HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-02-17, Page 3••••• • — -••••••fmmegp.,
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Pare in the singing theproper act kite
An itor Talks otand with the proper respect while it
ie being sung. Canadians, juef now,
4 • WhilfE thiS cruel war cantinues,shoold
niverYinie Ierns by ding. A. chilii gy5talitierrimg pointed out with ecnrie j sing the National Anthem much more
siirii web. Ihelfirst five years of its force, tit the great bulk .of the frequently than not 'of them do. In
e end how? - Certainly by doing. French in ant province ore farmers, scone churelice Ave have obeerved the
tstion If you like. That is doing a pastorial people, trite do not usually good Old Country custom is' followed,
,41p eeefi otherstA;, oing. The teacher . poscs the military. instinct. They when ,POod Save the King" le Sung
ails Who `helpe tdOseholhrsat school live the simple life, unconcerned about. the erganist utrikes the ;chord, choir
o much; the parent.likewise fi! vie- the outside, world, !content wAh their and congregation riee at once to eing,
1
' Ps•.the$biid too Mach At Wale.. . 1
•
tlet • r•41.111. /It/V.
e 'r
At with militarism far front their Barely . the tune pecd not be PleYea;
Ino.st.regrettably true. that moth.' thoughts. The system, too- under over on„ the ergan Whilethe
7.are, the :greatest elbowsin. thisrespect which .they have been brought up tola tbei eat. .ilritiehere would cer-
' Nrith their daughters. We:14414-bl Mind . -forbade military ardor, and insisted „Wetly feel very =ell .out •of place and
'Ihne MothW•whir ffthied Ave
• tem.and.has, been literally and .netually
elave fer every 9110, of -them 'and is
now the inaid-Of-All-Werk inithe.honiei!
are •
IOW. our observation teaches us
• that thie-s no eaceptional.caea 'norm
hortest opinion. not. MO mother in ten
• fdeee her proper .40tY by her daughters
eeethati is, She 'dee* not take-4ife com-
,.• 4aratively .040 ',Alla, 11184it the
- • daughters • doing all kindsofhouse-.
; work.' • • ". • . •
. • e
This unertunatte condition -in parent-
al dieeiPatte leeds. us to say that eereeY
•_child, 4ven the littlest, should be
taught 'to do Ode things asdhey earl.
$nforeenieritt of this slaty vannet • be
- beguntele yeupg. %Let theeehild help
itself `lis much as possible. .TO
tatethis atter all children's dealing
shogld J atinpli made with buttons
s'where the thild..,can manage them.
Whey:0 possible fereiture of It size to,
• . benanedable by the child .should be professors, aseietant profeesers, 85
that the etuef consideration was to form to Sit Still, NVithin gerund of tune
reeve the Wee This War then found that bring* every Briton promptly to
them remote in thought and feeling his feet. Euether, if the rule of plaY,
froni military duties, unlightepeed 48 ,ing_ over the tune is followed, there
-to the cane, and. in 'their Ignerellee -nyo-pietty- aii-e-toliedorsfe Persons pre -
indifferent ay to ,the result of the sent who are not eoeuetome5e, to ode
struggle. There is a reason most ere- `plan and Would•Makeethemeelves.awle-,
suredly for the %male number. who twardly conspicuous by standing, while
have enlisted, *rid soniebodY ref. others in the audience remained' site
ePensible.
* * • tinge We would have the Natiboai
•or
sung at every, church service
•We have eeet ,eeceivete ene • anntueie or every other Pliblic meeting while
report of the University of Toronto, the war Jests.- The ..Bowmanville
• which has heeresent es by•Presidene seateeoteee •
„
A. Falconer. We al4ays peruse this
report with intenSe intereete bee -ens° • POWER IN. A SUNBEAM. .
*nal life of this Province, as .shown Wonderful Peribllitieee or the Vetaye.
it is a very clear index of the . - , —
by the initialed' of students. attending
• • •
the eaelous•Fecultiets. It may interest • .44y Chas. M. ma?, peeeeee colored°,
reades to "learn that the-total...staff of• is everywhere cenceded that the
professors, lecturers, edenionetrators, present war is eopducted more hag*
cede of the.lIniverSity".and University than any other that has preceded it in
'college • last. year numbered, ,401' ' ef the *ntio ,history, upon, parolee sciene
whom ee-were.profeesors, 54, associate ' enenciPles. War: means tha+. the
goelca ShOtild be at.a height° lecturers.andaisociates (in inedicine),.
, 'easily reached and the rule rigidly en- and 192 -demonstrators; fellows and in -
forced. thaCthe child, when he collies structors with sessional.appointments.
in and takes off his clothes or When least year was very eyentful in the life
going te bed, should put every qrticle of the 'University, Although the session
in is propel' place. 'Older is heaven's Vas well,under Way when the shtick of
'first law and all children ,should learn war was first severely felt, so that the
the law of d place for everythipg and, attendance was well up to .former
everything its proper place. Parents years.•'University College suffered
• should make the rule easy of °beery- greatest reduction and the Faculty of
ance by providing suitable commie -
knees, then the Oita that has accts.,
sible such convenient accessories and is
' trained to use, them will be more self-
•.' •-reliant ane .of course !mire %depend- and in the new depaebrient .of
Tiain-
ent than rine who has always 'been ing of Social Service. It is greatly to
washed, dressed and pampered by the credit of the President and Board
nurse or mother. Alt young mothers of Governors that efforts Were made
may,well profit by this advice to impress upon' the students the
-* * * * , • meaning of the war andethe necessity
'Parents, nurses and teachere shoulde of their preparing themselves for serv-
• too, pay constant and etrice.regard to ing their country in the pressing war
cleanliness, instructing earliest lessons crieis, the result being that a contin-.
