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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-08-22, Page 6•••••••••••••••••• OF MANY IN THESE $OW ROWFUL OAYIS. 4111.•••••••••• • roams. —noir MOW this times. sent labs- my OF The giri grips bid arue and there a hustle question yesterday morales; He stopped re -Yee," the **Idler audwers. "It *SS I UNDYING GLORY1 FROZEN LANDS ballet just as we were lee viug the trendies. ?be law word he spelce was your name." TOWN OF IMPORTANCE BEFORE PRECIOUS STONES OF THE FAR NORTH. • 1.1.01.1010•10 Just fee a admirer the girewife iTHE BIRTH OF CHRIST. swayed to her eorrow. Then ehe held , I out the parcel. ; ,- "Tbera's the dandwiehei: 1 gat ready laileaelteele Seirft is W*11 Meer ' tor Tim. Happen you cuedo with tatted in This Little Sketch. rem. rIt be getting along to the shop. , , You'll be wanting more alealiells!" Drip. drip! I Out iuto the rain she atunible4-- t The raiu at the stetion roar ticked ' one more warwidow wbo remembered leke minutes sway. and the grey dawn that her man was a soldier. , POMO throughethe drizzle. Here and ,i Sere lights were out here and there , a sleepy porter awoke to activity-. l NELSON'SFLAGSHIP, Little 'knots of waiting women were tandiu- iu n expeetant sueeee ea , Britain Preserves veral Ancient Sg a the arrival platform, and eyes grew 1 Men of War, Victory brighter es the mitrutea passed. Soon, il Coins Oldeet. 'ery soon, the train muse come Away in a dim cornerthe lone ; M. S. Victory, the historie Eng- lisb. nian•ot•war whiCh was Nelson's figure, girelike in its outlines, stood motionless. For two hours, except tor ' flagship in the memorable battle a Trafalgar, is Perhaps the oldest sea - an oecasional glance upwards at the of the I:tercel sho ,eeneete she had It has been kept in a fine state 'of .• year cat the anniversary of its launch- , Station dock and a tighter clutching , worthy vessel in existence. preservation at Portemouth, and every Sleeved. The Leave Train. A sleepy porter eliambjed b.er way. "Waiting?' he caked.' "How longwill it bet" "Here any minute now, raise." a The girl's eyes brightened, and as I the porter disappeared she shyly e relied her left band. A pain lint Of •11014 gleamed on one of the Yellew- stained fingers. "That =mitten job do make you Mucky," she soliloquised, "but Tim 'want - • A choking feeling in her throat and a sudden throb of her heart held her That a vrhietle Again - mune the screech. and a second later the ratn-spattered engine Wooed, it* Way aimed silently into the station, bringing intits wake aeong line ot car. 'riggers wbone doors were already - swinging wide. Therti Was an audible soh of relief from the waltinekomen, and the girl oa•General mid ImPoverished it by 'with the stained fingers found herself that he fell mortalleewounded, end it heavy restrictions. . iswept forward with. them to nteet the was the Victor* that carried. the dead tense. was ing ,itis dressed, with VACS_ • The Victory was launched at Chat ham dockyards on May 7th, 1765, Nel- son served under Iervis on the Vlc- tory when that gallant' ship lived up to its *Janie off Cape St. Vincent in 1797. On that occasion Sir John Jere. vile in coranitiml of 16 ships defeated , the Spanieloileet of 27 Of the line. I For thie victory Sir Jobe was raised. to the peerage as Earl St. Vincent, , and Neleon, his able lieutenant in tae conflict off the Portugliese oast, was knighted and made a rear admiral. It , was erten the deck of the Victory that I t d th fo atioa et the First Congresa of Aviators Transee formed Rheims From An Ancient to a Twentieth Century City. Barely halt a dozen cities itt all the world have coupled their numea with mors,great eve* than has Rheims, Rheims has been a theme for news. paper stories ever since newspapers were atarted, butiit was an important news source even before the printing pros was invented. The capital of the Champagne has been indicated on every' map drawn ef the western war front since the Teutonic hordes began their invasion of Belgium' four years ago. Ewa close to the direct line to Paris. It has been a storm centre almost from the clay the war started. The re. peated bombardments of its cathedral, Nelson d roc e e rett '1".."