. She was opt for conquest; and herinvariable policy has been, first,. to accumulate a stock of armaments in each of lier colonies, afiC" secondly, • to tampers with the loyalty of the raees end tribes in the neighboring:French, British-, Chinese or Belgian Governments That is what she has always done in 'EurOpe. That also is what she bas done sin Africa. • • . The whole world recognizes her to- day' as an international nuisance and an internationAl menace. But half of the black record that has made her an enemy of the hern*. raCesis left opt of the reckoning unless her actions and the spirit of her juke in her overaea possessioes are noted and studied. It is the pniversal conviction of all who have„ had „experience- 9f her as , eolonizing* power that peace and security cannot be -had -so -long as she "THE LAST TO TWO BRAVE MEN SOME TOUCHING STORIES OF THE WORLD WAR, An Irish Chaplain and a Fainoini Highland Soldier .Both Answered !one. Last Call.", He was the 105V:hived padre tin the Western front—a fearless man wile scorned bullet% and Whose life was given over to ministering to the falls' .0, en, writes an flglisiteroman, .When the men went out hito NosMan's-Lanst• on thatoleadly business known as . "advance," vvent, too. No one could* 'hold him back. •. • • ' "Mother 'o' .God, 'tis he that leads. the charmed life!" said the reginient of Irish Guards among whom he work- ed. .And indeed his was .A charzned . „. Hail of shrapnel, patter of-Machine...7-- gun bullets,.thunder of howitzers and heavies—none of these mattered in the least tOhim. He escaped death by a miracle—a hundredgmes. All over the world; on many a field of battle, for Many long years he had been known and • honored. ' And -it was on the, battlefield that he fell,at last, mere. • tally wounded. Ile was bending over the bodY ef an Irish, guardsman, band. aging his wounds and cheering him, A thud, a sudden choking sound in the throat, and "That's my last call," breathed" Father Simon Knapp as be fell forward: • He died within a ,few minutes. "Sure well never have another, padre his equal," said an Irish guards. Ingo, who told me of the impressive, funetel at the front when Lord • de Vesci, adjutant of the regiment, laid s - the decoration of the Distinguished •-ss Service Order on -his coffin. ' la It was in' London, in Kensington, that I attended the solemn requiem sung for this. great-souied padre. As party of Irish Guards Were •present and formed n guard of honor, with arms reversed. . And the wives and mothers and sis- ters of soldiers* he had helped were there,weeping the loss ef ,,a very, brave and noble map. The church was crowded. ' ."But 'twits the service on the battle- field that was more wonderfel than ' this," I hard a soldier whisper, "and s 'twas•an the battlefield the padre was Wishin' his Jost tall would Come. Tor, ,boys,' he would say, 'I'd "like to ' clie altngside ye, 'fightin' to the end.' " , The Wooden Cross. RA dig up.. .If 11111B are ton large to dig, plough and cultivate before gow. ing Rape. sown In the early part. of . . the summer, after the breeding sea- son, or early in September, inakes a ter, where the, rollers from the gulf good. crop for this purpose: Rear all met the tide from the. pass,- Here the chicks on fresh soil. tarpon jumped. several titles and made . : s Although these precautions may ap- a final spurt, but we finally drew the petit unnecessary it is the only way canoe beside its • - , of ' cm:abetting limey- disease condi- Taking the shank of the hook my tions affecting, poultry, which, if left left hand, I was cutting it fete from to themselves, will undoubtedly prove the tarpon's jaw -when, suddenly, the decidedly; costly In the long ren-s•Dx, open month of a Monster from • be- perimeatal perms Note; • neath the canoe slipped over the body ., - .... , s , . $ of the fish, and, elosiogseut it in two. ...., . ,.. • fell from the, canoe; sishiclistook'in'-gal- T_ItERA,._,Illio_O___T IN:. SWEDEN. ., I threw myself backward and nearly ions of water. In our attempts to bals First Nation of the Earth. to, , ;giant