The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-01-20, Page 7A
'.7,..,',41:r0240;ON'S.SQX4.1",it=10,4•3*.
• Tilf. CriANQB
IN QUINI1AN
*47i•V441.7,4444•4•4 "O• 704.4 ....1•46'•>4.1; '.‘•••44. .1#351Crii-44"'''W•7411.. 114'
Mick Quinlan was no greet lover of'
findirCtry. It wasn't that ,he lazi
altogether, but that his energy too!;
• unprofitable turree,euch AS playire
• football, dancin'.atweddip'e, or •iipin-;
nin' 1wi yarns.when he had the boys
•gathered round him of an °yentain
Fat Tracy's forge.
• It's said that we seek our opposites
When,---Twe fell-thieer4 and, enrelY.- the:
. easy-goin' Mick fell in love with
• Molly Dwyer,,whe WAS "aS brisit and
influstriolis aehielibieSelf was lazy. •
• Mick called over One :Svenin'. to 'Pro-
poee to her, expectiV to find her' dein'
nothing more vigorous. than &Iran'
hat,father's. Peaks, •Airtehe -wasn't in
the kitchen,' and, as ,life .WAS tUrnire
, away, he saw alight in the dairY, and
beard the sound of the, Milk -churn.
11,e, opened the dairy deo and peeped
- tor- and. there. was Molly; al.12 tialangh
IVOI:k in thebig, heavy "dash" up and
• „ down in the old-fashioned ra.,111khiien.
'`.She Caught a glimpse. of hifn-with
the eorper of hee eye, and She 'called
out -to Min;
•!•'." "Came in,•Miek,and, take ir hand
;a*. the dASh:fer etainktill 1 inn into
• -• the kitchen and put -a few Sods on
ossiYii';. she. "It'll spoil th
butter :if ;scirneene,..doeSn't keep it
• gem
• .!
.. t •
• Mick made' his way to; the ail=
pretty slow. The upright chtirp, is an
• affair that Means hard ;work; but be
• .couldn't refuse IQ take a grip of the
'dash, and, he kept churnia while she
Went off to the house.
. She was a long tiine in comb)? hack.
- And when she dicloorhe, instead of re;
• lievini him at ,the churn, she took her
seat�n a milkire-Stool that was con,
vanienti and looked ,up at him, •
nint glad you earner says she, "for
X haven't had .a mining rest 'since I
Vise this • mornin'. You May -as well
',..keepon Churidenovrtill it's --finished, , ' - - • - ' '
Ali*• It won't he miqb than _So_ 1Viick feand himself a soldier- in
• -haif an hour."
• • "Half an hour! • Ob, lor' " says
• Mick,. under his. beath, "I'll 1ave11ost
a -Stone or two, in weight by that
time!" • . • - • •
• He Was puffing hard by this time;
; And the perspiration Was sttieamin
__,.0,&11-im-eg_ if he was standin' under a
• hot shower..ha,ex---
- "roe might as well be- taIkin'as
nothin'," she went on "What
' 'brought you over this way this even-
• in'?" • • •
Helms workin!.,the dash a hit easier
now, makin' one plunge take the time
that. two should-. take, as he .panted
- out:
"I carne -to see Yon -'-on particlar
business, Molly. But Ochl I
thing!" ••Avas mg& and bawl' so much wIth had all we could do to hold the team
and they never fc .
riage, expeetin' that • relf,accept, you;
MiCk. But merried you, 141 be;
he welkin" pertrieri'And you'd be .tho,..
eleepin" pne..,' No .1V.lich!.. I'M 'verY,'
fond Of yOnt certeinly, but leVe
Seen fly out of. ti e.window if you Wern
referee. at eoek- •ghte, and umpire ,rit.
.foothalj Matches, wlaile I'd be .et hole .
,doiii? all the werirl''
"'Yeigve. e.aid. Queued"' saYs tai4r,
:with a enarl. "Tht Weal -of tal1-4
"It doesn't. take raileh to melte yOu.
tired, ,Whin it's ipleatien exertin'
.yereelf," she, moirenfuller.:. '
But 141.0k didn't hear _that reinarle„,
only makes me tired!" e
for of cays he -waa.eilready-out of -the- boot.'
411WEitioWligr that fcan be a niaa
of energy AO.` industry -if .1 want to,"
says he, to hiniselt clear out of
thiaparish.altogether! to some
big town Or fUrrbe e'onritry where ,a
pashin' man will get a Chance!"
Next ulerriing, while his mind woe
still beat on it, he left home, and went.
tolook „for Work. But the kind of
work that he 'wale looking for-soine-
thin' light' an' easy, with short hours .
