The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-10-19, Page 311
..,Lfl 1
;50,000'.for aworirofert, theproduet
of the brain of :genius, an1. bang.S it
tie lienie, Pr -donates it to an art'
lierY..:.9 not3hriftlessar eatrtrelle
gaiit---although many *add believe:
that the advaPfey of 'thrift F3 aghinst
11;4 practieell. •The Mari Whn. Pa70:.
149Akil, for a work of at places 4
,.01Orious premluits on ..genius- end
:bralles, giving impetus to :artisticpro-
gress,. rolfinefilenti and eleilleatione
The Manwho le penurious and
tight-flsted 1 4 dead weight to„.chtli,
ization. We who have the interests
of the great thrift movement in- Can-
ada. at heart nawit realize tbat'one of
our 'chief problems le to teach our fel-
low -men , that merely putting,. money
in a 'swinge bank Is not -the sum total
of thrift: The prudent use of mono?*
and the practice Of liberality where it.
can be afforded, have brought , about
the. development . of the arts and
sciences and the •: manifold blessings
of civilization. Nothing has :ever
been accomplished solely through .eel-
fishness and greed.
. • . 01.
rew editors, it seems to us,, ere
fully seised of the 'wide and f4troOir
influence they wiold through ertheir
publications, alot enly.,in the editorial
0011101010, but likewise by the gmral
• PM of the news end advertising col.
Unins, The pen, is mightier thala the
:sword. We shah I* pursue this
great theught farther- Pat now, but
give' the answer 'we 6.0 in the Chil• e.
titan Herald to a reader whoa asked
the guestion, What must I • do to be.
„ come a Sodrnalist ? A jeurnallat has
been butitoaeusly defined as "a news-
paper. man ont a a job. 'The best
• road to succeesfull journalisin, is
•through the letienelreire and drudgery
• of the ordinary jobs connected with
newspaper making. Many Men, fist)
• to prominent -positions on big city
• newspaperwho began by sending in
,. reports of occtsrrenees in their °Wm
neighborhonti. Begin first to write
reporta for your village or. county
paper. •Get reputatioa for secur• e
ing news quickly and accurately and
Writing it up in attractive style. Win-
•laing alocal reputaticei for -faithful
• Work in the small town' papers will
give you a good opening when you
Wish to try a linger city.. If any-
• thing of eXtiatordinary interest oc,.
curs, telegraph or telephope a report
to some large city paper or pews as-
eticiation: ' If your report is accurate,
• prompt and interesting they will not
forget you when yen...coves to ask fee'
• pesitioa. Editors •tarie -alwaYs on
the lookotit for • new ideas and special
• features; -Caltivate • an unaffected,
bright, vigcirous Style of writing. Be
•• • on the lookout for what is new, sur-
prising or humorous in the story you
are telling. •Above -all, stick to the
• truth. • People dislike to be misled by
a paper story abodt anything.
* * *
We hear very much about Theift in
these stern 'war days. Webster's de-
• finition of this little Word is harder
to comprehend than the Word. itself;
Thrift (a noun) -frugality; economic-
al management; pied husbandry; in-
• &ease of wealth; profit;, "tt: plant.
Thriftiness -the etate or. quality . ef It is the thrift that comes through ed-
• being thrifty. Thrifty -characterized waken, and is the basis of all pro -
by economy and good management- gross in art, science; business. It ig
frugal.
.We like this part -of thig article,
•too, because it appeals te common
sense people. We wonder if there is.
not something valuable and ,pertinent
in it for 4veryone of us who read %
Read a -n4 think: •There is a happy:
medium between. extravagance . and
penurieusness. One a .the evils ef
the day lies in thefact that many live
far beyond tilde resources. • On, the‘"
other hand, manycare cheap, and tight-
fisted in their habits and unwilling to
reward their fellow -men for work
well done. With them progress halts;
they contribute little or nothing to
•the upbuilding of the things that are
worth While. Midway betweeffmiser-
lineds and extravagance lies the path-
way ,of the greaW thrift -and it is
in the better -understanding cif this
fact, and the application of it in our
lives, that we have a problem end an
-opportunity.
The Greater Thrift is constructive,
scientific, liberal, it builds charaeter.
•e• . • -the' advancement of civilization • ace
. Hon. Thomas White,. Federal Minis- complished through the reward or edS.
'• . ter Of Finance, has been emphasizing ucations •moralitereapd incbietres. Sum-
• stronglythis year in addresses . end need up, the greater thrift•is Personal
,•through therress the•importance".aedi economics •in its broadest geese.. The..
• • -advisalsiliti• of -practising thrift; • • im• , greater -thrift is the art of true livs
•. dividuallY•• and ' collectively -in our en,. And this should be the. spirit 'Of
'• homes, in public capacities, .and, in the twentieth century :'• Money ,saeing,
- tommunities-aev.etywhere, and .- in is, but one link in the chin of a per -
every Poseible' manner .• It is e Virtue., lea. character; economy is ,.only ,a
i. s •• that it Woht be welt"to,practiee AI- `easeee‘ in the thread of. thrift - .. .
' • : ways„ We believe, While there are se • . • ...• • • ,i, . e . e .. •
Many.people.in the world in need of . • .
NcrWr this. Writer gives ae soinething
•' thesnecessaries. of life.. "The pii.or ye .. •
alWaya • have With eeteei • .minieteea along -feel practieal- liee.S-eit is ' • exs...
