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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-4-21, Page 6CRTC THE COWARD Teacher Engaged in Real Ch ai r cter - Making When She Taught William to Fight His Battles In response to a summons, Johnny* and William stood, in the office of th school principal. Johnny was a fighter. Russian, In dean and C`•ana 1iaa blood flowed in his -veins and he was the ..dopted soli of a Greek This combination of race and environment could scarcely pro- ce a tante teezzzperemm1lt So little Johnny loved the thumping of fists aril the rolling of his antagonist and timeeli in the dirt. William, was not even a self -Wend- er, When attacked at school he usu- ally rat. to eheeter under his teaeher's :authority; when not in school, to any convenient protection. Pure Swedish blood coursed through William's illiam s 'arterial !system, but any Augustus Adoteltes instincts which were his by `-Mghtikrt racial inheritance were being re -rushed out by the eleciplire of an unduly pious father. Johnny, undersized, alert, facedl his s ]cool principal with the assurance „ that wives from fighting icy self in life's straggles. Wiltlam, overgrown phlegmatic, stood in the attitude of one accustomed to sledging blows rattier than to parrying them or strike ang hack, 'Ties Farrar ant '..yoking et the two ex' -•rete factors in a problem which had been troubling her for eerie tittle She had thought o'it a ,teIution ba.ce,I en a theory which she belie. -el sound and, whi.;h she also he.ieved would give a true result that would be last - principal as the noted the changes in f; '" the two huin?n factors in her problem. "Well, William'," she said, "you can fight tear yourself." "Yes, Mies Farrar, I tank Teen lick hint if I try once again." William; at !ghat grinned. The next round was a battle royal. Step by step the Swede backed the Russian—Indian into a corner until at last 1.e panted, "Let's stop!" His eyes "Did he hit back, Johnny?" asked e Miss Farrar, 'Wawa' - sansweredJohnny, "Re jest beliered, TR tell teacher!' " "Boys," said the principal, "the only way at I see to square things up be- tween you two is a real fight, So far, Johnny, you have done the fighting and, William, you heave done the cry- ing. Sometimes the only way for boys to settle their quarrels isto light it out. I believe in fair fight where both take part. The reason I have brought you here is that you may have plenty of xoom. You are to fight until one of you is whipped. I am going to be umpire to see that there is fair play. "Johnny, you stand on this side of the lime and William. on that side," Johnny, eager for a fray, threw the leek of hair out of his left eye with a toss of his head, stepped into the "ring" and assumed an attitude both offensive and defensive. William,. fear in his eyes, shrank , bask. "0 Miss Farrar!" he boohooed. "My father he all time Says do " "Stop!" said the principal sternly, '.lour father has nothing to do with Miss Farrar's blue eyes grew steely. 'Vilna -el," she said, "yeti are a big baby! For two gears your teachers and I have taken your part against other brays smaller than eou. We will do this nu longer. You must learn to take your own part, fight your own b;tales. Stop crying, If you do not hum how to fight, I'll show you how. "Ilse e up. Be a man, Take your place. I'm going to snake special rules for this fight. One is, Johnny, you are not to hit William until he!, hits you a pretty hard blow. Then you can pitch in. Neither of you must hit inn. An e'vviit, in v hi h the two boys were the prii:clpa] a.ter. , semi by her at the noon recess, had given her the cor.uttions for tees r"; her eehation. "William," she apo: trophi ell men - telly. -you have always been a bele,- het el+yI :» you are g ftir the !colt ef reward. 1 der't like the change in your eye-- cera' year hande have sneaking t::snelnerita. Yen win be striking in the back next. ••Jolarny, you are a funny little led::: You :+ro necinniett insolent, I fear you ere even getting :brutal. You i:cen to be cergt:ered by one of your ewe victims. What you need, Wit- lia:n, you baby elephant, is to be ' taught that Ged helps him who helps 'himself. Arad it semis to be up to nee to gore you both what you need.' Tho principal stied up and gave the, hitt?e boy,; a long look. 