HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-02-10, Page 7- - -
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KING OF MAW:MN . AND HIS PRO.GERMAN
Lady Ileadero. of :every good. family -ofthe nilnieter. '.The country yeeto
%Momper form the larger .portion- of baoin most.:COMMUnitiee. Unparalleled
itii'COnetitueney, or,. aS • the lawyers opportunity to be A leader, t Melte t
gontete.. For ale reason de- the people, .old and young, realtze that
'that *eke Talks. .shall inelnde be h.olieves hineself ..related to every-
• 'Ivlat WOMell likeyte• real We lutTe thing Minion that has for. it Object
„Ind read. ti recent ..opeecb, by ..- gra, the uplift and' •construetiok and in-
Ndllo L.
McClung that intereoted.ne, .spiration for the comneunity, for the,
and herewith quota a *few sentences," betterment of any Of its ,conditions. •
. as it is as geed iota 43 •We can Such an aative and pastor'
ltro, 11001Mig epe.alte celnily,•.14,44 kindle. such A .MOVenlient and . de -
fluently, -forcefully, and atehes and Sim for la.olpfulluoss on thQ part of his
t.. attentien Of her. Ileareree .-eburelt oflieere .tbatetheyo too, will. be-,
*St; referring- ta- Man''&s cew .?tvoagenta-for the bottgment
• .tion Qta thetemperenee issue and the of. their neighbothood,and as ce 'result
:Moral principles. and intelligence the chute)); will .begin to have a. clom-
• that marked the.. election, .campoigritt Uniting Influence in tbe -coMmunity•
•• There is '09mtetteng,.we hepeilas. pass- each as too Many of them have ..loet
• - • ed away forever, and that io..•tbe ;longfor the time being and'.whieh.theY,will
dark autocratic rule. We bo- in thie. way . be helped to regain: .This
Bove that wc. have. entered /wen a may be:oalied the vision ofairtclealiet,
new day In this province -the; day .but we believo itis.halenilY possible.
• When thepeople are !ring to mb.
, * • * , .
'There.. is no better WAy. of safety In The Older ones ' among us can..;t•go.
. _government- than the 'ruling by 'the back in niemory to. early life in .Cen7.
• peoPle, To-da.Y. We rejoice .that.'; the. ada, When:the settlers. Wereeall 'about
• peeplehave.spoken as theyhairadoaaiT on. 4.-wial•-•egualitYy• whenthe-chargb
• , and we hope our Provincehas. entered and theselthel were the two sourcet
upon u new tinte-:-.4..tinue, in eevbieh gee' life in the.e3ottleinent, every ine.ve
,..there.evill he aVeirdeal handed out ment being centered:in:the/eand every'
•- 'every person.' On behalf. of the ."Nio•-andoitaking" almast' 'eminating from
. _men I -desire to extend our gratitude Went. We mayalmost ' say that the
•e and to, express. the 1407 that • you school ;fed the church and the church
• voters Will -never' be Sorry for -the volte ,tan the eenifnunitY.; The explettheitete• .
•
you leavceet this day Which will make was self-evident - the wliele Populace
•.-It43essibre for the women of this made- up the •eboreli„ and, asit wasy
• country.to stand side by. side. with .yon
02 conise Mrs. McClung sae:ern:04
more geed things,' but we.have quoted
enough to phoVe that she io..obright
txtempere speaker as well as .writer
of 'interesting.- books. , •
efr
0
in the met eleetion.
the. only . organization, coeoperation
was most easily promoted through it.
In these days of multiplied societies
orvaried objects and character the
same stress is not placed on -the or-
ganized .church. Now wedo pot de-
pend on the church to stand spenser.
for every coznmunity undertaking, nor
."Christianity is the most vitalizing do we wishthat itshould, bit we do
thing In the woeld," :said the Preeid,eilt wish to set every church exerting qe-
of the United .States 'hi a recent fate
. dress; The world e has advanced, ad-
vanced in whet: *e regard as: real
civilization, not by material, but by
spiritual means. • President •Wilson
made this further., significant state-
:ment One " 'nation' la- distinguished
•
from another byeets ideals, not by its
posseeeeens; by what it believes in; by
, What it lives by, by what it intends,
by the visions which ets young men
edieeni and the achievemente which its
men of maturity attenipt; so tlfat each
Patton exalts when it writes' its pee!
try or writeits memoire the charnel
tee'' of ite people -grid- of Grose 'who
spring from the loins of its peeple."
To every young man this -sentence -•is
• very meaty, and nut,Y,he re,ad andere-
, reed and studteci carefully.: So many
get the wrong perspective of life and
". set up the principle of individual ad-
• vantage tis the. principal doctrine of
their life, and so live a life that leads
• to all aorte of ehipweeck. It is very
important to get a sound view of life'e,
opportunities, its responsibilities, and
its manigeld temptations, and then set on "The Red Cow," delivered by Mr.
-,the compass for a safe coarse aeross Peter-MeArthur last night When he
spoke of the Red Coer as being the
tie that binds thepeople,of the farm,.