,a0 -long ro.oto for meals; with goo(1;
and at. least three half -holidays,
#
such a job wasnt" he
found at just - any -etreeteeerner,_
He was in desperation one evening,: •
when he felled .hireself steenge,
town, without -ropey chance -of
viOrk-when• he came recrUitingr•
office. stood • fig - a...while looking
at the '104 posters theehindoWe
when the receilitingrefficer, Who; was
standitig'at the- door,: sx;iied 111* -
'Went. join the ' Arm', •Young,
man?" Aays. 0° Mick. "No work
to doLfeee• clothes ;*•best of food; mo-
ney, in your. pocket ; and all the Wee
girle, in love with you!" . .•
"All right!" says Mick In a tired
*ay. •"I'M' just the led for the. bar-
rack -room- at nighte-40, sing a good
-song .or tell a _geed yarii;,- there isn't.
me equal Connaught!" ' ••
.
"That's allwewent in the Army,"
,says the Man, in a jocose Way. "We
merely' 'want men who look nice. in
uniforms, and whe ean. keep Step when
we. are on 'the march. - So • come
- can't talk while I'm workiii? at this
English Winnon'i Warjime tal:;qrs, , •
Ni'Vpaaje' employeil In tlie ferge and wpiciing by,a,
who are etgagee. Goveramerit• work. The Wornea (men at, work are
all ,inarrledv they •workr•troni nine 'tti twelve, •go hemp $1) prepare. their
children's,. dinner; return at two 'aed work until five, occasionally going
back later in the evening when their children bed." Thaphoto show)
them. forging the immens4y stroitg sockets for Jelated tent poles. •
- ,
Ting "vAGARIEs OF .THE ADEUE.
•
A Sailor's Experience" With the,
Penguins.
Mr. R. E Priestley, of Capain
Scott's antarctic expedition, relates an
amusing exPerienlie with Adelie pen-
guins off Flagstaff Point. The Terra
to Judge whieh,was the .more sur-
prised, the sailers or the penguins,
when the latter landed, half a dozen
at a time, upright,in the bottom of
the boat. Certainly 'the penguinsAvere
most annoyed; and directly they round
that they were tripped they assaulted
the poor man with unreasoning fury,
. . natter to itch
Nova had -landed e part•sr to take off 4 . • .•
geological specimens, but the men had them Pack inte the sea. .
itwason a similai.• occasion that an,
some difficulty in keeping the penguins
Adelie,..seeing what be thought was a,
away froth th,e boat.
•As --we lay alongside. tli. ire foot. --handy piece of ice, leaped out of the
says the author in his"Antaretic Ad-
venture," we blocked the birds' access
to their rookery, but that ( did not,
no time at all.' It ' didn't turn gut Water tend landed on the knees of -,-the
quite!, so easy as he'd expected; and boatswain Who was in -the 'stern. He
the thought struok him, after a while looked the man in the face, gave one
---d• seem . to • bother the penguins in the h. ysterical squawk of horror! and •shot
that there was more drillin' and
mai:chin' than' was quite -agreeable. least.- They would rise Out of the we, into the -sea. Ihave never seen a face
show greater astonishment than that
_ Joldier must 'obey: orders or be
punished; and Mick avoided punish-
' out: -reginient_ was ordered to
the Front before long; and Mick was
grieved at heart when th'e train was
movire away -and :there was no
sweetheart there to bid him good-bye!
One day, it few, months afterwards,
he found hinitelf in a trench with It
few 'hundred other fellows. The -Ger-
man guns had been blazing away at
them sine sunrise: A geed many of't
Mick's new chums had been killed,'
and a lot more had been .wounded.
The daY Weat by; ancl • 1Viick's head '
ter.a few yards off, taken glanenet
the boat, which the Y doubtless took
-for-.41-stranded_lift, and _them diza_PI•
ear" ---Froth previous :experience, L
knew what Was denting and looked
with interest for the next act, but the
boatman who was helping nie, get ,the
specimens on board was new to the
(
vagaries* of the Adelie. I was unable
of our respeeted boatswain-, unless it
were the penguin's: `.
• • •
Perpetual snow on mountains is.,
caused by tho rarehed,air abstracting
the ,heat from •, adjacent • bodies, and
'the, tops .being urfsurromided' by land'
n o heat is radiated into the air:
IMPLEMENT SHEDS
. • ,
burin, intheroad end the 'belts at
the back` of the box broke and let the
body. down Onto therunninggear. We
. "Yon mot, though! You. can't let
the, flash go for 6 single second- near,"'
• says• she. 'But What's the, partielar
-,hasiness you came to see, me on?"
47.
. ••••••".
. • . • •• :
excitement that he took no nate of . ,
,
1,. The reason' for • these and Marry
the 'passing time, nor of the 'orders of *What the rarntor shOu.td nave fmore accidents, losses of Money •and
the officers: . ' . s to ,Proteci Ins 25m:ilium 1 time, was because At thought the
Eut at last he heard -a grim voice i ' trees godd enOgh'shelter for all his
implements. He painted them regu-
.. "Well, Pm half thinkin' of gCtilie somewhere sayin': .
