The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-05-04, Page 7,rmur V,R1,••••,111•1 • '••
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! •IturiieEte of 0 Whole Pc. tiPleeia far More ,
' terrible than tbut. of Utatiocratcy.. They.'
Atom at *heaths 1ea4ership.' ,
'' • ' - • •-- - • • 14viiielit totnes fromlieno preparstion to '
u-QWe.,AO nUtti...elight istt..1m,7je..A.,ngtrw,un4i.eVer11-,1,044,1inglet-tfor,- AA, ,ri,giVen ',ea but they linvn..develeiled." '
trite andtgana MOO.' Reeently'in one j traleing. of boya.pplies with •e•spiai . in. the Us ,of wet a nava ot pilii,: '
' 0 .thette, talks. we .recothniended Jeitih- i f twee to girIS, Mothers fle well , 14e, , lie, men "tried in the film of - event ,
ittg! .otrtati. Pnriecia PaYing-illi .timet5. so. futhera. 'intiat be strong' and healthYi Weh. purges all, the dress till they.
• all to get, .Pflitere, financially with .all • ono, it is .said that '.girle undergoin.g . remaia •the last .4.0 epeo oxpretipion
ene73, erediteM 'a-inl •Sliggested 'When enell training not only mien= el. -More '1,:ef the. people whence they .sprangl and
''.0.110-Olnir Frilett.:30-.1teep:outif. pos*-upright-and-ilignifted--14arriage,•- --bUt•-•they.--trave,t-- • -abeam,. 1.411. remained
.t.tiblie* "by Paying gush for ' all pup, 'begin anconeelously to paid 'slang and.', throUgheht true- to those prineiplea o t
' •Chtniett In fnittire• That ideas really'. other vulgaritieS. • If a boy dries net ;humanity which ore the. foundqtion of
_steed end Prectieal, .41. will rulinit.,. but seem. to pich up Music with ease,. Or self-government. liere4n lies our
iwteri, latePien for hunietilate adop- SwordyleY, ila giaY ettain remarkable pride and boast 43 Britons, and Right
7,_______•,_tiOn:___Rut_more tend yet icaore pee* dexterity 'with.. tools. At best he maY Moist win. .,.•
• - ..-•''.Will endea.vor to -deal -On 747 vaai-b4Si$:10rtt'lliEtWirpi' At4iggt 1w. nipY.°•.- ntt...-- .• . .••••- . ‘e•-• ,..-,-. re,.......1., ;A._ • ..... ,, __.,
•'.'''''''''.:' le Was a soUrce of reel Pleasure to tarn .creditahle effieiency as A jeiner -The Educational Association of On-
. ..oe Seine. days after writing that pa.Y-.. or cerpenter. Personally we think tario will 500n be . meeting in Tel -Onto
• ° ' .itp- peregraPh to -read in a WeeltlY Pa- very highly :of -Military drill, which bo discussthe new pre:blends thatarise
- Per •of .verY Wide eirCtilatien that - traine' e.very fibre ..of the body dowit to from year to ..year, and to resurrect
.. ntecong .varfoiat Speciel dayS being ob-Ithe very finger tips and tile tiny nine- several. old ones that Still await...Sethi-
.- 'e
served In the country south .Of us, the elea of the. eye, besidei inculcating in• factory solutionWwhat it Were
• - celebration baying, been borrowed fro.* i Valuable habits . of ''pronipt .oballeace, cenvenif3nt ormorecountry people to'.
.tbe Chinese,whiell..people. in s.elile i tealn:•wellex resPeet .fo'r „effieient au- share -in the benefits of these •confer-.
- localities _celebrate New ,Yearis. Day I, thiwity...
. '. • ••• ,. ' •
. , • , • ences.' It is a • great opportenity for
- ' * * ,S *, . . all persona 'interested in the educa,4.
