Loading...
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-10-12, Page 3—.1.•-••-- -••••-••••••- • 4, • , Da We give tOe much advice about. milliqns which ar4 being made out Of the; treatmenVa chnobcpuT Wo con- such orders, our people ar living in elder bat; and. girls the most valu- sybaritic luXury, able eset Caneda poeseeSe4, This .. • * iit * Must be our encase, Then What ii Work la plentiful, Wagesare large, • , .givett to childrcn. to eat and drink "or the parchasing power of it dollar la Whet they get by qne means and •aue. other to eat has a greatinfluence on • their health and greWth. We are among those'whq believe that mist children are allowed too much linertY in tegard to their eating. Too many Perents .coneole themselves, with 'the •comforting theory that the child's • norrind appetite will be a sae guide ' as to -What and' how- 'much 'he ehepld- " eat, but experience shows that his aP- petite cannot be aerie -n -0d upon with, •respect to certain articles, and par- ticularly candy, Nature has implant- , ed a strong desire for sugar in every • Person, incense it furnishes beat and. accustomed to make in a week! There And there is an inevitable softening ef When nature developed the taste INT are hundreds of men making -millions rePelSion and indi energy when used moderatelyr But fferenie when we out of the Inanition !orders.. There are on the saine,road•together in the ' sugar she did not anticipate that the child could ever get sweets so easily are new •and manifold, activities pet hlaelinesla. of the night' •up in • conseaeence of the wide diffU- • * * 'a * - and in such quentiti‘e as he can at sion of moaey. Bastandd says our But there is another reason forthe' present In ancient times, before man wonien: do not year. much at e time, consolidating ministry of eonamon • invented Methods Of extraeting sugar that is, but what they do wear costs grief. Grief has a strange, power Of groin Plants,roots andthe like, one like the deuce. Was there ever such :removing the seals from our eyes, the . tad to consume a ' vast , amount" of extravagance in „dress? A woman .impeding cataracts which have ferm- • coarse material in order,to get it few pays $10 for a pair of booteand ed in the garish day. We become ounces of Seger. For this *eapon thinks nothing of it A 'ready-inado. costume cooed $50, and that is a trifle. naileh the same. ,Worlcing Ware hi treelyee as amels, we emerge as anielaeY, and atillthe Finance Min " ise while the San shines, By-and-by "rebr drav-irkm sheeagether °le 4allwhich huddle to - likely come as they haw usually casaS' p clouds will hover and hard ti will gether in the storm, We feel the coma come after every great war. But the fort of one alatither'e presence.;.It is chtV of evil Will Mile seon enough -18414 that one explanAtion of the the people will eat, drink• - massed Advances of soldiers is the and be , Merry. 'Aren't there thousands malt- "'wage and m°1111 sustenance which' ' Ing as much money in a day as they come from touching one another in were aecustotned to make in a week! the .fight. Be that as it MaY, thiff There are hundreds. of Mon making.. craving for fellowship in crises is AS Muelt Money in a day as theywere surely anative instinct of the heart, prejudice. More rawly but more profoundly the Wedding miniti.ter is COIX,014 JOY. nOlt dgaPaPt and Meet vital, of all le Pie union 3044 is bora out of common grief, When -every. thing else bas left moody and resent. ful ponds in a chilling isolation, they ore senietiMes brought inte• shared afflictien, ;Sind the hill:410M of SailOW AtilekPla their torpid affinities and Canada are mono . the . hanhe with Makin there all akin. We enter cur terra, advice is timely. .Beehe hay l'aMillta For ,, One thing, we instinct, ./•••••••tv••• •-•*: ,kef . . • there was little danger in. those early • days of a child's getting toe , ,much sugar • ! •' • 4,, * * a, • • . • , • Children gannet be trusted to rev- . late the quantities they should eat for • their appetites for sugar are just is keen in 1916 as they were originally. • They can't be trusted *flow because sugar is EIQ condensed now. that vast quantities a it can be consumed in a •short. tine. If patents could only Ano* what Makers Of candy put into ships, and every added tenderness is It to give calor and flavor and, to, Possibly few readerswitness- such the medium through which we makes • otherwise make the different kinds at- extravagence, for it obtains with the richer discoveries still. Who knows, tractive to the eye and pleasant to , high-class rich people', but there le therefore, what living unities are the taste they would see better the more truth Oen poetry in the state - being woven eyen in these dark days, force of our plea for the children. rnents: In a lesser degree we see it so full of. calamities and woe to What is a good substitute for sugar a all around u& In towns and cities bandy? Ohe good way to reduce the especially. many? The flowers 'are rotting, but ar We Walked up • V no• -°--e out •of the rottenness may come the craving for candy is to give the child ' Street in Toronto the other day dur- - all the moderately,. sweet feuits he ing the busy shopping heur in the af- flax, the strands which. shall make • can eat. tle.will not be likely to get ternoon. Was there any evidence Of a Stronger fabric and a more endur-. • too much sugar in this way,bu hishartV-time.a? If so, we failed to no - desire for sweets will be gratified.. tice it. Everybody was gaily or rich-. The fruit acid will be a wholesomely. dressed, and as a country man re - antidote to the sugar, for it will as- . • Marked, it wale a study to see the A hat costs $10, and that is a •simple • necessity. Many a woman in these .tivAr days says she could not/think of miere sensitive to one another's vir- tues . and less sensitive to ope an - Ottani' faults, - Many of our selfish prejudices fall away. Our heated re- sentments cool Into geidal good will. 'paying lest' than $20 far the making Our differences shrink, And this ex - of: a suit -a tailor-made suit -she fraordinaryt thing happens: weaeare furnish the materiaL In the big dm- more clearly revealed to one ahother tele in any of our centres you will see, our women fashionably dressed, ldlihgpver the teacup or wittchieg the daylight denting a .1a cabaret, or smoking cigarettes, and so forth. * *• whee the darkness falls upon us than we were in the high neon. We begin to know each other better When the mists have gathered about us. We become more. gentle in our relation-. • mg union. In the realm of common - sorrow' much weaving goes on in the night. I • Companionships are ,Made in tribulation:. And the comp,anions in • g g •tribulation often' inove together into ladies, ell brilliant and sparkling and • excess. Well -baked a bread, when the fellOwship of our Lord. There is careless and insiatent upon' the good . • .•thOroughly chewed,' is moderately time, while • , . sweet, and this will lergely atisfv • thousands are being eci- 8-- - - mated -at -the ftents •dayin , and daY .the eb\iu so, that he Will not have- se out. Is this criminality or•is it a des- •- great a longing for candy. A well-. tditthe nourished child whose dietary includes perae esre o Ot away from.horrors of the 'war ?' Is it indifference • •'ripe fruits, wellicooked bread and. ' • th that sendsae soldiers wife .to laugh ' grains, milk, eggs and a little meat, •at t•he movies, while her husband is will not •have a ,crevieg,for any sort up :to •knees in • mud in the of stimulating food, and sugar should trenches? The .tines are eel -held, but nothing is more remarkable than this experience -that. while Many wo- men have giyen themselves to noble lye method •of impressing a lesson �n • mill -fifty, large numbers are frivolous • it child's mind Leading them .in and prodigal to A anost singular de- • thought from the known to the un- ..-gree. ' , known is. a • plan adopted by good • ; • * * * 0*. teachers. • This inductive- method ...is *ell may thepoet of old say: exeellent • But here is a capital il- ' °111 fares the land, to hastening ills a lustration of what is in our mind • prey, • :just nettrA: teaming•OnA of the most useful things we. to do by •doing Whete wealth. accumulates arid mep . . - • it. This is one degree better than ' decay."- • • ' ' ' • ft In the Middle Ages the Arabs, Vene- as dairy farmers can learn is a bet - regiment in August, 1914, leaving hi's_ • beginning of the war Joffre ' . by seeing genie one else doing it • And there does , seezie soniething tot- At the tides, 'Genoese, and -Florentines-be- ter. understanding of *hat is really ractical. About every man: limits- wife and baby . at has castle •riear A lad wished to learn to ,swim, so ten in the State of Denmark when the prohibited wives and sweethearts from visiting men on active Service, sweet - came famous for ' the preparation of P the meaning d this much abused word_ 8radY•• Dering the first ,great Aus- he bought a book of adViee to swima average woman to -day insists ' upon smelling essences France did trian retreat the . princess fled, and . --fents of the book. He could -talk fiti-' change; but to the. man who is mak- now sta.nds: . Augustus consequently , :arm& and ,turn his hands, and prOpel Minister of Finance,. and this. has ap- mers, Here he ,read how to moveahis .