'arise Farrar's' long looks had a reputation among the pupils in the stehool. "Conte with me," she said quietly. Johnny went with a swagger, wink- ; ing knowingly at shuffling William i but the ellene ordeal in the ofnee had leen trying. 'William's tears were ready to triekle down his freckled face and even Johnny's dark, cheeks showed red. Er.tering an erapty recitation room :Miss Farrar ar said swisi:ally, "Who licked in the :crap to -day?„ "Me," piped Johnny striking a hentam-cork attitude. "Is that so, 'William?" asked Miss' Farrar, turning to the lad, "Tees, Miss; Farrar," blubbered Wil- ; Boaz. "I neve, tone?icy' him and I told him it was on the silica' grounds and he must not fight but he hit like as, ha always is." •. y didn't you pitch in and Tick hint? You are 'Tigger than he said the prince+l. lerey ' stammered the astonished aA a'i em, ";'nye father he says he will ii,.sc me reefui if I fight. He always say .at it is cal 3 bad and wicked brr,. eke J1-shnny as fig ht.s." de illumined Johnny's little dark fie at this tribute to his fame and pees att. "Then you are going to keep on jetting Jchnny tease you and knock 'ou around, are you?" queried the rincipa 1. "0 aliss Fnrrar!" sniffed William. "My father he all time says do like the Bible ay -s about soft answers. 'When Johnny calfs ane cry baby, I eaay soft, 'Go chase yourself up around 'n tree once.' And to -day when he ' Heil. me `Swede,' I say soft to him, ou're one by -gash Indian like what lives down on the beach and eats rot- ten fish.' Then Johnny runs after acre and swats me." below the belt er on the face, ready. Your first blow, William." "I can'tl" bawled William. The fighting blood of Scottish an castors began to revolt in the grin- eipai's heart. Conquering a desire to i hake the coward, she said: "Shut your fists this way. No, tight. It's your knuckles that hurt. Now think that you are driving a stake in the ground or splitting wood and draw back and hit Johnny as hard as you can en the chest" William wiped away the tears on his left coat sleeve and holding out his right arm limply, approached Johnny as though he were a sleeping bulldog or a stick of dynamite and toadied hint on the ebest with the back of his hand. Johnny giggled. "Good!" exclaimed the self-appoint- ed pugilist trainer. "But keep your fist doubled up and hit very hard— like this." The principal struck a sample blow on William's broad chest. "Just to stir him up," she thought. It worked. With a last gasping sob, William adjusted his fist and warily approached the indifferent, amused. Johnny and planted something like a blow en the small area of the fighter's chest. The young pugilist, taken by surprise, staggered. This was first blood to brawny Wil- liam. His eye brightened, his big comb hulking shoulders straightened, the primal man began to waken. Then t the battle was on. Fists flew out a with more rapidity than skill. Johnny, the experienced, kept his head, used his eyes and made his blows count. William, drunk with the joy of his t new-found power, struck blindly but each blow increased in force. Pen- spiration instead of tears soon streamed down his face. At the end of eight minutes just fi told t story. ' "Time!" called the umpire.. "Are yon beaten,jolt-any?' she asked. "Well, William, •lee 'has learned to fi glxI'mseem and I'kind of tired," he gawp ed: His backward tail• across the room was marked by chaps of blood from his sunned I,mucicles. The umpire ached. to - biad up the bands so pitifully: small and to bathe the dripping faces of both bays. Hers must be the ,Spartan's ;part, so the kindly impulses were trampled down. The laughter that had been danger- ously angerously near the surface more than once during tete ae-tive solution of her prob- lem was choked back and Mise Farrar !poked seriously at the steaming lit- tle primitives who with heaving chests sod eyeing each other. "How is it, William? Have you had enough?" "Ile ain't said I've licked him yet," answered the lad. The third round was soon over. Wirilltaxn closed with his antagonist clumsily but effectually. There was a short, fierce struggle, then down they both went on the #icor, William on top, rinnirg his old tormentor flat. "Say you're licked oneei Holler "nough' yet!" he panted. No answer trent Johnny but a claw- like han:1 wriggled loose and got hold