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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-29, Page 6• 0 s 4.14.0kear Tito Embl61.7 em -40 . .1:Mak?* Nindoto' *lhot do not boar th, . Weesasssoretee EsieNeies „ •es the il-o$i"14orthe**Rg-iii4nidaelureA anddealers'of the Dominion, tbeGuarantf Securities Corporation has established itg? canaclian office iii.the.National Trust Buildin& 1111011treal.'• The- CliarmityfPfairprOvides-a- teltiaie;digtesfie''d7'' anal • 'standardized system. of credit, fully safeguarding the banking }Proptieties," and., Offeraaccotrintodation t� responSible and erorthypersons who ,can afford to ciwn and maintain ..cars4 but desire credit in their purcha*Se.• The CsiyritifirPlia' free frisin-ananing ted tape--si•\ s:disrecturid - husiness transection, wving--ft Time: foe . Lilte Buyer-Chsh fo. the Seller-Sofelyify A11,1 See the Local Dealer in the car m -which you'are s • lerested. He should be fully, aluipped with full instructiona and the simple feria of purchase contract WhiCh you will If, by any'chanCe;* your dealer is, not equipped with •this informationZwrite us .givitig his name and;:address; land the make of .cat that he handles. Also ask jeirnio write' ' without delay.. We Will see that your requirem nts are• taken care of PrOMPtlY; •" .The Giiariiitir Plan ie applicable In the purchase of a' 'number of* the best known cars, produced by permanently! 'established concerns who Maintain Canadian service organi- zations adequate to meet the demands- of. Canadian owners., . „ . . . description -of the Otiaranty Plan , -"and a list of the • (Cars recognized, will be .sent upon request,but, see ',Local Dealer fir,st., • Mrs. Julia Henshaw uot often, that Weltian- £ Is-0IeCted ft Ve.110W Of the iteYel nal Seel:etre but the eeplerationa Wadeifl the: Cons AS 4 a RoelSieft ' 1.-n• 0..04e eh, .etre'' 'wtd 'lowers .by • Mrs. J1 Hen, -olour...deservekt ex ..ceptional reeogol. , tion, Iler- beck .Viowers .ot the Norta Axnert•. eau Mountataar 'with ita ..beautt,: luny uoloi'ed r Sates shoula he, come a elaseict.. • with. the . further. adVailtege.'ef be. Ing Popelar • .classio 0.wing to• : the nr.0 th.o-d: of arrangement. Tae uewors.are.- group, ed hy •colork one: • Peetten. beingde- :Voted, to. Green .andeBrowns fie:Were,. another '..r44.4 an (.1. Red ,. sfiewera. Blues to Purple • il'O iq e r 9, • and a. 0.0 )Tette* ..to ;Oranges .Mrs, *.11'enellaw, naddl.,' tiqn•to--heisfiotani- -pal: -studies is.; one •-or th Iea.flng .1,t s in tbe. aug.hters' of the • • Care Of Car Finieh. .. • CereleSaneaS in washing and polish. ing ear ,i§ respensible for: &great •many cars getting 1* look old and run • doult oo soon. in washing your ear be sure te PO Plenty of water and not Misch •pressure. rfouct mt., the mui sod dirt off, bet Waiiir it off with water. ThoronghlY eoften it and allow it ossoak soft hefere trying torennive it at- all. D0 not allow anyone ,to rub fingers over a stirface covered with dirt aa the Smell Particles of Icinsi will ot the finislh. • • You ehoula have two eets of Palle, spenges and Chamois for washing, Is a good plan never to use the same sponge or chamois on the body and running gears, Grease makes a sineary.appearance :on the body and should' be. kept off s'as much at possible. • !Xecier sponges and chamois clean ahd free Own .gTit and dirt, Use; a good body'soap ami luke warm water foi'itile last wash, for the hodYs .you can find a good besly 13elish, issgoed, but never usetno .rauch pr. put it on too heavy, be elite and rule ‘ft thoroughly and leave the body free from its or after a 'whileyou will netiae itrmaking. a coating over the bodysthatnii hard to remove. It is a good plan to go to the man Who sold you the car.,and have hint wash it up and Show you how-to care for it, if convenient. The nice ap- pearance may be kept on a oar for a year or two with proper care. Neirer allow mud to dry on the , , • . Eranire and, wits sent:last Decembersbr