Making the farmer's job a never-erid-
eng (Me, e iiieidentally made The point
that country life holds no monopoly
of happy -dee* and that the farmer's
life it not all "beer and , skittles."
Dealing with:the "back tie the.land"
movement, the lecturer said: Having
given the Young people a finished city
education; you can whisk them off the
lend- ifiside an hale; but ,it tykes two
generation to gee them back again.
• It is one Of • the saddest things of the
times that the hardy, virile pioneer
steels is disappearing:" 'He• strongly
urged a greater interest by city folk
the 'lives of the 'people who make
up the rural population. 'Speaking of
pioneer life in Ontario, he reminded
the audience Of how Neil McAlpine
s rec. t . et ejie
the -crops had failed in the early days.
_
Prof. A. T. Detury, Who introduced
Mr. McArthur, said'that the latter had
tramped the world, but ' filially re
sought the paternal acres and had
succeeded in •introducing •into the
eountry more of the joy of life instead
:of -the -intensity, of -mere -living: -----
wholesome, active, living interest
within the scope. of its 'influence, and
Tin this way assist the .community by
rendering assistance, giving counsel,
helping to vitalize, and putting inten-
• sive effort and ferce into every move-
ment that, effects beneficially and gives
an uplift to the •lives of mei; women,
young people and children, who com-
prise the • community. The church
thauld echo the • declaration: We
are everyOne in this world to,do some-
thing more than loolc Out for Ourselves.
* * *
Possibly be Writer of, the present
-day on rural problem e is better
known to the reading world than ,Mr.
Peter MeArthure-eHerwas-lectureettle
oth'er-evening in Massey Hall,.. Toronto
and gave sufficient expression to the
philosophy of rural Nieto; interest and
.please . every member' of hislarge
audience. The Telegram . tells its
readers that: .
Sparkling ,humor, with an adinix-
ture of common •sense and homely
'philosophy, characterizer . the lecture
life's broad sea of activities. '
*5*• *'* •
•
Per some unexplained reason_niest
publicists drift into the habit of Writ-
ing mainly for people "out •in . the
country" It is, we suppose, because
• rurel problems being less numerous
- -
are more ;clearly ,seen e or, left because
• the larger proportion of successful
men grew up in, the Country? A re-
• cent writer tells us that over . 80 per,
• Cent' hf briefness and professional then
•• were country bore. 'A prolific sub-
ject for writers and .public :speaker§
• of late has been the rural church. Is
the average nixed church e, being
utilized as much and as effectually as
it might be? In. what degree is your
• church vitalizing the lives. of the come
mueity in which exists ?- It ie
, capp1310 ef wonderful usefulness evhen
----eliriteted intelligesteeeleltdese_
The dearth of such leaders is the bare
Her to educational progress. Almost,
, any cenuntinity has • the undeveloped
•' human material but the great prcbe
_ lem hae away been how to effectively
develop' it for hest results. It can be
• done Only by aceive participate/fie of
•
- yourig;- peop-D-i-efyieb\lie- exe'rei-ses- Miei.
proper guidance.- and, ,lielpful instruc-.
' . •
• e .e..* * '.I, ,
...• PerhapS, Canada might take a leaf
.frOin• our neighbors to the sOuth • in
• rural community -development:- •e'bee
. ' 7 . . E T.
have been saying and Welting much
'Ottawa,' :January 20, 1016.
of late about' their Schools' as secial •says.a voice out of the night -"Next . going ..ali the time, and to burn 'wood
. taboolheuse,--whielieis ._'.oecripied _ ftVe, ands mote * travelled theotigh thateat- bay fell in-about'a couple Of yards?' which would •naturally .eause, spine -•,
"Good .1m:timing, merry gentlemen, TI -10 " GHTS FOR THE' DAY:
'eenters--about making the , district
a 'Week_diirinz the .day. kY the tractive tourist paradise, and 'yet the let .-nothing, -01,4, dignmsrp croaks- a 1
i ‘8;irlilt:y' '"Iv.oiliti you ll in oawvnertyllhwoll:tatshpacoef • • •• ' : • .. •-• ' . . . .
. children, a place Which . the •parents • military. actiVities ,were nOt: partici'. viiiee, • accompanied' by a , step. dance;1
cif time! Where there's smoke there'Si ' When women de• things well they dio
. - • mentalist:
..
• and young:people may eSe feimarious iarly 310th:table. . But that it was no fife -end where\ .thereea fire there aie them better than men. -Arnold. White. ' toe.create the- feeling. 'elf- et battlefield, -el-
. ..
Sada and OdOeationtil meetings 'in 'the secret in seine quarters is- provICn by
, , ,
tolutian of "Sunny France" -in . liquid , mene--you see my meaping?. -, . • 1 . Our irand .busifiees is not to see 'itself. 10 4'W& you :that -he is .a .go9
shakes' hands with 'you is enough nscii
The • Way in ' 'which ,,. Lard '• Derbk.* '..- • • - --- ' .,
• • .Yon hear Music that suggests. the
awn, the 'beginiung. a .a. hew. 'day.;.