of William's hair. "Shaine!" called the umpire. The son of Sweden bore hard or his fallen fie, showing no size of 'nervy to his enemy, "Make hien let me up," at last gasp- ed the under tact. '•Haller 'nought' Holler you're lick- ed already yet!" grunted William, pressing a little harder on Johnny's All breathing apparatus, "A•iv, go on! Ain't you got me down?" The defiance was in Johnny's words. There was little in his voice. "Has Wiliam whipped you, John- ny?" asked the principal, "Y -e -s," carate in broken tones from the conquered tyrant and bully of the primary grades. "Very weld," said the umpire. "The fight is ended. Rise, William the Cone I queror." They were two grimy, se Baty, gory boys that stood up. Black hair and ash -colored hair were dripping. we Shirts were torn open at the Reek, ties I were off and coats were ripped, But o a'Villiam, a nein light on his face, had f never looked so manly; and Johnny's braggart insolence had disappeared., The tears that were running down his C face the principal pretended not to C see. "Now boys," she announced, this should end your quarrelling. Every- thing is all square and settled, so shake hands like men, for you are riends now. This conventional a was performed with sone reluctance due to shyness perhaps, but it was c done with solemnity if net with dig- est nity. sh After buttoning their collars and c arranging their ties, Miss Farrar said d cheerfully. "Go wash your faces and an you hair and make yourselves c took like nice third-grade boys," It was just before dismissal. The b hird graders, with hands clasped in devout attitude on the desks in oat of them and with a Raphael - angel expression on their faces, sat a siting for the welcome signal, when he principal come into the room with two damp -haired, red-faced, sheepish- b ooking boys. "Miss Huntley," , she said to the eacher, "William will be able to ght his own battles hereafter. He clue It is the overflowing fountain,: not the ogle that is half' full or just full, that makes the valley below green and glad. it is •abounding health, health that is bubbling over, sup- erabundant energy, that counts, This is the health that makes mere living a joy. darns across the large units of th gully. A suggestion box was placed at th entrance to a farm, and a board w pit sip inviting criticism of method steak and business. The idea of ha ing a suggestion box inside a stor is not new, but this was. 'Many nov ideas were dropped in the box; not the least helpful was one reading "Why don't you advertise and ho. a sale of potatoes?" The idea a good one, and the farmer used with the e result that many potatoe were sold, The person who made suggestion told" his friends, with tb result that many. became purchaser E SUNDAY SCHOOL APRIL24. Poverty and Wealth. Isaiah: 5: 8-10; Amos $. 4-7'; St. Luke 16: 19-25. Golden. Text --St Luke 12: 34. Connectiztg Link Where social t selling to the poor "the refuse el the and e„aromic conditions are such that wheat, unfit for human food. men who work hard and tong do noel Amos believes that sueh ill-gotten earn enough to keep themselves and : wealth can bring no real goon l to its ,e their families in comfort, to feed and, possessors. The justice of God is clothe and. educate their children, i challenged by it, and God re er for- e there is evidently something wrong. g gets, This is especially true in a land like" St, Luke 16; 1'J -2a. A certain rich o our own, a Iand of abundant resources.' ratan. It is not the rich man's vealif. as it is folly, in this country of free pea d that is condemned in the perahis--it le free democratic i:vstitneions is his callous indifference to the need v_ to blame the few who have gathered of the poor sufferer at his gate. The e wealth or to talk revolution. The' very dogs had more :cornpassiee tharee remedy Nes with ourselves in careful,' he. el patient effort to discever'the eaii:.es1 The contrast is strikingly set be.. of inequality and injustice cued poser-Itwcen the rich man faring sunv'ttueus- : ty, and when discovered to remove ly and the heggar full of sores. Can ld them. Is not one of the chef causes! these men he brothers, sens of the wag of poverty and unemployment thief sane Heavenly Fathe:-? Can there a crowding of multitudes cif people late' he;any love between theta? Has the s the o