Sir Sam Sughes as a Captain In the Canadian Army on a•special naissien toningland lied France Connected with the distribtition of •Cbrisimes gifts to the troops at the Front.' Our 111tis4 tration thews the authoress bet minintahr costume with her favorite poaY at Lake Louise In the Canadian Pacific Rockies: WARSHIPS AND WARSHIPS. Guararity;§ectiritiesCorporatiott National rruit Biildiig , s_ • 1‘44ontreak DIFFERENT Krips OF FENCES. • If Proper Care Is •Taken the Wire Venda Will Last Indefinitely, : , , There are enemy kinds of fences, but •' they may be divided roughly into four kinds; (1.) stone fences; (2). live fences or hedges; ,(3) wooden,fences; . , and (4) *ire fences. • All these fences "•. have their good and had points; but • there is a growing tendency With up- to-date farmers 's to go in for Wire . fences'. of attention to keep un, ,aricl unlesis they are pruned arid the Weeda. and graes that accumulate around them are mewed constantly they become a 'fertile breeding place for alt kinds of pests. • • Where timber is cheap, wooden fences can be profitably used but the ---sses.saesieee. sae BRITIgH FISHEICUAN': • Thousands of Them Have Been Called • to the Colors. . The birth.piace of the British fish- inff,,industry, was undoubtedly the English Channel, But no better men ply the trade by net or line than those w rom the western and the Roy'al‘ Sovereign class. and the - • increase in the mire of good 'amber h hal f makes them 'almost Trohibitive except Definitioas of Terms Used in Describ- ing Various Types. •Each time there is a ' report of a -naval engagement' there is evident a certain amount of -confusions in the use of names of fighting ships. The name warship has ceased to raearbmuch.. Itis used to apply to all classes a boats, from the super - dreadnought to the submarine. MERCHANTS BANK OF CANADA Annual Report Shows Assets Approaching. the Hundred • Million Mark. •In presenting to °the Shareholdere the 53rd Annual Statement the But the terms battleships, battle cruisers, artnored cruiser4 cruisers, Merchants Bank of Canada, the Gen. torpedo boats, etc., refer to distinct generic types of warships. Battleship!: form the first fighting line of all seapower. Gunfire is now reognized as the great determining fader in a: naval' battle.• For thia reason the battleship has the dis- eral Manager expressed the. policy of thei bank during the War as one \ of "Safety • First"---mairitaihings a, veil: strong position in 'cash and imme- diately available resources, ready Or any emergency Or- development in tiactive feature of great 'guns. and these times of 'world wide financial heavy Armor.- British battleships of certainty. . • • • northeri. isles', and from the ports of 'Queen Elizelseth class carry eight 15- 'A stu'dy of the Bank'S Annual State - in a 'feircasess The old zig-zag rail • .. . northeen Scotland inch guns, sixteen 6 -inch guns, -etc., ment for • the year ending April 29th, fence served its purpose ,in tis daY, - .4 ' • • These places. are, indeed, natural While their armor is • 131/4 inches in 1916, shows how fully this policy has butwherever finances permit it should . . .nucleus squadron of these shandy craft 'thickness. A battleship' does not need been carried out Assets which are Stone fences are of greatest use on be ripped out and a' modern fence put by act of Parhanient Whale fisher- to be as fast as ,a cruiser for her oh: , hilly rough court* whe- th' to- - „re e s nesi 1111ts places_ , . . .... _ s. _- men Were exerripted during -the -Nap- -debt is -les -get at -the d I or Can be 'immediately converted into enemy -an -not-te--t- - -- - - - ----- -, -- . pre plentiful at& it is difficult to drive r At the present time, when a new 1 . • . , , , Press Gang. \ - - ou,t of ten it is a wire Once. There • o &nue wars from the activities of the run aWay. The Royal Sovereign has cash have keached a total of $40; - in sense -pests • ws fence is being put up in nine cases Where the stones are ' • - a speed of 221/4 knots, and the Queen 960,486 -an. increase of over Seven • large and heavy they do not need 'Elizabeth 25 knots. 