. as soon as the child can be given ord- •pal stream of students left, so that by s
ers b A way that it can understand. the end Of the session pearly •e00 un- W,e11, the X-rays are -only ea small
• Health and hygiene • are meaningless dergraduates were serving their coune
:..--e-.-toea-young-ehildeleutetoeteaeli-them-thee4ryeas-einistedeseltliersiee-akilled-enedi
Applied Science suffered inuch„•••
* 4. •41 .
-Women students showed • an in-
erea.se chiefly in Faculty of Education.
•devices for killing People and destroy,
ing propekty are More unproved and
effective than wasever before known
or empleyed.
When the. great American rebellion
of fifey years ago, was fought out,
smokeless Powdee and high power
rifles and cannon, were not yet in-
vepted, while the aeroplane and sub-
marine existed only in dreamland.
But science has in stake still greater
wonders than ere in evidence, so far,
In the --present European struggle.• „
Among these, andby no means the
least,clisthe mysterious V -rays of
light, by means of which the inventor,
an Italian, experimenting under
mil-
tary- direction, has preyed that any
magazine of explosives can be "set-
off” Or discharged. at a distance of
many miles, even on water. We have
all heard of the X-ray, and its aston-
ishing power of penetrating thought opaque.
eubstances hitherto ought. impcis-
.
• simple la* of clean hands „end fade, eel students for a Casualty • Clearing
clean clothes and combed hair is very Station near the firing lite at the
'easy. As age increases and entente front were drawn from the 5th, 4th
.gence develops the rulesfmay he made and 3rd year classes in Medicine, .so
more rigid and more extensive. -Good thatat the end of the academic year
health is far more precious. than ITItt-` there were 11 members Cif teaching
terial Width and the poorest parent gaff, 068 graduates, 484 undergraidu-
may give itew'ere money is out ef the atee-1,173 in all registered as being
--question,. • Soundhealth is the foundae, on. active s.erviee.• Surely this is 4
tion on which repose the happiness of striking tribute to Canadian valor:
people This being conceded, • then and patriotism. The Deminion•Goveine
every act that conduces to wholesome merit and British War Office gladly ae-
, • ce editions , should be taught and in cepted the offer of the University of
.° sista' upon: Every parent and guard- I a Base Hospital of 1,040 beds and to
-ian of, the ' young should make -right:. be -officered by ,nienohers of -the
Urn-
sanitaiy conditions ane right hygiene versity. ,COntributions ol 60,el0e by
Law, and make it a personal duty to the Alumni was subseribed.
' see that they. are observed. Early at- e * i* ;$•' •
teneion inevery home to, these things! Punctuality ise,.1„waye• a fertile sub-
- is•
mast desirable..
• * * ' * •• • ' diffent persons :Who uefortuntitely
A we ititineated iilett former "talk'," -Make tip -d very large cease. Our copy
we should constantly think of the book* headline told us, •"Nothieg is
• health of•others. If we are meet awe.. ' harder than planting a goed 'habit."
• fut to observe every itrile of health We Not so.' It is harder to uproot a bed
can consistently talk to our neighbors, habit At least, this is our expel.-
- friend's, fellow shop hands or comrades 'knee with others, and the number who
about such mateere. By avoiding tine' go late to concerts, church services
hygenie practices that would impair and evening meetings of nearly all
public health, if they became general, kinds, both in -town And country, eon -
we cite mike a contribution to the vince us that the habit of punctuality
wholesomeness, prosPerity and power is truly hard, but that it ie harder to
of the cOuntrielii Which We dwell. The break.np: the habit of unpunetualitye
and the task has beeollie •"tlite ho e -
less with some persons we know. Some
persons, inherit punctuality, butit is
aequiredemainly through traiiiing and
!,• e jeet for lecturieg slow, lazy nrid in-.
spread disease should be a prohibi-
tion to be severely enforced. • • Laws
against spitting, ineiecriminately
should be far more stringently enforce
ed than they are. Our observation is slow; patient assidtious training usu-
•"that such lities are far oftener hollered' 'aye. Did it • ever strike Our readers
in the breach therein obsereanee. Med-. why we have clocks? Of course to be
lad authorities tell' us that the persen on time Why have we bells on.
spffeeing froxfl tuberculosis or evenchurches, schools and ether public
• from a "heavy cold" who spits without ehpildings? To tell us the time to ha everything -in its- reeve, but itewas re=
' society. The germs discharged in pub- observation. tells us that humanity in
lie places or even: on the street eto be general is fearfully stubborn and Mow,
carried in the dust may surge bring a . gay difference to . clocks, • bells,
death to others. If children are taught whistles or whatnot, unless 'rules are
• the danger of this early in life they rigidly eoforeed by offieers in author-
• may by cave 'avoid. association with fty •and eyee then there are tardy
euspeeted eictims and exercise care in ones. If you -doubt it query a tune -
travelling 'about- ,Epidemies are keeper at a big industrial concern. ,
ceased no doubt by spread of germs . •
•• * *
in some way or another, Parents teachers guardians, lore- •
tion largely 'depends.
