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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-11-08, Page 6D MANUFACTURER'S OVERSTOCK To lax 011941x$4 elft id WHOLESALE " PRICES 500 £hollbgraphs Reg. $.RU :F° X36 An exceptional opportunity to get & trot.. • class machine at a bargain. Equipped with A.1 Motor: Universal Tone Arm that, plays all makes of records: and Tone Control for .full or 'modulated volume, Inas, .in fact. all the features, found , on the.0 higher priced machines.. The case 1s :in malrogany' finish, :.41 in. high. ' One year guarantee with each machine. • If not as represented .return .within la days ancl: get your money pack.. •Price While.: they. last$85 cash with order or C.O.D. C RQ,ERTSON' Manuiacturovie- .M eat. • 77 BAY ST., - TORONTI A . CURSE IN HOUSEHOL:<.D _SCIENCE__COMPLETE IN TWENTY-FIVE LESSONS. Leeson. XVI. Children's Food. - The baby who must depend upon hers. have .no place in the small Child's he bottle,, to .supply nutriment to diet. maintain life needs good care and at-. - Good homemade bread • and 'pure testees.. • milk contain the necessary elements That this baby' may thrive, . ow' that .are of vital importance' for .the, mother should have . the physician. suceessful• growth : during childhood. presdxibe a fqrmula that 'will agree That the bread. . contain all the .neves-• with the child, Cleanliness is a ,bigsary elements of the wheat, it should factor. ' It is impossible to keep lit- be made from , whole wheat meal or tle bodies,clothing and ,.,the utensils' , flour. •This gives the child the value n in. which food is Made, too clean. Re - the vitamines that are . contained the be ha l`m'cleanliness is the wheat The outer cpvering.•of me�+'� r t t suxg price of freedom icafrom much of baby Fain contains valuable material for illnesses, bone and teeth structure. ., 'Flies dirt, impure ' milk and in Know the source of your milk 'sup- s under sanitary conditions are the enemies of which it is cand a d for beforehe it reaches childhood, I you, Upon receiving milk,"' if •it is must bb:•e abiny' o eatsolid: foonoedsy,ea_. tolids m ot already pasteurized,then paste- urize -Wet -once, then :cool, nd stor at thisperiod that themother must in a place. where it will be free from use care and fore -thought. The tie- all Contamination: Remember that locate digestive organs are datdi.mik, will spoil very+ quickly if it is kept Curbed, • It must be realized thatthein a careless or dirty manner, or child• shouldbe furnished with foodsif it is periiiitted to stand in a heat - that will provide growth of bone, mus ed kitchen. Physicans will tell you cies and tissues and • alae: furnish it _' that thousands of babies. die each year with sufficient energy to exercise its because of the • careless manner in which milk fed to them is handled. Always wash,' if possible, ^ under running water, the top of the milk bottle or jar, before opening it. When the unprecedented sensation and con- ditions. • - WhiW the -die -stricken- crowds. in. the street watched the sky ;for. the ', threatened peril that might come, Pa- tricia. Monte2-,, in her biplane,, was speeding toward New York fro* the aviation field on Long, Island. • •e As the airship, freighted with de- structive bombs sailed down toward the bay, pier ing the sky above the center of Manhattan island, the watch- body. ers found 'relief in the fact that'xis- For growth protein . is , necessary. • thing any more . serious than giving This is found in milk, eggs and cereals —.-T fright to. the .multitudes had marked for the small child; and r+aeat, flet, . • . . the journey of the air raiders thus peas, beans and lentils, in addition. to once the bottle is open turn a jelly A• ( 'far.But the satisfaction that came' the .abovementioned foods, for older glass down upon the top of the bot - C `�14C `' etre distract ' receives his everThisforms sanitarydDvering to the crot�vds in'the lm children. Baby renergy' tle. f r a . ° * ' ,r was not shared by men who, owned 'from cereals, bread and butter end that can quickly be remove• •Ta1'Uellelj from Motionfurther Thefats �• in the milk _butter Do not give small 'children candy. • property ,,downtown. U ion square ,milk. ► . When crowds in Union and olk ,of a also act as energy, targe quantities of sugar