The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-16, Page 6eale"ere--e--..- • '
Adkins" women and elderly Men cattl resulte.
A Vela number of accidents t fleeing the much Oared, technical
he preventeds tit least the Onterhe *
Safety Lowe evidently *the they i In Eagland music rechivea nau.th
tans
by oTtatting safety „patrols. The ;greater attentien than in CenSea.
KUM* bag on the faee of it * fair ins '-illusic teachers' asaociatiene are 40,
&taloa of success. Of course the b,ganized in the leadbig teems and Chloe
promoter* had in mind children Wand even.% the country villagea nna
hyena and eities, bUt their *chaste *deal organizations are qiiite eeralnen,
possesaea merit for all places' 40, Oen. Standardsx'for InUsie teaching as Well
d'tione The mode (A oneratien in , as ter general proficiency have Iseeti
GUNS $HORTLIVED.
Praire* Of POW** IMPOiral ACC*111.0
et Fla*.
'Th* life of * gun deltenele upelts
the pregreas of erosion, Which Ileener•
or later la. certain te IMP& the. • tles:
-etireeY of fire. ErOalent le gentled by
the. action 'Of the explosive. :pie* .0
high temperature and .preeellres
cording to the Iron Age tit* 71i0t
gesea cauee a *WM* of cited . to
.alesorb. heat. :The flint .eapande and
becoMes. set., %am the releinie of
SCheeia .14 as NUNN'S': Front .eight te0diacussed, forMulated and adopted by the pressure it contracta, which
twelve of the eIdor pUpilas wheael. a nuMber of musicteachers' aeSeeht• causes iniaute craelcs that groW,
tains* Complete couraea of muate larger with evert' diacharge; As the
s
. Standing and . depertinexit warranti.
such recognition, •eltoUicis be aelected
by the Principal. or by any ,ether!.
.
mean approved by .the Principal to.
csMetitute. the Safety Patroi if eons,
aidered, advisable the Principal inay
_change the. useinheralsip at any One,
to. give Other pupils the _valuable.
esome centres make preetteaI what is.tudy,,including detailed teetti and, f',SX-
rtntiaatiQnS based upon. authentic
sourees inforination, are now avail-
able in published., form. This then,'
and. the filet that there are ,sutTicient
teachers qualified for the Wert; .In
,
increase in size they ferM Paasegee
-Ways for Mere hot • gee, and that
tends le enlarge them atm fuether.
The inner surfaea thus becomes
roughened. and the bands begin
Corrode. :Finally, the bore becomes,
ii0 enlarged that it allows the gage
perience. In small schools the num- 1 already ,desirable, namely, that seri- to eaCePe. The shelldoes not then Many, and was given unusual appOr,
• her'ef MeMbere May be reduced to Oa Music study beinclUded inthe acquire its proper 'rotation and its •tunities for observation. He toile of
four or. six if neceSsarY., ' , ' , f SebOol curriculum,- Withrating and :flight becomes erratic: An ' guns ex- 'the Guard, "came hack to, their home
i
1* • -* 't *. • ' credits aceerding to work and achieve- gent. amen' ones are .new tonstructed town (leebnated. • and hinnbled, • the
The $afety Patrol pledge teadat 1 Ment. • . with-liniags in thhi
e tithe, wcha tyhen ntioSt, amaSing aggregation of broken
•
RECI
ATM AND
THE BRITISH* s
saes..
Curtin, 14, &Sea, NitrKees
Scene* at German RailefeY
s Station.
The London Dail)" Mail of areeent
date contains the complete article bY
D. T. Cartha, of Boston, dealing With
014 rout of the Pruealan Guard-"the
outlast Military twee the wild"
r the western front, extracts of
which were gabled and puhtlihed..14r.