$3 silk stockings "Save," say a the, with his"feet 'He mastered the con, Peal to many who must count the ous fashioa: . • - the Army, • I fear thernas much as I "Women have ,nothing to do with Maria de • Medici • who especially until after the -Crusades, and It was brought them into favor. • Makers o'f not become acquainted with perfumes to the natroW dithensions of his Man . Practical is practised; that is the end -as of it. ' ,The Babcock test was not Practical" : oftieer, who found the infant in. a • in the general confusion her baby left behind and feet, A: Mission. • adding, in his customary terse! vigor- xperieace, Wh,ef • he ' kn.ows to be • a,, used in swinareing., • He knew the thousands who are making, $10 a ,clay there. ° The little village quickly be. And, ,as an indication of his inflexi- ently about the rritiscles that were : ing Millions by munitions, to the decided to found a homan . colony fear intoxicating liquor. „. . perfumes quickly recognized their m``Perrese geed or bad medicinal influ.ences. It 11886s a; i' dno;,11.eevieir everyone oonfe ten i efvaers- : , ditch; sent it to Russia to be cared . for. • , No one knew the infant names of thegreatestswimmers, and over -munition lathes; there has 'neve 'came • a town, -and, as a defense bility. of purpose, he imposed a Eihnilar was remarked both . in lialli and Lon..: in.: its practicabillty. . ree- •silo, the , a • . was a p ug the record time for the various dis- seemed a More financially riotous against the wild Celtic and, Illyeian iestrictiOn. on himself. ' For` five, don, during the cholera epidemic ' of Pure-bred hell, the growing ofalfalfa; ,. Baroness Natalie Garet. adopted: it tances in swimming -races, , but he time in the Dominion's existencetribes of the surrounding country, who Months at a stretch Madame Joffre the nineteenth century, that no one the king system of Ventilation and could net swint. ', ' ' . • • host of other well actepted improve•• a and tea it to her home at Tiflis. ' Possibly conditiOns as we ;see them always gave the Romans so much trou- nevek saW him, and since then she has 'engaged in making perfumea was ever ' Recently the' story of the foundling He would go te'• the beach *here the are somewhat exceptional, because ble, the new city was surrounded by a Obtained, only glimpses of him on his .attackedmerits in dairy practice havehad to . . ___,,..-_- run this gauntlet of "practicer in the was published in a Russian paper, lads dived and sported like fish, and country people, are not familiar with wall and fortified with toWers. It .flying visits to Paris • . mind of the .average farmer'. _ with a . picture of the child A Rus- , talk about proper swiMmirig. He said them...Bet in other ways the evi•! Was given the: name, of Tergeste; Lady Smith-Doirien devotes a good LITTLE TRAVEL IN BRITAIN. 0. • . ' 'sian priserier, teken by, Prince Ged- i he was going to learn after he •hed dence is not waeting. While driving quickly became a flourishing Roman .deal of time and energy to "mother- SeegerWheeler, a Canadian Sas- , aa__ . • s. katchewan wheat farmer, his had an toic's regiment, happened to have a thought •a little mote about the pro- through the country the other even- colony and had a large territory at ing" the • British Arley. Always' a .Pleasures Thought' Necessary Are experience.in this line that is well•Set pocket, and by chancel:tine° Gedroie copy of this particular jostle in • his • per way of breathing() when in the ;mg we Were surprised that we were tached to it: In these day& just as very ac . tive worker in coneeetien with . , ' . New Saerificed. ' a,. • be regarded as a form of stimulant. , •; * * * * • • Object teaching is one "very effect - a •certain awe in the darkness. The veil 'gets 'a little thinrier. The un- seen and enternal lays, its- pressure upon us. Enter, God! 'MUCH FOUGHT FOR CITY. History of. Trieste. is a History of Many Canfiicts. • • Trieste, the principal. • seaport Of Austria, :which figures so prominent - 3 Sea, LV .544.4 ii4.74.04,11:••At „, 4 AAA 44••• 4Ast• Children of Sir Douglas Haig, Britieh Commander -in -Chief " LLD their father is leading the British troops at the frJnt these •twO 1.• children, Alexandria. and Victoria Haig„ daughters of Sir Douglas Haim eomileander.an-ohief are enleying fighting' of a different variety. Ths staling at Deal. Ragland, often provides a good fight for ths hopeful angler, orthe fish are pot 'at all eager to be caught and they exhibit their feelifig'Fhei weimanbd.ove photo was taken at the juvenile anglers cempetition at Deal, • WIVES OF OUR COMMANDERS NOTABLE WOMEN WHO WORK •• WHILE THEY WAIT. , Since • the Outbreak of Hostilities They Hare Done a Great Deal of Useful Work. Fierce as the light Which beats • Alfalfa Mixtere for Silage. • 4 0 •co - 111igt XflailaiceMent, The Idle must There. are Often times when, owing also be given credit for ito 'Value as a to a Wet seaaela Or au early frost, means orbolding over feed In