3 Man's Pomr. l - -- - -..- - Tudu. snap. a wu. we judge I Mud. " “by Mow. Inn} :hnracler by observing whether) At . baby show held in â€km a not in has enough authority to'Euhnd. "or! manor who had I N " um; trom bobbin; her Mir. but†entered had to In. I hubby. When adding distilled water to tho battery in freezing temperature. make Sure, that the motor is immediately tun for 3 ahort time so as to chum. the battery. thereby mixing tho added wuter with the acid and preventing frrezirut. A batter. not properly charm will freeze, and the speeitle gravity lhhn'd be fw-qmnfly checked. Tho {dinning who will he found n con- Wi': Ibo {oil "I Bpr I'.;e u. rim lttiert plunograph or Vie-mum Tau-zoo Mat-mun. would! “point“ JIDSDOSQ nmbundor to the United Smog to succeed Ambassador 'mnbul. Th load. my joy um: steam: plant. old "in mild"! rtty. "ou'd be frequently folk-wing tab'e will wnient refereneo: hrerdie Amt.of anity Charge t.29rc -Full charge S t.2ay-% eharite ..6 1.2iir--% charge ..2 t.Po' t.th" now tn sunny waves of whim: . A. graceful on thy hoary he: Ins tlmo th" robe of honor ' And there. oh.' waxy. softly. Hin Ire-am of snow. And as the parting beam ot day 0! “mama snows rMercted Mar, And tints of rotate mun shod: This. on the snow that from thy (Continued from last week.) Water. if atratwed to count in tho eil circulating system, will pocket and from very readily, stopping the cir- nhtion of oil. A heavy sludge will tho form whirh is very detrimental to tho motor. Lu Where run: Those locks Invite my In“. mu. yo snowy mule:- wave. Long loan. your much-loved bonny 3.10; Mar bliss your latest evening crown. blur") life's winter of its "on, And sun. " hoary hlln. In down In gadnm to the Sr8twe. the night! by means of the drain valve mile conveniently located in the right-hand side of the crankcase. Any water present wiii be thus removed. 51w “WY. A vital point to remember. in cow. nection with the storage battery is that " a temperature of ten degrees F. its oftleieney drops about 50 per cent. Also, it in much more diftieult to crank the motor because of the effect of the lower temperature on the lubrication. Because of the incom- plete vaporization of the fuel when the motor is cold. slightly more crank- but In required to start the motor. To mount. the evils of want accu- mrrution, it is wise to drum t cupful d oil from the crankcase once or twice a week. This should be done while tho motor is warm, but after it In! hen allowed to stand idle for about in minutes. This is easily accom- my ' Amt. of Franco " r Charge Dee. P. Full vharge 90 deg. below zero. At eharge ' .60 deg. below It“). 5 charge . .25 deg. below an. _ churn- . . g deg. below zero. Discharged . 5 dog. below zero. Mow To PROTECT MOTOR CAR IN COLD WEATHER youth may bout the curl: that The Automobile Silver Locks. word" breeze ot May. his the garland twin. 3 of every hue combine; wavered. tint silvery shin. ..._ Curr; """"'* ... Transmission grease or heavy oil feral“: (his; allâ€: must never be used. summer or winter, 'f/ rep}; :1 re using: in a car with four-wheel bake equip- . L'l'l'f “an!†of â€:9 ment. In cold weather, the medium twer temperature on the stator or. used In summer.- must be Because of the incom- rained out of the transmission. After ltion of the fuel when teyes, out the transmission case o‘d slitthtly more crank.. with kerosene, Ay, it with light. cold 'i"i'o1'i"ir"t' the motor. test motor oil. This is essential ty the heavier drain on the the proper operation of the hydraulic . brakes. Where temperature is con- s decreased effieieney in . ' ' energy taken from the sistent.y below zero add 10 per Jen': I be conserved as much kerosene to the co.d test motor oil. 1 nten starting the motor, M AXtt elutch, which will pre- The rear axle, at this season of the try turning of gears in year. should be drained of all grease ion Ithrourth congealed and thoroughly ttushed out with Rem quently reduce the load sene. Pill it with a mixture of 75 starting motor and hat- per cent. light transmission grease .e that all connections and 25 per cent. zero cold test motor oughout the electrical oil. As in the two-wheel brake trans- at none of the wires are mission, this mixture will flow more aborted, freely end will properly lubricate all tery with a hydrometer parts in freezing temperatures. i ks. If, on any two con- MISCELLANEOUS. 3 the 'tpeeifte grevity is Tires should be properly inflated.) r, remove the battery Watch small cuts in tires. Water will nd have it charged. and soon work into these and loosen the 'he generutnr is char.