Cuitin, Was for :ten menthe. in Gere
will work for the Safety of others as Already a. inunbee of Mir cities. and the bore is worn.out, are 'removed. men I.have ever encountered." He
Would want thein to Work for my towns have with flatiSfYing results, aaci replaced by new ones. The cost watched' theta secretly as they Were
Safety. • I Will work' for the Public adopted sa41). a system in the public of relining. a gUn is approximately 80 unloaded from the train. Having been
Safety, as. I 'would want thoee aPPoint-
ed to saafeguatal our city to work Or
me and my family and friends, .1 will
try to Protect myself andsthose swith
Whom I come in contact from the risk`
a unnecessary Chances. .1 will do MY
PART to 'lop reduce the aulliber• of
.
and schools. It is urged that the per cent. of the CQ4t, Of the glin, informed that ha: could .not ,Bee them
Beards Of "Bdueatien: in Oil townS,, and ' • • There appears to be aeaSitnait- o the imleas he had tranaseiel pass from Bers
cities Wilr scant consider this' Matter. •number of- times that A on" can be 'lin? he, by erase, obtained asvantage
seriously. ' - ' •,. • s. relined. The email 'firma itaed, in the point in: the station restaurant. He
d f *. * * " * ' • . • ...- United States are considered to be writes: . • •
, , . •
• '"I would rather Stand' at•the foot of •worn Out after moo to %ON rOands ' • Dejected as Well as Hurt- -
my class than cheat of MY leasone," have been fired. Sniall •11.41/41 gella •The
can be fired about 1,000 time a 'before home. The steel corps Of the Army
Prussian Guard had come
they are "regarded as worn out:Large of Germany' met at Contalmaison
12 -inch and lasInchanaval : guns . are the light-hearted bOya. I had seen
burled the Guard Refterve ,at Con,
taintaillen because Ohs Waa determins
ed that this ireportartt lint in the
elatin of concrete and eteel that coiled
back and forth before IlitpaUMesPe.
re4U14 MOO reMella Unbroken. The
newly forMed Of Britain% sone
bent, but did Mit break tinder the
eheek, TIM Were lait-ntiMbered but,
like MU the reitth th
at Of the Pritat
the Inicksfreinsthelront German eel
-
diets heti told' Me about, thebe fatight
ou 0)1, never thinking Of sutren-
der.,
(*tidal Beat ToMmy Atkin*
accidents and fixes for this year. We 'overheard .a girl, remelt during'
* A' I' * . our recent trip. That is a safe and
During our recent holiday We had honorable stand to , takes "Honesty
, . .
opportunity for Seeing the need of is the best pallets sera A bystander, considered to have a life, on one lin- drilling in Hyde Park last year, and
1
such action. as the Ontario' Safety "ha it Makes a man poor sometimes'''. ing, of from 160 to 209 rounds. Low- in a furious counter-attack, in which
League is taking. . The „rapid in-, True, but if need be I prefer povertY velocity guns, Pell as howitzers and' they had attempted to regain the vil-
crease of .automobiles increases the to deceptiott and wrong -doing. The mortars; have correspondingly longer
danger to children on. city streets. Joy, peace, Comfort OtInind. and real :lives :than high velocity. guns of the
There is aornethirig in boy nature that happiness that wines from right- same calibre, because the pressimes.
prompts him to defy danger. "City doing and honesty makes the effort they develop, and hence the tempera -
11 t he d an auto laorn if •worth while, .if it bo -an effort to do tures, are levier. , • '
know freM One of them that in
a ,first onslaught the Guard lost
heavily, but was reinforced and again
advanced. Another . desperate en-
counter and the men from Potsdata
withered in the hand-to-hand carnage.
The Germans could net hold what
they had WO back; and the khaki suc-
ceeded the Ileltlagrey•at Contalmalson.
The efacuatibn of the Wounded
occupied hours. I purposely missed
my train, for. kneWtha.t I was prob-
ably the only .foreign civilian to
see the • historle• picture of the
Proudest soldiery , of Prussia •return
to its garrison town froin'the• great-
est battle in history. Empty trains
were pulled out of the way, to be
succeeded by more trains full of
Wounded, and again more. Doctors
and nurses were. attentive and . al-
ways busy, and the stretcher-bearers
raotred back and forth until their
faces grew red with exertion. °
• • All In. '
But it Was tite visages of the men
on the stretchers that riveted • my
Attention. I never saw so Many
men so completely exhausted:* Not
one pair of lips relaxed into. a smile
lage,,had been wiped•out. These were and not an eye lit up with the g A
not -merely wounded, • but dejected, •recognition of familiar surroundings.