Yeerli farMera exPerience difficulty •iri eavo of abundance for nse year ef grop Ing the last cutting of alfalfa. At scarcity."' ouch times a method for ....,00nverbbv ' Corn silage Ike given ore;favor . saving df the- entire last crop, alfalfa into allege may bring about a able results than alfalfa silage, due largely to improper- fermentatiOn:- - Daring the fermentation process of alfalfa Eilage, which affected its • which tAos Place lmmediateli after Palatability; Per recent exPerireente the silo is filled, the sugar in the green have shown thet a mixtalre of on crop Is converted by. pecterial pro- half green • sorgbaini With "one-ba/f• eesses into a mixture of acids. The green alfalfa Makes a good "quality most iraPortant welds formed in silage of silage, but the feeding value 0.014 are lactic ,azid, the same acid which' mixture has .00t been eemPal•Pd: With develope in the souring of milk, and corn silage. • aeetic acid, the same acid which gives to vinega.r. its sour, taste. Several other acids are also ferried in lesser Auto waken; aro turd/1g 340.xe at, amounts, 'tad they are of little impor. A.2 L Lt. — 4•=4-, tance in normal silage. ,Those. acids fv:nrn7tax;aLcotor l'finaeid,PaPar for4itr puinrptors' :serve to 'preserve the silage mixture fermentatiop which takes place when The ctfongathefing' more *finite inrep!igt.. from. further decemposibien. .silage fermentation is similar to the manufacturers of antomoinlest,; have been attendhlg trader' &Mon. cabbage is converted ipto,sauerktaut, stkations this season. A lew-Prased • The alfalfa plant is 'defieleht. in efficient 'tractor for use on the aver:. fermentable sugars... For this reascle, alfalfa alone does' not make silage which will "keep." Acid ie not pro- duced in -sufficient qtaantities to pre- serve the silage. Because of thiede. ficieney of acid, putrefactive processes set lap, and the silage acquires a dis- gusting taste and en odor somewhat resemblizig the odor of decaying meat. The Feral Tractor,. ,age, farm .wonld,r,evolationize methoda of farming displacing the horse in it field which to a great extent yet•re. mains his own. The price and size. , of Feat ,of the farm tractore noW111 %zee are suited only to farming on a ; !Argo scale. ' • Henry Ford, it has been known for sorae time, has been at work oft thie midable. A cutter containing. sur - was , Agricultural Experiment Station con- .for the first time last week in a teel problem. His tractor was exhibited In September, 1914, the Nebraska vivors from that ill-fated ship floundering in the heavy seas, when , etructed six small sires having a cap- of tractors at Fremont, Neb. It is she began to sink in consequence of acity. of about 1 ton each. These four-wheel, design, and is capable of a hole battered in her side. Quick to were filled, -1 with torn, 1. with Black drawing two ,plows about threemiles to the hour, and its speed along a • see the danger, a 'bluejacket took a ,Araher cane 1 ' . blanket given to him by Lady Jelli- coe, stuffed it into the hole, and stem- med the inrush of water, with the re- sult .that all in the boat were sayed, VALUE OF PERFUMES.. ' --- • Have Often Proven to be Useful as Disinfectant&. Persia saw the •earliest develrip- meet of the perfumeindustry.•The • a'. wl road is six miles an hour. There is , alfalfa-Eane mixtures in• the propor- a set of headlights fot night plowing. tint Of 1 part alfalfa to 2 parts cane, The motor is a four -cylinder, each 4 - equal parts • of cane and alfalfa, and by' 4.25, and in general is said to 'be an enlargement of the Ford autoract- mobile Meter. The clutch is of, the multiple disk type, three -speed with reverse of the constant mesh trype and worm trarismission to the rear axle Vile tractor weighs less than . ala",• • 1.915, After having been filled for near- • • ' ' ly a yeat. ' The' silage in all except one ton„ being Very /light for a maa . upon ' a throne is that now focesised • • the one containing Only alfalfa *as. chine of its kind, • A contention .of _uPon the_thilitary-And_ naval _c_oin priests of Egypt, who.Were the sole found t *n_perfeetacondition.-The-Some tractor makers has been that , • menders of the Allies. I3ut their depositaries of science,:knew the se- silage made from 1 part cane and 2 welfht was essential. This cret Oraromatic substances and Pre parts alfalfa was jusb as good as that ever, been.most Objectionable to farm- wives are so, much in the shadow that we seldom tiee o'r hear o'Y them, not- served them. Egyptian perfumes ac- containing larger proportions of eerie . erEi, because:of the Way a heavy tratt- Withetanding that some of these quired great celebrity, especiallythose. Alfalfa Z parts, mixe'd.With cane I or packed the ground. over which it , passed. "Made' in • Alexandria. The Israelites, ladies have done a good deal ef -use- ful peblic Work since .the outbreak of during their 'sojourn in Egypt, adopt - hostilities, says' London Answers. • 2 parts alfalfa to 1 part cane,. re- spectively.