ance the cockleshell we made it careen , , . Universal Suffrage. s''''' • eo far that the Captain went. over - attack ,in the old stupid, arrogant board. A momentiater he witsawim- Boche way, Their efforts were mad- I ming With one hind on the gunwale. isificentsbut .surely not war as War irs aClbnb aboard, quick!" I Amite& Sweden wee' ------------0--------she-na-fisrmitted-stasena.et-sa-srolesshe-haa O tions of the earth, to discern the sass not merely bungled but. disdraced. proaeh of univerial suffrage. Certain Greater 'Germany must be .encied once communal franchise righte have been and for . enjoyed by the wornen of this Far North country for mere than liehuit- deed years 1862 Sweden gave ,the full vote to those of her ;unmarried toeuntgahst oiltphaesvae .94,74.001Thumeny 'omfaLchuresd, 'strhi)ionnilderingoof the great shark that had all ugh left in its stomach to ac- - 1 to finclthe north of their. own line so cominod te the , captain. " eilLAUGHING BY ELECTRICITY. • exposed to 'a hell of British fire that "Cant' do it without swamping you. they could not deploy and were forced Paddle for the heath outside the pass. to walk on to their death or die in They chose the former I'll hang. on here and Swim with you.", women ,who paid taxes. Eight years Conntertance of Intelligent Peeeen • is their tracks. , • I paddled as if for life, with the ago the rights of municipal franchise,: . ••• . r F • or their goading officers chose for , • = Ivision of those Cruel janrs closirig wee extended to, all 'women and the Expressive so ep Inge. • carburetors are not designed to take that, ee tar as , they have gone In trY- through the living body of the big entirewomanhood of the nation seem- ' N'ithat is called the "play" of ,eXpres- them,:the ancient 1:"Xlisaistn, thing' Pt" ' s carp of this condition, and the only ing eat the ntotor trucks, they have - ' ' - and simple , • - "tarpon,. , I tried to talk cheerfully° to ed destined for • universal suffrage sion depends ePen. an exceedingly remedy would be to stop othe engine, found the horse much ° more satisfac. 'Under direct fire they kept on, de- ,the captain to keep the grisly' spectre just when the Veropeen war 'broke 'eleherate coMplex system of minks . . • . . • '• instead of eiloviiing it to run while tory and economiCal. Whether the de. creasing in numbers yet keeping till from his 'mind, bitt My breath was fn 1914. ., ' ' . that go tp make up the human face. , Standing, at the curbs s velopment of the motor truck, which, "7. . wassee for he see no. Hear rae, and he • So smoothly has the feminist move- ..These inuscles, in Win:- are actuated ; It was truly magnificent, but 1 4. A -0 1. A:41 -I. 1. "TO ,,,;0Yefeonle Smoke from 1 the oil .until comParatively reeent years, did horribly •suipidal: I never saw .an ad- remarked to me afterwards!' ' • . -merit .progressed that • when Strind- (responsively to *the motions) by a customary to tave.a groove turned in of the passenger car, will be taken up Whole : body of Several thousand men ' I abet often afraid of sharks, but beig, the novelist, promulgated „his. nerve' trindts , -,,with „ever - so many which, is drawn up past the pistthat ssn it is not receive as much attention as at' vance under such a terrific fire. A - a . thinkin' I Was, Seared blue that time I kept short stories entitled •"Married, " halst branches. matter that has been mint with five .or gist holes drilled in the ficiently economical to supersede' the died and .did notidli; What is the.' tipse I kicked I could:dee' the shark "the new women" by Ibsenee. "Doll interestingli studied by apPlying dee- & that tarpon, and every ing been inspired, to inveigh against ' It iS a the piston under the lower piston ring, *ith. 'eller& enOugh 'to make it .sufr was shot dOwn before my eyes. They groove through the. piston.; - The piss horse, I cannot say.' The heavy farm life of German soldiers • to Prussian u` ehind me. You'd better believe I House," hehecame involved in 'a law- tricky' to the yarioun facial lunacies. ton ting then scrapes the oil • from traCtor is a: thing of the past The military ., preetige,` .