* *• * •• Ineri •wail chairmen of public assem- When Roentgen 'discovered- fhe X-
pait of a ,sunbeam, and so are therays
. hart prierettierewieel• - ,
and now comes science, with its dis-
covery of the V -rays, that promises
to be many times more wonderful and
astonishing than any hitherto achieve
'merit in. teat field.
ithin the last few Years science
has come to realize, that the every
day sunbeam is vastly 'more complex
aid potential of transcendent powers
than was' before thought to be -pose
ethic. _ •• /
Melee the days of Newten, we have
known that a sunbeam, or white light,
was -made up of a bundle of seven .chs -
tinct colors, faeniliar to every school
boy, and that in some mysterious way
it carried in addition to light and heat
tertain-amount. ef -electricity,-and
goodness. knows what else.
But no One sespectede that out .Of
the . innocent and modest sunbeam,
there was, destined to be evolved the
-
most powerful and formidable weapon
a warfare, conceivable. It is by no
'merles imposeible, that the develop -
meet of the V -ray viith its destruc-
tive potentialities, may be Perfected
for effective use before the present
conflict is ended., Fortunately,the in-
vention or dienovery emanates frone
orie of the entente powers. -
More than one idea. formed first in
the imaginaticei of ingenious fiction,
aliebecome._transplcuited-into 4lee0 -
plished fact during ' the peesent ware
•notably the use of poisonous gas -
clouds; and Conan Doyees suggestion
of a submifirie blockade to destroy
commerce. , • •••
• It was H. G. Wells, who discovered
the 'frightful destructive power of a
"heat mere' capable of annihilating
pAeTTRAL., FA.A,P4M
„. • _
to,
.11
r
'111 offd
leaet "4000 pounds each, Which!,
Means that they were sold At only
gents Per Pound live weight. ProbA
hany.ththeyeybewee:eprwuporotilynoonims4oer4e,obeht.
might easily have sold. for two to,
el'an aell"Ivrser°7"pfilirwilinst,milrbeuziht4I114cFrdeta,‘:nwielTyftlia!ininithe: tvbxigleAtet13:12'1611"defeix-IP:uVa:PliaGrilit'n4(4 itiliV(fref
that, with •the limited knowledge
• which I have iegarding.this propose -
den, • the etitieigies are justified,
writes Mr. E. a Archibald, Dorainien
Animal•Ifushandmart in cinuidian
rarmer. . •
A hundred acre farm -of good char -
eider soil segued be producing a great
'deal more .than this• hundred. acres
mentietned: 'In looking over the state-
ment one finds that the live' stock
kept amounts to • 4 horses,' 7
milch cows/12 bead of 3rOung"cOWS,
.16 Pip of all Ogee,- and 20 ewes; yet
lo the' accounts, one.noticeS items foe
the porchase of 44, ,0 or 6 tone;
straw, 1 to 2. tans, and chop or itte
tle and pigtleed amounting to over
$70; With a total for,feed pOrehased
of $177.126; .A hundred faten
should*produce average crops approX-
%lately as follows:- • '
10 ares of corn ensilage. ..150 tens
0 acres of potatoes and turnips and
• • maegels, say 900 'bushels of po-
,ntaiptosesaliadndnutin,2g000b.buthels o_f_tnr-
•
5.4cres of peas , • • ..... .1-00 beshels-
5 acme. of wheat .......200 bushels
15 acres of oats or mixed oats and
barley 900 bushels:
20 acres of hay •40 tons
16 ages ef rough land and bush.
•
20 acres of pasture. •
4 acres of building sites, roadways,
' lawn, orchard, etc.
This is A rough celeulation which,
of course, would be varied depending
upon the leyotet of the farm, the char-,
eAeeeeeeeeerefeeee, oe,..eeee
lee ,
How the Army Makes. Roads.
, 'Bridging the gaps across the swamps of Flanders -a corduroy read
built of tree trunks by the Canadian Engineers, who have had experience
with such country in Northern Ontario and British Columbia: This ,scene
is somewhere in Flanders, and in wet weather this spot was practically a
lake. '
e :
BRITISH CeLUMBLe.Suppose ifeone had lived hi the days
•of the patriarchs, one. Would have
Some Natural Beauties of the Cana- fele like erecting an altar to the God
dian Sunset •. Province. •, of hea•ven, as did -Jacob at Bethel, and
••- Saying ,"Truly, this is the house a
We are so near the borders of civil- God, and the gate of heaven.". '
ization,,wheie. one only need tinvel a But the reiseioriary; like :the dis-
short distance out of town to feel real! • ,
ly and truly lost - P e , as o ge ac o. e
1•
valley; and. meet not forget that he is We have been here at Smithers, B.