"Charge;_boys! Givetharalthoi*f__. --Articles:on, implement sheds in the larlY, but paint cannot protect, -the
end!". . . • ., .. . ,• . ' :. various farm' papers have been very Vital parts of the marhine. Ea*, sleet
With a 'Wild akin:1.66i" he yvas oir‘, interesting to me.:Maybe it is be- and snow will get in and rust out
u ' .
gripped --his- bayonet, he put his hand ter§ everyday from farmers who Want •
in the little 'inside pocket where he inforthatien on, farm buildings, and
kept the ring he'd bought for Molly may be it is because, I like to get the .
Meyer. ' And the touch of it put extra rdifferent view points., Anyway, it is
simpleness into his legs, and extra interesting, writes : Mr. ,Edward
strength into the arms that gripped Dreier.
hisgum .. '•
. • , hi' Down in Minoie, about seven years
married," says' he. "And", as, you
'know, Molly, it's...yer own sw"Ceit self
•. that I've got to be'fand ef-2- Oh,
----may the divil fly.away with -this dash!
• It feels like a4iin weight!" . .
••"It's • only because via. aren't ac-
•customed -to hard. work that. you feel
it so much, Mick," says she, standin'
up. "Give me the dash! I'll take a
• turn at it while you're gettin' back
' your breath." ' ° •
Never did -a manhand over a job' so
- quick to a.rnaid as Mick handed over
that one,. ,So in•another minit 'twas
•',him that was sittie on the wee stool,
• tryin' to recover his breath, while
awavid_thas,b_irn
• IIIRROCKT 3101INTAII41$0
441i4P1411
$7 Tiellinaei,..TeineelAVOrt
$1118" VIO a sang .of the founteins high
Whose summits eeem 044- the ehY,
Where. verdent trees the be sure
hound
While yet their creets with lirieW ar•e
crowned.
There are the 'lakes, on the billa
near, bY,
Those placid mirrors axe nover.flrY,
Arid Oh, it must be the angels' please
To be reflected in 14ake 1491400.
• ,
WitolWaterPlear-, Vid.-e-Verg7
. feir, .
And -the highest pealce ere. niirranied
•. there, ' •
As angela eome and their 'steps re
teace • •
You can See theieheautY face to face,.
, .
When these shining oneii eaeh even -
intake„ g . •
Their way to the markin of ilia Inliet
The inountain toper are tinged with
• geld .
radiapee frOin'tfie: angel lad....
Eeh craggy hord and: mistY 'dell,
.Each- rocky cliff and riVidet tell
:Of. Beauty that's, hid away,..awaY,
OnlY„revealed by the light Of day. •
,
•
.The.rpcks are .bare and rough and
•• -- old,, .
And the walls 'are highv•andbleak
and bold;;
Diiwn in the valley the river flows,
Fed from above by the mopotain
• snow's.
Paradise Valley and .Castle Crags, .
On Victoria the • glacier rides,
The trail leads on to Abbot Pass,
A canyon deep •'neath Lefroy's inass.
•
Stately mountains to Cataract Creek,
Flowing 'directly to Wapita Lake, •
Through Alpine • grandeiir, hard to
surpass,
To Great • Slate range, a Citadel
•
And on and on through the maintains
• old,
Whose glacial tops- are. ever cold, ,
Feeding' the lakes and the forest
stream,
That like a silver ribbon. is seen.
• • .1 •
Stealing its sway o'er the slippery
rock,
Curling and daaeing• from: drop. to
• drop, ,
As though it were playing hide. and
' seek,
Until lost to view in the river deep..
The river 'flews with a,ruSh and roar,
And iS lashed in foam 'againit the
, Shore '
But wending its way to the • ocean
•
dee, •
The turbulent' stream hashed to
.• Sleep. .
. t
Came with me, then, to the hills
Eiway. •
Where; th-e-1,1Mis watch.. from day: to
-,
Silent sentinenls, they ever guard -
The Narrows and Inlet ,of- BUrfard.
•
with the rest. • And, j it .before he cause / at reading hundreds of, let-: bolts and bars, 'MachineS will rapid-
• • •-. „...
The, rest wan like a dream to m.
Ile didn't. knew what he was doing,
And he only -eame back to his senses
that evening when a nurse Was ban-
daging his head, and an officer was
as if she'd, been ,born to it: • •
anding-hesido-him-helding..his.land-
"You'll be a famous man after this,
"Now, then, Mick," says she, with a Quinlan, whether you live or die!"
-laughin' look out of her. bright eyes, says the °mien
"you can go on with the. conVersation. "What for?" says Mick, in a dazed
It's propositi' to me that you are, isn't wav. "I don't zemimber anything"
• it?" '
. - "Well, when the rest of your com-
"It -isIVI011y," Says he,-startire to. ,paby retired to the, rear irrest,
lay off the little speech he'd' prepared
for ' her, "I'm getting' cooled dawn seems
after ten hours in the trenches, it
you didn't retire with them,
again, after that murderin' bit of but stayed on with the relief -party.
