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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-04, Page 6* • 42 a s • TS =mown. run THE EARTH, the defame' of An Observer at the • Freed. to thin oute Mid Me they refeated lower, me us the inicreasion that to a colossal height. In another Moment I caught: 1 tight, through tt tenon** hole, of a 4 tiny, triangular Well et green, which, feeseeded-ae ene ef ,ABOVE the ge.et tenets: of fesei "Coptineete It teld i were we were. It also revealed us to "Areble" • (the/anti- llow sent up- sane "frightfelneees" • aIreraft gun). That persietent old feI but he lutd not *flowed liffiejettelet ler the wind. . •-Zt.xs easy to imegIne Or feeling • reltef at the dispersion it the stone'. ; OtherwIee we should have had to• dive through the clouds and do our reconnaissance on ' their bottom fringe. Now, however, We went about ur work in 'the ordinary way and were erten ready to return. Aeroplan I was at in ftevorite grocery in the little Prenelt town, buying 'for our mess. It wee raining in eheets, Awl / reflected • with relief that it Was "perfect airmen's weather" there weld be no flying- that daY, • surely. We had had a busy time of it, and a day off was welcome. • The tnieetion a issue was the price "'APING FURNACES OF HEAT' of honey. I Wag; annoyed that IrtY . Vreneix had not made any inwreesien • - • 't Somethime .AboelVeals ealmes ana ,T ane was repeatipg .4rop ghee" r4irthuak 'for e BUT THEY CAPTURRI) THE GERMNTRENCUES the fifth 'time. when I heard the chug The name volcano is derived from • of f4 ttletereyele-an it India Up OUt. Vu1eaius1 tlie'144of itie-OT the an.: vide. I had a nasty feeling the eider eient .Romans. They are generally was after Inc. I wondered what On divided Into three classes -active, in - earth in - earth was till)," because the weather termittent and extinct. SteeMboli, in was impossible for flying and I Was- the Mediterranean,. is a eo„od,,escaraphe don for duty.,. of the first class, making'it'lery hew.. The- orderly's message was soot eon. light` for Sailers' on the neigkber- ind to the Pointe "A ,.etir is coming, ing sea., Etna and Vesuvius. are good /fro totake'Y°11 tg. WediAttelY tc haak examples of' th*"Seeond kind.. To the. • • " quarters." Popularemind they are .the' chimneys Aa I 'strolled up the' steps of bead. of the yastereaing furnace: Of heat s • euartere Who should joie Me but my. MY- in the 'bowel's.: of the earth, . and uqe flight eotrimander.'e1 leaeer• Oat .wasclaubtp(11§. serve as meritsfor the up afisuOuas I saw him. In rilYmg powerful gases that might, if .con - speech we were "in for it." Air eir- lined, create a total destruction to the gent 'reconnaissance had to be clone, i crust upon which 'we live. _ despite the weather. , There are supposed to be some three ' We were to proceed as soon as the hundee,d and over of these chimneys worst of the eain was oyer. The re-. upon the face of the earth, two-thirds connaiesance was so important that behesiteeted upon islands. America it was to be done on the "edge of the has about one hundred and fourteen • clouds.", .• of these, and morelhan any,other geo- By the time we got back to the graphical division of the globe: • aeredroine the rain lied stopped and Earthquakes appear to be from the there was even bits of blue here and same causes as volcanic eruptions, the there. But it was only A lull. energy of vapors and gases in the • "black ones" were getting.' ready for earth struggling to find a vent. another downpour, • We decided .to - The same night that the city of • "race' them 'toit"-j.e., get above Linea South America, was shaken • them before the downpour started. • down: 'four new volcanic vents. _vents,/ were AV we get off; :the debt of , two found in the Andes. • ' other machines being Prepared in Soon after the earthquake in Lis - case we•did' not get back or "crashed" bon in 1700 there were some Of the was not .too reassuring. . • most violent 'eruptione ever 'mown. ' We were hardly in the air when the sun .'found us out end gave, us a burst ' of dazzling rays. an was gone in a moment, and eve knew, we should not see him again for some time., "Rain Mountains" , , The air ,Was very "bumpy." From . 