7,..,,. here Le miles from home, but both
II $1I / ' --•qa'—'14.----rt ma:. and; horse feel
• • .
course, the e"tenderfoot'! or "chech- •
short pause, and so • we lope. along
, aco" feeling has prettier well left us, down to S 'tie • 1
• , y
and while we geld not yet be classed east- out demons 'from 4 child, yet
with the "ole -timers" as they • say there is woek to do, a Sunday school
here, or- as "sour7tioughs," as they to take charge of and a cities to
• say farther norte, yet this' ceertery. is 2
• • . . . . . teach, so •perhaps that in some meas-
• • •
g P .g i
"Home, Sweet keine." • . like May help to- prevent the demons
from getting in to the,lives of •these
The climaieliere is' vete fine, sled
--- flee' Canadian children in 'this • great
many who. have travelled quite ex- empire of ours, on which the sun
. . •
tensively, say it is one of the beet in .. :
-.• -• • . _ One notices in. looking over the
the woeld.
that one. . *in stifement that two men are maintain -
What a • privilege iti, is tpo feoel
days,
The summere are not as warm as these e
e'on this farm, and considering the
Ontario and the nights ere • always fieeet empire on earth, one of the. feeds 'raised' there is far from, suf-
gool. Winter dees not come any eel:- largest and best of her colonies, and
Went label:, to keep two men busy,
, lier than in Ontario, ' and usually c What is best of all, a member of that especially dui ing the wieder morithe,
comes More gradually, and we da ini(oi kingdom which is. above all kingdorete, with the small nuniter, of live stock
'e get the cold fall rams' nor the wi •
. I e P
tineip eae -w ie are- egine —
wniellefiebeing kept. Aside from thie,
in fact, it is on veryrare occasions 1 te be the prevailing principles .of this' • .
fo,
What a 100 Acre Farm Shelia('
Prodtpre.
• Previous to receivimg your letter I
had read the oracle in. your December
alst isae, and. I wenici, after tlee fol-
. , .
lowing'. criticisms of the conditions of
meat question is that the four 2 -Year
Again, the seven cows produced ad
di
old. steers slid net produce as nmehin- ,
.come as was expended in the house
hold for the ,butcher bine. '
, .
tete' of approximately 75 pounds o •
fl
proximately 9 gallens of 'agent and
40 pounds of butter per ow, or a
butter Per. vow. The cow ;which does
not produce 300, pounds of better '13er .
annum on a hundred acre farmvahled
at 0.00: per acre ie:a4esing.propOs1.-. '
den. , . • • .. .
.,
Genera y spea. mg, IS un re ,
.11 • I this h 'd tIt
acre farrn'in net producing either ' in
field crops or in manufactured wore
• duets,. namely, beef, park; and "dairY -
• products, One-quarter of the amount ,
which- it. 'ehteuld• eIreufeVer, in ' this
etatement one netices that Improve.- -
,mente in the fields; ete.,•if such ,were •
Made, are not credited; also that -inie -1 .
proveinents in the stock, .if such were'
made, are not credited. One also no-
tices .that the twenty ewes have pro-
duced no income either in lamb, mut
Mist be kept at aloes rather than be -
1
ton or weed. Undoubtedly his state..
merit that the wee are receiving lit-
tle or no care is evident, and thee
ing the best money makers on. the
farm, as they should and might be. .
Generally speaking, the following
suggestions for th.,e. immediate in1-1
prevenient of cenditions might • bef
-
• 1. -Te increase theeproduetien:• -
the farm two, three or four times, as
soon as possible, by a goedisystein of
rotation, 'better tilleige method, and
prebably, better selection of crepe, toe
acter of the soil, and ' the elitreacter gether with manuring, 'ete Details •
of farming- carried on. Many hun- this phase 'ref the Week -May be 11,E4a
dred acre farms in Western Ontario free upon apPlientiop. to the • Field
produce a great- deal more than above Htis10.andry Divisinn,7 Central Expert.' •
estimated. This foodstuff would be mental Ferrer Ottawa •
ToAnereaseethe---productkin-e4
telie live stock on the faiene • If theriel
cows cannot „produce,. by the ebesti
commercial feeding niethode, more
than they ilia 'during ,the past yeater ,
they . had better be sold immeeietelyie .`
and replaceel by cows which can show'i
a Profit 1If ihe feeding method
faulty,these shaeld be improvedimet • • • •
sufficient to feseleatele
'nuniber of live stock •maintained
thereon.
Either the kindred .e -farm. men-
tioned • is very. poorly farmed or th
soil must be in a vmy peer state- of
• fertility, and needs -Imre radical
steps in improyemerit. A hundred
acre farm which is not capable of pro-
, .
vieing hay, grain, and other' feeds for mediately so . that the eowsmay 'travel'
the ,eiriall. nunibee of live. stock .`car- an. opportunity to prove "their. wortheei
.riedehereon _amid net be profitable: • This. also. applies to. the haridling .of
that We have much wind. . ' 'whole wild when the visions Of preeeetieeede ..
g well, sawing- avOod; -god the
one notices the , special_ :charges r
_ There..ere...eecragenal. told . snape .. ire,.
whiter. The mercury .went down re- .•
Phet -hod-poet are fulfilled, land theie. _
like, which inight be easily done by
iS .the reality, of Tennyson's vision °of .these men.. • ' . • ..
eently to .30 below, and once it was a.- the futurT . where he says ie --7,. , '. 'Again,. one potiees •• stichiterns. as
few. degrees colder. e Howeeer, these .,
;-. ' ' ' ' ' • • '$30.for the grazing of &title. If this
. .
cold' spells do not ledit.more than . a Ale , •
%indeed acre 'farm (menet produce 35
tons.of hay and provide sufficient•pas-,
'Wee for: the 7 •• milch_eCOWS. 1' and 12.
head of young itoek, it must be most
unprofitable. Again one noticee that
four e -year-olds should have weighed e .
• g -w e. v treper
day oi. so usually, and reline. one feels • of the south-wied rushing warm,
the cold more at' the coast when there wit',
e the standards of the people
is feeme 20 t� 30 degrees of frost than . , plunging through • the ., 'thunder -
yob do here that much below zero. stoem; ' .