It Was not however, the lines of suf-
they 'can avoid it but stand their the right,thing at all 'times and under.
.
ground as if to challenge the driver all eircurnitences. The Christian Her -
to go on, The Wonder to us is that aid in discussing a great motel. issue
• many More accidents do not occur for recentIY, said editorially that • there
the very reason that Children playing
in city streets are SO venturesome and
lieedlesa Of danger, " In New- 'York
is a Wide difference between the qual-
itY of uprightness and that of down-
rigntnese, theugh bath may be
.,
•
CONSCRiPTION. IN ENGLAND.
•
GoVernment .Strict With Men *Trying
to•Eirade Service. "
The Daily, Mail of London eonductS
City and in 131•00klYn Where they have trated in the character of the • same a column under' the • title "Fax aid
in operation the Safety' First Feder- Person. Thiels true, for 'human na- Near," devoted. to minor happenings
atioh of America and the Bureau of tare is Often seen in' most peculiar .arid to news b•riefly toll The follow4
." phaseS. . , . . . , • ; . • •,
-Public Safety, respectively, We saw
scores of children playing with fire
. on the streets 'where they gather
sticks and refuse and light bonfires by
, the curbstone and carry pails of blaz-
ing .
chips,. etc.
- * .*' * t
. s , , • ,
Science too IZIfieli WIC es • us you- that to adhere Ur a strictly honorable gone'riorth"to 'evade service were: at
. unheeded and unappreciated.- :the alt conditions is heroic. Such a man ovtir •te the military -authorities.
able lessons that are allowed to pass ,course of action and do right under Glasgow fined £2.- each . and handed
teachings of science regarding effects I is. a tree type of Christian. An, ups. al have no patriotism. I would
of spirituous liquors disregard Very', may. be -a-very worthy 6. 1 estimable
and - .rho' at. ' 'Nottingliant• Was plea ee returned. front 'having depOsited their the Somme. Yet bete. on the aetna
• Presently the great furniture vans .push back the troops of. Rupprecht on
` of alecihol on the bunion sYstem .Inwe I right Men, who fears God and ' tries. rather be A slave . thin fight for free -
been explicit and emphatic; but lovers to live a` blameless,- and . useful life, ,doert," said Robert TaYler, aged 23, 1
often the admonitions of the •Scientiets. Christian citizen; just and scrupulous- and handed • ovet - to the military terrible loads, and were again 'filled.' tautskirts .of the Gernien melte' was
is that the normal reaction of cold- little force •Of character, lackings, in-. authorities. ' ,
John Dezialdsen the I S io 1,
• One van was reserved for those who 'a grim tribute to the =Chine that
rod dion of heat and con- itiative and unequal to a great emer- short -distance running champion, , e pro e s ea hadeapired on the journeyarid •it was • Great Britaiit had • built up under the
;mai full. • ' -
One of the, late scientific discoveries ly honest in all his dealings, yet with
It is', we belie:eel .ofteri very:,easY
for a man to deceive himself. It is
said that to err is human, to forgive
divine. Temptations are so Many and
attstek us in such a variety of forms
ing. extracts from this' column- in res
cent issues will show bpi; strictly
the English Government is looking
After the "consdentieus objectors"
itad other men wh.o are trying to
evade service in the fleld
Two London objectors• who ha.d
wounded. The whole atmosphere of
the sone was that,of intense surprise
and. depression. Tradition going 'back
to .Frederick the Great, nearly. two
hundred years, ago, had been smashed
-and by amateur soldiers, The cal-
low youth of sixteen ;who served my
fering in those faces that Impressed
me ti(i MU& as that uacanny sameness
of .expressican an expression of hope-
less gloom so deep that it made -Me
forget that the sun was shining from
an unclouded sky. The _dejection of
. The Gaff Engine.