'and Three -Quarter Millions fram the much repairing .or sittendhag to, btit A battle -cruiser,, though her busi- I,remarkably good Showing of a year. , ' if light email 'stoneia :are used the ness is to stop and fight when she : • ago, . , through. '•- ' -• ' he cal*. Battle -cruisers ofr 'BY this pOlicy of keeping wen pre- Live feature of British aml especi- en Mary lass have A speed of pared and entrenched the Merchants Live fence§ or hedges are a charac- The corning of, &eat ships el war are many reasons for this. First of ' • ' and a stant:ing navy endea 1 a great all, a wire fence is a good deal cheap-• extent England's early dependence en er,to put up than any of the other the larger, fisher craft in sea battles. kinds. With proper dare it will last ' In pre-ArMada days stile fishing a lifetime, and it is hog -proof and ports of the Channel provided the sheep -Proof. ' largest number of craft and goalie:* Although a wire fence once it is put (London, even, was less important pp need§ practically no' attention it the navy than a combination of West should' be made a rule to go around , Country ports with unfamiliat every six :months or _every year ht and ,when a, Biatish expediS. sOme definite time and tighten up the I 'jamas), ' tion was to be sent to France.. th be4 if possible to preVentr-g, A.• " Brwiley in Varna and palry. . Don't Travel en P• eilated A tiro agent, says that many Inotor,1 give so little care to their tires. that the first intimation of their Proper cenditiofl. omes when a fled sound or a jolt, caused by one of the Wheela contain in contnct with. eoine hard object on the road, diss closes the feet that the rho is touch ing the ground. • , • "The envelope is ' then notched, a•. • new tube fitted and a sleeve put On . tOr• the purpose of increased strengt• h; The driVer then proceeds to 010 Mar'. • est gqragerWhere a new eesiag is ob- tained, the damaged one being left . for repair. Nearly alwaYei it is hill• that the tread is the only part Ort casing that has not been totAlly, dess, Stroyed. The beadsare found to be lirelsen or torn away. "'Me Walls of, . the'casing'are.ecored and, scraped ins aide• and out , The , canvas' is torn• ; „ anti frayed end haw broken aw,ayfront Vie rubber. The. tire has lost its • shape, entirely; its several parts 'are ,., dieintegrated. . '•• : • tube, replaced on the road, which was perhaps new or c-neerlY, • new When the journey .-started, has . been torn beyoSel,all hope of malt -4 • •••• and scraped and !Wired all'Ovets'sconet of the 'incisions being almsoet as deep •as the thickness of the rubberitself. , ,. "All this deley, trouble and ex. _pense.,is the direct result of travelling , -'6n a deflated tire, • whereas periodic: inspection of the air pressure would. have entirely prevented the damage." 4•11••••••••• THE SUNDAY SCHOOL cattle or sheep very': -Often " break should also be able to run •awaY , • ete; they carry eight 13-5., guns.' Bank of 'Canada as faiorably EngliSh feraiing:... Nothing will teen, 4 -inch guns, but their beautify, the landscape more • than ' to e lt.,,Arily,... 9%. inches in thickness - ' pressed the' depositing public at home have the fields, divided by hedges, and catimafeil'with the 13% -inch 'armor and abyead, and deposits have'grown it is ..these more than anything else he lar est' battleshi Th in the twelve- months covered , by . ti • re that nialte the rural districts of the Old •Country so attriictiVe to Ameri- can yid:tors.: For a variety of rea- sons, hedges, however, have found ---,comparatively- little favor- with- CarF, ..