There are a few, settlers seattered Till the war -drum throbb'd no 'longer,.
through the valley, but unforeimatee . and the battle -flags were furl'd,
• ly,, the best of the land Tiber the rail- In the Parliament of man, the Feder
road is heli ,up by speculators, and r aelon of the iimed..- •
the pigs and the sheep. •'
3. The cash inco.mes•from. this, firm
•muse be increased two or three times.e ee
The present income iseout of all pre-' •
portion to the rieeeisary expenditures'
and else to the large amount of labor°
Which es being' maintained.- There*
esufficieet labor on this farm to pre-'
duce a cash income from .the • steclet
•and also from the fields of at least
five times the present income. Genel
erally speakiog, the expenditures
seem to be very fair • for. a Diem of
this size, especially where improve.;
'tnents 'are being made, with the ex- •
ception of the items for -the purchase
-
of feeds and for the grazing of stock;
which certainly appear unneeesearye
considering the •limited _see& _nutine-
•
th„thisi _i_s_a_graathimr-ranee tk-the_i dial- . • . . .
.. I 11..orpe , is The fact that ee9,000.,000,000 ..
• •BRITAIN". COULD • — - — nett etrilung_evidence eefewhich-Per
' opmeet Of the country. The scenery Not in .vein •'the distance eeacons, for-
' ted to he held by the •eanny , in- , ••
' ' .: woeth of .foreign „cecnrities are esti- e
here is very fine: indeed, and in the , • . Ward, forward range, '• FUT FOREVERt tha
• .I habetante of.tke tight tittle island.' • It •
.fall •when ,the leaves were ttirningel, Let the great World -spin forevet doeen . •
, was not necessary to "stage" • the loan
think • I never saw each n,erignificent. •:-.the spinning.grooves ,of change; -
• . ' , •,• e4, : - ` „ :' by .a .long interval Of. ptiblie peepara-
ailer effects. One Sunday, instead .of •
• • ... , (Rev,) W..C...FRANK.
• SAYS ' PRES/DENT - OF BRITISH: tion•ae has alWees• been done in Geree
taking the ehorter road home, e came •• Sinitherse B.C.,. january,•,1916„.
• , •many, and wite,..to a certain. degree; '-
down from-Telklea. .on :the north side e
; ',.. doneein ethe case of the ' flotation •: of •
of the Bulkleer river, by the. Hazelton
- ,
.. ine'e-E. STUDENT'Selt-ESPCiNSE •- 7 • AgSK_IATION.
_ , the recent' Anglo-French loan in the
- ' • I, United State " • e ' - ' ' • • • •
e. By Dr, E Te Siemer', •B„..A. --. -.
•
Doline:4) •', Tee mere sannoilneemee' t that dere"
The text -book Page fades...sinall and Cotild Speed :Five . Billion
ing a couple of the early weeks of. '
. • • elm, , • •, .,
..111. e ..eilier!osrpodo,m... ev.alls, grew ..close -
loan. to bear the, unprecedented in -
Its
Every ••Yeae Without
July - uelimieed. _subscriptions , to a
The call etl Learning, dies within; ' „ ' ..: .".poiroueng. •
. ,
ceived was -sufficient. • With a The World vibrate s• with -sound. -. stetements efroni• an article eSpeed-
Heye are some, very interestinRg.
terests-mostly banks and • instirance
. . .
terest of 4% -, per dent. WOuld be re -
Thevoice a if it ne'e.r had been; •
. • . . .
less gesture the British moneyed in -
the care-
woods,
and .iii the . background was The air IS 'filled with noise of'. War, • •• 'Freeman in. the • Ameriean Reeiew Of
ing the Sileer Ballets," by Lewis . of -
000, into the war t mu, went • on
,
companiee-ecoeller tossed • $2,900,660r '
the' gradually rising: foothills - of• the The stet:knee .eour responsie.e epringee Aerie -Vey -... • . • ,
• libelee. thir. bue'ineshea;'Whilie -the , geill-,: . 7
now capped peas about 20 miles To do bis bit in the awful etrife; . -
The Huns' deep ran000r brings. ,1!.e.eat Brittiirt-the' proportien of • its
The extent Of tee "tax- ri•bilite.'••••e
Trearened-peaster 'rempeign, Et:Ought the
•
Bahine range with the 'Wig -ening Se give hie -bee -ire -his- britwe,•his We
eral public,' . stimulated • by lee well- . .
miles -of the-Thilkley.--valley-with---the
'-away. In front (West)-; was About' 50,
river winding its WaY' along, looking 'His books, hie•georn, he .;ce-As aside . „of..eurrent,,reyeeue-it •irs. -very
.. „, 1._wer_e_imenies the crenate. cirri pee; out
tliffi' ' by , • buy% e..1Leepecheee• • -1, " ' •
. I ' pi_ ': and .ieYand 0,0.vngi,,,nert !_gtire:3;....
in the distance like•a huge _serpent. In
the _distant. west. the Roche tie--Beule. • : .. -
..
. F.
His father's plans he argues vain
kis sweeth ' rt 's. 'ell bee mother's. of: the . fact that ''. flit): limit: will . ea , .. sle see ,,, ,... e . , elle-sec.'. frideren.ert.eeleeeireeeree-MPreTe7earni- bl a:7ot: r::::::::'.:41, 5:00t:e.as'il.1702:h:ltil'oTi..eille•oe,!:.,.. ''..