•"•• Why Germany Has Made an Impudent Claim to Spitzbergen, an Arctic Eldorado. A willow which reaches the height of two incheit ie the only tree which grow e Spitzbergen. Tet this bar- ren and ice -bound archipelago, which lies threeltundred miles north of the North Cape, is a regular Eldorado; Once it must lia.ve had a climate as warm as Attlee, for the cliffs, are felt of coal, and it is coat of as fine quality aa can be found- anYwhere in the world. •, There is gold there, ,too. 'A small Hnglisb. sYndicate was at work there before the war, and did wen. Its marble is the *Lest knevin, next to the very` rare ,and choice Mexican marble, and, there is iron as well, in the threatened-and-actual,Attaeke, elleareet quantities. _ the city, its gallant defence all have Spitzbergen le a present a. bone of beenrelated in deeptatches daily. I eontentien; but it le rea ly B s There May ee sone ea the yaun5ez, territorl, our IlachavIng been etalested" generaeion who imagine that Rheims ,there so long ago as the year map.. was a discovery of this war. Students' A Good investment know that it was an inniortant townj before the birth of Christ; that Caesar ehaN°a•keerenealyeecte "in:ywahawyritri tsrteoarseufreosr speaks a it in his Commentaries; that civilization; but enough is known to the Vandals captured it 1,400 years ago; that those other Runs put it to4, be sure, that there is enormous wealth of mineral, gold alma probable; pre - the torch and the. sword twelve cen. pions storieit around both Pelee. tures before William of Hohenzollern • was born; that once in the fifteenth huTglieeee4mAnstractio expeditieus found of oat in the Antarctic Repairing Blow -Outs. In my experience it aeldorn pays 'WI have blow -outs repaired when the fah. rie has been torn open more than two mehea. One that east $4 to have re- paired ran just nine =ilea. Another costing $8 ran a little over 200 miles, and others cost from two to four cents's% mile for the milage they made. IThis was net the fault a the tires themselves, fee •alt •of them were standard -made tires which had rein more than their guaranteed znilea. I. The most effective plan we have for obtaining the most Mileage .frona tires IS' to Rut innerlinors in them when they appear to be about worn, out or on the point of breaking. We „make these innerliners from old discarded casinge. Much of the fabric material in such tires is pretty substantial I i when Itepeen a dry place, The fabric is stripped from the rub- erethe heading cut-offouniatheeed a R yed. is fabric innerliner is in- serted in a weak tire or in one which has a blow-out. This fabric should not be cut in two, but left.in one eon. tinuous piece so that there will be no, danger of its slipping,. ` I It is a good plan to ststrip the fabric' out of two or three casings and keep several Koch, innerliners in the car. One of these came in very handy last August when we were quite a dis- tance from home and ea town. One of the innerliners was put in over a blow-out, and that tire is still see - vice, having run eight months, and it r rood** om Ed* Green 1 NEWS BY MAIL FROM IRS - LAND'S SHORES. has not been: removed once shwa. . . It takes some little time to place. the fabric in, the first time, ao it Is well to ..........