The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-11, Page 7^4; • ; W^' '7 ,;
vIrtr' 7 • .7 7". -,041/(7-1, ^
'o0417 -71111, -
,NOT AFRAiD
MARINES
TERMiNCE zNolernfthntg%..4$4:IO1OF ttheretimt:riyoun,
1 HARD"W
in the person of 4), A, Speen, who
ill()
• shipper and the road and of the cap.
HEAT seems to know hOw to pacify bath the
tain's cargo with precision end, de._
VOW iti(b-WAR •11:0 BROVOIIT P4A' .
' Making Better. Patin Butter. nough to give the 'cream tho greatPst
. NearIrall butter sold 4 tbe form.. aMountiof 'agitation. 0
'.or is of poorer quality than it should!The butter sboUld be gathered. until'
- the grains become about one half the
be, BY Mere careful handling anfilsize of, wheat. Then draw olf the. Mit-
, bettor methods there is no reasen terntilk throtigh a. strainer mid wash
. WhY this product shonid not oidy be the butter in coldwater two or three
- iniproved in quality, but a betterpricelimes or until the wash water 4
—Thahen14407,yeetetTedr-ter it. By carry- moved praetically !clear. In washing,
log out the .following conditions and care sheillei be exercised not to bring
Methods a very inucb better grade of the grains together. in One mass, but
butter should be produeed: ' . . rather keep it in the granular 'condi,.
,
*Hand separator cream produces bet- tien'. Tho limiling14 tb• 9 butter.- r-tr
- ter butter than that separated by tiny •moves the buttermilk and make tlie
- ether method. The deep can surround- butter keep for a longer time. It also
. lid by 014. wa•or is „mai best; pans puts it in better condition Or salting.'
and crooks are third best, and -. the. The, ,butter ,should be taken from
• water -dilution method comes last., _ the churn in the granular en/iditinu
• '".4nd the sat'ipriniziedover it ' -15-eftire-
---TIRIToviiir'aioiiretit, kept in. as it bas been worked together. Usually
nearly ,a(sweet ,cenelition as POSSible ,. 's.ofsalt is added for,eae4
until enough, a cant apace ,ehas been' gathered for a •
- churning-.---Thisrshoid-thoivbpound Ofbutter.
ii 0014.4 . .
One wiliking, at. the time. of salt;
. or ripened, TO ripen the cr,eam. warm
; it to a temperature of 75, ,to 804e7 ing is usually sufficient, providing the
' .grees, until it is sour enough; then
butter' is hard enough When removed
001 &Iva to a teraPerafare: of froin from the churn. If the butter' is some-
., 02 .to cos degrees,. *hid*. is right 49r ii*abltaetd.S:filtd'W$Ohti'llik:Watlefilar°42;'fietwetzig:U1?rse
‘, • churning.. 'Let it stand at this t.r.n* until it gets 'hard emingli tb Anish.,
.. peratnref for an , boar vr •so ,hokore 13otter,10 1.100,3411y- worked enova when
' !ehilkrnirig'41': llossible.;. ..9L*Is v!ill: cause the Water" hag been re:010,ved 010 that
. tbq 'butter . te eelne in better 'edinfitien' it Will bend, without breaking. Too'
Cream that is hair.igs-roiv,PearTicilihma:l'bb::,rouch werking will spoil its grain and
'.,thore.erojutgsholyes4tdir;eidor cbur.ong. , Make it sAbrY, while leaving too much
ter, in it will Spoil its keeping qual-
'It is Often advisable to save some itiea. ' ' . • . .
of the buttermilk of one churning. to • ,Pack or print the 'Mittel-, as soon as
• be Used as starter (the same as yeast it has been workedsufficiently and
in bread making) for the next. batch put it, in a cold place until. it is taken
of -cream. Add a small amount of this to, the Market. 'Remember that the
., buttermilk to the sweet eteanr - when ' appearance of the package; as well
enough has been gathered*, for a ,as the wax the butter is packed, juks
churning; thoroughly stir • it, and it a great deal to .do With this selling
' Will ripen Very much more rapidly. price. • • -
, Care should beexercised to keep this, In order to make a uniform colored
eld buttermilk in as
Possible. : gaed condition" butter for the entire year, some color The supper took place' in what
• 'Iniai be used. Very little -will be re-. Charles Newdome 'at' , first thOught
Strain all cream into • the churn. quired during the spring and summer must be Buckingham Palace. He had
This will remove ' all clots • and months, when the cews are getting never in his life seen so much gilt, so
Particles of curd, and there will holm .0
_.„eari feed- Colored hatter is nut many hveried'Seryants with. ,powderedred
--' idangar or white ispecks tri the 'butter. only inore appetizing, but can 'bo dold heads, or so many dazzling •lights.
Do not fill the churn over one third to on the market for a very.much better And Mary walked through this amaz-
. one half fall; Give the cream teem price than that which. is not. colored. '
:....-. for agitation, • which inintres ' quick The colin should be added to the
churning. Turia the churnjust fast, ant/I...before starting to churn.
