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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-01-01, Page 6• 11111M11. THE TIA luwith the action het jairaspranglloWalr ke. lieu* of tho sn•tY Ilit fire -place. Seri woo his only chance.' e,AiM&i know, theeiti= wattsi ever two font irtur•!tks . ' flow- iron bare 111111- been laid cross - By JACK REYNARD YOU • UII tomes:cies eeese_eis feet from the! * l‘w t° rb-ti°11" the The FRUIT GROWERS CON-- NG. , . Of 1 .All ACRE OF SOILI ••bin were. id oat above the other 411r"---=°1=5. aft.' at a distance of about two feet! VENTION ADDRESS. "Now don't forget to stop at Joel's lor 'qua to get home before dask. For Qv,. -kly catching the firit bar and by i hnd give him the fruit a coo es,' Mrs. MacKenzie called out to Max as set:es . illinging the tenon to Pet above it and reseh the next A _ Did you ever visit your district heset out over the wag -on road to e' .set scov emit* 1 he 1411 the afore and est est sit a brisk -Etre he stepped to rest Diming the1 • Mei found Joel cleaning trout. The, pace for home. He had'uot left the' past few minutes he had had warmly hew on Sena Areas "TV scmheci:1?in 440nde trheisspeafternoon. cts. Across the; ot preserves or Diane other delicoky to gray clouds. gaining *. briath he began. to shout ., z .on e sides e Few native "Canadians have anY con- front of the room was the hlackboard. =rehim vritb. He was a typical Max quickly' realized that it would for help, now and then calling out ce -o Indian, barely over twenty- soon sway.. He shifted his bag from Joel's name. , ption of the possibilities of an acre space No boards the of th 1 telse in the ways of the white men, for the first flakes fell. It would get dark sat On the cold, sharp stones of the. dividuals as well 8.5 nation! ' have intended for exhibiting good work or be spent his summers and fails guid- much quicker now—he must hurey, he chimney top, while below him he coukd grasped for more for all- time, saYs .,7.ihatever the teacher' wished to pin on nd ki ' northern Ontario * winter eight sqi ?ming and SqUirming he Malt • his shoulders *nil so on to the top of the domes,. Fruit and Vegetable CommiAnc- 09172017S CIP•S? A Visit to the District School. big Indian was always glad to nee eutahlits of the vilisire till the eun tinte to breathe, and now he fouad tered a small, rather neat looking! Wok especially when ,Max had CIL12 became wereast with low hanging himself rnting like tired dog, 11*- Profitable. of soil. The principle of expansion is room, but between the windows were live, friendly and intelligent. Although shoukler to shoulder preparatory to. It was a miserable situation. With Oull-blooded to his ovrn race, Joel vats quickening his pace,to dog trot when one leg on the outside and one in, Mal 118 as thit la,' of self-defence- In- stretched squares of burlap, probably leg the hunting and fishing • parties' thought. The shadows of the second see and her the bear, gazing at him E„ J. Atkin, Leamiogton. in an address it- A few stale samples of drawing, an the growth spruce, baleam and bare hMi ard- and 'ffing- Occasionally the bear's at the Fruit Growers' ,Cou'reutium 41 were pinned on one pire of blieLp, that came up horn the cities rtie his winters he trapped, but wood, began toiengthen. It- was over eyes would gle4.1n a. fiery golden_ or., our -greed for gain we ignore the small and pasted on various parts of . the the springs he again worked two miles to Jaen, anci. over a mile green, and- (sometimes, after it had. and smilingly insignificant things in IS"M" '1111"r a 'War • " -(A01'41611::':illd'AAkell't0+.Safety, An- vabley. In some of the many holes cabin. He would pass n-iithin a quer- Suddenly -Max heard a faint call: B tufls, g Bruin had fount comfortable quarters ly, brea ng e keen, , - marshes and low -lands drained, §,o that the teacher's -desk, with i.issbac's to the w Joel had .)0.,_---1. gsls.. 