a farmer in familia ar and | try who Sr | [that ruts, bu hy ¢ | for us to state that when. hard-tired, | 8 The Prefeseiice seems _ [horse-driven vehicles strike' any ob- | be for thick leaves, bu ; 'stacle, the force of the ; models. with thin a ea pre taken 'up immediately, 1 the rig great flexibility. Garage mén 3 has come out of or over any place not tell you that cantilever takes up a 2 perfectly level, the entire effect is| jolt and instead of communicating it past and gone. 'This is not true, immediately to those riding in the cdr, however, of automobiles, for their spreads the impact a long distance. springs are built in'compensation with | = Front springs are uniformly. short- Pneumatic tires in order that the jolt | er and stiffer than rear springs, be- may nob be communicated at once, but | cause for saftey. 'Then, too, a ear rather spread over an appreciable dis- | sential for 'safety. Then, too, acar' tance, Before going any farther, it | body must be prevented from pitch- might be well to state that many un- ing forward disagreeably when a comfortable jars have been given the | short stop is made. or upon striking passengers of an automobile bv not the base of a hill. In little road- pon, BO a) Per yard sters, of certain types, you will find re it an advantage to carry a bag of sand or a piece of heavy material under the deck at the rear, at times hen you are using your car alone. If hree passengers are riding, the ac- Exclusive ion of the springs will be as com- : Roun ng Up Slackers at an English Race Track. : 'military "round-up" of racegoers at Newmarket, England. An of- one of, ficer, and special constable are shown examining a man's papers on the THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON OCTOBER 29. with a dry cloth and powdered whit. 3 jing, 33 : 9] | If you intend leaving home for a t dish; er with |g. days and wish to keep your palms bor; eayenne and other plants well watered during : Live ne | YOU absence set in a tub and get as he this for ten minutes, turning many bricks as you have pots.to place frequently: . Take out, roll in cracker | jn ty. top Cover the bricks with Suh; Shen in beaten LL ey hin water, and the plants placed on them Hard and but halt an d h alf, : wil draw all the Gishure they re- _ Creamed Oysters.--Parboil one pint Every housewife knows the value of of prepared oysters, tha is oysters kerosene at housecleaning time, and freed from bits of shell and rinsed i every other time that there is clean- } gritty. Drain and use the liquor with ing to be done. It chases anbs, too, oir enough cream to make one and one-| Saturate a cloth with kerosene and half cups in making a thick, white leave it near the ant hills. They soon _| sauce, Season with salt, pepper, disappear. For cleaning painted mace or Aitmes; add the oysters, us-| ong varnished floors, bathtubs and ing only the soft parts if large ana marble wash stands it is unsurpassed. | For tubs and marble, apply with a serve them in fancy shells. Sprinkle inced woolen cloth, then wash with soap and fine m! green pepper over the top and hot. Serve each shell on water. = For woodwork and walls use clean cloths, changing as soon as they and serve fancy dolly laid on medium-sized : # 3 get soiled. Afew drops in the wa. ter when washing windows and mir- rors will give them a beautiful polish. -- QUEEN MARIE'S HOBBY. She'Has a Collection of Some 8,000 Scent Bottles. The Queen of Rumania is a daugh- ter of the late Duke of Edinburgh, fa- vorite niece of King Edward, and "a first cousin to King George, and it is only natural that her sympathies are with the English. As a child, Queen Marie was the pet of Queen Victoria, | warmed in an iron spoon. "A tablespoonful of turpentine boil- ed with clothes will greatly help to whiten and disinfect them. Put a few drops of ammonia on a our rag bo rub finger marks from your looging-glasses or windo ul} "Phe worn and greasy collars and al cuffs of a coat can be cleaned with "benzine and an old clean brysh. * Keep tin vessels free from rust by placing them near the fire after they have been washed and dryed. To soften water .in. which flannels}: '| are to be washed allow two table- spoonfuls of glydérifie to ter. Fi *s WIE 3 If silk handkerchiefs 'and ribbons 'are washed in salt and ironed wet the in 7 | best results will be obtained. nm To remove a rusty screw first _ap- i ply a very hot iron to the for a 8 "time, then use the ver, Sud er and--d&Si uo... A Jortable as the manufacturer intend- drive your motor fifty miles an houty ed, with seven-passenger cars, and, or five times as fast as trotting alin some cases, with five-passenger horse, the jolt, you can expect bo re-| types, shock absorbers can be em- ceive, upon hitting any obstacle, will | ployed successfully, Where only the be twenty-five times as hard as one | front seat is being used on a long obtained by an old-style vehicle. This journey some owners have found it ratio, of course, is reduced when we wise to employ straps, Let us close Lesson V.