• • The., sorghum cane con- tains a higher percentage of ferment- aable Beggars and makes up the difici- ency of the alfalfa in this respect. These silos were 'opened in August ed the use of aromatic • substances. Madame Jeffre leads so tetired, The Jews were fond of cosmetics, and i ' life that a Freneh lady who recently ', even used them to paint the face. All deliver d a lectureGeneral J ff these perfumes were extracted from ly in the news, of the, .day, goes back , confessed that she .did not know the essences of trees mid various plants. for the beginping of ,its history into •i maiuen name of that national hero's The Greeks, who loved elegance, were antheet days, It is first mentioned wife. She is however, the ruling espectelly addicted to the use of per 100 B.C. as a village, a: place spirit of the French •' coramander's fumes, and they taught their secrets of no importance. Some fifty years home t Auteuil,'d • i bright and usage . to the Romanp. The lat- arid Cheerful, despite her husband's I ter, in the days of their decadence, long spells of absence. •• went so far as to scent the coats of • . their dogs. Madame Joffre. later, it is recorded that the place was attacked by barbarian tribes from the interior, and about twenty years later still, Trieste makes its deflialte emergence into •history during the Dalmatian wars waged by Augtistus. The Romans, with that. sure judg- ment' which •charatterized their em- pire building, recognized the import- ance. of the site upon which Trieste part, makes a .highly desirable silage Silaing.alfalfa with cape in the 'man- ner here descrthed is recommended,•as a means of saving the last • crop -of,• Princess Lost Boy Flight Front • alfalfa when ,cond3tions are ,such that . it cannot be ma. ,ito hay. Wheth- ' Russian Soldiers. er or •not it will ue profitabi to silo Prince Vladzis Gedroic, two years' • Alfalfa is a question which 'cati only old, son of Prince Cyril Gedroic, an be -answered by the farmer, himself Austrian, nobleman, is reported to have been lost and to have. been found' again in most romantic circum- stances, says the London Globe: • Prince Cyril Gedroic is an officer . in the Austrian. army and joined his . • • FIND LOST BABY MICK. under the individual conditions. a . What Is Practical. • • water. The boys WO Id ask, him to , meeting and there were passing our forth in the following brief paragraph examined this prisoner after his Cap- „,, • come in and they Would ,teach ham carriage on the highway more auto- which we take from an article in the ture.. . • - No, he wanted to think: ft while long- I mobiles than other vehicles; and many Coutitry Gentleman: ' . Glancing casually at the paper, the . er, and then he would begin to swim .1 of them were owned by the farmers. "When Wheeler first began growing prince recognized his lost child. ' . -93utayoua-will-never--I - etagentsaire-selling-threeacars-tci Wheat fromaseeelected an&lared hy '•aDiplomatic-repeesentations- ensued, O td -.day, the importance of Trieste lay the Soldiers' and Sailors' Families mainly in its commerce, as the natural outlet for Pannonia and Dalmatia, and early days of the war of the huge task of finding homes for the , wives childrerr-of the-Regularsatureed mit of barracks to make ,room for the way,” said the boys. "Don't thiek country people to every one sold in about it .get into the deep waiter and town. Farman% have the money and - try it." _ are spending it freely for • comforts * *, * •• and pleasure. • The SteLtheier ,was passing, but the •* * ,* lad had ncit gone in once. He , was I There are some redeeming feat. stili thinking. One „day the boys ! tires, too. What good is thii war do caught hold of him and threw him, _ing for society? Every now and into the deep water. He had no time again we hear of some good resulting to continue his thinkin.g; he had to from its influence. Now we are as- • use what knowledge he finseessed. So sured that the war is having a bene - he struck out. and struggled and be- •ficial effect on the Mental stability of came a swinuner: Aftertvards he ad- Civilians. , naturallY supposed vocated the method of the boys, that themexcitement and strain would "Don't think, try." •.