•
which splashes all and sundeo. with a i ••
,
- The sdeprIse' has 'eery 'frequtritii
hcn expressed that Germany •could
have carried:On active preparation for
a great aggressive War and 'the. other
great pewers be ignorant Of the fact.
Thousands students .avery year
from . other; ltatiOn.s. attended • German
imiversitiek and -colleges and thous.
eeeee/ /
W•1=',‘
e.
27,
eeele
e
////e/ ',/re ,•„,e/ew, zee / /e•
///eeeexii.4. /,/ ,e-e•-ee
'att,s •
(aeff z f//ezeeeezze, "Jo. ezor. &a: rea tom r/eze, r. eozz r. a#,72,sf. &/,". ez/zzezze,z, d
King Gustav V. Ls a centre of interest on account of his supposed friendliness toward Germany. His wife a
• sister of the. Grand Duke of, Baden, loan ardent pro -german, The, parliament Buildings at StoCk-
holm are. also shown.
, .. . .
Prayer` for victory, for support and way overheade-ethe start of another step to help us, along. One can, see
strength to maintain the straggle for day of ivar. .
Divine aid to hPhlutl-it'stheunusual help the nation to rise . the brigheness in the step as s.00as
n a
drink, arid coveteousnees among the . , sound of a ba breaks • out,,_ end tbe number of
-N. puzzled me. May it bethat certain
bove itsesins and. vieeknesses-vice,
num er. . rifle ,grenade eetiving. the rifle, on its tunes he. knows would. fill, a librarY. P
feeds are mor
wayetoeGermany.--Bing-whewl is the In_tliees' einieliglit_eur relief c it e desirable than ethers
, - *.clete--In a recentetssneenf
- * * * * * sound as it eXpledes and the pieces and we move out, straggling along the
Hoard' Dairyman, the results of ex..:
ewhistle through the air.: How man y road out to • our meeting point, inea
peeiments .at. the Wisconsin Experi-
different sounds there are here, every town -in the rear. ' It's safer for the
instrutnent of. war having its own, so men to leave in this way, for numbers ment Statiqn are suniinarized, and' I
would like to have their sennmary ie.
that one can pick out the different marching (and :the men naturally fall
d , • . •
things by their: noise; A faint into step when together) would re- prouced:
.. '
."lehlut-whew-whew" strikes the veal them to the enemy. When' Effect of Feed 'Parturition
far .
ear, and men seek clever, for that enough out for safety, pipes and eig• • 4Sixteen young heifers, all of •tiee-
means a visitor from across the Wayarettes are lit, and 'with backs 'bent parent equal vigor, ' Were, , selected.
Swish - crash!:---bangewhieu-and under the:weight of equipment, they Group No. 1 was fed the -products of
the grenade, has gone off, mayhap in trudge. back to peace and quiet again. 'wheat; group NO. 2, the products of
front or behind the treneh. "Phlete_e Their weariness is revealed in theoats; group No. 3, the prodacts of
phiLittet-plut"Is the answer, for our sleier progress; for broken sleep and
nerves on edge for days at a -time do mixed_ grains, wheat, oats, and corn,
boys have-litle-grenades to spare, group No. 4 wee .fed On the pioduets
making . our ' enemipe reply -sound not tend • tewards . "resting" ete man.
weak -as they': are. Bang!! And all There's' no more to tell you now-
search„the• air above with their eyes, We're "halite” in . oar barn. Goode
...
sernewheree There's a
the earth beneath you gives a con- THE DR
dull thud, then night! • , _. DAN D. •
for /Vs a trepch mortar on it way-.
vulsive 'heave, and the air is full of .
flying pieces 6f• metel and. earth. Without, the sta
"Whew!' Right in • the trench," says Tho moon fie
the sentry, who has takep a peep over. The trees Moan
And toss•thro
„•
Within, tire lions
The world an
Yet, mother's ey
For one is stil
Among his gem
She sees him
eeso lets m• ow is
She heaves his troubled sigh. -
faces , as these words fall . on their -
ears. "-Give the boys•hot esoup;" says, - '• '
Th0Feefliag 'of Ifeifere, • ed, greatly lin the pre-mttal Vaud*
have at varkue times dealt with Merit of the foetus, as well as an •
proved oentItton of the mthiew
telves.” '
•
Thie looks. to me like a careful, !rot
tel.-11Pa 9-tileriMents-r avrer,
been 'very favorable to corn feeding;
sticking clese to my mete and bran
with- a little fax seed and ell cello;
This exparbaent WOUld male it aP4
iee_ar that It r would be Worth' wide
mi et considerable Cern Or Cora Igoe'
ducts.along'.With the oats. '14P0 tri
the. feeding, of heifer calves during
their first year, and have always
Pine0 the emphasis on growth, writes
"Ilerdemae, FATM and Deity. I
helfeeee'• in carves liberal
quantities of whole milk, then skim
milk, and then finally good liberal
feeding with grain Ala . the .104t• hay
that the ferM produces. This. Smile
feeding system during' the yearling
stage of growth would ° develop a fat,
pudgy animal of inferior (leak 'qual-
ity. *During the yearling stage, I
am to 'develop capaciti. 'Good pasture
ia an excellent piaci or the yearling
heifer, • During .the winter months
the very -hest roughage should be fed,
such as alfalfa .or, well cured clever,
eon, ensilage, and recite, but I ,wmild
strictly 'ady.1.06 against feeding nuieb,
grain dbrieg this Period of the heif-
er's life, -Mir the .:ern4-11 quantities.
that are fed, prefer; ground, oath.