--The Voyage--Acts 27. consider that the pneumatic tires bring | this article Ye stating that care with 1-38. Golden Text.-- a large measure of ease, and that the maximum«riding qualities are those Psa. 37. 5 different types of springs tend to re- possessing the most harmonious re- A duce forward and side action termend- | lations between springs and tires. If Verse 13. Their purpose--To reach | ously. Manufacturers have a num- the former are very flexible, the lat- Phenix (verse 12). There is a har- | ber of points brought before them in| ter can be inflated harder and will bor still called Phineka, which does determining just what springs should | last longer, but if the springs are stiff "look "southwest and northwest"--for | be placed upon their cars. It can be and rather unyielding, less air should this, it must be admitted, is the only | safely stated that very flexible, easy-| be used, although by following this possible rendering there. Ip is just | moving springs take small obstruc- | your milage for the casing may be at the back of Lutro, which has usu- | tions easily, and large ones without a somewhat reduced. You 'should re- ally been identified with Pheenix, and | gread deal of trouble. Rurthermore, | member that each spring works co- has produced the strained interpreta- | it is also an established fact that the' operatively with the other three, and tion in the Revised Version (see mar- | subdivision makes it possible to ab- that when they are in complete uni- gin). sorb: the uneveness of the road by | son the best results are being achiev- 14. Down from it--From Mount Ida | spreading the back action over more, ed. See that the body of your auto- in Crete, Tempestuous--The original | space than is possible by employing mobile is perfectly level under all con- is the word from which we get our |solid material. A very popular cheap ditions, because if one corner shows a typhoon, ' The wind that sweeps down | car employs a cross spring, which, tendency to sag you cannot provide from Ida is described as coming "in | while not as efficient as it might be, yourself and your guests with that heavy squalls and eddies' Called |it still durable and gives fairly sat-| measure of ease which is so much de- Euraquilo--A combination of Eurus-- isfactory service, Other types are sired. Constant inspection of the east, and aquilo--northeast; it came, | still full elliptic; three-quarter elliptic | springs should be made in order that accordingly, from east-northeast,|and semi-elliptis, Of the last three | the least crack or break in any one The called suggests that Luke repeats | mentioned the first and second are of the leaves may be immediately re- the seaman's term; compare Kings- | doubtless easier upon the passengers, | medied. You may give'your car a ley's ode, "Welcome, wild northeast- | but the third has advantages in the heavy impact to-day and fracture one er!" matter of installation which seem to] of the leaves without immediately 15. Face the wiml--She would have compensate for any loss of comfort, It | noticing any inconvenience, but soones jad to run northward and then some- | can be stated in favor of the elliptic or later this weakness will communi. 3 il. | What eastward to make Phineka; and | type that it takes far less space along | cate itself to the balance of the spring, ap ler Justrait painted by Mil in such a gale it was impossible to | the side of the frame and gives easier and you may find infinite trouble in * 'Queen Marie introduced a: i tine ¢. | Tun 80 near the wind. «| starting and stopping facilities. The reaching a destination. Always look 1y English tone into Ca ne 16. Under the lee--So as to get shel- advocates of the semi-elliptic arrange. | well at the clips, for looseness fre- Mi ae nl a um es) fer enough for these necessary pre- | ment maintain that their situation | quently results in accidents of a minor Crown Princess, and so strong has | cautions. Cauda--8till called Goudo, | and clips on the axle are so arranged nature.--Auto in The Farmer's Advo. been her influence in the Raments | We were able--The we implies that | that the spring leaves are not twisted, cate. capital that English is now practical- { Luke lent a hand in a job which any illing 'landlubber" kle. ly the language of the aristocracy. Ne np idle Be Seoul task Th minus quantity. Injury--A word It has become almost a proverb in : . |often denoting a criminal assault on Bucharest that it is only the "women Somanied Me. skill of ails. ri the person, a combination of Ansult | Put Into Force in England by King who wear kerchiefs"--that is, the the rope by which she was trailing, | 2nd injury. Edgar laboring classes--who cannot 8peak | and ag she was, of course water-log. 22. And now--Emphatic: he recalls ; English. » ged, it took some pulling! The word | his Previous neglected counsel, which| ~The first prohibitive measure in There is a story told of Princess with difficulty is Luke's reminiscence | vents had justified, only to induce| Britain was that of the Saxon King Ileana, the third and seven-year-old of the effort: them to listen now. Edgar, who nearly a thousand years daughter of Queen Marie and King 17. Undergirdi Passi thick |. 