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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-08-31, Page 3ditor'TrOk$ Here Is ant article for echos& to activiti than pereonal intereet and tettelieree,lt tisiPeele strongly te u me reeponsibilitiee, Ono writer having coffee we had the experienee' for 50., a Weedier thought, webs: Ile loneliness ea l Year% We eee Lindeay ever more utter 'loneliness thanwhen enewspapeo that the Principal of the bereft ef tee, a life matust be made • sCelleglate- Institute - and another . teacher who were belidaying in. the POrth eenntry discovered :a farmox . 'Whe was allertlianded for 'harvesting .14.3 hey .crep, so they turned in and helped:the old.yeteran, aBritielt .eol- ..(.1.1.Or Of 8Q- yearsa That mem: a.- good. ."-W***-7,-***-- from •tbat. leneltneeet lie, it not then that We met beware ef :selfiebneas, becauee nfne there is Taa ene who' alaims oar entire. .flevetiest?'• 'that _the elm Seeme, obecu.reell then, also, vetoes need. of greater • effort; Then, 011110411e nthet, be sought allege act and -Was for them spleodid oxer- pereiste.ntly and bestowed latlere free •else, Why could not .the thoueande of lyemust this sed :heert ,fotget.its sada teachers, • preachers, etudentex .prtso MSS- in. work,aye, even dredgery, if .fesidonal 'Men , part of the • They Will.. fi ,gleid.ef lis .isfaction •kindness. . ' 4, 4!..* 4 . . After Sept, ipth wo aro. to have in -Ontario 'what are. to- be known as • "Standard ., temperance . • ,housea of acconineedition .very similar ". to tho temperance Alotels. th.rooglient. •. the British ieles,„ If -they are up to the standard :of , the Old • -Countrar neighbor to the- smith in several ways hostelriee they wUL be homes iitict We. refer just .th one eimilarity.It - conifertableaa,"1-1enies. • aevey fro.rn is becoming .too,ariuch the leeshiori in Hems," they are. often .• tertred , • 'in., this, •douritry to Measure metes sUc- • their booklets. Here r4 What • the, cess by a . money -standard -to • esti. It cla.sses, spenda need be, in constant thoughts of be - holidays similarly ? nevelenee .and 'cheer for ataangere. _hundreds of farmers, who soon beconie as Met own, Angela ' aad there Is double sat- 'unawares borne to os. on the wings feeling that Ong hi tieing of :mercifuloefforts to aole.se them and • • . . . . ... ... • • EVEDMON DISAS GERMANS Dp) waling+ .11) • • • HIMP THEIR a+LIZS. ,ourselees. • i 0 panapea blest! divn 0 plan e, • For human hurts, defeats,' and Fria; Thou draught letheanaswiftly .supply- ing Forgetfulness; and sweet relief!' •• *•* * *•, • Canada .` is becoming like • mir e4Must be: , mate the worth and ability of a man hle place by the amount of money he aceiimia. for public accommodation, each Oen.. ates:' ,Conortercialista is ' the altar .. clard hotel shall be a well-aPPoirited i at -which there is too much ardent eating heuse. Applications for Ikea- worship. Dr. Iladley, of Yale, once ses for a hotel 'should be made te the , declared: "There is no danger that Board through the Liscerete Inspector , the ountry Will even feel the lick of not later than Augest 16-th for the 1 money-makers. What we do need to . license . beginning Sept. 16th, 1916. ! fear is the possibility of a leek of .' • License . fees' are ,al. Every hotel ! public-apirited men Who think not of must keep a slipply of pure, c,old themselvde 'first. History, whatever is drinking ;water, convenieptly placed studied in school, is 'intended to broad - for guests. • Every guest MOM shall.. en the mind :and sympathies. Thai •have a bolt on inner side of every spirit is growing in this country. 'Vire dooe. Fire escape -signs must be want. men who stand for. idea's, who prominently displayed, :and ropes make life worth living." We certain- .. must be placed at windows of every ly believe this money -loving spirit is bedroinn. Liquor mut not he sold, growing apace. We have seen it served or kept on the premises. No grow as. we have grow o older. The • i disorderly' conduct, gambling- or get -rich -quick craze has seized Can-. drunkenness perinitted:• adians with an almost • unclirichable ' * di * * • grip. They ,are all after the dollars Liquor dealers are out after new. -the mighty dollar. This in spite of business if we may judge by the large the old adege that money is at the • display advertisements with price root of all evil. .. • lists of the various brands of liquors. Very few weekly newspapers will ac- tept liquor advertisemeats, but sever - Canadian standard,. hot In addition to being a, * * * * Daily we are/reading of big for- tunes beieg. Made by Public men- a • Prince Henry Sees His School ,Win, t Prinde Henry of England watching a match between Eton and Bartow heal recently. The match was won by Eton, °The picture is interesting in that it indicates that despite the war, sport in England is still not without &arta patronage. • * • dreo into the professions nd the rest nowhete .in • particular.