'sear.: clear, longs:drawn baY of a running, IAA ,out 'for the, wolves, rJoel. ,, , ti3eettei in land,is ru6hed- in few tb I- 'Il th ' t t nt k Th . julep off the yacht into the sea, and • swim about until picked .ups by a and sallied forth only in the warmest he heard ahead of him and from the ten,,,als. Joel it was. the water that should' remain for room. The program was in view, Po winter weather. ; opposite aide of. the frozen river, the., Here I am oto top of the., cabin. IA , ice.s of the best men and women for various kinds of baits, but to no avail. him. He gripped the hag more firmly,' followed' by the death howl; of a., wolf b , walls and on the' front blackhoard with the white men in the lumber from there to Mai's own home. ' sniffed about the cabin for awhile and! nature' and rush wildl on •• without , cleaned, the tWO talked of the fishing, long, awhIgui. g_stinide# half run, half ing dits shining white teeth. Outsidel 7—, . surely missed her calling. 'when she gb; within the next fifty years, coming this school in your district? Are you agriculture is indically changed information when she first took the the teacher of this school? Are. you toek up teaehing. She volunteered the of the traoping, of Max's school and a trot, that vrould esrry him. hour after the wolves sulked noiselessly throu school that she never intended to- a member of ithe school board of this hundred other things both were inter -‘hour, and mile after mils, over hills the underbrush. A big owl soared, generations will have a food situatioh fike bigWeek bear that had come down ; heavier pack than he had now; and shadow faded away through the tree i Thle fair Ontario of ours, whichi supposed:. ' e next Si.ige . rh t. 19 to ested i& Put chiefly they talked of and through timber, with a much like a shadow overhead, and like a to solve, that is now perplexing India. teach, but when the count el 'd d district? . Are you the father or the ly mother of some of these children9 and hands had evidently not seen soap and water for some time a w vac hair Was unacquainted with comb oy brush. ings, and often pupils are in the build- ing an hour before their teacher at - rives. • No respect for person or prop- erty ale shown and evidently is not taught. At recess time such-ncdse and disordersprevailed-that it was „almost 'impossible to hold conversation with the teacher. • The doors of this building are never locked, there is no way to lock them. The windows have .ne secure fasten - or compass. our ays :were Christmas decorations. The teacher is a bright girl but she* Something is lacking, not - only in t ool itself, but in file' district. Is , While the trout were rapidly being vras irons Joel thet he'had learned. the open its jaws slightly and snarl, show -1. f he ech • • • camps along the river. I • Max was proud of his endurante. It came back to look Up at Max, it would! chart Unlesstem MOTION IC:PRES HO* EVEN DAVY JONES • IS CALLED IN. Clever Devices Employed by Producers to'Obtain a Realistic Picture. The film -produce? makes a favorite of no kind of craft, for he will handle everything from a raft to an ocean liner. His pet Stunts are the acci- dental', turnover of a rowing -boat, wreck of a craft by eollision, or by running into an iceberg, rocks, or fire at sea. ' - When a scenario stipulates that a yacht be. set on fire, and a boiler ex- plosion • 'despatch • it, beneath the waters, ,,n old craft is' purchased. Af- ter the preliminary deck scenes lead- ing up t� the sensafidnal situation have been producedf'the vessel is, di- vested of its interior fittings, for the produceiais not so rash as is common- . Sieross the iee from the Northern On-. leave him. scarcely more tired at the tops. The wind woe soughing and, k8 hig4 y eet e •09 satuatte the ship with oil, end turpen- est of all provinces in the to accept high school graduates Don't blame."the teacher, nor the tiles azei place sticks of dynamite in • and caves along the liver the black ter of a mile of it. And then sudden- from the direction a Joel's, and irn- us or expansion. A large -clock hangs dead on the does not teach for nothing. :Until the is dangerous work for tario woods and apparently had settledl end of the -day then at its beginning. moaning in the trees .and rattling the, Dominion. for the production of food- - de_ school beard but wake up 'and do sotrie- „tea eaee count of shoitage of teachers she the men .who are assigned the task • . Down and Up Again.' • h Eau Claire bushes di fled to satisfy this 'd d h • , . • thing. Remember that a good teacher :Immediately their work is over, they down to spend the winter in the riser n e was c t f t'll e mediatelybegan calling assa'n at in- With our forests gone, and our wall and a small alarm dock ticks on salaries ,of teachers are improved, it old t the serv- t o 'lied- one f:er • • _Se had trSsd traps %%eke, ale sea, ee, 1,a,e ne,Inee a ea ass r:. . •, tea,. e ;se Ssasa - ' ST;elaer , ll-huntilig and wolf.