The soiling system. of 4eeding yearl-
ing heifers no good. elf 'the dairy-
man has pasture i I WOnld, advise
him to rent pasture' land. • .'
During the two-yeareold stage, I
would feed more liberally. Our heif-
ers are timed to. freshen at 80 months
and the drain on the heifer's system
from the 24th month to the 306
month is great. I would avoid get-
ting the heifers •overfat;• at the same
ime I like to have them freshen in
right good eecefidition. During the
last month or so I like to feed a hand-
ful of ground fax ;eed in a very thin
gruel of bran mash once a day. And
right here I want to rape a confes-
sion.'
Every dairy cattle man With whom
I have-talked:and wile hashad len
experience, hes confessed that he has
had more • trouble with heifers during
their first' Calving period than with
mature cows. A large -percentage of
-the calves come weak and not a few
are born detier•elehavernot had more
trouble than most good dairy/Teen, but
this is a condition that has. always
• ' In all ages; We believe;- men have
in -extreme. difficulty and danger.tarn-
edte a Power outside themselves. for
aid and •guidance ,1 ...According to their
several - conceptions.. of :a • diety that
•power may have been a .woodea idol
or the Christian's God:. e Be that at it
may, Man has, always confessed his
dependence. upon..a •'something larger
and more powerful then,.hines'elf: . It
has been said that more. -things are
Wrought by prayer than wonlTd
elreains of. The •significaneeeeTif the
•poet's words,and thought invOlVed his.
the fact that latterly there has been
an ,increasing feeling,. 'of •-self-suffic-
iency -along all classes who had. been
-Wegnecl'-away ler • inany- reeSana front
-actual ,connection with the Christian
Church.. This. awful -"struggle how-
• ever, has 670, the •sense of.helpless-
-ness and -with- this the.-old-in-stinct tof
turn to higher -.'stiurces, for aid • reas-
serted itself. Truly, .it ...Was: asking
for guidance and directierrin the pre-
sent. distressing and awful scrisis.
4
IN, THE TRENCHES •
.• ON CHRISTMAS EVE.
PteeeDeneDouglass-Describes43adeCon
• dithms in a Cheery Strain.
•
•
Writing from "Neer Germany in
Fratice," Douglass, Of; lst Cana-
dian Contingent, .saes: Someone
'asked- for a description of Christmas to prove what he says. How a inauth-
here. - Now to give you it in full I ful of ruin is i going to make a drunk -
&tale Start- --Witlr'ehristmas• -Eve; Ord -of a boy -in -the -conditions in -which,
She hopes, she feat s, thenightdrags
shouldn't I'? So, here.gOes. Pitter- he lives here I can't make out One
Pattern. Pitter:•patteril Drip' Dripl thing r do knew is, that the 'Cold
the outeame 'be?
-(sounds interesting, doesn't' it?) which cuts into your Marrow in the will
Will ,stormy nights bring peaceful
Swish!! Swish'! Pop' '-(last star long hours Of watching is dispelled at
shell of the night now going up). least for a time, and you earl work •
My boy, or death, to me?"
Pitter-pattert! Drip! Drip! Sieh! here to keep it up. Very often there
(wind) Plop!-'-splaahl, "What's.that?4, isn't enough fuel issued to keep a fire
Ceeient Tee Rause,.
• The following hints' for It eitlalle)
Bulletin 62S, -United •States-Departe:
nice:Inert
concrete ice house anefromfr. 0. 9.1' rarnierall
Tho building may be cenetruCted o
solid concrete. , of -concrete biopics
The foundation trenches should bet e
dug 10 inches wide and 0-% feet deep'',
and fillpsl with 'concrete' proPertione
one part 'cement, 2%. parts sand and
•5 part*. • broken -Acme.. Above tht.
groundlever the walls may be made'
either of concrete blocks; laid up Ii
a one -to -two gement-sand Mortar ol
of solid eonerete. For the solid _walk
above the ground level the eencieti
should be proportioned One bag .
portiand cement- to three cubic feet• ,
of 'sand and five cubic feet of crushed, '.
rock, or one part cement to six parts..
back -run gravel, - •
In building up the concrete e
reelable forms estra. used.fer, holding
the yet 'concrete in place nail it,
hardens. These Dims_shoilicl_ble three- -
feet high and extend entirely-arennd
the building. Aftet filling the forms
With concrete 'it. should be 'allowed' to
stand for a ,day in order to harden,:
when the • -forms may., be loOsin'eAl-^
'moved up, and again filled;
During the construction of the walls,
%-inch reinforcing rods should hi( '
used,. spaced 18 inches- apart, running
in both directions. Stagger the rod(
by - pliant half of them !time inch%
from the outside edge, and the °thee
half three inches from the side edgf„,
•
of wall. Enebed.twe rods, or an old
wagon tire cut in two and straight. '
ened, in the concrete twainches abOve
the door opening.
