The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-10-05, Page 3;
Wbatis the best way to SPerA WI"
44y07 What are the best e0114.41040.
•• 'Those who bia'vo. Suet, returned from
•outingg.might hold' an experience
taeotimi or symposium in the 'clIcY
papers azowthat the suliJect fresh
• In their minds. ToAnany the ways
of others are very...1)=11er. NOY 4
AMOY Which had a nice eeol house in
the city With concrete cellar for re-
fiater Wag niSalinfe beneath a tin root
.:tit the country boarding Wise,or
sUmMerlietel, suffering unspealielolu
tortures, yet litinglY insisting that
they Ware, having a lovely time. To
the young, however, all is happiness,
and hundreds of boys and girls 'ere
fitted, through the country experience,
for the studies of the fall and Win-
ter. Many agencies have done nobly
In taittng the„ Poor' into the country
o• for a ddy or two at o tiiue.' This is a
beautiful ministry, • The pity is that
it ls so scantily supported for there's
hardly any form, of service which
, could so ourely be depended upon, to
„bring reonita in strengthened bodies;
• but in minds and hearts, too, made
.better by contact -with nature in which
. ,the "immanence of God is best dis-
, closed.
But -es we write (Sept. 4) the town
is filling up, pleasure, rest and health -
seekers are coining back. The home
10 •being aired and the rooms dusted,
"Children. are seen in groups 'narrat-
ing their adventurers and swopping
" stories. Normal: conditions will soon
be restored' again. The people tell pa
that it was very hard to leave the
pledhant companions, to be torn from
the fields, the synods, the shores of
the enchanted lake, the base of the
purple bills; but we were made for
work and not for happiness' as Car-
lyle always insisted, though he would
!sin all probability thought • differently
if he had not been a -victim of dyspep-
pla-a complaint which gave a 'sone-
' bre touch to much of the thcoight of
the Biblical -worthies whose lamenta-
tions would have been turned•into joy
did they but possess a decent stein-.
ach. The country home is being dos-
ed up; the city home' is opened. The
• •
Marked lianletimes far-reaching, •In -
titmice .on character- . This infiocnco
works two ways; It works psycholo-
gically, 4;14 it Works phYsiologically.
There is 4 direct psycholompal in-
fluence from tho mere know)cdge'that
one it vitting,•standingi and walkin&.
as a man should. •
Self-rospeet increases forthwith,
timidity diminishes, self-reliance
•grows, there is a gain in the spirit of
initiative.
An this is thine in accordance with
the James -Lange doctrine of the
emotions. Assume the physical -ex-
pression of an emotion, this doctrine
tightly affirms' and you Will develop
within' yourselfthat emotion.
,
The trioet Important thing in life
is geed health and what we eat and
how we eat contribute to our condi-
tion of health very largely. Fietcher-r
Ism is highly cominexided, to seekers
'after, health.. Briefly, it is a doctrine
of thorough mastication. Before eat-
ing, Fletcher cautions, `sure that
you are really hungry and, not pam-
pering e false appetite. If the true
appetite, that will relish plain bread
alpne, is not present, wait for it. Es-
pecially beware of the early morning
'Imblt of craving. Wait for the earn-
ed appetite, if you have to wait till
noon. Then chew, masticate, munch,
bite, taste everything you take into
your mouth until it is not only
liqul-
fled ond made neutral, or alkaline by
saliiia, but 'until the reduced sub-
stance has settled back into the folds,
at the back of the mouth and excites
the impulse, and continue to chew at
the remainder, liquid though It be,
until the last morsel disappears in re-
sponse to the swallowing impulse.
Never forcibly swallow anything that
the instincts connected with the
mouth show any disposition to re-
.
ject." .•
A person following these plans will
soon, lose his desire, for meals or any
sort of carnivorous foods, and be sat-
isfied With but a small portion of, the
qpantity of food generally, that the
• life becomes strenuous once more.. ordinary man eats. • Mr. Fletcher
Books have to be bought. Home les-
• sons have to be studied and instantly
• forgotten the moment one goes
through the • school -unrelated as,
' they are, to actual life. But what a
wholesome taskopid what subtle in-
fluences coming into the life through
nature making for unconsceus revel.; fully to compete with college students
ence and moral feeling! But changes in many athletic feats. • "
are wholesome and it is well that aer * * * *
many can find change and variety of •
AWORD OF PRAISE.
holds himself rforth as an example •of
the benefits of the scheme. When
he began experimenting, he was past
fifty, fat, in',poor. health, and reject-
ed by insurance companies, and later
regained his. health, increased, his gen-
eral endurance, and was able success -
life. during the ' midsummer when
business is quiet.