„,,„,7=7, I putt, in during leisere Moments at home before the easing has Impale ruptured. We have used elmut six or seven of. these" home-made inner - through. them. The edges of the rin_must_be tapered to_prevent_the ... , . . . Human After Ali. ' "'On that expedition wo discovered an officer's horse tied to a *once. We knew by experience that the saddle - "bags Of Officers' horses always' con- ceal something that equal be eaten. We searched him therceighly-under cover -and found in the saddle -bags quite .a larder of line loodstuffs, but- ttuerrnalleddthlearhclorasmelnogeeeth:""1. 711111 we But more impudent still Was the be bt,i3anvtisa.ur ofa band, of soldiers who one night reached their destination -an ()Pen field -too tired to put up their , "Everyone" 'wrapped himself up in The Mill and the Farmer in Northern: x• • • • his cloak, lay down where he was, and. as soon as be ley clown was asleep. The officers shouted their commands at the . exhausted'. scildiers in vain. Then they began' to shake us up, but as semi as dee was awake, the melee Offers) 'one, of the best possible illu,se , fore Ilea gone to sleep again • i trations. of a worltingepartnership be e ' "-For the fleet time, Med' discipline tweeft the. forest and the farm, 'says ' had failed: , • ahe• Canadian Forestry ,emirnal, The , • , .----rt. • • .• lanes are heavily covered Vieth spruce . s • When the Worm l'isriled • . and balsei tul poplar, 'spruce ran. -1'• century it Was ceded to the Englislif continent, and there 10 probably iron to be restored to •the French' . , ore ere, 14 cer Y P • English fleet's battle line off dape , that it was attacked by the Spaniards Thei ' United States paid 'Russia Trafalgar, Spain, in 1808" '. when He hn 1650; that it Was the scene of int- seven million two hundred thousand, vies opposed 13T the combined Recite of portant , operations in 1814, when France and Spain. • dollars for tb.e whole vest torritory ot ' s Napoleon Was playing the last act. of Alaska. People said they:were throw - It was from the Victory: ' that he his great world 'drama; that .during, hie away money: but as early as the sent his last signal, "England expects the Franco•Prussian 'war of 1870 theee every man to do his char:" ' yeer 1900 the amouut of gold alone re ' Germane made it the seat. of a'Ooverael • th deck f the Victory covered in Alartita was over eight mil- lions of dollars, And Alaska ha a sil. ver, platinum, and alter treasures as •vf-te-elir-eenland, ;hat huge Danish terri: tory, hae- copper, lead, silver and tin. Flakes of abeollitely pure silver have been picked' up in orOvices along ,the cliffs. Masses) of almost pure iron are bforiionudghitntuGrEeuernulapnodw. asOnsiex -which was andat, half feet long by live and a belt feet thick, and, weighed • forty thousand. aoinids. .• Ichall-clad figures that were tumbling hero to portseeouth; - First Airplarie You meat out on to the platform. The ofd.• ship is Ohl seaworthy and And, as it all these facts were not For one face onlY she looked--th* el excellent conditem. 