' work ' But I'd much rather that you,
were sittiri'lae`re by my tilde, listenin' You joined.: in their • bayonet -charge:
And you slavered . a German officer•
,. to what I have to say to yam?' and. several of his men before • you,
"Oh 4 -can't sit down till I have the
--7 --- -'` * - - - wadknocked. -You'll.
over at last - be
durnire finished! And. the, I'll have
te hurry and get . father% . supper either a V.0.• or a D.C.M. after this."
Miek's senses ---weren't :all back to
• ready, for he'll be home. shortly," says
ghe! 'To just go ahead and talk, I'll him yet; but he was iumblin' in the
. . inside pocket of Ibis 'shirt, and his face
listen." • .
• lit up with joy *hen he found what he
"Well, r'may toll you that 1 bong&
a ring at the fair. o Beltra, last Week. "It's the. ring; sir ---:the engagement
°Here it is,".' says he, takin'• a_ l' ----44g ring that .a- girl- at home promised to
:from his •waisteciat pocket. "Stop the takd from me if ,I,
' °burnt& a -minit, Whiny, till I • 1 could convince...her
place that I ain't lazy," he explained. ."You
this piee.e of gold round yet e -charinin'
, . _, say that after ton hotire'dlity 'I' stay-
. - - ..'S-4 ed, on fightin' till Imade a ,ekidow of
9.•
finger."
•• aOli; Tearit stei, the. eliurnin` new!. smite Gernian offieer's'-wife. • Is that
-'• But -I 'can talk, and I went -yeu, to the *ay of it?"
listen, Mick, for I'm goin' to be 'dead •"That's it, Quinlan. Heroic endia•-•
Serious. You'll never Put 4 ring on price, the, newspapers Will call it."-
: " - my fingey because -Ian sorry to have hies What golly Dwyer will :call it,
, to. say itLyou're too lazy a Irian for sir, . that 1'ra wanderin ahOut. Will
e. If you ever. had the habit Of you, weitnto her, sir -I'll her
'iverk, Mick -well, all i can say Is that address -and send. her this ring?
' you've got Out of tlinhabit The man She'll wear it flow.".
-)d-.Iike-as-a-husband-nuipt-liti-an-iri.-- 11-witly-Pleasure
---dilatriOnrimiti-a Man #11 of. -What's •
• ' ' ; the name of itle-----onergy;u1nrur-who-
- --- - .-„gihedgee,,,the.,Ahntlia--ePeada...ilLaleelle ing,tho_engageenen IA! IOY u y
- , eat ' or readhe the -news e'er.
-it Man who Must o soot in grea
heroic in the World" • .
"Ohoiety welt! I might. as well go
.- ;home, then!". says Mick, very angry,
,. air he rose to his 'feet. "Bid, maybe,
after you, get all your work done;
you'll glt hp and write an article for
the papers on, 'How to Become Indus-
.• . trious.' ' ' ,
_ "If I do, I'll fiend it to you to read;
• 11711ekt far I never met a man .*Iie,
' needs more to lath the same thing,',
says, elle. "Now, r11. tell you what to
do. ..'Iteep Ahat..ring In...Your pocket', .1104 pointed 'Alt to Illa taast' a lata -
and it aver .yo. do anything' that'll seiiiV buStiiif, '‘11Whiit' -110' iolr'lliirik
. Change 10* ophiloyi of you, being back of that, till" boy -eh?' The followhig.
that Aug titid rit. bo proud AO *oar it reply was hleemiglied tether' than
an lila anger. Roo it to remind you spoken: "Beentifid,' old Alio-very
that youNte got ..to do something to 11110-4wi'ilY400d••• ' Ti!e06 ‘aVe litiUt
' 110*. That YOU're 0 Mali of deeds. .to nO'tballYV).'
*now at thiln'' anything' that might AfavidyV *
• t
. mete. the best dancer, in the .parish, "4"-"4- '''
but the vetiret pleugliniant ' You're the . . Not a Pault.finder.
. Feat singer, bclt you're the Worst hand liras your husband good to you,
"niake yeti 'tirodlo . ot ope'ed he .Wati,' MISS. 1 we'lted '18
- "It tieeirtia tlifit YOU have a mighty hours a day .foP vat fe,dat. Man an*
.))6or opinion •of IMO' says. he, very he novel' 'doe tonna Milt wif a thing
. fiufty. 41.catne here to propeSe 'Aar. I did feqiits.,' .. ,'. . • . • ,
,.. ,,
• Ong° in ,YOU to.iiighti, but ,n0t. to be
:lastilted?'" • • : . • • •
qOU taiholove, to ropose raap,
ly-decay. •Repairs will -eat up profits
in a hurry.