overheat i, tax's' .d'la,�r' of the' Same the.., rY .egg saw the great• airship appoachiing •iving foods. The juice of an orange the blood stream and upset the .diges ,1Tarne by the t%ttiversal Film from the. north, there was a cry of ma be given in small amounts to the tion. It' is' possitively criminal to 'Y alarm when someone -discovered still shod under one ' year of age,:with lgive pennies to the children and allow Mfg: 'Co. arm another air monster heading toward beneficial •results. The value'of them to buy cheap candies' of unknown New York from Long rsland. One orange , juice in the child's diet is of origin. , If candy is necessary,: make >9 brilliant light flashed from Pat'swb s a laxative nature. The small - child it- at home and _ be••assuied of •. its T EE NTH EPISODE plane, the anarchists' airship from one.to three years may have the purity. FOU.lI > < N a ablaze`with•rows of glaring shafts.. The Shp , iVlgneters directed' thepassage of • her bi pulp of a baked apple and prunes in plenty! of'` cool drinking water Th mounted atrol guarding the Pat d addition to the `orange juice: should be given to the children, even e m i , i p ^plane, so. that she kept fax above the Children from three to six ears. of the smallest baby may be given a tea= outskirts of the city in its thinly .noon a archists' craft as it moXed down the Children y • r three or lour times d sections, had begun their nightly • l in close to the financial hge may hay�e cereals, milk, eggs; fine- . spoonful of wate t m orches • lett t , g island. Com se l chopped meats•, fish•boiled and oak- during the; day: Do not. gives al without prospect of unusual ad- had her'plane ,Y PP • _ . e Vigil p P distract, Pat h d , venture•, il- an that she teas directly above -the air-1,xshlrebl�s and fruits: Corn, ctren ice ,waterfioflesafety's sake th - *.. {. s . , wenn ee:,:iiner. evening, , . - d then he decided' to act, beans, tomatoes, cabbage and. cucum- water should be_ 4', -was .� T7. stein—uiiu Gileil.:3 - with very little moonlight, Far to the. Ver deliberately sheHoisted an ox- ,. .:bu :. night life of_. .New! '.ode•• a •big _ '! ; `o. " �� south, the sy �. _ plosive -bomb over. the.. s of.h. _- f f .: q r -�_•, York, was moving in joyous streams lane having guided her craftuntil it -, �' •• ht of the Cheat- When .. In the der 't e^ bright lights the airshi . Wh un h g g as directly above p �,9:•- vy y ' 'Usually O'Donovan,. : i scored alit - - T 1 .xical.. district.. Y.she dro � e the•bomb she.,, "-the moiilitecl`policemat who -had-pa- firs o P d trgled .the same sections for years,: The airship lurched and swung •from Might as well. , have been • riding' its course. Another bomb dropped the open country for all thelikewise register- : 'through, p from pat,s biplane,gi excitement: that game his way. ' : ed,and with joy the girl observed the - t Irishman switcheda rse a d• the ky,o nigh thegiant ;aircraft change its• ori n CAO. sky, trying. to discover.,, ,e,, R f, head for- the: Brooklyn -side- -of--East the strange intrusion.u on the custom- ., . gupen raver. � ., dry stillness' of .the night.:Suddenlyt o busyin saves their own •..there appeared a string of lights, high To c sts had not even attem' bacon, in the heavens,pat first faintly discern-, the anarchists citybelow them. They. ted Ito bomb the ible but growing rapidly brighter. came a.. louder "hum," increas- Were just arriving at the ted ton -their Then -flight when they expected begin ing in .velums, until, as it.approached destructive work, but : Pat's attack .high,above thegrounds the policeman completely upset their plans.: • at::lastw-.concluded that some_.strange With-.their-mown=lives'-:at::stake, the. ofsipeair was e ,, A pod article is worthy of a goodpackage. A ;lith, strong, delicious :tea like Red Rose is wait putting into a sealed package tel. keep it fresh awl ° ggood. A.. cheap, ....coii ion . tea is. hardly worth taking care of and is. usually. sold 3u, sulk, Red Ro-se is alytrys. sold in the sealed package which keeps it good.