- Well may the • Farmer's Magazine say "the rural school is the ,most 'press- ing educational problem to -day."' To- day's paper e tell. us, •toothat Lord Haldane has appealed to the House of Commons to de something to im- prove the schools of rural Great Brit- ain and Praises American lichoold. * * * * • . • - We do not like • recruiting rneet-• inv. Yet they- must be held it seems. Soldiers must be gotten. by some means, We would not have war but we have it and the conditions must be met. Canadians -make ex- cellent , soldiers, so our couotri must do their share in this "our war." Whataglory our men have won at the front, toe. These young men from opposition te the eubmarine naval n e al city dailiee contain them, and ala recently of • a man making a million the Parra, the desk, the shop, exert - THE SITUATION IN GERMANY. 'By Chas M. Bice, Beneer, Colorado. Moch depends upon the outcome of the "great drive" now in progress on , the various war fronts, not ' only as help them, ether with stores.or with cencerns the '.German military force, men. Their two systems of supplies but in the political affaits. of •Ger- many. It is difficult for any people at War to cope With politics and the ambi- tions of the. diplomatic force, and we find that Germany is now, divided in her ,foreign policies. • • 'Ottonia;i Troopii Mostly in Raga and Nearly Ouf of Medical Stores, , . A neutral who. saw the' prepare., lime for the recent Germaaa'orldels. attack on the Sues 'danal ggypt, which, the Brigeb. repulsed, describes. them in the London Winsea as. fol- lows.; - "The exptdition was • careflinY • planned ,.-and exeCuted,.•• ,„ .movement. en which• the Turks pieced. .041144 tee Pope, to producaeithea..0g4 Growing ,Hvickveheat„ ceder*, iiiiekwheat is the least eeineler4 •Of 4400 the general d become the grains, Probably becaase of the Insletent for.ftafer And IgleY 9.t fact that it has been overshadowed by Meat that are reasonable its size. Onehl other crepe more universally grown, quality and- gagedity c4alsined ean- buckwheat bas,Until recently, been not he economically impplied leY tba given but little attention by evert, 1,800 steer, 'beta an. amnia hs met ment stations and cOneequeutly the /we size becailee an animal of mArb-A. • eroP 11aS been quite freventlly grown' weiglat takes eextra time to become In a very haphazard way, Buck4 ready for the !stitcher, with the result wheat has beeo Called a "Poor land" lhat the flavor midi nicinoes of the meet crop. It is tirtie that buckwheat will is not In accordance With the.talite of frequently produce profiteble .crop the. maierity of consumere, - $1eeders ,nowatle,ya are hest fati,de' fled with.. the anunal of reasonable size that Will turn the feed censunted late a satisfactory. beef care:ease fn the slioktest possible time. FeW eteers over 1,400 lbs,, can be dealt , with by the trade at the' present atid the inalitations are that the big fel-. lows will:never come hack MO p�pu- larity, so as to ,compete with :the, handy *eights or prfine medium sized ' great store. The prelieratiens. for it Pr rye profitabli, but it 'will do etill Were made even MOTS CarefUlly than, Der. the expedition lest Year. When the attack. was heing planned the better a given good treatment. In fact, the Nev York ExPeriment stit- tion, finds ,that gSitickwheat when whole country was overrun with, .grown on: poor land 'whom's well to immigrate dressings of even low grede Germans told the Bagdad 'RailwaY fertilizer and many farmers who do was taxed to It uttermost. "One of the most striking features nob US0 fertiliZer 611 Other Crepe find was thetath.e Germans never frater- it profitable to purchase it for buck- nized in the slightest degree with the Wheat" Turks. The Germen . soldiers were • Soil Requirements. well clothed. and well fed; theiz com- Buckwheat, is. well suited to light Missariat was ron Along Prussian well-dreined. sollsa such as sandy and lines and the -men wanted foranoth. learn& Ib needs but little lime, .ing. The 'Germans had plenty of growing well In "add wile Without medical stokes and doctors, but with kime, where alfalfa and red •clover their unfortunate allies it was differ- could net succeed. . The Tient seems ,ent. • -,, unusually active in taking plaatfood In a Desperate Plight. from poor and rocky'. sone.