A.-reedieel men of Wide -experience,. Oen of theyouth of this CountiY.. Each ,
. .
uses 'cream eictensiveIY '. in • place ' of year sees a new crop of faddists pro-,
Meets. in hie. own home„.. ' Few people, . Metingtheir pet theories, but they
he . says; kneW the• real Vrilae of c.rearn, 'ply' lend ',variety to - the occasion. We
irV a regular article :of - diet Or.: t1ey-.1irive been -§Ipw •in odixiiiing- Nature'
would use use ' moreof it at their 5'tiibles.. Stlidiras a -ppl)l,ic sehool-"aibiect, Ona
,He glee ',matt extensiVely in his prac- We cleated its iulvocatee with the fed --
lice with eXcellent results with . :pae dists,„ but after.' reading • eneladdrese,
dents who • are "run down" physically • :On the Value of theeadeet tvIlle see it
and require building up. Its use Would in a-rieW light, . 'Thee it.* that a con.:
be more!. general if its true. food Igo- ventiori of eilaeated. men. and women
piirties• Were beiter'tinderstood. ' In a ,Meeting together and, 9itjrig their'yari-
recent' article by man who seemed ea eXperiences in sclool and, eollege.
to understand what he writes • about la 'halls, broaden one's • vision anal. dispel'
suggesting certain .substitutee .for the prejudices.. It is an axiom with. _-u8,
Present high priced foods seys much that everY person. .should not onlY
the .same things as the. doctor .quoted. read the best books ..and weekly- .or
He say: " . -.: , monthly publications• bearing on .his.
...
The value of :pure. cream is .,ilot to Or her calling, but -should attend
'be computed in dollars .and cente, but meetings for mutual discussion and.
rather as a food. and asa time and reeiting experiences„. • ....
labor - swim-, to the buoy • Ifoueewife. ' • • ' • . , -* . *- * 4° ',' . • •• •
Cream is the very, Choicest) 'Of.: fate, Possibly some of our readers would
both. es to palatahility and ease . •of, like us to give some of the arguments
assimilation, .. 'People with .weak di- that we found. convincing on the cares-
g.estions •can usnally digest eream, and tion of introducing Nature 'Study int:,
it 18 rarely that we ' find anycthe who Belie*, rural as well. as .urban.. Here
cannot age.ciefin?,•in, some form. ' A .is briefly the line' of. argument:, It
more perfect' combination or fat and was Thomas Huxley, . was it not,who.
flesh producing food could hirdly be affirmed that..., a . liberal, education
imagined . than • exists in cream. Per-, should. teach us tei love all ifleantYr
sops ,who cannet, take cod liver Oil at „either of nature .or Of art,- and beyond
all, :can -revel - in •• pure, . wholeskime all question; there is no 'Had Of.--etadY
cream... A . notedph•ysician. has said that so appeals to jUvenile imagiria-.
that if children were 'allowed all the tion or' that •stimulatee close attention,'
ereamthey desired at ..all .thries, their and. ,observationno much ..as. Nature
iparents wouldenot-he-obliged tO AMY. Study; =When, 'One"' .kemembees, :haw
•so many bottles , of cod liver oil for Charles Kingsley °delighted. to take his
them later, in life. - !Good bread, .but- souths on .botanizing- excureions, and
ter, -fruit and cream in abundance, will when one has ..seen the ' lad, thrilling,
a furnish. AS dainty, wholesome and pat., With. excited iniagination'.'ae he 'looked
atable a' 'meal as the finest Paitry. ' at some newly revealed natural beauty
Heil& .it. Will: leave mother more. time and wonder through a Microscope, One
for reat. • ' :: ' .. r. ' '• 'feels the magnitud'e of the crime Which
„,.-- • .*, , * ...qt., * ' ' . 'closes this . lite. of thqught and. study
-•-•---Witerieopsetting_ther_Outine.ot life: to the Child. The cut-and-dried facts
so -inuniatakably that -people- ak.alwoa,,,7 tireAtlf-yez•y :tea end 'very, necessary
dering ho'necessary Work is.' going but, • as we, have, iesietedonoreatten.-
to.-be.done, Plans are. Suggested, some tion . should be given to muSic. in •Otir
Wide, Many otherwise.. One says send schools,..so new ..for much Athe. • same
men from office 'and.. store a .bo 'the reason Watinsist. on the value of. Ne-,
farina, and the feraales• taice their ture Study .in the school:S. , • . ,
livirig..chiefly on breed and ..milk, po- places. ,' • Another says send the retu:-
. .. .
tatees and milk, whltepot-milk end
, flour ceoked and 'eaten with a little "su-
by 'Getting Up their creditors and pay-
ing their debts, imitation Of tha.t, ells?
tom has been, attemptedley instituting
"aretional pay -up vveett." The writer
stated that it ie a Wise action to have
a cleaning urfintincially, but it should
• he oftener than annually. 'As a rtile
people wile, buy on credit Pay a higher
'price than the eash buyer, • •
* le *.