500. feet upward there were great Current junctions whirl tossed us , About and toyed with -bur endeavors. tomaintaina consistent course - At 400 feet the. machine 'was in the • bottoin.fringe of a amide ;The scene , from here was like a great inverted • • landscape,- With huge black Mountain peaks- turned down.. We kept in the valleys: and. -skirted the. mountains. Here, and there • a mountain" swished us with a shower; as it in- •' dignapt'"at' our " •' But the valleys were elbeing up. • Another deluge was eoinirif We had not too meek time to get, Out of :ft. There. was lightning around.; and it would be suicide to stay below aey As we turned a eharp corner round an unusually. black' and forbidding . Pfajectioix, we found "ourservei in '• a • splendid .valleye At the 'toe of this .there was may what • -we call "huffy • stuff" -e mass of thumish fog, some- , timeS 3000 ' feet through, but 'com- paratively safe for flying. It took tWO circuits to get to the top of the Atelier: Hardly .bad we been enveloped by the ."flaffy stuff" when there was a huge grunt of _thunder that seemed to .coreer• - all -about us. Thunder in the clouds is not a' sharp dap; ft is a guttural roar, which sounds above the', noise of the aeroplane just like a great we „gee:wee seeeeeetatiease..4‘ rerearie.e=tir. ,e.seeeeeezi.ii,.44eieekeheroo.e....e.es.tI , A .1.ii•Oadi OfrIOOttObit ti#4, /315111rd tifter to; chaige In w1dcIi his.k.giment;:1111v:71" *04'4 row Iiimdted. yards' of GerMall'-tre3413, Of .0ils,.reginient• *414 *lin* ;Va. 000, only .14$00.: parae back Orel , I STAR AND GARTER ROES HOSPITAL PROBABLY THE MOST FAMOUS •.ff9Tgi, IN ENOL.41.1sTD: Famous Old Richmond House Pre- sented to- Queen for Red •,Cross •. The Star and 'darter Hotel, at Rich - From the Ocean Shore organized a sine social and dance, which netted $87.96 fee the 64th Owlrhandt Going into Halifax -harbor, the tug BITS • OF . .NEViTS: 'Awn THE 'Pe9t.anian and.• a-- aellnaner 'Phe v'A4 MARITIME PROVINCES.. •schoaner was coniiderahly damaged, s ' but no live* were lost. , .• • towing • ran Vito a warship. The Frank Poster, one of the pros. !tabs of Interest From Places peieters of the •Defferin Hotel. at St John, N.B.eis deal For Many years Lapped By Wal -es of the • - The Union Hotel stables at New- castle, N.B., were burned. ' • he had been, an active factor in the business life of $t. John. • • It is believed that the cut of lumber in New Brunswick, this -season will be greatly reduced. High carryieg rates There are -270 towns, in Nova Scotia doing Red, Crois work. . and large stocks on hand. are said to • • be the cause. •After the destruction of' Caracas the mond on the,. Thames, which has just SYrian "citizene of 'St. •John, N.A., e Moose meat was se Plentiful 'volcano of St; Vincent became •active, been purchased by thereal estate men subscribed $100 to the patriotic funa. in and at. the beginning the earth Was of great Britain. and Presented to the s At Fredericton, Na, potatoes field Halifax that hunters were selling it in six thousands miles.. .disabled Ofricers„ is probably, the most Tag Yeats,. '• in the .streets. The practice Was stop- per, as it was contrary to the health shaken for a space of nearly twenty- Queen lig; a Red Orose hospital:, for at V a barrel, the highest Priee regulations'of the citY The nuareeneet, of the earth duriog tiniemOlotel in England. . George If. 'Barker, who had teen a • en. earthquake. 