•that proud thing Was glad when. we got alining the 'suit„instituted by the State. Thereby. the nerves . that energize . the cylinder 'Wall. into the groove and light farm traetor his' come 1* to stay :4 y= fading into soplist? . . • '' ' breakers in the shallow water." , Sweden first extended. freedom to. these muscles are strongly -stimulated, beck into the crank ease throngh the So far is the horse buidnesseis• eon- Victorious Conadians: • ' -That beast of a. shark chased -m4 women in_1,856 when the Conservatory And the face assumes • corresponding 14stOu 'wade.. This Preveilte it from corned, a man can CalltiallS to breed., Suddenly they ' broke the seennd round all that night, and the Captain of Musie in Stockholm was opened' to expressions not 'relating at all to the , Vierkied upinto thenonibustion chain-. heitiy', horses withont 'AV rtsk iifs time. And ahrost tri§tioti'Alle Ptitish confessed at ,breakfast that it, bad bit- them• the universities iii 4870. ...The feelings or thought of the 'fsubject.", -, -...,_ „her, • hiaey ma.hufacterere do this market lettere for et 'least ten or Of- artillery fire slowed down and out ten hint in -teSo a fess -times. ".. - Iiickie's Deduction. Urtiversity, of Stockhchn was the first If ,the nerves that.ac o p oe the very new models, told repair teen yvus to come. . sprang the men from Canada. They Hdropean university to give a -woman hilarity are touched herea-peir eke - a profeesor's their. Women were ad- trodes, instantly, bir a response of the men do it regtilarly on Aid miodels.iind • arried-everytbrng befivee _Ikon; The nitted ter-dentisitr-y-in 1861.and_ to. tlie_niurielcaLthe Man will assurne .the :new nt.nOlq-,winelt do not hwte-3,t. addition.„ ,to, ,their honey guardp.that which 'was left et it, Wilted , g_htfls ss, ..,..Steltsims_pheas n_ ontal.riervice_twe_yea_r4ti.et A teacher 'asked her class Us write - "Sometimes -the-eld level -will--;be gathering;-atasnisefets soh look ' It was -in • a remote. part •of the Highlands ‘.'Of Scotland not very ,the ago that I mime across a little grave - Yard, most 01 Whose 'age -worn torabs. - stones dated back to the fifteenth ce,n- ---:-Severatsof -Stheeeinecriptions. poetical and erude—asuied to be the • fashiOn a hundred or -so odd Tears ago. The faults of the departed, as Well' as. the virtues, were set forth for all the whild to read. Here one could learn that bad temper and spitefulness had been the leading charectetistics of the occupant Of one grave, while near- by a paragon of perfection , "mourned and 'lamented by • all , • knew him." • , But the sinalrerossthets caught nr eye was of simple wood, and very new. It somehow seeined strangely out , Of • place, in that old-world graveyard, so . I crossed oyer to teed the inscription It was scrawled in: pencil, asMility ""The Last Call." s . Below Was the name et a very fees- , ous soldier Of a Highland regiment, a man who had won every decoration for gallantry that it is -passible 'to . For:a moment Lworelered.that_euelie- • a gallant and -famous soldier should lie in, such a simple drove, with only .a wooden crass to mark it. - And then I kerrierribered. the e`toie of his little, 'Highland mother, who had. conic, all the way. to Trento, pint to • and almost. indisperisable to the cons through, Every Such Of ground n-essai h -°r1e-w: r- pater.- In4810-theiLiVete permitted -to teer perreetry----grave':---Zr---wviegiee, prised sto read the folfowing in one at- ' ' tinuance of a latgepercentage Of plant threatened in the Joliette counter -at- tempt , .. • - take up the study of medicine. While • Other nerVerhe. cat' be ,luade-to -look- life. • • , tack remained in Canadian hands, plus • "The ' ' pesple es London are oaten for • ., a * we heke-eo America have been Sm. grief-stricken or •horrified. _. . ... .,.. . . There are 350 sPecies of parrots. 