For holding the plates on top of the
walls sink a• efieinch bolt. 10 inches
Icing, head down, six inches into the
concrete. • ! • .
Lay a 4 -inch concrete on the
natural ground, and on Op of this lay •
three inches cif cork;board insulators
embedded in hot asphalt, folio:Need by
tkvo inches of concrete sloped one inch
in four feet to trash drain, 'the floor .
of cern Mark -well-that each group should be finished -with- %eh/eh-Pert,
supplied With the frame amount :land cement plaster.. • • ••
of Protein and other feed cOnstituents. The cork -board insulation thouId lict'
EARY NIGHT; - the feeding was clearly seen in the %-inch bed of pertland cement mere
It was not long before the effect of erected on the walls and oiling in a '
tilrYSical donditioif Of -the -heifers. The tar -mixed in the -proportion of ons
; wheat group showed the least thrift, part of Portland cement to two parte .
rs shine cold and high; the oat group next; the group fed on Of clean, sharp sand. All vertical-.
Os earth with light;
wild and weirdle• sigh, mixed grains next The Corn,. fed joints: should be broken, and all
ughout the, night: group was greatly superior to the joints made tight Pert-
-others in this respect. •,
a noise shut 'mit;
this disparity. of results was shown
"When it conies to calf bearing,
ehold rest and dream,
leswi7heouotee wide ilr a
wheat group and: oat group lcist ' all
very marked manner. The
rades in his bunk of their calves, the tidied grain group
• • did. a little better, while the Corn fed
tired •
tar e,
It has now become quite light, and
the officef an duty,comes splashing his
way • along the _trench. • "Morning,
boys; haw're things this NVaii" "Fine
and dandy, with bothlevers down," re-
plies the sentry. • "Post sentries, and
stand' down, --arid send' the sergeant
along for the rum" (as an after
t). What would
say if he saw the smile the boys'
She wonders if his heart.e'er .turns
some one' at home at 'his desk. Let
Frani What he bravely chose;
that nian come here and get it for us
Or if determined still he spurns
The life no conflict knows: '
•
land fement finish to be applied to
-
the walls and ceiling as Well as to
the floor. -
In Many eaees it Will be cheaper to
crib the walla 16 their full height in
stead of •-using• sectional' forms, as a
part of the form lainber can be used '
group peodeced four • welledeveloped in the roof ,and ceiling, and the re
-
rid vigorous calves. Thera seeniedi,mainder ,can- generally be used to ad -
to 'be something in the corn that aid -1 vantage Q'n'the farm. • .
• • .
•
LORI) DERBY IS ,,I fa great hearted spettsmainz a geaerous •
1 mend and•a sentimenta is . It as. the
- !seittamentalist who has wan all hearts•.
A. POPULAR. MAN presses their. spirit --that he i'S a
f People in Lancashire•know that he ex-
strarg-ht-speaking - -Man"; -.0.- -cheerfal--
. •
•
• • • ,_. , sealed man, and a most tender-hearted.'
HE! tS VERY -WELL. LI -KED IN man all the same: I 1 -tallied one
why it is he Makes this appeal to the '
GREAT BRITAIN. ,
heart of Lancashire. He wits telling
me about his recruiting band---tha'.
'
finest in the country -and began to • •
The Mac 1' Raised yine New Army,
. Is 'Regarded as a Seal- • -
deacribe to me a new piece of music ,
which the band had lately introduced.
• "I shell ne4r forget the first time
hoard it," he said. "It,' is supposed •
d ' •
-,e4rileger-Wlien---rhe-Y-M4y come, toge-, a -speech -delivered leY aeniafteeehoepos- forme e`Theee's- me. place likel. ' Now. , thereAumnes:'"Yorkie" -(Chiri- :what lies' ,,slirnly_ at. a , eitetabeeerteetd feneeee "ARA ip additt011 it -ibis -he hap
-.......then _reveille_ sounds,_ aRd tliera is 4
.. tittes, Work, entorptises, talking abeat ,. Starr Jordon, Chancellor of _Stant'ord ['o/ne." _ (this sung in, it manner eltht Ilighee4.-ja anticipetiOn. Of the spoon- klyle. :
. , _ban --Car- e advantage of: such -a jolly;Sua. a mustering -'0f Me!i'v'`'It'nfl--Cile-sen.-5i' m
, r .a. li ••ht. then"come
' tliet: ler profitable study, debates, le,o, sessed inside knowledge. Dr. David , O'o'ome--there's ne-wo Place like he Romans) vvitir the-rirmi-oncl-.-faces-4o-do,
.. , 4. .