'altinnigh . it sufficient to insure one town's per- „, face the' color of brick Iandscape„ but could ' hardly surviTC a -single snot mama' place in history,. there is Yet ehe'd know it anomie tb,oueande of the fired tram' the great guns of Britain's !another; by reason of which future P -e*” I, chroniclers, are tertain to accord it 1 a same hue. Timhad promised to bring present battle -fleet. „Britain has r her a Gernasat helmet this time, and I served. several tither ancient men of i high place, though t he the fleeting the sight. of one swinging tron the ar, ineludible' IL M• 5. Itallifteahle, I pappecona of present events its merit; pack of a. .corporal from. a *Highland ' which was: built in -France in 1801, and a degree of empe,reauee has been.. Ae., l' regiment brought her heart to a up to a tow years ago was serving as • flied it, •• ' ' ' a training ship for boys at Falmouth. I • It was •on the field of Betheny; jest second's standstill. Then it went me - Ing On again. RS she told herself that' Another historic British ship is the outside maims that the first • Many -Colored Gems. e Tim, didn't wear kitties. , cabala:ea, , which was launched .144 plane tournament was held in Auglist, Precious` stones 'are also found in ., x The Absent One..' '• yeare age. . - •• • " 1909. Only a little while before this the Far Noeth. • One of the most. - Her eyes roamed, but they fatted to. ' 0 • 'e -e.. - ' ' Wilieur,Wright had astonished the beautiful of what are 'called the semi find the face for which she sought A ' ." • SPIDER SILK,. ,. World by the success , of his , expert- precious . gems is named "Labra - queer, aumb feeling came round her ..: . ---,..e ' , ' . • _ .ments at Le Mans ---astonished it by doritee° it ig foundin ,batit; green, gol•-• • "' 'etteert. -Sillaseset be.badtee come. Sup- Madegastite Spider Yields -4,000 Yards emend:sting. that to vise from the aen-Yellow, and aometimes just the , pose --L She remembered that her of Thread Per Month. . ground in a.leavier'than--air machine color of the skin of a eipe, peach. :Are. , man Was a soldier, and pulled herself 'N , - - and to fly about at will was not, after other Is •exquisitely spangle& with ioir. • Up. And again her eyes • searched 'Spider Silk Is e a fiber' SO beautiful' all, dadrealn. „ ' den-yellaw. tleebradoilte is very •high- : bravele. • .; that mane* alternate haVe boon made In, theyarious events of that world's ly valued by camci workers. It•ceraeia .. it became - easier as the ininutee to utilise it. industrially. In, ante" one , eesa einem week at Rheims forty-four from the • barren. Wilds near 'Hudson's; • passed, for the platform was thinning.' instance hart success been achieved 1 aviators Participated. The Apectaters Bay, • • , 'In tWoe bronzed Men and bright-eyed namely, ill Madadaeeart Where wUnin saw Something never before seen iby There are, diamonds in,' Alaska, women were passing out into the 'rain( xecent years a • silk quite wonderful 'human eyes. The 'whole thing *as though whether there will ever be dig-. sodden street'. . She could hear the ; bus been derived °Inn e native Brach' iiiithout precedent, almost undreatned ,gings is another -question. In North. throb of taxis In the aunt. -Little hap- I nicl of large ,eizta Very. •black and , e t of, so different. from anything niati. era Siberia they dig a stone called that strattietl to eat& the voice • sae It is plentifully tetrad on trees. • Not . ter matches of talk eame to hateears 'known as the "%glebe" or obigspleer., had witnessed that the gaping crOWds t"Phenatriteee whiclv looks for all the. felt if deserved a special kind of lap--; -World like II diamond, but le sefeer, ' loYed. A party of ini4-0alted men. went thing ago a bed canopy' made of this leause, an , entirely hew vehicle , of and', therefore, lees valuable: clattering. by, giving her greeting as !silk. and to *Welt many thousands ot ,expressiOn to demonstrate their ad i- The exquisite lapis lazull,. is also ,... they -paseed. Beheld them the coalepiders contributed, was exhibited eel ration, theie.ewonderment, their a e. found in Siberia, and. is seat from . petal with the dented 'leaflet salinter- • Paris. . - • • , - I . It was. enter nine years ago, is