fig.‘ Jm Cam): should be kept in clean, covered jars to prevent their becom- N-aunt woruy. q Mixing bowls and cooking utensils than†be carefully scraped. Much fog] can be and in this way. Food should in earetiilrooked, for burned or badly cooked food is wasted. . Vegetables and fruits should be page! thinly or unwed. . 7 Fresh fruit and vegetables shiuld be purchned as needed. Overbny- ing of perishable food results in spoilage and waste. Perishable fruits and vegetables should be carelully put away and not allowed to wilt. . How Food Can Be Saved Before It Benches the Table. The butcher is often allowed to keep bones and trimmings. These shoaWbe taken home. The bones and meat should be used for soup. The fat should be tried out for cook- mg. Left over eake and cake crumbs should be used in Puddings or to re- plnce ftour in dark cakes. Juice left from cooked vegetables should be saved for soup All bread crumbs should be saved. All left over mueins, biscuit, bread of any kind shoud be saved, made into crumbs and used in scalloped dishes, baking, etc. No bit of food is too small to be saved! l “or Food Can Be Saved After the Meal It Over. Bits of \egetables should be kept tor soups, salads. etc. Fruit juice from canned fruit can he used for getatine desserts or to tuvot. puddings. on the plates. As far as weenie care should be taken to prepare onlr the mount of food needed by the family Smaller Amounts of salad dressing uhould be served. s. His bowels should now may: at last once a any. If they do noti " diet and uterine should be so Ti minted " to bring about that result. J: He should be interested in iifi) hs' en, dull, or unhappy children Irei frequently suffering from the want; of interest in life. Such o childl should be watched to discover if pos-- sible what he does enjoy and when! his natural interest lies; and it isi then an cosy task to stimulate his in..', terest until his whole attitude is,! changed. ( T. He should be taught simple les-l song of personal hygiene; the use of} indulidual toweis, handkerchiefs, toilet erticies;, good care of teeth, nose,’ eyea, hands and feet. it. He should be taught to believe that to be healthy is one of the flnest possible achievements in the world,‘ and most patriotic. Bow Food Can Be Saved " the Tune Smaller portions should be served. Person; at. the table should be ttiv- on an opportunity for choice, so that no food is served unless a person There Care " Home Plan“. In “my: for home plants it should 4. HO should have a daily bath or rub-down and n cleansing bath with warm water and mild soap at last once a week, oltener if possible. 8. B. should but plenty of out-of-' door ttl-ot too much M, nor too long continued. r a C. Raccoon Louis no the but vahxe on tho mar het today. The! no and. Ron NI? {mud prim It!†--good ad roomy. with m. an: " u to insure "mm to than": when mt- ed. no let.",, the but cum“! 1rett.tan cl mu ct coats; an inch... any}; u. a. u. in... M t. Tho "will. child lust have: plenty of doâ€. Up to six years In, nook! sloop 9nif the tao-twel"; out ttf twenty-four hours. Part th the iqttrse may he includod in the (hy- time up. . I 2. His food should be plentiful and, nutritious. Each child should have,' " but “no Pints of milk . dun! Part of this any be in mm othcri food. web a: custard or ice eream.' Me should also have limited quantities of meat and plenty of eggs, cereal» vegetables 1nd fruits. A CUIIIIM a CUMMINOQ 1-â€. " “I " . 'haKre.t Illitttt'tt Raccoon Goats â€(It Cod-ud-uu (a Children. --._ any, very ou mid be out at the table. g meat, bone or surplus It left on the serving plate, be utilized in stock or tor $701154 served should be eaten. be nothing edible un With a tumurbe on the own she will then m home to her hay! lite, couch! by this ehat with her hul- Sloop won, for all gobs well, and t have meaty it! my stocking." “Was the rain cold on thee last night? I thought of thee when Hay w'th the children in our snug bed be- hind the lattice. Perhaps thou wouldat care to hear that Jean has twins. That has proved a happy marriage, though Marie had no other dot than her good looks. Also the apple crop is excel- teat, and next week we begin to make elder. An revolt, my well-beloved. That is a pretty picture of simple faith that Mrs. Ninn L. Duryea gives in her article on The Soul of Fighting France. Among the sand dunes ot