‘sislian and American farmers.. The I, climate in America is mostly contins ental, that •Is to say, there are ex- tremes of and cola,, and this is not. favorable for the growth of the -kinde of trees and shrubs that make ' the .best hedges. The chief fault with, hedges is that they require a lot wires and' 40 any other•little repeurs necessary. If this is dope regularly,a day th moSt cases will ,be 'all the time , • the men. ' ____-_ - . ously disposes!' toward religion than ' • 144 • Throughout this narrative We • INTERNATIONAL LESSON • face" the danger' would have been feel.: see the'effect of the Master's com- mand (Matt. 10. 23). • 're stay and . hardy: Paul could -do.: more for thh •• . istic of Macedonia. Thiel verse dis- Lesson L -Paul At Thessalen• ica Aad gospel at Bercea by leaving for anoths er field and so saving his life. • The Golden Twit, Acts 5. 31 • BER(EA.-Acts 17..1-151 •... . 15*. Paul's decision to remain at sea -At a place called Dium, probably. • • ' Verse 1: Passed threugh-Th 'e '0"ri in I. Thess. 3. 1, but thiesimplies that ... Athens alone for a time is. referred to . great Roman road from the west, the Paul's regaest, Silas presumably stays, Timothy had -quickly responded • 'Os . ginal verb suggest% travel along' the via Egnatia. -Apollania was about ing on, at Berme, unless the "we" in , halfway to Thessalonica, thirty .milee that passage is to be referred 'go Paul southwest of Amphipolis, which was wanhdichS,laiss, instead of to Paul alone, • hear the mouth of the Sti7mon River. Paul's craving ,for companionship As: perhaps more probable. oTfheLsuralosne,icaa, vsetrily1 . cfaalmiedniaSralpolriaiekeis :cso: strongly marked throUghout; there day. It seems to have beenthe only, Was, something in his tempetament; er one of, the three placs to possess ,ti his circumstances (of health for 'in - one hard to hear. . _ stance) i that made solitude peculiar- ' ,eynagogue. Verse 10 'shows how, even after such terrible danger,' Paul •' --+ z--- clung. to his principle' of going first 'SAVING THE SzTTLER. to the synagogue. He must at any ' • .4 -• - cost find men prepared for the gospel Will Not Be .IPermitted to Take by loyalty to the Old Testament. Such , Cropless Lands in Suture. . when convincei that Jesus • fulfilled • ' • ' • The opening up of non-agrieultural prophecy, -Would be mature„and zeal- • lands to settIementheis produced some -: ous leaders for the infant church." of the most far-reaching and Piti-. - 3. "The Messiah must suffer" was ful .tragetlies in the Dominion's 'hieis the one great doctrine which divided ,Every provinces has 'communts the Jews instantly. into tivo camps. 'thrY' • ties Which have been permitted _ to The royal Son of David was the na- Make the- fatal, error -of a bad Was' tional ideal, and therecognition of lea. thin. . Their .subsegbent historsi is an • • 'unbroken' line, of bed crops, poverty; • ' suffering and ' human 'demoralization. • Too poor to Move away; the farmer _ andlais_ family _resign_ thezaselvesss.to__ _ a pitiful standard of -living, giving, : their time and efforts for practically s was a true application; haw could God' no return. "allow his Beloved One to see 'cor- Every-Province and the Federal au.' ruption?" And well might the apes- thorities-liave made such blenders in ties apply that first to the Beloved, times past, , nor is there satisfactory ; and through 'him to all whom God evirlence that a general and coMplete ' loves. , . . reforin has been 13rought about. .• 4. The large following of 'presely- Fanners :still are allowed on Federal ; • JULY 2.. , uen • y was 070 feet long, or 50 feet! statement by ;the considerable suin of 53 in such a connectionwas very bit - fisher ,craft were requisitioned as. river than. the Queen Elizabeth' Ten Millions, rea.ching a total or $72t- ter to the Jews: In preeehing this transports. • ' battleship; her horsepower is 78,790,1177,099.15. ' These deposit's reflect a- 'doctrine the disciples were only en - _taken up in making the repaire, and fast ancfl seaworthy wei•e the .as compared with the Qeeen Eliza - fishing boats o the Channel -they beth'S 28,000. . . measure of confidence on the part of .forcing the Lord's own "must" (Luke be twice as usefuL-Canadian Court- were used as "scouts" and patrols. The sunnored cruisers have t e public °which has been very grati- s. 26). Psec- '16 -was -mainly- in- mind - ..the fence will last twice as long and usually as the proof of the resurrection. It to the proprietary of the Bank. . just as their •Compeereare •being used a belt of 6-ineh primer, arid from four fYing tryinan. , • to -day. • to. sht 9.2 guns. 