ties, whe•n city fields, our forests,; rich man shown A real brotherly feel- the our fissheries •and cur iztitee cannot; ir,g lay fingering a perry to the beg - e find enough laborers? Dees not the' gar as he passes hila be? V1'. w: eel remedy for Cenada,• in very large' Jesus Christ= have done? Wowed He 1 part, lie la move and still more pro- have taken the beggar into Hie horse, duction, and, th efore, in the eegag-i and fed and nursed him to health, nig of more and still mere workmen , and Helped him to a place cf it ;Ie. in our great pre ductire iedeatriea? pendeatee and comfort? n And it will lie with our govcrninen.t to Carried by the Angels, '1 k , paar- provide •by taw that there shell be t able suggests the lesson that the fair and an aJequete recompense to, wrongs , : d injustices of this life may every horaost worker, and restraint he set right in the world tit come. But or compulsion of route rort for bath it suggests with .equal tleret!rnss and the idle loafer and the busybody, force that the time foe men to begin Ise., 'at 8-10. Woe unto them. The I hone=!' and uneeltibhly, tryir,rr to prophet, living more than seven hun- t set things right is here ant nerw. The dred years before the birth' of Christ, mail neglected his opus rtl.ni'.y wets the injustice of his time and is and was lost. A barn lay h n :':.. Ailed with a. pason for reform, :thirty', and s!.1 at hie gate, wed 1'-a Especially is he disturbed by the fact' did t•,, at ma:deter to. niter. that the lend seems to k: ;eas=ing out; The Bicho dote net tale:: that e°.11 he of the hands of its original owners,' ilea in the inane 'i or in the Pe the free men or Israel.. into the vos a .: sicn of we citi:. Railer er cines it etre, are &ion of a few great melees or rich me -m. 'meta induct! .:tail thrift, end reale Ilex eforth they who had- b.ee thin fid gin, 'viii"' it .• ace,,:.. is i - own rna'ters, o; ners and teitivatcr. r y5 of n*e l n'r set a:de ar•I Ct ti of the land, be,.ame i''aC ...,al;. '1avc :, wr. r r :ted eelflit' use e•i the ;awe: cr leave their^ poor Image to fled a that trialtli give-. precarious living in the shops ,.n.} t 1it.i'tc :;Eau. markets cif the city=. I Mer: cu eseet i+.'::i.• e,:o+•e case Isaiah foresees trout:le cominl* upset titeu hi it r; I"e 'en''' rev oft! zy the rich landsgrabtbers, 'whose, in :tri- ` eat • with sigh skill t ,_tt the la t.., .:'s wale Inst for more would seam i to in:li- weever, A cinei,.,,aa peel i'wf''1. 1 cafe that they wished to dwell alert said rel c•atly that the eerie in ..t .i• e • in the midst of the earth. A ftrrelg;n " ought never Bio 'r agil . l te, ; ,"a enemy, the the Assyrian, w -i 1 rain invade ease.. So it i, lye retrani i to :t the country, and• their fire batiste ; diseases; we heye tea lair r = •nate "I shall be left deco ate, and their vine poverty as scala='hili;• wn,ieh i:. i evit- yard:s rind corn fields tva to and un- able. It is not se, : n.1 int' of the productive. Then ten Acres of vine- tasks awaiting' :;n Melee -tit church i9 yard shall yield one bath, that is only to show that poverty is no mete in - eight or nine ganger. And the seed c+vitehle they were t :any phyeicil t of an horsier shall yield an ephah that ; cases vhieh are row disnp:.,acrinte is one-tenth only of what -was sown. Much of tete poverty in Chri:'t'a !lily For an ephah contained about Wino " was due to inAn's If hra:at gallons by dry measure, .and an homer poverty a man;,. us is due to the seam was ten times afi much. I cause. Amos 8: 4-7. Ilear this. Amos, like 1 Isai^ h, denounces the spirit of • greed ; when a vt d"s ins at t':etre which was so prevalent an hies time, . tht won the in:mode-late and naserupulous Ts cu 'lave gat hien on the roan. seelcirg of gain, and the prey ing;-urcn A roil -kept woucl lot ora plant;!