. • .•
.. ..• . . • •
,EALTs APE= TIM WRATIfFil,
' Chas. Thee, Denver, Colorado.
• The vilfuls are the chief faders in,
weather, but they +change so• 111104pPet,.
edly that prognosticating the weather
verY '
Weather signs are muiterous and
•many of them still remain a mYstery,
hut enough have been deciphered to
render forecasting tolerably gertaln
for at least 0 hours.
We have rain when there is cauSei
.for it; and the wind blows this Way •
and that, foL well ascertained rens,-
ons. Air pressure 'determines the winds
and winds artr the potentials of stormd.
Barametric pressure of the air shindy
/Meting that this Instrumeent zsecords
its reletive density, or Weight, it hav-
ing been provea by eXperiment that
•when air,is heated it expancle, or be-
comes lighter, for the same voleine,
and it becomes beavfer as it thols. •
• Air is always flowing from 'regions.
a high preespre to thoge of lower,
hence the winds. •
• A weather map for the country
• shows the high and low pressures by
heavy black lines:, and all the places
having the' earne air .pressure are
shown by these *heavy lines running
through them and the,figures close to
ethe,liees indicate the extent of the
pressure.
' These heavy lines are celled Isobars
meaning equal Weight orrpressiwe. In
the. 'U.S. and, I glimpse, similarly in
• Canada, each morlithg at a o'Clock,
Washington time, at every. weather
station,in the .country, the barometer
is read and the result sent to Wash-
ington by telegraph, where the read-
ings are placed on a skeleton map of
the country, each at the location of
the city from which it is telegraphed,
and lines are then drawn through the
„places • having the sante pressure.
grorn, these it is easy ta see where the
high. and leer pressure ceptres are hes
eated., Such a map generally shows
several such areas. • Observing these
maps day by day will show changes
in location af the high and low pres-
sures. It metres eastward across the
country at several .hundred miles a
day, and often many. of them are on
their way. at the same time. Experi-
ence has shown that the "lows" gen--
erally,cross the Northern part of the
U.S. and ahnost invariably pass down
the St. Lawrence River valley. The
"highs" occupy the spaces between.
the kiwi and also Proceed eastward
with an inclination. to the,south-east,
but their progress is not so regular
as that of the "letvs." •.
go
WeedingTinie in PeioalrY. 144 wiiiijait longer, Qur inowcanc°
reed, being higher in Pri- oe. antetfu! lose and we have greater Pearce 11-)4" -
cows demanding more of It, as wall as 314-Tod••-•-lifIraill 'Weepier in ram. and"
More comfortable (Parton, greater pitir34 •
•
•
nate and attention, W1140 50460n
ibOUld )30 the one in Which the feline Nudges the Right DiSttiOri-
er detects and weeds ectit the nude*. Have an understanding with the
able Members of the dairy herd, • companY ,that Insures your buildings
• The old CQW that has rendered good before YOU get a gasoline engine; It
service but now cOnsumee more feed ,MaY stave a lot of trouble. •
than shepaya for, should be promptly' If you baytnot basine for 'Your cows
, .weeded out by turning her over to the' •tee dalek aura in the barn, you can get
Markets. To say nothing of ber being 4/'firOall heater Or the watering
unprofitable the old and infirm are trough outside, , This. will take the
liable to sudden death, any day -a chill -.off so that the cattle. will 'Come
tRtWalitir an accurate milk -test so easily
,•
•
obtained, /many farmers still are milk-
ing cow that' give. one-third. More
milk than that produced by others,
moggg,org...iggg
COME ON OR COME OUT
\pa.
is the allied soldiers' cry, spoken or not, to the.germans in their vast
. • mtniem• of dug -outs. How it is answered may be partly Judgediby thio
fact that since the allied offensive started in July nearly 60,000 aerman
Prisoners. have been taken. -Drawn by Louis llama:kers in London • Daily
Mail_ • •
• . •
MANY GIVE CASH
TO HELP BRITAIN
•
izes the wonderful fight- our troops
are putting up and the glorious deeds
of courage they are performing it
makes one feel sick to be cooped up
here and not be able to help.
"As my service has been refused I
back feeling eomfertable and. goad in-
side• . •
Have seen cowsstand. .a long
time at tl watering- tough COla
weather, as .4 dre.adiag to, take in the;
wheu.the crea'm test is, se low en these lee -cold drink eet before them, Mere
larger quantities that the. animals seen those cows, too, go away from
barely Pay for their care and feed the the• trough all. humped up and Oliver-,
year reund. Let the -Babcock test as. Ing With the cold . It takes slot ,c01 •
slat, yeu in this weeding oat.
