HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-04-12, Page 2e'
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An 'Editor Talks
•Tlis Itesratimal As *o et Oek- Thi ammo et pesetiell study end
WI* is sAmmicitimir its asumial smote antmeil croft* wore a reteletiosi to the
,eef **I is liold ivory yes: inTO- Toroato *threaten. We believe as a
lista airing icsuitar handmie-tue
poor from April 8 to 12-eneeting in
eeetione-priacipals, trustees, in-
speetore, etc. • Many phases of educa-
tion and kindred question* will bet un-
der consideration by leading educators
and school efficiala Addreseel that
have beet% given deep *world and
long and careful preparation will be
delivered and afterwards dismissed
and triticized. It is *heave a meet
tausersiene, *Awes, lantana slides,
there% soaps, snap essi laleteseefelent
*needed reeding *attar and diectuisione
to give the pupila sefeeient contact
with their =tura', industrialWadi
00000tak, VOCatiOnal and eonieetie
melt et tiria' viromnent so as to defeve the besot
- — Pre"' for their echool work from reel Wee
epIendid technical school in r0hto *none nand thus melte school work
treee„,aiiveteits,,,,,ainesti•i°71 ,_„rtateeitte conetently real to them.
' "w"• " gaiY0 tw“""" This outline has on its face a great
school*and moment training are here dot to reeoromona the new coarse at
to stay.
* * * •. etudy and the results will be amtiouse
ly anticipated by educationalists the
However it be for the cultural idea over
the boys educated in theee practical werld
schools- are taught how to eern *IW- THE NEw taussita.
ing-they leern how to do things
tending and profinehle essembly, but themselves, and an an age more in -
considering the importance of the sub- tereeting in doing than thinicing,"such
jeet of education to every man, woman e result of educetiou is Very popular
and young person, the reporta of daily Alai unpresetve on men of a practical
ecseions are seldom as extensively
reported as they well might be in the
daily newapapers. The baser sort of
politica might well be dropped for tote
week and the editoriel and news col -
marts he given over generally to mitt,
eisms and synopsized reetorta o the
respective sessions. In ibis way the
people of tine province would benefit
by the deliberatione .and ideas ad.
vanned be" Prominent thinker* and
workers in and out Of the high .and
public schools.
* * $
Faddists on edueatienal methede
will diecuse the relative value of sub-
jects of study; the place of the class-
ics, mathematics and the ever present
question of whether education is for
culture or efficiency. This last is, in
our opinion, one of the greatest prob-
lems yet unsolved by educationalietel
althohgli it has been a subject for de-
bate in teachers' conventions and in-
stitutes ever since Herbert Spencer
and Matthew Arnold had their inter-
esting controversy'. History tells us
something about their contentions
Which may be briefly summed up in
this paxagraph: Mr. Spencer said the
average boy did not have the slight-,
est conception of winit chemical, pro-
cess was going on in the candle while
he was reading by it. Mr. Arnold re-
plied, in substance, that he ma not
care a blank Whether his boy knew
What was going on in the candle•
flame or not if the boy only had a
mizicl capable of enjoeing to the , ut-
most the Shakespeartinie wes reading
leyahe candle. These are a comment-
atotti words, but they fairly sum up
the controversy and. the controver-
sialists did use the candle as a case in
point.'
* *
ice11, "to' put the question agearelY
before the members of the Edueation-
a/ Association we shotild dearly like
to hear them discuss on all its bearings this inquiry: Shell the public and
high school teeehers in Oritarinteach
- • the childrea hew to live or how to
eara,a living? Or to pet it in an-
, otheer wayaShould 'the education, g:1V•.$
• on. to the yotith of Canada deal in the
main with the problenis of their° worke
ing hours, or with their leieure•bOurs?
. Patlee for a fele nioraitite to gete.the
imPort a this queetiOnt for our -ob-
• servation leads us to conclude that the
, greatest Amber of individuals are
more seriously ,perplexect over bow to
spend their leisure than their active,
thne. Torn/ate our question unques-
tionably clear, Shell all "edneation he
erelalieed or all be forgeneral dis-
, cepline of the mind? These questions
' have engaged the thought: al the best
• e,duentors since Spencer and Arnold
debated, them, and if we draw, correct
=elusion the world to day aides with
Spencer most closely. The contro-
versy these men darted stirred up the
e" two great leeding•Englieh universities
to; Oxford and Cambridge Which . in-
sisted that the study of Latin and
• Greek was the best eraining not only
or areel he brit for effective work in
„ the world, -while, the eheads of the
Birmingham and London. universities
o' 'claimed that" .science gave both joy.
e a and efileieney and that it was afl none
. .
r••=,-.•-•••
137 Chas. M. Btee, -Denver, Colo.
The revoluelon tet the Russian gov-
ernment, and the -triumph of demo-
cratic, principles in the land of the
turn of rola But the question of autecratie Czars, is not the least of
culture vs. efficiency has not been, fin- the. surprises of the great war, It
ally settled, for there are, educators ashen in the dawn of a new era from
who deplore the' tendency of today to
teach boys trades or even profeeeions. a quarter hitherto ariexpeeted, and is
They wantrather to put all the school
one of the Most astounding episodes
energies into producing high-minded, of history.The world to seems a More o -
widely -read, well -disciplined, cultured
gentlemen -men with a therly and Comfortable place bee se
finest things Pfe bas to . These e
10,41; for the of the sudden •and oveMeal
same celtural advocates ,,argue- that •eusege 413 the 116vereiSelit. of this
the cultural discipline of the classmighty nation
ics, , The Russian patient might, well'
Philosophy, literature and /nature
stand forth new, a smiling figure illu-
maticsobest fit men in the long run mined in, the sunshine of his freedom
even for professional vocations, and -the mose'patient, brave aand modest
so this side of the, controversy has
of men, to whom the bands of all men
'still its keen sympathizers and zeale
ous advocates,will be stretched forth in hearty wel-
. • ' e
• com.
• * * *
• For almost 600 years -the peopl
Advocates of cultural training of this vast empire have lived an
elairtenvith much in experience to sup -
Port their theory, that studentsso imp aca e ynas y, av ng e o
educated make the best nien evert for no concern for their 'welfare. It wa
work, recinlring epecialization. Men
who also employ great numbers -0-i, first the rule of warrior kings, an
then carne the darker .and oppeessiv
young merlin business, .strongly rule of the Romanoffs that held them
phasize this theory. For instance, t e
manager of a large industrial cone .beneath the threatening sevoids of
endlege tyrannies. If they asked for
cern remarked to the writer that he justice they were answered' by the
greatly preferred' to engage men with knout that tore their flesh to ribbons
classital training rather than , with If they pleaded for mercy they were
scientific, because in his opinion "they shot down like dogs before the eyes
were a higher grade a and their of ,him, their little, self -assumed fa -
an -round culture made them of more ther, to whom they hadpetitioned.
value to him than if they had receiv; they cried out foe liberty arid ti
ed technical training or experienee.' rights of men, they, were manacle
.Another man wbo prders cultural
• , "L, FLETRI8SURR" OR °THE RANDING."
This is how a French artist pleturee the punishment Ousts fa to be
meted out to Kaiser, Wilhelm .before peace is made. It is quite a•pperent
that he believed the Kaiser to be a serious inepace against humanity and
would have him branded with an indelible brand that wouid et him apart
erora all ellen ea one to be abhorred shunned and despleed. s •
• ,
labored under an unfeeling, insolent,
INCREASING -
CROP PR.ODUCTIO
the farmer should insist on getting
seed oats of a known variety. There
was a limited supply. of 0. A. C. No.
oats, and he understood the Do -
inion Government was arranging to
. • • — • get "Banner" seed meg from the
TIMELY INFORMAreeN GIVEN BY
PROFESSOR ,uvirz.
Agricultural Connitittee of the, Legis-
If•latuee Discusles Growing of '
Foodstuffs.' •
trairdng saYs "the- technique of a and sent to the frozen dungeons er
thing is quickly grasped When the
mind is keen, Which ndanie will deny;
Educated men, in the mod real sense,
is what we require in our business be-
fore boys who have learned the trade."
Similar remarks have time and again
been advanced. An eminent man re-
marked recently that he . preferred
regular aillege graduates foteteachers
in preference, to those who had been
trained in 'teachers' colleges or even
Normal Schools. Surely he wee sta.nd-
ing on debatable ground /or learning
is by no manner of means the only
qualification required to make a truly
succesiful schoolmaster. Many nni-
vOreity-men have turned out. , he
'Worthless as heads of schools.
Frederick' Lynch, the New York
publicist; in a letter on "New•Expern
meets 'in Education," whose views we
have often quoted, says in effect: For
my earn part I prefer the culture. • .1
*ant my children to Speed their first
21 years acquainting themselves with
the literature thought, culture,. music
and art of the world. • The college ir
ehall.chease Will be. the one that pro-
nidei them with then:knit cultural at-
mosphere and which can further in
them a love of the good, the truly
great and the beautiful. They must
know the Greek and Latin.literatures,.
for in them all other literature is
grounded. I want. them- to know the
great books and the great .minds of
the ages. want them to know pholo-
sophy and history • as ' well as art,
poetry, and music. I am much more
interested in educating them so that
their life may be rich rather than that
they, may get rich. (What a sublime
thought that is truly.) 'Above, all, .1
believe in the college which ' teaches
young men that the life of the spirit
' • sense to bring up a boyam Greek who is the real, joyous, trne life, and :that,
vocation is empty to help orie to live
this best life to thd full.. •
Dr. Lynch evidently. desires to give
his children the kind of education that
will enable them to properly, prOfit-
ably and 'thoroughly. enjoy their leis-
ore- ours -t at t r of the day -Wirer - -a- •
ciency inity aery well and effeetively•
•. ' was ft, epend.lais life building bridges
, or financing big badness., So varied
are the occupations of men in - this
, practical, utilitarian age that the tul
thought which probably Was forgotten.
in the heat of coetroversy then and
which dominates our minds toalay „ is h e 11 hi' d to his rights, anctehoteeeseht foe them _were- itrger-ancl-s more -vigorous-thane peopmetune, •and npluinp" seed -Selects
e. in Russia shiee,1825, and° it is said
the results to the, farmersefrein thee starte reeving the enemy win:follow• • .
season's drop,. given reasonable wilt- until the `inevitible siunrieingt But 'lit'eteadd.1111-5eitell4riel:baluIrtiolfsIvh4tesvrnsesvienr" • - "'
'ther conditions, would be astonishing Tertian's
. . the Surface commander gets i
far-off Siberia, where life was worse.
than death, and from. whose •beuene
but few ever returned. ,4 •
. .
Over them this shadow of "the Ro-
manoff dynasty eternally hung,
'Mocking their miseries, and rendering
escape impossible; an overlordship. of
the powerful autocracy • that claimed
its authority frotn Almighty God, and
proclaiming- that only to god would it
render an accounting of its ,stewarde
• Back of that dynastytfor centurie
stood the Eaten Mack a chure
the braVe and suffering,* peasant
strange to say, loved with an abound
ing faith, paradoxical as it may seem
He was taught to believe that th
Czar -the Little Father,, as he wa
termect-was the chief minister d
GOd. on earth, te whom all obedienc
must be give:flee-arid from whom 5ustic
•or the basest crueltyhed to he aceeit
sed with equal humblerreas and grati
tuck, Shedd one peasant more intel
Agent &eh- the others deubt thi
teachtng, it was ie -read to him 1
the quick volley of a Ale of spittin
rifles, or the durcile agonies of an exil
in, Siberia,- Where hope died tit
heart, and the •yeas were Isde
measured tramp of agony. . •
Thus sadly did this silent and mos
pathetic 'figure go on from day to days,
from eentury: to century,,' •reading
•
thinking and pondering in his own
way until there came - this magic con
tact with the -outside world that th
great war gave lane and out of the
At the • • inaugurd meeting of the
Agricultural Committeee of the Legie-
lature held .fecently a propaganda
was instituted towards meeting the
problems imposed by the war on the
agricultural- industry. At the request
of Sir William Hearst, , Minister of
Agriculture, Professor C. A. Zavitz, of
the Ontario Agricultural College;
spoke at some length on 'weys , and
means of increasing 'crop production
and the right kinds of materials to
use. Sir William himself made a few
remarks emphaeizing the. need ,not
only, of growing foodstuffs, but of
grotring those kinds of „foodstuffs
which will, be most needed both here
and in the Mother•Country.•
There was a desire on 'al,lesides, said
Proteesor Zavits, to do,alrpossible to
meet. the very trying conditions that
West in feief- 'about 400 OQO bushels
;. ,
had been collected for seed purposes
in the terraieal elevators.° If the
farmer could. not secure these he sug-
• gested that No. 1 commercial seed
• oats be purchasedSibut en no account
the ordinary commercial feeding pats.
This point he strongly emphasized as
tieing essential to success -first home
'gown. seed find next western seed of,
known variety.' •s
Professor Zavitz warned the farm-
ers againstpurchasing a a ig pi
seed oats that were exploitett by
United States seed houses; when the
same quality of seed could be your-
. • .
chased in Ontario at from on -third
e' r ,A.l'amnui na:ry 127,1 dee:: °thzeilusbtirratthedsay this,
' .. '
to one-quarter the price. •
. part of • our men took eighteen en- feeling. On the birthday of the laais-' ''',.
- • tenhe Potato Situation. .
1 gines and a big lot of rolling stock.
At the request. of the, committee, "We were the most . westerly of tae late Erafieror of Austria, A.ugest .
.14144044111,
CAPTIIREIHY
•
Thrilling Experience of a British
Traeger in German. remit Africa.
Being airried off by a lion rigbt ia
the glare of a huge temp fire and in
the midst of a detachment of the
Fourth South African Horse, was the
recent experience of /Win Brighton, a
railroad pestall telegraph clerk from
the Maritzburg Post -Office, who is
serving with the regiment in Gerrnian
Etta Africa. A. comrade toile about
it in a letter home: • •
"We pitched camp at Sarganda on
tbe_ceittral _Railway,' about fear
miles from. the staticm-r eS;
"and stayed there ten days. Such a
place few wild animals I had not eeee
in all the teampaign. • Liorts and
natzknehybsurwalemreenthage eezlhieiletanddrotgeirnsroaort.
ing and. chattering at night- to which
hyena added their weird yelling made
sleep unpoeeible. Vtte.lay aimed the,
camp fires with rifles loaded and bay...,
,onete'fiXede in readiness for apything
that might happen during the pande-
monium. ' , • '. 4,
'As .we made no noise• the animale,
doubtless emboldened by their own
and gettnig accustomed to the glare
of,the„fiees, drew in nearer' and nearer
as qur day was prolonged. On the •
• h
THE OF
THE REVOLIMON
sper=0¢9•4•
'GROWTH OF 'THE SPIRIT OF DEt.
.mocpAcY.ENT Russm.
runt night a big shape hurled over
the thornbush-barrier and landed as
lightlf as a feather, and Was off be-
fore anybody -realized Nit what had
happened; taking Brighton, who had
been dozing, wrapped up in his Wan-
ket, with it.
"Brighton was too .astonished to
yell evert oath the lion, for that is
what is was, had carried him seven or
eight yards beyond the barrier. The
animals teeth had not touched him,
but had gripped the blanket and • the
postal clerk, pulling his arms free,
pounded the -lion's, nose with all his
force, wriggling and. shouting as he
did so. By this time, too, we were all
up and darting in burst*, yelling like
mad, and shooting off our rifles
Brighton's punching and the unearth-
ly noise must have scared the lion half
RUbStall Army and Ruesion People
Have One Single Aim, Winning
Of the War.
r-Th• eenuma-has-been-greatlieresPone
eible for the grewth 'ef a 18pirit of-.--
materacy in Rrissia, for although the
first Dumas did not accomplish much
in the way of legislation, the members
enjoyed the right ef free speech nod
the aewspapers reported what was
said ni the Duma, wbereae.they were
prohibited from , reporting public '
speeehes made outside the Duiria,, •
writes Mr. Riddle, formerly American ,
ambassador tb Russia.
• There never has been much extant.
festation Of public opinion in Russia •
because the male tef Russian peasants
have no opinion, to express, eo far fie
foreign politics or nationdeesgoverne
"tient is concerned. • -
The spirit of nationalism arid a feel-
ing of sympathy for all Slays has been
the one eubject which has brought
forth a niaaifestation of 'feeling ea the
part ef the Russian masses, -Who are •
intensely interested in the fate of
their "Little Brothers," the Slays who
• have been, or still are, under Turkish
or other foreign domination. It was
-this spirit which brought about the -
war of 1877 wit Turkey.
Even the Russian peasants who take
no interest itt 'lime or foreign politics
feel intensely on this question of na...
tionalism. ,
'What the Revolution Means. -
- The revolution in Russia seems to
me to be more a purging of foreign .
influences than anything else. It • is '
an expression of national feeling. •
There have always been many per-,
to death, for he dropped his captive sons about the lussian court whohave -
and made off at top speed. No doubt been strongly pro -German. The court
he is still running. s. • . • itself, that is, the family of the Czar, •
"Two days later we treked down has always had strbng • pro German
•Kilmetinde; also on the railway, and synipathies. Although France has ' •
then pent on to Itigi, where we took been Russia's natural political ally the
three engines, practieally intect, a Court has always shown more interest
for Gentian institutions than for
emantity of lulling stock •slightly crams
aged, a purnp, tanks, and a .splendid
workehop. Two stations further up a
:Professor Zavetz referred briefly to .General Smut's advance tlind at Itigi e •
-the potato • question. The existing
high price • of potatoes he *Might
-would result in a great rattily people
in cities ,and towns using vacant
land Yor potato growing this • year.
, This 'crop could also, be very well eis-
I tended because of its • great food
,value. tb methods to be employ-
ed in sowing, he said, that best rres
turns 'would be secured .from soWing
'advance Party, The Belgian ,aslcaris'
we came in touch with the Belgians' to the Teutonic embassies, &ark the -,
the rulers and extended
-just like a Natal eiksha boy's dress.
wee' health. of
every courtesy to their eepresenta-,
Uniforms : wee a scream. They
Some were what they call 'Marks- tion to July 14, the French national .
tives. But be did not pay any atten-1
men' and had huge gold cress gene eeeeey. • . e ' es
Ill over their elves" ' • . i to '
THE SUBMARINE NET. e arntautacritoy, _while • France 4tood
, • • • stand foe' the, principles Of autheritye
Probably he considered Germany •
0. •
f '
hoped the stiggestious;he had to offer ilealthy• plants, as distinguished from -------•-', s•------- tittle -CM cc; - • - - It is true that since the Japanese--___ ,
•
:
or democracy.; : - • ••
existed at the Present -tin* :T:itit ' lae.-smallommature :potatoes .ftore good, Once 'Trapped, . the Submarine • Has •
e . • ' war there has been a teetain,develep- .:
would be of real service In, connection small potatoes •of • a poor, 5ariety. ' ' - ,
and es. Large potatoes, when used, • should A submarine net is made • of Wire. rhent of the democretic idea in Rus -
with the inereeee; if possible;
, be cut - into pieces of about two 'rope, about as thick as a.lead pentil, site but I do not think the people wi •
11 •‘' ,
pecially the quality of the :crops of ,
eurices an weight. Eisperiments along and the meshes are of great size- want to do away with thethrone. They ., _ ,
Ontario for the corning year...
Better. Crops With Less Labor; serie f is d the t '
es o yeare; an e wo-ounce net has floats on top that keep bob- Of the pernicious -growths Vul bar- : '
:
Oweig to the scarcity of label-. all seed, under exactly -similar conditions brag up and down like ehe fleet on /lades that have aelberedste it, .
posidble inedis-sleauld' beadoptedto-io One -ounce pieces and less, lita giv- a fishime and on he bot in . are. Russians always have enjoyed . a
•. ,. •
economize labor. Wbile . many of en a yield, of 177 bushels' per acre. weights that keep the whole thing in greet deal of democracy in their local
these suggestions .v.rezi obvious, their , This was • also demonstrated at . the a perpendicular position. • The eub- government. The Zemstoesewhich are
importanee could net be too strongly 'Central Experimental Farm at tr.5i:' inariee.erannot submerge to very .06at seinewhat like County eouncile, are •
this line had been condu'eted over • a about tenor. fifteen feet sqUate. The do want to rid the goerernment sonie
emphasized if, actual results were to ;taws 'where they' got better results
depths on aecount of the pressure
' --
be achieved on the year's operatiOns. ' from potatoes frorn,Indian Head than 200 feet being .about the limiting
depth: It sails innoceptly Along,
He, therefOre, said as a first consid- from places further south. . Net be-.
• eration; the farmer should get ready' Zause the potaniee came frenneIndian otherefore, until it pushed its nose into•
e for the Year's crop befere the snow -Mead, but rather that the potatoes did these meshes. The net now trails
there flashed this 'resolution to be
-free. • s •
He talked as an equal man with
egad- men, '''eviter English,' French 'end
the long -limbed youth Of distant
seas dorninfoine and he bile seen the
disappears •from the ground. The not coma to the same degree of 'inatur-
seed should be selected, cleaned, and ity. Give first preference to • your
get ready for spring sowing. In the home-grown Seed by all means.
great, Majority of cases if had •been
teased that e the, Seed which produced
the best results was that .grown n.
the locality- Where it would be used,
along on both sides of the siibmarhie
--its progress:revealing the fact tha
east yeare tive power.. Perheps the net sudtleely
, e ,
Sbmething below is supplying the mo -
•The weather conditions
etons;, that mean! that the , hidden
sa4-7d Professof- Zevite, were. -abnor-
submarine hissetOpped, its naVigators
mats Fortunately mostrof the" sped In
having made the horrible sdiscovetY•
'Ontario Wes free- fromedis.ettee.
Stars' arid Stripes kissing, the Wehtls"
. 6 • 4. 4 ' . The
that they aeg trapped -or perlietps the
above teeny hoepitals, and hag heard, Iii Ontario, gerierally speaking, there lets& Shortage contimeed tee be- acute •
•was`a lot Of .seed of • good ,quality„ and it coald not, ' Well be were -erne- hasshecorne, twrited in the.eirepel:
lieneetti these friendly tente a tont At the College. they had learned from4while the war lasted. Brit he was Me,
drone tale of freedoni.. Freni these a long setiegeof -_,, experiments that sured that if' ihe suggestiOns that lie
near horizoes he event hack with• a `Spltimp" peed gave intiCh :•betfer id- had throven out'to the •committee Were
geese et his, own rights relicindled and -
. su s an area see , . u mere. see o ser o s y y e armers
Iti lh 11 d b t d • itd pted i ti 1 b th f f
o
with the assurance that he, too, Was a
man, and entitled by the lava God
• would have to be used in sowing, aertntario, the se,ed prepared before the
the Monts 'from this class of seed. snow t disappears, sowing done at. the
•
chosen by, the people,eend 'their voice '
is supreme in matters?of• locargovern-
- •
ments In the present war the Zeal- •
stvos have been active in the foeward- '
ing Of supplies and other military . • .
matters and have enjoyed the full ' • -
supfagt of the people, . ,•
The Russian government always has
been patriarehal, and the peasant is .
willing eto let it take eare national
affairs. •
Aim to Fight NViie to Finish. '
---Although the liusinirre army and • • •
ler. Under these zonditions the wise. people have not always sbeen one in
the past, they are at the present time.
submarine . rises • to the surface. , It
surrenders, becomes the property of They have one eingle „purpose,. and
the enemy, arid its clew made prison- that is the winning of the. war, which
ers. , If it does not take such action to them means the liberation of Slays ,
enemy Will'ekait trporgthe-aurface•inte - Ther6
who are'underforeign demination. - ' • . . . '
}lei been.. anorectic. revolutions • .
one of two thiegs. will happen, .- The
that e ucatum r cultur9 a d
• d ' ' n ell- • . . an had -thein as his own, So this from small seed. • •
men do not work -but the third that marvel 'lee be wrought, in a f
* * IkeY, end pulled down., ,e'Peeeauceeeuet: e,
' • he combined. - is as impoetaat as the eight hove of
or. ivision•of time b d Plant at the Right Thrice -
•
•
On cit3acuetom, of ConSse, • 'Ills kind throne the world ever 'beheld, an' lol portance ofeplanting the seed at the
- aee ree AelAoHiLexAd-r-wilh-#: le-'•--esightrlifteiesiatea.4-eiria---fienvsverds-easgteesueotlfaleatse estarTMdlirVlea • - • • • - :$;, •
a.se autocratic oppressor from his, mighty The next pnint made wasthe
We have given readers of this page of education innat..begiti jb, the hello -ea, it kale, leissee, Another superetitionis right time. Much had -alief_ been'
. .
ed free from diseitie or blight, that the• submersible cotnes up or if it .that
. • Alexandee II. ltrid constitution* '
.0c;anged to ithy .greet extent the form- . • •
eteee patientsete sua:1:aasteelie_ic,,.._an let.a _ . government and nave beee meetly ' ..
to thtc...te farmers thtrv„eneselves and _agree" rn
A-. .-..,4.,+•-i ,,.l ... 1
... ''' .. .. 4'. . ' 'l Z''...1;1 j-waq4E. 51.,gar.....+A.A.5;, Au ,1..-., ...see --ese yew- ereesseeee tee. se - s
ranee. V 14 IC
had tot a voige in the gogetrienent e • . .. „ e• .
- - _.: lieer•ev iet-irellerici s _
..... _ 1 e - elm • see a - .0 seethe:- e. fee „es _ _ _, _e_ , ._ _e , eeetee_ „eseeeeeeees
eeeesessaeseatea-people-ewlie--- seesseseeseesees
•
have directed ttierne • ' ' 1 ' 4' '
o. .
Theoughout. the. atintry the revoke.
tionary moyeniente have not been fel1/4.,', • :
Sense tinsee; mobs but -n houses and
buildings- in the provinces, litit it iS•770.- ..., I .
court Was.',-, : • n '• , 7"---°- • • . ' • ually to get food and not to attempt to
"Whey, lies nobbaf 6, PuoPy !" . , nET, A CHINEnE INN. "., .
• • • change the form ofeseyerninent,
"Yes, yes, ite yen 'say," said the elerk , - --. , 1 --"t• , ' . -
at lain. "13iit hew old is he really ?" • BibieS Sleep in , Cradles ' That Swing organizations- which in the" past have . • '
Tho terrorists, anarebists and other, • • , •
"reauldn't fell to a bit," was the.re- ': ' ' 'Fi°111 Itatteis- • ,. I ' , continisallysbeenettgiteting -aggia-neethes e ese, • - :
ply,..eanaver was rrarch geed at,electeles eeefbn ":"12411afrii; ;olrefi a 'ilongs- :eue- govern/neat-de not repretent the pees . . ,.
bat lie'd-riebbet a PUPPY. • ' storoyed•inud litit, with thatched root ple at .large. Been they heve been. -, s .•
klyidence proved, however., that the writes a traveller in: •China. We en- quiet since the wee began and have ' •
og wei long pad puepehood, and the tered: Beheld what the frontiensmae jafrained from embai•raseing ' the
ench luilicted the used iin ' • a created. The long room was, the government.
„ . .
Talking it ever afteievardes ..fire far:; I.; seene Of herriely iteustry. team the e In shert, the pretent distfirbealee is .
e
mer exelairned: " 'Ang me if 1 ean me ! eentre, hater hung a big oil lamp, arevolt againet foreign ilifluences in n'
the "sente, dog, - ale it wor 'anus good. the clay Stove • gee the :grindilather are determihed that the war shalt be
'
7.4ertean:tdbaitt,, if 1Loladstoyeeasi4.,va,adn'tathree:41,Qa fiiriny as kasy as a hive of iles.,
1' t' hivailnee leee, Year '?" . . ing a breed ef childeen playing .ort a ing the govern ent to do it,
iy leeving it &oiled, Bet the cheery of yellow carnmeat that oozed from ' - ' , Shade Trees. .
notteli aforn I Whoei been meedita' lee ing the ire with. twigs, and tend- eought to a fin sh and they ere fere-
:nulling and Pinching the fruit, tiler& fie headdiess gathered up the heaps ...,---
on of the south Watt not going to let
uatomeeeS who Miele a practice of while a woman le red with, a wander- of the throne, • • ' •
rer wits very much vexed by possible ed donkey walked round end roteren thro*. of the Emperor oathe abolition: •
An Italian greengrocer.. and fruitL of grinding millstones tee ble di 1 f !Widens would not vote for the over,,,
A Mild Reerciof. From one eornei ensile the. inei:ry• whir held the majority' of the ne0,000,000
. .
dirt inter peened , hied; swept clean. • I believe that if it plebiseites.
* ,
p ,twtlherierierli‘.avtr'i neg
sbtOrlityli ii,111'(Inetreli Inibeiti,:1,1tel'arid, noTtn.t'IttloTesptiritenet3inig2ttiff:pitatiw• 0,
By ministration of liffaire. The yeeSsle-
s
• . .
. '
Year ' shedding_ its. ,r;iyi siter aeseatriarchal the-govetnment end graft le the,lad-; I -
hia ge on Much loft e -, ..al h '
It of its chaff; Others lean- 'opliegive Shelter to birds but 'toed as
ea i'•
eild not
:
'11
ae
eifiareillet • e. -
niS"IdearebilOt epene an he_efertheeheienc men s e I retisa
, dem ofescheols-delevered-4-ftetide eet ' en e •goo
will tread -the highway of freedom;• results indicated that in the case of
'
• , petual-Puppy.
merged -Germane know that tills homb
marine.- -Of conesemire sub= -
is likely to drop at any minute;• ' the
"psychology" of such '• a situation
tends to persuade the :Imprisoned' crew
peatedereply to the . 6 ti . ' e to surrender. • • . . • ' ' .
• Eliot of -Harvard University, This were and Nem the -eight kind of built' so to speak, in a night, for the ' spring wheat -it was important .tet get
very controversy agitated the scholars seperstructare.' unfettered feet of men. . the ground just as quickly as
arid school authorities in the Milted
• •
We welcome thee to, the delloWship thee land could be work:ed. This I
dent Eliot introduced the optional
eldertg-tInglish termer had been
Wed before the inagistrates -te Show'
Cause why he had failed to. take out a
icense for a pet terrier. I tie , oferee
States a few yeati• ago when Preee• • -
The United 'States' General Educe- of the brave and the free,
.,,i• trust should' be immediately followed by
bon Board has been endowed by Mr., that henceforth we shill behold above:pats. The, barley -should be pet in
course of 'studies'.into liarVard,'. and
. ' It raged hard and furious, too. 'Writ- J. I); RoCkefeller with $35,000;000 and the flames of the battlefield a neve flag : next, then4peas and beans. ' Getting
le undertaking an experiment in edu. 'unfurled, and under it and it3 hrother.: the ,seed into the ground at the rightje
ers intim magazines and leadet. Writ-
' -ere:, on the • big eailies sent forth ar- Cation- with the aim et testing -out a flags. of freedom; the, bugle etiellesohe ' time -means an addition . if-, blialiela ',
dent articles pro and eon, and the de- thoroughly modern course of study. A. be calling an • enduring , peace With 'per acre, • • . -; ' i
number of bays, and girls 'between ambition for "World empire" forever 1 , , ; I ;,Ilteans _Should. Be __Grown, . ., • , ..
bat waxed het aed.inteneely intered- _.
• - see - -- hag all -over that conetrytinitt epterid ageas_a_inad ANS/1111)e matriculated -and- -blotted:from the ininde of men. ' -.--e-St --Thirring tliCetteritiiiii--"th-ilie.1. Crepe -
the experiineat will 'begin next Au:. Thii's 'by God's grace, "goeernmentethat nn ht be sown to ad4antage,
*vet here into Canada. FortunatelY, tunin_
at least en we think, president Eliot This Board will provide of the 'neoPle,'he OP people and for fseofeseer Zavite urged an increasei d
Teachers' College a Coluinbia tide the peeple shell net perish front the sowing Of beans "Beans were rown b
• • •
' rather carried the day, and as a re- . $.
ere y, ew ork, with rnoney neces- earth," but ,ehall be enlarged, hallow.;
sult the colleges began modernizing sa
ry• to. establish and condect a ed etid gloeified forever• eitensively in Michigan and' New
•York States, end -it was • reasonable
their course of studies, Greek being
, made optional in most of thein, and school for.the purpose of eonstructive ° • " Ito assume that Ontario, lid/1g be -
greater attention wei given to•nriOdern ifieritarY and"secondary etlueation arid,
work in the reotganization of ale- • ,WilY ,Be(fifelnigIvitaledhisi Atteical‘tweerr theme eoirld grow bealIallrent i•P•
AIl theway float.
languages, political ecohomy and I'enn, and al,ttioukt •oxpelimenta,, Where General Stelae, whn represents
ecience." Tit many, also, banking, t- • . ••
• • deebnlYt;iitTedhefoh21;rel:I:It;artrihtlig113:: seed 0
• commute and ahe. subjects called, course of stuilY so that it may•be bet- enee, has been rounding up the hist available • in Ontario wile compare-
tivelv free from disease., The variety.
g Improvements m the n p ri a on. el-,
practical, every -day atu es w re ter adapted to the needs o mode n e •
et promilimice. Indeed, it was ibout than is the curriculum Two memoors. af hur expeditionary
'this time': also, that the -scientific new in
common use in- that country. Tide force 'get eeparated froni their e one 7-'beS•tt. tdvantRg-e'.was thr e°111111°11
e giv- • f r
"nesille Thile‘Iving : that thought could be used to.,
•
61 the uns
•
•
,
schools be all f b
„ lar and the eciettilic departrneets of
the great universitiee- were throngeo
experiment by the Facelty of this cal- ,m ere 4CoOttired '17Y a hostile tribe of ty in the Provinee, arid could be h
lege which, includes sonie of the •eavrtes and brought. before the chief. I d d ' h • • '
P • plan insaree the careful study of every' mend and were lose inehe bush. They grown to ebnie extent le every come- e
,w pe eau. ey aie alreadyc
• witb. zealous students.
° *
Some years later, as more of the
. . P 7 • - 1
ablest eritics of educational proce lure Ile - mitered. them tosee out
in the world. ' ' . , . . , ..i gather Eonic frulte nem their return d veiling prices are high and will, eon- .,,
Abate' tO be so nt long as • the war t
• ' . • ' .* * e 4, ' the ehief Ordered 000 UL them, line de .
•
•I 'readers of these Valks..will temember,
-
ed over 'elay mortars, pounding eondi- well? A' black sweet -cherry or wild
there came the great 'eniphaeis on
teehnieal educatipri, and 'immense mairtS With stone POOties.• '''• ' '• ' cherry tree is bealatful and free troni• , e.
Men wet hurrying here aid, there attacks of kale es compared to other ' • .
. . , with firewood,. coakine 'lett the. tre- t ee . . ' • few locust trees with a
' "Sire," said the 'grind viz' ler of 'ri veleta. One end. of the room Was re- twidting 'tot grane-vine tWining over
certain .Drieritel Potentate; `I su.ggest served foe these wayfaretra but athe i them are beautiful, and the fragreifee • '
thee hi the ,future we bay our auto; k'anir at the ' other end WA'S divided f 1 , ••
•!flie announcement states that Latin to hirl Prese"e• ' '
and Greek as languages will net -be "Wbat• • bringeet thou ?" he de.
taught in the 'wheel, Science, Indus- =Adel ' ' -
try and domestic bets will be premin- Grapes.
e e
mit throughout the echoel and increas- "Then swallow them whole; that Is
ed attention will be giyee to made, thy punisbMint, did entice nature'
asts. Ile very strongly rirgee elo. a notice.' which read : , •
growing of more beans. • • , "If you meet Inhale fi•uit pincha
The Pea ere!) Might also, ke ins' (le eeeeallt/t."•
• $
Schools Wee built and equipped euch
ste the Armour Institute, Chicago, the
Institute of Technology -at Boston, and
others.. Several years ego the writer drawing and art. efatheniaties
Will
was. invited by Dr. Jaittee To, Haelesr receive• special consideretion in the
who we regard as one of elterettla's hope of World -rig out a rational eourse
mot practical educationalists; to met of stud3r whieh conneets the etudy of
einiliSaley the Termite Public .Sellool inethematies. with its use and which
tenchere ennui Easter excursion to also makes edeetutte provision for
• CleVeland 'deft the schools of that those 'Oho have epeeiel ability for this
great city, and on that oceasiott tilt Subject. " Organited recreation, play
tWst of that vieit centred iu and mete will be provided for and
)5/71 not:m.601r of the ilardeaSe teeb- comitent Orate will he made by
•
nihil school then in felI• ereratiore,
will he the punishment' of thy friend."
• ' aim buret 'out dau gide g.
"The chief gazed at him sternly ;
then
"Why dest, thou laugh ?" he Asked.
"Well. my Pal, Dille -ha, lueleetteee
got eocoanuts 1"
if tire sea ehould rise ono-twenty-
stictle part of its depth, elle-balf•of the
mem ilielteiclualy, elaee and eehool land would be under ivateVs. •
•
creased, but lie% did not Urge
strongly. Like. the bean the pea
'a concentrated. food., .
Room for More .
this • ;see-- ,
was • All Eye For Bargains:
Another crop that ceurd be in-
creased to great advantage, seid Pro-
feesoe Zavite, was oats., The oat erop
wL55 exeeedingly important& It was,
needed to feed our live etoelc, and'
mobiles from the Western 'eompany,
that has just offered us thirterseSer-
cent. discount."
• . A i pe i (neon:tees a (neigh! and
into Pectium. Prom each rafter over a gioriotei feristefor Lees. 'Where tire .
each " seetion swung, (paint` little the nirds to neStrind feed if all the: '
triunes; in each cemile was a little ! Iltiuiler is ie cut down? •
.
"Good" said the potentate: e'Ordar browp baby, eaeh.beby tended by a
[ nye' stock was "greatly . needed, The .a• consignment of ilVe• hundred .autO• inriVer Phila. Pei -away from theiend e A, frugal Sent, wishing ,to light Up,
oat crop. of Ontario was sverth in mobilesa negated sizes, at onee, :mil theeer of tlu, Neentern. wmeet lee nee est ee a natittr
nel'..k‘i$1. ie'en', hint r -romp: to ib el col• v. rmli,,b. . ' 'N'',101:1(feollf')w-tble'rtai8'Abe.tg!i7jr"
, e, .
vaolu
pse alheeuitteorantel-lemeniriti4ert.
* " I, hill tell be ettlei in d • A ' '• • , " • • ... I * . r , .. " i i • • . ' •
oolL1401r1: a 11I;VI'lellie fteelrl` itliilee' teli6siellorrtilkilliy° 1,Pt1'11r;11.1'1,1•t1.1.1,1,14';1,1 .,, e,..„ tt,,, eel „r., rarlks . and' one. ,fle"41.71°, ea'er 7eail•fhedlY7 "•Aweel,
abut sowing sewing, geed geed, be declared t, will s,
•,
'4
.I'll ler, a it, tan yin o!sina aim," •••
„
1 -