'nay :be vertical' hoe- •'.T'or.something more than e50 years fireman Ett fit Jh -NB f 38 • ' zontal or whirling. The most destruc- there hu, heena leietelry of this' name Years; "i& dead. , • . JIMMY CREMATIONS, THERE. tive shocks are generally the Shortest on the bre* of Eieluflond•Eille, pee- Mrs. 'Joseph De Young, 'Of Dart:- . • • ' in -duration. That of Lisbon, Nov. 1, 'senting the 4.11est' view of the winding Mouth, NA, Was nearly '103 years old Funeral 'Or Dead Soldiers Are eeee laded about, six minutes Tee 'river that 'eie obtainable anyvvhere When she died. • • • • - Lit 'Near Brighton; Englaed, three shocks that reducei Caracas ,to within allay% Journey of Londou. Judsen Macdonald, one•ef Pictou% eitizene s died. suddenly of A. strange consequence the vvar ruins March 26 1812 were over in The view from the windows of the prominent , s e a that funeral pyre for n sol minute, and moot of the damage , Star and Garter has -inspired poetry- neuralgia of the heart. was troin Wordsworth to Maurice as a pie. James liScSorley. of "city of Conception, Feb. 20, 1835, dont in six seconds. At Lima, Peru, tore which • shot a moose the horns of which had an average ef, nearly fifty 'shocks in a spread of 58 inches. diees are being lighted on the Seine Penniae, Downs in the,Seeth of England. a year are expected, and in seine Perts "Bnrets. in a' flood of glory on the ' ,Lola; the - 6 -year-old daughter of of South Amerlee•oyet sixty have been -` 'Vie*, .,.. '' , ..... Charles Shaw ',pe, , Centievillep - N.S., counted in a year, , not reckoning the Stijl -.bright; .StilI Varied' and forever died after being struck by an auto. slight ones, which ' .are, 'etill more nue ile,w* ,- - ; '.• , Thpi-le e baize . already • been 'seven ,merous, . , „ .,,,, . . deaths iri :Connection with the typhoid - .. The pernianerit-Aelietiere or- depres- ---- - An • auctioneers adVerti4emeritdemie-it,•Derchesthr N•.B, t--- • sipp, larke t1744fs of,:iand °tie of•prin.ieil Ise yeao:iip, 'described ;',the Ditugliters of the .inpire at St; these convulsions of nature: D the peculiar •phenoMena attending ePTAP-belertyenade fvelgelirebelees-Toll-reemeeissteFf,-y-stithee- John, N.B., have xi. inovemeritt on -foot Star • and , Garter, o 4 hmond city. to start a toy -making induste in that the earth -quake at Lisbon the new e the favorite, spot forcenturiespast- of Mrs. A. E. Curren of Halifax has . quay subsided and the spot was cover- the and the ' admiration and re- made $40 for ,the Red •Cross Fund by• ea bywaterslit hundred , feet deep. princes, of the first 'nobility and taste in making , and selling knitting needle Many other remarkable instances are on record. They have been terrihly Europe;replete with- every requisite eases. ••• • destructive to life as Welt as property, cOnvenience for the reception of all Mr and MrS D'Arc •Br n'' ranks in .he pubhe. hue, PeSsessing fiawfield, '•14.31, went out big. game, c 01, kailutesde;.,,T;860Q0,;:pe1r7u9vi7,0ifrsovmeriah-eds.iniilAatt ,ittew.1:°et 'Octenfiive', and delightful'''. ahnudnthinifewifunt Bder:;rw.a. d!u!t a all°°8,9,,ferenr kinds ef. diet have to be pre: - e of the Thames the ..whoIe - MajUr' James, M.D., the 'head of the. Kitchener Hospital at Brigh- ton, 'which aeceminodates • more than 2,000 Indian patients, stated at -the Royal Sanitary , Institute Congress that the bodies of the Hindu soldiers who die in thelionnital are erematest on a specially prepared site at Pat-, thane, oil the Downs.. • Thp 'horning, is done on a funeral _pyre of weed loge, in Precisely the same Manner and with the same ceree filepies as these' petformed India. The cremation is Conducted by a member of the same Caste as that to which the dead man belonged. •' In •brder to preevnt the different A visitation of kind in'Pere,•1746, • . castes from "losing caste," eight dif- Oaracas 1812, 10,0,00 mere were des- one 4. ffie °st enchanthig. M P I pared, and 'there are separate sets of • treyed, 60,000. at 'Lisbon in 1745, 40,000 in the New Calabrias and • Sic= fly in 17e3, and 20,000 mere by sick- irese resulting fromeit-- . „ • June tO, 1814, at which were present it is doubtfel that any place in the . . tures in Great Britain." Entertained Royalty One of the notable Occasions of the ehotelewaseashreakfast served -o Sydney; Ns., wassfourid bi her bethel cookhouses for six different classes of ' men. - room •shot near the heart She died 1 , " . without making any explanation. 