there to Chinaewhere it fetches a lord 1 • ' id, as it seeking for 'something he ' These spiders yield a fiber that looks . tournament. at Rheims: _ which we witnessed, 'marvellous it .' . • The Ir Pg. Pliee., like -spun, gold.. A. French missionary, # feared to find: - - • • ' • Aniethysts and ivory: ImPeisone- then' Ja i appeared, was crude in the light of :e, e eyes of the girl -Wife glanced at .Father .Cembone, 24 a i future developments, the,.Al ''sp. none." -a very beautiful yellow - a. query in their depths, and the einete` Match beim% -with their abdoe • ' men. gulped and passed 'slowly. • ,A, 'mats prtkrading, and .literally reeled tvance toward perfection which rapid - green stone, is dug in or 055. Nor- CONFESSIONS tF A • GERMAN DESERTER ONE, AT LEAST, -WHO StiUDDERS AT.WAR'S HORROR,S. rrrrrrp • Here Are Some Vital Flashlights on • • I the Hun Military Machine and Its Niethods. * • • • • We are preate to regard the gentle Hun as a man war) avvele in blood - lied and butcheri. Oe some this- maY be true enough, but there is at least one "German wbo shudders at wale with its attendant horrors. • • The eoldier in question is a' 'aoung miter who is now' "wanted" by the Gerthan •• military authorities). From" the very outset 'his heart smote him, and. bis sympathetic description Of Belglan refugees rings eingularly ih our ears. • , • • , ^ Strecken and Terrified. ' "They :had Probably- walked :for • • . little. way- down the platform lie the silk outeof their bodies. This was esucceeded. Henry Fermate ' • . paused, hesitating, and afraid of the the firsternde method. No* (for mar- , amazed the world and woe ae tee. • •• lob before lietia - . -a ket purpose) they .are heel in ininia- by flying 118 miles; not in a strai There no Cie left:an-the-platform , tare praltiPle straitjackets, .each .c.....on-_ Bete or cvse-country, but round , now except these two -the • man kc!•teining twenty-four spiders,: while the *mind the course, never tose big naPPeninge In the Emerald Isle of Interest to Irish - Men. • pAriee.. standard cloth. is to be manufae fac ured in England, mat at the same tur d in Ireland tine same as is al'here was oe total 'absence of pig buyers at a recent tair in Athlone. RIK1 the enimals had to be driven hinno again. Private P. Binke, Canadian% • wile was awarded the Military Medal, is La osuoattooutdedr.ryT: Dinka, Midland ReilwaY, The Department of. Agriculture re. POrtS rtita dUrbig one weelt recently 15681 Mite were boueht by bac.Oito ciners in Ireland. The Bollermalters' Society of Bel- fast , ha,ve pledged . their eupport to tha Erapire for the destructien of Prussian militarisni, soTihatliZsy•ttSecn7eilts .4°--.44.etrft 3tl-i,41,„;11'41fril China Cathedral ' :in memory cff - =outs who lieve fallen in the war. • An interesting ceremony took place in Belfast reeently, W,hen the Lord Mayor Presented illtitainated Certift. cates to the relativee ef soldiers. • • rive thousand eggs were 'sent from, all parte of Ireland to the war -time inaln,eihnialdidaott EtuPpeeyr.virtfo.ounAt, street, Dube • To plate Ireland% atttections in .lurtieNhe•wanodssuBeriitirosohwpna, pweesill.,stpheepaCtkon:ucluil • • ' equal . to a penny in the ie adver- • • tine. • :' • : ONTARIO'S OLAYBELT • • • Ontario • Ontario's'Olaybelt area'btvin the . • • . •:‘ Quebec border and Beard, along the • •'; National .Transcontinental RajlbY e ;‘ . , . per cent. of • On one, of the Melanesian i Islands ning as high as 80 t° i' .the stand. . The newly -arrived farno , in the Pacific Ocean lived a muchebe- • lived pastor, a native,* the name of er • must clear. his kinds of the . teep •- , . e ays, for they .Williani. Iiiith one exception all of growth