- tire structure. i F' Henna; I When the machine is moving. the 'glow'. ‘inner hoop is kept stable by the "sad. _ weight of the engine and driver. But if Wreatl. Fopposing this there Is a friction roller, y. shed :driven by the vehicle’s motor, which ' acts against the rim of the tyre and revolves it. This force is more power- "Ml (ragga! Atl than any retarding resistance. i Consequently the driver does not e ot May, ' turn with the wheel, but maintains his I twine, t upright position. He balances the III- combine; E chine much as he wouid I motorcycle. very shine and regulates the direction to be ,tnhen by the vehicle by inclining " :body to the right or left, and by A " ““1. !sieerinx when]. New Swiss Stamps. Switzerland has issued two new Mumps. 20 and 30 eentitmsa, to com- memonto the 50th anniversary of the world's poem! uinon.. The building shown on the stamps is that in which the! tirtrt postal union congress was held a Home on Oct. ft, 1874. Adjust the brakes and fit new lin- ings, if necessary. See that the brake shafts and such parts are oiled. It is highly essential that the steering gear be correctly adjusted and that the wheel alignment be correct. Slippery pavements make it essential that tho brakes and the steering mechanism be in proper condition. Spectators at the National Stadium in Rome were surprised not long ego when they saw a huge wheel. driven by a motorcycle engine. rushing at high speed around the track. Within the wheel they saw the driver, his hands gripping an ordinary motor-car steerig wheel. his feet resting on or- dinary motor-cycle pedals. His body kept the wheel in perfect balance. At every turn he would lean to one side or the other. When the spinning whel finally elowed down and came to I stop, he simply rested both of his feet on the ground. then let down a standard to keep the wheel from top. ping over! The driver of this remarkable ve. hicle was Davide Gislnghi. Having a idea that one wheel would be more emcient than two, he had perfected what more than one inventor before him had attempted unsuccessfully. a one-wheel cycle that would run.' Montreal in now the canton inland port in the world. The wheel has two principal run- ning partir-a large pneumatic tyre and an Inner hoop ot steel. The inner circle curiae the driving mechanism and the driver, while the tyre moves round it. On the outer circumference of the steel hoop ere rollers, and these support the run of the tyre. Thus the two pieces, hoop and tyre. are inde- pendent of each other " the wheel moves forward. 7 Mohair goods in‘ the dress line nude; from ttont's hair. IGNITION. A good hot apart is needed for starting in cold weather. Make sure that all the electicui connections are tight and clean. that the distributor breaker points no clean and the open- ing not to .020." AUo see tht the spark plug pp: are set to .025." TRANSMISSION. If the ear has tmwheel brake equipment, with the coming of cold weather, the oil should be drained from the transmission and the case thoroughly thsshed out with kemsene. It shouid then he tilted with a mixture of 75 per rent. light transmission grease and 25 per cent. zero eo'.d test motor oil. This mixture wil'. flow more freely than the usual transmission grease and will assure proper lubri- cation. ( But I who loved thin lady Can tell 3 tau--. Hor spirit climbed n mountain And rider a [110. They buried a quiet lady Beneath the sod; They said her quiet spirit Wont. up to God. A One-Wheel Cycle. Montreal Aotiiev" Honor. Quiet Lady. -Anonmtous, Something stirs now and than. When an old year eaW, And we try to look back _ The years are not so far As they seem to be, At times I think they press Close about me. And one says '"1 loved," And one says "I lost," And one "I would not pay the price,I And one "I count the cost.