• It needs alarger proportion of phosphoric acid "Their stores were alwaYs low, and and potash than of nitrogen, einge their had almost entirely run out of large growth of straw ie. pot desired drugs and medical. necessities In this so much as prefasa bloom and early respect they still are in a desperate filling of :seeds. plight. The Germaos. did • nothing Yo When to Plant. • are run on entirely separate lines. 'he Turkish' tieops are in strange contrast with the, Prussians.' Many of them are in rags, without any semblance of uniform. They are pro- vided with a good aluminum water bottle covered with felt Their rifles ' If reports are, true that, eseape the also are good, bot many of the men are without. boots and some without German censors, there is formed in headgear. The majority, hewever, that Country an alliance -between Lib-• wore a cloth' helmet, with string to erals, .Socialists and Catholics ,for the tie .it under the chin, said • to have first. time in history. These are sup - been designed by Enver Pieha and 'porting Chancellor Hollweg in his policy, formerly pursued by Admiral n camp the Germans and Turks been secured. Best redults are ob- ways in prominent peaitions .on the dollars commission on one Public ed initiative underttood the avvfultained where the land is plowed early, page Limier busin,ess will die a •na- transaction without the investment issue at stake and, without a blanch- von Tirpitz, backed by ConservatiVe- might have been on the opposite sides but fairly good results can be obtain.. total death unless an army of re- of a dollar's capital Easy moneyt ing of the chiek, they -attacked the Agrarian element which demands of the earth as tar as licornmunia ed by sowing immediately after plow- cruitt is sieut.ed constantly. Old Thousands must be the stake or fee, who gave waybefore their on- that aggreisive subinarine warfare t b G ' I h t • ' 134 ed. The Germans strongly diecoun- cation between the two was concern- ing if the land is well prepared. Buckwheat is -usually seeded; at the rabe of three to five pecks per acre: If a drill is used and the seed is- of good vitality, as little AS three pecks maY be sefficient ;if the soil is fertile. It is best to Use a grain drill, but good results 'carrbe•Sectired by brotter-, casting the seed and harroning it in. Three varieties of buckwheat are Under the most favorable condi- tions; buckwheat will mature-- in 10 weeks, bub the average time is about 12weeks It-4-6-e-e-lciirlien see late, but is very sensitiveato cold and Is killed by the first heavy frost. The aim :should be to bring the crop. • to matuaity just before frost. In the latitude of southern New York this meane that the crop should be plant- ed about the first week in July.. • Buckevlieft ehould be tam on land prepared as for corn. It is an excel- lent crop to sow where cern has been planted, lea where a stand has not , • topers die and • young men must be many Men wont touch ..a transaction, elaught. The awful tragedy is that - found to take their places. Here is . They are after big money, only: No , this. -appears'. to ••be • the best use to. a theory advanced by the dhristian one should begrudge a • man - the 'I.,' which we cat' pat 'our' bravest 'and Guardian Which, .as , an advertising Money made in honest industry or bar , best -to kill and, be killed.: . This was Man of long •experience we. stroegly development of ,nittarar resources of ; the thought we had. at Valcartier . endore& Parents and auardiensaand the country. But of late it seems as ! when. we saw the 300:100 men of the all others responsible .for the, theme- , if these are the ,exceptions from the ! First Canadians in review- the Sun - ter •of a .hoine should ponder serious- revelations of conimissions who have ! day before • they. left for overseas; ly . and •long the advisability of ala investigated :certain public transac- I and the same, thought' pressed Reda ' hawing such newspapers 'into, their' tions. Yet great fortunts, have been !upon us as • s.everpl' trains- 'carrying ': atunily eireless "For it iiato be re', made thro'ugh the development of the soldiers passed down the railway to membered that liquor ', advertising:, enorinous natural .advantages Of this I °Montreal last week. . It is an awful • does createa:demand for liquor. Pitch. wonderful eountry. , In such a pealed 1 tragedy :but-.Carladians: must and will advertising does- not Merely . thange , Of industeialisai eueeess is apt te 'be ' do their share * , * * *. : . the demand from • one brand' to an- I Measured , .by individual wealth or ' • - f . . ethet,:er, froai. one dealer's :stock to :•earning capacity: But we shall come : Ye, this is the Christian age and 'ternetional lawaand rights • Of Great - that of another. Any student . of ad- 4 More and - more • to understand and. Christiaoity is. a' a mighty force lir 13ritaiu. on. the seas, Whicb :it. is_claim- ed has been done • . . . vertiping, would adinit,. that. '. Liquor i appreciate the title standerd; tet. those tountries. at .war, tnit 'war is on , advertising 'positively'. ,creates ,. a de.: • estimate .men; not • in dollars • and and although this was to have been - The leader of the ' censervative- : 'mend for liquor; in other words, it is l•cents, but according to their, real our golden age Of brotherliness . and 'Agrarian element is. former Admiral Seine similar town, where they find - 'a plain, unvatnished drunkard' ' pro, , worth •.The 'world's greatest bene-.