* * * *
Parents, teachers and others who
have care of children should exercise
strict discipline in regard to Their car-
__ _liege. The advisability for this will.
' be seen if they will stand. for•a few
minutes and observe people passing
by on a busy street in town or city
...end note' the -difference in • gait and
• style of walking.' H.0 Addington
Bruce wrote a sane article which ex -
pains what we mean. He says: '
Here is' a hint for the man who re-
cognizes that his . character 'is weak
• and ,wishes to -strengthen it:
• Sit straight, 'stand straight, walk
straight.•
u
It. is ndeniably true that Weak,
. crooked bodies may accompany vig-
orous characters.. Also it is true that
• 'wealt characters sometimes are found
in men Who hold -themselves splen-
didly' erect. '
Nevertheless these are only excep-
•.
How much a little word of praise wilt
keep a fellow going!, •
How much a little compliment will
keep the sunlight flowing!
A word of cheer will do it, too, '
So fellow -man, and woman;.
Let's try to-day...along the way
To be a little human!
•
How much a comforting remark will
• do to keep one steady!'
Hew sweet the heart responds with'
song and idways up and ready!
A word of praise., a word of cheer,
They have a mighty power
To lift the spirit out of glooni
• The same as any 'flower!, •"
• r
EtOW MOCI1 man can do when he is
told he's doing finely!
How much it makes the rld a world
he learns to love' divinely! •
The highest and the lowest like •
The tender 'word and human,
And as it is with men it is
tions to the rule that posture has a •The same way with a woman!
HIM PETITION
FOR END OF WAR
,
-THE GERMAN , SOCIALISTS
.ACTLVE.
rising anger againbt•thoie, who made
the war and caused all this Misery,
and Who keep ,it lasting for political
tinddynastic reasons. The. German
Socialists, it 'seems, are at last be-
ginning to find their voices again,
• if one May judge frOm, such letters
ARE as the follewing written by 'an edu-
toted hand:
Memorial ior Peace. • .
"You silt how far the peace move-
ment has advanced. It is impossible
to say anything definite, but we So-
cialists are new going to present to
the Ininerial Chancellor a great peace
memorial; 'containing the signatures
Captured Soldiers Don't Claim Vic-.
tory, But Say; They Can't
Be Beaten.
It, is , extraordinary difficult to of those citizens who want a speedy
,
know whether all. the -British shell- Peace_without annexations and Viritil.._
fire and all the. dead have yet begun out violence to other 'nations. • These
to shake the cohfidence of the Ger- will nut their names on the lists, arid
mans in the strength of - their war ;those lists will be collected from the
Machine. Some' el the officers \ whowhole empire and handed" to the
have 'Come in as prisoners still . keep 'Chancellor. God, • grant that their
their pride, •writes • e correspondent names my • be put down in millions,
'with the .British ArmieS in the field. that. the 'Government may see that
They have seen the losses inflicted on the great mass of the people want an
them .in and behindtheir-lines, but early peeee.
. say: "you can't beat us. We can't' .' Distress is Acute. •
be beaten."' ° ' ' .' 1 "One may hope this accursed inur-
That is .diffe' rent from the old dering of Peoples may come. to an
•phrase: "We're' winning. ViCtory. is end soon, but, unfortunately, the ob.
kt,'S
A -
`••••••••"Ii
e,f
forwira •
orame e
:644..e./44,14,4
Atottit
•
Great War Chiefs of Britain and‘Franee Who Planned Drives of Allied Armies on Western Front
LEFT to right: A.rtistide Brand, F'rench Premier; general ,Toffie,general de p Castleneu, Chief of the French
G'eneral Staff; Lloyd George, Great Britain's Minister of War; M. Thomas, French Minister of Munitions; and
General •Roques, French Mlniater of War. This. gathering of the greatest of France's,,War Chiefs and Lloyd
• George, Britain's Minister ot War, bp one of Jlia moat notable conferences that hive taken, place since the be-
- ginning of the great war. •
a,
UNSEEN HAND THAT
• FEEDS THE ALLIES
THE 'COMMISSARIAT DEPART-
.MENT IN LONDON. • •
common articles of war bought, for
the Allied' armies:
Ten million ,pairs of boots.
Thirty million yards of cloth. •
One` hundred thousand miles of
telephone wire."• •
One hundred million sandbags.
The figures in respect of the more
destructive Munitions of war" cannot,
migiht. Others again, were sly and
casnistical, while some had the
audacity to berate Americans franIcly,,
but these missionaries of Prussianism
accomplished but little in their
proselyting work.