• -cult eti appeokininte,• largely., beeaese
.13P- -cie7ft•-'io-iile e''ali(t.11, Critiscllsintirreited' that
. . ..
while to the left the Hudson
peak eeerned to totiell the • heavens, eEei-ree'et,enrs.. ,,'. .... . -
Bey I .•lejs fighting ineterets 'relate
Enlist is all he hears ization of their: resPonsibilities.„ we ir- •
efis in .the Britieh o le.' 1 Will • t
1 . ihere wee plenty of • money on account of the feet that they were renge seemed to be equally as high • • .
:pertly' behind wits- the Telkwa -range; e
so mochitearer; Thereto the left arid Ilejeinie with steel, arid fire, and shell;
The Mateded transport. bears hitt'. f;12•4••• .
. s' ' .: .' • . .riroduce and erayee „:Perieripe .the iteM 1 • 1 .,,i
eutemetirtieeestatoreeete that has eeene
tees: effort ' an 1 ' '
What 'up to tl(reetixteilotieemo;na: teihl ean'.gti.heotistee
to : b • •
1 t e u . ey liver • could be seen wine-e_teheee,
.to_ateet_the_y.Ano.„:,ta the ,,,,,gtsaNthe,..,. 1, • Free heeneeet -trectused of hell. . • i 7T.C• I*1-41.1•6g6life'?-:kble41:6;" 84141 Pi rdr: :
theee,seemedte.gradually taper down -;e.ed•gee'e to 41.1.,..b.Y. -them _denied„:. . ,
just. as bcantiful as' the others, and ' • Plede• e '
ing its Way•daven terough the breeder-
. .
ans
ne'side his' masked,. an.: tering
. Iliel be .deg-ellfe d i eae nlarhe•7, trig of et 0110717,1' • :at ' Ihinelfeerter•eei e e' '
_ : Ott 111 -addreeenilleetrerteeent ga bee- - ' rit It .ta I 03'.:Irli:(1.11::.-yutat.:01r‘Vill' tth:;:' ee_.:
! preeident of elle British . Association.- ;
• . .• .... . • (711 boo It Was a eemari,:abie.linan,-
, . .. ,
6e."711i,Ificat4' coni
•
To eeresh ' the : frenzied • „Pressierre' ' ' , • , „. tee wan-. eii . histor7
Priele in this eonneet ion is • that of e •
) f lee B eeett the dietinguishecie
itti.;icillimpieo-iiirr.sthe;,.f-_
Vith't he iferniihatiiii. dateithere-' a ni.
valley which with its few clearings. , ion - -
, .
,, He . burl§ bun& deat
. and. rierel lei, billion ' pottreis e year. The o'. (10 e.le•-•.• . • ' .
- .clellietelv. neweet--c 0 -ti ii.- -. ,k-,-
"thrq Great Britain could tier:nee- hi:- - , • -
• . • .
• 41 ''''!, '
. . .
1 ..I.• I ON DiSCONTEN'7
, .e„ ----e-e•-•
- .. •
. e . „,. ee,no. _.{.ivereo.m.i,• tt o(hi.e.Nement.
itillee.i.w.e4vsgirivortrigzolleattIoTyirpopiotresnoorr. tih.herst .itia„.„iiiit.e,r,otoeil,,oc,i.)6.'.a,:i; itnoe,
in;eristite" foe... eilf'etleir117t1(Y•tIltrie0t. lei t(-1)rifti•I•lei!:.Pilittn‘iTt4SY14,1;1'el.'ilitlitlitri• eip' etedist 4,e4ciatelimet 511 ), :...;.1 1y
vast territoee that in such -.compare-1 pie .eie hiry Is won. .
' Gerenanye
by the white man: .' . '
fively recent years ,las been eett•led • -
.
. Not there eilene . the. Storm :led spite.;
. ,„ .• • it ii iiii • worked' .. k,00d tiPal • ha rd er • • .
thee. in time of peraT.
•" " ."'il-1(1, ' :. Th..' ...teopeehageri
... •
emereeporeleet ..tri •'•
of coloreabout :half the evergreen .171.ut.,•:i;TatIle•!:1':e;e..teh of '"..,.()14(1e;
seemed to . be just one great variety
The whole Valley, and the - foothills gielet . ee0.00n'e' 1•1)70•., eena eleteee''' 1*(4'71.14'1:ids°. i'Y 611.x.nii".11 ,1(19ei1.6i)•11()('• l211.il'.s1-e eche 11.7c. • Telekrriph. Cerripaee
. . •. .0 notirets weth. ene 0111.:i0Tfai income ' as.
.• ' it is just 11977,. NV L. • cy AIM sia,, (e, it w(t - • ., .
14e, . . 1.11 0..,.. g Hass( , ltieler ,of tee 11 So
.
•
•epruce icrid --.Iack-p hie ,, and the rest. '' P. nen ''-'4. - g • ' 5." 0' 111" t" 'Itli;(:silisl.:ig,4totiot:0,6(1;:::::1)101.1%1:01tIr'gk;:e.,111,..11.111,1.1-. 1(::::.:Ilis1:t1411:::11.":4.7.1:Iti.illittI117.27.::: irit';tiveimsPlItrtr:.t1%i ril,11.1illti .,.
the different kinds of trees, alai bushee ' • .. fleet:twit boundless nigher; of fear,.
. .
.. - .. -
- . . .