• 11• th raising south in anarchists centered all their efforts in the timet: night, bound for the city still the hope of making a safe landing. several miles away.From its.great height the -airship be - O'Donovan forgot the --Sweetness of . gain to descend in zig-zag fashion,, sail - his pipei.'as he suddenly. wheeled his ing over Brooklyn, toward the open •. horse and dashed •away,' for the)tear- fields iii the suburbs. est: patrol box. The airship was now As -Pat's was skimming above Wil- directly overhead, humming along to- liaamsburg on her way back to the • ward New.. York at• an;even speed that hanger whence she- had started, she Haight' send to the heart of town had the satisfaction of watching, the within an hour. anarchists' airship as it • slowly de - "It's O'Donovan," ,said= the patrol- scended. When the helpless craft manover the police 'phone. It's neared the ground, Pat • observed the 'above you at•the' airship. _ Its a big wreck, as, it hung momentarily in one, going. south." • flames,. and. then crumpled up. falling • The desk sergeant in O'Donovan's in a burning mass to the ground. • g a inet sent: an officer to •watch .for Satisfied in having accomplished her the dirigible, and : passed the word purposein saving the city from an at- along to.the. other station houses far- tack, Pat sped through the air, to. the .ther south. In this way the approach aviation field• and safely descended. of the airship„ manned by anarchists Her adventure had taken her less than and bent on a mission of destruction, an hourand her mission had been fa. Was .made known to ^every police sta-filled with marvelous success. ; tion in the city: In great ".scare heads" she read ,in , Arad as a precautionary measure the the papers, next morning, of her ex- • department headquarters had called ploits. The sensational events •• that up Governor's island and the'forts followed -the airship's. passage down down the bay,, warning the officers •in the.length of Manhattan island,. occu- command :that New York was having pied,,the ' front pages .of. the papers - a visitor in the sky, who looked sus. but it'had been found impossible, by vicious, but not, of necessity, danger-- the newspaper men,; to : identify the ousto the welfare -of the city. pilot of the attacking aircraft. With the . speed that generally at- Later issues of the afternoon papers tends the spread of sensational news, carried stories of the biplane that had the approaching dirigible was herald- left .the •aviation field on Lond Island i • -tin. . •,s . s eau:inoaa c.a' c:._.> , .: .ta:,rat _ - -3.- - --,a--t,: c • -±. .,—:-:-• legra��rrr>-•.in•ciccriev.�xtg �L• t'1"14.114 attach; `but ,leis iiri�iti�esr` iiivescigatioi�t° ublic squares and thoroughfares As a aulbfication- Music.@ 'A.:musical friend is a friend indeed. hears it -said.: that.: One so frequently ;=hes , ;some -,young -woman_- has' .�a_host. of friends because:of her, music or that'a certain:: young man- is tremendously popular on .account, of his ability to play the piano welt. Yt is. obvious that music :heip�s`'' you make friends. It is also true that •you appreciate having' friends who: are musical _Not lonff since, a mottle .:who . had .: always been careful -about her "chit= dren'.s choice of companions, was plan- rning in a judicious way to• encourage her son. in. becoming intimate `with sonic,, other• young folks because, ; they were musical. Going farther and into a . more serious • realm, when a young man;reaches the stage when he feels , he can assume the responsibili ties of taking unto himself a: wife, he would do well not to: be forgetful • of the,;fact that Arcady is sweeter if the woman' of his choice has had the ad vantages -of. •'at 'least some musical edacat on: And the , oti r around, when a- youngwoman..is_ about to . say "Yes" to the man of her choice, that choice will mean all the more. to. their• enjoyment of life .if he is musical. Young: people,• who have musical parents will, in their years of mature judgment, never cease to thank Provi- dence;for that 'fact. • An, employer of a fairly large office staff os noted -for asking 'every,•male Applicant: for . a position two questions• -one is a finen- cial one, the other -are you fond. of. music? week, ,say • on Thursday,, pupils 4ar4,. NEW USES FOR WOOD.' too apt to neglect practising until. the following Tuesday, but when there pale of the' Latest Products is Arti- • James Graham has just .coinpleteii are two lessons: to get, there is no time ficial Silk Stockings. fifty, years: of service on the staff of to play pookey. And the pupil' n. the Glasgow Corporation Lighting. De - joys .the two lessons, after getting Silk' stockings, phonograph records the Gl nt. • f used to it, because there is more fro- and sausage casings .are all being. Information has been .received of° nest change_and the interest is kept made of` one material to -day -wood. the death at Capetown, South Africa, q , . "•-- nl . n. a ..