- It frightened him • It thrille4 Cittck! Crack!' sounded Joel's rifle hear's tracks at the old Eau Claire, his pace. pack disappeared -in the timber. our orchards and crops; and drought "Htred Man's Room." lay is given Mallet' he never times the o'clock till recess time, and not, one expect ut ' blighte .and 'diseases,- for ..the, time -1 -was in the. room froin . rn any, after repeatedly. seeing the eyery muscle tense; _ready to double rending.* the air as the rest of the most log houses, the Eau Claire cabin he Saw a, wolf sitting on its haunches "the bear's . in here." ' great war and the.extreme scarcity: of ' time and there were. not more than to make them happy and contented , e'en burned.. Oftentimes several , - devised a unique but practical trap.: into a run, he stopped „stock still. For chimney.", . 500 ecres of -land has -put into .practiee besa _The hoard space is small but there, is ' , farms. was ideal for his purpose. Here -with watching him intently. liax's-,pulse, "Ruh!" ' farm -labor, has taught our ' farmers. that number in any one..clais. .. • with their job: Several hired men are ;, rece-hes. are taken for different produc- „ More etrong and well preserved than' there, not twenty yerds ahead of him,! : "Wolves nothing!” ainsulated *PA, The past few years, owing to the room for five or six to work at one a n'OVel plan of handling his hieed help the help of Max and his faiher's tools, , began to quicken. The wolf pointed A throaty growl and a ripping more in regard to -intensive •agricul- ' Every- pupil in' the room ansv;ered employed, and up to last summer the tams 'at the same time. . Joel had re enforced the heavy door,' its nose to the .sky and with no other. sound as the bear clawed against the Lure, smelled acreage, and ' larger every question put to him with a ris- farmer had all the ustial difficulares in i In one picture an expeintse yacht barricaded the 'windows, and ingeni-' movement emitted a ringing howl. scablin walls, proved the truth of Max's .. yields, than the' whole previous cen- ing inflection of the voice. There were keepin-g good ones. .. was blown up by a torpedo. Clara ously contrived an arrangement of Even.as it did this, other wolyes came, statement. - . ' ' Then he built a finS. new farm home,' . . Kimball Young, the star, witnessed will no longer spread a -five -acre crop only four or five appeared to have any and. in draWing up the plans.for it hit . , this Meident, and declared• it was a. e shame that sueli a pretty. boat should be destroyed. The direetor informed ' ' - ' • hr h the scant timber: "Wolves gesie now," assured Joel as tury. .The successful farmer of to-daY twenty7three pepils in attendance,' and one • • I initiation te -get full value for tile out - cabin a few miles from his own, he • -But itlitead of increasing his pace. "Ha, ha,. wolves chase Max ap the. ds and hard w:nters for our A •farrner 1,vho is -farmini.); dese to dynamite to eiplode until the ship has' hot win . pupil was asked' to do any board work.. hickory spnngs and triggers so p ace s in g that when the bear had been attracted from all directions. Max kne-w that' soon as he had fieished shouting o -ver come will n.ot warrant the expense. teflon was passed.by with a frcavn on her, 401cingly, that she could ha% e as. Into the cabin.and tamperEd with the theY would not attack him while it the bear's capture, "colue 0,n 'down, oVer a twentY-acre field, as the net in- wet ta look after- A failure in reci- upon the idea of setting apart the bait, the door would snap shut anti .was yet light, gind he reasoned that wee'll fix'um bear in mornin'. ' TO'wer floor of one part of the house a fre-e gift if it was cif -any rise to her it Joel, lif passed the eabj..n but the er than then the wolves would be leap- and frem there juniped off into .the . li . 1 a titi•nk-,, after- it bad got, into /the t letches of The armers of to -day, and more par- i the ' teacher's, part, or the remark, as a •-biTed men ;.4 roorn"—not • On the way to town, after leaving reaeh Joel's cabin. He knew that soon- side y . . room, but a room that would serve; Davy • e woods,' Max could not . remember of moment'a hesitation Max started for "Joe, did you ever hear -of anybody that intensive farming alltl.rioll soil is..et room. are built into opposite sides The utility side wa..1 .alsoslooked the .vejossi.ele11.4. Ti ber joy, lie repelled , . 