They had a two -fold purpose in
view. They *corked not, only to con-
ciliate American public opinion and
turn Americans to defend their cause,
for .obvious reasons, be cited here, but •hut to arouse and organize the German
they are no less impressive. Americans Into a corapact political
Buys' Monitions and Supplies For the - It 'is hardly necessary to remark--- Party, which was designed to terrorize,
that is, in fact, the whole raison if it could not persuade, the govern -4
reent to aid Germany by material
Varied Needs of Eight
Nations.
At the cor,ner of Kingsway, • Lon-
d'etre of the commission -that 'the
•sums expended, Vast as they are,
would have been Much greaterif there
had been no offiCial organization to
regulate prices, to control the world's
N4 .110,": WAY, But Illow-,esod,
' On Some farina the lit0:4st JO „Mode'
that fedeler is vol.= to lee'dl a. cer-
tain number of elOvvii and heifers tbs
year rotind. Ntimbere ratty Convey
an idea of the owner's wealth:in c;ise 'Weather, many secc,ndary diseases arer
04 beef animals, hub wIlen. it comes to sure t* occur, and I hay& recently 11944
dairy cows. it, is no criterion a the 'geed Poft bInch spots oecurring • fit
i
yearly returns nor of the =oh value the heads. TheSe 'black PROP:are bre -
of 'the anifnals. To -day, the ques- dependent of the rust-, and, on examia.:
tion is. how much Milk does the cow ation 'ander the•micrOKOPex &re:found
prodnee and what is the test?, There
are herds that have made remarkable
"records .while others have boarded on
some other department a the farm,
Bowever, in the poorest herd there „is
likely to be one or more cows -that are
callable of makitg a substantial profit
Lor their owners;' -if properly fed and
cored for. ' In the testing work inch-
viduels of all dairy -breeds set apace
that °is hard to follow. It is too
Mach to eipect. a whole herd to come_
anyway near some of the records
madeebut, it is poseible to bring them
t� °Ise holf the amount. Ten. ethlira
giving 9,000 pounde cif "milk worth
$1.25 per hundredweight will be a
to other =sea thall rtlistm c.iteife
degcribcd as follows;
}lead. Rot; Owing to the WeaknelEt
•of the wheat from the rust attack',
and to the •cOntintied wet and Minas
'to be F.'usarium Wilt and Macrospar-,
lees, .twe &Minion Wilts alwaia -
to attack. a Weakened Plant, UV°
will kle .nivalt. barn to - grain '04*.
Might. ether -Wise have graded nuw,
ber • threet as they, bend to give it a'
moldy smell and -dirty color. ksani0
thesehead wilts' had so developed as
pies sent the. from" • glaskatchowaml.'
to C#U13E) the grain to be quite soft.
Ergot:. is`ieldem ,•that We see!.
ergot 'en Virliciatir but when; condition*.
favor one disease they alto foyer an.,
other, •and Y.. find much erget on ba
ley and rye, in some ease* so% On.
barley, and. considerable on wheat
which is seldom ergoted, The ergots
gross return of $L126 or $112,50 Per appear as large black Protruding
•cow. "A cosi can be well -fed /or grains. On eating them open, they
half this amount', leaving $56.26 to are p,urplieh Inside and, milts.) hard..
pay for labor and over head expenses. They make flour milli, for use, and
At these fingers a fair price is allow- hence should be carefully looked for
ed for feed arid there is a good prbfit this year. I do not expect that they
made. On the other hand there are will be oufficiently common'in 'wheat
herds of 20 cows which do not aver- to hold up much of it for flour -mak-,
age over -6,000 pounds of milk in • a Ing, but on barley and rye they will
lactatiob. period. At $r.25 per be sufficiently common as to be a
hundredweight this would give a gross factor in their grade this year. • •
retium of $1,g50 or $62.50 per cow..Ity. Smut orBunt Plots of Wheatwere•
is doubtful if a elm can he kept. in sovnrthis year with'ed wheat, Un-
reasonably good condition under $46 treated, and, as One might expect on
a -year 'leaving $17.50 to cover over such a: year as this, bunt has•devel0P-
head expenses and labor. , In other ed on these pieta to the extent of per -
words the herd ;of 20 cows gives their haps'20%. All the weaker andoor-
owner only $26 more cash than the ef heads are bailly "bunted? -very
kernel in the head. , This is a splen-
•oljd illustration of the expediency of
treating seed grain with fOrmalin.
, •
Hog"IPastures.