• 1 exert an evil effect on weak and ill - So it is with , charader-building, ' balaneed- Minds, Now, after two Association, she took charge in the One by one the greatwar has whit- • tied down a whole list Of comforts, services, pleasures and so-called ne- cessities ofe-that-the twentieth- century , thought indispensable. But hand he was looked upon as a faddist. and the little ,prinOe is on his wayto in these days, just as to -day; it was a 'beautiful -city. - On the fall of the' empire in the west, the history of Trieste merges in- men who flocked. to •the Flag • . • • to the •history Of 'Istria. It passed throughatroublous times. • : It was Oa ' Lady Beatty's Yacht. . , !aged by the •Lengobatdi and the In much the. same direction 'excel-. Goths; was annexed to :the Frankish lent work is being done by Lady Max - kingdom by 'Pepin in 789; fell into the well. Though she has mane hobbies' were. all travellers. 0.The magic carpet Show in 1911 for the best wheat raised lay Waiting outside the door : of the on the' itamerican Continent, arid an - theof the dukes of. Carinthia atteaut and loves ,riding; she takes an 'active' the middle of the tenth century, and: art in caring for the sick and *wound- humblest citizen With . a ten pound other international sweepstakes prize from • thence it passed -successively ed, thus cOntinuing the mission : she • note. "A Week in Lovely Lucerne for at the 1914 'Show in Kansas, and in-. _through the hands of the dukes of . undertook in . South "Africa Whew! Five Pounds" was within the ambia hteibriTiotinosnaeiipnritihees at nviateridousstaottheser ,aenxd- Miran, the dukes of. Bavaria into the ; her 'husband was appointed Governor •tion of th'e poorest worker,. ..; - possession of the regmblie of Veniee.! of Pretoria his . wife Pined him . in For two years now not a single Eng- Canada, they have stepped ealling him • Islapd of St Helena Where. Napoleon For the next 180 .ears the hist that that towna and, at a trine when there liehman or Englishwoman, unless. On • a faddist : When he began to grow Trieste fi chiefly years rec'ord of cenflicts•I Was. no other officer's wife within. a , "strict business only," has been Able wheat at the rate le forty-five to e.nded Arial.. career as a prisoper. . The with the great city to the South, and inkaachus of many miles, •theew herself to leave England for the continent eighty bushels an acre on small plots "Petit Provencal" say's: ... . the end Trieste •placed herself under itt,i)tt,leittnalsk of caring for men sent Two •years ago the Londoner . could and thirty to thirty-five bushels on his .•"The 'Plan to capture the Kaiser . . Abstract thoughts . ' and theoraes, year's of war, an eminent apeialist • • alone, are quith Insufficient. Nire Must, in the' North •of Ireland.has come -to the' ptotection of' Leopold III., of Au'e: --. ---'----* ' I compass Boulogne or Ostend in ;• a isaornte, :nejt strin.hitisiganv:71:91:d heti_ Dever been..given" up by EngfOnd .,. r; on °lir know edge.' . We must trY.. the conclusion that the war has dolie t • we Are to ,. succeed in Anything' much to cOntrol the mentally un- to undertake the' triist, and so ftom ria. Leopold was only too willing . Lady Beatty .usually. gives full .rein twenty-four hours' jaunt • To day two dollars to three dolelzettiatbht:sts.l.file and France, Although this, aim' of the . . no stable, for.'"the fact is indisPutable " ' • -worth' while.. Theories that 'do t , protection, Austria advanced to over-• often to follow her husband's ship . was a practical fariner and a compet-: sear has not •been,:mentioned ,by the. .. press during the lest twelve or fifteen • to her passion fot yachting, and used • those. triteafamiliar towns •havi lordship and and from Overlordshin to 'ate from place to place. At the outbreak. • .' come as Milk off ' as •Lhassa or Yark- Practically every one d . land. . .. ' . months • The fateofthe unspeakable • a fit the fads of life are wotthless, and he says, "th4 ineanity, like crime, .. a has lessened." It might be answered - , 1 taal possession. Twice during Oho yacht, . . -- of war ' h ' t 1 ' s e no •On y equipped her . .. • 1 -chief of the Huns, this beastly modern - When we. make practical attempt. that the decrease in the nember ofd h 1 Home travel, too, has duffeted:. ent business ma.n." ' , great.- I Attila, will probably be decided before we can only discoYer • their. worth • , Napoleonic .permd, namely, from 1797 h la g . Seventeen cross-country train ser- • very step in the way toward . Think welly, is good; do well, is het- adniissions is 'probably due to the vast to 1805, and from. 1809 to 1813, Trieste pital for our soldiers and sailors,. htit vices have ditappea. red.. The People, et profit and greater 'efficieecy in the the end of the present war. If he - ter. . , ' ' • . -• • number •of• meh ' Called to the &dors. was ie the Posseseion of France' i_. volunteered te gewith it wherever it who 'live on 'these relates are expeei- business. of dairy farming has been ' ought out and Won against the nara cannot be caught in, the' field when : IS it net time. te: leave . , the 'low-. But that explanation ,will not do be- • • n • ht b t . . encing restrictions Of • movement' f. the remnants ' of. his . shattered armies • vaulted past of thronging and think- this later year however. Austria- sae • ' ' 'gilt th- th th t k pt t h me -1 tow judgments of farmers whose,only :"' ing foe thinking's pake and make -cense-the greatest reduction is arming ed the .city amid the. ee;roundipg -di; ;.