'de of the chimney to the low roof Ocularly'•the fruit and vegetable 7 'You must put more time en Yrear first and foremost of these perhaps is, A boys' toilet room and a girls' tail- • %S•riting,and reseiving their. frier:Ss.: . having seen aslive.bear, even though the cabin.. • \Vhat if the trap was jirrnrpsng out. of the frssinglin into .he Y_ d e ui ted with a -after. A :erige•ow•of ------hoolplaced ti 11.1:4.. i'.::,,It'31;igi :la :Jai. Itlile)(11';',:as;it i'.V014 f horticulturetl at .1 -s. f tl Is Hsi - he had been as far ncrth as, the region sprang'? But he'il,;d not stop to con- the tire?". asked Max as he hished I 'Secondly that crop rotation. Must be chemical closet outfit. Right' here let followed to produce suceessfully, year Me sayethat our own small boy of six above Sault Ste. Marie: He had vivid sidee what he. would do iu that \case: telling of his experience. . . unlY after year; a large., healthy and profit- ears sa 4 it is '-'-'"'"*".16.--rettri4e.,•_1SeAvsksf a dead bear which his Knossing that it was a possible haven "Yeh, I know what youemean; • securelalbcolt itself. • 'Would be deep (task before he could, Max then clambered down the out- Th f L • growers, ave earns. severe va uable work-, John."• No one was asked to .the men just as the living loom eerv-, She decided to 'take a sport ilia - door w -as unsprung. Although past . ing for his throat. I soft snow. He was not long , in et - been 'Spent in the northern Ontario flashed in his mind and so svithout a be in this -situation. • seninees and had a diver investigato ed the family for resting, readieg, lessems within the past few years. The make up -work. seventeen years old, all of a-hizh had The bear trap—Ean Claire's cabin— plaining to Joel how he had come to 'b . h ral ' of refuge the onle•-• th ught was to .get like you, fry -pan no better than fire . able crop, . , ... y toilet room he will not go into it. In t es so filthy in •the boys' . Horticulture That Pays. the corner next the boys' toilet *sten' cis As to the &St point, it is not my in- a very unsanitary openswater pail and dipper. Would ' you want your chid - - ever seen, and so he was in ign g tention to mention it but .briefly. • In to drink there.1 hesp-es that Joel would catch this big about fifty yaras distant. It took but for me as itdarker and darker, the Leamington section, -where the - fellow that had made such enormous a few moments to reach- the cabin, to but When I went in the cabin, I surely There are no recitation seats, and a years ago after shocking it in the there. He well kpe that to ren for fry -pan by m by get hot like fire. father a wocds along the riser. Not even a would show the wolves his fear, so he Max laugl.ed. "That's right," he tame bear or one in a cage had Mex strode as raPidly as possible, with the said, "if I -had stayed outside the cabin • • 1 in his rear 'keeping the wolves would have made it hot scarcity and high cost of manure number of the desks arc .so insecurely 'looking tracks. run in, and to ,pr the trigger. The was .in the fire with that bear in there. fastened that they 'flop, and squeak, At the village, Max went to the post. big door) propelled by the hickory An' I certainly was lucky to get out of makes it ahnost prohibitive, we must office, then to the general store. After spriegs, slammed shut with a ban& the fire like I did, don't you think so,i resort to other means: True., we oo • 'he had made purchasea lie went Scarcely had the sound ceaserdolvInir Joel?" • • use a small ansoupt- of farm -yard and wiggle snore frequently than is pleasant back 4'. the large wood 'stove around Max heard a roaring growl f out "Yeh!" Joel answered with a bread i manure, particularly where we have to sbich a dozen or more mershad gat/e: of one of the corners of the cabin—a. smile. follow extremely 'intensive forms of I saw children from sense of or • laP ld af- growl so ominous and terrifying that And so rescued and rescuer set off best families" whOse faces and necks culture, as in the greenhouses and on ; fairs were being discussed by several it seemed to make his very pulse and for Max s home aa the last 5114111114.1. WW 14' lumberjacks down fram the camps, as breath stand still. - our irrigation plots. In the latter we I of twilight faded from the sky and on one side <van where the men ::•Ould in half, it li:id wily torn .4 hole-ia tho hang their coats,when cornng in froni ' side. Mies young ai 4;71. •.