,
...iti ,10•i!tN1)07,10r,S are' .
,
t ' en loomed in ' iti 1 ,it I ) I 10 7117' set o-ur . me 4 ttl lfe- 1 — li il.- .' ,e
gradually :taking on the mese beetnie Poe. not 'a shot flies blind With death. aro saved eetere, tiii,•,1 „appt; „ .1.:7.4,1,7, , rlanitio,111. whit'l) il
till telor effecte, that ;the -eye'..of----tee And 'Pot -a -stab of .eteel es, evessee, .ptivate inlid4r, toimoniy ‘m,,01,,,,e .4,.r.eise, Aptrelliiteri: frOill prirnice, . et. ili 1;haqf •
artist eould ever look •upoer. e. •But hearts at home gio* chill mid political direles !As. eigni-
Oemlieed was a deep.bitio-eky, with - ••• Cold, . • coin& .within eight . of '"'''''n'ese`e 1 n
gaii bi.,tweri 800,7: feller d pirliticel„battle. .. • •
iiere and there a soft, white, fieeeY, 'With texturing' detibts 404 eains tie- .0434.14090.poltuds 4t.nti t4w 4 eet4 lee e0441 ' 'There is eeery.;reason ttebelitee e tin..
bridging over the
ed,• then we
-cloud Which gb Wonderfully metellert .folit, . - ' , . - ' .' well have ,to sit much. longer
.v"thifing%•mto igetlelising
the dazeling whiteness of tee moun- That:rack senile:loving breaste , warded.; „ Theeetere, lire
• t411 :Wilti l",xpectod in melee. to dertl
- The .effeet of a scene like that ite not '
• • Vet et zstilsi111)fo,ortrele:0,3e.! Web , tit, in. ,grive for. are increased economy,
both p‘iblic,And.private Aliii 3I170 15(111 iillittt,L1:::?,!38i.,i1,,I,..Ig:,„ ttitrTitt:t1.1,t(47.,11:11,11,14.":eat:itt7,1;,!..
tale peaks, ' , „,
Grim death untold, on land, et. ilea,' • , .... S&000 0,000 Lotto *elev.
production." , . ... . ..
; peedent 'of the l/aily .News. "In (1141..
soon lost, and a's 1 teok off my ' hat
arid did some trilkieg to Myself. end to Mares universal waste 'and. blight • • • I er to rip crew threw el. io e •-• ' .• fe,
the horig, I knew bow Peter felt when: Well stiffer on; to irring the light '' . , The work of reising the Ce4 War' e r I'll 'I • lie' 4+0 1 -)14f:1A 11 .7%11 . .
017'01. .0 t.00.. W....1 110 :01X 'I' t1in `,
he . said to. 'our, tord-"Let es .build Of. prieeless Liberty, ' . .' " loan. --amounting though it .dill. to 13 11 i • L. Irtn 1'11' '
AS 0110 WOrabips,;:alltidst nett won- , so tek,any young. P001710 ICI. in Iwo. $3,000,000*000 - teas a sim2,1betfon ee `1%1140,i1..rP atin! !,.77. 014' '41/'dr.fri
three tabereaelee, one for Thee, one . - • .° 'Ottawa, Dee. 26, 1015,, time than . • t
for Moses, and tele for Elias." pie 'one comPared to 1170 fixing of the I. . • .' •-..., .7... ' . • , ' . '. .
new taxes.' . Britons of the preeetit ,. Mutton 48 exeelTrrit 1,l ()171 weetheti
derful -geOlie8o ate Surelr feels "lite, b'eettuse they are Just As fr-Olidt nit generetion have beorr leaning ore fe. i bee* of. high •Ine niece value: "Trite1/41
stayiug there for some thile, arid ' I older. people. • ...• •',, .
, .•
ei Vostilig money all their liy'es, OW IOM'S, iS,I)Piier Atill.
kw• t . .... ,
• . . • . - • '
e restraint is our offender -against at the place a assembling. -But my/ served for science -16 'take the sun-
beam to pieces and to find its con-
stituent elements.
Thus we have been made aware that
only e very small -part of the sun -3
beam carries light; that is, only a re-
lative few of its rays are able to•pro-
dete,:any conscious impression on the
•retina of the eyes. Another and larger
part carries beat upon which vegeta-
Just . now when influenza ie so pie e blies should letake advantage of every .-
• vant people :Shouwholesomecalculate whole
void studiously opperturety to : me rayit was invisible pieee of the
an and etTzed
. . ,
• that h hat e; minding other .petsens :breath. The advibee or .suggestion to, if possible, •
barely induce-peopleAnother portion it compos:d of Ielee,
J '-eleric behinth
cle-erecteintere
- rter ' to more Es-
, :. - - -e -
• tele rays; which • are used for trans-
' • avoid the breath of the euitomer on pecially• should' parents and teachers
• • . : mitting ' wireless . messages, • while
.• .. ....- -.. ,. .., . ., ... . _ „
, Wit
the other side, but bare. should ob.; use their positions Wenforce being: young Heminondeis_noev. employing it
. eervcd lo do so if poesiete liiiiifeeieliffee always
-:: It. isnet a . littedehipe y
, ..
• being digoarteotepeit is no secrto et that, insist on children and eldeetsteer a newfanglee so marine tor-
t ones aS red% which, when the V -ray is per -
infectious diseases ,aro eonimonicatetk 'Well, being on-time, say' when rising, .