• the teaching of the Matter it being von Titpitz, who resigned . his ppsi.,, the Government has done With 'them'. •m.oti"on agerieyy, 'teaching these ' who &attire' have been, men . who lived 'taught . over wide areas 'so that . we . tion When forded by',HollWeg to sub- In • some villayets there: is no Arab ,haVe not thunk before to begin it, and and died poor In - .material wealth.. might expect the spirit- Of gentleness. mit. to the Americap demand sneaking, Christian left . ' • ' . entrang,•those who •drink . •to • • dririk • The sch lar, the patriol",--tht--ifite-s-a to soon' be univetsally diffused under The -.strerinnultiett-of the isituation ' This. neutral says that one of the, a larger percentage :of nitrogen •than man, 'the. Artist, the scientist, the normal conditions: •' But as Bystander ha forced Ifollweg to. :organize, . geed -works of the American .. Red 1 it i does of phosphoric acid, jest the inTreniarks-thie- dreadful-foe-mustla , e_. publ city. campaign in ,which he is to Cross Was clearing . Serbia :of .typhus • -..__..ahigh Moat searideadaandatruly Pat- teather,_the'instral ex•amplar, these_ More. Arid how any, newspaper with , revei.se of_What-buck.sidneat-neede. . . riotic. Purpese can. lend itself to . sich athe . greatness of their work, -.make: faced -we .must go on killing; and go through the principal, cities of. its-fataasabuinanly Possiblea Th For most profitable results on stony , a' thing, especiellY in , as. time alike the Mete moneyagrubber seem Mean- the mote, you kill. the happier yoli Germany personally and explain his Mans did not help; he says,- but wait - this,' surpasses as" a .... ly small, There is too much Worship 'ought to be Occordietc, to Father . policy. It is cleaned that this .has: d • VI the A .' had acComr . , . .,Vaughan. ... er am y i is a too pat- • been made necessary especially. Since , • • plis,hed -things and then settled. : * * .: e'' . -. '.• . . of wealth; but it is • notruniversal and ' 0 t " 1 ' "t 11 t' wealth'. iteelt is p . .f b e ent that' unlees ..the p.o.wer of Germany, oor • aral • ee I aa the defeat of the German navy_ in " ' • "Iintnatarity" it the chief cause of ... and the spirit which moares men to that 'nation Will dokninate. the world. whieh'is jutt becoming .kiiown to the • • . . . . —, • , ' - 'this year's Lower School: :. examine-, . . . .. . p,e6Ple. • • . • • . ' .' • • - • . . . Russians in Germany qoptplain to The; Chancellor's. attitude towards • • . •• Red Crest Workers ' * *peace :end its essentials will be filliar -. explained to the peOble in thia whirl, , SuaSian prisoners in Germany are wind speech-maki-ng catnpaian. .. ameng the greatest sufferers fronithe ; strong and prevents lodging'. TJnder. Of course, he. expect a Germany to food .•thortage prevaiting in that coun- about one percent • of win, • or- at least he will Pretcnd_ to try, . according .to reports - made by 'i ier, flalyzin:g , present abhormal conthtions a fertilha believe .it, for any'. other" attitude tem& of tliii-M, stera-ofthe Russian ! ammonia, eighi pereent Phosphoric would Menace his office as ,Chancel.: Red Cross upon their return freta a 1 id and, one percent potash maybe lor, which is the 'next highest official visit to • the German' prisms • camps: 1 substituted or the potash • .: may be position to that of the Kaiset., ' These charges •arecontained• in eopies•il aorxic--i-'todi • But he is opposed to ariy notion of of •Russian newspapers that teethed ,' phosphoric acid. slimed be increased entirety . in •whicli case : : the territorial aggrandizement : at the •Switeetland ..,in July • and are being soinewhat • . expense of either France, Belgium or 1 teprinted by many Swiss papers The One grower says, ."I ,like to raise Russia; and t'he strangest ' thing , following is. part of 'a report Appear - buckwheat because' it is the. only grain seen e,cloth, is geed if kept wet.' If about his •policar is that he is desirous ing an the flussky _lar.jedomosty • ° 1 for which I can buy fertilizei. 'on a. &Tit is worse than nothing, • .