The cow that eats -twice es much as
.the average- cow, must, in order 'bo
animal vitality to warm up. a epee
after she has beenehilled• that way, .-
Olean out- Our tables three or foto
prove .a profit maker, produce twice times a day:, Berea t•he first thing .-
ars meek daily prectucts, yet many in the morning. DO the mirk before ,•
ftermers.unknowingly retain just such Vil ing. . Then again about the time -• . ". • .
aniinals in the herd from Year to'year, yo 14 year 'cows, Out to drink, poi -
'simply .because they do not take the, low this up still later before milking
at night Care in thisparticulamey
time to look the xaatter up. Besides,
such a gormand. is almose sure to mean health and safety' te. your herd •
bring on digestive derangements and to those who use your farm pro -
which Will rendez. her useless as a duct Wortb While, isn't it? .,
milker, long before her allotted time,
and thug add still another loss to her
credit. , -
•
The severity- of wintry weather
seems to have a more deteriorating •Tour wife' measures your love for
her by the little thinga you do. • She
effect on 'some Oyes than others-. They
appear unable bo withstand the rigors can't help it. , No use balking Jove
of winter, and fall:off in both flesh and and then letting her dig the Wood out
Moving away to some other pant of,
the country never gave ie man good.
neighbors. To have good neighbors,
one must himself be a good neighbor.
•milk production to such,an .extent as 'of the snowba.nk.
hope • my money will he accepted, a'ncl.
MONEY FLOWS INTO TREASURY soon as the severe weather.sets in Kindlings in the oven urn
Will b all •
ain therefore sending what Money ' right and often they 'burn the house
that they just abotit pay for then ,
•Flft0IVI ALL LANDS. , I have in the bar*:
"I -would rather my mite' did not go put them, there. •
••thoughts a a prise flow of milk for
• "• toward relief works, ".but. toward Hogs -are nob .fools. • They knoW'
a few weeks during the summer bo in- •
'achieving the success of our arms when they :rewarm, dry and comfort -
Children, Old Soldieia. and Rich We. ' fluence you in retething such unpile-
' which will ie the end depend, at any 'able They will put on fat faster if
fitable members, in the dairy herd. - '
Hien Send Contrihutions ' rate to a great extent, on eash." • you see to it that they have all these
Weed them out, at oncel
Big and Little. • • ' • The same spirit is visible io this ,.
Th th r
Then, e &are other typ.es'ef dairy things on'their side. • ,
• ' anonymous letter from a workihg- • • •
• h = If you• have a farm so poor that it '
• -feed and keep. Don't 'alio* the up with them before morning; Don't
• e
cOws•t at we cahnot. a ord to keep
The war has Created a new kind man: • , • •
of 'citizen hitherto unknown to • the "I am , sending £20 10s, ($98.40)
around us, The COW that has short will, not raise white beans, make it so
it) will.. You can do it The Soil' is -
teats, or the One that is so difficult to ,
'British Treasury..- He does •not lend which I should like to give to the Gov- milk, had just as well he in the mar- r . ' ) ' . ,
not to blame neither are the beans..
The "lows" are generally more or •
less of a circular area, suriounded by his money' to' the State -he givee it ernment or aeywliere.else, where ., it
k t 1 h . . • e•
. • th et is. yqur part to build the old farm up ,
high „pressuree, and .the an tends to
move front the high to the lowsareas
from all sides. • The rotation of the.
'earth on, its axle changed. the direc-
tion of these windsedightly. The low
This new eitizeii is sometimes a Man, natty be wanted: e•thenight of lending equally as.profitable, with good-sized,
ers
sometimes a woman; sometime it as ii.war 1oan, but I would rather
child He flees in all parts of • .the I kive it. I know it. is orda' like a drop easily milked teats. And these
-
empire and in all parts of the World, in the ocean, but every dreplenay help milkers are no more coetly than theyou fooLaWay so much time and
writes a' London. carrespondeht..• 'tie gain the Victory in this great war.' 9Irs
.White'S advice is, therefore timely and cePtionally good. It must concern . "
2stkirekeeegr,tha:i.d thethitet
br;eialkichnyii.twe. 'Ito°
Some MOnthlyeD,onatiOns.. • •
spring, keen the ewes well.in the wirie
• • • soinetimes an. area 1,000 ore znore which theseeeeptributiceng. centeees' wild • • Many Of the' gifte are setae in e cone under.this'.came class; fer
". eaceellentS. but: eine, fact he. mast bd. eVery pareet whO has the future well-
being of bis and her ehildren at heart. • • •
conved of by thiS time, is.that Cane:' . b le
is a sortof air .whirlpool embracing, .111erely to inane' the pe froin
and melee' hlossoen like the rose.
• Two really good sheep; ' will soon
stock a whole farm. A thousand poor
dooiiiiees.never will do it .as•it plight to be
• .
• If yap want good Jambs in the
• h TI ' ' ' ,ter.
miles in diameter, and 'moving slowly ° a ssen geograP Y.
• • iere a form tit niont ly donatiOns. •There is ' theY may give .a goodlY geantity .of
• The best sheep, in the world en- ay be •
,
_adieus are rationally it thrifty: or a It will pay for twice reeding or more:.
eastward,• called a cYclene; but in me- eoriuniee' in the. of Sandakan, a 'man somewhere in Asi:a. who has ins rmilk, the :various points of Unclean-• '
Holes m the fence around the sheep
ed for a War Loan of . $100,000,000 well as material preparedness. And ad. a firm in Sandakan to• send £500 stun•to the Treasury every Month till "of time -during -the milking-houts; dans •
, la mean a tired man, for the sheep
- ahd inside of two weeks lCanadians it is only through the process of eclu- 0,2,500) to the ,Chanceflor of the Ex- :the enclaithe War. Some of the moet I ger;_ damage to fenges,•crepe„ and the will find them as sure -SO you are born.