1 ' ,efseetelin.,:eisTelle,police arrested -elk Chinese charged With opium sneering: . , . the Prince Regent of England, the -Three of them are hank to fines of 1 war zone contains • a grave of such •A DEVASTATED. TOWN, ' Emperor of Russia, the Duchess. of $500 each and the other 16 ito 4.001proportions 06 e,Flotrokow, ,. Poland. ,. ' SONY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL 'LESSON, - "It/VENDER 7— L�o VL4oash Repair- the 'Tem. • ple, 2 Kings 11. 21 to 12. I, Neglect to Reeeirthe Temple - (Verses 44); RENCH ARle FuLtow•Gtacti[41,1. xt,g4to usiNct CANINES. Trained for Three Melees of Ifork,I Patrol, Linking, and Ambit. lance Duty. Baore the war the French math; Verse 4. delmaiiti, Said to the Priestti. very little use! of dogs for military, --Several years after his neeeS61011 to Purposes. The Gernetes began train. the throne. In 2 Chron.S4. 7 we have ing them for war foe long ago as ao. account 'of the way the sons. oi".. 1085, while Old rrencele paid no attenrc Athallak ruined the temple. ' tion to the subject until a dozen years An the TIMMY • of • the hallowed later, and then, only for- aMbulauce ihinge-That which was , given. tor :the 'work. At the outbreak of . the war vessels and accessorieS Of the temple the Gerniane had 05,000 doge ready to', service. (see 1 Kings 7, 48-01), tio mobilized. .To -day there are only. eFor whom each• man is rated -See 1,200 dogs employed along. the Whole Exed, 30. 12;e Lev. Oa, 18-24 V. 2-8; French. front.. . , • 4 " ArFiVnelk -Magri Aureliellt;•Vebolli 5. Wont his acquaintance -4 the. elericeiking QOM= ,illanoeniresf:niiidi canvass for. tends, each person was to fun of theeentPany, of embalmed • go to those Whom he knew. 'ffhe Mod- dogs: • ' • ern Method at *kiting fonds is very "Before General Wander** •there like the old. • • . • passed ill:7refieW the SeeOna $1111(10i. • Repair • the breaches of the holeire, Brigade, the• Fret Regiment bteltoefel Theword repair means .to .fill up, to wows' and the Seeond :Regiment �f1 calk, eallr, indicating the ,Sort of holes in Imperial Poodles. Dogs over seven' the teMptkwalls. . ' , years' enter, the Landwehre arid all . '6. biethestheet And ,twentieth year those who.: have their tails in • the '^ '7-s,JehoaSh was new -about thirty years shape of e trumpet -aro erirelled in the' • itee- . •'.• hand!' • , • 7. Wh74'ePair ye ,not the, breachea? "Three -classes est doge -are ribw be- -As.no 'blame was attached to the ing used at,the front," said Secretary - priests by the king for their neglect O. Bert. of the French Association in keeping the temple in repair; it is for 'Mining War Dogs to .anewse presumable that the temple offerings paper correspondent' in Pule recent-. had so decreased that there really was ly. Bert, who is back wounded from „ no money on hand for the work of the front, _Was in charge of the de - restoration. Their honesty was not tacliment of war dogs at ,Arras fist nnpUgiled, for in. Irene 9 we read they December. ,"They are petrel dem were put in charge of the public offer- linking dogs, and ambulance degsr • ings. ' to house" • collection ordered in 2 he said. '""The, ,first class are always Take no more money -The "house ' et the sheepdog breed, chiefly from tlirom 24. 6 was now to obese and the Picardy or Flanders, and neted for • their intelligence and sense of smelt. offerings were to be made beside the Their calm temperament, too, counts. altar in the temple itself. II. the Chest ,of • Money • (Verses .9-12). ' 9: All the money that was brought `•-e-See 2 Chron. 