Brittany, she says. superstition finds fertile soil. Bretons are less French than any other class in France, having retained their own language, customs and beliefs. They have little fear of death, and they are deeply religious. A cemetery is a place where children play, and on fete days it is the meet- ing place for gossips and swains. Relatives go always once a week with flowers to deck the graves and tidy "the wee shrines above them as they do their own homes. A Breton apparently is not entirely convinced that the dead has really de- parted to another world; he behaves as if the lost one were still near, hear- ing, seeing, Ind interested in his former ttssocGtea. A discreet watcher will hear a widow any in a pleasant, conversational tone. while she tends tin, grave; _ - . A - I. boborneinnindthattheyareoltwo .‘elaueo and that ouch plants In “terns, palms end the rubber plant “will do better in thou parts of the f room where the light in limited. Cliriire lowering plante, such as - ianiuuu, tulips, nudes! end eyelameu, , must have on much light as possible. ,iPlants are more like human being! v, ! than like brie-a-brae end if grown to r1 brighten the home during dull with .'ter months they must not be left to , take care of themselves or they will. '.Ioon fail to fulfill the purpose of tthet presence. l 'i There are not a large number of. “successful house plants and those,' (which experience he shown are best; . suited for the purpose demunl oer-i l'taln detlnite conditions The funda-i {mental condition relates to the at-l ;mosphere of the room. If this isl , suitable even the soil is of secondary; /importanee. The atmosphere muat' [ be kept at a suiluble temperature and! (also, for success, must contain plenty} of moisture. A dry utmosphere,! even when plants are well watered, is fatal to good growth. Regular Wm; tering is another important factor for success. I Her rebirth, left a heritage to you, Who live the hour of joy, the years ahead From those whose hearts were brave, and courage true, That silent army of uneortquored dead. ' Fresh air is always benef1eia1, but not in the form of direct drauglxts. A temperature of 40 degrees or low- er will often seriously affect the ten- der house plums. Palms and ferns are the better for worming once,or twice a month. Never waur n sick- ly plant too freely; it more often re- quires to be reported. Most plants will be benefitted by a yearly repott- ing. Healthy plants and plants in Bower require much more water than those which are sicky. Soil should not be watered so often that it be- comes soggy and always cold. A plant with cold feet and a hot head icon dies Behold? she stands triumphant once again, Her song rings out anew across the world; t For over stormy seas and- fields" of slain, Exuluntly her banner floats un- furled. Mt rings hollow when tapped with the knuckle needs water Over water- ing is bad for plants and only one or two varieties, like the spirea, will succeed if the pots are allowed to stand in water. All pots should be supplied with good drainage in ,.the form of broken crooks Mled in at the bottom of the pot when the plants are potted. Plants will grow better in houses heated with hot water than they will in those heated by hot air or steam The latter systems absorb the moig. ture from the atmosphere with the result that the plant either loses some of its leaves by withering or fails to make healthy growth. Pans of water stood on the radiators to give off moisture always improve the conditions for plants. The blooms will last longer when the atmosphere is kept somewhat cool and moist. The) ideal temperaure ranges from about) in) to 70 degrees. Higher tempera-l tures necessitate more frequent ww‘ terings. Some plants need to be wa-, tered daily, others not more than two' or three times a week. A pot which.I Communing With the Dead. Peace. (ery, $230; stack $460; '?yetyyetiito {at it.. _ T". _ 'in homestead. iii. amusements, tir,' T e old asiage says that fine hath. clothes, $160; tttrseelhneome, $50; er: don’t 1ttakVfint birds, but any I We worked it over and docidod careeruinly tltit help to tit.tp birds. that this thiauU more the my Jhture 1‘ anyone and: things, slurping tii - fl reg ouxhbtodnnd: '-. 44,111)“ .atta.dilrr, or tha 'hd y'wg‘ 3 R,', â€running gamma; 8103:! In .old-fuhaoneq-tngi than“ slow, t say nin the tam; . ; lewd“, "my. the best tonic itiigtiier.i-"ssii'inir up. J'l'l4,. stodc,"diaTri'inprovmttiitts, m . .. s.'