Pigs make the Cheatlest gains • on-
pastute: Brood sows running on
for the paltry sum of $26. To snitch
plass deft. my herd belong is the ne I
ci-e-s" and a half' pOunds or grain Per each
good pastere and nursing litters
do as well when receiving one to one
tion every dairyman should ask
• self this fait It is quite possible _'_
him- 100 pounds live weight ,of Bova,as
have a herd airerege 9,000 pounds of sows in dry lob•receiving p1/4 pounds
above the average for the province. .
is grain per day per each 100 ponnda.
live Wght. The pasture just about
milk, but 5,000 pounds per cow
This fall ,help is scarce and feed is c.ziits the feed Cost in two: The pas-
eitpensive . Although hay was a ture alone does not furnish enough
feed'for either the breed sow With lit -
'ter of for ,the weaned pigs. They
should be fed some grain, so as .
Make a raid growth. In this. Wel '
,the spring pig can be ready for •nuer-
ket before. real cold weather ,sets
•
Alfalfa, cleVer, brormis and winter,
we giake.the earliest pastures. When,
these have hot, been provided early •
spring Seeding of such grains as oats
and barley ,or rape is the next test
' '•
,SHELL ,BLINDNESS.
Patient Was Cured *trough Being
herd of 10 cows gives their owner.
•means. As tile months flew by, these
brazen conspirators grew more bold There is a reduction ef $11.25 in coati
and wanton in their methods, goaded of feed per cow. ! .The over head ex-
on, no doubt, by their failure to Make pensee per cow are the, seine a,nd.the
don, ,where that royally wide and satisfactory headway through mi.ld. labor hill' is the. same'. ' Keeping the
markets and ,t6 apportion the avail- and conciliatory means. . . . ••large herd of average milkers forces
ciircle of Aldwych, there rises the able supplies of food and war meter- ' They held meetings .at•Whith they'
straight street merges ,into the semi- able owner to do doable the amount of
nil to the 'needs of each Government -openly preadied. sedition, 'and. through
great triple bending_ whiele contains' concerned. And always • this* main the G•erman-American preso, theY an- 'work requiredwiththesselepted herd,
Empire House, Indio. Rouse and Cane nouneed that they 'had formed a coall-
ada House. .It is in .aspect half noble object has been kept tigotously in
lion with ' the Irish -Americans,. and
view, that none of the uniticina re- •
and half conimonplaceethe front hay- • • 'd. f the • '1111' ... _,.... would seize the 'country and rule it in
*ng hale !strength. and dignity, white quire; h orm e adequate pursuit of the the intereate of the Weer. Some of
_ . ... war s ou be withheld •or delayed in these more hot headed Stamps even
pictured a ,German Imperial Prince
sitting in the White House; and ruling.
as viceroy of the Raiser, '.
. .. Of courae, anyone who had the least
• - .The services of the War Office in knowledge...of...the Irish _people, would
most impo•rtant a all the many wheels this connection in regard both• to e know that•e coalition of that kind with. good' Crop -and the corn is making.
of war. It' is the. headquarters' of the Purchase of perSonal .equipment in the , Germans ! Would be as 1mposisible as.. progress, bhe spring crops in general.
Conimission Internationale de .. REM.- quantities .referred to and the ',supply., mixing -water a,nd. oil' and expect a .
f ' nitions cannot be verestimated I chemdeaLaffinity to reSult.' appear to be below the average. , On
stone columns and wide and high win- transit by keason Of any overlapping
dow ?paces, the sides being merely a of orders or confusion of interest.
maw 'and aching wilderness of red. •-
nclulaiing the Supply.'
brick. But within its immense walls
revolves bone of the least -known and
tillement, the CommiSsariat Depart- ,
The Universal Buyer ,
organization which is able to provide
and the completeness of a system or Put this claim, though ludicrous in , many farms the rations of roughage
small' Ok' the herd reduced. It must
nient of the Allies. ' the exteleme, shows the, denseness of , and, coarse grains will have ' to be
, ' for the supplies both of the British the aveiage German in. dealing with!
those 'outside a the Fatherland ' be remembered that a certain portion
The , Commission de' avil Ilement fig 'rig forces an 'o eit Allies, no
it • ai Though" the Irithman has hi g 1 .' of. the feed must go to sustain the
is the unseen hand that .feeds the ' enly in Europe but le Canada and ancee . over what, he thinkss efrtre-
animal body whether the cow is or is
many 'great 'fires of war; • In all the America, is too little realized by the harshness of English rule, he is nee
' markets. of all the world -that is to public.. The revictualing commission ; apt to want to exchange his pletee in not producing. Over this amount is
say, all the world outside •the cOun- aloe enjoys the full advantage ,of the ' thp sun for any straight -jacket ceer- freetobietpurntehde tiitcixhmt iealknifbrthe.e . It tries of the enemy -it buyes the guns, experience of the•agen(s•of the Minis- dye reginie the Kaiser hhs to offer.'
it, so happens that the Germans lit achippeafs .bhatfit 'will be mor rofitahle
the shells, the rifles; the ammtmitionj try of Munitions in America and else-
Taminany Hall are eontrolled by the to Weed out the 'cows that are not
the saddles, the Note, and the uni- where, and enormous •:quantities of
Irish, and you may be sure thgeWill be,
paying their way and feed the reniajn-
forms and all the rest of the melti- metals and machinery have been pur-
farious equipment requited by the chased all over the World by this should they. a esce, for the Irish wilt (IOf the herd a little heavier. . An
, P drelative posiltioo Of the tyv'o raees,
fighting ' ships of England's :Allies. means for the benefit of the ..Allied hardly sacrifice their posltion in extra 'few pounds of, concentrates
The commission buys in tons by the Gov.ernmente.
million, and pays ' in pounds by the All orders are placed in such a mane
hundred million: In short, a myriad nee as to avoid competition between
quartermaster sergeants in one • ' the various purchasing Governments,
to exclude the irresponsible specula -
But lt, rose from very small. begin -
tor and to insure that the articles
ningse , In August, 1914; a few days
bought are obtained from reliable
'aftercewar broke out, several French
sources and are of the best quality.
officers came- to London to buy boots
and similar articles for the French ' Ce -operative Pnrchasing.
army. These were the first of a long
series of war purchases, whose extent,
beginning in thousands of ' Pounds,
rose rapidly to millions. They result-
ed in the formation byagreement be-
tWeeri the French -and Britigh Govern-
ments 'of a Commiasion de .Ravitaille-
ment (a revictueling-cOminisaion, in
the old bhint naval phrase), with the
following objects: • -question of the provision of teenage' wit whom we were at peace. . • •
For downr The 'adult beetle is very firm- and
1. Tp co-ordinate the, purchase of for the transport of these immense i ht bold • and ,fincom-
food supplies, munitions of war .and supplies and of the --i'egulation of i;Pr°°21eing e (emery,. this surely hard, wingless, with body cylindrical,
ee "takes the bakery," and has; no pre- about one-sixth Of an inch long The
military and navel equiPment by the .r...;..1,+._g •„,; +;
• ..»b....., ---- q -s -on which dernanue
Isto Goyernmente. • • th 1 't p 1* ti th t f aninsraona as ington a n
eedent• anywheee else : Ifil'a if Our head is 'prolonged into a Snout or
America to promote the illicit ambi- daily often pays big profits.. Money
titan of any Europea.neneonarch, mach spent in •mineeea and 'nitrogenous.
le sis that of the Kaiser. They intend to feeds to balance the ration is gener-
• remain Americans, and these siniele, ally money well invested. The rough,:
.deluded Germans will learn in the end
age should always be home ggown. If
that they will be exploited by the Irish,
• feed is scarce weed out the poor cow
instead Butthoef Keuxipeleoritel naggetuhteemd. id
not even and lessen the labor: One cow pre -
stop at sedition. . :Acting under in- perly bred and well fed is worth two
structions whic were directly traced cows of promiscuous breeding and fed
' This principle of 'co-operative pur- to GermanianddAubstrtn officiaulsit "Ion little more than'a maintenance in-
setert1
Yre !tiameL' t:ielx:log: ;her far chase has been followed very dose in tion. Why do two • hours 'work when
connection with supplies of cereals, 5' eta
. • ou at sea They blew up munition almost the same returhs can be secur-
ed' for -etne.7 The quality of Cows in
the herd counts for More than the.
numbers. -Farmer's .Advocafe. : .
'
whrh are purchased on behalf 'of the
.Allies by a single committee consist- feotories and' resorted to the intirolda,
tion of manufacturers, organized
iag-of-members-ofTthe- Commission, strikes and- sabotage, tried to_wreck
Internationale de Ravitaillement and railtoads; and to all intenta and pur-
the Board of Agriculture. . poses, Made this 'country the base for
'Then there iS the whole tremendous hostile operations against, the Allies,
• The Grain WeeviL
. • Hypnotised.
. • . •
• One of the,:most perplexing- injur-
ies incidental. tomodern warfare is
shell blindness, causedeby shock. Nu-
merout cases - have been recorded
-
where a big projectile, 'elepleding near'
a soldier, has bowled him over and ‘ -
possibly knocked him. senseless 'He ,
himself has escaped possibly vvithont ,
a scratch. Upon reeovery he. has
• been found- to be sightless, blinded by
the shock. ; , • . .
.• The eyniptoms are invariably . ..--• •
iden-
tical.. The eyes have not been hrijur, ,
ed -or only slightly -4y., grains of
dust, which' May zn,erely• have, set-up ,
more_or_lese lobaLirritation. The pie .
tient has either been in absoliite-
darkness or could only distinguish a ,
'slight difference between light • and',
shadow. These 'cases, however, have'
proved, to be, exceptionally resistant -
tp•ordinery treatment. , • - . .
Two ' ef our leading 'optical • sewn- •
, bill, and the thorax is pitted! with a
2. To preVent harmful 'competition the shipping ac141§ers attedied to the been supine and self-seeking, this tists 'were attracted to the " strang,e,
commission. When all the shi tl i - uld have been promptly sup_ i few longitudinal punctures. The fe- situation, and, 'although neither 'be -
le the same markets and a consequent . • . • . •
• • ,
ps re- ., i ng o 0,
inflation of prices. quiSitioned front the British Met- pressed. • Some -prosecutions are still ' male- bores a•minute hole into the ker- hevea in hypnosis, both considered'
merit in communication with . firms
capable of carrying 'mit erders satis-
' 3. To place the French Govern -
reckoned there •only
preportion of tonnage available
, ere remains a 'emit_ ' tors
i But the final revelatien of Gerif an
pending, I believe, but the perpetua- nel with her snout, and in this, cavity, the field promising for its practice.
should have been hung • deposits a very small white egg. , In Forthwith the patient was hypnotised,
laarfvenwadt htoatedeheeesuc and the and he Was induced to. imagine that
..chent service for War 'purposes are
factorily at. a reasonable prite; and, for the darria e f 0 I • aheat d
, g o , c a , w ea an atroSity and underhanded methods beginsllonscetileegg, he was only temporarily blind and; '
4. To spy cad the Orders in such a other commodities. " .- - canie; when the world was introduced
r that cotild see if he strove to.do,
•• terior of the kernel • The larva: is e .
to the alniest limitless scliemes.of the • • '
Y m q German spy -system, -The spy, it thrall e to say, *the reattnert in
g y, t t -
way as to distribute.empleyment, and
• • •
• This tonnage 'is of necessit o t ' ' footless,: thart,..robust, fleshy maggot, s°'
• rigidly regulated and apportioned, variably had the desired effect. 'When
thus aceelerate delivery • • • Seems, undergoes a. prepared couree leSs than One-eighth of an inch long,
How the Commission Began. and the existence of the commission,. 'of schooling in. Germany, hefore he ' and, white in color. ' It vhanges to a the man awoke from his sleep he was
le -to see as as ever lode d
•
which can centraliae; all information. or she is sent cent on theeedespicabbe white pupa within theekernel, which at ab _ . ,
certain for Germany," and it is a ion stinate ones have no wish for peaee. • „ • . . . as to the requirements of the the dif- .in ss on o c .p .
•th Brit- this t is a mere • in the oases handled by the, two above -
way feom the acknowledgment of de- They are working in all countries, • •
. small office in Queeri Anne s cham- . . • . • .
isn staff a a dozen,. estehlis!ied in •nie female-ie.:per prolific, and her mentioned Scientists' ' the hypnosis
a feint Alliedl. Governments' and the With perverted Wills, they, simulate
truth which the heart is ineapahle of treatment has neyer..falled.--7-Fred
feat 'or possible defeat. There are 'against it, skorking, With' ali th,eir - possibilities..of meeting than; is of
weeks. The adult beetles live•:.v:erv2-1 Ta-rhaTI"he'Srientist•in Wartime. • • .
_tii__nes_when-the-pdattintistw-ameng-tte-powel---eet-therenteenaticemee-eapititteee •
has been gradually extended to cover
kreeke---ainah-itneineeeetiel •
-foeftlitgrlie tin.41-suser-delpecti-tntpPereeP4p le ve-twitit414viroirill e •
1 f !
they .deal. The German noVernment eral weeks, gnawing. ill' It I
co tee terne ds
n n s, an
- whose hands rest3 the final decision
are tempted to think that the Ger- its can do no better business, than
mans have mysterious reserves' of , they are doing -pow, and their purses •• urchases m,acie on behalf of all the
as to the distribution of •the available kept spies in 'every .CoUrt; foreign and devouring the inner STRANGE FACTS OF SCI'ENCE: •
Goverriments,. and it. now' In- . • • •
• 13r ish merenntile marine Municipa. "mpera on, n phereby do almost as much damage ••
A small but usefid'eleettie railway
strength from which they ,can heel appear not thll yet. • eludes neval and •
civilian
their wounds, and that the SUCeess ' "With us the distress gets greater delegates frOin each of England's Al- '
injured the German war machine ,in pool' people are suffering from under -
ma" lies (including &eh Portugal),- tot -1 - -GERMANIZING AMERICA
gained is only local, and has not -yet- frau-day to •clay, and hlreedy
• •
Other with eepresentatives 'of .the '
•
laboratories and They intri- . Both' the adults• and
• gued ln • Egypt, in South , Aerleae to -1.1 -
vvheae stored iti granaries and eleva-
ace a •• . .