24, 9, 10. • 10. When they saw that there'; was much money in the chest --They could determine the • amount by the weight of the chest.. Put uPein bags and counted the money -As the money Was imcoined geld • and paver, it was first tied in bundles, ; each ',bundle weighed and counted - ele Into the hands of the* that _did ifinttlliogfen alti,doagssemleacatieoninofpasrleziabltilytit the work --,-That is, it was paid in- when the doge selected •have been geese to the contractors; whe in turn sent to the front it requires only fotni paid the Carpenters, masons, etc. nights' teaching to make them fit fori • their work. The chief difficulty is to, e WAR EISPEls1DITURES. • make them learn not to bark, but only; . War Goods.; ' . • they startebarking. • • orgr°74 on the head is enough when Violence is wrier used; a tap Terrier Too Nervous. _ "The fax terrier arse was tried, but his nervous system was found to be , too delicate and highly strung •and cosequently hi temperament is too excitable. The sheepdog's sense. of smell is won Tea -1W; be 'easily .detects the presence of an enemy a hundred or even a hundred and fifty yards away. . . - • . "The training of the dog for septi- • , eael and patrol werk. When he is a1 - ways, accompanied by soldiers, is stele • pia and speedy. Of course, there is; $600,000,000 Is France's Bill For "The t ning, of dogi for linking France's growing -digit' to eaccumue purpoe - t is, for keeping .two late artillery . and ammunition is bodiee, of soldiers...he touch with one shown' in an analysis- of-warlexpen- enoth r -requires tvie months.- The dituree. , • eciurse for an'ambulance dog is nearly t • The -total- 'for.'14 • months- shows a year.: , The ambulance deg, - --7----"-- mord'than 3,000,000,000 francs (600,- the 'Patrcil or linking dog, Must be 0.00,000) spent for cannon and -animus taught to bark so as • to :.give notice nition, at the rate of 106,000,000 a to the battlefield sesirehers. when be month in 1914, 255,000,006 a month has found a wounded man. during the first halt of 1915, and •Fanning Dogs. • - 370,000,000 a month diming the guar- - • ter ending September 30. "In thecaseof patrol and linking . The expenditure for artillery ad dogs there muse always beesiene One ammunition are exceeded only by the Whom the :liege bnowelat the point to _ :item of food and -,,toriege, which he is to be gent. The dog must • amounted to 4,250,006,006 francs. have exceptional qualities if he is to Next in order come the clothing and act independently; if he to be used - quartering,. of .01 troops, about 2,- for instance, for dragging a stretcher 600 000 -000 and the pay of the , , ,troops, 00_IneGiee Grave • ghout„2..000.9oo 000 Oldenburg and the „King of Prussia, each, • Beside tile little Russian cemetery, grunt • French Village iteceiired 9,000 SheliEl with his sons and nephews.. The c ne. I The St. John's, Nfld., Trade Review itself filled with individual graves Of ' •"Cheeleohl" einiated the sin Daysi pany, which also included Gener°als says the catch of fish off Labrador both Russians and Germans, is a vast through the telephone, "we've beaten • ' Blucher and Platoff, had journeyed this season be .5.0 per -edit over Mound, covering • 1,300 Russians - who the' old dog to it". h is a p• The' villa of Serenejeesles-Baina--eatefrom London by' coach: the cath of 1914; and the price will fell in the fighting there last Nevem- ,idee, among flYing pen that, a_ thun, will have the double honor of figuring is-Qdeen Yieteria was -a frequent- Vis - lays' . der .cloud 'has- an evil' 'genius -1,vhich in history as the extreme right of the ;•itor to the hotel, particularly (hieing "lays" for one • • • - position of the 4th French army in 'the earlier years of her eeign, and • As I leaned forward to answer.the the battle of the Marne, and of being there were few of her roeal