- .e:- .. pr .. , p : _� .. -�- .., ed-- f:�elluloser-- - --- - - •- �. £ormor ;_.. UP; progress a •�lk-asiargely eomp�•s oft af`�oliln i'ols� l+'I. i lY<a �o ,,,_. �. p: imagine what slow and as wood is composed chiefly . of b school boy or girl would' .make in Aberdeen. arithmetic or reading who attended cellulose it has been found possible to The Dunfermline,School Board has s oobut once a. week! produce 'silk from wood, says the.Illus- again had under consideration the T 1 trated World. The cellulose of the providing There is every reason, as'a matter question of a second 'school of econom . of both time and money wood is first converted into a sub- for Rosyth, y stance known as viscose, which great- The wedding took place in Green- (and I might add, off. energy od andpa- ' 1 resembles' celluloid and. , is often fiance on the.. part. of,both teacher ; S' side Parish Church, of Captain T. M. • Pupil), o 'banish from this soil the used as a substitute• for- it; also as. S,.Miine Ilendeison, R,E.,..and__..i. iss_., a b t casing for sausages. • baneful, deadly, one lesson a week, Evelyn Haldane Blain, of Edinburgh: Tn the production of silk the viscose George Jamieson and Son, timber and thus, in a large measure give dissolved in water,forced through is i vmerchants, Aberdeen, were fined £6 the capillary tubes of a spinning ma- for having failed to give up an in chine and the fine threads : produced .surance card to one of their work - are hung up to dry to be convert- men. • ed into cellulose by warm currents of At the annual meeting of the Scot - air. The threads are there woven into "silk" cloth with a cotton warp. ' This artificial silk is very difficult to distinguish from the original product and is offering keen competition in the market. jFROM ' OD S ND NOTES OF INTEREST FEW* HER BANKS ANIS B#AEEs. What Ia Goin Op in. the highlands and Lowlands of Auld Scotia. Sir John Stirling. Maxwell, Bart., has been, chosen Assistant Controller ' of Timber fox Scotland. . The sum of 1140 has been realized by the sale of war comfort tickets on the Glasgow, tramways, • Lady ' Stirling ,Maxwell opened the autumn show .of' the West of Scotland ' Horticultural 'Society at Glasgow. The Killwinning burgh assessments this year show a decrease• of three - 'pence. per .2,; as compared • with 'last , Canadian pupils, an equal opportunity with those in Europe. "The advan- tages of European study" consists chiefly in this frequency . of inspira- tion, as exhibited and radiated to the pupil by the genius of the teacher. • ammumwsimmommim Send 'Them To • .: PARKER.: Anything. in: the nature of the cleaning -and dyeing of fabrics can. be entrusted to Parker's .<-D.ye Works-with-thefull.sssur._ ance of prornpt, efficient, ark(' economical service.. '. -- Make a pa'rce4' of..goods you •wish teas vated, • attach written in-• structions to each piece, and send to us by parcels pos , pay carriage otie way. Or, if you prefer, send for the booklet first. • Be -s re to. ou uy• rt parcel clearly_to r-eceiv---- mgdept.. , PARKER'S DYE WORKS - ED ` 791 YONGE STREET , TORONTO' Incompetent instructors• and the per- nicious;Canadian habit of,�one, lesson a 'week. As a'rule the pupil taking : elle lesson a week makes- the- same- .q s advancenient in;'a year-as--the=on taking two' lessons will make in .a term,. and in the course of four years 'it is discouraging to find that:: he has' accomplished. only what --.might have: been.,dane eii once. , When lesson' days • come but once a the p q had not uncovered the name of the long ,before the airship arrived at a pilot. Ther was only, one item that point ern the sky .above the tenter led to the slightest hope of identify - the city.a ingthe aeronaut -a purplemask had • ' The cafes:'and' restaurants were a- beenfound tied to the fra ework of a. flame with excitement. ' ' Eagerly the crowds waited and as thousands.of. e yY.es-scanned • watched, the sky while necks grew distressing- ly stiff from the unaccustomed strain of bending backward. Wild . rumors • • flashed through the , streets, passing from Man to man; growing in circum-• stantial-detail-with every -repetition . As the giant skyship 'passed. over block afterblock of the northern 'des- trict of New York, without creating anything more than intense excite- inent, the residents who felt that they • had escaped some, dire calamity, grew trim in celebrating their good for 4 If You, Aire Not, co.Gwriaht 81 Co.; Preps. Ac uainted g.. let me introduce jou to the Walker Masa .