. (The' " 1 I When we came down-stairs,' Em, with a surprised "Oh, motherl" just i ran up and ftumt her arms around her mother and hugged her. All- of a 'sudden her eyes lighted on her moth- ‘er's hair, shining like silver but done lin the sums way. That was the one ’thing Agnes just eouldn't change. When George and I went over the books we' found that our income had been spent somewhat after. thir N.. shion: For runnin the house, 8690; running the 'ltr'll'l'u'll., new machin- ery, 8250; stock $460; improvements in homeutead, ik; amusements, $45; chilies, $190; mcellgneons,_$§0.‘ Mother .kept it clean on the inside, and that seemed to be about all that mattered, except Em had announced,i a few months before, that it WIS I. good thing there were no small chil-; dren in the: family or something would be broken every' ten minutes,‘ they couldn't help it-there was so; much bric-a-brac about. To her Ila-y tion. the house was just at old-: fashioned as were, and she wasn't far have rich!» . - A I Of course, after Mother, I wasn't' much of a sensation. But George,' and I had a good' talk. I told him I could see wehere we had been making, a mistake. We had been spending. many time: as much on new machin-f cry and on regairing the barns and} sheds as we ad on the htywt--'uy', fact, we hadn't thought much about how the house looked on the (which! i Early next morning, about five past gsix, A man went to each post, up- 1rooted it, and stood by holding it in y position. A few minutes later a whistle blew faintly. Each man threw (iiiti; his'post and jumped back out ~of the way. It was A beautiful Idawn; there was absolute stillness "long the whole front, such as there ihad been for months and months. A I Roche observer from his post in the '. enemy's like saw the screen suddenly fall, and barely had time to wonder [what it meant. "Oh, Mother. let me wave it!" beg- ged Em. And waved it was. Immediately after supper we went upstairs to put on our new clothes and take a start out of the children. And I must confess that Agnes took a start out of me. I didn't ever think she would have the nerve to do it, but there she was-blue silk dress, silk stockings, pumps and tall as tickled as a girl over her first. party. V_A_ - ---.- ing the thought over in my mind I decided it was up to me to drive into town and ge\t ' haircut. I had in- tended doing it in the city the day be- fore, but had not had time. 1 got a haircut and a shampoo. The next afternoon, after the housework was done, I saw Agnes out at the back of the house drying her lair. I thought: "Mother is sure taking Em's hint to heart!" Turn- for r, roar. There was a terriile flash nearly a quarter of a mile in length. There was a deafening roar, tor fifty guns. standing wheel to wheel and naked to the world had spoken as though fired by one man. North and south knew When Our Family Dolled Up A week later there "was a feverish activity behind the eatnoui1age.,Many men and many horses arrived, and with the horses came something else. The wind howled round the posts, and the camouflage quivered with ex- citement. One day, as the eatnoufiatre was beginning to lag and rot, a trio of senior omeers, walked along the road, peered cautiously - Heaven knows why - through the rents in the cam- ouflaite, jotted down things in their notebooks and went away again. The camouflage swayed uneasily -in the winter wind. _ A: a matter of Net there had been very little truffle along the road. Now and then a mess-cart bringing up a case of whiskey to battalion head- quarters, once or twice a week a GS. wagon filled with wire and sandbags, and once a lorry which had brought 1p a load of material and a party of men to build an 0.P. south along the crest of tYefridge. Eastwards the land sloped gently away to our' front line of the valley. You could just distinguish the wide, greener belt of No Man’s Land. and on the top of the next ridge, 2,000 yurds any, you could Que a broad dark brown strip which curved an? twisted -now on the crest. now duo over it, end now out of sight on the other side ---the wire of the Hindenburg line. One night a party of engineers had come-to the 'road, driven in a Tow of We along its edge, and nailed from A Little 3"de on the Wager. 