- the or. It seemed, ntdeed, as if tlicy* ; tion of forest trees tmn the hilly par- tions aar- wou d destroy poor min out of the, i i s u. o i, of the farm Will make the glee Children: of Armenia. Thousands of Armenian childre are frameless and starving;, waitin for us to decide whether they :are to live or die, I Wonder. I wonder if I have the right To let niyrelf forget to Caro How children shiver in the eight Where all is dark and cold and bar, My tittle ones are freed Prem dread And sheltered safely from t storm; Their eyes are bright, their cheeks red, Their laughter g'ad, their clothhin warm„ Idiit other little ones must weep, And face new dread with eaa'bt new day, Where Hunger's fangs bite very deep And Want sits like a ghost in gray If children who are hungry sigh; If others who are cold complain; No guilt lies on my conscience --I Have never wronged them for my gain, But, knowing how they weep at night, Where all is :dark and cold and hare, wonder if I have the right To let myself forget to care? --S. E. Kiser. $60 a year, t5 a month, will keep t, an Armenian child from starvation. f you do not feel like adopting an rphen for yourself, get some of your riends to join you in the financial undertaking. Send contributions to Treasurer anadian Armenian Relief, Mr. D. A. ameron, Celt:Wien Bank of Com- merce, Toronto, Disinfect Dairy Barns. The spring renovation in the dairy ct barn should include a good spraying with disinfectant after the dust and obwebs have been removed if such tineas are present. Let as much sun- ine in as possible as it helps to lean up the stanchions. Dark and amp corners are good disease -breed - g places and where the sunshine annot reach, the spray dope should e used most liberally. As the season advances and the queen is Iaying to her full capacity, single breed chamber will not have' sufficient space for maximum pro fiction of brood. As soon as the hive ecomes welI populated with bees, the rood chamber should be enlarged by adding a second storey without a een excluder. as Johnny seemed to be getting the worst of it, the uin lire called, "Time!" l "Rest a few minutes;" she raid. William, mow a young anianai, with 1 something of the - man's sense of M power of defence and offence awaken- ed, was restive under the enforced ins tezruption. Johnny looked with some fear and considerable respect at the I aroused Swede, but as yet his thin dark face showed no sign of yielding."I'm willing to lay a stake of a month's salary that my solution will turn out to be correct," thought the will come to you with no more coin- laintsiabout being teased."thirdWhen the jubilant thgraders lad filed into the freedom of outdoors, iss Huntley turned to the principal with a Look of curiosity. "Do tell ince, what were you doing >s1 room nine this afternoon? You're ooking utterly fagged, but I know you don't believe -in using the rod and I 'think you wouldn't use the thumb- screws or the -water cure. What were you doing with Johnny and. William? "Making character," answered- the prinnipaL - 1>stroll i4 w laaaltnaaaulantran r ia ttrat ss>a>sstaf hezea>ats s u as m>stees>a 1 1 En 1 erience Cotints You can't afford to neglect fertilizers this year. it 4, tt Fertilizers: si es 1 F9` id i* Here are their advantages: (1) ipay Four money back with (4) hasten ripening„ big interest. (5) eliminate to a 'large es. (2) increase yields. tent crop failures,, (3) improve quality. (6) help banish weeds. (7) cut down labor costs. Lasi summer a$1 invested . in fertilizer for - potatoes I growing near London returned in one case 82.94 `and in another $4,52. Figure your needs, and place your orders at once so that you can receive fertilizers in time for seeding, 11 The Soil and Crop Improvement Bureau . r of the Canadian Fertilizer Association rt Henry G. Bell, 13,S.A., Director, 14 Manning Arcade, Toronto, Ont. yr 19 A tot■RM/ oirism11guts smal'Jd o 9XXXWill,allXfitaRliikilE.?irvxsormaiiicztanomi+v Topics in Season. A set of good tools wig often pay for itself in one job on the farm If you must use locks, use gond ones. Not much protection in a cheap lock: . Plenty of • water internally,,extern- ally and eternally -all possible if you heed the slogan: "Running„water and a bathroom in every farm home,” A remedy for erosions:. To- prevent erosion on sandy hillsides, throw up ridges. of earth runn ng across the' hillside, When plowing, A fey such ridges, erected at intervals i of twelve or fifteen yards, will help to prevent the soil from being washed town the hill by heavy rains. `' Steep slopes, poor soil, sandy land, unusual cornets, gullied and wooded •traet—a41 these afford opportunity for growing timber profitably. Certain kinds of trees, like the• locust, "build up" poor soil through the nitrogen- gathering bacteria in .the root,,nodules. Small gullies can be stopped up by .clesely peeked