-4erreeet, progrte3s, or: holdieg varied speech the heard. delivered ,privately I home if they only ,heard it) .: Prack--1.the W.C.T.H. could only see • us now," not nad a tiff. It . means a complete z.oes out to hint at, the first moment
4f ., ,.4...dolve belie.vp „ .....th,174.3 4„ .11' „.. good „naturete3d,_suce i au riii isour.loarE
; . : - • - rn • et Y -w ti es -erous --coun lan e, la
" . inb,iecis at coininunity interest, ehet- Upiversity, Calirernia,Thas told of a „would:make the 'War Offiee send iiim : ful Or. so ol""firewateri" to:come. yin -wag regunentar-PallSi. the -sound, or - -
-e•-•-•:•••-ee-L.--,--e,-". .. e feettetentea, . " •',--- ' , ' r 'Musical, 1 the 'how. notorious, General "Bern- pinge--and e shot liits -the parapee in IT says a bay; as hp takes his spoonful. absence :et charaeter.:--Mr. Justice -o.f. .your meeting .. He• is one Of thOse
. and then. the charge is sounded. There
- phySical ciereLees, or ,Whatever else hatch, in which he yortricrirthe ea] tlbut of the il " . • ' • " nn them here and they'd change ! Avory -
. :may ite=WISely-preposed, and-W-herseall and - -dwelt upon - its- inevitablentns. eceuare-headed -, elongated -- frowsy ,` their *minds,Y says •ano cr. ___. men whom no_cne can -be angry ,with;
the .roar.,and ciosh. a a mighty battla
iS-all the thundc'r of- & great dutrge,..
od sort writes Harold
. s. .
Ilegbie iii-tlie Landon Chronic e.
somethinthe schonlof sunset and twilight stealing bite '
' • There is g of -
the music, mut •then--Lso gently • at •
boy,in his appearance -the fat scifool-
fitst that you :scareely..realim,
-
what: is-
' • tamtsand tal'es;
• • -
.., may take active part witli the .utniott Caetnly'and cynically he ,assurned that whiilkered on ;of. a e-- --zee; ---,--e? Here!' Bring' ?ern .here -all young as the ehagrie ,of the, idle; no pangs
fiVpdnra.• Of courie,. we knew . men e Prance would'.be attacked, then 1301- -----(censored)..:' .-Se.ntry ,. sights: his tiffs!" says anothe.r between gasps.- ; so sielte.ning as • the satietieS of, plea-
' wiseacres tell us that 'talk, -le a. vere'. gitim, in erdri.'tapr,ovide a bake: from rifle , end' Shoots-e-craelt-plop! 'emit:ter. the. rum bites en. en .empty, stoe: sure.--e-•Rusltiii..,, - .,.., ,.. ', :. • .
• 0
....elarigereine thing. : :rine -1071-11OIY-to--' whicrli'llr-t-ivrti4rreA.v. -the; Rr-itigh-_,...E..np,_•1-„Ilje,.,.,shot hits lite _parapet ' ..ahea,4_,)b' ;mach.' ' '2 ., . _s _ A .. i Manners are an art • gome arie per- 07,, , ., ,.coniing---the Muslc.'la tbe mum". 'a
be the. ease if : goisip %both] ' he the pire. ('n I. of ' morality • elide Styes dance reneweTie the7a&rninini- 1 -Well-boys -get busy oncl.get_ your .feet,..iatne commendable so fa•It .•• i ' i t'Ilehas hair.
4.
„ • ,. nle Y, a. litt e s loving o •tc. • . • • , • • •
• that,vitrit•ty,'• •• It. is 'aleVeYe 1:-Vherej •hrtishql. aSidc.;, I. is rep:Alec( tp hoOth6,.ttnie's nee, leek ava•, theces up• -•-for rnent.--4oubert. , • nicest ro'Uod bine.; eyes'
ldnelme„--;_it411g34_10.1.-I•wer,..49.7.--,tisit7t-13.ittlio.,,af-.!.yhiternatiorat-lieewire:7-nerntempt(intrely.tmentil, It'-'.ThaterS1:sna-c7itirkr.liboot-,-,tha-h-real.dasee'e.auti:e.-W1l-hae.e.,ge- '14. int:Inor -Abwe •7Ft7114. -19915° at
•
44- • ac.liool-houses tire used for communal have stack is for wealclingt-q tinestrong thing funny aboet thiS jet/ when change," says 'the corpotid. •AK11 faces There is no greater s bi • 'gen- and a mouth that might be- petidan
t mg at each other, not knewing what;
•
_- , de ja a Milian 'than it , or o trifle silikyOnit for the me/West t° inak° of it:, and thee, .what do yeti
e_. ..-...pitapo5e's fer •,tbe _hoard' Of trustees Ur' take what they e ant i•epardtoma. of th.a b ritzy iS away (Sung in an under- 'turn Ins way; for that joke 3,s -very el al decay. of virt
• : 4 , if • ' , • " • w • • , a 4 ' ' .4"ii , , , 4 i '
thii k haenenede Very -slowly handee . .
