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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-08-31, Page 2"1.6111.1MIsnimmteireew----evenneer elealeanuer - "ife-etetris* CU* of thte'llrele. In very hot, tie w.ell es in extremely eeld weather, the redistor *tumid be OM • coestant ettention. WRY 144pe. on the road during these warn. he,UMId -darilrequelibly 'boil the weter • Peed for the .coollng of the engine.. Never etirt, awiey on a trip unlees you are Poeitive that the radieter ie. fitled -t m to Of the over -tow pipe, and. it there i the 00404 hissing sound. • , allow he engine, to-reet. •Il/lany p00 - 'p* elo not takethis latter preeetitien• but theme who*re wiett enough to -paetc t,.save e Miter to no-ine etinteideetilfite extent.... ,ShoiiI4 it be -• xeceseary, *Weyer, to force the *ear .0loate until they/Oar' ii.steamingi you, phod melte eure 10 seek the. first ;bailee for a otop UUd.lefter reineying ..theradiator cape .allow the. 'steam, to . "eanel iii, easily recognixahle as inflated Mare likely to attack ,* sharp object than, * Ming which is PerfeetlY round ander tap lead. NeVer •get on a trip 'without Carrying * WOW* air -pressure gauge and do net fell to Make 'constant. lige of it. YOU nmy kick or rock or examine the point of contact, in connection with tires, but thie system Will not give an accurate idea of the pounds of air. con- tained therein. The gouge is the one metbed to pursue. enever or bruise appeare git a tire, do net console youreelf with the idea that this: point will never strike a sharp object. VW the hollow, or abrasion With cement and thus prevent sand, grit and .dirt frone enlarging the blem- ish. If you (Hoover a large cut, rush the eire to a vulanizing plant and have it attended to without delay. -A escape. Do not inimadiatelY Pour In eaused by dirt or Sand forcing it way between the rubber tread and fabric. ' furictiire this swelling im- mediately, cut away all portions of the tread that indicate wear, wash the hole with gasoline, and -vulcanize 4at the earliest possible Moment. It is cold water as the reaction le net good, ler any ldnd of metal. . Itlitir best 11141aY mrill be to clean'the le:Whiter by • Milting the water off through ...the drain cock, After the engine is aool- ed can introduce anew supply- . . if, hSwevet; it 'is imperative that you iihould rush Upon your way, refill the • radiator. With warm w,ater. The cY- linder Sachets Can always he drained ' by reineying the pipe plugs um the bot- tom. 1,,To bad disaster elm occur from using'soiled or dirty Water, but those Who have the best interests of their . motor at heart will. hoe clean, soft Water on every possible occasion. AbOat Pnce ler twice ri-year it is well to run a aturabed solution of •com. mon soda ,through the radiator. Such • compound: will remove all scala and eedhilent.• ' After this operation, rinse out the radiator carefully with clean, water before filling it again for a trip. Summertime " brings a certain , =Mint Of annoyance through :tire troubles. Of eourSe yo* will realize that punctures' , cermet be prevented. Sooner.or later you will have one, and it ia just possible that it may occur at 'a pointon the road wherethe sun is blazing overtime and the dust fly - hag in -clew's. With such a puncture In , mind, yoa will welcome a saggese ' tion or two regarding tire maintae ance. You will lessen the liability, of accidents by Iceemag. plenty of air in t your tubes. A tire that IS not heavily' er's Advocate Well in avoiding time tioubles to knoVe that wheels out of alignmentcause tremendous .frictiOu on . tire treads, The back wheels seldoni run oate.Pf true but the front wheels are sabject to it. Do not fail to check the late; ter up frequentIY a 'otherwise • You may find your, front casings going bad before their time. If eluriug the' holidays you decide to lay pp your car, - do not fail to remove ,the tires. They' should also be washed with soap and water, and later on wrapped in strips aper or cloth, Aedarleecool' place isproper storage. Figure that by re- versing the posnns y,the can prolong the Ii'Ves of your carriers., It is also well to change the front and rear tires as the last named carry more than half the weight of the • car,. and *cense uentl doles built a the hard Y driving. Now -a -days practically every machine has an extra tire for emergency cases. In carrying this fifth casing .and tube remember that sunlight has an injurious effect on rubber and that the purchase of a cov- er will -amply -repay -you for expense incurred, --.