• •
• Abaciis a. sevne On• the s‘n4h81110.„-Conliston ,iiirater, the "Photegraph,
. heag taken _while the ve.sael'''‘Vas passing througli, the straits,
. or (Awn*, The vat it .. Alas erathai„, the #eg._,Valla4u*: the Perrot:
Branqaut Moultey watau,'.. • . •
they „encore •her, .11o* sweetly :sire
sang What lovely dresses she ..livorel
'How beautiftil sbe looked!
And More than once he found her
her
le.oking at him, nodding at him, wink-
ing at him with.; that wonderful wink
of hers, and his cheeks flushed with
pride,
At 'eat the play Was out; offi-
cial game to fetch him from the stalls.
He waited some moments in a inks-
teriotis eerie' place in the wings,- and
then finally Mary appeared. .
-"Now,' you -dear old thing, we'll go'
And' have supper, and you..sl?all teil
me What you thought of the play,'"
'shod said, squeezing his arm: -
NEWS FROM ENG
NEWS BY MAUL ABOUT JiHN
• AND EIS PEOPLE.
•
Occurrences In the Land That
Sapreme- in 'the. Coin-
mereial
- Two hundred women are being
•
trained in Liverpool to take the plebe
Of postmen. . •
In the seventy -even livery „guilds
,of the city „of London, there are' in
all 8,659 liverymen.
Britain has 2,300 trawlers, mine
sweepers and other auxiliary vessels
engaged in sweeping the,NorthSea.
Owing • a shooting accident in
Yorkshire, .Pririce Ranjitsinhji, the
lag place, like a queen; holding his .famous cricketer,' may lose his right
•arm, quite at home, apparently: ' eye.
At the door of a private room a The Eton Guardians have revised
magnificent flunkey, carrying a costly the diet of the inmates by which they
holiquet a .rOses, stoped them, and expect to • save nearly $800 'a year.
said somethifig‘to- Mary which the old Miss Botha, the niece ,of 'General
man, could not hear: , Botha, is studying English nursing
"Oh, bother hini!" she said. "Tell at the Priacess Alice Hospital, East -
hint to Yfin away and play! I've got a bourne ' ' • •
much nicer ,companien for supper to With the Men in action at the front
-night!". ' • •• ' • area number of West Eod tailors
• Then, after supper, Mary leant whose duty- it is to mind and reno_vate
119,more -would he ,•tread. those•fainil-, -across the table tower& him. . uniforms. •
lir -Stairs that led up to the offices of "Now,- Uncle . Charley, tell me till I The death ha S occurred at Farley
IVIalcohn, Baker, and Co., Vie doors about yourself. , What have you -been ' Hill, Surrey, of Mr. Win.. C,oiderY,
were, closed , against hiin, and •what • doing all these years?" , aged 96, who rode to hounds "with the
had -been the main episode of his; life••Soon , the old loan found himself Duke of Wellington.
The afternoon light was waning as whole story of his griefs daughter of 'the Minister a Mini
he
,
• • aveMent and looked at the office that
• • • , . The long ,chain of Custom that linkL"
- 'It was only When %he was on the
"1 An Unrehearsed Effect
he realized what had happened.
19;• • c ed him with the time When he was
%-to-4,419•XceiRs:4041,040,iirOfrai-21 boy of sixteen to that moment when
"1-loW, long have 'you been in this he wad shay, was, broken for ever
• firm ?" -,-- •
•
• :`.TortYolour_ years next- month, ,sir.
Was sixteen when old Mr. kaIcelni,
took me on as: office hay."
Mr. Richard Btirten sat in his office.
chair polishinelfis mina.' It was, the•
• second day of his rule there. For
the Aum of several thousand pounds
he had aOquired the Very substantial
old family business of, Malcolm, Ba-
- of Lincoln's Inn
Fields, and he Was in process of, set-
• . ting his new propdrty in order. . •
His notepapei';.still bore the legefid
Maleelm; Baker, & Co., but Old Mr.
Malcolm, who had been the founder of
the firm, and Mr. Baker, his suc,cessoF,
had long since been dead, and Co. had
retired, with a very substantial bank
• balance, to a country estate.
"Yoti are.too, old," he said .shartly.
"Thirt3r,yeati• too old. I want•yotin•g
• men, young blood. Copying clerks
•• are no use to. me. If you eoald work
a typewriter -but there; you can't; se
there is no -purpose to be • served in
talking hbottLit._
The . old clerk; in ..the facl'ed ,black
-. alpaca -east with the quill pen be-
• hind his ear, stared at him: :
• '9 beg your pardon, sir.: I don't
• think I heard *hat you said." • 7
Mr: Burton looked up impatiently.
44 • e• cpoirc. yam. sprvisos an
longer. I have got no ase for you
here, and, of course, I have got to
consider the business.":
Business was business • With Mr.
• Richard •Bitrion.° His was no namby-
primby philosophy Of life. He forgave
. an injury, •if iinmediate Means of
• middle a London!"
repaying it was p'ossible, but he never•
forgave. "Do, or you will be done,"
' was his Motto. ' •
What he demanded Of life was cold,
41culating• efficiency -. that Would-
,. te_maire money.' He was,
Wont to •say; idrith grim araile - et
pride, that lit left his heart outside
'his office door when he opened it of n,
. morning aIld only used his head dur.:.