• • e Xereeee tte..1.1-rf-oinratien-%,Tamtf.111-We'll'"'--eTl'Unree-ar.t,'Ing ctit "et-tifk6-116-Vart--r-' Isiiittc-7-ost '•-bilit:sfii"-2.2..7'..-- - ."'-' .;lieitilv.'etaYedeciat'her-e--.- 2,..- - • -4 • l' , '+ii' ' ' I '
.., ,ikePc e
'Still 'all-Witlr''Wra- of y.ea..-iii ItS iabitants f.or the r T t nip& et thr 9 -est of-irtm.,- He ), - - 'A,- ' ' ' '--- ' l',. * *- "-- '—'•' ". . :'. ..".""'•
..' SiOini rect,:tri:e 11/134t: irthe sug'1,14-41611.18 -artrelties citiTleTeTikalTe'..ie•-•Tfiel'Sreit-7'71/4-7rgiiiiiirtadl r.eveliep--Fis a voir.q,;_iind if' goericanTruS-1--L---fifrolf714-Ife,.: libli_71-coin.' te-e.L.'-.4ilAtife.17 -:L''..44_,-_:_irie-,1-1-„,carsiTiTdicretil'a-iiiiiiat,ift.-te,v414-411)-t.°TeAlaild'annPit' 1
acted , uperi we tie tot ' •feinel thmee et who gives es thin ief:yrinelten 51(411 ' ii. inan'ifie'vei-lii-tTili SeinilTifiXt- anil elf-ec-* a.: at rum, iiifiri-ari-----7-i-miran- -. ti -0 iriric-igiir 'heart thnt every' mieeieeaged ' below -The • es let - ------:, e :
eaeie 1 etreter,--the rloco thrit th'e•• ped- • i.; likely, to lead , ' in the el eaiely t6-.. Tiling' and 'circintry need you!" Again nades, smith an OdcaSiorial .-' sniper's til know' that No ' he is speaking seriously his .eyebrowS
.00. ----wiTen-1-8111Y-those-zain_were.drawe ojr_11;.:_465,_....
people there.ivith tears in thrir eyes.
would be Intielf‘trouble. ,•We etronglyeibhe calm:int: • We . tee. whord• that, calls into an *opening covered by sack- other day's toil starts. Shovels ply to day IS the best day in the yeer. ned takee downward to the inen's
L.:very clay is 'Dooms- i•
anythirig. fightlY 'uni- Igo ttb, his forehead becothes wrinkled, knees, , and ' theee were hundred, a
, advise :Malang ,ilte .00,autry• rd1001. e,..thetteine. li.:er. lecleteeclay, aini:t.'here if ing•--qIello, therel-stand tao--youir fhe tune' of exploding shells and gree man has learned
, of ear,orcliwitieg that It-doeides to be tOmystery,a mystery of cien, (Is hp-, 'hut ,the pitter-pattar -of the rain and over. Is it any' WOnder, 1 ask •yeu, Let nove stain hitrl moustaehe' Sticke out, and lie looks
' pie of I l,,.: section. van nee for any kind, racercw that 'f.,.; beforo lie: Oh, ,it Is there's qiiiet „foie ti. , few minutes -all: Oita, as he sees maYbe 11 man look • day.--Etherson.
, prefitobby °lel wholeSome in the rule .1)(tnetrehie ae the mystery 'et the .de- the ee:beleeting "drip! sdript" "'When ' diet we get tired of it all; and wish were too .great t
' • •tore of (merle itenent . • e , scent of God. Mtn' the v(ry , heart of 1 ryes young I used. to he, the smartest we. could get iti,Vay from it Mt? - • ease too bad to b
. • . „ -P - . 0‘, , ..
tin! Win'Ids ill. that„ 11o, ini,,,;ht ,.,uirg.o fellowyou ever did.sede, The priee'e of , Sergeant "'I oekie conies down the advocate who tie
• exactly like: an. overgrowa • schoolboy 111°Yed, 'r" te.rilen.d9i1glY•"
°ace' as if 'Ills sins' who has either just been switched • Pe•aet-,
c cured. • Jeses is in nilintba.e.:r.1,14:(1vQ:N.*CielYke0t3:‘:•Sith.nlitif eihnait1e6ebanft".:
yet• loet n reeler., a ,seehig 1,14 441(1(5
Gerreate •hope that the war will be
Apt when' he (:ver in a. fe'w months' time i believed
In . d1 riot s where ., elnirches 'ere itenway -. .. ' • . •, • . ,• . •
• available they ,elleuld he used 0S"..t the
1
' i I . .
. 0 0 ,..:: it ;•i . ,
••• .... 1)04 , Waco foe. ecieicil• venters. There I, We Wonder if thi,..,faith in . the 'God
• •iihoplii be auflitlit'rat Orgailizatkii •with- !,of Battlee is as vital, and real as
. . .