• • • ' their exams, but not educated' m. a had seen the. truth of this statement that this war Will, proveto' many of of retaining -British friendship' after Malecoav ef an address. delivered 'in reaI..sense. . ' ......: .,. .. ' • often in. his scheal. ' By till. meant, such .class whose social conditions the ,wat. - thr ancient Russian' capital by Miss- .. : . • a. ....* taaa. • Pa . - parent& give' your girls . a • ,good, .edu. 'will -not permit them to engage-inado- • ' He is antagonittic to any. r_p_epeeei— _ a . • . . coarse, this policy would • annul -the tenenced, any attempts at familiarity:. Teuton promise to the United States conditions in Syria. • • and would doubtless embroil the re- .. •public in the Eoropean conflict, 'But The 4 waiter says the condition. of what is that to a nation that can dis- the peoPle of Syria is past all be - regard treatiep when they stand in lief. Many hangings have taken the way of what she considers her piece. They are not exactly hangings, tnilitety necessities?. . . for the victim is suspended with .his As an excuse for this policy Of pit- toes barely touching a stool, which he acy it is urged. that .Gerniany Made often kicks from under him. • ., . it is estiinated that . 60,000 to 80, - 'the promise to, the T.Y. S. to cease this barbarous form Of warfare only 000 have died froni starvation in this pawn the condition that. the 'IL S. country. The people who are deport - should exact' the recognitien Of ina ed are made to give Up their belong- ings: The Turkish Government then sells the/land and promises thein sim- ilar allotments -in the north or in An- gora. They -are then sent to Sivas or • anitnelio Breeden of beef cattle areworking into the hanglia of 'the feeders; proa ducing balls bred on such line lines that when they are mated 'with 'fair,. ly Well bred 'cower they, will ,prOduce syrometreical and fairly- fine betted Ma's capable of putting on geed meat quickly, and on the • right parts of the . kody. • This good breeding. .in the • bulls is largely repsonsihle for the ability of the progeny to put on flesh possible pound of flesh, and, to car- ry out this prineiple to the best ad- vantage he must si0. the feeding from• kart to finish himself, in face for the sake of the greatest cc niooti' the • feedee should be the twee Irir ef the • nimals-thatahe intends to halms Farmers of Ontario have great Op- portunities to breed 0331 cattle for feeding on their own farms, as the best herds of Pure 'breds of the beef - -breeds are afairly ' well distributed. throughout the province; the quanta' of these animals being . proved by their success in the show rings at the ' Western fairs that have been held this Summer. The, actual 'breed - chosen by the beef catthe raiser can be largely a 'matter of his own pre- ference, governed to a great extent •by the conditions- under Which_he farms, but the primary object of each one should be to tise-a pure bred bull of a beef breed, ai41 one that a '-a• good individual. „ , • Good Milking possibilities., in ihe beef cows is being more considered than formerly, but this quality can • only be expected in a small degree on, their part a the Production as com- pared-vvith that of the pure dairy breeds, yet it is a point of great ini. porttince to the small breeder who , , commonly grown -.Japanese Bilver • des not expect to obtain fancy prices Hull and Common Grey, the fieat two for all his animals. A beef cow can being the•xnost generally .used. Jap - be .considered good milker if she . anese has , a dark -colored Seed, while will mite two calved, and bhis per - the Silver Hull has a smaller seed, formance should satisfy her ,oWners glossy or silvery in appearance. These as it is the means of saving labor, arid - two varietiet are of about equal, value, the calves, foe' beef purposee will be when yields are, considered. better ,than if raised by hand. • Because of its plantfood require - merits and the exceediogly short sea.- „Hot Weather Miles. son of growth; znantre has not been • found satisfactory as a fertilizer for 1. Load lightly, and ()rive slowly. buckwheat. • Fresh Manure emitains StiOpin the shade if possible „ 3. Water your horse as often as pos- sible. So long as a horse working; water in small' quantities will not hurt him. But let him drink only: a few swallows if he is going to. stand and sandy soils .under normal condi- tions about 200 to 300 pounds of • a Do not fail to water him at night after he has eaten his hay. fertilizer containing one to two ,per - 4. Wben! he comes in after work, cent ammonia,, ten to twelve percent phosphoric „acid and two to four' per- •sponge oir the harness ,merks and: cent rifest.' should be applied at time' sweat, his ekes, his nose and mouth, of seeding. On loam or other: soils- .aoclethe dock.: Wash his feet but not his legs. . • • . richain organic mattera use less am- monia. BuclivOheat, urine Other 5. If the therniomeber is 76 degrees.' or higher, wipe .him all over with a grains -never straightens up after , it once falls. Potash makes the stalks- damp sponge. Use vinegar water if ,possible. DO- not turn bhe hose on him. a: •• • • - 6. Saterrdaa night, -briar- mash, lukesearrn; and add a table- speonful of saltpeter. 