My father used to unhitch in the
field and leave his tools where, he
• stopped work. Dad's profits were rea-.
terially cut into each year by his re-
•pair•bills. Now, he drives home every
• 7 .
DRINK AS AN ECONOMICAL
PROBLEM.
„
By Chas. M. Bice, Denver, Colo:
It is Fin old, and stale,. maxirn Put
ago, there lived a man who had a 600- night and very Carefuliy puts his ini- forth by the apelogists of drink, .that
acre farm -a man who knew more plements in the shed ' "you cannot reform mankind by acts
horse sense about farms than most: An implemerit, if it costs Only POf of legislation." )if reform were the
'people do; He raised record ci•oln is as valuable to a farmer as in auto- sole object,?there would be 4 Measure
and won prizes at all the local fairs. mobileThe auto is housed and the
Ile -11-- fine st-o-ek-and horses, and *SS iMPleMignerErtetWIYM'her.. f 41r- 1
considered snccesS. He was suppes• 1 wonder why. of truth M that, statement..
o rely entirely upon physical Pro-
' hibition to effect 'reform' is farthest
ea to make more profit per acre than ' Someone told me' not long ago that
any man' in his • neighborhood.. His fie didn't build an implement shed be- from the thought of prohibitionists
themselVes, for the tendency would be
yields were better and he raised better cause lumber in his locality was so
Any- object
switch the mind•ftem: the deairable
thing's than his neighbOrs, yet those dear that he couldn't afford' it. object Of moral education
i_ But this is far from achnitting that
a very ,great, good, short of • a refor-
mation of character, cannot be secured
neighbOrs,'-sonie of_them-made more iway, heowould have to _paint it every
money than he did I few years to keep it leaking decent,
After the first Year in that faint, and he would use that paint ..on his
this man hardly ever went to the .field machine instead.. by proper prohibitory measures.
to work without being obliged to send t -. When: I told this man. that he could ' The boys and girls under prohibi-,•
one of the men to the barn or to town. -get a ready-made building which had tion will•grow up without the temp -
for some repair to an implement He steel :trusses, wood posts, and metal tation and -desire to ruin themSelves
got,:soi that he always carried a pieee covering, a building that would , be Land injure ;their country by their ex-
' - 1 7.- -..- '• ' .,
•• ...-r. -,..- cesses, if if is thus made. easy to re-
. .
-Cost of Concrete Mamma rit. •
"In the Slimmer of 31215 Mr.•Carman
Metcalfe, Cherry Valley, one of the
enterprising. farmers qf 'this county,
7,69.
.1 gine an permits errhanet steam te
cape unusued is wasting a
by-produet. EzliauSt steam can he
used eniccesefiilly for heating mr",
hunt a concrete manure pit the Par- 'cream boiler -feed watcr, vete-
•ticelars of Welt are rather intereate, 'and the,:_buildiag. ,Theheatine.",_ „
ingz' Ver firevioutilY 7111i; boiler -feed water and Wash water oh:e.
Meteelfe had been aware that he was will be hensidered in this etir<iee,
fingering Some 1046'04310 Waste On Says a eireUlar iseued , by tbe
apeount of the menurh lying exposedeDivisiii, U.S. Dept.; of Agricultpre.
in the yard, but Was. eomewleat 1. e majority of*
ISM IXOW to eliminate it. At our erfee, boner 14 fed by Mearta, -
suggestion he finally .decided to build an injector, but this :is pot en ech-h
4. Fnn,er2er feet Pit .16 #, in 414- miCal apparatus ter thie War% 7;Aw
and,a concrete floor, ', with the
floor and••*alls plastered tia.make it
waterPropf. The fallowing is an itepfx-,
ize,0 -account Of --t110 COStS
4. hhhi, eentent at 8.00
2 loads gravel 15c.................0.30
Haulinegravel and stone. 8.50
•Hauling silo eings%...... • • -2.0
nian 1. day at 4,50 -............2.50
t'day at V .; ' LOA.
. • • •••
• .
•
•
' $i8.30
•
*.
„Mr. Metcalfe is more -than delighte,4.
with the results, ' It holds about .1/420
tons of manure, thus it is only, neces-
sary for hint to have it drawn out
once a month, and one' man with a•
team will do this 'job in a day. lie
has never found any of the manure
bailed by overheating,. mir has it
ever •been frozen so that it ;could not
be removed, even when it was 20
degrees below etre. isle considers
that it Pays for itself at leastortee.
year, in fact he thinlielt.paid for it-
self during the past summer. In con-
nection With. this he said, "Before we
had. the pit the manure. which, was
made -during the summer was dumped
out iin„ the yard, and in the fall it.