'Their speedis about 1' Total Assets also show a very sub - •When :wwas ar declared lin Auguat. , 23 knots. staiitial increase 9f •oyer: Ten 'Million • The Cruelty of Justice.-- • 1914, thousands of naval reservists The protected cruiser has fewer Dollass, And amount to $96,361,363.07. • Ex-Prisoner-Siirely you ain't • go- traveled from the fishing ports end 9.2 guns than the armored cruiser. This. does not include Any -mortgages, ing to trim me out of gaol in weather islands to rejoin, and though round and its resisting power .is not greab, 'era like this. the deports one heard many dialects •its main feature being an arov4adebts and real estate, mored • I other than Bank ' , y from Newquay fp Scalloway, from deck extending from end to end of the Premises total onl VIStornoway. to Dover, there Was only ship below the water line. The pro- i $341,549A7 or lessthan 2/5:61 one per 'TO OPE• RATE THEGASOLINE ENGINE one argot Of`the sea; Donald might tected cruisers of, the Powerful class .:cent of- the total'. assets. 'Another Told by C. W. Mies, of the Ontario AgriculturaLCollege. - ejaculate Gaelic,' and his Cornish are 520 feet long and havaa speed of . :year of, sach progress . will bring neighbor in a dialect akin tn. the leet, 22 knots. They 'carry guits,s .• British language but they had corn -sixteen 6-incli g-uns, and others of the Merchants Bank of, Canada well mon ground in the speech of their smaller Calibre. , i into the class of Hundred Million''Dol- • calling, as a few days later they had The cruiser also called "second- I tar. finandal instituticins. • . ° a common dress in the unifoim of the class protected cruiser," is a .ship ofi Profits during, the year were rieces- [No. 1.1 , ,, [fumes get mixed with a ,certain pro- Royal Navy. .. . 5,600 tons displammerit and 20 -knots • sy sesssieted by the policy of . To the 'farmer Nvlio Owns' S. gasoline I portion of air that it becomes a Pow-, It was astonishing hovt smsas artly speed ,with eleven 6 -inch gun I engine, and never has had. the time or , erful exploSive, and this is the source these fishermen leaped back into 'the ' A torpedo boat carries a suinily of 3naintaining se high a ratio Of Muhl. • ' opportunity to make much a a studyl of power in. the- gasoline engine. d `e f - • , an ow torpe oes an( aunc es on agains . I reserve or assets that cc:1.11d be con- c:rill and uti o Jack Tar d h d ` I 1 h th t ' orthe troubles and trials- of his win- A,ssurriing that the piston is right a uniformity of appearance:was, gain- the verted immediately into cash. Current the such work is bound to achieve highei• •eriemy's warships. ' impertance the eyes of govern- • ' formation, gained from practical ex- -: wheel of the engine is revolved; the better social position than m Greece: tes it to be noticed everywhere. They were of heeestity people who greatly hungered after a Living God, for the 'Jews gave them small encouragement: it was a very :secondary place the p selyte had to fill.. Beiag without th is ablic disfavor and the Jews' great hindrance, their racial growing in p pride, and attracted bythe universal- tendency of all governments -now is ity of the gospel, which stirred the Jew to "jeatously'," they naturally proved good soil for the seed of the world. Chief Women -Compare verse 12. In Macedonia wemen had a Or and Provincial "homesteads!' which are impossible for field crops. . The 'policy was, of course, mare there. sult of laxity in classification and not a deliberate effort to send settlers to useless lands.. ,The laxness, however,. - to protect the settler and to conserve rocky, sandy areas for i.theif•natural purposes of growingtrees Several survey perties, are engaged on soil examinations -this summer and • ingltellier, iSe hone, to: give some in, sp 'as coremeitial loans and slitceents ohnder head -when thelli. ed. Bushy beards. were trimmed, 'A torpedo boat destroyer 'not• only Compere Lydia's. story.. . • • .5.. 