7. DO not use a• horse -hat, unless it is a canopy -top hat. The ordinary hell -shaped hat deed more harra than good. 8. A sponge en bop of the head, or compared. with the power of thought be crushed throligh adequate killing, the North k Sea battle -the truth of PRISONERS IN NEED OF FOOD. the failureaof so many candidates in towardthe highest ideals., 'edecetionalitt in this Provanee. " .* tians, is the opinion of a prominent wqr examination should be taken at the , "Educate a boy and 'you train a end of the third year of the high man: educate girl and you train a school course instead of •the- secoed. farhily."The Farmer's- Magaeine. :Camlialates for -prospective teachers ...After Moat of _lifetime wenet_ should be educated thoroughly rather this trite saying_ that embodies our war were Mentiotied at •a Fecriating than cromined With 'a' let of -facts views, frequently expressed in pages meeting the 'other 'evening, but the There is. no good to come. from of -writing and often, given expres- good that will conic to many Women Rinsing the truth -the boys and sion on the platform. Given an edu- was not included in his list We are girls turned out of • the \Tormal cated mother in a house and as sure told that in the' old countries there Schools are not sufficiently eoucated as that the, sun's rays produce or pro- are 1,600,090 women in excess of - foe school teachers Immaturity mote growth' in the vegetable king- men, but this war will greatly in- , marks their, whole course from. the dom so does she preside over an in- crease the proportion of wemeri. A public school° to the Normal, final ex- :,telligent household. Every honest great pumhet of these live aimless ainitiations. They are &whined for school teacher will tell you that he lives under ordinary conditions, so Atal all will eeho the words of, Sir Edward Grey 'at• tile beginning of the War, "I would rather be dead than under .the rule of Germany." * * * - • 'Benefits that will come from this . We eften -think ..what A 'joy work cation. Do hot confine it to edueation mettle- service, 'but this war has -put that would interfere With ilia an , commen. task we thoreughly enjoy it ! should be learned by every girL • • but referring to the daily round, the . school 'Every .perion who seeslhis work pro-; epering in his hands must \ feel a ! "Whatesrer you would have appear do now eat! he has in view a fraternal comi;ina- --- ! this plantfood hastens ripening., thus ing Mild water, or, if neceesary, chop, ' crowds them , may ' n'ot see the joy, time should run concurrently with the there is work foraall 0 a -all kinds of work in the home task. 'Does n9t the fact that the un- into the schools." This is a sentence wearies' of-Errglamtatelicateasnd We sill recogniie his ' position of epidemics. at all.. All the prisoners . brings to living. Those Whose work in the school 'either -the .hoinia educe- a new Parpose in life fel. them-- understanding with Great Br • itain for T will be. for years to come. One ' ti9n or working agreement between . . • 9. if the horse is overcome by heat, get him into_ffieshade, remove .13hr- ness end, birdie, wash out his mouth, sponge him all over, shower his legs, fetal give him .two dunces of aromatic • loss euring a, wet harvest season or spitits. of 'ammonia or two ounces of -- does. not need to pity the working Germany, Britain...and the. Unite broad, entirely open plane. They have • auses grain to ferm and: hastens ma, :watPt; sweet, .spirits of nitre; • in a pint of denied ieentity of economic recogni= 'women eacept .in so far as they are .ed so PersisteritlY to aviiici ateak disinfecting rooms. On. the sanita.ry I States, and .this is why he has work- electric. lighting, sewer . systems, and ;from early, frosts. Phosphoric acid burity, hence an available supply of warm.. or .give him a pint 'of coffee • •Cool- his head at once, us. • ple,asueeaan_aleaferming his regulpr in the life. of a people you. should put tion "hrith the men; •but the gentle- with Washington... • . side "they are faultless:, there ate. nO .day note and ,pay for it out of the N. Orsschevskaya, a member of ' the Russian -Red Cross. ' • tropaitarnakesa. "Externally the camps are ideally rBluocnkgwelheaa.nt.dbitoheemegr.fat