• hall tbe wash bowls. This has retells a :big a trustworthy idea:sun:. craft; in which y'dcht ri.. Is'i 41 and repaired. 1 1 , is now work. On the °the:- gide he installed i saving of. work to the housewife, for. as fair owner has taken many trips... the •men now go direct -tO `the room to I There are occasions. when a misfor- . kitthen. . ' " ' • ' ' inalit4 of movies. the - tune proveS a .blessing in iii,guise to On :leaking of a prepate for m'ea1s...inStead of using I. , T'he room is fitted -up with •-•orrifitrt--.•*rer..k.aiorig 111, coast' wiira ea -;y dis-' able chairs, couches.' a writing desk, tan,e, he will probably Journey with .'and a cabinet. for guns. fishing -tackle.: ilk' baed ef •elayere and Cantera men, and similar things. Here the men weaving a marine drama en route, and really have a home of their ,)v. --n. The ese"ting all the atmosphere he requires. ovsn'er declares that the. pian works Neither is -he averse' to the other s.plesidid1y: ' . . • inuni-y-iiiving plan • of cutting 'views' give an annual ,application ot about ing year -the ground is planted to 4 , well as some 'other men who had come The quickness of thought and the from far back in the timber came the twenty -tons per acre, a from some of. the settlements to: -resources of -the nerves are things that echoing cry of a wolf, lonely and i which is supple.' onions. egg -plant or peppers. In this 'weird. - mesnted sq,th commercial fertilizers.1 rotation five profitable crops are (The End.) Where poisible a cover crop is also grownsdin the four years. while under -sown in the fall which is plowed down ' ordinary means of caiture ori:y three in the spring. On the would be produced. ' remainder of , That Beacon Light .1 the land a fall cover crop is generally ; If we had needed proof. that a reta- in the olden days, a man who erect- grown, this is plowed down in the tion of crops wes necessary we had an he south. I no man can understtand.Max a a Jenkins, the storekeeper, came back' healthy body and likewise an active and suddenly -interrupted. • ; brain. In a crisis thought and actions "Boys, I jist he'rd that ol' man Heft- are one and the same thing. And so derson kilted a Vmber wolf on his it was with Max. After 'a moment's h* ornin' " . frightened pause he acted. Clearly place iknd immeis diately leagues of nations' understanding that it was - the bear ed'a lighthouse -just ' as to -day he and wars were forgotten and talk that had growled, that it had come - builds a theatre -7h oped to make a for - turned to wolves; several of the men' into the cabin shortly before his ar- . . tune from it: ' As a matter of fact, elaim!ng they had seen srnall packs in rival and that up to that time it had • men who gained permission to place die vieinity lately. ' ! failed to spring the door. Max flung . , .N6ticine that the dull winter sun tge bag straight towards the dim. Permanent beacons on dangerous Was hanging low .in the west, it oc- corner, from *here the sound had parts of our coast made' thousand's of that if there werewolves come. to divert the attention of the pounds profit, says an English writer. hborhood it might be well hear ffOrn -himielf 10 the bag, anti .-----ThiSs- priectieeracf------alletvring-sprivetee persons to build lighthouses became very much abused, and was eventually stopped. One man paid $2,225,000 as in the no • Care Needed What Usig Electricity spring and supplemented with coin. ample one this last sea.Scn. A half- ' , mercial fertilizers. acre plot was planted to egg -pant, half Crop rotation is the one that re- I i of this area had been an old stra‘ser- quires,•perhaps, the greater considera- I IT patch the previous year and had , tion, and the proper rotation, to a , also growei a crop of late pistatoes, or great extent, controls the loss from in- i in other words, was the fourth year of sect pests a.nd plant diseases. 