†Hot Bread for the Diner. A new type of bread warmer has re- cently been Introduced in the dining cars of a large railroad. which enables the traveler to enjoy hot bread with his mmls whenever. he so desires. The carrier is made of copper, and of a size which can readily be brought to the table. A charcoal oven in the bot- tom of the container supplies the necessary heat, while I. tray at the top holds the bread. This device will no doubt give added comfort to the man or woman who spends a great deal of time on the road. Hot bread ls supposed to be injuri- ous to the stomach, yet many who eat " regularly live to a healthy old age. thus proving that theory and practice no not agree in this case. The years come together A close company; Only the New Year Comes alone to me. The New Year comes and hides The years that came before, But I hear them Whispering And crowding at my door. Strange. how the edge dull; On our old pain, And we go quietly On old ways again'. I hear them whispering Of what used to be, They are very kind, I think, And wish to eomiort me. To-day is a mist Between la and the past, . Strange, how we forget What we thought would last! Tm years are not lost. They stand whispering. They tell each other secret: And remember everything. Bo successful was the recent visit ot the Prince of Wales to Canada that Prince=s Mary and her husband, Viscount Lascelles. have virtually decided to make a trip to the Dominion next year, it is announced authoritatively in London. The visit, it Is added, will be in every way an informal one. Here is shown the aftermath of a "00,000 tire at St. Hyaciitthe, Que.. in which the Bremen fought the "tnet, tn below zero weather, the water free:- in; shortly after lowing the non}... Through high, grey walla PRINCESS MARY AND VISCOUNT LASCELLES Yea rs. PLAN TO V’SIT DOM!NION -Lottitre Driscoll This is the advice ot Dr R S. Woods- worth, a famous American psycholo- gist. "The first step towards effective memory training," he states, "is to de cide exactly what sort ot memory work you need. "If you wish to improve your mem- ory for names and face: you mull practise connecting the name with the face. It you wish to improve your memory tor telephone numbers you must practise connecting telephone numbers with the names of subscrib- ers. Moon and Radlo. As the result ot a long series ot ob- servations made in England. it was learned that radio reception is best during the full moon period. When the moon changes from full to new moon reception Is poorest. Just for Meals. Bartlett “I hear that your next- door neighbors have a new organ. Do you know how many stops it has?" Jaektron--"0n1y about three a day. and those are only tor meals.†Lite wouldn't be' worth living it it weren't for the things beyond our reach. "If your wife complains because you were an attraction at all successful cannot remember much of interest traveling booths and entertainments from your day's experience to enliven until the custom was repressed by the dinner table, what you need to William Hi. practise is the taking note of interest. Recently a rich and eccentric man ing items as they occur and then re- in New York, anxious to impart some- calling them when the time comes." idling of the rural atmosphere into his -_-. ----i. __ ztown residence, engaged a man to . . L crow like a farmyard cock outside his I Like You, Life. tbedroom every morning. Yet this is I like you, Lite-the joy, the stry.t , only a survival of an old English court And all that F099 to make you. Life; 'custom. During several reigns there The unrequitted hopes. the tears. was a Royal Cock Grower. The man The laughter and-ah, yes, the tears: had at childhood undergone an opera- The storms that hutret me, and beat, tion of the pharynx. His post was The knotty problems that I meet. :thnt of watchman, and he ranged the Even what sadness may befall, 'pnlace during the night and early Delight and â€va93-“. all, all morning noun. giving out the cry of That you assemble at your call. the tarmyard and thus supplying the What thbugh the Joyous, happy smile time ' I Like You, Life. I like you, Lite-the joy, the strife And all that goes to make you. Life; The unrequitted hopes. the tears, The laughter and-ah, yes, the tears; The storms that buffet me. and beat, The knotty problems that I meet. Even what sadness may befall, Delight and happiness. all, all That you assemble at your call. What thbugh the joyous. happy smile ls gone in but a little while, What though long hours with pain are "Poor memory is due to poor man- agement rather than to an interior faculty ot memory. Atty sort ot memory can be improved it one dis- covers exactly what needs to be im. proved, and If one can play the game heartily." rite, In spite of this, I like you, Life! I like you, Lite! -Ida M. Thomas In "ihtecerug." How to Train Your Memory. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 3 In certain London theatres the use of the word “fire" is forbidden, "tide" often being adopted as a substitute. "Water" is a word that brewery work. era regard with dlstavor, while in some hospitlla it is breaking an un- i written law to mention the word "dis- ease." l There was a time when "laughing" faces were actually manufactured to meet the demand of those who wished to be amused. Up to the end of the l reign of James H., human "sculpture" i work was carried out by roving tribes of gypsiw called Cotrspraehios, who were of Spanish origin. They bought and even kidnapped children, and practiced a. science or art of human T diMguratiott. Perhaps the queerest rule or this kind was that imposed on hie workers by the late Herr Krupp, the German armament magnate. A maker of death-dealing weapons himself, he had a horror ot the word "death," and it was understood by his stat! that it should never be mentioned in his pre. sence. It no ther curious tolhie that led, it has since been revealed, to the almost lite-long trstratttrernettt between himself and his wife. There Wu once'a hen who awed-Nu")- laid two out in the same pllce. All] went well until she tried to alt. She; Wite- “' had her eggs neutered all over the quite ham farm, ttttd she tried to hatch them ii) Husbam The third day she went emar--CotvlhMe Wile! ptmtrate'.--The Emclency Maniac. Prttutar" Art has come into its own again in Spring Gardens, where the cake: of the London County Council. released by the erection of the new County Hall, are to be converted into a pie- ture gallery. For several years in the days ot Hogarth the Society ot Artists held their exhibition in Spring Gar. den. The memory of an old-tlme practi- cal joke ls preserved in the name. The place was formerly a garden of the palace at Whitehall, and was famous for Its sun-dial. As the visitor, unac- qualnted with the place. approached it, he trod on a hidden mechanism which released a "spaing" or jet of water. and the unwary one "enjoyed" a tree shower-bath. Among Scottish thrhermen there in a. superstition that the word "rabit" must be avoided at all costs in conver- sation while at sea. This word, like “salmon and "minister," is regarded as being unlucky. though no one knows how this queer belief arose. The last tunctionary ot this kind was a man named William Sampson, who during the reign ot Charles ll. was paid an annual salary of about torty-flve dollars. There are many references to Spring Gardens in literature. and Pony: re- cards how he took his witch maid: there on one occasion. and "the uvnclms gathered pinks." "Why, yes," answered the bewilder- ed bride. shopping for the ttrat time. "And you might dress it in pink." There comes a day when Justice overtakes the poacher. One morning, as it lies in its hole, it is awakened by strange noises; it catches the scent of dogs and men. The otter hounds are about. Silently it slips into the water. but the string of: bubbles which marks its course gives it away, and in a mo- ment the hounds are in full cry "Do you want a dressed chicken?" inquired the butcher. Anything that swims in the water it will eat. But it will not touch coarse titrtt it it can get trout, and even trout are left alone if there are salmon to be had. It knows just when the sal- mon are running/tind as soon as they enter the pools it Is after them. One ot them forms a supper, but it they are there in numbers it will often kill two or three. Children thus treated grew up with an immovable and fantastic grin. They were an attraction at all successful traveling booths and entertainments until the custom was repressed by William III. The otter in not newly so rare as is generally supposed. - It is nothing but a. large water weasel. it is quite I his animal, I dog otter frequently weighing " much " twtratr-tivts pounds. The otter can swim swiftly enough to ouch a tUh in a. pool, and can run quite rapidly on dry land. It can also dig and climb. When full grown it In a beautiful beast. Its long body is covered with thick brown hair. which, in spite of the many wettings and drying: it has to endure, ls always smooth and silky. The otter ls one ot the worst natural poachers we have. It has an appalling appetite-one otter will eat may pounds ot tiah in a single night-and, worse still, it will often kill for the mere love ot slaughter. The Prince of Poachers. Faces Worth Fortunes. F orbiddei: Words. Time's Changes. Preference. 1 Small Boy ion art-1m at. country ', cottarr)---"Murnmy, when in tho bath. groom?" i To a tbnowfTake, 1 Francis Thomrson was born at teston, England, but refusing to en. :gage In business be drifted to Lon- don, and sank so low that he slept on tho Embankment and sold matches in the streets. From this he was rescued by Alice Meynell, the poetess. MotherJ'There Isn't any ballroom dour.