'sc;ine more that was found to be a their stupidity." , 1pressed with the new an varied activ- s man s deloped, d ' d ' A ha d veloped his face has eleefly confined to the warm. arts of mese of tang 0 Si' he young author was asked how ne ' led wir defenses thick' ir , ities of women of,la e years, a ese eco e . . t ' 11 th b ni More mobile, It is vividly de- , ., things have been done by the women scriptive of 'whatever he feels The America, .Asia, Africa ..tind Auttralia. strewn with Oerinan . , a that idea . There is none in- Europe and note in along a line as far as the eyecouldpp got at *' of Sweden for many years. savage has no such play of expression s-______, . 4 reply, - - : 44.4...../1:4..4.4..4*..... 4 IASI" ' miss," was the, 'get . dead bodies. All Asia evest 'of the Indies; and while reach the fight went on; far to e teh says . ft in the textbook' the poptlation. of • • , as the civilized human being. very E - numerous in the Valayearehipelago, lecould just make out the blue of e 0+ ' I ,"Say, mother, what keeps la from 13ody recognizes an expressive face as found too high. This. may be correct-. ed often by- lowering^ the oil troughs • , or by filing off the dip on the bottom of the donneeting rod so that it barely touches the oil or touches it with a •nerroSved surfaCe, • • , How to Recogoize Steam. "In addition -to. the smoke. result - Ing tee' gaged/le, Or rill there is a large amount of carbon de- posited in the cylinder which takes up . space in the .combustion chamber and • raises the compression so high that they are wanting in - China, Cochin indicating intelligence. The tounten- States is the Carolina parrot. ' hs we. say, Thlenks" • only species native tosthe United poilu's uniform, for a •-certain. FrenCh army wits fighting in tanison., I saw them 'advance, and I 'knew what they could •and would -do. Hire, t thought, London is very_ense.,.„, cff the-earthohen we're upside The rtin---.1iing -of :4"--a gas engine may down?"' "Why, the law of gravitY." often be improved by denting it out "But hoe,. didwee stay on before thi with gasoline. • law was paess d.7" _ anoe of a stupid person is relatively Chinnand the Philippine Islands. The expresiionless; that of an imbecile is, r • 'OP AERa e9Pig patA rADI sopposr. IlAVe."301.1sVgit `ro A ta OF SILLY -TALI? 50C11 AVIDDq- '61PL. 1114114if petit% is A NVIONT`i aestiloLE GIRL, 6•5LP a 11. fE) 3111431.3tzwisk, c)11 'tilt ea Oft HELLO I JusT sTopooD To ‘stiow e'Jimt44",K1 leieW ste' I eekieFel Hite. fl tk1 etUrF THE eAMO. At MRS, liekg0ist- CA611.0 POEsS eireres-DAnten-P, ;, -TING 1,40..ivEt 1131L 1 MOW' iltitt.AL0NO Noel, lye, qeT TO irr llottit AND 61VV. JIMON SATO — 60ote eeeS 44, WaLl • • HAM NOVHING To SKI 4GTO sPi !I I 14// eke Ari Wt. 4.40 Nitti/ • - brinehis bode -home -foe buriatshn eetesefeetetelteenettetelenetenteeeli:entie'"'ee loe expensesi-toolealotts-that-artr-one- -/,:- - . else might want to share the honor of , burying him: Soshe herself had erect-, ed the little cross and ipstribed tho., words 'On it, A wreath of white heather lay .on the graze' above the grave, ' And the ,.. rain and the danip had blurred, the - writing o* the cross—or'' perhaps it . Was the Mother's teats, Who know'" And as I drew nearer I read some worde written in much Smaller ,writ- ing'heInk "The test' Ca.". ' ':- - ' . They were: "Ile answeied' it brave- ly, and ,as n soldier." • . SELECT StEb CORN NOW • Now is the tithe to prepare toe the eelection of the seed corn, Tim world - iscrying for Intl -eased •grain produe. tion. One of the least expensive and easiest ways itishelp inereaso 'modes's-. ' . . tion is by. the planting or Sowing of the very best qbality of seed. Before • :cutting commences is :the best tittle to • select the eats of core foieteed, - • Go IMO the field with a bag, and O * from the Strang sturdy ails with • large perfect Oars eltoos0 the, best. Select More than you will require to plant your_ trop next Yearelefore planting time a second selection can be Made of the 'very eholeest of the ears aireade. gathered. After bein gathered, they should be carefully an thoraeghly dried and attired In a dry place. Plan now to select Iii this men. 1 nee and . to have a 'meet ploieeeline . • Whisk to store the seed. •-• ,