thrrpeeen•sweekass arranged. They are almost all of , toinevenly. This often eau ses • quite the same type; barracks built upon a preeenting loss from early frosts and ped ice, wrapped in a cloth. exposure or. • used member' weakene -and becomes that made us sit up and thlok. Its tenderly reared creatures who • nave Chaneellor as este of • supteme no- are vnreirratetFwgainst ,.,rnallpo - rmarl y cause urmg wet ' uselest go, to .w..tbat activity is. truth soon dawned uponns, tete It 'is been brought up in lincuriout idleness Portance, carryipg with, it' responsi- phus mid cholera: Most of• the Medi- '..a.oftaaaaaat. _tear itcal serviee asaioe by Russian physie seasons while waiting for all • the hini with two quarts of eats, mixed • the natural. conditioe for man. We a great truth -much after the char, and see their lives slight and uhfruit. pity man or; womap who hae• eater, of the old'headline of 'the copya ful aild idle endaiinlease-these are to. a ltY for mperial acs and policies to n arge ettent, and 'it has been -tura ciaps. There ie noticeablee shortagi grain to ripen. • , • ,, • • with bran, apd a little, weter; end add a little salt or 'auger.' Or give him • no erraler, work to do.. In thede hell- books-fiAs the_twig is bent the. tree's be Pitie0. For these the war, 'though inizial that poesibly the. Kaiser him- of medicines, The German :doctirs., farmer. does not need exPen- • dear t meg some petsent become very ' inclined." That other old copyline, restlese and iniserable after ' they "The boy is father to the man," ," is it may have torn their, heartstrings through beteavements, bee' beer; a suing, • • • . self it back ofthe -course he is pue- are kied in their teeatment of the • vpri:tiiTtohl.h:erirberin„.4g. :tohsvn.e.t.y.efillx,edi:lels4he e_swisetnert does the hhoalrzetri:ngis 011;1 of deir‘aopdle, although it require.; hard lit- uckwheat crop. , An old-hathioned • 11 Vv.itch short Ind the •ce.0";ur,irybo!irrolfielii.fwi letfairyedat,:rior stops.. with wjth his 'legs braced- - ps.„ iive • maehipery for lia:v..easiti.._Lhe through the camp was the selfstune eaeoy. :most eatisfaetory machines for, haia sideways', he iv' in danger of n heat -eomplaint that she heard herel-J.We are hengria_we ellen 3ret veiling% Gutting -fit begun as socm as sen,etroke ,and needs attention at i',•inarve bcfen -off -clutyafor a .few days. Alike „pertinent, nonoiring _sincerely, 4-stR-vation. -r-e enwtten,, a , Time gams to hang so heavily and the - absolute truthfulness of these Inirpese iCheaven; 0: lf he stan(Iq passes se elbUrly to them: President old eayings, why do- we Tart-ihaVe -At IF-- - --*-----+-------;- ', • came he says ro many sensible things country -better rural c•sehools?' The . . Kaiser, lo --id" might anvolve--radiral sses, 'says!: a One who tountry °Vet, 95 out of every 100 changee not only in the foreign- office, Its Total Length is Very Nearly 850 hi his addre His prerogatives are so far reach- ing -that a ehingeArathe -Chancellor. .at this time would' be interpreted by Eliot, whom we so often quote be- better system of education in this INAIS E -A -T the Gerinan'peoPtle-AS" a rebuff-to-th • seeks happinese, -in the • so-called country boys and girls, get all ' the • of life Ma at well despair schooling they ever receive in the of happiness." After al , tthe only ' one -room, • ungradee, cross -ids true happiness comes from doing,.', sch.eol, which, as a rule, is taught by One's duty, and work' of some kind I a young girl who knows very little • or another is 'the duty of all of us. • about the real paoblems of life., How * AP, , . . We °lily need to appeal to persona . forced to inaction and there will be • very many of them after thid war, to . realise what a- blessing .it• is to have our daily duties calling US each morning to action Mid to have.',dur. home duties and responsibilities -W- eal' us to work for those near and e dear to us -Who are dependent upon' , us. Truly the blessings of 'work ere many. In no war is character so de. • veloped .as by the daily contact with and overeoming the petty of life, .aceepting its drudgery and making its waste places bloseem. as the rose, • .fl.,Vett with its. accompanying &erne. Tnere ie ever. an inspiration to work When laving itoMe ono for whom to trevidd, the heoefisarlee a life, We lnoW gi.no better emulation or spur • • • then can she Prepare bpys and girls to meet the steen re'alities that' are sore to meet everyone and early in life, `too, very likely',• • • * * , "We spend -much moriey equ.ip and man our schools," .remarks a trustee., That's true, but the educa- tion imparted is not practical.' INThat sense is there in running a counts school on the same course's:if