William's little flock bowed before his er6P9'. -Irt his first two years ha - as a preliminaty to _field •:. Theett were *omens ' old. white-haired, pastar's wife, Lydia, a lady possessed word. .The one exception. s the not hope to open up enough. soil . toe give him ei profit, but with the aid of can - many an ° hour " h . s " looked , tired -absolutely exhausted. tunately; 4 -very long and very sharp unfor- the pulpwood Oiling at the track for melt, and ctildren all mixed together, of sterling, gealitieS, but also, who had. not betel able to save any- -e $7 and $7.5o.a cora (enrossed); he can' ' • , - , manage to make satisfactory wages • thing but their poor jives. In a. per- tongue. Miss lorente Coombe te s o h e while clearing his property. It is 11 ambulator, or a. pusit-eart, these lire islands of Enchant -la forttutatre'beinits carried aWaY the bridal force -1g war had left thein•. finally -arrived: - all that pastor' day of Winn As- soda as they beheld ens of ui!, soldiers they were seized with such .a. i!ilPt : Poor ' W dailyliaam:torifgtehnt hicieeda,arhoiikicle tup We tried to and out the cause, of that flagrationa 'A much -more potent.. tear that they seemed to crumple Up. min. Lydia had been on the warpath fear, and beard that those fugitives mi.. and refused to allow him to have his argument against destructive fires le had Witnessed bitter street lighting in He longed to speak his mind,bilt i the •necessity of having in the Clay- . the clattering tongue Bevel. ' ceased. belt 'cbuntry industrial towns to fur- t their. villaga - They had experimiced war; had seen their homes burnt, Presently the cher& bell rang, and Irish a inerken for :fatal peochicti(in- '• William hurried to hie vestry to robe, cleding' pidieviood) and to :provide. ' their itimple belongings perish; periodieat ..employnieht. . Such a cam-!' end "LIrdia to place among the wonierie -streets' filled. with dead .and wounded ,- • wee bination is seen 'st Iroquois -Palls,.': hadnotyet been able to forget their Iva soldiers." - . • ' • cern' e Lor -ward in his surprise' to laaarni where 'the Abitibi 'power:: and Piper • ' .. . . , . . . . . en prayers were ended, , . • . . ,• . • , , la few ewes. .2 conipany has paid a list of.. $1.10,000 •• . - gooa. reesion for the attande in whieb, Was the text' a her 'frusband's dja-' ing „Country for many yearato cbitte', Met -regarded the,ancoming fee.' Even ceurse!. As she sat thete *meekly and Results a tbe-,same hatue will fol.:. when they were not committing atrcici- tearfully below Iiira, for (Mee Williafiti-1°W the DOV..1.3111P ties,. the callmisnese of many. of .1104 had hir heart's desire and could say ing, to be *erectea by the, ppFuce, Palls .. • ,, . . mill at •Esainskae- • , . , •;,- war comrades disgusted lien. ' • ' itevlicit he reallyethought He had the 'Pulp encl• Paper Compane, of 'which.; e, • • "One eve) he says, "wehad to 'first 'Ward, andAhe last -weed, and all Mr. E.; Stewart, Toronto,- (fernier ' ir to f F tr ' is Man ing • ! * • • .• • • therefore, contrary to the sett ere • financial interestethat the forest ma- terials be Wasted fie the ' erear- ing process through wholesale cote' . . • . • This human yeefig Bun:confesses ' • Whet Must Lydia's "h Month' and' wilrbuy' every. Pound Of with sheltie -that the refugees had been when. she found that she .herself farm produce.amsed in the eurrou.nde hn way, nncl garnets and tourmahne are fortify a email farm we had taken .the words between! Lydia was t . . grea - 'Director. This plata will create an .' ei: got from Greenland. In . one of the erom the French a day before. • We ly edified by that sermon, and the reit industrial t on the C, G. R. 