-"Aute", in Farm- ONAL RIES F THE BIG PUSH WOUNDED BRITISH • TEIX, OF ; THRILLING MOMENTS. , I Machine Gunner Killed 'in Tree -Are. • ' tillery Work Marvel of , e Exactness. , London is now daily .being thrilled ' by the stories of the great „push on the Sonuneewhich the wounded sol- diers have brought .back with the . Sorely wounded. 'as many of th .I simply tinned from:right to, left and ;are, and after a journey which all the &ed. just as if he was in a sheeting 'care made barely endurable the Men galleryeIt.was,the best bit of fancy •--eatill--tingle7witlit-tlfe"--tlitilf---of - theshootingI've seen." • eliarge and their talk is all of the • Artillery Called Magnificent. glorious rush with ".which they ca- Ar • • • . 1 : . • ,.ried every • obstacle, writes a London • A sergeant -major of the Middlesex correspondent. speaking of the work of fnglis,h artil- ' "We went ovF in .grand : style," tory- Said: "They were simply magni- . said a gergeant recalling the assault, ficent and as we advanced theee,lifted . . _ An Montauban, "and found the price tiench by trench. The battalion went en an awful mess. Most of the houses over and on in ,fine style. It was just had been*Icenleked head oVereheels-sl like a parade and the men felt confi- the .onier. ones I saw standing Were a i dent, as they knew that large reserves couple o2 cafes-As-weeearne-on-weJ-were-behinde-them,--:Weesoon-got into • •saw lots of Germans ,running out ' of the German front trench. I saw very • the hack of the village, but there were few living, but in the second and third 'plenty of them about the ruins. We lines we found a fevii. At the bottom% ,dividedthe company up into groups ' of the deee trenches were Plenty of of anc;•but as we neared the village ; dead and in the dugouts too. The we' joined up again. My five pals and i prisoners we took seemed half starved Myself saw Some Huns in a ground , and .as soon as they saw us coming I floor _room, so We dropped e Mills ' Ai:Jilted out, `Kamerad, mercy!' but ' bomb through the window tead 'didn't they only said this when they saw :. Avait for an answerie • that 'the machine guns which they ' , "As we furned the cornm we saw a ' 'had previously been working for all ..ce • German lying round the end Of a•wall. i they were worth were about to be• " _He'd got a machine gun and had,made . captured:" w 7 A. little emplacement With bricks. He.' ' A- corporal in the Northumberland Aliened the damned -thing on me and Fusiliers -gave a picture of the pre - saw of him" Wei:that he was hanging by hisboots;from the "The spirit of ciar boys was splen- did -they simply 'loved -the fun: One of them got leloYeri Up by ,a shell He seemed pretty -dazed, but be picked himself up and came along All he .said was 'Oh, -there Must be a war on, after. all, I suppose:, • , • Picked Off Two by T.ro, ; "We bed carried the first two lines - and on getting into the third we se* the Germans coming up from the two exits of a deep 'dugout and pairing off down the trench. Out platoon com- mander got into the trench and pick- edbe as they came out He had the mouth of the dugout on either side of him, say. 'fifteen yards away. He was As cool_as_a_eucutaher;Ive PITION WOMEN THE SUNDAY SC110003RUSILOFF OF ENGLAND - SHOPS WilEft SOAltOELY A MAN .10 TO ON S.r.3P1% Z- gYerr PireC*II/Illa Is Tali_ca Those UL Charge to Peevent Accidente, • A lady representative of the Press ASseciation, writes: Sieniewliere in the eentre -Engleacl, where last saMillee there were, poppies in th fields of ripening corn, stands 44Th Women's Factory. I call it this be CaU3O when I. visited it the other da by permission of .the - Munitions and under the eiliclance nif o oftimai, it Was the peedomme mice of women that was the first feat- ure to strike me. In most of the shops there was scarcely. a Man to he seen;' just lines' Of the girls.at the benches, young and &hell meat, of. them, in, their. khaki or dark blue overalls, with faces. smiling and. mem, looking up at you from under; the quaint eneb caps. . • "This is the factory that turns out the best fuses and has the moitrapid output in the country'," said the offi- cer in,tcharge of our party as we entered the. shop. "And it -is because the Worker's are so well looked after. We have .been running six months and We have not. yet had a single fuse or .anything peeled out in the factory rejected, .• • • "WO employ fifteen hundred wom- en to -day, and when extensions are complete we are going to have twelve thousand, INTERNATIONAL LESSON 13EVITADER ° Third Ouarte‘440410* SerreWe and Comfort8.-4 Ver, • 11,21,,to 1.2,100. Gulden Text• • cot, Ige 3o Vere 21. Paul Want& to Illakei clear that the braggarts must not be be taken at their own valuation; he is hbliged to -explain -and blue pit- a renthoilis here and in vane 23 0110** a how distasteful it Was. ---that he could not honestly admit their ouperwrity Y. 9n any account. 22. Hebrews, as Speakers of the sacred' language; Israelites, as inem- bers of • the sacred nation. SimilarlY In Phil, 3. 5 Paul, claims. to be., "of the of Israel" and, "a Hebrew of Hebrew descent." Alerabanee Peed is befit hiettated hY.1 Alin 8- OP. 27., " 28. We can see how acutely Paul felt the, necessity of Actually' recount- ing theeufferings and toils be had, un- dergone for his Mester: the yery. pre- ciousness of them was -14 their uncon- sciousness. " The catalogue thus wrung from, him vividly illustrates the •ga.pe in Luke's," narrative regarded me a biography. One beating (Acts' 16. 22) and one atoniag (Acts. 14, 19). -are chronicled there: a faith iihiPwreck (Nets 27) was yet to come. Prisons -Paul's -familiarity with prison life . . . ebundantly. illustrated" in the Acts, where two periods of two years axe recorded subsequent to the time of this letter. What 'waste of unspeak- ably precious time! Yet God saw that the time was not lost after all. Deaths -The plural implies different forms of deadly peril-, 1. In the Danger Zone. • Fuse making and filling is the chief branch of .munition work here, and the women are engaged in all the processes -of -filling the 100: "gram" fuse, ,and 'in many of those for mak- ing the 13 "time" fuse. Presumably because Women excel in branches of work that require great accuracy and delicate deftness _of touch, the fillingof the fuses and the making of the detonators' has been left in their hands entirely'. This work entails the handling of high eXplbsives, though if one had not to twee all handbags and umbrellas outside these - shops and slip on goloshes, one would hardly realize it, The girls ,handle without a trace of nervousness th deadly -t--11. T"., and the even ma &achy fuliainate ,of mercury, du playing 'a steadineks of head an smoothness of movement that•Showe how each one realized the vital iin portance -of the full, concmitietion o every sense upon the : • operation i hand. The shops I Saw where thes important processes were tarried a were, emall, ,eachL. occupied bir �nl three or four girls -this to localiz any explosion -and each ram had dare open to the fresh air at Alm end, so. that the atmosphere should net become poisoned by the chemicals 24. Jews -The name of his own lov- ed comitiymen stands in reproachfal emphasis, as in Acts" 26. 2 Fbrty stripes save one-InDei-W-26. 3 forty was named "as t'he maximum; the punctilious Jew was so careful not to exceed that he, made thirty-nine the limit -he could take it oet-in quality where depited! Jesus' -told his disciples they should be scourwed in syana- gegues, as breakere of divine taw. 26. Sudden. 'floods in dry riverbeds are "familiar in countries,where the ram i comes n, mass. 'Ve may con- . • jecture that peril from highwaymen was especially serious when er.ossing e the mountain passes in the first.jour- e ney, _the Poiat at which 'John Mark's heart failed him. Note the climax at ithe end--eliunian treachery is worse 27. The. trials of thi,verse "are art. e. :ranged in three giviips.2*.Eirst comes n the weariness of Physical and Mental e. toil, Witli frequent denial' of the sleep n that wald restore energy. •Then the y long'weits for food 'and drink, often o ending in failure Of iiii-ix-Peited sup- ply. •• (We may be sute Paul is not ✓ thinking Of useless' austerities: he had 'quite enough unavoidable fasts with- • out imposing - Mere 'ritual feats on himself! And we may well doubt whether a man so -emencipated from the rittiallaw found fasting means -' ofgrace, which is its only jtistifica- , den.) Then comes the necessity of traY'eling in all weathers, and ,often without clothes enough to withstand the -cold. \ 28. From thipgs that are "without-, which touched his bodily comfort or ' even threatened his life, Paul comes - tothat which alone found an entry'to "is souL ilow_daes_this_canfeision_ f 'daily "worrying" • square.- with Paul's own precept "In nothing be anxious" (Phil: 4. 6); or the Master's own commands about amciety? (Matt. .6; 25. 34.) We find that the 'forbid - ben anxiety, is- purely selfish; anxiety for 'others is an essential part of love's burden. The New Testament takes' us far beyond the message giv- ea to Ezekiel. Thos e who "watch On • behalf of douls" may "deliver their otorriecair-brfaithfully warning th sinner of backslider; but that cannot mean washing one's hands of an un- worthy man as eoon is he has been Adequately admonished , 29. Weak -How, • this colossally strong man "bore thesinfirmities of the 'weak"' appears in many of Paul's • chapters.He felt for them sedeeply that he truly put himself in their place. Caused to stumble -There is geed reason bo believe4that-this word would be mOre -exactly rendered en- • sneered, entrapped, tempted so as to elust as to the -OldeTeetemen phophet the undelivered madage was "as a' fire in his bones,", so is the news of a Christian's fall to the apostle. • than all. • The Safety -Gig. - Indeed, 'every possible precaution one could think of to eliminate dan ger was taken:. for the processes such as the screwing up of the ' fin ished fuse; where the chance ef an explesion Must be risked a machine called h safety -gig inVented by one of the owners of the factory is in use• It is. a globe of hardened metal, intc which .the fuse is inserted for tighten • ing, so that if 'any explosion takes place it is inside the globe, which is strong enough. to resist it, and the Operator also goes unharmed. To mation all the processes performed in these workshops would involve -un- necessary detail, but they range frcan• the "breaking down" and examining of. every separate part of a single .fuse to the filling of the detonator that hollowed tube nct longer than the 'first , joint of the liftle finger, which, with-four-grains-of-ful- • minate of mercury, and four -and a hair grains of pistol powder, can fire a shell of practically any size'. Tlhe Output is Very -High. • _ A standard of high efficiency both n speed and accuracy is. maintained n these shops. One girl charging de- onators declared that recently, in her oreidor-there are on average about fteen rooms to a corridor -they ere turning out 4,000 s day. Aa - other girl, whose work required the utmost care,, for the :dropping_ of a grain or twe of the chemical would mean a dangerous explosion, said she filled as a regular thing between fif- teen , and Sixteen hundred detonators a day, while a third, whose work was Imeasure the length of powder pel- ets, claimed fifteen hundred day as er• averege output. Working With T.N.T. 1 got me in the foot. It didn't stop me though,- and when I -was getting near • ‚to hiin 1' felt two kicks over the heart. ee didn't wait to .see what ap ened, but "simply Went at him and bayonet- ed him. eouldri1t go On much fur-, ther. n at down to •see what was • the_ damage. eision with which the 'assault was carried out. . "Just .on time," he said, "the first lines went gwey, not hurrying a bit, -:just taking it easy. Then came • the second Inc. Of course there were gaps, but these were soon filled. Then went the thirtLline-ancl_Lfollowecl_up • _ ;Book Stopped:Bullets. • "My,.foot was pretty bad, but when • I looked at my left hend kbreast poc- het I sew two holes in it. •I opened iny pocket and found that two bullets had one through inypecket case and 'had hosed their way tato a book ,I was carrying. Funnily eneugh. earlier in the -morning my -officer gaire me the book and said I totild .read it when I -; -gal-Ante-the German - trenches, eo • • putit in my pocket, little thinking that I should be able to read a bit of • it on hospital ship coming back. •The • two ballets after piercing the mirror with Ithe. supports. Everything was going Al. The artillery, was lifting • from trench trench end we were 'goliONV- ing step by step. It was ajuet like a field dOr. The carriers with bombs and ammunitlim .kept on coming along as 'cheerful as anything, and then t• e • i th d I-- -at is into our owif front lines and on to the • dressing station." • -7, One man who had been at Mametz eaid that in the .German trenches t -hey found plenty' ctr,inen, but,. is far as they 'could judge, bombs were'. the chief weapons, • not rifles.. Several me,u spo e Ile Comparatively stna number et' rifles in the trenches, • ,• •• • • ' • . • Playing Safe. 