couldn't be found. ,This year we drew
enough Manure out_of the pit to pay
for Before, the ,liquid manure was
alt- lost, but by having the Fit it was
all saved. Some of •the neighbors
said I shvld haye made- it square,
and with a door so that the waggon
could.be-backed-inAut-if I-had-dorin
this. the liquid :manure would have
been lost, and besides, there isn't
much \ to be gained by . backing the
waggon or sleigh in when you can
drive all" around - P. ' Mae-
Vannel, Prince Edward County:,
meter, s cep, with walls 1 ft. u t
'operation aadecennot *handle bot
wa-
ter. Por every "ID degrees F. .1;1'1;4
water. is heated before approxianately•
'One per Cent. less' fael,:is required:.
generate given amoutit' of., steam,'
and •fer each' la degree's inereahe
in feed' water temper4tire thOboiler
.cipaCitY inereased' appaheriraately
one per vent. When het fel& *0
is used A 'constant liressure OW, the'
bailer earl be mare ea4ry Maintained.
• And there,Vill be an..edditionel•e'aving
of fuel- attributable to even firing
- The, beating ,of feed water from
temperature, of DQ degrees F. to that
of 200 'degrees E. by rneans of exhaust
steam Avill reduce the 'fuel ,consurate
•
Hot Water in 6reamery.
• A. creamery that uses a. iteani. en-
-cauae t req ve gteotu i
tion alout 13 per cent, or will reduce
a $500 fuel to $430,
The use of. exhaust team for heat-
ing wash water will still further re- (
duce the fuel cot. It is eStimated
that 'in a creamerY, Making \from
100,000 to 3a9,000 poods, • of butter
annually maximiim Of 800 gallons
of bot water ere used daily. It is cus-
tomary to heat this.. water with live
steam. from the boiler.. To heat so
raueh water frinn-a, tea4era,t1ire*(4' ,
.degrees..1. to .that, of 170 degrees P.
requires approximatel3r 127 pounds of
coal When the heating is done with
exhaust steam, there is a'net saving ;
of 127 'Pounds of coal a day,. ork , if
operated 300 days a year, an annual
saving of 38,100 pounds., At $5Na ton -
this is • worth -$95. -fin a creamery of
this Size the heating Of the boiler
feed -water -from t temperature -of 58 -r: -
degrees F. to that of 200 -degrees
WM effect a further saving of ap-
proximately 1100 annualik. ,An
.equipment,' consisting% of a 20 horse
poWee heater, het water storage ‘.
,k_,0,e4w,gallons -rapacity", .-and =-••
bailer feed pump, can be installed far,
about .$299 and will effect an annual
saving oft $19`5.
• ..1,1 • ••
61991190919.1
ury. Were ,it not followed by' sich fear-
ful consequences, xriOtally, economt,..
.cally . and physically. There is „no
Wastage, in the country that can be
corePared With- it:- If it ,Were totallyprhibited, as, vodka 'has been ferhid-
den in Russia, the gain to the wealthi
andhappiness Of the • peoPle" would' be •
immeasurable. ME Lrod. Q-dorge *as
right When he declared that the "lure
of the driak" was .the -source Mire
than half the •industrial traubleg,
which brought tabout the perilotisi
munitiens crisis. •
The effect of Rossia's prohibition of
vodka may be seen in the figures of
her Saviags banks, which,- in Decem-
bm., 1913, was only $350,000, While it
reached'151,000,000 in December, 1914.
No doubt :thousands of drinkers feel'
relief from the deinends -of the. social.
tyranny of "treating," for to many •
net to (0er a drink '0 apiend was
though to be. dee to a want of.'
genielity, if net to actual meanness, [
There are many People disinclined
to extreme meaaures, who, since the
great war, are looking upon the drink.
habit with new eyes, and recognize
the intimate • relation between __drink,
and the eonduct of•the war. :
Let' the control of the state be
fightened, not relaxed, for there ne-
ver was -such a propitious oppertuaity
as the p.resent for total prohibitory
measures. Every moral. and econo-
mic. argurnent tells for. severe restric-
tiop. There is an obvious reasisna
war reasian--:-for iirunediate action.
The problem Of throwing thousands'
out4bf einployment finds a solution in
the dem-ands-of-the airny feFreffillt-g;
•••while the ra*Lmateriall'of_ the..trade.
would easily meet the demands of the
Military for supplies. , NOW iS the
time . to- -strike - an-. eitectiv_e__bloW.•
against. this' 'national :.curse.
Perity, and a. gonscienee that gites yOU,
no peace. YOU see, it: is qUite Permit
sible to pass other men; if you wis ;
to "get on," but it's against tort -
science to kick other men clown. And
4 you get to the top by foul means
you...den't go "-alene.' ..-Zoteve a trod -
bled conscience to keep you cemPany. „
Give your conscience. freedom • •
speak. It is quite possible tO silence
the 'University of London •who says the still. small voice, but the kiss is • •
,• ARE*Y.011 HAPPY?