Few intake' farmers would listen
to. a aalesinanWho offered them, at anY
price, abandsPower feed grinder. The
sane neent. will go to town, purchase
a Washing Machine se large that it
would, almost stall A one-half horse.
power :'engine to run it, ' Do they
think where the newer to run this ma.
011ie istato come trent? (Trtie it is
that mile ;Men run them, but not•al-
ways). No, they take it for granted
that it IS eo far ahead of the old
'method that the wife or hlrecl girl
shoald be. satisfied to turn the the
Prank, or work it back and finish
Whatever the prescribed method may
,
The ptimping 14 Witt& f0,t4 the stock
in the barnhasalWaYa been ceausidered
one Of the most important •uses to
which a gas engine could lie put. Whet
abOut seine lebor-saving device that
'would pump water to the houe,01,,Thent
the vegetables Could, be easily Wasb.
ed bk. turning a faucet and letting the
water' de the work, the butter, could
be easily 'Washed, , the, Blue , Wedgy
would be a thing of the past. ,
Electric. light is 'another 'conven-
ience vvhich this source of power inekes
poisible, These are some of the more
common qabor-saving devices, but let
Us look. at aome others that are Pos-
sible. , .
Let any man watch a woman, pre-
paring a meal and he Will see the
energy, she expends is mostly' in doa
ing countless little things. which tire
her more by their monotony than by
actual work. A dish washing ma
-
chino will relieve the househwife . of
the • most disagreeable of all aa, A good temperature for churns
tasks. Why should the country wo. r•-"' -
mg is 68 degrees Fahrenheit. . When
the cream is the right sourness it
churns better than when sweet or too
Our The cream should be kepf at
5b. degrees or lower till the day be-;
.fore churning Then warm it up to;
70 degrees or room heat which will, •
bring about the souring by the next
day. ° ' ?
When thp barrel churn ia used al-
low gas to escape every few minute
at first . .'Wleen the butter begins to
Come keep X close watch and stop
churning when the butter granules,
are the size of wheat kernels. Dr:its'
off the buttermilk and wash in ilk •
churn repeatedly with •cold water till •
the buttermilk is all removed. The
3
lunch was mutteriag something to the the police, of the soldier onlookers, o
barmaid, who replied that he was
lucky to be in a: class that was not
nicely to be called up yet.
The extreme cases were carried at
a snail's Pace by bearers, Who pat
their feet down as carefully as if they
were testing very thin ice,, and who
placed the comfortable spring stretch-
ers in the very few vehicles which
had rubber or imitation rubber tires.,
The werk was done With military pre-
dsion and great celerity. The evacti-
ation of this train was no sooner fin-
ishedthan another took its pace, and
the same scene Was repeated:
Van Load of Dead. ' •
t e.walking wounded, and those up-
turned faces On the whiter pilloivs to
ld
as plainly as words could. --ever tell.
that the Guard had at last met a fere()
superior to themselves and their war
Machine. They knew well that they
were the idolsof theif Fatherland and
that they had fought with evert, ounce
of their great physical strength, back-
ed by their long traditions. They had
been vanoished by an army of mere
sportsmen.
Grim Tribate' to Britain-.
11siy thoughts went back to Berlin
and the uniformed scoffings tit . the
British army and its futile efforts to
tease p •
striction
skin -is
doses ,of
• titY of al
fall of
• in a in
of the blood vessels . of :the
partly Paralyzed by large
alcohol's 'Even a' small quan-
ohol wilLsonietintes cause a
e'er six or even ten, degrees
's internal tempetature.
gency. 4 downright Christian we,
should r garcl as 'one who ,is Poiitive
e
in his beliefs,. unshakable in his - cons
vietions a• man who goes straight to
i. ,
the paint where others would hesitate,
one, who 'is fearless. and 11 not halt
.