'While ;.the rotation mentioned above. The ts_were / ze end healthy and pro- sume, are fruit growers, a large num- aduced, oyes. one-half bushel per plant, ber engage . in vegetable growing as , of first-class fruit.. The otter quarter • ! acre had been planted with egg-plaet the maTotity of thogebefore me, I presl-Plan. well. These two work *ell together vio s -ear This crop had . .. , • the purchase price of a barren. rock 013 in a good many localities and on pro- . . . , ., , . which he built a lighthouse. per soil, especially one that is sandy ', been healthy and showed no signs of Electricity. like fire. is a . valuablea•turn siff the current hefore ,leaving • Of course, the value then •ef owning in nature; they give us a combination ' diseases' but the crop this year de - servant, but a danteroua master. So : them,. ' .. . ._, a lighthouse lay in the money 'that was that is both profitable and easily : veloped practically every disease com- tong as it is kept in perfect control it I (ti) Never touch .those inteilor live • demanded from passing ships. Sir 'handled. While vegetable growing is ! mon. to egg -plant and I think some i is the most convenient and cleanly 1 metal parts, of sockets. plugs, etc.., Edward Howard, who built a light- the principle one in oui district, a I -that were not. The crop was almost , source of energy that Science has I which 'are used to cafry eurrent. Use house on Dungeness in 161.5 collected - - -• . large number of the growers have ! a•tetal failure. These two plots were made available for . use in the house- ! the insulating handlv.- es hich are pro-' one penny per ton -from vessels pais- foundthat a combination of the two side by side and throughout the sea- ' bold But it must be controlled.. Hun- , vides; for that purpose. " WhileIn ing the lighthouse. • work well together, especially 'tee, on it was easy to tell, . even -from a . t where the divisieh came.' France to Store Exploiives . in Glacier -fed Lakes. The glacier -fed_ lakes of the Pyre- nees are to be the etoreteusees France's vast aceumulation cf mSitory explosives. according to a recent de- claration in the chamber of deputtes The speaker -explained that tbe stuff stein deterkorate quickly if kept, in :the usual way. 11.destroyed outright, on the other hand. the government will suffer a loss Of arrosta billion -francs. 'instead of "keeping her powdet dry," as enjoined by the' ell sme; ft- spemsi2at, France w111 kee,p...it damte, 'and incidentany at a low and even temperature; in the strange 'tore - houses mentioned.: . froni/ an antmated news-oape.r.. Effective, But o xpe s . There is also a certain film concern which. unlike -others in the ,“iine bumf- ne54-:. apparently does not believe in 'the value of realism. They shuw marked preference for the easy and inexpensive way of framu ing p a wreck in the studio. An ace-tuate . model of a Ship is pieced, on the 'e ige cif a green -topped table. This "wreck" is produced by means of an electrical device. and is pirotograplied a good distance away from the 'camera. Oil thenext day some sea scenes are produced on the coast. near bys.. lioth negatives are then cut in two. and one . ;section or eta uSed-. Th - et- Aga - dredk of lives are :oat e'er a year areal bath -rooms, ,toilet • rooms. kitchens. Front the cliffs of Dover we cell smaller fruits, such as strawberries, Ui5t4t, JU7 of defective wiring and the eareless with damp flooTs, stoves. heaters or swering our Foreland light. Though great exteht: As a swift soil is not We , find that if a crop is not pi propeety 'destroyed as a result -1 latnAries, basements- ov., other ronms watth_the flash of Cape Gris Nez an _Currants and even *peaches, to a very handling of this remarkable unsOen plpe,3. etc.. which may , be touched: ' to -day both nathins loom greatly in the, s --------------------- plums and oftener than every four year .common to it and. the f force. Below is a brief suramnry of iecorn- inendations which. if followed, will go far toward elinunating /If (Aden!f: iD the use of electricity: (1) Never touch a wire er any elec- trical device which hag fallen on a ted he bily sockets, fixtures, or other electrical councils of the world. the lights re- pears, these are very little grown and ° e 'little avoid touching aey metal par of lamp deviccs. since they may accidentally both conquered by the might of Rome. trouble, a probable exception to this is the raosiac diseese and I very much mind us that at one time they were are not nearly as profitable as the be alive. While in a bathtub 'never i In Dover Castle the leaver, part of aforementioned. The peach trees are planted out early in the spring on a the Roman