• . subscribed two hundred millions and I cation that it can be developed. VIt chequer with this message : , • ' menificent contributions are bermeti- animals, themselves. . • •-•
1 .1 Some roosters have •a wicked' way -
, the banks -were ready and willing to cannot be taught in a haphazard man- '
cooler places north - causes warmer •
"In this- territory we contribute ripe eally anonymou§, One .is a gift of But bhp .gi•eafest of all reasons for 'of tackling every rival that may lift L . ,
the people; but "the banks Were told .tices of this great virtue =zit be a cool wind froin•the north in whiter; while at the seine tune we enjoy all $4;959 ($24,750).. " . .., . _ . • of the dairy heed, is the inflinnee.these ,
to it by taking the fighter - out and '
• • • 'd. p
greater thrift is mental as arid surely ie•Wascromance that mace structed his bankers to pay, a certain ability are none the less preseitt--loss • • _
saving people The other day he ask-) The
teorology, a cyclone is not a destruc-
tive wind, as Popularly conceived.
Such sare -called tornadoes: : •
A warm wind from the south • to
subscribe :if necessarY, as much. as ner, Through our sthools .the prec- weather in the latter, and Vice- versa thing towaed the imperial nnanees, ' e5;000 ($e5,000); another is a gift:of weeling Out the undesirable members -
up his head in the, yard: Put a step. •
that then money "is not wanted at introduced: We are teaching crur. Often carries freeting weather teethe the benefits of British protection, We I There are marac gifts from women. would. exert en.tbe future of the en- giving the restepeace. "
• • thie time. ,Surely all thie . goes to boys and gi• rls Arithmetic, history it'd .Gulf States. • • ** are therefere, a • nxious te hive a share; This letter eame with a cheek ter £100 tire herd, since they are at leadt •al •
SPrafing th,e houses is not all there. .
On the weather ma' Pla f ual ;however small, in the finaeciai burden , ($500). • . • . • is to keeping them clean; ' Scrape tip. •
Prove that Canada is a wealthy coun.: geography -our agricuttural schools ,part of the foundation en which" • we
try ahd" if' greater thrift be' practies are teaching t temperature are centected by dotted h f llow countrymen ha:ve to .."1 am one of the• women of •England s 11 build. _No sane man can „ex -
w eur e ings before you do the spray -
hem to till the soil the drePP
ed it will become mere wealth.y; scientifically, apd to deyelop the re- •
lines called Ieotherme; They etre us- bear at the Present thrie, and "by dis../to wheat your encular letter. is ad- pect that the:offspring Of the, abOve Ang. • That' counts.
4 * * ' sources of. the land throuli education..
wally bent porthwarein front of. a posing of the above sum for' us you dreseed. I long to help my beloved mentioned" • cows will show sufficient n
The boy that tickles the colt need's'
wile be assisting Us to 'discharge, a ' countesain way I can, but I , impeovements.to warrapt One in keep= tickling' With a good•switch pff the
, '• Thrift isa' capital subject on which We are teaching .householdecononizcs' • storm,. and southward in• its Tear. , welcome duty." •• • • ' I'Verit elderly, and there is *so little that •ing them as Milkers. s Indeed,' thei e peach tree. He would get it the, if he •
' fined :to mere onlyWomen also may worth while but practical Thrift, -
to meditate just new. It is not -con- merality and hygiene, and everything ,
The humidity in a 'wind alsei an
,
1
important !tiptoe, for( it varies • with From 'New' Jersey - an Amerigan I can do. I do net wish am make is a far greatezapossibility that there were- my•bey, •••-. -•
.
, .
Citizen is foand writing a check pay:- ' money-out'of this awftil war. To me will be More a A re(rogeading in the Any maples on your farm?: malt4 a
he who practises the greater thrift is • . g n. in e eoun iy is,
"itsolf , . time, the herd will not . only fail to, pancakes. liking 'good! '
g , a as i cools China 'a husband and • wife send a -Is it. therefore permissible forsine to .
. land the air contracts it holds 'more- . • ' • - •
draft in four figure§ to their mother- send the enclosed, but 'decline to ac- prove a source of prefit, but actually
.- join in the "ieteresting' and : peofit- and We are neglecting one of the most)
; able" enterprises Indeed, one of the important branches .of education. If mnvin•
the temperature. Air• from the south ,•able to the :British ', Empire. From it would he 'like 'the price of blood.' strain, and that, within a ;few years' a lick of syrup to -go along- with the
,
• best articles we have • ferici : on the.
. , subject. appears in the - October num-
: ber.of Every Wopiata's World of Toa
ronto, "We 'take the liberty of vet-
s ing•a fee; paragraphs from this time-
ly and splendidly written editorial,
a. valuable citizen, a 'benefit • to, , his •
nand. From -Canada a man sends • a eept exchequer bonds' in exchange.," ,w, return leis 'dairy product* to the
• fellowaaen, an encouragement. to gens moisture • relative to bulk Until finally ' • .
hese an in the „progress of civilize- 1 at some. distance above the earth, set- cheek for '..£2.00 ($1,000) "-to eovet" The .inest teaching gift of ell conies farmer than the cost their feed and
1 uratien 'maybe reached and the moist- 1 monere. ' received •at • Keyham." nearly from a poor old Irishmen. , His letter the amount of binie, and labor expend,
tions then is it not worth while thats
We look into this. problem more'earee! lire ondensed into the form f - louds f
!• half a Centdry 'ago.. ''''
, • . is a nievjag enixtui•e Of'7.•UOCOOSQi6US: ed in caring foe;thenadvhileewSth con -
we weeding out of the we:Jew-
• ..pathea'and humor: . .. s . ••••• ,
"Thrift Means :Met 'This" is the only means weemay deVelop this virtue in
. • • • • • a .Th f in S. kat h - ' • ld'
page, of this wide-awake „magezine• fully and :diseeeer how and, by what i,and if .continued rain is sure to•fall.! To Beat the. Kaiser..
• heading:. Generally speaking, there • our, people
. iir a misunderstanding as to the scope • • . • __ea.__
and purposes eof the . thrift: moves • , .
41 ZEPPELIN BAIDS. '
., ment eri this country.' The lack, of I. - .
-. Understanding lies Primarily in the • . -
g o va er cau 1 .
able _members, and et epthemes selec- ee Architecture has been affected ..by
• SrAs'I was .not able to answer your
CLIMATE AND. ARCHITECTPRE. ".
The iiensf Is the Most Important Part
, in House -building.. •. • .
. • -
ton • of. •the choicest offspring
mountain ranges cause marked local man sends a cheek for £20 ($100) etee,request owing to cronic catarrh in my'• as many iefluenceSi .such as race,
e m t '
breeding -a -beck,. the -Standard. of'. the :Zirate,.accessibility of materialsare-
veriations in the weatheriaceom•panY,...' help) us' beat the Kaiser," whom he hear and rheumatism in •mY blood '
.heed will b a etiall advanced ' ' ' •
only above the "average", but ..above
not , ligion. arelesotial conditions. An.. in-
ing thp passage of winds. , ,
. i.p.ortravs as..."a compound of Nero,' Which:has caused 'mo much youble, . • • • • Y.-
aSeveral cyclones padiPastward each alidas and Ananias."' lie • remarks- "I, have two • boys at home S • They
those which rank assfirst cla:s. s. • .terestingearticle ,on the subject- a15--
1-- one has jaimdice stoma•ch and •••••• • 'nears in a recent issue of the Builder",
, • 1,334. People 'Killed and Wounded in week •as 'elle; cyclones and .anti- o investin
fad thzWsto thrtopular --mind- thrift • •
-Other's ,bead ia tiot .rightalgoingl - • • '• • in which it is shown that climate is
• "England. •• •• •, cyclonee follow so closely that WQ are a -wet hem andeiraweirdividerad °Whelt-they
• means sireplY sa ving Mofiey. In stew- • ,
ing. to "differee hate between mere The ,New. York Times !whits ..the
•• Why We -Built• •Barn,
in thesone or the other almost e cota•''brave Men are laying . down - their about talking' to himself . •
„
P ilY • Y
money saving and theapractices of the following, story from London: .
, • . . the pinnemelintinenee in determining
"I• Vllin to •hel in a wa. Our barnahad becoirre delatiitiate..the typsofefoof and Of windows. The ". •
. greater rthrift •we are reminded. that In' -the last two 'years there•:,lea•ve • • or etamps. foe these- who.; Can 'and •has. given .liberallY."to eeery- ed., that lt \WaSeriecessaryeto' it,,Or •••
elopice apd •to them 'chiefly the middle, Print .noteil roof ie ehe, more importaht, fer
stantly. MOA of the winde are esa••• ! lives." Ile begs the Chancellor to . • sun I g
ie would soon doevn. and the pricee history -of erchhecture is Very largely.
or what is knoWn in this country
0,5 prefer-glen:4A° len,. • • ' charitable cause since I new anything
. .. • •
- "Learning, _ whether .specalative or been 41 Zeppelin' taids on England- •
. . • ' • ' .Manf th • f " ' of Char't„y P • .
of beilding material 'were id high. we. the history of ..ref-huilciing. A cli-
•the Mississippi valley,..owes rain -1 .Y 0 • these: iee givcrs are • • ••
. .
OL „ge in 1915"and 19e6. This sum... eau., ' "h as that of E t which is
•practicat, is the netairal source did. not know .what kind 'to btie. mate such • . .gYP 1.
' I old Men.. Sense of them -are poor. 0.ne `"1 how tend pep a sUbscriPtioe, of 1
lj
wealth end hohoi " The difrer-•nce•
• • • , • . s y does not take into. accoUnt , the• . Wooden siding sheebhing apd. 'shingles, very and• has onlY•iii slight rain
•
An antisc clone Me • • cif them writes• • lamina ($4.89), trueting YOu will get it
• betWeen inere money -saving and the many aero •and seaplane attacks and • •
„
. ) e w lc
ane the ,
-area •in : • .
• . •
h w lite cooler air esf. theetipper ! "1 rsee Plente alseet lending meney •
-greater 'thrift ie leaening the natural the numerona al Ottiv attethnts.
• • all right but j.. have "nci motley fEr ex- had been steadily going up:in/pike fall,- demands a flat roof, which is the
year after year, until they had eetech- sialplest 'way te•:-proteet building ••”
dartb and:flows away in all directions. •• about,. givine• it. 'Sebere. go'eS for bonds and I would Offer enye
eel•f if woulcrhe of •any less so
las e seen • liven ac a eceast oe• • •
glens is settlipg to 'the perface of. the to our country; b t • f •
- so ar -.nothing,
•• , balked by shifting 'winds and Miaty.- YOU 1 ed. the thea we. alrizestafeaaed. frem heat. . As the exelesioneof •
seem; of. wealth and honor: • • • ' I • I • d b k t th
- • g
sineerely. hope' Otn• yoefiger Weather.. • • • • I
•
"could , not afford :to but. theni s The ure is. of eecondary Importance; 'a.
. have one of 'they boys et• you •
• • • • •
• , Hence the weather in a regioa of high •start -,10e. ($2.401 froin an •man••niaY • • . . •
, . . . .
• • ; usually ".cesol clear and '. hoee' ' incerne A A • thinic•ehey are. at any use Th 'es , old bate b 40, however,"and •slepiag rod is Unnecessary. . To ob.
. hack to. e .
. emitter's, .as well -as the "groeVn-Upe;" • If in these raide we take 111100 pre 'is ns •
dry, with -a West or north-we:4. wind.e Week 'i, anal .. hope to be "ableeto send. • l''
r '' • w . • $ (If'-' (!7'291• Pei. 'tit sst t i" ' '. '' • •
a emen . • -..‘ . •._ , tee decided to make a conizilete.job (it. lain- light- only .'- small.. openings- are
.
. . .
.. . .:. .. ThiS ie wliee,the air is freeh and beac- sortie more. irlor 'on Mi.+. is • "m'n e ,• • • s.. • , e :.it.vdien. we did de item get qtaatabisins -used, since it is'ssatutal in e .hot and.,
will thoisghtfelly. read end ponder oVer Zeppelins tie the average n.qmliCr, -
ehe' SI:atemenp made in the pare- ;mil allow. e three tons • of • explosiveg . . . e e . : „ ; : • - . s • • , • . . • • s e, . seeeTee .dieBuee Jeeneeeeelelleue, .. • :on new 'siding .and shingles ' 'for' pie 'Very sunny clim'ate to' prefer :11: ' 'dint '
Q °WIN; a lain storm, fe js whet Ovene pie, I have oo debte. . I want., no e .
graph that Tollawd • fol. its "thoughts and loccendiery bombs as the eapacitY'!""g 1. " ••' , whole buildieg. . ''..• -, . ' . s ,... .. '..', light' as ei relief from :the .glaie 'entr:.
-
truly - goldeti.•••.1 tut woithy of being . of 'each dirigible, Swe. slave ail; itg*re. • is called- 'enti;cycloneSiveathere .. , .. i coupons. our, - . , . • ' . .
' .
• • • Large Family Will be "Reg d d •
.a• r e. A.s e. P One evening abeditthe -time N'•e Ak ere , eide, • the Aftai. leSof also afrotda,
diurric nes re-si•ori e . . ':-
seine. chars_ ii. IS'yer. tbe .children's naltelinkies . in • • . _. . .. . - , -the 'different • aterials ther passed Weather, "Giver& and Italy
.
. ... , • - . " National Asset • - . ' • • - • m • ;• • e
•
•
• knowledge." Here. •is. thee nugget: .eitee.' „Supposing each „bomb. 'weighs' at lit .-='-.-• ea :tia,(1 : are Q1' t le
(hippo,' op. tinily. fry' Thofti, . dosteuctive..: ThoSe .,..reasnry. annehees. It is; elessifiedy e • "The war efter the • war. will be ewer our section: al eountrs; e• heavy -lint. aueshineebut leis hale died:more!, ,
"'Otte e. from ' children.' toward - war ',..won..hy the nation ichieb encourages • thunderstorma Some • Si•iendie and Our- rein than t gYpt• •Th1.1- :consequence. is
nettle lead' toreedees, laut us-. ea
• Educetion,Stakeit in•the sense ef Merit? .50 porn:ids, ' we' haye . approxinuttelt aeler.-*
„ -.. el .discipline, le the foundation. of all 15,d0,0 as thisr number ..
that liffiTt ranad•a and' the. U. S., a:mese' . 8"ehriels dub togetiler to ilotir': early. mai•rigges- and large -families." .seiVeS ,had be'en awee' to fiSpiceieared, thafea. rod:Sloping enOegh. to' .carrY.- .
' . ....wealth and .hopme. national and • inch- .England' Or ,in 'the' lelettii.Sea. in ''the •
•yiduel, and it iseoillY•thionghlits.peo- ' last two year.e. •. - • - • • '," s .liave their. Oriain. ;new the .,„Wes.t. In thee. ,ecseee into, the war (hest lint .Thee • words','Were. used by an em 7 We Were jueb•••returning Where' the off the rain..welefis 'a irecessitY. 'The
ier•r•t, and' general'a• !OOV( WediSelarci to st'orriS' canto 'up: . The liglitnina Wes, slope adopted fee the roeif settled the .... .
cedeess that we, ean ..bridgesehe chasrif The BritiSh Governmeht. haS, tirade:.
the eneistestend ethist -- trcir-thwitril ' and"- gi thei9-•'theW-iiwit,i9hiVinfr's
the children -soniet:ine*.s.', :scrape to- inent London in an Inter--
. teem Money eaving- to.' .the -a-area-ter 7 -public the humber df. Casualtica-aftetT
pa•sa• oat acresS the Atlantic wfili de- awl. ',-send - vieW • With the, London Deily EXpresi. -very' Sharp end elose by."..• We thcrighteLproportierr of' elle pectimeats., •The nit,' '' . '
however, that we eoOld reach the ehel; tura). 'Method of etscluding. rein wil••••• • -.