• •
Some flints . 11ovi to ,Make Life
'Really Worth Living. •• -
Aoh's your conSeiencet? .All rightl
Geed! 'Then You're all right.:
'• Keep it right, and you keep npright..:••
Iteero-, e1ear,1;an4 you'll. keep- cleare. •
of wrong. , . • ,
Don't mess about: with the works;•
let it be an accurate register of "right
and wrong; a stern standard to raea-
sure moral conduct,• a check; a borake. -
Let Your conseiefice have perfect
freedom of .speech. If it doesn't re-
proach you, you've nothing to re-
proach yourself With. Nor have •
others.'" . A clear • conscience means -a•
dean life.
-*What is conicience 1" No defini-
tien•ii needed. You may all it.the
inward yoice; the voice of God; what
you: •
•
A
Nark Dryer le now: proudly wear-
e-werinore.4ntrierirolAbleajeind_JUenlatt tO AI and II •the urchaser mary of the iesa ts. ere s a
intendents of divisiens that dal-dr-en-
ness generally, and luriong women ip
particular, has greatly decreased. ' A
I 1 When it " ricks " it •
niiirke'd diminution in the nember of
women and children standing outside
public houses drinking has, been no-
ticed, and in Many distrietsthe Prae:
tice has ceased altogether. Police
have invariably,found. fewer peoPle on
, .
heensed,prennses, and a tendeney to
make shorter stays has been observed.
Pratt -really Ito -breaches of '-the -order
have octurred; and licensees and their
servants have shown nt 11(11. Alines,
tlielr WMingnesa to assist the police."
If the results have been so good in -
the Metropolitan twee, the eystern
should be extended all over the court -
'try. The moral effects are not only
reassuring, but the etohoinie efireets
are equally marked and eneouraging.
•The figures show a roduction
druekennoes of sone 40 per tent, .by
this• forte of prohibition, and it
is idlo•to talk of ecoinnily, arid refuse
• to Prohibit this drian upon the nit
tional resourceS. Alcohol, in any and
alt Ito forme, fails to be peoduetive of
it ;Jingle geed to, the. state or people.
It may he classed. as an idle lup
strain themselves. Weak characters
may reach•the-eqdvalerit of-S-trength,
if deprived Of the. -opportunities , of
folly, This - is• -especially - true 'of
drinkieg. NO Man have the te-
merity to argue that rest -rib -bons on
opportunities for drinking will •,not,
lessen artinkenhess, or the amonnt- of
think consurned. To .Contend thiic
theJrian.Lvtho_coniiilained that his
berorneter.".b.a&no__effect: upon; the
weather. The 'facts are overwhelm-
ingly. against the theory, , , .
Take LOndori as an exaniple. •The
mild csi•der issued that "No treating
of bale "Wire Wherever he wept. Some- shipped to him complete, even to the the Metropolitan area" shall be
thing was continually going wrong., A nails; and that •he could erect the permitted, and observe •'-the • effect.
belt. Would -break,. • a casting Would building in it, short time without any This area coutOri.O1 • about 7,000;060
•
track, or Something else would be help, he came back and told me that, People, in Which are'if,10$'-'ftilIY
sled out Bala:Wire itroUld be used "There isn't no such building:, 1..lice.usecl grog shops, 2,373 bar houses
until -the repair could.be-Made, The-----e#e-se-oins• MgA41.t,-AAIA. -131,1110-41g..-1,144P913-trotisep7-w•jilicenspii,',_ and
account book every-- -Saturday night musthavebeen_designed-for- the -farm -ft AS--gObit leg •cattiw
shoned entries' for rePairs. I think er. The manufacturerk cut all the 'deAred.' Here is the official sum.
t i f 11 '
A niiisanee, if yen like. It's there, .
and, unless you drug it With soporifics,
feed it with excuses, or kill it with •
neglect, it will tell you the truth, al:
•
ways. To he approved by conscienee,
is praise indeed, ancrrowerd enough.
. working conscience7is -art asset, ---
too. None of us desire, any, traffic -
with the mariivhoin we hear has "no
conscience," do we? It Means that he. •
has no inward tribunal to pass. judg-
ment on his acts. He's "conscience-
less," and so a man to be afraid of.,
'A dear eonecienee a Precious session, and and beats omisbegotteri bank
balance. It nieans :that you can look
back over your life and see that your ,
path has been straightly trod, and
your actions' devoid of crookedness.;
-It-doesn't mean that -you haven't Matti
mistakes,. but that in life's battle you
were a clean fighter.. • , -
- That's- everything, for an- inward
peace is better than ill -acquired prea-
• SilORTAE 0.1i. DOCTORS.