India e they Influenced ,laijan against tors. „They attaek weeat, oe6-, hat-
. .fastened an opener for bottle rem. ,I. .
. r.
any vitnl part or struck a blow whid: feediog. We will, however, hope and ; Ely Cha . , D ver, &lie. TheY
ries iii Bice en were detected in Ireland and.
has readied to the heart of the Ger- act, for slimly the good sense of the War Office, Ministry of"Munitions and
In my last article on this, subject, •Anierica. and ere 'felled in Mexico leY and cern.:- .
The simPlest atel inost effective re- . The government 'of -Chile has un-
man People. , ! nd" j • • • f W
other British Government Depart- -
VC were able only in .tbe s , ""
, 1 Peoples mifY • conquer in the e . Tilehtg under the general direction 0 • TY b instigating that people' against the ' • • , thorized the erection of a• technical,
industrial .school.
•e larva area serious pest 'among ;
; fonient risings against thee -British,• eo•One end ef a 13E4 Pocket 'knfeiti
s••contained withie Paris sewer..
signed, to mention a portion et
Letters Reveal Truth: ' I - Sir Edmund Wyldbore Smith,' of the • . S.
ody- tit , ntr. ,that-CatriSehungeri-41--radi-lr-:-.1-
• 4 9 ."-WAR:.WIDONV.S.l.'---- •• • • • . — • .111'.1.111 n • eoieMs t S.. '14110 ti •
Its p,rsoimel. is now- number d at The . apostles of "kuitur were war were though pretendiog to P1' 6'
tile U.S.
fo o •
.*4 s is. umigation with carbon. atOr to entilile person to wathise-----..
; of etirridors, containing about iglu. presented Gertrian methods, an1..001r in many parts of 1..Ingland,.France use when the temporabireis Abchit 70 is prac
feeTthi:esw0breietin,sinsvue4tiesd•:.0,,f.e.blaCk oPirld
etre...for- __cch
. eaRliirTrade.
•
united States. . '1 • f • •
into- Bole -lune and Poland before' the
.found in letters captured in the Ger- • •• - •e ••
•
Though 'Unwed, They Wear Mourning nearly 50he its laige offide has miles '-
man dugouts and on the German opecielly 'chosen because thee well. ro- bo el ti enk,• and they wel'f 'fird ound' '31Alte the enciosere nir-tight and.
prisoners. They draw the veil Aside , • , for German Soldiere.
; • and. tell the naked truth. Through Many. young women in the. Dtichy rooins. Ilarber'eci happily on its tnany. imperiel ma,ster. 11 171
' .... pass, .f.;:r the T t y..4314.1134,41,us.zr pti p.m oszondis4.1.147-.........p.„,-4.T1t.,..fm.rd. 5 tu, 11,713f .....ivirraf...w*Borreto.n...g!li •
tieelly exhausted, • in the 6pin- •
e lecrtrig----11"6 s mei than eight sePeie, want cif space, ,t le German•American and cf sPY•
.• , whava WITS are fightIng or 'dead, and o a en, ermany, corbon•bisulrhicle each 100, bushels., . "4A woman is the iuventer of a, ,
ficere and soldiere killed ill 'the war. 'ate flatiollai"..eelenies-French, Rus- Press, the acts of the rene-ade Get- In these vare•us fornis. mon,,acitY,
• by:comrades in arms, not hiding then°. have talten.aclvantago Of a recent de• etedian, Belgian Serbian, Porta- rnan- Jews, rind . the. rest oft' the fttil •iviiielf seems to be nn. inherent ete-
; moss of troglodytes, ard take up the ment ef German nature, displays it,
ery against the bloodshed and rniaery ere° of the Minister of Justice that . guese, J:ipanese and;English.
tlicieght§ frern each 4ther, 'tilde is a. German Professors.