' •, • theta. Saving .mbney. is one obf the '• each raid,. and thee -aggeteretc 10 ; , thern• to: the chancetior. of • - the' .I97,x... ' Ire spoke on the subjects , whcch. Sir
ter of a chureh. shed. befere •tN storm ter frora a huileing with': a pitched , .
efoundatione'stenee in the building ,of it ,deeel end 9,8e, metaled, This. -.means.' efek'ing. s'c31-..eritY "' We' will consider. aPheilter wit li et 1 t tt ea jai infall y .-Writ= ,. Leo Chioiza •SSIpzieSe M.P.,' *dealt "with
yeached its height,- . 'We. did tot reach,' reed ie los let the ' .roof plane prejeet --
atter sterres in einienext. . „ • ,, •
.':•tiiiiity charadtei.- -bait it is nO more' Oa it inis Mime „mere than t• tOn of'. ena ten in nine epee's ha nil. Ilere. i's one t ' ' reeetitly--the ' need for more atnnids
. , .. . • .... ....... , .
this shelter before .an easeally 'cease: beeend the eaterpai lace pi, the all - •
' .- the.cum total of thrift than -one stone" Gernien Ixotribs for evei:.y fleitiSh Man..: ...:.• ". -.---:•'•-•--'4'• • ' - . "•. • "I far& (eidelp„. yell dm, Siffillne .1(24 antly populatiegthe British tmpire
are
ht bit!-
carefullY stored in our "treasury d- gate of.870 tons of death-4aling - ni tat orig• in- . , • • Seventy ,yeari; • of coneidering.the .prites -and merits, 9f. agree.anle, •• -• sleep dining hot.
• •• . . ' • is the •Sum total in the do und a time, of , woman and" child • Who • has .be en _killed; .1.• 101Z -SES ...511.A' M.... Sic(lc.S.11-.›..n.i......L..:,den't..0._ ow_ of mee_nreeset enseeesee...te..etuide flee pinsiL afethesfarnilieesof---ene, - flash.-g-igli. tniegellearlY eldiaded-ne-eend -theeabyeteetente -thee' jorn•S:t - -bee.' ee. eesees --- •
... . '• i ' •; '
' • • 4,,great house. A. man may be '4 A Mititara 'expert 'figures that ' fee • • - ' . . e se -s .. ° . , • help ta.any fee the War. .. Daddy..saye or two children... , - . and almost iititentaneedelyWith it atweet roof and WallAs a result We
; ' money gayer, and:yet:It lie dissiPete, everse saldierekilled the., tknemY.. must', rrtneli 1 • 1, ' • i i • ' 9.• • ' ' ••'i collffeting it., le ein I'. esears ./...'"M•Y •experienee sliews thet, given.. barnalioate4.0 ro,ds away. eeetesed ' 'to heVesethe. carnices WhiCh may• be eald .
Arnty Ve ere ar ane ,Arc Con- :sou •al s
.or is immoral, lie is eel.. thrifty. 'A. expeed his weightlpieed.. lThreirellea. . a , - Owed. • , ,.. • old and 1 hnvelW(i itncics fighting:" . ,, good. stock- to stertewithe large fami- bui st out ineflames• -The barn...was. to .heee sprung frOm•ap absolute „een.
op introng, ox, will. orses 0 avoid: ' And lit is 41 &d' e 00 no L., "lies PiloVV•lio deterioratiOn among the ' full of'.110Y and .WeS-140611 1).Urn•V4 to, structive neeesiity.' .... In ' northern . .
. • • •
• man they save inoney.--:Yet if 'he work Ileitish• perfected t•heir, defences ,; .....:• • .. • , .' f t t i -
9 ; ' •; .1 th , ni lati.,• •
. . '
* PiejltfTIT 1.1.01";ILIIII:Ys. to the ttgioXill-LeDt—Aiv-Piilfd. air attaek tbP loaa fti' Illt s. • ,i. e t ..e . .ieemeetee "This leSeetirely her ow-neidea. Rev Ycnsnrer bilarielle89' •F4tmt----tile---Plwgl' t r''''' 1' ' -* , . • ; • • ' coutila peereelzethS, a Is Mere. rain. • -•‘-'
"On •the contrary. I frequently i ..,This occurreme eet as .thinkinge and arta. oecitsiopiil snows,. ' _steeper encifs; .
.. • ofhis health, lie iseiet ;thrifty, True lunch ereater, the ceettalties. steadili eeem4 new wee • t 1_17 e 1., one regret is that it is ••sp little, hut it dab.
es e i as le( . saYs . a 1 . i e i t i , ;• b • 1 • b pie se find that :the best bodies, ° 'end - op- we decided• to proteete our new barn
, ' utlumaidi itnhgcrearuese.rdegilGezev.k.,.. , .
. resettr,es, and' when:"We'ineecely , sa;P•e ' '
siam .016,.warbagaii.it lia.4 eacri dee.; .i prve(incfla. , tri•arnate vetiberineritens .., litlityte. yeti will give .great offetice.'s e . with 'the fottet1);,fiftla sixth Or sevoltph ;.first . we thought of Pulling oli light- 'larger. lind• detaile to be itailtiCin;li:I'‘t!:;i1i111-r:t
thrift consiete in ..the•judicious'Ape. of ; deerea.singsae tha diffi„ulties cif..attuelt •Peris patch. • ' . ' '..1 ...., • ..,,-- , , • las e• ea e; ott •;.1 101 Cy , OX,N a e .. 0
as far as possible •fi•ein lightning -At
, .• . tempt yettem it, elaite.,,et yoll doi or .' rbatically he besi, brains, omit, itiya
aft e•ta incased; material. tind phyeteal inereased, .,
.