eentem. . pilot', I placed inythand on a .crossing h fi ' • Th • t r rss 01• nip e e y eves a e poraries who did not at one time or :be eyer a dollar better. • 1 fp a little hemlet called Pennant, en the western Shore of Halifax har- ' ber,' Which -is peopled by 14 fainilies, e.. i( -year-old girl netned Bertha Gray wire. ere was jusk the faintest- ownl' ise frorrr their .. ashes. A: anothe artake 't h 't 1' , • ripple of electric , current passing through.. We were not yet spite. out of danger.. _ - • s Climbing through a thick cloud is a tedioas and alleles* job. Thereare _ b m even more ereagnifieente fashion and no .eidentifyingbbjects" above, -below there remained -nee 40 of these -houses ' • vr- •oo--eith r 'There- n�' top f erect,: anti narte-of-these Were en5eln- or bottom to anything. One is at the aged. • mercy of the instrument beard. There -Nene- no fighting in the town' ftesetfe and no soldiers were ever-quar-- . : Peering for Light tered there _Yet it receivestO 00Q h its M3r pilot poised the machine beau- in six 4ays-10 for each building and ; tkie emoe,e Given a fine pair of hors- • LkJ year ago it...was a local sugar refining during the decade preceding the fire centre and a watering -place of charm- of 1870, which destroyed the gree.ter frig cottages and Villasond some lux- Part 'of the luxurious building. • urious mansions,. its , population was ' , Within two years it was rebuilt in. about 3,000.The I of fdr thenext few ._ye -ars Was at the: Zenith of popular fever. Nine Ed-• vvard, while -Prince • of Wales, 'was often seen there; The cook'we's ek-• depot,- the -wines and. the cost heavy eliongh to keep away' .t. ar.r_carefti isr_foll.00.4nme more than'Ahree for each -hilt b' _ . . ass" as ft nglthe Ieft Mlight. uiing the week of the battle of the .., psweo.r Marne. There were le* casualties ••• We were • not, yet ribieve the region among the civilian's, for those that had of blimps. The cloud gave. us some vasty shift as 'We paSSett its -.Centre, ../.1..ok,eY..*enated .tIgh Shelterrin cellars Suddenly the ilot shouted What buildings.rememed erect when pto ine;dinners giverethere, but the great City the right distance from Hyde Park Corner, the centre of fashionable ton - eon, on a fine summer 'evening Not • ally- were- the smartest of private per. .-The grave, which is at one coi- ner of the battlefields, is marked by more than a score of ' drosses, each bearing, the paines of the men lying under 'it. _ . Vehicles inchzding mitemobiles, were bought to the *Mount' Of, 223,- 000,0(W -francs, and a billion and a half Was paid for horses and mules. The sanitary department has cost 647,060,000 to date an. average Of 88,11b90,01/WeontlUlirsing-1-91-4T--an 53,000,00 a Month in. 1915..The total expenditure for distinctly military' militarY operations from July 31, 1914, to 'Septeariber 3, 1915, is about 16,000„- 000,000 francs, niaking up 73 peiseent of the budget during that period.. t A: billion and a, half has been spent for the relief of soldiers' families and workers- throWn out of emCloyment, while 190,000,000 have been. spent fee the feeding and sheltering of refill keeb. • - :he subseriptions. to the -national. tdefence bonds ,and obligations have furnished 66 per cent. of the fundefor. the total 'expenditures of 22;900,900e - out to wounded men under fire, or • smaiLkartable kitchens on broad gauge wheels to men- in an advanced fighting line, or at a listening post " "War dogs are recruited from a . . parts of France." • "i have already three Bens and a son-in-law 'with the Colors; now I give enyederse-..-mettevivirtaeFrancel" wrete one father of a family the associa- den when offering his deg. Some ambufance dogs are • famous: . TO Month.