'Jason -3A -well-known:name mehtt. . One party, composed ; of pnriance.. that • inay enable- WM the piston is drawn outward and •aeting better to enderitand.the-afflictions of siee the piston of apUmpdraWaair Greek mythology &one., the Thessali an Meesrs F..C..-Nunnich of. the. Commis, . .' close, maited•locks sacrificed, and the destroys torpedo 'boats- by gun. fire. Canada, the main soin-ee of.a Canadian d razor's eatly labor produced *a -man but also battleships by t•orpedoes. .• I Bank's 'profits, ,increased 'compare•- . Itively little- from last year, and ' iiet little -different, on, the snrface, from 'a theusand..of his fellows. Such .were Britian's fiSheririen Warriors. . . ' his alintst. human' 'servant; for in across the surface of, or throu,gh the many w ys 'thegasoline engine has gasoline an the carborator., The ,air , human tendencies -sunless itisfed-kr:carries the gasoline with it, partly in • cannot and ill not werk' unless its farm of a. mist into • the cylindei. health receives. the Careful atten- Gasoline is vaporized and the miXture • -o$95O,718.42. hero JasOn (see William Morris's tell- eion.of Ctinservation and Walter -Gra - This, with the balance brought for .1profits fell -off slightly ing of his , story). But sometimes ham of the Experimental Farm, Ot- .' But -the -fiset Month of War showed s_coMPARISON OF TWO NAVIES.. avard_from. the....previOna_yea4_enomed_ Jews neined Joshua (Jesus) used this tawa, are in New Brunswick, co-oper- iii a Gentile stibititete, arid thie'lason ating with the ProVincia Government thae, the .fleet, Was deficient in mine- ! e. • - • - • the Bank to meet all 'dividend charges, may have • been eCcase. ' • . in a schc me of. classification. The sweepers, though, of course, with. a Sea Strength of Britain and Germany -contribute genet to patriotic and • ' ' 6. Rulers of the city -The Greek project :deseryts ;the hearty suppert , politarch is a title almost escelaSively of conservationists everywhere for connected With Thessaloniela several the beriefits are fat ;from loeal.- • ' - trose-Aits.eriOione-shew--it,-Tisr . cd• . . upside down -A colloquial • tion of itsemaster and ills or accidents of air and gas forms the charge which nucleus squadron of these handy eraft.• • at Beginning of 1916. . Red :Cress funds, transfer $150,000 tO . ... to which bsoline engines are su. ? s ' b'ect operates the ' engine. The return 7P0 the, trawlers and drifters and ear- I Contingent rand, and Carry forward 1 The New ' York Herald gives the $250 984 12. ' , remedied it i•.; unable to give .ffeicient •stroke Compressest this mixture in riers of the Dogger Bank, the Ice - 'following at a 'Probably: accuk-ate table ; ,n.: ,•• ,• ,.- and satisfactory aervice - the clearaece chamber in the cylinder . land and White Sea fishermen were reeling or t e 'rectors as eo- . la' doing this. we Aall treat . the eat or : a part of the cylirafer far-, called upon, and. the eurplus men of Of the strength of the Britiah ahil Ger..' • ' „. . piesscd at the Animal Meeting, is one li ' 'It t • men navies at the beginning of 1916: Of qiiiet.yet coinplete.confidenee in the "WAR MAP" FAVORS ALLIES.. matter in three Sheet separate 'arti- ..thest removed from. the. •fly wheels. • the fleet; drafted back te the' Id verb, by Pad- in Gal. 5. 