'•
. • •
had been cut abruptly short, pouring out into Mary's ,ears the Miss Owen /Loyd George, 'elder
he tettered out of the acinare, • what “Istler you •mind, .• yon dear old tions, Ims returned th•her ditties as
was he 'to do? Where was he to go? thing!" Mary answered. "It's time a. Red Cross nurse in 'France.
How could he; a man of his age,,, find You rested: You shall, conte •
other erofifey-orient f' • ,• with Me and look after nie, and neyer
'He was a bachelor, Old -and friend .
do another stroke of work in your
life, But, I say, should -like to know
less, for he, had lived: Wiriest -,whcilly
with 'and for his work. His one. rela-
tive -a sister ten years Younger than
himself-rhad died' a widow: He had
been very fond 'of her only ,da,tighter,
'Mary, but he had been unable to help
her hiniself, and she had disappeared
years ago tinder. the care of her fa•-•
relation -s, • . •
The landlady of his lodgings might
be sorry for him, but as fot'hlping
EMI, that Was Out of the quebtiont.
And What was he to' do? •
He. walked aimlessly down' Kin' s-
tered the room.
,way, staring yaeantly into shop win-.
dows. 'for ten • minutes together, his x on can go- and tell that:gentle:-
poen old -brain detect -told -Stunned: He
was trying Jo think, trying to frame:
. .
some plan of action; but his mind, ac-
customed to''' tread one •beaten path,
refused now to deviate from its famil-
iar track.
• 40 had wandered heedlessly into
the Strand, And saddenly Somebody
btimped Against him, sending him
back against the window of a shop'.
"Beg your pardon, Mr. Milestones,"
said a cheery voice, "but you sho,uldn t
'start playing bliiid-man's buff in •th'e. "Hello! 110w do you do?" Mary
said "I thought I'd just like to see
you. • You know iny uncle, I think."
•.-Mr. Burton turned, and -the ald clerk
_and his late employer stared blankly
who tins, particular beast was who
turned • you off • like that,"
"Mr. Richard Burton," he answered.
, "What!" , she exclaimed, • with 'a.
start. "Mr. Richard Burton, of Mer-
ioneth Place Hyde Park?" '
He nodded. --
• 49tighi!" she cried, springing.to her
feet. "Well, You. Sit tight, Uncle
Charley, and you'll see some fun.
Here, you, Come here'!" - •••
She addressed the;ilkst ,remark to
the liveried flunkey' who had just en -
man that I'll see him•afterall. 33ring
him here. , I've got a little surprise
for him!" • '
She sat down again, picking up the
bouquet of red roses as she did so,
her eyes on the .clopt. Presently it
•penedi-and-a-man-hr-evening.-dre
catered the room with -a smirk of sat-
isfaetion. Mr. Newcome looked -up;
then the soon that he held dropped
from his. hand, •The -man , was Mr.
Richard Burton. •' ••• •
lo exei n. The 6tatement
that -he -gave -fret Tiny le -more
' humane sentiments beyond the region
- Lincoln's .1but his life
• supAilia-not one tittieaf evidencein
'!.;vtfter forty. years' loyal service!"
-the old clerIc starninered. • " •
Mr, Burton closed his penknife with b10-shalr-never.finthit face th t I e "You ne that poor 0 I
• of his White Waistcoat.
'Mr. Neivcome found himself star-
ing stupidly at .a smiling- vision in.
furs. '•
.2"I'm sorry,. madam; but you. are
mistaken," he .steminered. 9'ni not
Mr, Milestonest-mr name-- New:
conie!" '
. . He -saw a -pair of danein•g eyeS-and
a flashing 'gleam of white teeth be-
tween', red, divinely -curved 'lips, and
•• •
.,-Lance.Corporal • Dwyer,--the-youn
est-.V.C. in the army, whose home
at Fulham, has been given a cominis-,
sion ai secaird lienfenant.
•It Is announced that up' to the pr
sent nearlrac.thousand of the old boy
of Haydon Road School, at Wimbl
den, have joined the forces. .
By Order of the Assistant. Provost
•Marshal itinateur photographers
the file of Wight are not 'allowed t.
use cameras outside the • gronnds o
their residence. -• •• * •
Although She has just celebrate
the 100th anniversary off ber birthday
a Bedford lady', Mrs. Le.armouth, ha
during the last .year kaitted num
•bet of pairs socks -for soldiersi
Speaking ' at Westminster, ,Dr. C
Saleeby Said that in the past yea
niedical officers had rejected no fewe
than e million men 'who were
to Serve in His Maest3r's Forces. .
• In.•the Isle of Sheppey coins have
been discovered , buried f the • '
enry Edward I., Edward IV.,
But suppas we begin away back at
Si-MUM/WY TO, CANADA, ' the ranch. The wheat, oats, barley
and flax have been sent to the local
• elevator. Now it's to the roads to
The Re/Minim- kr -Largest 'Wheat go it gao.
Shipping Country in If the field of the late owner of the
3 the World, grill,/ is beyond Calgary the ehlinnant
is inspected and graded. by Govern -
No other Single article of food has merit experts in • that city, although
so much importance or civilised there has been a oared rough grad
aa 11W -wheat nad--in war time- ing at the erevator,
when a country's food is #3,, danger
the chief aindety turns on the wheat
BITS OP NEWS PROS Mit
,TalArE /PHOYINCES*
Itiema of Intoreet Prom • MO4
'apPad B.r %Yea ot the
Atlantic.