handed 'over to trie m.ditary exathori-
protection of. her navy. •
rem- • In Berlin at that moment the. after -
r iments • noon editions were
This, then, was the battered• fl uttering their
,enagistratea• nant of the five reserve eg
deciding ,;that though an Anstfaliarr of the Prussian Guard Which had daily headings ' of victory" to the
• ties' at Manchester, the
he had become an :ordinary resident"charged the British lines' at Centel- LerOwds On the Linden and the :Fried -
in England.. maison three weeks.'before in a des- rrichstrasse, but here the inamnioth
For atteni tin to , a military perate German counter-attack to vans were 'moving slowly ihiough the year in the exe ption from hog ehol-,
Healthy Hogs Sholera,
Hoga are net tesistant to 410000
at thie 'season of the Year 44 they nrei
in the apring when getting an Olinda
aim) of green forages and having 404,
cess to a wide range It is necesaari?
therefore, to sigive them more atten-',
Om and better este to (OW 0348°11,4i '
al CerlditiOne and danger troll) nevti
corn
DO net feed in the Pan/ lot, or ui
the sante acre of 'ground, (let? after,
day. - This contaminates the feeding
places, and ale° attracts Crows, pig)
ems, and sparrows which may ha
been feeding With, a 'clielera iiitecte
herd. Throw the feed out in a differ.)
.eat spot eackday, thus giving the pigs"
a clean "Pitite from which to eat, .
The :water supply is of much impora
tame to• the health of the hogs atthitf
time sof year. Old Mud wallows ari
never good, but are not so bad if tint
hogs Oh have pure water to drink, Isu
if .farced to bathe and chink in th
spit "tub" serious trouble can be 1315
pected at any time, See that the
have an abundance of pure *Ater td
drink, aituated near the wallow bole
or feeding Places. Pure water Wi
aid materially in keeping the het
cholera free. -E, R. Spence, Missou
College of Agriculture.
• • it
Makingflutter. .
_Cream Is made up of, little fa(
globules in milk.' In making buttei
the, fat globules are brought togeth-
erinto a mans and the milk is remov-
ad as butter -milk These fat globules
will stick better when just the right
heat than if either too warm or too
man not have a vacuum cleaner?
Without the engine a small shaft driv-
en by hand could give power to a food
chopper, knife cleaner, coffee *grinder,
etc., and do many, other tasks in the
kitchen. •
The housewife will insist that the
engine must be clean and easy to start.
She does not) want one that will spat-
ter oil all-over. Many reliable en-
gines are on the market and do excel-
lent work when used intelligently.
Leber is scarce and often hard alt get
•aleng with; herein lies a possible) solu-
tion.
Many. of our readers will say these
ideas are just notions and sound very
nice but are nob practical. In the
older -settled districts in this new
eountry ntany ate contemplating
building large modern houses, while
many have done so already, and this
question should be given.every consid-
eration , will pay the outlay many
times if so inach•of the drudgery. trhat
rightly' drites girls off the. farm will
be eliznintited. - Most men will gladly
help to de their part if there is a
demand for' something like this,. so .he
sure and lth.ein.know your wishes.
Then ;we mill be able (1), to .do things
temove the • butter from churn an •
work it with a paddle. Add an ounc • ••
of salt 'per pound of butter. -North
Dokota Experiment Station ,
Dairy and ;Stock.
• A milking machine, is like most otle. •
er• things -it . will not run ;itself. „
Alfalfa meal' has had'quite a vogue,
but 'give a cow good alfalfa hay and
she will make her own meal.
People are really learning some-,
thing, There was a good gain this .
p g eve e ary . we had not the tmie to do in the past; - . • n1
i --wrest t'he village from the enemy who streeta of *Potsdam. ,
t od 'the ( ) toSdo...work better than in possible '.