12, and , ir o ser -1 • naturally; follows the other. In this the valves are'closed and: held there The, submariee war was, however I ' • • •• the New I Lott Vast Territery. • • .1 Cruisers cuss +hat which each operator -must them, end it, is squeezed :into a small , ed at the-destrection of eYery ehip instag., ias ulsess Destroyers- ° ; Ineat important thing of ell is to have en eIe ctrie -spells, caused by the onto- :lee soon gaineu. the mastery of this . • Built. B '11' • 68 14 a oadiness to devote'the growing re.. ently _beneath the dignity of class' . . . I3attleships . • 'vernaculars do,diments, but appais . • . •' England- • . mg. future prosperity•of,the °minion and g int'enately connected, beeause, one The raikture .cannot escape because I vice. • • - • 4,* -ma British Official Shows Germans Have • - sBattlezra4sors----- ' 9 -- 1 -seurces -ofs-the- Metchants Bank -of 'Geek: it is chatacteiistic of. • -one, first of the eeriesiTet fis then dis- by plc., Pressure • of the gas against their,opportunity. -The Germans aim-. . • .• 47 1 • nest...become familiar With -the •prise. Voh:Mer ,, Just as 'the piston almost th.e neighborhood of Britain., and cep- - ciples; of apei others • ' sPerhave -the rOaehes the -end -of -its. inwerd 'Stroke tatrrlY-did aerions-darnage, Thestraw.- Tensed() vessels 65 '29' build.in • The World, as in Ldled 2. 1, a terra' r: • Affes, ha. •Teetement freedom froin °artificiality. , Canada tO sound elevelennieet and up. Lord Newton, Undo -Secretary ---fot , .oreign s, no -01,101-1T0i . .26 • 1 - : - • ".• for the -Romarr metro; the rest of the 201 3 6 A • • • • levorl . was liaTdly-knoien: •---4 I forthe lattpr's suggestiep,' receatly , Chancellor von Betlimanp Halls - veg pe o Another -are. Made in, an intervieiv, that the' War thorough knowled_ge Aryl 'under- ma. le breaking of the current from moneter of 'the unc._ jesee'• As, .and may s Highways' Saved France. • .. • siending of just what to- do -t-0. starts.the, produced right •in the continle to hold it despite the. nevv- Winne -saes . ti9 , the engine, and Why it 'is dorm, 80 midst .cf.. this highly -compressed gas, , in-ventions of -the .enemy. Germany, • 27 • reviving -the eity-thatsseat the-Diaeter-nnw-sbotee be used as disc -um for • Built Pailding. recent, corfespOudont- et the AS" t0 th0 OMR; (Luke 22: 2), If the ems many engine Operators know svhat:to The result is aforcefulexplosion, There is an invention which. assists pesesIf •ee - • ' - • Battleships s .. ' ... ,• 35 . 6 soeiatecl Pres§,' 'writing from. Paris, '.pire had realieed the rivalry of this s am much surPrised et. the (e • A , do 4 ' : : ',other emperoe as. soon as. the JeWs man Cha. ncellor," said Baron Neall right 'because they heve beee and she PiSton: is shot oetwerd at ters the loiation of underwater .craft,' . . . . told and shown hy. theXpert at ,,ho rifle speed, due to the rapid Omens ' coming of which swePt. 'von TirnitZ S • • 'Cruisers rirn the .Battle cruisers 4, . . 3 • : tells 'how the militarY lilghegiya of .. - 9 , - , Erace have, upon more than One idid. Christianity might have been recently, "for On niwtony. war map V found ' 6 --occeaten aaVed---the --French 'Trill ••'". time of installetion, but it wasn't ex- sion of the •frages ignited by the spark. invisible 'fleet from his grasp. • Light cruis-ers- P Tram. pod -before -it -was-morestwo points -whish--: r shoos% jiidgei-;=•.• •plained.to them why such a thingsvas /t reaehes th3 ellof its stroke, and The latest leclaration of the enemy Torpedo vessels • , after Geymen long-range ,.'artillerY thai. a tiny'. sect. But Providence would 13e highly distasteful to tlesP• . . - 133s ..fitme'....inierefcre when anything goes the impulse, transmitted, by the :pis- will compel the men who use the Dog- Destroyers . • • 12 'with .consuminate skill had cut the deferred the VJEtr between the two em-• mans. wrong they haven't the slightest idea . ton red to the cfrank shaft and fly 'ger Bank to become watriors. 80 . is, fortheothieg before in expert ar-; Of 4111 cynder trough- the exhaust are to be sunk on sight. Fish. Torpedo bona as "building" have been put in corn- _ where to Start to look :for the cause wheel careiele the piston back again . irig craft have alwilys been theoreti- Siibmarines . 