phares still stands. For doubt if this.is carried over in the soil, but rather with the seed. fixture or.ert if it is a non-condtictor. the first crude light& which shone from soil that has been previously well pre - tench any part of an electric cord or The use if electric vibrators in the , Boulogne and Dover were those erect- tion and proper rotation, will give To sum up, rich soil', good cultiva- paied. Early tomatoes are then plant - bath is dangerous.. Avoid - touching ed in the orchard; the cultivation 4 41 on using the ' large, healthy, profitable crops with street, alley or lawn, or ivitch hangs ed by the Roman legions. The French necessary for them gives the frees a telepnone, particularly during electrn the minimum expense stoves or other metal di within rtiach, if thre is any possibili- . call a lighthouse "un phare,'' the word good start at no extra expense. In labor. ty that itnmay be touching any over- . al pterms : beine 'derivelfrom the most famourof I in 270 the fall, the vines are pulled up and ....... belongs whlch It give v ry the early. lights, that erectedpiled about the roots. These give pro - bead electric sire. This applies to in- c • rd' r Never try to take electric shocks , B.C.., on the small island of Pharos in tection and els° serve as a . catch to 'Mated overhead wires as well as to from the wiring in buildings or on the Bay of Alexandria. the snow. The second year the or - bare ones. , streets nor iee th filduce others te take such , (2) Avoid touehing guy wires *hid) risks. i The tower wone of e. Seven chard is planted with melons. These • , Wonders of the 'World, its rays being' 'gm* well .sand ihe only preparation are used to anchor poles to the . (8) avoiktouching ba -re or abraded.. vitOble at about forty miless‘and the ground, or the ground wire run down spots on flexible electric cords. Do cost estimated at $1,000.000. It was necessary is digging some well rotted manure in the hills. The third year wood poles. Never try to Jar arc not hang such -eords on nails and overthrown by an earthqua(e Wabout often no crop ieplanted if the trees lamps. nor toutir the (-halms or rolltelF *ben damaged have them repaired or 1220. have made a normal' growth, but if supporting them. During and after replaged by a competent electrician., • to have been built at Caiater Sri 1600. mit it, two rows of toniatoes are often storms do _not touch eva 'enthe polee: it 0) Never touch a ' person who han s ' ;- i The first British lighthouse seems the space is limited and the trees per - wet. •been shocked while he is still in con- The Lowestoft light was then erected, elsinted the wide way, the third year. 13) .Ne‘er (limb a pule (4r tree on tact with the electric circuit, unless and a man named Frobisher built a' By the fourth year the trees will l. com- . or near hieh electriwirepass. you know bow to remove him without light at Ravenspur, having to paping would be unwis y the mence to bear and further intercrop- wc 's, Never touch such wires from- wilt:Iowa I danger in youreelf,- Call -a doetor and King $41 25 annually. 'nor while on roofs. Warn children i the nearest lighting com.pany. .L'se a ' : Navigation would be almost impos-. --- -e.. R against climbing pOes or standing on - long dry board or sroodenBib -handled otatiSin Under Irrigation. pole steps. • • i take or broom to draw the person , le, without their aid, and conse- Under-thirrigation a different' ro- e quently their value to the natton is . sticks, it away troni the wire. or the wire away tation is follolwed. Cabbage are plant - (4) Never throw stlingweil-nigh incalculable: so it is as - ed in the spring, usually aboqt Apyil 1st to 10th. These will all be harvelit- ed by the first week in July. The ground is then given a light top dress- ing of manure and about August lst to 15th, is planted • to. strawberries. These produce a very good crop the pieces of wire over the electric wires tarried, overhead. Also. never fly kites near overhead wires, nor throw sticks or stones at insulators. (15) bo not touch or distuibe any electric wiring or appliances in build- --kjiliet:4-40.4-44,--ia4L-intentild_ Weep furature 'Ara o materiels away from interior wires, see,see that the %%king is in conduit, or • -wipe aile4.1 ,..te's pretectqd again- :• ‘fter rising G. Dt...,„ irCliS, from him Never oar any metal or •tonishiag to find that most of these