.-
'among 'ehildren at • school in their •at alt.mehis and at nights. And mark feted, - 11 b controllable f7m hoe.•
games- from iehriling the breath laden you, perentsi.00 habit needsmore to at a distance of many miles, by Merely
, .
t ' with . gbfros.. Isbidemics of typhoid, be begun. in the early yerirs of child- yieweng it with a telescope arid push
ing a douple of buttons to. teen. the rude
'septic 'eore throat, and other virtilent hood than that of being, always ' on
der as desieed, to bit the object. ,
diseases originate through • persolatil time, in med around the home, and in • Inquisitiee stieneeteas taken up the
4isvegar4.7of hyvnittiaws-,,,,,nreoeeless -;going to: every appoletinent. • Teach '
misch_ceikeedityseep_rWerrt me digovered the rays above
assoCiation. No - ' vicious intent.wasc
.. -liff td-ceff-- m their the• 1 t and bele* the rede
— -ever-dreamed of, -but this does not thatethe etle means -more -then gomg_ _ • • and thir
* „help the Persons who are sufferere in to lesiong,...' its . promnature, and for what purpose they vanpt obedience lie utilized! -
like. mannereitedoes_not. _lighten_ th7e means lefe. , Hre elet us stit,frona per ...
•-•-• --e. --We have Jong itnoevit :thee abo-ew the,
, • buicieh on ir ednimiinity whose eitieens sorrel expetienee that teaeleere, cannot . 4, . ,... , , b • /,
• e t f. the
...Alatee, Ut1141MelikalliZZ en,1;daa. -1,4145111.t._:sallisteateribi„,micivell ie this under,
.1- 4het used by teneehotogranlier
then hag clone ineceeto give the peelede Wang without the eters:tea help and -4'-' - aro -- -----'
. l th t the or, chiefl ' •ch enical
• ' • fro10. such. epidemic*, through neer- desistance. of paeorits or guardians,.
i•e
spitting' ordinances and .education 'we mest• eae here Olaf pArents are
ave that effect the delicatplates Be -
through the press, in the schools, by more to blame Mail children in Many • low the red rayeare located nearly 411
,• lectured' nod otherwise, but coestant [ cH
ases We heve known. ow, calla chthe heat rayeof the sun -beam, and be-
ild •love these, eothe the electi•ic rays used
reiteration of the dangerd and of pre- . be 'taught the.true signifiA.ance of bells by the wireless. • :
cautionary methods are necessary. So, when one excuse does duty tO-day, and -
' -•
. ai eee said, at the .outeeteour people •anothee is accepted, to-inerrow? It is violet eays es a re•-
intifiAbove theultra
t.,,, gion in which ' the photographer can
te be trairred from earliest bhild-e teuly I. - astonishing low ea ler
- - in l''' ' still take his : Pictures, by excludiag
hood to think of the welfare -of ethers !ehildreh learn to coneuee up exceses,
. ...
air Well “S of themselves. SocudlY, and effective 'pleas for 1•40hitiell of all other rays, but colly in a vacuum
. Far abov,e these is the X-rity region
hygenic habitss, mint be ingrained in soma parental rule or lm. Be.,assur,
. -theta, that etludetion. • ,ed that the true way to profit by the and above theste again, and boo*, the
; heat rays, are the eleetric hip, and
bells• of schteel teed 'Cif the, world, it to the now nornee „tetay.s .3.vithlts „aston.,_
be reedy for them, for Ilte,belis Of Ilie
iehing poSsibilitiee. '
Who den 'say what reetivels Tie in
these unknown regions of white Tight,,
or to what ptirposes diest may •be ap-
plied? • • • •
They are liable to revolutionize war -
'fere; and may . do Much to 'control the
march Of future eivilizations. It is
• hoped that diebe deetructive ' forces
will be forMed as great nnd -sweeping,
that. hereafter, Ad ill}tiOti Will dare to
• CiptlAre Wttr• raid hazard the liability
of. being aneihilated. '
I . .. ,.
. it, le Ile 'ef•
•. • „.
Newspapers have censored severely
•
our Prench-Oanadian compatriots for ,worlit take MY OIMISeqe '
dOWlietiS in enlisting for service for • e :* .
ktng end edentry in this awl war. Thc Notional-Anthein is never sung
. Sir 'Sam kagliee has gime on record at the -06'6.6f e concert Or other as-
reeentiy as ,testifying to elicit bravery serab1a0e that; %erne persons do not
etetheertenteetating in Toronto, in a take the first .note of the pianist or
publie address that: 8,000, had comp' organiet AS signal fee "getting
• feral to do their duty. .Ae has been reqy shoot" -out of the audience
• reinarkeet Brie 18 a meat neither °et room. :S(ich persons seeln to be
or, over 2,01)0;000 in Quebec, but it i•a• reverie of the spirit of vespett and
aeintringlti lkiten that the quality of loyalty to his IV/3eety the Itingik If.
' those endaged in action is 00 high: thce Ale not care' to take a personal
• 3' '
eee
roacie-which is- four 'miles' faith -el -1 arid'
shall never .forget the view.' •After
riding tip from the Jiver bottomon
to the higher , ground, I stopped the
horse and just. eat •for a few minutes
entranced' ey. the wonderful ''panera-
me Of tiattire. On the right , (north)
there was ' a. Pretty ,little lake about
three miles long nestling in the val-
ley, partly hidden, by the surrounding
.•
'1`•
Vela