Tax coblections at Sydney* C.B.,Ii.
this year, are very .great1Y In mown.
Of last. .
- Fisbernien-at-St.--AlitheliYi- Na..7---- -
trapped on an average 1.6. bevels. et
Ttlere are eight straight grades of coosh a diky,
• wheat, One ,flard being, tho • prize It is claimed at bihr GrimligdsnIsT.S.i -
supply. Bread ,i0 one of the main blonde at , the beauty Show. • Next . that rents there have gene up it* per
items of food for the bulk of the peo- -comes One Northern, then TWO'North- cent, lately,
I
Pie aael Wheat products of One, kind ern, Three Northern, Pour Wheat, DOreheater, *R.; has AU . outbreeli
or another enter into the 'diet of prep- rive Wheat, .Six Wheat, and Peed of typhoid fever. There have been •43 :
ticallyevery white person, . says a •Wheat. Any of these grades may be 041.00 lie far, - - „
.Writer,in the Neur. York' Sun. (a). teUgh; (b) elamP, AO.' smuttY, ' Rev. 3, P. Hogan, rector' of the An;
The united.labgdom is the great- (d) rejected, And this is • just the gliean. Church at Fugwash,t_N.S,,,'„Innis
'est ht_47,tr.,._Pf.'„:.wheakin.thel.world.,. =ft genameneement,--ef ,--the--irritchirs! joist -01u' j otiat-o- ,. .
1-.
any serious rise 111, the /Sees .s'of troubles. Oats; barley and flax are Women of St. John's, Nip; gave al
*heat,. Reim and bread means great similarly long on claSsifying0.* In the '"Ragtime Revue" and Taiseti piwtqc.
distress. for the millions who hover ha year Of 4142,-428 grades of grain- liel-WoMearer-ratriotie ,Aisociatien,
near the poverty line, It might he Weil) handled,.; and.;Of• 'course binned As monster tortObie, weighing over,
,Said that .precticallY qlrgrY• 11:011aarld ,aeparatilZ.D7'.the lake shipperv at 800 lbs., was captured 'Ott LiVerpool,l,
WOultl feel the mare expenditure. . ,Fort William. . ,.. N.S. Ds was nearly seven ,feet long. : :•.,
f As a .result 91 this the efforts of -Of _• ,f the grain grew east of Calgary it ,Building Permits nearly doubled in .
the inniudase British navy in insuring was Inspected at Winnipeg, 'where, in Ste John, $.B., in filepteinber, as coin- '
regular food supplies, is very largely thirlall Of 1913,,it arrived at the rate 'Pareit with the; same month halt .
fociissed "Oh inardi 'g the conveyance of car minute
a a aevery das, for two verretraffie at 1E4; lobo, Nit, .40,.
of 014 immense quantities of wheat' straight, Months. And AO great is the •
which ,the British. Tales,•roimire,, • • deSi)atelk 'obsefyed :By. All parties 0„on- owlag,, itwau ,uaid, td, the',/alling oft.
et ease censiderably. ' hi ; September,
' 'After the 'United k,kingdOin,, .1100 •cerned•othat a car inspected • today je-toartete. , : .
enemy, Germany, comes AR in will leave. for Fort. William, arrive, las; John' lbomi,001),, o• f iblibm/401,,
important 'buyer of' wheat: This is be unloaded, and to-morre* night will
g up n e list of Countries which inixleiL-tnetim!,Peeg,
produce their own wheat. This feet. the grain' has .13een•
• - wagon and broke her neck. .
. 0 gra n, fell rp111 1
junction, after helping lier'husbanil '.
In the St. Jolin,' N,B,- police omit'
has taken place in Germany **adzes the profouhd change that switched to some one of -the twelity7 Timothy, 13„4„le was fined $22 as, 12 ,
since live dient4113 by the railroad corn- months in jail for Using abusive buil
1870. BY -becoming a great indus- PanY to -Which it was consigned, un -
trial nation she is -• no; longer able leaded by the Itorininal, ' Cleaned and tu
entirely to feed herself and thus it binned with, RS own grade after hay- Swinamen, lay awaiting burial, The'
In Halifax the body of Jeseph' •
age to his Wife and resisting arrest!
is essential for her to draw her sup: le; been .°inal'eeted bYeavern- house caught fire and the. body weal .
in face of the feet that. she stAde start 'on its way•back over the 420 put on a load f f "
hi h i th
,
heavily from Russia Hungary,
been shut away from her. But Ger-
another these sources of supply' have
Balkan States and AMerica. One after
plied from abroad.
In times of peace Germany buys fowled covering' the quantity and
the tqouapiritYoteoeft
?tient. A warehouse, receipt
The Receipt is Regisfered. CreolelhileCeda.omultpanuyt:sf•cioorallieritehselorl-)--Soeml3itenimon
• netove grainyb9ay. • . then almost cremated before • it could 'be,
many undoubtedly made provision the wheat is they ready to be ought
all round, and
Against -this. and sold on the grain ex -change, ,
considered eiteellent, 'as many of the
ber was about 432Mo tens.: This lei
• And now the great Canadian staple bamenlisted:. ' • '
There is talk in Halifax of raising
I •
British Demand for Wheat. is about tebegin the first water stage two platoons of business men to serve,
England would be in der wore:• •
'shape than Germany if her importa-
tion. of wheat were interfered with.