'rrtett Described by Bum The road ran almost due north and The battle had begun. miles arose the same stupendous quarted bf a minute later he CIIA PTER II. csnovnmn / , many mont By R. M. Boyle Wt Maybe it was luck, and maybe it _ was something else, but the deals we ‘ made with strangers who called at {the farm more advantageous than i they were in the days when we didn't mate how we looked. Possibly be- 'csuse we looked Jnore prosperous they didn't have the nerve to try to beat us down on our slice. If the prosperitv o the farm is hwy indication, we re better farmers than we ever were, and I can't see Ithat the house is losing out any. somehow or other, just dressing up has put punch into everything we have done lately, and we have by. fmore fun ttf it. i 1 Agnes and have dressed' up our grammar, the whole family Ins dress. 'ed up its manners, the house hu been idressed up inside and out. George has had a lot of good ideas about marketing that have worked out well. lWe've attended church oftener and gone to lectures sud shows in town iytrvisited more than we ever used to. We have discovered that our aegi- tude toward the Burgess†Wu iuit common, everyday envy. ‘ Tho, want all the joy out of life that th'oy cm t, and they know that you sei/tly' to live beyond your income having tiGkliinriiitr: n -GGirer'iiilu"ir ed__qf 1.tavirtlrefore. _. f Best of all is thwhnnge that, has come in our relations‘with our neigh- Eorq. W; has? mgr-e friends atyt lre A three-dollir house dress coat a little more at firitt than a ninety-eight cent wrapper, but it wore a lot better and looked well. A khaki suit for work, cost but little more and looked much better than overalls and blue depim., We've been trying to live up to that system, or something like it, for three years now. Dontt get the no- tion that we are dressed up in our best all the time. Probably nine-tenths of the time we're in working clothes; but we're in presentable working clothes. When we worked it out the actual figures showed that a fifty-or even tseventy-fire-ttent straw hat for working in the fields wag more econ- omical than a fifteen cent hat that the. firyr wetting wilted down. ( homestead, $150; amusements, $125; clnggs, tfoo; mispellaneoqg, $100. To lengthen the life of linoleum, mix the warm suds and cooked starch left over from wash day, and use to mop up the linoleum. This not only preserves it, but gives a new trloiss. Combine leftover mashed potatoes with leftover minced ham. To each three cupmla of the mixture allow one egg. Mix thoroughly, form into tut cakes, dip in flour and try in ham tat. It desired, a bepten egg may be put upon each two patties. The North Cape is another similar centre, and between these foei a kind of compensation of action often exists, sometimes at intervals of six months. A warm winter at the North, Cape cor- responds to a cold winter in Iceland, and is followed by cold winds in cen- tral Europe and over the- plains of Hungary. The cause of the phenom- ena. it is thought, is to be found in the variations of the north polar ice cap, which constitutes the great reservoir of cold for the Northern Hemisphere. One of the most important of .11 these centres is that about Iceland. According as the atmospheric pres- sure there is high or low, mild or severe winters result in teentraPEur.. ope, and there are those who contend that this influence is also felt on the North American continent. IMaeetee of Atmospheric Pressure at Certain Parts of the Globe. There appear to exist in the earth's atmosphere “centres of action." which have wide control over climatic condi- tions and make it possible to foretell the character of the weather long in advance. TEE PULSES OF THE WEATHER "Tis a rehearsal of the Judgment Day! ‘ All Wrong take heed, thy sway will end likewise; Though feet of Vengeance for a while gelay, God, ntture, history-aT against thee rise, . And those base exiles whom the Furies keep Proclaim aloud: "What peoples MW they reap'." So when on that last act the curtain The Judgment’; Wall W6 knew_Wau with! brow yank] 'ott "tsr)";;";'";;',';? htiirtecisasort Child ' ' __ 1 Son: home for. blessed Page?†aye be found, V _.' 