'at the - ' 1 Iniost unknown Arctic islands of Bra were to construct machine -gen eta- , of the:island hugely enjoyed it. 'nd tish North_ America a great store of pleeemente, . The moon, Was shining t . __a...ea...ea.. , - • edge of the eoldiers' settlement. e It Will Provide not only a •centee -of erne . . • ht 4' -amethysts of the .fluest quality 'were fairly brightly. . lit an adjoining. gar- t. The neatest Place in the World ployment and immediate buyer 'for - . , . .. !recently discover„ed. a; ' dee there were some friiietrees, an , The eneeseem. ee 13eing, the. . • , . .. k - - • e kilts, who isn't Tim, and the welting 'silk is reeled. than thirty feet frota the eartn. I h Of ` t a •th ran -1- settlers wood, but will me e a pro - What is per aim e most amazing apple -tree among •them wi some ap- enjoyed •bt# the -hill station Clierra- can *depose of ' his goods. at the beat -. lett place in the Warta has long been Market an„ which "'every soldieresettler - panel. on, the slope eif the elimaliyas peke,. •... based on .a forty -year record at • the ' le • - • A' nlaybelt • , 'ili •Aisam. . The latest Official value; . lite dirappoIntesent . , s , . .(Siberia I elf, an e O. • f th . sTb " e the b ' ' • ' ' islet) who gather the spiders from the ever asseiribled teansformed rat mi.' e te d th so if full o at tree • ouga Y of a.himste eternae ice to %the north of "A Fretieliinan had hung himself On Inuits in the spruce caveie., ..• , l'h location:Of these nkills-4 in the. • . . , . a congress o ir men, . e f!rs , 1 ^ -- ' . . . . •During the p st •century sh ds sappers , . , Cherrapuriji- statism, is 4a6 nclics e . ": ' 41 say: hec4orries, "are you Engel"' ; • On. deity mornings in the summer- 4:, siding . . , 'ner the cause ,?f . settlem!nte, tThoe:e: ', supplements in a most v uable m n • w Ate. average ,spider, thus dealt .with. • It semis strange ehat Rheims should lt e • °•:c3„aole she. waisee're haskelyi tete yields' la lave ar six successive _ret, •have been the scene of this initial ex -I - is that C0E. pies still attachedd tained :in the Liakhov Islands and , • „. erimer lugs during a:menth 4.000 Yards °I slut aibition by the monarchs of the air. The Callous Hun. - the franthir of• th Girls do this wotk. It Is they . New Siberia, *These lie in the midst , • . • e 1ozks ieund forlornly, 4 - trees and }tasten them mto the strait-.1ront an ancient, •to a -twentieth oen- tusks fif the no* extinct raemmoth. have henetleere for days, scietei ot our aneaum. Blatiforde‘ the Wellatriown , Tate little is at her elbow mow. jacket volitrIvances, „ • tury citv 'Even if the, Huns, pera a tine et were eeeer 6 g hi their vandalism, aeetroy et the apples, !authority on' Indian meteoroloev eth- f eil Ivo have been broughtaut The soldiers took the apples -without I apRears to be p.enty af smite o , P • le an raet gel een eaee the tirae cam omen sees. • extended °Ter i the last Vestige of the nc.ble .katheo 15 OS • '• ' thodght that the mean in sonee placese the mills supplied vvith raw material, ,. • opera • • •• • .a 'loess ate bushes, :cobwebby ,plauketsaigi • The tofrit eeeeeee. ae and sold. at..v.sry litale prices. •' _ th_e • tet atteut the cleteal at -Cherraptinji -exceeded-. • • - Than." <:' 1 fbut n where amounted to 000 incheS , -. A 4,14,,,, u _ IL... , , chat naag proud Place an history, not emus of. ' ---'--c--"--- I.. • 5°° Inelle.s, if tha•loteSt flret stapIrrelsed with•- have beau ,woven by fairi • • H If tild 't the • - • al everY living ehe fewer •of. the Tor- • 47,1,-ar t ' - • They are, spiders' webs, not at all like the lam" gdoni'' which there. rase, only ,to- . • . • •. e hintso , co notouch faart. asthea7Intidaial n.±e.estafttdisongIst.hsenrp'rkains: 1 61t• •Ser• • • • Argentina. ire the fruit but when hunger, (trove, heedid 'Aftsu ExPertiPen s • - .;'' Lt-‘g'0,!_ne sell*Zabe4 ' ' filet,se spun. high In air, bit oe derise gs•-n-vAlitt' les.Pauttes of the-trininph• • - -Prelaablgt beano:Se they are• -I tha-t fscience w- is everniore to Plaahletion el• " :tint scrulLet esed by that recently reportea by Fief Can CaterOillars, Think? • - an ve obtain * I ' tO t-a8sgr-0,1 -other - , . •tyees' st-i give It• .11 salv 11211*= to capture •Veri tnilliete tweets- °influence 'ale destinies of nein and na, ed. better results with eacirses more ways: The following lodident shows °II, Campbell, it at Nirtilalealei in the Tsland of . Straterd Univer- L It caterpillars. cantot acttuilly think an ten• years old than with yotinger even Fritz surtpe his aingers oc- • 0..y. • azg ,te ent gertaa•.; ;In fsTonIUy aet palate* pietures eitees • • . •th • - Arm such cobvvebs hoe deveIoped-L - • • .... though jest taw it Is done (fee imbse- .""" Patent leather gauntlets have been "Our field kitchen -1md 'net yet ar'11912-16, inclusive, the lieWatiare sta- sense net genera • -eeeeekeeety Inking tLe -tropby. =Ltd ••.- y r cogn . • . 'IV•`•ttl "tr-1 zorn,-g?" •ng'g 6.1Ti• • gramiug) nobody seems ta'know„. • • . tanent artificial coffee' has been in- found valuable a .„ e e • London Institution. leeture some time • . . dclitiOns to th quiP- rived SO we ere compelled to find 'Aim Which is 5,075 •feet above sea - V dui k k h b err 1 • • • animals. , casionelee it ,discipliae..a Nete'ai /lemma. mow. :the yea -es iteppe'aes that they have a degree of . • • • II o ized Ina els shiny way whith the vented in, /apart which is seed to lave lama of Polices:11ga as theY rflee.t right our oval food. Having -714? meat, we Ikea, recorded the astoeishine, mean ago re • c noc w o e =,an •Is.regDadizg ter. If a maa' reanY..nt lore with a,' the- rii„..ht flavor end a large percent,. o.t night and al eignalhng ,ivaf- went through the garderie in eeareh of *annual rainfall of 51$ h ' studying . the insects • for • half a e'en- • etn„t.cyme., no tea f liter freode5 are lavisThIle. age of tocrislortent • fic. ' potatoes' and vegetables. Et . teem eg eeee. . • " ''14 LL?LV • tury, showed that they really seem to be conscious of their triark ng and col. • :.„ • . . - . 10131m. X3Pc•122.mm, csE *03131.0 413-itz Alec „ , tioNal 1)0,14iss PIPPlti -Hatt EasisAtiot . *Mitt tier.10 -Nat ZUFF, 41E,S itOEEtto,:iROS VaATAY.It is ,fmAitrint. OR itusr TeLLNOla, tatitivr 1 REAMS AtIGIN egeWisiss-VouXtleel asti ies 14ELE$ WELL re; tiktE DAelE. Is ABM/ As, Ji•ITERern . As A prAsi4 ToM I yiAtiar lokrrq Q91Y• ?MANG THAT YO,IPRA Oi ' OPP 190 THE SIDS prdtC"-- IT WAS DISORAegfal ta r • „r`‘'.' • - "11 ••• • " •-• -, • • , • . • • oration and are able to Use the • • knowledge in' protecting themselves . • from birds, th,ir natural enemies. A *picture of a'geranitunliinneli threverr- on the screen-apparently'represented only a mass of dead twig', Yet 'there were included eight caterpillars, look- ing most exactly like t • • even more rerria An tective fore* le aMMISO of Pro' the tat0••,''TgoMay he ri6On when --.--,stpihor spins the T000011 011 lit ' I "ftil,j id evidently becomen aware that ft25/Peof may boom° detaehed'and that A fall -rosy ho fatal te the Chrysalis. ,Co prevent this. Catastrophe the sat. to the stent b"silken threads. This ' erpitiar fastop* tho Vette Of .the leaf Strellthatilig of ellkOn, has hien 11000441 AIM/ Ammo, and is striking • e1itilsr0 OW it %list realise the dogs& from e fall. • KentUeltyand PellnaY'lliallia ProAttes' heaths all the Cannel coal Mined in, the M• ilted States. '•••• ••• • ate . • t • r. •