. ,
Yopag Physicialik Told .Not to Go to
' 'the War.•
An appeal to save medical' stodents
from -the. rankS of -combat • has ;been
Ina& by Prof. E, •Barclay -Smith, of
cAnsciebee to
"'serious, and will '1)-e-Iiir more -se, in cireel. y Ou, you'llre 16050 MI the world
WO: He writes: . ' . - • - like a beast, With nothing to limit you
•-t1T144,,lictuin.bas. goae:forth that.it, anye law;and your oivn_ interests,: And. ... ,r
'-'1"°-elTe711,2-tg' -orr--1 • . - , ser---11--eqt with the the . exeention Of those in 'their of a geed working conscience.
fourth and fifth years, to forsake,their Cultivate your conscience, them •,
• profession and vo unteerfor combat-
bukes, liatepn; and halt.uudoor Whendon't. do eI re-
ant'‘Lseetryttee.inedkal stadent one& re!): Wrong, the shabby trick, you haVe
Ilize that this is his duty and he WI -,na or contemplated doing.
got of that I have not the sliado-e Ile thankful that ia the scheme of
Ia doubt Ile has , already gone J . ",:iings as Protidence has 'settled them
larger number than ' the authoritiow there -is, quite'epart from the laws.of
d4*-jnitirr404-0114WamoffigeatiOnitir0111
tEV.1
9 bjg clinge in , and, that lie
will be a man worth' marrying when One entry I will always rerneMber.
he comes home, mere more. -London ,There was a fine big roan dolt that
we called "The Indian" because he
was such a terror. tavas , •going to
hitch himto the corn binder on Sat-
urday to take •a" little of the "divil out
of him." On Saturday morning • he
hitched "The., Indian" and two other
heezee and started eating corn. About
half an hour later, We heard a yell
fromthe field and sa* Art. With hie
hands fun. "The Indian'', was playing
• tricks. To -make the story, Shorter,
*to shot "The Indian" that night. A
bolt had brae with ft rattle and the
•high-etriirig . Indian was oft The
other two horeee got some of his
fright and then ran; "The Indian"
tripped and LcD, puiiinft the others
down. When ,the mess was untangled
oThe Indian" was down With a broken
leg. , •
The entry that Saturday. rilghi read
"i• hotee broken leg, allot,
88,40." The •next week there were
entries for repairs to the corn cut.
ter. .
Another time WO Were driving A pair
of colts to A .surroy* We Went over a
Answers. • , • • .
,
• lc -Little Shaky. •
'He went ,to dine with a bachelor
friend who prided himself that his
few *tures- woe gems.' 'After hav-
ing enjoyed themselves well -too
well, in fact -at ainner,they adjourn -
cd to .thif•pieture gallery, where the
•
• Most pen are willing to start Some.
thing for the sake a all organott
setting up the building: Once up it is
there to stay until the owner wants to
inove it. It • is •fife arid ligltning
p•Oof, and will last forever. Hun-
draftof these buildings have been
erected in Ontario and Quebec in the ;
last two years, and are. protecting
theesands, t dollars' worth of imple-
:month. • ' , .• .
The proper kind of a 'shed to have is
one that will keep out the bad weather ,
And the fire and lightning proof. It
Should be erected close to the fields
where the iinpleinentS ere ttfbe MARL •
The dealt eri the building should be
hung on double bird -proof traelc so
that they will Toll past each other.
This *illallow of (numb* any one
t eeth:in of the building • withont•
poilag all the machinee,
The Man Who builds a cheap shelter
to heat him two or three years is los-
Ing Build eight. Bred a
building which -will lasta lifetime .and
latwaye be of service. Putting money
into a permanent implement Shed is
like 'patting money into a bank. It
Is gomg to earn a bie Intelsat in ilui„
eaVing of damage to machines and
equipMento '
.are probably aware; and this in spite
of the restraining leash of his, teach-
ers and advisers. ' .
"Whether his going wilt be an
mate gain to the natkinls not for lilnt
to judge, but it a Matter at 1126
greyest concern. The demand for
medical service for military purposes
et kerne and abroad, to say nothing
of the, needs of the lay ponulatiori, is
increasing daily, and .by leaps and
bounds."
mem som'ething Mysterious, inward,
unseen, which instantly tells us when
we are: offendiag against the unwrit-
ten law that that which is eight, is..
right, arid- that 'Which IC -wrong is
wrong. You ran call that "public -
opinion" if you like; and what is pub.
lie opinion ' but the ha111101V of Many-,
COnSeiendeS?
..A geed conscience ilVes in a gooi
man, and has made him good. And'in
-all the harsh and hurtled misjudg..
Ments of the world theft is One
pronto consolation which buoys 5 Man .
up --."a elem. tonticieueee.° Got it, an
keep it! •
••A Tragedy. •
"How's that black -an -tan dg o
't141710;
* , •• •
•
•
"Yee, swelloWed a bun& of Watch
keys, and. they van& hint tip4# •
;
It+
Nr4
efit°tIelul
eeil
imeret
they se k
". tret /Ala
••