1 And'Treodom, Reason, Truth ne’er tRs exiled. I And miles of battleships to our _ Beet bowed in awful silence, o'cr our fallen foes, I seemed to hear old Justice speak aloud: Ham and Potato Cakes. ~Aleiander Louis Fraser. iT The omeer who sank the Belgian Prince on July 31, 1917, collected her crew on the deck of his submarine and I then submerged was Kapitan-Leut- nant Paul Wagenfuhr, commanding U-44. He was a little older than T Schwieger. having entered the service in 1900; the quality of his work and his successes had been recognized by the Order of the Red Eagle (Rotor Adler) and the Hohenzollcrn Order with Swords; but a swift retribution was at hand. While returning from the very cruise during which he sank the Belgian Prince he encountered a ship which could fight back. A British destroyer saw him on the surface, headed for him at top speed, and I meanwhile opened fire with every gun Ithat would bear. The submarine was obviously hit at once, for she failed to' submerge in time, and the destroyer succeeded in ramming. . Unenviable Reputation. I It is claimed in Germany for Kap. itan-Lentnant Rudolf. Schneider, of i U-87, that he sank H.M.S. Formidable and destroyed altogether 180,000 tons of merchant shipping. One of the ves- l eels sunk was the Arabic. In October, i 1917, Schneider was washed overboard . 'from the decks of his craft and, ‘drowned, and upon her next cruise‘ the submarine met a British patrol! [boat in the Irish Bea. It was CliriIt-l mos Day; she saw her enemy in time end submerged to escape. The patrol} boat dropped depth charges where the U-boat had vanished; their terrifie ex- I plosions tore her delicate mechanism to pieces and forced her to the sur-! face. The patrol boat rammed her' amidships and cut her in half. if)) sank, gushing oil and air; no survivors came to the surface. l But Four of Many. l The oitleer who torpedoed the Sas- I sex in March of 1916 was Oberleut- .nant-ltr-See Herbert Pustkuchen, 'erfatmandimt UB-20. He wee younger than the others mentioned above, hav- ing entered the navy only in 1908, but he had had time in his. brief service to cum for himself the Iron Cross of the First Class and the Order ortho House of Hohenzollern of the Third Class. He afterward was given command of the UB-66 and was lost to his country in June of last your, WEI: a trawler lighted the jumping wires pf a partly submerged. tsubmarine which was proceeding " four to ilve knots. The trswle'r in.unodintolrund- ed fonthe submarine, which disap- peared below the surfue of the mm. A depth bomb we: dropped and found its mark, for. a series of heavy ex- plosions followed,’ one in portieuler cousin: on upheaval three thrretrtU height if the others. "In an mun- while other trawler: hedjolnod in , the beyond bod dropped depth bomb charges. Then there woo, o In: silence; not e sound woe been! by the our listeners on the bowlers, but n ma ofoil‘on the nrfsce‘bore wit- use of the feet that the submarine 'EOutofaLoag ListofCrininala rm’ Btaatt1otrtaaGMitrirtn .l , ' Special Degree. l ' Among those names which mist lam-rive the war and remain forever, . " a part of its history and character, ' F four may be selected from that list of 150 German submarine commanders l killed or captured by our naval forces _ 'which was recently made public. To .them, says the London Daily Tole- I graph, is insured such an immortality l Ias perhaps a German naval omeari I may desire. First in the category! t comes the man who placed upon sub-l imarine warfare its crown of supreme. i achievement by the torpedoing of the! Lusitania. He was KapiUn-Leutnant l l Schwieger, commanding U-20, and I _ later U-88. Be had entered the navy i 1 in 1903, and reached, therefore, the '1 {summit of his career, the greatest i‘ murder the world has known, before , [he was thirty-itve; it was only in ', (November last that a mine in them l North Sea put an end to his memories I ‘and to his purposes. l I Deliberate Potter. 