any moist' object. lights were originated by private en - (10) To resuscitate a pence sufterprift. - fering from electric shock draw ,his ', - tongue (Alt of his throat and apply ar- , Many fine cattle, sheep and 'mine tificial respiration for two or three changed hands at the wintex Stock 11--ffecessar.re - 7 -4ota4 ft -It re -any en wires, defective wirlilg. etc. (12) Never emplos azyoTe but•eom. • petent 4car1cians to tarair or eleinge wirieg and do not attentait it your- ,' belt ueless qualilled to do so. proceeds of -the sales amounted to' cultivated,' cleaned out, and later on $23,000. Cattle sold for an average ofl mulched and left for a full crop. the $140 per head; sheep, $18; and swine coming 'year.. When picking it over $44.30. ' • . thea are plowed down and theground planted to late potatoes. 4The follow- Stiaara's isilliaLOSS Clliee Ogles. M. Who I nted What? The rivalr candidates for the honor of ,hav g invented the Tank, is by no means L new thing inthe world.. We talkverYl glibly of Stephenson in- venting thp locomotive engine, but dozens of attempts in the same direc- tion preeeded the evolution of the "Rocket." The' cotton industry owes its looms and frames not only to Ark- wright and crompton and Cartwright, but to numberless other*wondesrfnl in- ventions which have made these Men's work a hundred times more effective. Thus, rival and independent claim; have been mide for the discovery of the theapry 9f evolution, the interpre- tation of Egyptian hieroglyphics, the invention of the steam-engine, the method of.spectrum analysis by which the compositien of the sunand he eters can be dfnermined, the telegraph and telephone, as w•-11 as many ether epoch-making discoveries and Invens team erniessanave doinrsno muets stor• mink You want him' good and healthy, You want himtig and strong. Then tve him 'a pure wool jersey. Made by his fend. Bob Long. Let him romp with all his vigor He's the best boy in the land. And hell always be bright and • venni?, If hiwearse Bob Long Srand ....Bob Long. Many women are being em, to help rejoair roagte an Greet Rr- saar*s Lialaisas *arse D:-zr,t1,4ria, get' 4. BOB Lona BOYS' PURE WOOL WORSTED JERSEYS /truism front "Mast to CoesVP POR HARD WEAR. COMPORT , AND SMART APPEARANCE R. G. LONG oft CO. Loam TORONTO • • CANADA 144 Look tor the bawl 11 tive is cut in half along the line of the table -top, which is the "water -liner and the real marine half of the other - one matches it exactly. The iinished combination creates a perfect illusion. Of course, when you see water flood- ing the eabins or hold,- or smokolisind Nunes -filling and • devouring tlo.bm, with the passengers and cre W franti- cally trying to eseape, you must know that thesesittiations are faked in the .,studio, as they would be too danger- ous for the actors if staged on a real ship; let alone the disadvantage that the inferior light conditior.1i. would not permit good photography. • In one important production the C. F. Titgen, of the Scandinavian Anted- . can Line, was hired. Five. hundred players, acted as the passengers who fought for the boats; many leaped Into the sea, some of wham Were "drowned." All the horrors, in fact, of such a ealamity were' dragged' in. Mae), were the rehearsals to get the .actors to render vivid portrayals. . Strange as it may seem, the ship was not sunk at all. Its wreck was only cleverly suggested, without any ma- terial damage being done. Using' the Actual Ship. The produters saved considerable expense by having a wooden replica of • the lhAr made, and' sunk to the bot... tom. The photoplay director is IOW par - ilia to stories of pirate days. The dif- ficulty one knight of the megaphone had when about to put on a play of Hilly Ilayes, a noted pirate and smug- gler of k little over thirty years ago, Was to discover a suitable craft. On a trip to San Pedro. California. he had the'goori fortune to hire an antiquated ship that had been conflacated by'the United States 140 ernment. On hoard was .an old Norwegian, who informed him that the .shiwas o'riginally the Sprite, a vessel which had seen many a ferocious encounter., riorrett. hatt-aetualtY Itioren gostgod. by All grades. Wrtte tor prises TORONTO SALT WORMS la J. OW, • • TORONTO la tateific Coast towns fee many yeers. This was a cafe- of fortunate ,onincfs el nee. as a rewar� for the fllin-man'is. perseverance. . -, - 11, 14