(The House of Plenty), eirrhome-comfort-islaa paramount factor. It is the one • hotel where the management.lend, every effort to make its patrons ._. _ . - _-�..._ -. feel it is iirust like home."-- THE WALK -HOUSE ER The Howe of Plenty 'TORONTO,' CANADA • tish 'Traction Engine Owners held at. Stirling,. William'Reggie, Dunferm- liee,. 'was : re-elected president. • Second -Lieutenant. M. D. Mackenzie, R,F.A., who has. been. awarded the . Military Medal, is a grandson of A. Mackenzie, 7 Ramsay. Gardens, Edin- • burgh. , ' Furness, Withy k Co., of Liverpool) .. have purchased from James Gardiner of Glasgow, his fleet of -fourteen car go -carrying steamers, W ` -he Venison. Snpp1y f oinmittPe fS Scotland has asked. those who have " venison to dispose of to: do so by ,sale Sir Robert and Lady Baden-Powell paid a • week -end visit to Aberdeen in connection with- the Boy. Scouts' and One Lesson. a Week Habit.. . - It'is•no exaggeration to say that inns,„nf t w !`3ilnres in usicaledu- ;Lac.... M;us•••s was immediately transmitted to Pat; and•her craving for adventure led' her into a. daring experiment. : Before the secret service men had' the biplane that had, 'beenused at. the ,been on the job an hour, Pat ventured fi The' "Great White Way" had never experienced such -thrills . Just as. excitement in the heart of had been taken up • through secret "I came m e Out t fo r a stroll just to make $e r was -at eta nio t intense- heir-- serviceagencies, ichastened'to he YourjoboaBier. and thousands stood in terrorof some headquarters and volunteered what .'Much obliged' for your thoughtful, time. forth in her Apache costume for the To Phil •Kelly, the identity« of, the1 pui:Dose of testing, for herself, their' pilot was clear.. :She had gut erne , abilities. When she appeared among him a sin .and. the eat• de -presence was observed over. on h g , gx the trees her teetive felt 'keenly• humiliated, even by the government ; operatives, and though he rejoiced 'keenly.. the "success that the 'at once began to surround her, had attended the daring.girl's advent Gradually they closed in upon the tore. .. - _ . pp FurpTe, Mask:'ilntil she; halted -at "She'sca wonder, for• . sure," 'Kelly every turn she •niade Finally, the said to his assistant, when he had leader of the secret service band plat= finished reading the newspaper ac -1 ed his hand upon hershoulder, as she count of New York's evening,of terror. emerged from the shrubbery and said: Very naturally the sensational of-]. "You are my prisoner, Purple Mask. fair attracted the attention of govern-, We have been sent try arrest you for ment officials and orders came from endangering the love's' of thousands in Washington that the matter must be the air raid one New, York." thoroughly investigated. When .Kelly, Pat took her arrest good naturedly heard that the subject of the air raid enough, smilingly remarking: • unaccountable disaster, an . unprece dented thing happened -every light in Street or building was snuffed out. Tho "Tenderloin," for ,the ;first time. in the ' history of New York, was in titter darkness. • Police headquarters, acting upon ad- mice from the commandant at (lover- i• 'lor's island, had . ordered the power floatriliansi to shut: off every electric ght, from Columbus Circle to the ttery'wail. Iii a twinkling the or;, der had been obeyed. • e' hours of terror, that. followed the linking•out of New Yot�it's.f'white ig1,L.,,Will' be a topic of :converaa, lain and sensational eknment as: ton . yea. Girl Guides movements. • Mr. and Mrs. Matthew TI: Stewart, both octogenarians, and citizens. • of Govanhill,,,Glasgow, celebrated their golden