'Soine yvriters have a happy; faculty
of stating theit ideas; in heautifUl
Phraseology and •sequence thmight.
To say bright thine in a nice way
and in proper order of thought is
truly a most desirable aecOrnplish-
ntent. He le a Wise teacher 'who se-
, tilde well expressed thoughts for his.
students to commit to morriory. Such
gems of prose and poetry come very
' handy both . in speaking and writing
often. To illustrate our idea we will
.7 quote a paragreph that are came
across very recently in an. article' by
Maltbie D. Babcock. Our business in
life is not to get ahead of other peo-
de, but to get • ahead of ourselves; to
Threak•our own record to outstrip our
wyestardays te-daye, to bear our
. 'trials more beautifully than we ever
dreamed we 'could, to whip the tem-.
per inside and out as, we never whip-
ped him. before, to give as -we -never
have given, eo dp Our work with More
• force anti a finer finish thee ever. This
• is the triad idea; *get shead•ef our-
failves. Whethr we *in er pet we
•
ire playing' beeth&' we ever. did
.before, and that .is the point after all
-to play a better ga of life. :
*
YoungPersaii surprised to
learn howcheap] people could five.
about, a centurya ro when Canada Was
only sparsely sett d arid most of the
pioneers lived the ruly simple life:.
Doctors -were- few and ifar betweenui
"-
but the death rate vieis 1owno eeflec-
• ton,On the dot° „; however. Not only
yvas the family menu plain and sup -
steals!, .eonsistiog 'mainly '9f. bread,
park; potatoes, cabbOge, onion§ and a
-• few other. vegetables, many children
l• ',..7•••
e The Spirit of ,Otir Tonimies. '
Life here ia jest One 'round of pleasure. .All one 'as to do is 'heat and
sleep, dodge the belly Shells, and blow the 'eadei4reft the .bloOnrid 'Germans.
Between while it's a bit slew, you know, but we 'opes it'll get livelier. .
ed farmers leftek tdthe -farms during
war tithes and hundreds of Others in
t.,z-r -Or-treacle on it, and 'other -aim evitis-antLeities who -grew up • on
.. articles of diet such as the mothers of farms and Could reedily bake up the
tilose:eerly days knew Well how to work again. Yet Others Say that on
prepalte., 13ut, its we began by saying, farms let the woliTehaegainassume the
livInei was Cheap, as the following list- dirties that their aandinothers and
,will shoW: •Ileee are a fewptices of great-grandmothers performed uncom-.
-.-7-eatittroditie.s • andAux-uries-prevailing.. .plainiagly, such .as nil* cows, feed
in Eastern Ohio. neariy'a century ay. calves churn, butter, get eight to 'ten
' : * * *
This coricluding part of:the address
impressed es .rriost forcibly with its
value:. Natural' science is very close.
' • .
plishment. . The Goepel plan of.
ment le on a very different standard.
The. Redeemer of mankind lied a dif-
ferent standard of -judgment. It is not
what one has done so much as what
one is. This man °has sinned. 'Yes,
but what is he in his heart -vicious
or geed.? He would have us look at
a man's ideals, his aspirations, his
longings; his ambitions, his general
tendencies.
ly akin to poetry as sappIyinefood for
the ..iniagieritiOn, and we cannot. hut
admit' that our school ctirtic.ulure
the past has not striven :to develop.
this neglected faculty in the child -
1 fact it would appear to. have quite
ignored it Perhaps, the best giftthat
The pi ere baleen from charges -in and -twelve 'children ready for break- science his ehadeto air_ .intellectual
'an old f`colinter•boOk" Of ,1825-6.: Eggs, fast, get their school' dinners ready life has been .in its development and
•
4e a dozen; butter, 8 • 6 nd• u . • mi start them- oft" to school every, .discipline of the imagination. This
• 10d • re pound; 'pep
--,coffee, .31a a poim
.poand;..bacon, n%
25c a •gallon;I'wh
. oats, Ific a bushel;
4½-c. a. yard; torn,' '
Un , 20c and 81%.0
et pound. Who wqul
• the good, old days.? . •
*
*! r;, 50c a pound;'. morning. To this' round of- duties the gift has not been niade through text
tea, : $.1.50. •Crillia Packet edit -or adds: "Our books or the aaquaintance of the pu-
a pound,. whiskey, grandrnOtilers spun' the• yarn, dyed it, pil With theories but 'through actual
t, 40c a bushel; knitted the family socks and stock- contact with and observation of na-
wered wallpaper, ings,'made and mended clothe,s, dean, tural phenothena. The text bOolc set
e bushel, taus.' ed tripe, made sausage meat, leachect, forth for, use in our schools designs
atd; •salt, 21/4c Iye and made soap, Put down pickles;
't have lived in saudes and preserves,peared, cut, cor-
: Cd -and dried apples, made candles,
looked rifter thehens, ducks, geese and
Nature .study it-On:dee the study of turkeys, made and 'fended the iege-
birds. Canadians do not give as much tables and flower gardens, and help-.
attention to Jaird-study as • dq some ed out the old mon when he got be.
other countries. There are many in- hind with his work. ' Add to fill this;
and more, the fact that this busy
WHEN WILL THIS Orugir, WAR
. •
• RE OVER?
Chas. M. Bice; Denver, Colorado.
It w-quld require the prophetic vision
of a Daniel or an Isaiah to predict its
end With certainty. k
. Many have eseayed tq dd sm but in' .
too many instances the wish is .".father French towns and villages vvhich they
to the theught." - • . ' oceirpied before the battle the
Mr. Hudson Maxiin predicts it will Marne. Professor Morgan is a
end in five years, possibly in three, and famous jurist. He has 'an almost
he has history on his side. •
Perhaps the greatest, cenflict in .his-
tory, before the present struggle, was
the Arnericazi Civil War, 1861 to 1865,
and M many respects the parallels are
striking. The South was virtually in
'Germany'd pOsen to -day; in her of his 'enquiries including In the
econoneld conditions, `with ,her: ports SeMe volume a detailed examination
all blockaded, and like Gertnany ' she of the German- official apology for
hoped. for foreign interference. The the outrages in Belgium. The result
Mason -Slidell inerdent'was hailed by Ise document as terrible ott the )3ryce
the South, as a •eleVer'Pieee of work; report • Professor Morgan has the
But the Confederacy failed to enlist courage to deduee the obvious Moral
THE BLOOD GUILT
OF A NATION
;;;;*-'''' • r "'Ar • -
Clover -A Sall'Remivater•
Practically every varietY of clever
is considered ,by farmers to he a sag
renovator. It doea net require four
leaves in order to bring luck to the
fattner-greiwing-it, but -elover---"Viti'
riches go hand in hand. This may"
tweed an absurd • statement to Make,
when the price of. clover seed 'IB con-
sidered, but; even at' the present high
price, a farmer Would hardly be jesti.
tied in curtailing .to ant great eXtent
the amonnt of ,elover seed to be sown
per itere this spring', Thereis a con-
siderable, variation id the iniopot of
red clover send sown per acre, some
.farmersobtaining a good catch .from
five or six pounds of seed, while others
sow from eight te ten pounds Per
a,gyet ortier to ensure a good etaxid.:1
:The amount of seed tq' sow depends
somewhat on &ail condition, piepara,
tion of Seed -bed, and vitality of the
tAtir.*;,..t."4.4.77.,:r.;6:11
of litmas PaPer by placing` a SMall
strip a blue litmus paper. in ritoist,,
soil; and, if it turns the paper red, lion).
is reqUirea in th4 soil, . Anotherl
Method is t� pour a few 4opo of nod;
on ,thn soill_an0,3f iti_does not -4fry" it ..,.....„,m,....„,..,,„..,,,
is iiii IQ icAtioll :that the sol iS a,41::: '
Cleverdees not, do well with wet feet,'
If conditiona we such that water re-'
mains on the, surface of the ground
for nny "length of time, after a heavy .
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