. . . . . .
- .
, •J
• • -
oui ro • e ose ea serve ion ta
. fling leas; • then we bought. of. t 0 mllat he holder. •
"Married people who prefer small
families ritdc the possibility of losing'
a genius which might,bave come In
a fourth or fifth child. parsons set
a good exaniPle, ag a rule, in the
sip of their fiuntlies, and they are
usually fine famflies, too. .
. "In Germany, early marriages and
ittrge, very,,large, tainiliem are the
rule. I have seen a father; ' mother',
and twenty -fear children, all robnat
and bright, going to church.
"Bachelors who postpone niarrying
untlF they.are thirty-five or Ivity act
foolishly. for themselves and the lace.
It is one of the weak points in our
social .ilystent that Meft (ie net:PlarrX
yOutig,0 '• , •••• Value lei the money spent in that stinging enough, • •
„ ••. a .
danger from tire from, •°thee causearl a—e..e............
or _accidental firing of the stralkstack:•I--•• •••• :- • • • e .
• money We beano* -gohm part w.y. , , Z Pp certnuthorses.fall most'unaccountably, Give a Yeer's Pay. qua.
e teperted that -fourteen e e- .
A miser 'id an undesirable citizen. lins have been wrecked; the real num.:
••What, prey, would be tin; fate of a
taticin •of. Misers? The wheels of. in.
•duptey .are terned by men and wonien
•• who tend and. employ their reetleY
,wlseiy and live" sanely: , •
*•*•
'The writer of this editorial offets n
loophole for the. wealthy to indillge
• - in greater luxury than those of -mod-.
• ereteemeans. To he perfectly fait we
ehall give 6110 instance, iltliough this
•feature d4es not do strongly appeal to
OS here ior thervery•good reason that
....Juni:nig our constituency of readers
`thee1/43 are very tete multi-mMionalres4
wrifer sayat The Meal who papa
4 4
ber is probably much larger'. It id
estimated that it coati; at leaet 1250,-
000 to Wild Zeppelin.„,Multiplying
.this suriete° 14, •Sve have 18,500,000 ale
the amount the Germane have lost
through the Wrecking •. of • Zeppelin§
alone. This stint would build 00 acre.,
planes at $7,000 each, B15 Stubnierinett
at $106,060 eeeh, or paY for ••70,0qo
slums at. $500 each. •These 14 Zap.
polies did no military damage; their
only value to Germany has been in re
CfnnialSeitii.ee work over the North Sea.
• And many a trien's belief in his
isuperier wiedoni makes fool og
ill'Whoh In boniburded regions. • TheyThere eve many gifts frozamfficera
lie down endeheent too weak and 'ner-
vous. to move, ea go lame. When
they are sent back to the veterinary
damp in the rear, in a Ally or two they
yea, all right again.
This has happened in do Mani eases
that It has 'become a Matter beyond
dispute that ..tie aninials 'slunn sick -
„nese to get away from a spot where
thy have to do etrange work under
atrange conditions • and where • ton.
stantly horrible things inike terrify-
Jng noises. • ”
•
-Celery id a good euro for rhetimat.
ISM and hentalgla. •
, • .
'
I• "Perhaps out -here we get a •elearer.
vloW 6f the war than they do at home,
for we just get the news without the
as sparks from the thieeldeg engine, '• "•• ° *Talks '
•on active service. , Some send a year's
• pay. -Among the contributions froni
The outcome ivas that -We prited.the •trai1esas4"4 like Ynn Y•Or.-1' ninebr Mr.;
galvanized fob.. eisank* and shingles A.rdup, but I Cannot marry yen. '
rethed officers ono froze) a gallant;
gettlemea: in a far_ totattrys
writes:,
' "/ have twice applied to be taken in
the A:rmy Reserve; but hatie been re-
fused on aecount of my hearifig.
was a gunner officer, for several years
but having beau made deaf by tetin
firing Was thrown gelds) without a
pension. , , , •
• 1)ages of.padding; and when on
0. real.
reanufactured. 'by the 'different* firms
and found 'them to be 'rid little higher
In prke' than the.lv,00d. that we botight
enough /or the barn:
•
We now have a building; the whole
exterior of which mtidcd,galysokt
ed steel, Conducting ivireeftni into
the ground from. the roof, making it
lightning proof and we have practi..
cally nothing to fear iron: lire corning,
from an outside sonrce. It cost Us a
Itt10,finSfe tint We believemre get bet-
ArdnP (lsieking up his hat)-st .
be ecetally franIc with you, Miss But.;
lion. I de:13 Sikte•youSat all, but. . t
would marry yoU in a naivete. .
More 1self.sacrifIcing than you are
Good evening. , •;:b• • •
' A Stinger Himself.
• .Merely ,Curionn-What was it the(
woman had, a serving bee? •
Male Pessimisti--Must bete been •a, •
"hoe" all right; I gods there • wasc
.1