1 It now appears that his supreme†i deed was not of his own initiating; he’ .was sélected by his superiors " a, isuitable officer to carry out a plani ( devised and prepared as a part of the j t (deliberate policy of the German Ad- " ' miraltr--that is to say, of the German ‘ fGovernment. According to the evi-ga :dence which is available, his success ,1 lappallcd him rather than otherwise; ', s the world's outcry of horror was: s audible even in Berlin, and upon his, I return there he showed himself little ‘ a ---possibly by order of his superiors. f f Even his reward was stealthily con- I s ferred; it took the form of the Order, of the House of Hohenzollern, the, Kaiser's personal decoration. U-20, t finished obscurely; she stranded in a , a fog on the Danish coast in November, , v 1916, and was blown up by her own i tl crew. A year later Schwieger, now, 0 in command of U-88, was groping, submerged through a minefield in i! company with another U-boat. The g crew of the second submarine sudden- f i, 1y heard an explosion and felt the jari of it in their own vessel. They tried ti with their special signalling devices [ tl to get into communication with U-88,‘ a but failed, and she never returned to ', tt her base. i n Wtiiijiidjiiiiiii German)": Four Most Infamou- PIRATES RIO Ahcnlvsé TORONTO The Hun. it is likely, has a bayonet of hit own. It in a deadly kind of dueling. Skilful fencing may win the combat. But no foul is barred. The business is one 'of killing; and muscle, quickness, presence of mind and Itendiness of nerve in the midst of wild excitement are the qualities de- mmded. A jab at Fritz’s throat Is at once the most disconcerting and, if walk aimed, the most immediately disabling of thrusts. It whl at least force him back, giving a chance for a thrust " some other vital part. If he turns tail a puncture in the kidneys will finish him. The bayonet (and the same rule ap- plies to its use as a knife) must never be drawn back for a thrust. It must always be held in advance of the body, counting upon the impetus of the charge and the forward stretching of the arms to plant it in the enemy's cares-s. If it sticks Ynst it may us- ually be nleued by flrine the gun, which breaks the bones that hold it. One of the points most dimcult to teach the average recruit is that he must not thrust too hard. The vital parts of the human body are easily penetrated; it is successful aim that is important. If the bayonet passes clear through the adversary', body it cannot easily be withdrew, and in the meantime, while trying to wrtnch it ‘lc est, the soldier is helpless against I " ccnd or third enemy. In practice work these dummies are suspended from overhead horizon- ' tel poles or attached to stokes driven I into the ground. Most commonly they occupy trenches, which irtftustrymen under training ferociously attack. It l is the busines cf the attackers to l, stab the dummies swiftly in vital; parts, which are sometimes indicated; by painted- spots or attached disks. ', 1t was the British who developed the system of bayonet instruction by the utilization of "dummies," which are usually sacks trtuifer a) solidly as possible with slaw or shaving. ond sometimes strengthened by the introduction of wooden sticks to counterfeit human bones. Um: of the bayonet as a knife is an impt rtant part of the instruction given our fighting men while in tmin- ing. At close quarters this bayonet may often be employed to greater advan- taqe an a knife, ehieily for thrusting, as the Roman soldier used his favorite weapon It is held low and thrust upward at the enemy's vitnlr--a sort of jab that is hard to ward off. A Weapon Whieh Strikes Terror to the Heart of the Run. . "rhere in no question of the faet that Fritz does not like the bayonet. It doesn't suit his temperament. The British, on the other hand, have always led the world with this weapon. They invented the kind of bayonet we are now using, which bears 'little re- semblance to the old-style instrument. It is a one-edged knit; with a handle, attuchable to the rifle muzzle, and in Lum suggests aniknetm to the short swan! of the ancient Roman legionary. WINNING WITH THE BAYONIC'I‘ These are but four in that long list of names that shall endure nnforgoto ten as long as the war is remembered. To them there has yet to " added that other list, the names of the sub- marine eommamiertr--oueh as he who unit the hospital ship Llnmlovcry Castle and murdered the Canadian nurses and the men in the boat-who are yet living. For all of than the fame they sought is secure. had met the dogmas: we richly deserved. Members Montreal Stock list-hence 106-100 Transportation Building g. M.Connolly&Co. by new at which you an Invest your raving. on a monthly m in the par-chm of my â€hand mound urinal-ls would!