An effective blockade of the, British' to lead up. Here comes in the whl
--
Isles would shortly mean. starvation hub nature and irepertance- of -the
to the popitlacp„: Great Britain has Lake Shippers Clearance. Assoeiation.
to import three times as inneh wheat . The ap.R. steamer Keewatin MaY
as Germany to feed her , populace. be slated to 'carry 70,690 bushels Of
Fdrthermorei England possesses a
very small reserve stock axid has hot
the eareftillY planned storage organiz-
ation of German. :
So great is the British aemand for
wheat that she draws supplies.; from
all over the world•and if her command
of the seas were negatived for . only
a few weeks' she would be in a peril-
ous position. •
It has been absolntely essential for
her nationbl existence that England
should have a navy powerful enatigh,
to keep the food routes o en nn mat. -
of its Journey. In the busy seas= With the colors, •',It IS be1ievedtjuis
there will -be 'as many. as. sixty, boats, -ellabee .for cornradethiP would tend to
'encourage men to enlist '
Lieut-Oovernor , Wood, • of NeW1
big and little in the harbor waitin
i'Bwt shhirjuei. c:phhsetOdpillagek
Brunswick,
r:o6' Afrbs. heso-naft Ssts:huveeeandvp:: jannatenir je- tit c7ri appealoeilone. I
grain, consigned toher by s* or seven t • '
•
-tel‘, what combination :of val powers
is ' is pitted against her.
One reason for England's alliance
with Russia, is that Russia is the
greatest wheat producer in the world.
But the •United States is England's
principal source of supply,
e•-:
s
e7
1 - tion. Canada -„comes. next• with India or an average of 2,600,000 bushels a
different shippers and stored in 'font,
or five different elevators • Owing to
the strict Government inspection, One
Northern -at-the 'grain growers' "els.
vator is just the same as the same
grade cat the big C.P.R. house, the
largest of them all, with its 7,500,000
bushel capacity. Bunching 'all ••the
orders together, the, shippers can 'give
• the Keewatin a full cargo at one call,
or two, or, three, instead of five. The
shipper saves the interest on his
money.and s� does the linei*-and the
time of a .big boat may be worth
anything up to $1,000 a day. Nfore
important still,' the whole stream of
traffic is cleared out and hustled aleng
Mooser. and deer are so, plentiful inj
,Queen's ounty-,- Na, that the. farm-
ers say they are a nuiaaace., One man -
saw -17 whilele•was-driiing from Men. -
Donald's Corners to •the range 'near
Washademoak. • •
In the King's. College library at - •
Windsor, N.S., are ,stored.many
scu-
venirs of the late Judge Halibtirton
(Sam Slick), which will soon be ex-
hibited in the house the humorist lived
in. The pioceeda of 'the ' entertain-,
meo.t. ge--taille-4e(1---dr-ess
John Coholaii- of St. John, N.B,, ;
sebrated the 50th. anniversary Of his
having been mede a freeman of St:,
.lohn for -life i•iring." He is 84 years
accounting
by the qutekness of the transfer. The
record case of loading. is 17,000,000 old, .and from boyhood has been sav..
bushels in five days last year, follow-. ing people from drowning. In his
n Argentina fouith and•AuSt•ralia day. •
fo,rino.one-iathriitield. ofanherixenbt.ire co,n8s8a,omop- ed by 9;009,000 in the next five daya; lives and assited in Saving fifty iner&'
lifetime he has saved .pers'onally seven ,
•
•
increased price pf wheat in England thousand for loading within
I
o fif•th. - • ' Vessels of 200,000 bushel capacity • JELLICOFS COAL BIM,.
_
, I tralian Crep. If Russia had had free smaller boats getting a lower tariff. The .British . Navy is the :world's
I
f Ofie of the,cauees, advanced•for the arid over .are '. Charged: 40, centh ' • - • - •••• - .
Modern Battleship '11-seb Twenty -Tons •
24 hours;
a i this year is the ^failure of the•lest Aus- 30 cents within 48 hours, and so on, , of Coal an Houi.
s passage through the Dardanelles or a The average charge a 'cargo loaded champion coal-consuiner.
- • waern water' port this -deficiency would in 1913' was•123.20. "'" ,..
' have been made up. 'And it is also • •
In -4913,-. inicier-peace-conditionsi-the-------
., very likely.that ahother Tr..ansi is the
r activity of the German submarines..
1. Voir this reason England is depend-
ing largely•iiipon Canada for her sup.
ply of wheat, '
, Tanada last • winter 'and in early
•
Here again we've got mussed U • P • Admiralty spent no less. than
-in figures. If you're so lucky as to be 455,245 on fueL. 'What the bill forl
on one Of the passenger boats, or bet- -1914 will be time alone will tell, but
ter a big bulk 'freighter, when she's it will be many times greater than
getting •her cargo- yoti'll:anderstand •Nvhat it was in 1913. Every ship is in!