* only three: There is "Lou. e leu," the gift of the poet Edmund Rostand to the French ,army; "Stop," of the Fifteenth Army corps, who haw saved scores of Jives, and "Flora," . ef the Twelfth Alpine Ohasseurs, who - did linking work for four .days run- ning under a ram of shell without ree ceiving A wound. • Ec(nvoivrY:7 • 000 during the 14 menthe ending sunflower. Vied in • Germaa. . Septeniber 30, the establishedlaxei co-o-kien?: have produced ',16 per cene, and the "Peer for lightr "Peering for l . the Germans retreated Were set afire. i ht" is the process of getting seine hint • To -day there is. ri "Hotel de Wye- . as to whether " fitted with guests, a"Grand ...Or not the machine le ' ,genrst = Tavel- - .se e•-- -- e, . - _........e -e- se- - e;•Beeear," .n.‘ dressmakingtand,,,a,, mil, . . _.. . I strainerr My eyesin vein for i few irill-TY. -e'tahlfehnient'' a gi°e-er' a. --Lniinetees -Then-eight-belowsme_oneteee. butcher, a barber. and a deafer_ in left, / eel, ailash of 'sunlight. 1 was. garden seeds/f4C19131g'a thriYing Taus!' Companies jield their banquets in the . .spacions pavilion,' and • Statesmen and Celebrities of every - degree -Mot be- ' A Site ef ;Rare Beauty. the'daeen-ing CreSent ' let eh d. W os Peas 'century die atteactioee of the, Star upside down A bump then would The • Quakers have erected 58 tem-. • shave etdo_n_e_Lfeeetieeealie,centrols-LVCS,a.r.Y. -here and . there. . creaked and the machine shivered asInluee permanent structureeThaveTheen and Garter waned. It is the conven- „tiohal thing te say..tbat_the.eOraingnf. • din automobile killed its • popularity. _ Ny Other causes contributp.d. The. road; , e put up ay the enhabitants with fends she tipped back. into position. ' made for, the light arid followed the loaned by the DePartrnent of 'file instead of runningthrough pleasant Marne. Seventeen hundred of the rayIferan at . an easy angle; and inhabitants have returned. we • -kept Well On line. The cloud began to thin There w ere tt1 • pockets( of lurht sort of offshootg Ancients teed (as in Warfare, front the great penetrating ray that . The earliest USe ordeleteriotts gases• Was. guiding ns Upward,' In another irielege warfare is recorded in ehe his - top nge. Tlie cloud now wag is, great semitireular ribs bending • ...outward. It was with a Sight of re. lief that We met the old Sun again. .1Ie fairly ,datzled is ;with his' warm greeting. Befkind, on the "fluffy stuff" the., shadow of the. aeroplane was made up of rainbow colors. , We are now 0600 feet up. There brisk breese trom..!tlke west, Oar sPeed was about .110 .milesan ' hour, It took us only a few .rainntes . ,to .cover. our dietatee "ant." As we •'tore along, the 'clouds below, began roe:anent e were in the region of' 'Lilo tory of the Peloponnesian wars from 431s to 404 It.C. During this struggle betvveen the Athenians and Spartans and their reSpective allies the cities of PIatea and Delimm Were Besieged. - Wood saturated with pitch and ma, phut- WAS seems fir'e and burnt under 'the walls of these cities in order to generate ehoeking and poisonous fumes, which worad stupefy the de. fenders and render the task ,of the at- taeltirtg forsee less difficelt • , • .le Wtt6 OliVet Cromwell who first instituted ;the Board of Itade. • open country-, ' was lividly becoming an 'artery of heavy omnibus And train - car traffic. The era of the fashioriable restaurant ie town had begun, and it ; was no longer neeessary to go so far afield for a good luncheon or dinner. Ten years ago the hotel: closed its I doom. There have 6111.Ce been rumors from time to time as to reopening it as a palatial boarding house or re- building it -IMO .a block ot,luittiriens 'flats, bet none of the climes cam to maturity.. , In its new usa. asa permanent hos- 1 evidence in one's own handiwork that vital for officers, it will preserve-forTnialies it dear- end nils I with, fond a work of national usefulness a Ate' mentorieli, Whatbettergift.cottld one WOrderi make another than a negligee She has daintily embroidered? The illuettatioes here shotvp.offer