24 14 " of the trouble,,and an expensive delay, This time it forces the burnt gases out &illy imrmine from sinking, now they How many of the vessels classified mission it is"; of coarse, impossible to calculate. . • ' • rives. • . valve, which is mechanically opened, 19 vers. sous:: and ;retain. outward stroke draws ' , Gatoline, as a. liquid, fry, that: in tho posei,16,. of air it : in a fresh eherge of gas, the next in . A , Colored letaloprop: will easily esoperate into and mix :ward stroke voinpresses it, ignition Mistrees-So the autoreobile .zilmOst ran you donw, did it, Hannah? with the air. If an open veseel 'can- , takes place and the action is repeated Hannah-ttit:sho did, Missus Art- • taining. gasi'dine were exposed to tlie; alt hur, Hit's nothire but a dispensary air A--Itingli-"reotti for -§oniestline,i-s-Thie isrealled stintirsetrokeen er Providenee stet I'm libin' ter tell and then ,a Match struck, en explosion cycle engine. beau --e it takes four de tale. . . Of* an intense heat would ,;eeur that strokes of the piston to. perform the woeld probably' de:Strew the • buildings 'complete ride of operations. neces, due. the vapor. from the gasoline i• eery to produee one explosion. This' Him -"I don't knoW how'to tell you cominnina with the air and ereating type. for •various reasene, seeing to haw / love You , Her -"Don't worry exCeedingly eninbue‘ible mixturesi be preferable to the two-cycle engine about that -I'll take it as it come8. rittgarie in iteolf is not more danger. I for . ordinary farm use. -Canadian What you wane to get nervous about ous than cord oil; Itis only when its' Counteymati, • as how to tell papa about it.", Qhiss That Won't Splinter. Glass that will not Splinter when broken is being made in FrarktO 'by pressing together under heat two sheets of glees with a sheet of -cella. loid between them. • • • • • "Paps, George says he is'very Worried about hie ineonie.'l "I ehOul not think ,he would worry About a little think like that," 1 reM r roa nes of corantim pitei until the •eliurch was too num- tion, droPping with the . precision ereus and too univerial to be killed clockwork as Many as 80,00 shells upon short sections •of tilt*, in the van of approaching Supplies' and men. Yet each time the automobile car& vans' brought up the reinforcements of COMM, munitione:, food and water. Meerschaum. Meersehesun, out of' Which. pipet, cigar • and chenrette holders are cute le a mineral found in irregularly roulldiid lumps scattered through. drift material washed down from sounbains. the largest deposit of it Is in the Plains of Esitishehr, Asia Minor. off. . • 8. Troubled -As sleewhere (for ex- ample, John 14.1); this word in much too weak a rendering.. • 0. The actual accused being out et" reach, they could only exact bail; pee- sumably‘for their being sent away, 10. Bercea-Some forty miles southwest. 11. strong .word, Stiggesting eager attention. . 10. The influential poeition of th ladies of the upper' class is character- tinctly set Feats that among the Greok population the trend of public 'Orden. depended largely on them, As; e ()hen happerisk they wire me' e sir , • s - I . • "In the first place my war. Map. shows that in Alsace, Turkey, .Togo- - land, s•the '' Eamertins, Southwest Africa :and Galicia, the armies of -the allies are 'Occupying 01000 square miles ‘ of Teutonic territory, 'or' al: most•six .times as reueh as the arm - les of the 'Central powers are ogeupys • big in territory of the allies ' "In the second place-, my* War Mali Shows .the sea and The ships Upon* of Which only 'an oeiguous 4nantity," ‘Tobserve,heltItire ClIteclaAimr al:dMiral Mahan.. tadde 'it plain in his boolts that com- mand of •the nea lin war times has a itta.seaffnecetirl' owetli.iwleh.techom:nanr4de8otf. ly• ,ransitoty." A , - • - f,•••••••._.••,- • Of 4•f. • 14 ••• ‘AgAL.' , _