'by seeing it . coinniission, every bunker is crammed
The ship draws up to the narrow with black' diamonds, and,, day and
wharf -from -which towers -the:WO-a' tor 'ghti-a-full--head-xif-steatnAms--to-be,
o
Edward VL and Henry VIL- London Of the .rnother couritry,'s needs,' It
pins of Alexander III. 1249; and makes her the largest wheat shipping
James VI. .' - qoantry in the world and has brought
• The Board of Trade has issued a
circular to - LOOdori ' coal merchants
pointing out that in order • to keep
lofts fully at werk every effort shOuld
be made to inerease stocks' of coil to
the maximum. , .
at aomiiie. another.
• the _bag's_ come_ un,411e-beit; -Rop
, ,•.B , ,
'sr ilealty,'N ,n0 Mei-- HISTORY •OP GtEAT-STRUdbLE.
he_ivas_your uncle,7- kiss. Burnell& •• --. ----- .,-:--., - ,-, --iprairie:und •brit* deep, to its destina-:1 into the chute, and go skittering down'
Most interesting!" . , O likntograPhing the War on. the Fight. I tion; which, like es not -iii Liverpool. - intO the Vessel ilc b' f
• "Thought it.,would: surprise ....yoUP.
-karY said brightly. "And I've .got
sorriething ;else that 'will make . you
'S
acres. of land' in wheat to •take care
like a collection of .huge cement or maintained, ready at a moment's no- ,
terra cotta organ pipes for the giants •tie for the order "Pull speed elided.",
to play on..•• • The average modern battleship re -
to her activities that ' ,are imprece- I
dented. ..
hour in •Order to maintain a full head
. , •- •••of stean;i, And we have nearly seVenty
- • The Romance of Canada ....--:- Stich ships at present in commission,
as a Wheat countrris One of falcimr.- says London Answers. A battle antis.'
et) such 'as the Lion, has. engines of, =
•
The Boat is Made" Fast, qnires about twenty tons of Coal an
the 'guiitoting soldiers stand by tosee
wbat happ'ens, the Government in-
spectot • once again [does ,his wOrk, and
then the big feed pipes are Slung out
and the grain cascades 'into . the. 'hold
as per order&. if the 'cargo, is °Mixed,
and-part..;of,it-is-flour, yf\u-ean-Watch
Colt' Aud- further -reiriance 'lies' in
the transportation probleni of getting greater horse -Power than theaverage .
No; 1.„ barcl_from thereace 11.iyer,„.say,. battleship, arid, .consequentiy require,s
*Vet. the .5,000 miles' .of blossoming more fuef.
hen Sir •DiVidlle-a*rs
•
me ?"••
creature started 'forward and Caught
I•1•04001ved-nt-t-h-emrsiniling-r-winting.
is arni,
• "Newcomer she exclaimed. "Bilre-,
ly can't' .rnistakenf-hmusk' hc
-
I„hicle---,-Charleyi • Whir', rernember
yo ec y ow. • ou aven •
&Linked bit--•-exiiiitly the seine kind,
dear old Fin•look.ing.for.solnething.
•
• One of the:Pyencli 'Soldiers* killed (it
the takingofMetzeia in Alsage,..1a'T.
ge o a .aneli- We 'army, ser-
vice. otganised_111_,..namith-s-ef-wei ,
-called the "Photogralphic section "
p. •
When Canada- wokelzp -and- 'found f , - And- then uff- goes- tire -boat, homia
She had the biggest fills*in the wpoorrldt' for Coder:Leh., Montreal, Port-NleNieelli.
H
at Mager.* the: had proved nothin .Part,_Colbrien‘ar--Buffele.---The.Wheitt
M --five -battle-'cruisers paid their -fam-
ous visit to_ the 1-keligoland
they consiiined hetWeen them- nearly
,000 tom:of iliheit. Welsh steam .
_ _ ,
coal. •
jflhei 1u11she can confidentl assert that in
But 'When to -da consigned to lake ports is, of conise pe cfr, oat
Lafterward-•,trarisfeiyel-'•u cars that
lam and Fort Arthur' she holds will earl. it to th deStroyers ere even bigger, gluttons
which is now•officiallY phetographing •- • ' • • " .1 • avY •
Mist be •barrung over luy*uo,C' .
to receiVe his reiVard of thanks. Mary • the world's greatest grain port •witli ocean grain, boats take it up. .80 far ' •A"(("
, . • . • • , ere e for coal titan battle-cruisei'S,., Our
.04,40 .9p lhe:hcinquet,and, , rising-, the- '.% 31 Ita•role Iv artistie, -histori '44-e1C-YilU":' '1134tY- '
of . 43;256,090 t the: gen:nand-have never -sunk one"of tnpaln..±1,1e-uoulaf....a-d , . _ .,_._-,.,,,,, _
With easy grette.,: Vitkiked 'pp to hini;•
'Pa an , e ucatron 1.