' hi this.reake of every 0Oligregation to er nee - WaS. , lItiVe the terrible' eruelties
'carry en Om work undertaken, and the 'that have'e charactet ized ' the' .present
•• patter tlifajlift be " he, • leedere unless .;'rIverldt•War etiesed 'people , stand
adoquate and qualified local. ktulerA aishaid at the inutatiOn of the, etre;
itire Otrthli..apot.. trobally the ln (Wes and atik is therea Mid ligavee
the ;;teaelier, and few other intellic, who poinits these tel human. tra-
' i.tent .people ' are sueletently interested •gedies to take 'Piece. Be • Obi as it
in everything Ont. important., for iiraY the. British: Etripirebas -hem' .0e
• OM yommurify toemake any wider.- its ,kneea., Ihstory Ai/forme ns Unit
.
tat in 81,11011,4;!.tuily.•' Eel -3000y' CrAtiv5,11 fled hie Men elwaye. prayed
iihoulit.rery dInetbl all members or..tho. tho.y. fooht. 'and they ;fought
6001'13e willing, to givfi their'.tine,. pretty ,well, By universal On.
131(1 1T And (3. to 10 03111131314/ nu. a• Week', of inteeessory prayer
der the.' insp;metior, ' •eneourogerwit. 'tvati . engaged, trt nearly,' iknot 141
• arid forkdd aasi140lit ',ever he') (very • part of „ fneeiluug envied
Wales' invited me; t� come nd join
the army." (The sentry thinks we
like to hear him sing), T-svo orthree
forms stand around in the trench, now,
yawning and rubbing their eyes.
"Say, Jani-o! d'you . ever get tired of
hearing youreeif ?" says, Mia. 'The
Singer pauses in his song to tool( at
the, spcaleetr, and tiftbr prolooged
pause, goes on -"After the ;war is
over, -after I get my • payi-after I
hit the home town, by the light of an-
other Aoy. Many's filo thirst I'm
cuenehing,-if I can meet them, ell, -
and reanY's the tae I will 'batter,' -
After the Nor." (td the tune of "Aftet
the Bali.") Pittev-patter,Tat-patl
sPlashi-eplashl (with. • hi!! • feet),
Boom -in -MI -and ehelf etre% chef: its
trench, with the gled new,s'thet we go, physician who never lost ,o patient. --r ,•11v-ri he sticks hi: thunIhS into the • • d A • l 011 • .4 ,, to 111, 1 d•
, "out" to•;.night so "Christ/nes in the Dr. Guthrie.. . •
trenches"' eanncit be written ,by me , The light Of the understanding is
after all, How the spirits of the men not a drSt.or mite light, but receives a
jump, and theysingas if they hadn't tiecture from the will and affections,
a tare in the iverlde--(aed perhaps and it forms the science's accordingly,
they haven't). The x will be able to for Irian ore most, willing to believe
,eat their Christfilas -dinner without what they meet •
the expectation of either "golng up" You knoix well' enough what I mean
by being "Inishe(rv by a Mine, lir get* her youth and age; something in the
tine, chinde of high eXplosiee thrown eon], which has no more to do with
(it'there. the colOt of the hair than the vein of
Daylight fails, and we ire all ready gold; in a 'rock, has to ati with the
packed up to MOve out as 80041 as We grass thousand feet above it„ --s
• get the word-,-ond relief. I hear Ah. nolmes,
Limas; our"orie-rhan bend," tuning up
ready for the march, on his Mouth- ' ,LienS and tigo.s 'aro too weak in
organ. II00 that boy will play, hotq lung, power -to TUn 11.10ye 113 13 half a'
after lionr, just to glee us the eapy "
armholes of his era stcoat,,erossos his ' . ' ,
l03
egs, tilts' back iris chair -and ex.' el'i'c•I 11 th° fact-new9 of whiell "9
, leaked out, in the eity-eehat -the. bull<
presses some genial.' sentiment, thee
of the 'Argentine' wool tit') has beer
he looks what he.realiy it, the nutlicne,,'
bought on German' aeount and the re
tie Englishman born ,under a
luIciln.tYs•: malt -Ida • by Ametican houdes. ' It is
star, one !with whoin ,evorything
!understood that the wed- bought for..
-Peespered, one' who ;could settle any ,
is to •be. seored , in Aegentins '
difference in •the world over a good I 'ellna'flY
t until after the end ofthe war, and 11)15 •
(linnet, a man of the utmost elutri
' ; aetion 16 taken to point to Ocriner
good will, and eominort .14ense:•-•itga n, , ,,,,, ,, „
a good sort, a real., good soft, , ipreparatiens ier the mute and a hops. .
. . , that alte.rnaybe able to stile the. Wool'
.. His Appeal to Lancashire. •bctore neltt 'icat's (1113 1'- available...
In Lteactishire, where they .not eirl'y
know him end are 'mighty proud of 'Willie ----"re,. rihy is ea after-aiti
Iiiin,• but .where it ia na eXaggeratibn iier speech called 4.1 imiktl:"... PA- •
to say, he is the suprenie °Won .61 i “Ilectnise it IS n$1.1a1ly SO tri, •r4
WO 'worsikip, L'ord Derby is known as gsion,"
•• i .
, •
•