gives them piactically the status of , niul1iplkity"of „Arteries., Some of these were already in the sou., it is not to be. wondered at that
Goethe should erebodY,in Mephist-
of ,this war, rind tor peace at all wicrows, They have eidoptod the I The rorrithissien Whose purchases Chairs of,Ame,recan universities before • opheles-the innrit of falseness, a deep
costs , ' I names of their dead flances;• and call
• "By now the town of Offenbach themselves "Mrs." (Frau). They
11118 five thousand widows, and be- wear mourning and wedding rings,
sides that there are the unmarried .i and are known as Wskee ividoats. They
men who havo fallen." I wear • bead -dresses disthiguishing
"Our -"TuPallY 1()st. cal itEl .0frit6!si i them :from real wicfows.
and ten men, but that is 416 SUM! I rt is ex ected that t
euttival in extent the !hest seneation-, '.the war „began, but many others were 4seatad national chtractenisde, of
sent over sinceostensively to do some which the Kaiser is the inost inus-
al of transatlantic deale, has ,been at
iti tne field of entomology trious exponent Crtielty and cunning.
work rIOW for 22 intnths-almost ePeelel wifYrIc
and in kindred. •sublects ; and these are the ends to which "Maur" too.
without the general • public becoming inzarlably, after a brief• Introductory .cally leads. Dante rightfully reserved
even aware -of its -existence! During a roes, would pour forth to the the
this period the orders it has officially% lowest depths of.hell for these whe
American students a Specious but by mendacity betrayed their fellow-
. . •
men.
• —.4.-.......---,.
with every company and every regi- 1 P h 6 sYstem will placed on hehelf of the Allied Cov-
61*064intethoils.of
alas, 1)e extended to other airman, Statesz ernments amount tg no less a total , Paritis3t ir°41ergtrig
- Ceremonies ave performed than 020,000,000, and this stupond. ' the bsarbrareokusEillIluTst:
Merit on the Somme. T, could xt
0115 figure, if we odd the , tfihhases stone unturned to aogonivjplit'sblietreeir una!
Mado by Allied Government totitract-; holy designs, be4aley wore deluded
ors/Which ate Mibinitted, for the1fthe1mltg1liedtat thheyy etuOeldelrcuedeee
ori fooling " Americans
amination of the commission, is •
• in--
andstllY4Itnfuge
crOased.koughtly to000,000,000. fioteeetido% °tileet "Kul -
Here Is kfapproximate record o• tar,end left to their hearers the ritcht
the quantities of some of the more ato, draw mich cocchw000 4s they
• g
not get the much -desired wound to
• send me horde." "
. Riot; Are Told Of. •
- There have .booti riots in Itrinoliu•rg
and other according.to letters
in many cages at Baden at the Aegis -
try Office irt the 'usual way with wit.
flosses.
Yesterday ire beard a man. wishing
found in, 0, trenches, and in the for peote. Ile was wishing his credi-,
• Spirit of civilian Germany there iso tori ould lea hiM have a io.;
, 4 it
, Bound to Ascend. -
"So you've invested yo_ttr mn
money i
4 now airship eornpany?ff
"Yeeg our airship gooi up, tho.
stock will go up.v •
"13u6 giiiitOt4e it doeen't?"
• "Then the companY wit go'up."
pcptter the l'quid col the groin, or, ease that can 'be ,folded flat and car -
granary floorewer with it (Market); riedetinder one 'arm .when empty.
and leave for 24 heurs.,In finniget, : Presi,ing a•••-iener projects a slide
ing empty rooms, u 1 8 lbe; ef hqu down, the tines of: a new cold • meld%
that the vapor generathd by. cerbon
to 1,000 cubic feetNote, fork to retrieve its contents' fleetly
A . ,
Multiplying Machine small •
. hokvever,
enough to be mounted on the end of
a lead pencil has ben patented.
yiteacl boards can be bleadhed • bye •
washing them with lemon Alice, then,
with cold water and drying them Iti
the sun. • •
• A propellor, driven by the air- as a,
cot i running has beep invented te•!,
blow rain away from the windshichk
of an antornehtle:
bisulphide is very, inflanimable, 13e
Kura' and .1ceep all lights "away when,..
tuitng this matorial:
,
' •
• Ansi .11rings Other Troubles.
tvould appear from information
issued hy the Publications 13ra.nch
Departnlent of*Agrielture, Winnipeg,
.that rust on wheat brings along other
troulfies. The Vent, weakened bY
rust, Is made susceptible to other dig.
eases. ,Prof, Jackson, of the Altud.
iota Agrioultura, College, states that
the crop failuvoin some places is duo
A
Just
"We, watt 4
meet!'
"Tito ono of
The Crittert-
ratiscot for our rogi-)
the dogs (1i \VIM'
• 11
• ' •
•
""--1