sugges. darks that Will prove adoptable to the many WoMen who are already pre- paring, tor Christmastide. Ladies' . . • r 14465 -This iiarrOw floral border is 1 Inch wide and 6 yardS lorig. It is illuStrated en tteidigee 0088, whfelecuts in Sizes 82 to • -46. transfer 1,0 centai negligee 15 cents, • • 1864 -o --A peat finish for negligee DON, which cuts In sizes 32 to 4601s this scalloped herder. Itie eg filth wide and 3,yards long. 10 cents, negligee 15 cents. • ': ' Negligees Good Christmas GUM. • Very few people really want or ap- preciate an expensive Christmas gift rt1a the spirit of the season and its .of rare beauty: The: hotel is almost completely surrounded by park lands, whir+ haite been gradunily tientared by the Lontlivn flonttly Connell to give the nubile tt;:ty ar• °ifs to. the bankof the Thames. • Home JonrnalQtranefer pattern No. 4405 is a narrow floral border one i. bola wide and six yards long? this 6 alletvii bn negligee NO. 1)088,- and Pattern No. 13540 is a neat finish for Negligee No. 000: It is l'/g indica wide and thise yards long. Patterns, 10 and 15 cents each for embroidery' and gross patterns, re- spectively, can be purehased front Your local Ladies' Home Aortal Pat. t,etn dealer,. Or from. The 1103se Pat- tern. Company, 188-A` George' Street; Toronto, Ontario, vanced by the 'Bank of France. , ' WOMEN D0TORSWANTED. Salaries Offered Double Those _Paid • •Men Before the War. The ,demand for women doetoraej- ment by the London School of Medi. eine for WomextEveri the_Pcista..v house physician and house surgeon in 'the hospitals, heretofore always held by., Mere are •offered to .wseAei. j1us Paid inlai.fir *trite of..the proyinciat hospitals. Women are also taking the practices of Men who have gone to the front ' • • Peerds•of guardians are So hard up for dactors that, casting aside their inherited prejudices', they offer. posi- tions Nvonteir. at increased salary. tlefore the war, an infirmary adder in the Whitechapel district ;who was at. Wore a Mart, received only $50,0 -a year and entolutnetits. Now the same post is advertised for a woman at $1000 and emolurnente. - . • The Weinen.0 Medieal Sehool of tondo n has•tralaed-600 women (teeters now in Practice, and has gg� Studefith On fta tolls. TM, class entering the Autuitut terms ia. larger by 00' appile dente than ever before. Eseape. , Ihndges--4atma was,borri a fool, • °1/11:01:342.4) h, Ilanho'Would:haVe'. been one anyway, aeber--oe-ee is scoring new results from time to -.tiine even among' a people already to economical as the Germans. The Ber- lin newsCaCers are calling ;attention to the extraordinary increase this year in the cultivation of, the cOMMOn sun,. flower; it is. seen in great quantities. , inthe gardens in the suburbs of Berlin_ and other eiticCand-viong railways, everywhere In previous years the on- e•• . 1Y-PraatiOalevalue-ofethe-!plaist-weseineeeee feeding the seedsto birds, hit this year the seeds are used to make in which,4e-pronOunced equat-tajtlfe- -- - best olive Oil for cooking purposes. - A writer is, also pointing to further possibilities of the plant The oileake leftrafter Making oil,. he se yst__Is_on- • excellent feed for animals, Whereas the seeds themselves cart he roasted and used as a substitute for coffee. The young shoots and, undeveloped . leaves can also be cooked and eaten as a palatable substitute for spinach.. In Belgium, too, ‘the Gertnans are turning their thoughts toward vering new uses for old and fattiliar. plants. An agricultural weekly Pub.' Waxed by the German authorities there. haa just been filleting that tett can he made from tender,half-grown leaves of the blackberry and rasp- berry gads, which has' all the quell. ties of its famous Chinese cousin. Without its nerve -disturbing effect; Young titmice are AO greedy that their narentS sometimes prOvide them 1,'el lirta than 42 thousandeaterA pillars a. day,• •