I d d - " -
btitiluits,-ahe has -, rov6cl•h = . i. . Tatt.11 they do their block- [hien'
tusk him7-autosa-4-he ., 'lop. sic ma e t at'part herself out of ade of England can't be said to' havetfortably in the Kiel Canal; is doubt -
Navy, which is resting -so -cow-
.
i
,
AIL
4 •e, -ti,'
taff is Military, 'Weis° is serving the
"That's just to show you vvhat ./1;
think of your- flutfiers- and -
19 Ale epar men. o
Instruction •
off' d D t tf
Daring
backwoeds and con6.ete. •
-the' 1913 seasen ruiviga- And so '
done- mu h h • •
oFM- • less very mtich more 'econo1/1.. ical.
a Click, and dropped it into the pocket used to knew' as a kiddie:" M
wnenevsr tile
• ydbee^ oThe forward.British
, ushels of grain mends such haste, 4,1110110.L.orritit a
uns War? elcasse Minister • . win'Per 1•4! ur' Y -Oven -it left the the biggest coal bill 'the world has
SuPpose But' I doelt want -s-senti-inieen to Y Y.. , dito being pestitb<T:.
dn't inatter. Ho Was jUtt 151dfl
She laughed, but there was toine.• Lister .of Public Instruet.ion; 'aided by' - - - - s ceses wei•d to going shOrt of coal •Itimself
tion
General joffre, Nlessieurs Millerand, .
an ea Of his 'job, did you?' Yon f vv ,D
dn't any more use •for Innt, _hadn't - ,
of .Poreign Affuirs, _and Sarran1;. Min '
u? That lie •was faithful and loyal.; . -
'the -Committee of Forogn Affairs et ••-
rn-'out machine, And_ you •Scrappe
04 et -hare -ter of -Deputies and the FOT1 r
, you eold-hearted brute! _ .
.-"IVIaryl" he ga-sped.-414'14 11„,,
'"You. were 11 paid for your loyelty,1 t that ea are max •in
111entel lee,t1lre, YOU are IQ tine to me thiiig Ariore than • laughter =in
the
-so -yon -have got to -gor '• • Sotaid., Om -was sit -Jilin- --b
222 544 596 b
PaSseci • through th t • t D. I t d atm,
ing.the same period Dulfftli-Superiori farmer Ono Hard is •eiiinhing out ofj ever known. He can also • rook fay- .,
tandled little more then halt 'that' the hold in L' 1 Thi
•
antit
y am •.(... lenge ess than a ritclener and delights Lloyd Oeorg&I" •Gertnew esea to be _our__beit ous
. , • '
,
(Vette?: , •• • • ., - •
,t,..,•t L •.1 , -. lin aiso_provide's Canada nithir,reason. tarter for coal but the Navy is more . -*----
there was a' mist iti lier-gds:WarkCCey3re.;, -15. -bii.e.-tUtted "Feifiaiilt•s -
Charles -NdWdoitie :eintated 'his dign Officer collaboratel itS ‘brianz.- -••••
•
Tn iystiort .The opertteri II 1 't4:e :11311' t 116'' Pr-''"1.%t"Qf -
nothing but ii sense of national' pfide • t maxing_up__ferLany -cue-tem-We
• -fasitiotind-talhtt-Witir--,tob-white;
transparent hand as if he was sato;
• cathig Want of breath. ' •
•, • .• 'Neither Mt. •:Millcohn nor Mr. Bi-
•• Iter would have' treate.d me like this,"'
he intinahled. "They were gentle -
*foie".
• Mr. Mitten's hand went out to the
• elettric hell on his desk, and his Cash.
ler-one of the.neW clerks -presented
'• himself Instantly.
•"Pay this man the week's. money
. .which he hasn't earned, and turn him
, off!" he said shortly. '
'Charles Noworim turned elowly on
his heel, and followed the cashier in-
to the'enter office. 'Like A tilan in a
;dream he received the few •shillings
• which *Ore due to him, and, Still with
. : the ' aanie feeling of 'unreal -14f; he
• closed his ,Oid faniiliait desk, packed
his, aPalea epat In A little brawn bag,
. took hi' hat. frerd the, peg, and ,With
ids umbrella under. hid arm, walked
out into the Auer°. •
-b
--"*I-Tuririust Mum iind see lli-e"-s-roT,V
• 0 'c 1S. • •
I . .,--i'neon-meest.t.eonile't,firctoo;o l'Ialineficem•gta.iatruliie . fiat consid'erin .the ex.,tra 1,588,000 ticre.:,.g•oletsst athi,.,ag,geltititilhgc itoirta:...a.pd'. i)ri'6es......
Ufiele.ChittleY," she said. "I.fve gbt,,•• .
0, towni.ds the cloor,..hie . face scratched ! llga.. rheIT!.11. 111-' ..'""%rit Met ---.z614 '' are e'a ' .. r/ i ' . f I . .1 . .. 'for- "ehe ileS. trlis ear Put under cultiva- are going op\ and. up.' But we 'final).