study as the, city schools? •We admit that the sante 'expenditure Would aceom- plish more desirable results, Is ,it not true that our presentsystemof educatioti finds only some 5 per cent. of the children in high schools.? They do not go beyond the Publie school. The tomtit of the Whiele system is an abstrect and generalized education •that leads 414 Ter cent1 the chit, •••••*".... • but in every department ef mdminis- • tration of intetnal Waits' so that 'Chi a is repOrted .te be censidering t restore on of the oiq •canal. eye: - tem, of which there .Were at. one time 66,000 milts within the empire. Can-. ' teries before the (*ristian era the great rivers, C Ina wet° diverted from their natural courses, the Waters ope turned. hito another's bed, and the aeaterwaYs carried, along in the direction of desired traffic, The an - °lent Grand 'Canal „exteods from itangehote to limit -SW tsteeersitig the' ,Provipces of Cheitimig, Klangse, Shangtong and ChM, the toal 'length of the caiial being about • 856 miles, Chins. Is in desperate need of trees.. portatione and it 'has been 'estimated by enghteers that the canal syetem can - be restored at a less Ceat than that whip would be involved in the build- ing at the necessary rallwaYe. .With Ihe camels agabi iii 'operation the mil. way building can go oft at greater lei, sure.-Chrietian floral& A great many men have Made their mark in this World because of their liability to write. any new incumbent of the offide wenild, mean offiositi n of the Kaiser himself. Slag allies should eontinue to ' the .--bsve sinee •"±be drive" die of, buriger here.' Ifhis 'complaint the fiTafable-esoans have dieappetiteda- * dogged her footsteps through, all the m.- often just 'before the first frost it.1 camps Sciuth Germany, .The ra- expected. Buckwheat will matute dons ate insuffieient. The ' s,oldiefs•. its "seed in a few 'days, if, atter 'etit- - . . pPosetiato-eciit_300 granis ,aaboa ting, the .crop is left in loose 'bundles • 101/4 minces.) of bread a 'day, .but in ' u lore t ey are t roppe rom t "reality they reeeive less. Everyavhere .cradle or reOpee..„.. It shon ld'itn be wrn, as , the • prisoners tetaise to do Work that set up in -sinall ,hocks and tied near • began, the ;Chancellor may find • it mightaae used .for m:lirery purposes, the 'top with SOnfe. stranko,of the . hard to make any impressive ' favor, somethieg which hase sharper 're-., Stan* bent upward fr.am the aides of ' able to his policies, uPon the•Geil-no gime og a Lonsequence, *uch as pun- • the 'shoeq. . The it buckwheat ' is ishm.ent by imprisonment and being bound to e stake. , The application .of the. lest numbed punishment.- as• tified by the comion'odent Of a 'eainn through the leek of jail spr.. a and. people, and .a crisis' is liable to be precipitated Gerniany shelter . to that which France•withessed in 1871.- The Entente powers are 'watching events with -keen interest •and atand -to gain hi any event, '• • Denver, July 81st, 1010. ° • ' A Slight Matter. 41 don't' see you ab Miss Golder's receptions any. more, old man," "N,o;'' she and Thad- a little "'differ - Mice of °Pinion," -."Nothing serious, hope," usually left in the fi'eld in the ihoelts' until threshing time, when it is drawri intend threshed either' with the flail. er by machinery. The filthier need generally have no also because it was custom .• putt- Lear of this crop being damaged by ishment in the-'Germa-n aer. , The either insect eneeies et fungous dis- prisoners are paid from 6 to, :' cents eases, as- the buckwheat plant is but for ,their work. With- these . shiegs little affected by either. It is an ex - they are able to iniprove th f,00d." celleitti crop for destroying weeds and Of Course. "I am going to Immo my 1. ..store 'the Vortex.' , "Oh, nor tsTily tholight I Was the ' "Why that?" tan sheought to Mary and she "People will just natte 4., be thought I wasn't" •drawn into itp • • for renovating and 'putting. the soil in fine mellow condition; and when properly lithe -lied could be grown with. profit 041 many more farms. Medium -Sized Young Fat Steer. The possibility to mature eilrly is •,the au,ality that la being more anck Two Anglers. • A barefoot boy, A white birch pole; —WO A 'swinimin' hole, A baited hook, . • A tufs'und swish; „A steady.. haul,' A string of fish, . A white &Mk milt, • A canvas boat; A cosbly rod, A patent float, • A gaudy •fly, A 'cash and swish; A pretty sight, Bu !' t nary fish Russia Prosperous, Russia it said to be the only wale ' ring nation Whose people are aetutilly growing more prosberotis during the - conflict, Prohibition answering ,for, part a the Rating° and the forted velopment of new Industries Ing the real of it, "•• 4 • lo