• Of. tafte, liow.eveza 'she" Ilea spent • ti . el-, an , ose a e , a . o. r • are externunate r e grea o e - rict of Istria and it has eemained ra . . ost o her time at hei• husband's , their ' Ancestors of, the. stage -coach ..ery was "not practical." This proves „ - • • .1 beyond eontroversy, that the only ifn- , 541ve 6f. the• allies, his surrender by womenaof whorii 154 were admitted in' t • . • the great experiment of doing the .1914 and onlY 119. in 1905 He attri- an •Austrian possession ever since. home, Brooksby .Hall, Leicestershite, "Vs. ,• • • , his people will be the first peace. con- • net in the ecern of Ally .""nee" butes this .Phenomeeon to the whole- and with the Serrowing women in no- People haye schooled themselves to ., practical' man in the business 'is the . • , ! ohe who id fooliali enough to meature ' ' dition The prison in which he will: .• • , quencea? , • " • .e .. * , * ; some. influence •of a common interest ' . .. a A Tama ,41:r.HE w A., , Vat 431•Villl& , All one night a gimp of - . tiavel 'AS little as possible; ar-e con- , }Imre to spend the rest of his miser- , • . ' iii -something of . importance: "Idle- " ''!"'" li it bluejael:ets-' wiVes wliited on the pier tent to wait , indefinitely . for dela el y j. •• . - • • . ' the question - solely by. what he kn.,* able life has long. been prepared • by hibition has become hietory. it ‘ Question .of Iteconetruction . „is ,Rt.,,, or.iiceetain port; anximisiy 'waiting • or go-aar.a, 81.6 weanagaaii zoiwafie_ ania thdt-'iliWne.--Roard's. Dairyman. ' I t' BTiti.0 Government ota St. Helena. Theagrent ' TorentO_National-.1 • 11%-----frair EMT ennui • have lost their hold; . -- - . • great an several respects. Tho at . • • • ceiving Attentien. i- for news frein the Fleeta and among • Cern Silage vs. Alfalfa Hive - . ' . Hi s• quarters there will he far less - the.preeailing fashion The war has . a: them .was Lady Reatty, Who 'Comfort- their eninual.vaehtionS. ..,, -- wee• healthy end unselfish activity ie now'. • tendance was great -some daas werea. vay hy day the.question of recen- ' ed there in. theiamoment•s of "greatest.: _...........aa. .a... ___ a a As a reault o ---f three years' eapeei- enfranchised. women, for 'it has set ; comfortable than those of Napoleon structioii and •of preparation for': the trial, • 'rt.! EATBE SEATS COSTLY. . • were. /Us oldest San and heir,. the recordones in spite of wet conditions . Crown Prince, will be eaecuted with- " gmnil-°•-•""lis ' (3'14i'lrli°-•"46-7giv"--Fel. itiona itics• that threatened to '`.•Mothetine.'" the NavY..... Rritish*Governmeni Adds War Tax to of alfalfa hay and .corn silage in . • mid to help _thale lb .need in. this And .. . some millions of dollars to war funds .. . stifle their p.iychic energice, atalasso i ,a.,, hire 0.1, pritife attenti_.,_ , 1.,,,, The Wife Of. aanalier gOat 'vein- ,• .• Prices,' ittreadir Vie,,Ii• !nt fr 7 cetri o7sn s , after the war occupies a' . . . . • - preiludtion, the Nebtaaka• Statioe triikc3tclicetil23lo life commanding' Pol,t.'4. M.> folloWS: • ' . , . . • ;other hinds; But •financially con.- - .far at hos contributed towsounitneee ef 3..pa'ny eolintriee. ' Peek, has pet held i c'a "" mander, Lady Stardee, eullitattes- the • • • ' - --e , sideiod, who would .ever think that • • • * * • 4. ib , . • .. • . tin .07thihition. Of model boithed on the • • ' a ' a home a few dt.zy'S no to the honse in the middle- of lboxfOrd • -• ' The high . cost of theati•es . 'came' a. „, ,a Brifi.sh . tat7a1.11.;nUitira:ve 'bteeri.rvd. iantdbeal; . ' 4 Women on English Fatima mind 'ited nerve." . . . • aomesticities an • an unpretentious e lit ca e a a - i a iis world's history- wile and. meetings, dealing with redon- - Rants, where she and • 'her _husband*. flubik• Beginning with Tekerved seat A. prominent Bi•itish Stalesmen Canada is iS at War and thousaas of i , . exreriirient: with eorn silage is worth .. , . ' terraees or the• Jardip de Tuileries, her soap daily being killed.. There is ''••.: are very popular. , It ,is clitracteristie , , . . _ ,. a .. . . .33.50 pm' ton -all -ad hay is worth V': Marked recent] that the ex: er•ence , buyers early, London theatres started . of the laStteroYYders. hits taugPhtl him •' : • • no apparent scardity of money. The 'there .siamuch or ao, widezspread sor- struction and development. work a • the victot .of the Bottle of Falkland o exact tne tfaternment s ton in ace • . .. • 7Dominion GoVerinnent is floating an- row as ait•this Moment -for which the of frequent .occurience in beth,France • • no grumbling is heard from the peo- Many were not quite so charitable as Austria. ple who have adjusted themselves to the changed conditions., Two Years ago the English people that in applying names to hith and his work. But since he won the $1,000 • PRISON READY FOR KAISER, first. prize at the New York Land - • He Will Be Incarcerated on Island of •• St. Helena. • According to French. papers the .allies are as fiemly determined as ever to capture the German Emperor and to incarcerate him for life on the • el • them free from the benumbin cen4 eltradetptneTrtnwirrelyarmi t lilt •t°4--wurk-t"-i't-tilLrletive N'al'ab Admiral on •Tirpite, and it number of ditlon to the regular price& r? t011 When the prilce‘s of 'ai.lfalfa hay runi, it was neer safe to 'say that a ' A Weatia.41End theatre hoisted a . higher than $8 per toe, the vatoe of , woman rould. not do anything that e• upoii•Getmany, and wag offered a spe- phicard hearing _this atcalea , . le.ilk Prdtteti°11 'win ! Inatalltilec°Alm4e.d; er:illgaThE4 'data meseTtairingeWaos4 ' . . Goo. cion inorease in lior cial train 10 coevey him to Private boXes, $25, Ole $2.16 abundant the use •t)f 'sit. farmers on their eonservatisei im,the. four•eente. i* aaaaa' ' • Would indicate that where alfalfa ha i farm elected to: travel to town in an ordila. Stall. Ilig•62.1 Okla twanW ary second-class carriage.. • Londoe, he erliniont tax. . . • ' .....a.---ee ' age will not lessen the cost of milk a• , matter .of *employing, 'women tin -the •• - land. The latest reports she* that Finally, Lady, jellicoe-whose sis- Dress &cies $1,20, plus six cents, " ' -..""1". andproduetion unless it ean be produeed tefiiiiittilgervoaftittline pisaftra. piglly , ltiliee- °Do nulled yez don't git hur-rt, in these experireentia- . 'Ic4iiitt.ecillittPi:. 'Imittrest. . . at a lower cost theft ; t. al tearged for it a colinties from, whirl] "returna , - have been:received by the Board of Pat." !laid 13ridget • "It's dangerous The 'advantrige of • silage ib inerees-; Agriculture, more than 7,0110 women. a' workin' it that quarry." • ing the number of animals whieh can are emeloyed on, the land. "That's all roit, Biddy," Mild Pat be kept upon a limited erda by say- "Oi've •borrowed two dollsies frim th' ing the roughness which would .other- The world may MC evely .inan a ., foremen, staid he don't let tee do any wise be wasted is, of c.•eirse, apparent living, but a lot of them haven't atsus4 " dangerous, work any More," ".' • in the study of it pernitmett plan of ettoogh to show.up en pay day. • 1 ." ple are tarebnifg-over 'each other • . other $100,000,000 war loan and peel- hungry 1,0-Kev. 'Dr. .T. 1:1'.' Zowett In his fi•dailY instance of this aetivity•is afferded,in . war -lords are resplmsible. j and the 'United Kingdom. •The latest ,. . Islands WAS ealled upon' by the Ad- miralty to -inflict that crushing blow subscribe to it. Sir Thomas White, aneditations" contributed to the a reporty recently made to the Birm- • Minister of Finance, says that Cana_ Christian Herald, writes beautifully Ingham corporatioti, on the question diens shthald save. They _should on "The Unifying Fewer of Coleman of rebuildinehouses. lamed for tern - a time ,ne Sorrow." Based on the words •"Your - , • esehew luxuries at such tai purposes and of proeeeding with . •this . threw wider eonditiOnS Stated" ecrhpanion in tribulation," 1)r. *towed building schemes arrested by tile out- -the advieo is timely. To 'note the seye: There Inc many things in -life bileak of the war, two yarti ago. The tee, it is interesting to note, it.4 the way our Cartadian peopleare living nitwit aet as the promoters of -i deap report advises the expenditure of a wife of Admiral Maddeii-t"reothers" ' you would suppose that never hi the or superficial union. • Sotneti s the sum amountieg In all to something the Navy in • mtich the, same weir as e .-: • history of the country was there .a emergence •,of it coininon interest 'like 1,850;000 on sehools and other more ,prodigat period. As the real ch aWs sundered souls int ellowship. ambito; buildings.' • , estate Went affected the entire poptt-1"-And the same day Vilate and gerod lation amine Valli age, so totday, ow-: were niade friends together" , Some- The follow tvho gee; nothing IAA *ft to the munition oi•deis and ille times 410 riveting bond is. a Common money Out ef hut work is poorly paid, oceurred after the disaster to thc For. . , . • Lady SmithiDorrien "mothers" the Army. • One of the most gratifying Jed. dents connected with her good work • e. 4.1 ; • • • • 4 • ••• • • 1. •-• .14:!•