†holiday." Wile -"D're know you're growing quite handsome, John?" Husband --"Yer, Mary; " I I!" I hue when it (on nnyvhoro lou- your The visiting card in of Chinese or- lgin. and was In use in China in .the distant past when that country was in the forefront ot civilizann. But its purpose in not the same as that which it serve: to-day it was used rather as an invitation to mar- riage When smitten with the charms of a damsel the young (or old) man sent her a large red card, on which tore written his name, the date of hi birth. and the names of his ances- tora. If his suit was euterieined. the girl addressed sent him a reply in the form ot a similur and bearing like perticuius regarding herself. Each person knows somewhnt the limits of " bodily strength. But ot the, measure ot our splrltull power: we know pitifully little as yet. Only we know that some seem to have ac- cess to them in greater degree than others. And those who possess this power to draw upon unseen reservoirs of strenglh are the loyal. the loving and tlie brave. The next step on the way to matri. mony, the engagement having been approved, the two cards were tied to- gether with a red string. which act was held to consummate the ttttion. What u. principle to adopt " a chart of life! Abraham Lincoln, Joan of Are, Paul of hnuswthoy were neither tearful nor unbelieving, but loyal and loving and brave. And of those we know who travel "life's common way," who 599m the happiest and most bo- loved? Never those fearful and unbo- lieving ones who so their way doubt. ing and complaining. Memory lingers fondly only over those who were loyal and loving and brave. "This world," he says, “I: III adapt. ed to the fearful and the unbelieving; but most tsxquisite1y adapted to the loyal. the loving and the brave." I IVY-DOW VIII'VI'I" An English writer in a. little book; . . called Religious Perpexfties has given “Iv†Scholarships. u- a text that fairly illumines we. MWF.., . t. - T "God was my shaper. Passing surmisai, He hammered, He wrought me, Prom curled silver vapour. To lust of His mind.'.--. Thou couldst not have thought me! So purely, so palely. Tiniln surely. Mightily, (rainy. lnsculped and embossed. With His hammer of wind And His graver of frost.†The same thought was In the mind of John. the beloved dladple. when he referred over and over again to the rewards of "him that oTereotnettt." What hurt could have thought you t-- Past our devlsal (0 filigree petal'.) . Fashioned no purely, Ftagilely, surely. From what Paradlsal [manuelese metal, Too costly for cost? Who hummered you, wrought you, From argentine vapour?--- The “Mailed Fist†ot Spain. That is the name sometimes given to Cap- tain General Emilio Barrera. literal dictator of revolting provinces ot Spain. In Barcelona recently he made 300 arrests in " stern campaign of repression. A Poem You Ought to Know. He wrote many exquisite poems about her children, but the greatest thing he ever did was the tnagntt1eeut ode entitled "The Hound of Heaven.†The following In: "To a Btttyqrtiaee." Loyal, Loving, Brave. Courtship by Cards. A Real Holiday. This I: going to be a ran! Funny. 3 Provincial Ahtiverrity Re. i "One has to recollect that for many Iyeurs the Kemnaw promontory of ;Michignn we: cut off from all com- lmunicntion with the market except ‘during the comparetiveiy few months of open navigation; that supplies of fuel and merchandise were convevod Ar water to the mines before naviga- (tion closed, and that the copper ac- l emulated on the peninsula until navi- :getion opened the followirg spring. tThe open season was of course longer than it would be in the Arctic Ocean, jand the climate of the Arctic is more ,i, severe than in Michigan. the thermom- neter dropping oeetoioruCi.v to 40 and (so degrees below zero. The fall of lam, however, as reported on the lDene River, did not at my time ox. " eeed 2 feet; and therefore mining. ore "oneesntration, and smelting. IS well las railway transportation. would not ;be conducted under conditions much ptore onerous than in the Pruvinnc- of ; Quebec, or in Michigan." Grasp not with thy dimplvi haml- At the world outside; They no "All too may sat? Lite too cold and wide. Be not roman. mu. feet Lie “can my and: hr too round than H": Yet to try to “and Within three weeks recently the University of Toronto was the happy recipient of scholarships founded 'P donors in three different prorir.