wedding' recently:.. _. The Lords--Commissioners,of His Majesty's Treasury ` have :appointed Lord Salvesen a member of • the Scot- tish War: Sgavings Committee. • Elizabeth Paxton, of .Partick, was fined 25 for falsely representing that -she grew fruit in order • that she might get 21 -pounds of sugar. Lands-and-Fishing•-Gommittee� of ,.the Aberdeen Heber_ Board re ported that• the total weight .of •.sal- mon, grilse: and. trout caught there this year. was' 76,242' pounds. ' Harry,. Lauder announced in' Edin- burgh that a committee had . ,been formed to..raise £1,000,000 for the. benefit, of Scottish soldiers on their' return to civil life:" .' ,THE' BAMBOOS OF JAPAN. ' Have;Remarkable Power of Resistance -: -Against-Pressure. To Canadian eyes the sight of an enormous trestle work of slender bier; boo poles carrying a railroad • track across a mountain ,chasm might not - immediately inspire confidence. 'Such, however, is a common o.ceurrence in Japan,, where bamboo is 'used •for a multitude of -:stiuctural:.pua�posesr-•-- -; ---. Japan; has. ntore that sixty species of bamboo' which have been named, The tree grows With amazing rapid- ity. For;commercial purposes it, is• often• used.:spht',llutt more'-comaimoniy in the original round shape for the .. power of resistance in bamboo against ' pressuio is•--•reinar-kably •great: ---Gut-- - LSY tiia.fi.iii:3 . t fcvu th,.ze to -tai ',car; itis "ilnrnrit eFtile� epi tciuiti -} =• vantage of 'the bainboo,•as compared with. the Canadian spruce, foii, ex- ample, which for saw timber purposes i above ' cannot be utilized usually until 50 years: Japan's :supply of bamboo forests is constantly increasing as artificial affor-estation--is'•easy. -�- .ln the form of hoops for barrels and ails the split -bamboo is manufactur- pails, P ed• with. a view to prevent unsightly change of color or to prevent splitting- . - . Mid .Other damage by oxtractinig:._ths....._ oil while the bamboos . are • still in their original round shape. The pro- cess gives the bamboo an attractive lustre. ” In the whole of Japan are .over 600 species of forest woods. Twelve hun- dred and eighty men are employed on the state-owned forests for protection and improvement. into buying Only- Oeoulne Victrolas and Victor Records bear the Trade Mark. known the World- over . t Iect. information felt in dutyhbound'to do so.' on the sab-; have��naaid bbedhyouanyi'now, soonerouor d y His information amounted •to noth• later." - ing more than suspicion, but when• his .While the officers and their prisoner report had been 'transmitted to Wash- wore exchanging this badinage, they ington the orders ,came back that the bad been walking among the trees to Purple Mask mutt be apprehended ward the path that sled out of the at all hazards. o. The authorities,; et rounds of the House of Mystery, into course,, had not understood Pat's ex-- All street._- . ° ploits in foiling the anarchists, and uddenly, froth behind a dense hadtold them sinsply growth of shrubbery, a hall dozen of what Kelly P y . served' to center tlheir,suspieious of. Pat's -men pounced upon the officers, wrongdoing around the Queen of the and engaged then in a ,vicious fight. Underworld. • lin the first rush Pat slipped out of her Several of the best secret service sip- eape, leaving it In the bands of her eratives directed by the' Sphinx, began would -he eaptor and fled "speedily shaclorvin The' House o£'. Mystery, at from the scene. _ ii+i one soul shall live, who'experience once. Their presence on the ground • ' (To be continued,) Look for it when buying° and be sure ou get thegenuine article ---the real. thing costs no more Berliner : Grams- hong _ 14ONNTREAL LIMITED Lenoir Street• �« ik This interesting nxammal has. pow- .- erful front claws for tearing open ' . l; ant hills and decayed loge, ,a tongue * "' that 'is a foot in length and a long, bushy tail which, according to native , observers, is used "to sweep up the ants.::. , In reality the till is not employed for any such purpose. It 'serves for something quite different, as one may see when the animal lies dowel.. Then the hairs of the tail fall both ways over ita body in such a' mannera as` to form a sort of roof-thatc)l, shedding ' , rain and keeping the oWner, dry la storfniy weather. C,. OA • • -..:-.1rw..+.r.