. the fighting line ' taking •• piettfi es,. ,
to hustle now, or rii be. hit& 'And : and bleeding Where the Wire that held...I - .
which, with orchlr's re OrtS 1 ' .. welding. difficulties encountered . ilf , iien;''slie. is, due. °for good thries •61100
Itogetivr. the. houqUet had torn :• the • have one consolation as we ' 't b ' ' '
sit y out,
-afterwards yeti. Shall • ' have ..... sapper Fskis. . . • . ,, .• • , : , ., .:,other, oloeunienti, 'Wit? liere:aPit4,eni-8.0aolti:-1. t I - . .' ••• ' .‘ .*: . . • -.'-• , ' ,
, , . itild giving,.1t to the. Brie:oh 'baker • • • . . . • '
./ e a o a.••
..... . „ , ettiptY grates. ' Wd may shiver, but,
a cog grain trorri. the ,Albei te f•irrnd • in -yr& "n- th 1 11 • f 191." .
with me.".'. • ' • . ' ' " ," ,. . 1„ Mary . • .., - , stitute • the historical peewit: , of
Charles Newdome presently 'I'o' Und.i 1.01.1 cad.. went •On. nl'here, . ,
1 - :General stair. , . -.. t. n(.. Witheut yaising lieWIS frotn• the'pro- ' • -- .' • 44 • ..` - , •• • • .Iellicoe is getting all th6 coal he '
_ .. .. ...
't inc
' - * .. - - 7 ' ^ • • A. ' needg And. a battleship- without suf.
himself sitting in the stalls of' a tree- t 1. • r ''Ae 4 4 II v ' ' • • , The .Silver .Lining, . • ' ' •
• For the rale Arta *section 'owl the d"eer' the 11"PPer' the . e("igllee• the l'• • i •
tre With no.. Clear conception of how
• he got there. • There _were a lot Of
strierbly dressed people-gentlethen
in evening -dress, almost as Splendid
as old Mr. 1Vialcolm, who represented'
for' him the highest standard of taste
and:luxury.' ." •
Then the cilittin went un, the band
played,' and be became eonscious trf a
sudden roar of applauSe in the house,
and there, to his utter` astonishment,
in. the Middle Of the 'stage stood Mary
little niece Mars? '
He leant forward in his seat in
open-mouthed wonder. And gradual.
• ly the Wonder taVe place to .pride,
new the people 'cheered; they:would
hardly rerthe gay go on, 86 often dial
1 .4?
see your face againr • ficient oat is of no more tis -than ,
edneationat depettinent it is int 'ivied
i A • .., •' • € railroads and the general public.. But Vo`ar does not nudie. all Men blood- *.e 1 m ch r '*
She thin • the -ruins of the I ' t ' . , • .
thirsty:, On tho banks of the Yser in ,'. ' • .___, .
•
Ilelgitim Where there has teen stud/.
fierce fighting, the ambulance men one . A Violated Agreement.
. .
day found a Yining GerMan blab' "I. don't , like' to find fault, Mr '"'
uroutided; and in. the midst of the
bursting • shells they stopped to serib-
ble a line describing i'vluit. they had
seen and, heard, And pinned it on thr
Llanket that enveloped. him, ' • .
Whct. he reached the in-41.'0\71mi.
• hospital, the nurses road the blood.
Stained sheet of, packing paper, and
ontk• or• two. brushed away tears as
they did, so. It bore these:Words: Ile
saved the lives of seveb British set.
diers." It is good„, to know that, ten-
derly cared for. 'by an titglish doctor'
blOwIng in to know what about mote . he eventually recovered. , '
•
o a cocollen 'nut
eftel• hint as he fled through the• d'oor
dins tmake mplete aio
Then, turning, she ran to her miele,
and put her arms round 'his neck. Her
cheek Was close 'to and ho." felt
'that teats were •ponting from• her
• 'I'm 'only crying because X feel so
.happY with Myself," she Said, "That's
the best unrehearsed vett 1 have ever
played: And won't let anyone .be.
trod ev
to you er again, Uncle ChAr-
loy-ne, never, you deal, old thing!"--,
London Answers,
,
SUbusarines for naval 1,111•06800
lint developed by Prance. 1 ,
go •to ort tn the • busy'
season and' ,see • for - yofirdelf,
Ogle .donie man ,Whei knoWS the
photographs destroyted datnegofed •
public nionuitents of great 'artistic ""tio
••
Value, and pi general to 'ftiriiish a sort
the 'war for the instruction of future • Yen 1
lenerations.
These official photographers during Clear
the sevctn days' bombardment of Met-, Thilhbero
of illustrated ,annex to the history of
, and if he's good natured enough
re you het on hour. of his time
he just beginning to :see.
e of the Lake Shippers
owe Association is as near the
of the wheel as you eatt get.
are grain data of ever!. deseriP-
there.are shippers in Winnipeg
peg Fort: Williant on the ass°.
n's private wire; there Aro rail -
companies, sending repro -
ties to see about 0n00 -for
steamers; there are
rented aint Uteezy Cartiaias '
send took 3000 negatiVeS.
'tion
A sales department has been
ized to put on the inarket copies • etti
of all
the photOgraplis that 'the eeroad
au- a.1.4"
thorizes to be 'duplicated.
senta••'
ere The more.. talk it takes to run their,)11
thingoi the slower they .triove. ; '
,
Landlord," said -Dixie Ipsit, address-• '.
trig the proprietor of the Ocean View
House,.• "but didn't 1 understand that '
our orrangemont Was that all bills
were to be presented weekly?"
"Undoubtedly, sir," replied ‘the
landlord. •
"won, 1 think yon bad bettor noti-
fy -your mosquitoes of the fact, sir,"
said nixie, ' "About 10,000 of theta
ate presenting their bills 11'1001,z...1,"
. , .
‘, There tiretto fewer than 110,000 post '
offices in Germany. , 1 •