- Sir James Aikins. Lieut.-Gavtven:or " Manitoba, s gnduste of the l’ni r sity, donated five thousand deOtrr , endow perpetual annual yiwiarslnv,» in English language and literature, :2 order to develop tt love for the trmther tongue end so ambition to use it pro perly end well. The T. Eaton 1H. provided, in memory of tbe.hito :41? John Eaton, two scholarships of the annual value of sixty doycis moi; a, be awarded to boys in the Uvi-ity of Toronto Schools who arr in IG,, ma trleuletion clue and who are took“ i" forward to a business career. Jt-zikir Bros., Limited. of Montreal, Bert a cheque for tIve hundred dolinrs to pr» vids for five yen-s on annual when» ship of the vslue of one hunt!" d (lo: lsrs to be open to all studo'.‘~' of the third yen in engineering. Only n P, w weeks up the Alumni Fedvr‘ tior established ttft-n scholarships of the who of two hundred (1023an ($0th of them two hundred and fifty dollars) to ho "rarderd to diligent students who need them and who are relatives of Mumed soldiers. AC', of whirl goes to indicate the growing reali'la tion that it is an excelled invutmmu to assist young men and Wottiq'n who are seeking higher eduratiun. Can- adian universities have not re:n"y as many schoiarships avai‘nhle as have universities in Great Britain, but the nuinber is growing steadiiy. Invest- ment in scholarships puyx large divi- dends in the development of lenders in all walks of life. Be not wistful. sweet hh n eyes, Find your mt tn mim- Whioh through m. an: alchfui To hep All “on from !'lt " Don't grow old too luv. my sweet! Stay a little while In this pleasant baby-1mm Summer! by mother's smlh For A will. be mine alone. So Immu- and so dear; Dyna-by than mm to tank. Id: has not acupod attention. " only as 1770. Samuel Hume. on. of the Hudson'l Bay Compnny’s nervents, then " Fort Prince of Wales, reocivod instruction from London to investi- pu rumored copper mines. After a number of attempts Hearne accepted the otreir of an Indian etfef to “with the white mn to the 'far-off mnta!’." The trip was successfu}. tue outcrop- Speaking of the possibiiitie-s of min- ing enterprises in the northern field, the late Dr. James Douglas, who hend, ed an expedition In 191t to investigate the copper deposiu, at the meetine of the Cnnadiln Mining In»1itute in 1918, aid: The Natural Mme Inuiligenco Service of tho Dept. of the Interior at Ottawa "r'"= _ - "iirihiGroAd touch hr economic minerals the northern, portion, of Cap- plugs 51 copper were found, and Hume named the river on whose banks the discovery we made the Coppermine. The river is situatnd in the Mackenzie district pf the North. west Territories and ftowr into Crsr, onntion Gulf of the Aretie noon“. The copper deposits are situated at what is known In Coppermine Mountain, some sixty miZee from the mou'h of the river. The Se%ntifie Ameriean, in reviewing a number of reports 0'1 the area. compare: it with the Luke Superior copper region. At Corona, tion Gulf the eonper-honrimr be't is said to be 16 miies wide and of Ittl- known lemrth. whife at Rnthurst l, ‘vt, an ttrm of Coronation Gulf. tho Mrrw, is said to be M miles long with a mnximum width of 25 milos. "Taken altogether.†says the Srientifie Am- eriean, "the indications are favorable for the existence of high grade mines as well as larger low-grade deroositn in this region. We have. therefnrn. it is probable, a reeion comparable. let us say, to the Lake Superior cop per region. on the Arctic shores." tat-tR-o-Baan. now. - Ihmber hies Mother'. Sur. In!†At n "can! concert In Win-1m. n gentle-inn said to his - (to. b But. “I notice that on on: -. the names ot the compo-on ot the long lyric. are mind. I - who is responsible tor and an on?- night?" It may to - u once that such omissions nre not eontutqd to Winnipeg. Everywhere you so You will find programs giving the namol of the compnsvrs ot the mush. but the artists responsible forthe huh are El ed! II n on of ttu fact t unhea be re 6iftts This thou not be m not to It tuned to One Ol ttttted to the One ot " this continen fare I study repertoire, I fully. and if I wouldn't I no runner I link was] mum: tenor, ge'.t will .illy or ulna. l musk. a ll that mu. " " u that the nu Iuch a mu: fauna and be If Nobody has a in man nun" al- â€and on w don-u. IDS We Ut Your Child Choose MusiCI' Instrument At . regular mum“; m a " arm I A: have. A: tl In of pan Because " u n taln ll u ty fl M“! , why other: a: how Immna any m with Ad And mum She Came me t ll the His