brush and treetops: Large,' open gullies are checked only by planting over ,the , entire gully `basin, supplemented by low brush lords ander dso e were the rie'a lad- i sformore and more. marc attractive, New Moon and Sabbath were hely!. e„ - -- -_ d,? days set apart for rest and wcts,iip, ..rah. .t, These twitters are impatient of theehe holy days, eager to return to their dishonest traffic. They defraud the people who buy by making the e•phoh, or bushel measure, small, and the shekel (=about is oz.), with which they weighed the silver bits which were offered in payment, too great. For a. paltry debt, a bit of silver, cr the price of a pair of eendals, a poor man or his children might be sold into slavery. Moreover, Anios, eharg;err these same avaricious, merchants with es- teas-gee:etym. 5 i1lLi ES 9V 001::"Fad. SSI ratiSXXATs Big money can still be made on these skins. Ship .your lot to us and make sure of re- ceiving the right price. Re- turns sent the same day as shipment is rectived. WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED WOOD STOCK. ONTARIO a_ ESTABLISHED 1870 ::.74tstx•4 •..A ♦ lei . . „ +t;,7 -;i BETTai HOMES _ AT LOWER COST (`HOOSE your Home from our new Catalogue containing over fi''ty illustrations of modern, attrac- tive Homes, for which we supply material to build complete (masonry and plass s work excepted) at a saving of $400. $5013. A complete Set of Plana and Specificptions is supplied free of cost with every Hone. Intending Home -builders should :write at once for our new Catalogue No. 69W The Halliday Company Hamilton Canada. Ca nada The or r•etsemeltcargetae ttesaggeeetaaereealatinejjaa40 age'' Tires as does the caweer of a.leg, heatepearghsimintelanaleite. titan All DOMINION.- TIRES; ere built.-tto mat dtandb.14 XegglAnitillt of siege Qual tyanawodkarartalts arif cernikettanikarrikaiviireckeelliet.e+uery-eal owner will get the utt:tost iii. mileage:astvice antZttati§ otr,. no matt er what Bike of.tikes dye bit There are DOMINION TIRES Ilya went, car: and every pu atter, t DOMINION,, ?NNERt.:T1713ES 1 to • 1pgyre perh5tqIit. balknced fixes► a and DOMINION TIRE. 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They are attractiveµ lords ander dso e were the rie'a lad- i sformore and more. marc attractive, New Moon and Sabbath were hely!. e„ - -- -_ d,? days set apart for rest and wcts,iip, ..rah. .t, These twitters are impatient of theehe holy days, eager to return to their dishonest traffic. They defraud the people who buy by making the e•phoh, or bushel measure, small, and the shekel (=about is oz.), with which they weighed the silver bits which were offered in payment, too great. For a. paltry debt, a bit of silver, cr the price of a pair of eendals, a poor man or his children might be sold into slavery. Moreover, Anios, eharg;err these same avaricious, merchants with es- teas-gee:etym. 5 i1lLi ES 9V 001::"Fad. SSI ratiSXXATs Big money can still be made on these skins. Ship .your lot to us and make sure of re- ceiving the right price. Re- turns sent the same day as shipment is rectived. WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED WOOD STOCK. ONTARIO a_ ESTABLISHED 1870 ::.74tstx•4 •..A ♦ lei . . „ +t;,7 -;i BETTai HOMES _ AT LOWER COST (`HOOSE your Home from our new Catalogue containing over fi''ty illustrations of modern, attrac- tive Homes, for which we supply material to build complete (masonry and plass s work excepted) at a saving of $400. $5013. A complete Set of Plana and Specificptions is supplied free of cost with every Hone. Intending Home -builders should :write at once for our new Catalogue No. 69W The Halliday Company Hamilton Canada. Ca nada The or r•etsemeltcargetae ttesaggeeetaaereealatinejjaa40 age'' Tires as does the caweer of a.leg, heatepearghsimintelanaleite. titan All DOMINION.- TIRES; ere built.-tto mat dtandb.14 XegglAnitillt of siege Qual tyanawodkarartalts arif cernikettanikarrikaiviireckeelliet.e+uery-eal owner will get the utt:tost iii. mileage:astvice antZttati§ otr,. no matt er what Bike of.tikes dye bit There are DOMINION TIRES Ilya went, car: and every pu atter, t DOMINION,, ?NNERt.:T1713ES 1 to • 1pgyre perh5tqIit. balknced fixes► a and DOMINION TIRE. ACCESSORIES ixt•ee r+ebti t,youi repair ltih' They- arc-aotd'by-the best- dsaitrs &am const. to coast. c I":_ TIRES