'O'Toole • -Phwat's the matter that ye didn't spake to Mulligan just now? Have ye quarrelled? : ••• • • O'Brien -That, we havo not., That's the insuraneo av our friendship. • O'Toole--Phwat do ye =Met• - O'Brien-e-Sure,it's this way. Multi-, elm an' I are that devoted to wan .other that we ain't. bear the idea of a quarrel; an''as we are both moighty quick-tempered we've resolved not to spake to wan another et alt, fot ?ear we break the friendship, •• • A Modern Ted. One interesting process to watch was the making cif the tetriol T.), ;powder into pellete- One girl carefully wipes and polishes the mould, a second measures the powder • and pours it in, and the third, the girl on the press, completes the process. n the workers 'engaged inehandling explosives wear masks and • shields 'I for the eeese_and- their- hands and feces are stained with yellow, but n e ay g moved ac •A limy of metal. , . "I saw three -Gerierms come up to twd of our fellows and' throw down . itioir rifles, So our bop) ,chueiced 'dowe theirs, too, and went for them with their fists, ,and they 'didn't 'half 'give them a dusting. •' "The Germans seemed to tie all agra from 15, to 50 I should say. Some 'of them, avec up crying out that they • • . • litid had, no food for five days, One of our boys did wonders With the 1)07, oriete•he was chasing three Gerinans he caught them up tied bayoneted. • two, as he swung tenni), he hit the third inttn adwn with the hitt 'of his • rifle. • 1 "As we were going into Montabhan , . We StrtV Gereann =chine goner up •tree. He'd got the nentestlitIle •platforre you ever Saw peitted so that ft was Minot ifivisible. We shot , but he didn't fali cioar 1110,,last we 1/4 '••) s not to a marked extent, owing to the precautions taken. "We are going to try and adapt the the use of the girls." "Are they influential?" "Hardly, , Their automobile is 'net ;ear's model,'" i Sent to Bed too Late. 30. Weakness -In quotation mar s, 'as it Were. The World Might deaf at' a saint's -tears,. over • the "sinners against their own selves" (Heb. .12. 3, as -it should beread). -God-does 110 count them effeminate! So again, men do nob boast of their prison re- cord or.'judicial or jfidicial floggings! Paul's lianility puts aside all those • splendors -so razzlingly clear to us - which would have prompted any small Man to boastfulness had he possessed a fragment of them, He declares ; (es in 2 Cr. 12. 6) •that his -appeal wilLbe to the most rigid standard of •trutheattested by God himself., • .3i. God is named Tirat as "the God and Father" of the Loyd for whose dear sake 'Paul toiled and suffered. , Then -as constantly in the language • •laietts-J-ev.te-(itt4-etltettel--7See4carl 14. 61) -he is the recipient of eternal tbhnksgiving 'from grateful: mankind. -32. A typical instance hishair:. breadth escapes is added s an octet, - "thought. • Aretas--Futher-in.law Herod' Antipas,. who divorced his wife to' marry Herodias, and, thus brought owe' on Galilee the armies Of the outraged Arab, king, Aretias Was speeially ftiendly„to the Jews, Which • explains Saul's :commission to attest Christians in: Damascus. : 33. Here is a close, link witli Acts (O. 24, 25). .The Words there through t the *all; low'ering him, are identical (except for the passive) with. PatiVe own "I was lowered through the wall" 0 here; the Worde for basket .difeer. fluke had heard Paul tell of it, but dicl not preserve the exact form. The window would be in a house overhang. ng the wall, like thatkof Itahab itt Josh, 2, 14.• • "Papa," said Jamie, "the reason there's se many laws is because there • are ele many lawyers in the legisla- ture, isn't Ib?" "Yes,"' said his father.. 'tried tor:' yours now." "Just one more question, Papa,"• said jamie, "why are 'there so many taxes when there aren't any' taxider- MIAS iri the legislature?" Pigeon `back After Three Years. After an absence of three years, a pigeon, that WaS enteroa in a pigeon race from. Bordeaux, Vranee,. has re. turned ,to its loft at Witheridge, Eng, land. MOD • • ....v.*. UNLIKE: SOME 'OP He I* One, of Pew Cole* Snag Pftraritea,..to giticce4. in • the Army.. Muniiton Pee, the well-krowill British Journalist, describes as fele • Iowa 1110 impressions of General Brute, Doff when, as the correspondent of the London Daily Mail, he ilatted him at army beadquartere before the; BUssien effensiVe begant . Wert( I King, Emperor, or SoVe- reign'PeoP)e, I Wotild have no gener- ale; my tierviceN older ,theit forty- five. Yet to, this rule would make an exception, and it would in In favor of General Alexis " Brusiloff- Never did anyone Illustrate Indr.0 aptly the truth of theemying that "a Man is as old as he feels." 'General Brushoff is 40y -three, Only two , years goner than General Ivanoff, whom he succeeded recently in the chief command upon Rusidiee south- weeitern- front: In, everything but fact -there is. twenty Years' difference between the .two ,men. Ivanoff Is big, slow-moving, old-fashioned in his views. Brusiloff is spare:: alert, modern. As I sat and talked to hini in the bare- ropm„froin -which he di- rects the • operations of one of the three groups into Which the Russian armies are', divided, I felt at once that his -znind worked quickly, that he is for never -ceasing "push and go," that he is first, last, and all the timo. a man of action. : V • �iioll GovcrilmentLoap Are' You Interested in, Winning tfto :War? - 50.0. • ilelp the 00VOrvanent by in'reating a few „thousand or a* fevrhundred 011ars in it* neve loan, Ask as fOr partieulara. We make 'IP chap for our service% Co. ,Burgess .COmpany. • • thize /14**11V.V.PlaUTCP orADA. - ' Gen, Alex: Bruaallort ' ••• • ' • His' face tells this. Dark, stead, searching eyes,• and a nose with • a high, commanding• curved bridge, give him the look of an eagle. NO pal cast of thought here. No stiident or professor, this. Firm chin, vigorous jaw -line. When this man pegins a task he will carry it through to • the mill, as he carried his Carpathian campaign. • ' Has Great Record. It was he who overcame all the dif- ficulties of that surprising adventure Spite of winter, spite of -deep snows and -terrible- coldrhe-pushed-on-till- he had won the whole ridge of the moun- tains and was ready, to push his traps down into Huagary, • ;NO fault of his that the efforts and the victories naught availed- us.. He has his place in history. He • has made new records in the annals of war, Never befOre, I believe, has an armir .taken „prisoners to the number of • twice its own strength. 'General Bruelloff4s army averaged about 180,e -01:101teliever-exceeded-200,O00. -At times it dropped as low'as 100,000. He captured- in all 360,000 Germans and Austrians, with 4002guns. "And how many .machine guns?" \ I asked hiin; "I forget; Thousands," he re- plied. • Ivanoff, the son of peasant pro- prietor, has remained in essentials a peasant all his life', He lives in the simplest fashion. He !night, haVe advanced himself by ,marrying a rich wife. He preferred to be a bach- elor. lehielesty he tarries to • almost enorbidlengtle- •OM of the censors of his staff told\ me be was quite angry because a newspaper telegram was passed praising his -Conduct of cer- tain operations! , A map aecestomed life to working continua*, he liked • doing for himself many things which ''a commander-in-chief might to Make others do:. • • A Social 'Favorite. • 'General Briisiloff's 'career hie been a different as possible from that Of General Ivanoff; 'therefore his mind and' temperament have developed along -different lines. He is of good family, went to the Russian Eton- (the "Pages' Corps"), and then begainife in a fathionable., eavalry regifrient Ability and • influence combined he, make his advanm eeent rapid. He held many good positions, was reckoned a favorite at Court, distinguiehed him- self as a daring rider, encouraged cavalry officers!, to go in for polo and Foss -can y s eep et ases, was pop - 'Mar in Petrograd' society. Tlien came the .war to try out the capacity and characters of men. most; . of the 1.1 io bl s oldie re wen t inlet 't'try quickly. It was the studious, strictly prefesSional type" ' of officer which. came to the front. Ili:usileff s almost. the only 'One of the pto- minent axial figures in the •RUSSiatl army_who has. made good, lie began in 1914, 351$1 the command- ee of an army corp•s. ,,Soon he had an army unifer hint, and his. army did he most brilliant Work that has been' done j)y any Of the combatants. 'In hm ie -ode tife he follows the habits f Western Europe. His biteraste are those of celtiyated people, Ite tnlks French like it Frenchina, and says he will learre•Engliih after the war. necessarily Warm -hate. A' Woman with (fiery teniper 41.0•••••• Normig.w aniximAiftlebn. war loaszu - ' . W. every good; Cimadieaappie..eor'livery della, he etin atter& . will handle applfeatiene without apy charge. • ItilhiLlsialfildl'XIX. larripaLlo.. koottati. . • 11,040 inviited ln these bonds iitILlm repaid on m4140147 ItY the Noonan iv : Golfer:meat w th what vfin produce icomedian money, a roximetelY il.650. ; and ...,- geed b NretOly ihter_eat in the Meantre Both end. and Coupons can be cashed tie Toronto. whit' is' the ((area and moot eitittuite.of all the 'great wet profits, and empire teroutli the tee nieel °end non •ot xtuoium *X - (mange produced ay' this -ware. Writ. or. telephone fcll (drainer NOV exeleinieg. . ' HOWARD CRONYN & CO. , . • .ostorrst sugamice, Tomoro, Tzigirrionli .ssix11. HOT OF A Blflir IN RESER, • Germany Will Operate All War struments at Her Disposal. • Prominence is given in Der 'rag of Berlin, to a long 'article on Thor's. hammer by Dr. Reinke, member of the Upper House of the Prussian Diet. Dr. Reinke opens his article hy recalling the fact that. the hearts a millions of Germans were lifted up to "-the God of Christians," at the commeueement of the' third year Of the war with a profound feeling of gratitude for "the immeasurably • great 'things we have achieyed during two years of . bitter struggle in this defensive war iforced on. .us." Dr. Reinke writes: • "The God of Christians is the. God of love, of faithfulness, . of justice and of mercy." We are to serve Him In spirit, and in truth. His service does. not, however, preclude, us Ger- mans 'rem turning also to the gods Of our Teutonic forefathers, who in their myths divided , among several ideal figures what the Oriental Chris- tian teaching embodies as a whole in the image of God."' "Thor and his hammer," Dr. Reinke oisserta, . "syMbolize the German heroes. up to the present day, and it is the blows of Thor's haimmer that are , wielded by the German soldiers on all the fronts of the present bat- tlefield. • One great blow \ of thist hammer is still needed:in the west Wore the peace that : GrmanY wants reveals its face." One does not speak of this great final blow,- he says, but everybody is constantly thinking about it, and it will consist 9f operating simultane- ously .and ruthlessly "with all the forces and all the instruinents: of War at our disposal." • ; ; • , Reinke .observes ' that • the Charicellor • expressly 'declared he .holds this in reserve, arid- he avers? the - Chancelrof -id SupPorted 44: this point by the whole nation. The Only question in, he adds, -is when this hammer, "in .anticipation of - Which heaviest and decisive bloW " of thel. the Briiannic 'giant lives" in a state of constant fear and anxiety:" is to be struck. "Thor's hammer Must. be swung with such strength :and 'vig- or that the blow when it falls will make the rock of Great Britain wa- ver. England will never :be Willing 'to discuss, peace until she' feels the effect of spell ,a blow.". • • Dr. Reinke is one of Germany's leading savants in the -domain of bio- _ logital research. . • • , I SHE KISSED KITCHENER: - • Cape Town Yonne' Lad; "Lived to ' 'fell the Tale.' _ _ • . I It happened at the clase of the South African War.: Lord ..Kitchener was at • the time, en route' froin. the Front to England, ,having completed the arduous task hendedec.1Vee te him by Lord Roberts when relinquishing the post, 'es • Commander -in -Chief shortly after the, ,advence- to 'Pre- toria. Lord Kitchenme it- wilt he re- membered,-'.akeumed supremeethei- nand in South:Africa at the, mieset of the Bar' geerilla war -campaign.. The Alien Mayor of Cape .Town had invited about -4 hundred of the 'leadee, ing 6'114a -of -South Africa' S metro- poliiretogether with a few Of the most notable military inep at that time. resident in, the .Cape 'peninsula, to do honor to "IC!! 'ere he left fbr Eng-, • When Poultry Die, • The poultryinan ikould make it a gentral practlee to examine all poel- try -that dies from an apparently un- known Cause. By So doing one,is of. ten able to, determine the nature of the existing trouble.... To- make so •• pest mortal examination on a bird,' Proceed as follows: First remove the feathers from a large portion of the carcass; then with a knife separate the legs from their attachment to the WO. In thei next step the peritoneal cavity opened, Thi ii is best acconiplished: with a pair of sciasors, but a sharp,. knife will serve the purpose. abdominal region and cut forward • Start from a point in the posterior through the ribs on each side. /This will fre'e the posterior, pada of the! sternum or breast , bone, and it' cant now be broken and laid baelt from thet operator, allowing easy aecess to the' thoracic and abdominal organs. The general appeeranee of the organs in their. natural -position should first be observed. Of ill the organs of domestic pouf - try the liver and intestines 'are most frequently involved in infectious dis- eases. • The liver should always be removed and -examined carefully; next examine the spleen (commonly known - di the..melb); which hi a small, nearly , spherical organ varying from one-half, to one inch in diameter. This organ is oftentimes involved in teiberculais,' but one is rarely able to discern alener- Malities With the unaided eye in other diseases. , • ' The inteatines should be (aliened ; from the stomach to the anns, the ine testinel ;contents washed out, and the . mucous membrane examined fer_ helm- . • orrhages, diphdieretie membranes, in- flanimationsrand other chapges. ' •• Of the thoracic:organs the heart • usually shows the most striking' les- ions. s. Very, rarely are the lungs in- . volved' in the Specific infectious dis- eases. ;.• Even in- tuberculosis the lungs are involved. in :cemparativelY i• .evi.Ifthe i3s.poeltryie. en_ makes. the post raertemexamination of ell 'birds that dip -a regular part of the routine of soon be ognize any'- deviations from the nor- mal, and act accordingly, -Dr. Robc-t Graham, Kentucky- Station: tlee On Poaltry. "Experieneed breeders learn to be _ observant, mi nd cad tell at a'glance where the ,iretble ''es 'with ailing chickens.. Insect pests -will soon 'e cause young birds to drop; where the • .feathering is backward and the devel- • ppment Weeded itj8 well to examine ." carefully the head and body feathers a !so thoreughiy elest -with insect pow - ler,.. sulphate , y e tfir um.' end toj; cour the•eoop dr night • shelters -well ith eresgfe„ or paraffin 'emulsion. ften the -top of chigies' heads 19 .. ( 0 fested with. tieks; litble white' pre-. ..cipitate ointment rubbed in being -the • , best remedy. Insect life in young. or , old chickens must be quickly suppress- or such infested'birde will assiered- lY suffer; with the W'armth of surname the trouble will ' Mere; land, and a .dinner• -was ciecordingly, Poultry-kepere are agaitLyeMinded arranged Afterdiener a sitialt.eom.- that garlic -fel chickens seldern 'suffer panf of 'ladies Wasadmitted to -the., from lice of any kind; it 13 therefore ' room, in; order to ' listen o the wiseee give a •thilly meal of chopped; _ speeches -thee•repast-legeeen---' olden tope,, At • the close of the proceedings, as'p1beneficial to the Chickexi•eblood : the -guests of -the- Mayor were enjoy- -and organism. Overcrowding quick- ing a quiet smoke together., a young , ly causes trouble amongst promising girl advaneed.toWards.Lerd Eitche.ner flocks of chickens and is. noticeable with • her atitogratili-alhani • in hand, durieg the present' mouth, when rues land asked him if he would- kindly safficiently large for tweriby chickens . • . • • • . . , grap en a month since will 'scareely abeam-. ler heolc. iireidate. a &ken, now. -Every attn.; Much 'as the late Secretary of State tion to specials runs and steeping 'for War disliked this land of ,thmng, quarters is demanded; whilst the im- he could .not very well eay ""Nay," 'porta:nee OL•cleardinesoi should be im- anil sci signed his name inthe heolc..! prosier]: on till patiltrykeepers. EX - He wee iri the act of handing!t hack j creta allowed to remain even to the young lady, when, before thecie in the room could reallee what 'had happened, she dexterously implanted a kiss on, the cheek of the tanned and obviously, gignoyed • distinguished dier: 1 Needless t:�a, 'the company ex - Pressed its disapproval, awl disgust of the action in as forcible a' ininince as waa posiible circumAanceSt but the. girl capture1 the pesition by meane of e direct frontal attack, -and ivt to tell the tale. • • • Polish isnot necessary tt enable a train be shine. In 8ociety-4f lao has the coin, • few days wilt soon ereate a, filthy con.) ' (Mien of affairs., and when It it; ton•e. sidered that the thickens exist on' thei grotind time, eimeequisecee cannot foil! to be realized." . ,• - 11cde•ce Living cost In Ruesla, soeiety for entebatieg : the high cost of living has opened -a, number ofi• Show in Petrograd for the salo 01 provisions to the working population' Daigle closost,possible margin. Eleven,' of theeeshops have . already been! • estehliehed. They aro locitted In the ' vicinity Of fatioriee whic1t ere work.' log fot the national defenceIt is' proposed°16 open it Nita of thirty ste1, - thops. In the near future. • . • '