23: An angel--To the pagans whom | 880, on the advice of Dunstan, put Ferdinand, which illustrates. the feel- bles. Gud ih Hy i iid t MCX | Paul was addressing the word would | down many alehouses, only allowing ing of the Rumanian Royal Family, | er tne seel and fastening FIRST PROHIBITION ACT. --Note Paul's delicate consideration | town, and at the same time limiting To render boots and shoes soft and wash them once {Ha omg 3 A simply mean & messenger. The God| one to exist in any village or small When teased by a foreign diplomas them tightly on deck amidships, to | about her nationality, the little girl warm water and then k replied with dignity: "I am a little -| Rumanian; a little German, but most- ly English." | Queen Marie, by the way, has a queer hobby. It is the collection of .| scent bottles, and she now has some 8,000. I hear, too, that she is head of the Society of Goddesses of Ru- mania, not because of her beauty, which is remarkable, but because she has promised to play fairy godmother to atleast one poor child: The so- Ita "lan oa has done 'much 'good work in this fanciful way, So idl | ns dy ' | vanishes, otice sage 14: f they coul ledge wh | the word describes "1 the medical Jiter prevent the timbers' starting with the tremendous strain of the mast. « This | [OF the men's religious susceptibilities. the draughts of the drinkers. The A Another day he would plead for his| common drinking cup of that day operation, technically known as frap- as the ye God; worl. it is enough held about two quarts, and Edgar ping, is naturally unfamiliar in our to identify him as the God to whom | had eight pegs placed at stated dis- time, when shipbuilders have learned his own life and service were given | tances in each cup, heavy penalties how to forestall such dangers, Syrtis The order of the Greek is "of the God | being imposed on those who drank --The dangerous. sandbank to the whose Tam . . . a messenger." | from one peg to another at each time. southwest. The gear--Almost cer- 'The whole stress is laid on the God; Neither the working nor the result of tainly the mainsail, leaving ne OT | the messenger is nothing. |the Act encouraged Edgar's success- two small'sails set to keep ft ie ship | =, Fear not--The form of the|ors to further action, and the next steady. It seems that the ship Was | Greek implies that even Paul's stout | prohibitive legislation on the sale' of turned as near the wind as possible; spirit was not untouched by the fear- [liquor is due to Henry VIL, who, by and while pointing nearly north, she ful peril. He had "spent a night and | an Act against vagabonds and beg- {has drifted a. little north of west. | day in the deep," and he was not a | gars in the year 1495, gave power to This is exactly the direction of Malta. phlegmatic fool who can despise dang- | any two justices of the peace to stop Furnjtute Amargin).~The word is|EN'SERIE Tonl wit can desp thai do. |the common selling of strong ale. in general; they Sollected all, the i termined all Paol's action is to de- | towns and any other 'places they et pili pe Th ad dition of | termine his human destiny, Granted | thought necessary. Lt i a $s thee--God did not alter his will as to | ie fiber cab ith thei own hands is intended to the life or death of these two hundred | : esperate {Yice Blind Watchmakers. 'and seventy-six men because Paul ask. | J ;| ed him for their life as a "favor" po! ence of suf and 220 | Blind people-<those who have been sens oe louar | himself His prayer was an "in. {born blind---are, as is well known, ex- | ceedingly. clever with their fingers, Sours ime bow. 'wrought supplication" (so read James Na yh all "15. 16), the unconscious reaction of the itis h- --More exactly, "was bei . Me "1% 1 but itis not often we hear of a wate stripped off"; ova Reps for shother | Sivine upon the human. spirit, which | maker who was born Mind; ai: yet de Oe al} 'ko [1s the very essence of the truest PTRY- | there have been instances of the kind. A famous blind watch-maker lived at Ho '21, Without ? odo i What, then, did Paul's prayer ] at His name was Rippinjand though! 20. In the 0; psolutely) pi} of appetite" which in - Why, it was God's instrument roi" his tog herr ach, in Lincolnshire," Engla: at. Paul's instance, 'they lave Barri, save a girs | (verse 31) would not. saved: after: