The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-22, Page 2aeerweejaara
rvr, T MI, • III.' ,
1•,
U1 0Editor Talks
The ant impulse of a child is to breathing' *reams.. The development
*gat teanething. The girl with her of your lune means iuuch to your .
doll, tato boy with bis ball. They want health and Arens* of your body. Thit
something they like as their YerY essential idea a a lung is that of *
own. This trait grows with their Sae colliniuracating with the atraota
'rain and never deserts a matt even &ere by means of a tube or windpipe
when old age, and feebleneas ornc. "I through 'Ivatich, air is admitted to the
never bake ofr my boots till I go to organ, tho air saving to supply cozy -
bed," said au old farmer \Alcoa we en to the blood and to remove care
kuew, matting by that saying that be bonie acid. Lungs are freely suspend
intended te hold the deed ef bile feriae 'ed in the chest which is completely'
as long as he lived. He *was entirely separated. from the abdominal cavity
wreng partiente:ioar:e. nonS O ettazealar aaaPhraana Lanza aro
were growii to manhood and 'lying on made up of honeycombed -like cella
separeitsfarnia, but•theie dadheld-thes
deeds and tbe boy a could not call a
foot of property their own. They
stioald' have been enabled. to Say,' as
did the owner of a large estate in an
:eastern county standing with a,friend
and looking over a wide expanse of
beautiful land, stretching away - AS
far as the eye con reach, the fields
lined by rows of lovely maple trees
and showing velvety green Meaclowe veins, thus ta% blood' atougat into ed to captivate the pemiexe, a speaker
Alld. pastures sprinkled with herds of contact with and becomes purified by that was well within her cOmpass. Her
cattle and *sheep, watered by running means of the air- The julalare b1"4 diction is pure and loftyi her speech
brooks, the whole a composite picture 'enters at the root of the lung through periods eloquent, and, noble; her sub -
of
• aPseasciel amnidneTr 2,11tYm'anilieng.760117cosuarYses,t, thepulmonaryPaUltmhrhaelli taatutePrpasast-eithbeut,rplugrilit4:Ject Matter worthy of the occasion.
She has that Possession which Shake.
that he holds the title deeds. Is • his tied through the pulmonary veins' to- apeare said was. an mama.* thing in
assumption correct? '
Wards tae left -side of the heart- This woman -a• low Voice. Lady ,Drune.
indicates the vital importance of. emend her tieie,.her energy,
haling or taking into the lungs only her, maize teethe Empire? iee
pure air and 'zsPeniallY War" morrow of her noble •son's death she
leave °Seine t ventilation "4(11" 4.11 resulned: her work withal% Sliartan-
I-bleeping ickonis., .S. lie eeerage, which cempelled the gen-
• • . * • * , erel admiration. There are, of course,
Here is. some farther lung inforraa- scores Of able women doing.self-sacri-
tiOn it May he well to know. Both ficing work, but Lady Drummond' is
llings are enclosed in delieate mem- unique in the gift she lays upon the
brane called the Pleura which forme altar of .service -gifts of mind and
a ,kind, 'of -double Sae that on one side heart and •soul.
tem give Orval* new and that at unpopular with the women. The after.
once, of the horror a the raids, ,and noon tea now serves its parpette very
the iron resolution of the people ' well, but modern society has yet to
see the thing through. They are set- discover the equal of the quilting be
ting an example to Candedians the't tt clearing -bowie for goody. To
we ail should h*eed„, a:4 4' add
now, te0, the credit oa the fair sex, we should
add that they rarely made use of
The splendid WO* being done by toxicon4; but the old grannies did en.
Canadienswemen was recently praised joy Or OM fuffe. from $.1 blackened clay
in these talks' 'To -clay from. Om) pen pipe *fter their male. Both Men and
of BY:deader we wall of the due e*. WO11194 WeVe more or lesa addiebed to
aMple set by Lady Drunnnoud. "who the Utie of snuff, ,
has given herself to ministry in the “Whialmy wan pleutiftla the good
service of the Empire at I.ondon, Eng.. old. days, but the arinidng of it woe
land: Thie gracious lady, highly mg- not looked upon with such horror, nor
'tyro, eloquent, beautiful, might be attended with such -disantroila oonso.
taking .her ease* any of her homes queacee attia tear day. This difference
in canoe.. she, gave her son she was prohnblv. due to the drink ond..the,
anPlAY.- - at* aar•egaVe fiersetr; day and -night uns'tint. drinker. Some people will not admit
through the bronichial tubes It led and efficient and.beautriful service. that any Whiskey is bad, while °two
traced. are found to lead into a pass. She was the able lieutenant of the deny that any can be good; but the'
age which, divides and sub -divides
leading or into air -cells. Now come.* ter was in Canada* She cordially see,
Countess of Aberdeen, when the lat- whiakey of a huadred Yeareage dee*
not .appear to have heti as fierce a
a'faet T1Qt $1,1ingielltilr: well uuderettooct, ontled.'all her .efforts and kept alive the serpent in it aa the highly -advertised
The -walls of these air cells ceash4 QI 'name which the Countess ad going brands. of the present day. at poeseeea-
thati, elastic, connective, tissue through all
over the Dominion, theaocieties ed One 'virtue, and that was its elleaP•
Whleh ran small blood li•reeele which desired be neeoMPlieh' human neis,--64. a qua*.
nectiOn with.the plilMon4rY artery :xf Ludy:. Drummond ,had oar.
BY *A GAL, GRAVE
• By George Herbert Parke
Under this iinmObile. stone
Lies a little°01, alone.
It was a joy ber...life to Saa,-:.
-So glad,and free!
Her laughter gave the birds of Spring
Sweet phrases- for their musicking.
Possibly his father treated his sone
in a, similar manner to his ireat treat-,
•ment of his eons.--held„the deeds. till
he could hold theni. iio longer and then
'they I:Wadded ins course of.1aW to the
, eons and his name appeared. in the
registry office records as owner. But
' Whet about the exclusive proprietor-
• ship? . He could. not stet out his
eaughbore and passers-byfrom enjoy-
ment of his sun -kissed hills, laughing
valleys, eappliaa streams, waving
grain, smiling orchards and the lovely
landscape as a Vast natural, picture.
No' amount of purchase money paid',
no .number of .title' deeds could ever
Sneure the' cohveYance . of, or warrant
. and defend to him in perpetuity such
peseesSiona With a friend last week
we steed on an eminence that 'gave
us.a Clear view of a wide expanse of
varied landscape scenery. No title
• could. deprive us from deriving real,
. pleasure from seeing the blooming or-
cherd'
s Veen pastures, fell • leaved
trees,. the passing. railway trains on
tWe parallel lines, the lovely ' back-
ground to the south -the blue waters
of Lake Ontario. ' '.vas all ours :to,
enjoy. The owners.of .farmsteads and
• urtanTesidences are -no Moee the real
epessessors.than we were who were
permittcd that * bright sunshiny daY
to absorb into our secret souls the
• strength, joy, glory, beauty, rapture
Of that .scope of landscape, visible
from „Stanleys nm top which. Nature
so 'lavishly et this season spreads for
all who wander -up to appreciate-froin -tion of tha-bloodr- The -alternate -con -
lines the ribs and part of the breast -* *
boneandon the, other sire surrounds Early pioneer .life in •Canada op-
the'1ung. Pleurisy prises from in -'peals to old ankyonng alike;: full of
flanunation of this membrane, The adventure, humor and thrilling incl.
lungs are-sitnated-one on each Sale of dentee-We-seldona think of the,fact-
the heart, the. upper part of each, fits that various kinds of Wild animals
in:teethe corner of the chest, about an roamed at willover this part of On -
inch. obey°the collar bone, while the tario but little ;ever AO • years Aga.
base of each rests upon the cliaphragna To read such books- as Mrs. Irlocalet's
Few persons know that the tight lung "Buffing it in the Bush," is far better
is shorter and broader than the left. than any novel because the life and
which extends downwards further by incidents' related were real exneri-
the breadth of a rib. The left lung ences. The• latest book on pioneer life
has 'only two lobes whilst the right among the Loyalists, written by Wi'S.
lung has three. The elasticity of the Herrington Napanee a friend of the'
lungs by which:they expand and expel writer; is a very attractive narrative,
the air is due to the contractile tissues showing the evolution of the home -
taunt in the bronchial tubes and air- 'Stead, the development of the •log
cells,'this,:elasticitY being aided by a hat to the brick house and the habits,.
elastic surface tissue. ,The 'customs and peculiarities of the early
lungs are popularly termed lights, bel; Settlers ef the district familiar to him.
'cause they are the lightesteorgana III A tew....excerpts ,fkom his "History of
the body and fleet When placed in we,: Dennox and Addington," will interei
ter except when .they are diseased: our readers, we are very sure as well
The heart is so closely related to the asto convey some idea of the events
of the early days covered by the har-
Iiings we may simply add that it is o
hollow Mueqular organ, the function xative.
of which is to maintain the circula- ''* *
The few old •people who :remember
some such' experiences as are given
'we know will have their memory of
earlydays revived by these records. the well and rescue '.- the child. His
Mr. Harrington writes: "The life of suggestion *as regarded by the we::
the early settlers was not all work men as scandalous, for his touch
and drudgery. They had their 'hours Would have defiled the drinking • wa-
of recreation, and what, is best of all, ter Of the household"Go the
they had the happy faculty; in many
matters of Makin la out of work
This was. •accomplished by means .of
'bees.' There were logging -bees,• and
husking bees for the men, 'while the
women had their quilting bees and
paring 'bees. The Whole neighborhood
would be invited to these gatherings.
It May be that upon ,the whOle they most of them belonging to one of the f.
old not accoMplisli more than could .three great groups known as Brah: z;
have been done single-handed, except inins:Shudras --aad- Outeasts, „
at the raisings, which required many viduals belonging to the latter of c'
hands to lift the: large timbers into these groups are considered so in). -
place; but work was not the oily ob- pure in nature that to touch- them 9
ject in view. Man is a gregarious ani- brings defilement -hence their corn -
mal and loves .to mingle with his fel- mon designation, "the untouchables:" p.
low • men. The occasions for public. The higher castes, though relatively
meetings of any kind during the first tolerant of each other, .must not dine
few years were very rare. There were together nor intermarry On pain of 1:
no fairs, concerts, lectures, or • other a. social persecution which, for most .
public entertainments, not even a individuals; is almost, unendurable.
• ,
the-. highway •poSitien ,enjoyment traction -arid dilation of' the heart
which keeps the Wooden action . are
entirely involuntary- and dependent
upen the nervous system. The, daily
work of the human heart in propelling
.of that vision irrespective of so-called
legal ownership. -
is open opportunity for. a feast
•4 teethe eyea,aocordS%-anlendidly with the blood is • equal to lifting 124- Voris-
, eaeot.-ligh; ' 1.
in mind a similar condition He says 1
•
_thattver f ature,,every_pieeel____ •
Of. art, every straie of music within aanresajalfue the rairway magna
, reach of your consciousness, are yours
to ,exagy-if 'your eon!, heart, mind,
' are attuned to sympathetic apprecia-
tion : Otherwise, they are never yours,
thooghyou lay down their eweight in
gold. in , exchange for possession..
Everything in the world. is _tagged
and ;prided! You acquire whatever
you wish if you pay the price! . Char-
acter, Health, Happiness, Fame, Sue -
Usefulness, Wealth, or all of.the.
hideous, debasing things of life -if
you' care to purchase -but remember
this -nothing , of value is ever attain-
ed, truly,. Satisfying, permanently,
.without "paying, the price." •
The rest of this quotation is..
ex-
planatory and so full of rich thought
e,
died- at his Minesota. home on May
29th from blood poisoning, the result
of an. operation for 'boils, it is Said. lId
was born, at Rockwood, Ontario, in
1838, :so that he was around 78 years
of age. Be waa ,a man possessed of
great ambitibn and energy, directed
by a-well-balenced-braiii, One lesson
-
he taught' .was save your money in
early' life that you may have plenty
for all requirements in old age. He
.once said in addressing young men if
you do not save in youth,, you may
quit the game foryou Will never Come
to anything. There are many who
have peyer had : the opportunity to
save -people on • a striall fixed income,
Who after keeping themselves in- some
Smal degree of respectability, have
nothi g left, and -dare not look. for -
arid inspiration that we must repro-, Ward to the future. It is true of us,
*dem it. This writer c.oatinues. thus: however, that vire are not a saving peo-
. Youfig manafair Young 'woman,
ano• ple. We have copied .the Americans,
you, 'want:Chafe-der? . Welk day hd
night. to pessees, is cheap at the
maxiiniim price... Do you desire
Health? Work, live; act for it It is
as a friend said to the writer recent -
1Y, and the Americans " who manage
• • to make big mono at, everything;
never think of saving. Accordingly,
the structere ori which your. real use in war
• , time, one notes little, if any
to the world must be reared. Do you. differenee, in the outward living of
the. people, It is said that. at the
Woodbine race. cource recently in 're-
ronto that the costumes were never so
fetching or so dear, or so abundantly
botight as this season, ,with the men
at the front and Sir Geongel Foster
urging saving as a personal zieed and
d•uty. Al the same time, it is only fair
•.wish,for genuine Happiness? It is
forever ,eltiiive; unless built upon sac.:
• rifidei struggle, good. deeds -1. -the
Gold-
en Rule, an short. Are you seeking
Success? Believe me, the only real
• euceess in life isaccomplishment-L
• and :the measure of abcomplishment
. is the 'paradoxical law"The more one
gives to others, the more .one receives to state that there are many, *omen
for 'oneself ." -Lastly, are you longing who have parted with fashion and
to be useful Let Me say to You Vse- gaiety during the ' War -women who
• fulness' is the only real 'purpose • of
„existenee, for the genuine joy of life
is wrought..out in. work, which is the
" safety-valVe of the physical. and ' the,
salvation' of .the spiritual life. You
• are the clay and tite•potter oh well, my •of the most widely Teed Toronto daily
joutnela LAO if Canallpans.reatkgelt,
that the Empire is at war ? He would
-have Canadian more deadly in earnest
believing that from their' quest of
persenal gains and pleasures, they are
have consecrated'. themselveS to ser-
vice. These are found all over.
Canada...."
A recent free-lance writing in one
young,friends,..
esse you ale &ming.
. • ..
There IC no laughter new, nor song, -
Silent she lies here, all. daY long.
All day the rases over her .
SlOssom ahd blow; the winds npirmur;
She heeds them not: ehe does not stile
A little girl, so Seim at rest; .•
The secret longing 'unexpressed ,
Wakened, then paled. within iter
Gqi knows I loVed her; and I know
(E'en though she never whisper'd. so)
Her•heart wa mine, for, well or woe.
poses;
And now -she lies beneath the roses,
VIrbile man his thousand ta.sks
And.. -the day bre, aks„, and the day
•
-Canadian lg• agazine forjane.
• INDIA'S 19,009 CASTES.
Mest-of Them Belong to Three Great
" • • Groups.. •
• pour years ago up in the northwest
, .
ef India, a child belonging to aeltrahe
mite family fell into a well, relates
•the World Outlook, All the men of
the family were away, and the:. wo-
men •were- helples. . The servant
known as the sweeper -a very •low
caste man -offered to • climb •down
drowning:boy.. Hence the little fellow
n the well, to -he --fished A.
dead- some time later by the'• clean
hands of a 'l3rahmin. 'Rather death
than defilement from the touch of an '
untouchable!"
At present the are upwards of
19,000 eastee and subcastes in India
„
puuwcu ARE STUBBORN**
..1,etter 'Taken FrOxi. ..German Officer
CaPturect Verthun
;. tetters found upon 'officera nud
diere the German army taken
Own- gpreund Verdun, are given
at French, headquarter* itta.indicat
the etate of Mind of the ,officers, sin
th failure of tha first .esserclit, and
el*
ee • 7,11,!.. • -
es ; • Sprays for Potatoes. ' seiaiated, sltireauille, but put in the.
ut,, The Colorado potato beetle aid a teaspoonful of ground gag,
cucumber flea beetle are, the zonunork. gradually increase the slom4mik wadi'
est insects which injure petato flax meal tat that, by the end •of thea
tope. The fornter can be mailer fourth math, it is receiving a heap -1 "
ed 'with Parisi green in the proportion ing tablespocatal of flax meal and ten(
legrOltotitarcrelqejf water, Ounce
°Nrithillar4se48"n- firstmonthth°tOnrntititwIce.t has wadccWess tt4rlitithle r
water. Paris green kale quicker than or ehorts,
to three pounds or 40 galloue of or a 'mixture oa whole oats and bean
and 'a little whole oats,'
• -
ate of lead in the propel -tient of two eorleactit hay
arsenate of lead but the latter ad- The important points are :Eaglet. rea
heres better than Perin green, hence a galarity in time of feeding; quantity!
Mixture of both in the proportion of and temperature of Milk which shouia,
eight ounge.s. of Paris green and one be from 98 to 100 degrees F. From;
and. a bola poiroM of arsenate eg. lend the Arca of June the skim -milk' ebould' •• •
to 40 gallons of water will quickly be pasteurized OQ it -Win not get sepal"
and aalbere Well to the foliage' • It bale been the general opinion,.
The poisons mentioned will; to some among acirmeas that separator
.extent, check the cucumber flea beetle, milk was not Gtrong or nutritioasi
but in addition to them, a better pre- feed ,and that a large mos must be r••
ventive at a covering of Bordeaux given: to make up in quantity what'
Mixture, en the feliage,. The Bordeaux they.supposed it lacked in quality,and
-
. .
a. Mixture sheuld,alsso be tined to CQ11-, the result was that calves.were over-'
; arol the ,early• and late Nights .' of fed, .and indigestion. was prodUeetV ,
he ProotatoeTs'hethese, are
eatttewro .cliofsetaiisee .common -e aS bwi te .h was followed by sceurs andl
estrad'i--4cQoanatres'ol--the-e.arly iincria.• te bflg.ht "
of potatoes spraying with Bordeaux
' mixture • should be begin before the
disease appears and AO. plants kept
coverea until autumn. Is safer to
startl spraying with Bordeaux mix -
tura when spraiink fel- the potato bee-
tles. The poison of the latter may be
mixed with the Bordeaux. From three
to four sprayings or more will be re-
quired, the number depending on the
weather. Taking the a,verage of
three Years; the increase of yield frhm
spraying with Bordeaux* mixture was
at the rate of 94 bushels an acre. In
some 'years ft is much larger.
The importance of keeping plants
growing as late as possibleis II-
Iustrated in an experiment where the
total crop of marketable potatoetp
per acre when dug on September 1st
was 234 bushels per acre, whereas in
the same field the same variety yield-
ed 353. bushels marketable potatoes
per acre when left undug until Sep-,
teraber 22nd, or in three -weeks the
crops had increased; by 119 bushels
per, acre of marketable potatoes.
'Bordeaux Mix .ture'ia made in:the nro-
the feeling Of - tho: soldiert0 famili
at home. A leOter written by Lie
Eorcies., of the Slot Oenetan aufania7p
to hie parents, sari: •
44)10 losses in officers are so con -
Wettable that I was obliged to take
centaraina the Stir •Pnapan3r. We
are MINT in the first and I AM
crouched in tx mudhole' that muzil,
protect me Om the fragments of the
enemy's shells that come umuterrupt.
edly, have seen a great deal in the
course of this war, but r had not yea
been in a situation BO itaipSadhahly
feghtflA• . •
are day and night under a
fla*eighteguiritalgrtninliVengY17e*Stnlbetirnrr*enrcell-
sistanee, On'the 1.10„when we made
an assault upon the French trancliee
after considerable preparation of 12.
hours, weefetind, the French maChine
guns were still absolutely Arita* so
that our first wave of assailants w
iMinediately mowetil down leavin
the trench. At the Same One, t
French opened up. a barring are that
rnade iit_itintlpacQssib,bLyt think any
furthe"We 'ware` unable arid 'are stiff' un-
able tit bury our dead. There they
lie, a most lamentable sight, the poor
devils,' in their muddy- holes, for all
the.routes are swept without Ceasing
by the French artillery. We have
dead and wounded every • day.
Whether we ere. taking our wounded
back to safety or whether we Are go-
• ing back for our rations two mites in
the rear to the movable kitchens, he
danger Of death is the same, until our
men 'prefer .to suffer from hunger
than to go' after anything to eat.
"I addition to the danger of death
from shell fire, nearly every man in
My companyis ill, exposed as they are
to the rain all day and obliged to lie
in the mud all night during eight con-
thecauttIivwe idllahYasveatnhcie .4glogObdts. lucki telmgPeet
out of here alba:, becalm there is no
means here of even being properly
.buArieldel"ter from a woman in Apler
beck to a 'Soldier made prisoner re-
counts°, incidents_indicating very,
effeiiescent state of mind among the
population of Dortmund.
"A woman asked for more help, be -
Cause her husband is in thearmyand
she is unable to support lier six child-
ren. .As further help was refused,
she slapped the commissariat of Police
who, killed her. A crowd Of women
collected in the Lentenstrasse to wait
Lor the coimnissariat of police but
Mounted soldiers came and dispersed
them. Here at Dortmund and
Cologne and the environs the popufa
tion is very, excited on account of the
lack -of --provisions- If • ,it continues
hus, something will happen. We have
ad enou h of miSer ." •
Another letter dated Loham, March
0, sari!: - • • •
"Sunday a long train full of griev
usly wounded arrived at Straubing
from Verdun. Things are very bad
or us. here. We can get no meat ex-
ept with the meat cards and no one
as the right to kill any i more hogs.
•-young Pig now costs 80 to -90 marks
no to $25), while a milk cow costs
rom 800 to 1;000 marks MOO to
250)"
•
'
ENERAL SMUTS TERY:CLEt?Ett.
he Brain of the South 'African
„.Government. •
General Ian Christian Smuts is the
eatest man South Africa has pro-!
ucedl in. the kit' ten years, with the
7
• church, school, Or political meeting,
so, in their wisdom, the early settlers
devised these. gatherings for- work-
, .
.and work they did, het, Oh! the joy df
it! All the latest netvs gathered from
every quarter was diiicussed,' notes
were compared on the progress made
in the clearings, theew,ags and-elowas
furbished up their latest jokes, and all
enjoyedthemselvs in disposing of the.
A Lack of Bait:. d
• The teacher of a Sunday ' school e
class pelts the folio -wing story: -The
Eurperintendent, who believed in de- o
veloping the reasoning 'powers of the m
children, asked one of the znnaller ir
classes how Noah Weight be likely to f
speed, his time- on the ark A little t
xception, perhaps,Of General ;Botha..
He is al -ways spoken of as the brain
f the South African Government, the
an who draws up the pence,' which
he others awry- out. ale was the De-
ence Minister in South A-friCa when
he war broke out, and -he it was who
estroyed all hope of success for„the
erman paid plotters who tried to
ir up rebellion there. '
Though General Botha brilliantly
rushed the aernyuis in South-West.
frica, ib was GeneralSmuts.who ac -
ally drew up the plan of campaign
hich resulted in the end of German
le there. . • •
General Shuts has proved himself
n exceedingly clever army leader
me and time again. Wheiftlie Beer
lir broke out he was a private.
uring that war he rose to.ben. gen-
al and one of the . very toughest
its General French had to crack' in
last stages of the fighting.
He is one of the youngest leaders
the present war, for . he Is only
etajailirerialteleeetenaciaterertiffaaaa'
rprising, he knows the ccinditiond
fighting in Africa from A to 2,, and
ere can be no bebter • certainty a
ccess German East Africa. • than
(noble fact that at General Smuts is in
Several good stories of •Bothe's
ght-hand man are .toia. When hd
sited ' England •some years ago -it
Was
to 'bring 'the Cullinan diamond
er loreltingetelwardeVIleabyaaelie
ay -he found hiinself .sittirig next
a rather 'Supercilious young . of-
er at a, public reception. .
"Let me see," said the officer;
aveha we -ah -met before?" .
replied General Smuts
shortly.
good things brolight Roth frOrn the. hand in the rear of the room was this:- d
- * * * * the And to tell how he.thought Noah at
would pass the ,time. . The boy stood
"Perhaps Some special . Mention
rflrst on one foot and thea on the other, e
should be made of the logging bee,
and at hist said,„"Fisliin'!" Just then A
since it stands out as the Only one of
these jelly gatherings that was re- another small boy snapped his fingers; tu
Noah. woilidn't fish very long," said W
garded as a necessary evil, particu-
the boy, "Why not?". asked the puz- ru
larly by the female members of the
z ed questioner. "}Ie couldn't, be- 1,
family. Perhaps the grimy appear-
cause there were only two worms on a
ance of the visitors bad something to
the ark. _
ti
do with the esteem; in which they were
held at such •times. The logging bee
Yet They •Were Useful. 'D
W
;followed the burning of tire -fallow,
Which consumed the underbrush, the The office boy had been detectql er
left the charred trunks to be disposed
tops and branches of the trees, and ianr;
.igevarihcawtaiosansotootnethoef tiveetordian; n
th
of. In handling these, the vvorkos world and, moreover, to make the ,
spear:became, bleekeateenegreasee-aea. _crime:more grieaaus he had persisted ah
• in adhering to hi a orginal nien o I
'- rtiri".
the nature of the work seemed to de -
statement. "Do you kiow, my lad;" te„
' Ambition is to a Yeung person Very Mend consumption of whiskey. Any-
nsked an elderly clerk, "what becomes er
'desirattl . The ambling,. „indifferent, way, „the liquor was consumed; .the
of young las who trifle with the. th
e , tase,,:- idle person is ,uinioseessed not taking the world's greatest Wai men frequently became disorderly, and
coneluded the ' bee with one or More truth? ' i'lres," was the assured • re- 8,U
t
' ef this virtue. It Is MoStaagrettable as a serious -peraonal paobleM. Be lay, "the toss often sends 'there out th
drunken fights. It was this feature
' for Ambit:On is. like the rider'e spur would like to arouse Canadians to a. as travellers when they grow up." e
- ata lairboese-ait-Valtatli men ettiVeaLreal eterse -ofetheir duty as the people - -
of, the logging bees that made them
a. . - ..
-'earilesteifuthof educate ante stirringaain-the Mather-LiMaecevealleen--It as - -,--a-- ---aa-e a —
. , - • • - ------e ri
if it be not etopped- but if hy_chanee true, ea one w ,
4 titer says that there I
. .. .
•••••••••""'"7"-- r‘;' -41.11.-i, vi
_....e.eatelea.:_atea' ped and mina ' Imee„. its eeere morneets N.:Own the Ileitis -1i pec - t
it becometh ugla, often endaehe _pie did not realize the coenalty Cir the r -
w
corner -cupboard.
ed, and :the superini ndent requested
04991) OV
Our to great•ill-miture So ambitious.' taele tahe Wit if -de T r
Germany. It Was difficult to bring
the appalling thing home to people in
their .cetnfortable homes, To-daY,
there is no idle; indifferent' person in
the British lelea. The war has come
bomb -in the ihe.reasing casualty leas,
io the Zeppelin raids„ in the -murder-
• aui :_submaeine warfare; in the boom.
hag of cannon off their eoaatiaine
Millions of armed Men being •trained
for the ltoet. The Btitish people' are
sabered. "Their leaders have Made
blunders; but the peeple Ara. cletetrnira
ed to fight to the batter end. The
losses aro appelling. England, too, is
not fiehtieg for money or territory,
but for hoeor. In the aenex-al concloct
thet:is eInsive, zior is itsought
for with naiable assiduity, but it is
noble in a nation to -Scorn ease and be
willinrg to fight for the sacred oblige -
'Hone, which bind Men together. The
papctia do not tell the grim *realities
in the •Mothet Couritry. Private let -
.spur c a e war on ,
„ , • . • w
men if they find the way . peon
their iising and still get fervverd; they
eaioy the beisy, active lifo, It greatel
• iv haps to carry a man ' firth and
staorig against obstacles. wise Man'
linth put it these Waraff- Ita; that eeek-
eth to be eininent aifiongst able Men
hath a gr.eat task; but that is ever
good far the public: But he that plots
to be the only 'figure 'aline/last ciphers
is the decay of a whole age. Mxtch
of the call -doing among the 'human
ittee is the result of a lack of worthy
ambition. A pers,onwho has an ain-
bition to be.good and of service to Ids'
Yeliptviais not likely to do harmful
• By placing forthir ideals -before
the, youth of the country ate ambition
,tt, exeel well -doing is likely to be
engendered,4
•• a 0 • * * •
yo,,u.'ever try to iriereacit your
luag power? It is of ineetimeble value,
,to ,you. Yotir lungs are your sole
6 A
•
to
• •fic
• •
tioh1
oamaireE01,..
"Thought, so," returned the' efficer,
• ahd added in bored tones: "O'ne meets
so ninny people, don% you kno*. Let
me see, whoe did we meet?" ai
"In pouth Afried," retorted the gen-
eral. "You surrendered to Me
ing the -wan" . .
Once the iron ,deterreleation of
• 'General Smuts 'broke down. He was
appeirxted by President kruger to be
torney.General•eor• the Transvaaa,
d he -attended the, Tranatitta Pale
tient in grey trallSOVA. INS shoak-
the Boer Minisfera °Waxily, foi
ey ell dreeeecl itt sober black, end
eleiter was so 'greatethat the State
torpey had to go 'auk home and
cute his abreoks,"
, RAt
art
, e .
r, •
Doing the Best She ile*. • i lid
ed
"I knew I asked you to be eeerionfiena iny dear, bet X don't see why th
you are running aecounts with fair grocers."' the
"Why, don't.you Ade; darling, the bale are all so trin'eh less!"-Londen At
Opinion,.• . 0 . eh
.• "Feed the Young Foil; .
Are , you giving . that young foal,
the proper care? To, become a strong,.
Sound horse when znatured the , foal .
' must be well nourished and. .given,
every advantage possible.
At this time Of the year mares ad
,colte are olloWed to spend at least
a -part Of th,e.time in the pasture. The .
foal should be taught to eat grain
very eerly. By placing the feed box
from- which the -dam eats her grain
low; the foal; at about two months Of
age, will begin nibbling with the mo-
ther and.willcsoon acquire a taste for
the grain. . ••,
, A pen built in one corner the
fieid made high enough to keep the
mare out and Allow. the colt to pass
under will make it poisible .to feed
the foal grain with verYslittle clIffi-
eulty. Anew -the mare in the en-
closere with- the foal for a few times,
and it will soon learn to go in itself.' • ''
Keep a liberal eupply or grain, pre- a
ferably oats and bran, and. perhaps
some cracked corn, in the' feed box.
To induce the dam to loiter abeiti•
Ptninds lime and 40 gallons of water.
portion, of 'six Peunds bluestOne, fowl with' the colt, have the pea, near ,
shaft tree or the silt box.
Spraying mixtaresashould be used t-any weaning timer the foal will have"
the proper time and • theroughly, bedoine thoroughly accustomed. to
g:ood results. are to be expected. --W. eating grain and will Wean•very easily,
T. Macoun, Dominidn Hortieulturist, beside being in better condition as a
OttaVva. • resta of this additional feed. , •
, - Try this plan this year and you
. Separator Milk For Calves., be surprise to find 4 sleek,' fat,
well -grown colt at weaning Vme,--C.
In writing of his eXperisnee• in calf
S. Anderson, in Fenn and Dairy. • 2 -
rearing and the value of separator •
-skim-milk as calf feed, in the "Jersey
Bulletin," Peof. T. Haecker of the
Minnesota experiment station says:. '
• I have made Calf Tearing my busi-
ness for over twerit •ears
mg e t en ave placed' my
reliance on skim -milk. For growing
calves consider separator skini-nrillc
at least equal to 'whole milk, .though
calves Will not lay on as much fat as
they will wheh whole Milk fed; but
. .
they will make as good growth and'
be as thrifty on skim -milk. •There is
nothing' butter fat that.a oalf-eari
use in building body tissue. Batter
and body fat, and nutriment for this
• purpose can be Supplied more cheaply
• with flax Meal, which contains from
30 to 35 per cent. oil. • •
• My system' of feeding very uni-
one. VVhen the Calf is. dropped I
let it suck Mite and then remove it
from the dem. -If it is removed in the
Morning' I give it no feed until the
follewing morning. I give- froin
three or four pints of its • mother's
milk twiee a day, immediately after
milking the dam. A, small calf gets-,
three pints and a large ealf four Pints.
This I cOritinue far about one week.
Then. for One *eek Igive it whole
milk half and siiimaralk•half twiee.a
da.Y, giving it only from three to four
pints.• The third week I feed all
"COUGHING E
ONLY A HABIT"
SHOITI4B BE AVOIDED, SAYS A
• . ,
' NOTED DOCTTR.'
Szieeziag: and Picking of - Teeth' Un--
,
warranted Pieces of Self -
Indulgence.
Dr. Woods Hutehinson, the widelY
nomeaeameriaateemp tea eizereof- 'medi-
cal:knowledge, Wants people to stop
coughing, whethea they have colgls Or
not. lie says that the stuiitariunis
for 'tuberetiloais' have, been. able to
"educate -coughing ahnOst out of ex-
' istezice, se. that visitors frequently
cemrnent on how.' seklotri they hear
one of the patients. cough.".; A large
-share -of -the -credit of this, •chatige,
he loci, is due to the gentle • and
• peesuasive it -Loaning aid taeegood era/
ample ef the other patients.' Cough -
big does the COnsumptive no ....good
whatever, and does him much harm
by exchaustitig hie strength, breaking
his sleep and increasing the danger
01 tileeratien. If the .habit catt e be
stopped among the tubercalar it .' is
hameasurably more inexcusable
among- those who can complain of
only an ordinary cold.
: Try 1Vot To Cough.
If youhale never tried it, the
'next tithe you are -tempted to cough
or dicer year threat, see howwell
aou 'eon- get along ,without doing AO,
Oa after a little. peactide You will
Mid <stoat- eohttel comPlete. „Coualting
is for the most Part' nrierVdne habit,
due to aticklieg in the throat brought
on by previous ecntalfinge and. 'alio
by a sort of Uncontoloas
• Did you ever betide in it tareatia or
other pates of etitetattintriene that no.
bodst coughs in a highly (has/fade or.
Otherwise especially interesting etioe
Dressing Percentage.: .
_
• The average dressing percentage of
hogs is 76, while of cattle it is
• -of-sheep-Oa—Part of thi-s 'differ-
ence is due to tile methoca of figuriega
In the -case of the hog the Itide, heed
and feet are inelu.ded in the carilass
weight, while in the ease Ofcattle and .•
sheep the head, hide and feet -are • net '
included. Then the hog is Very thiCk
. es e and has a smell: digestive
system. .Cattle and sheep have large _
piiiinches -' and disgeetiiie systems.
Sheep dress out loviese, due to the,
.wool and the rather light fleshing of.,•
theThceardcraesese.•.41,e
perceat.age of ai.xim-
• of each 'close varies widely. -r-This is
due to the amount of flesh; especil.-:'
ly fat present on the carcass, and
somewhat to the thickness of thehide
and size of the hesis and legs, and
to the amount of fill or the amoutit'of
f watei present in the 4iges•
tive tract at the time Of slaughtering. •
Per the hogs the dressingapeacentage
varies from .65.% to 85% with an aver-
age of 75%. For pattie it ranges
from 48% to 70% with an average of
ea%, and for sheep from 44% to 56%
with an average of 48%.-.131. Pet
ers, North Dakota Experiment Ste.
deo.
—0 •
•
•
ment? Did you eVer -notice, thatifone person coughs a lot' of others
and that the 'aniount of coughing in
a public place depends not on con-
ditions of throat and lungs; 6ut ripen
habit, tradition and usage? •,
• • Annoyed Billy Sunday.
Tha despatches relate that Bilty.
Sunday expressed himself. as decided-•-•
ly annoyed with his•auditors at Syra-
tuseerecently because they . coughed -
so much. He was entirely justified
in this. This Coughing was unneces-
sary. It may have reflected a languid ••
attitude on their part Mach' ANS',
would' not have experienced had lie. ea
enaie eheepecasieneoneefereateireara7a ,
lacaratimulus- But beyond the:alio
lied no axeese for .distuibing him.
exAcepiltoastbovphbaytitiei. kn
tolls. the sto
ry
of a patient riding with him ene-day,
who .coughed and cleared hi*throat t
incessantly. As the young num lied
been learningto rue a motor exteathe••
.13b1releintl -0ffereda-hhn a &mice to
take the, arheela So intent WETS aim
beginner on, his new jab that --lac.„
half an hour not one sigh of a- Neigh-
Ot throat cleari
.ng occurrec. • When.
at last a light rumblieg.,appecired the
physiciate remarked: '"You must 'feel
that you are now familiar wah (be.
machine," aria when the yonng. ?rein.
asked •ntliy; the physician .tinswerk-d
b
udin
y g to the re
p ion e of e
eomethiog that *only bore ova:Ince .of -
a Mind not ftilly employed. ..•
Much the .same thing is 'trtieef
sneeziag. Tf .it Could' became.
nizecl that to 'C011ah • and to'slime
were eaele alike an unwept:noted pieer„
of salf-induigenceaboth as n..
der the eoiarel ,of ehe doerare the •
picking of his teeth (-quay
agreeable habit.... -we • shOalrj not prily .
eat along without 10110)171:0,- aring, hut,•suoez.
.w:e would take: 6.1enTr• '.'vtetir. •
toward arrestin* thy :;prpad viol -elk
hialedieft.
\Li
Te man tyke jloean't .tneay in!ircti
than half he sayels mata•veata •i• 110
saysitiyaihia or not; . .
•••••••,...”..;