“ on- Utlinf you to am dividends and Accra n: Intemt. Wo Invite you to write for I copx of our free buckle! entitled "Sav- In: by tho Putts] PIS'tneat Pun." which {any explum our uncut Enter the New Year With an dun-named human: to bohem- the - of. Ion. tood dividend plying stoch- end 121 the who! way. With that resolve in mind we stand ready to assist you ,ritts our PARTIAL PAYMENT _ MONTREAL " PA. l After a night of fmquently inter- gruptnd sleep, 3 certain young interne glad to come down, still Ileep,\'.'to his 'lltrr'rttt ward. The tirst patient was ia stout old Irishman. , "Wanctwo, three, tour, foive, tsir," hem the tratUnt, . l - . When the yum: dock-r. with a start ’opelf-ed his eyes. the Indiana VII panting Inn-Rib, "Th hundred and sixty-nine, tin hum Ill MW. (in hundred and Iiv an.†"Now, let's hear,you 91k." he conun- Ited, cloning his eiea and listening. “M Oi be sayin', doctor'." "Oh, any anything! Count one, two, three Ind up." murmured the int-run dummy. . . "Row gee: it?" inquired the young doctor. "Paith, it's me brenthin', doctor. ot an't get me breath " .n, at all.†"Why, your pulse ia normal. Let me examine the lung aetun," replied the interne, kneeling beside the cot mu! [lying his head on the ‘Implo dust. Shall we not trust who has been true so Iomr--n Whose (time-I Freedom'. banner first unfuried-. Whom honor and her conquered foes from wrong, And from their powerful thrones owl-enor- hurled? Ah, “who bu man's ambition grown too mm. And thrice In: England's Navy saved the world. Haiti’s Day. (Philadelphia Ledger.) The Freedom of the Seas'.' The seas are free " While England and: them with her mighty tuw, England. too proudly fearless for deceit, Whale rule, to all alike, gives liberty'. Never m Ingmar on any sea. Drifting forlorn, untimely death to meet, . Thu did not thankfully her emblem greet, Bho rest: on justice her summary. . "One day. after we had marched a great distance, we missed 3 camel from the corona nnd were ordered by our guards to search for it. We found it after two days in one of the bottle shaped well: where it had fallen and drowned. We cooked the nest and ate it t.awenouslr." "We had been cruising for a fort- nitrht in that locality," aid the cap. tair, "when on Guy Fawkes’ Day, November ti, 1915, u we FierP role- lhrnting on board ship. I Impede “truck us end wrecked the engine iroom, killing some of our men and Iwounding others. It looked like i Blighty for all of us. The gun crews took their places and better, ftrine at I spot! where they "ured the submar- 1 ine might be lurking. The ship was i sinking rapidly end some of the crow financed to launch the boats. We Ewen making away from the sinking "hits when the submarine appeared, iformed us in line and towed us i ashore." "That march through the desert was horrible," continued the skipper. "The ftrst dey we made thirty miles under a beating sun with no food and mitthly little water. The heat we: terrific. but when night an: it new cool. Some of the men couldn't stand the sudden change from the intenee heat and went mad. Others begun to give way from the elect: of starvation. When we did get food, after I. long while, it we- not tit to eat. It made us all sick. The captain said that he, and his crew were turned over to Turkish offt- ce", who kicked them about a good deal and at first refused (alive them food and water. Finally I goat was turned over to them for food, and the hungry men killed it and ate it. Later, on they travelled uross the, Nubian Desert, they were glad to at the meat of I camel which had been drowned in a desert well, the captain said. Early in the war Ceptain Growin- Williune was in command of n emu“ Steamship, the Tours, which was taken over by the British Navy end unsigned to scout duty of! the count of Ireland. After fifteen months the. Tour. was ordered to the Mediterran- ean and finally reached the coast of Egypt. When old aaita meet and win their new of the ne- the l-ttether line-e where'er he moth. That was true be- fore the m, and now. u the unfer- inc men are returning from ndven- tun-es which eclipse the thrilling tales of the pest, their stories gain added not, " their exploits are concerned with service in the wnr for democrncy. The tale of Capt-in C. W. Gwatkin- Wilhelm, of the British Navy, com- mander of the Edinburgh Castle, now lying in New York harbor, in one of the most impressive of ita kind re- cently brought to these shores, u the skipper tell- it. Virtual mush a. " ty Tun-pa Oter the Bani-x Suds or Nubian been. 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