. .
ad ie ea, o th , use ,of ale hol, drink the man for an emergency, and with fi t
dt t a o • g
be JUL instead of forty George. e arge be ween six and seven un ong me wa g and inilk, though a' full milk -pail. is
Quality is the main thing in buttet
' As evertrone knows, peonle who are a oing what he regards h d t `
is u y., seided by altering his .birtli cert -
ea e so as o ma e is age appear o
t It h' ' t had' just occupied it. Each train dis- 1 To the women who s o n
h d t ' h -'' 1 r a itin • vvith s the potate by hand.; (3) to find more tinie for
in t e wint r to keep them warm. Al- dors. The churchea- need more men ' ' dred• maimed Passengers. Nor " was / and butter, tiereis • -r food on the the develppment of a higher tone of
N.
, in tie summer o keep them cool and he stuff in him that goes te *take
• • • Kirby, horseman, was ,at Epping,
desirable -from the dairyman's point of
view*'
r°h°1 l'eaBY causes a• fall in Ole bodY's 'who combine •both characteristics. k •
• this the et day of the influx. . .1 other side of. he old stone bridge culture,..-:7Farmer's Adaocate. •
• y_ly .ordinary• cumbersome • furniture • . Calf Food Must Be Right. •
that spans the Havel they •were.reere-
temperature and does not, is pop- They need the ldnd of mari,Who gives For refusirig to join up -when call -1 Flower' Of German Manhood. • • It is-•beconling increasingly difficult
. • ssex, fined 40 s
" ' • to find help in the dairY, and yet lots,
as -erlarlyesuPpoeed;increase-the,--body's• --a-tre-aeth-:--airci-Y-erre-ourrigenient to ---'
ed, Rees. Jones, ot Llansaint, "erdrAt ' The Gimed heal -ft -Wm -Wm -chief!. . ..
heat: It is true that after:taking A others; ' who will not be , satisfied with - ' o new that cox's! depends very greatly upon. the -
• • - . • , h arm ing•-n a oa ly goo - dairy__
''''" - • ":.• • T A "e' f - --r 1 d ,
a the bleed story —' fedwhen' of lollva seem to think- that milk
. Carmarthen fined, £10 anhandedin Potsdam, but also Partly.in. Ber- ,
o i.
drink or two there is usually a 1 Merely leading a quiet, model life dur- d
.:' ing of. increased warmth, but 'thiS is ing the week; and appearing regular- over to the military authorities. His
father an a neig or nameflower o mean manhood. n par
lin, and - represents the physical
s timihrils contame e y way she ts, she is a young , •
H ; were they t k • ' should- be as cheap AS Water .
When,tvhat was long contemptuous-
ing
a delusion, dile to the greater ly in the pew On Sanday, but whose ,fath ' d ' ' "hb cl Powell •of Contalmaisonl . . • Calf: ' Mostimportant among the de, 1 . "flitch" . 7 . • ...
f G • 0 y Known asis now swung
vaecularity of the skip, and. the actras zeal and dowatight earnestness can- were each -sent to prison for three • ade it was inspiring to look at, and , • . . - ' •-•••
-•—•.•—•—• - • tails 15 the temperature of the fopde. under the guise of-"breakfitst . bacon" ' ' •
ity of •the sweat' glands. riot be satiefled unless he is •\helisillg months for aisaulting the police •who •
., : ' • •,,s,.
l'ta ff' ' th Id ' ' - - • •
. : .Duration of War. • for thirti cents thepoundot may fair. .
isle Moat eitteftil experiments prove • - - .. • • i
. . .
-Alebhei appears' to, act in two ways to make things "come to pass." Zeal Went to arrest him. . ! -
r• • • doubted its prowess. Nor. , • that _Some milk is necessary fot the
: on the body'a teniperatare, 'in,'erdirie .haS been likened: to. ix pot which is • --.-7.---.'--4-----' failed in the war to. show splendid . 7A -pieilitar man •• is young •ELIWEVS
. . • • - - ly be said the bog is looking un.
.! calf b f . •• - •
e de she reaches , the age . of , . ...„... •
ary doses it has little or no effect liable to ,bail' over; • but it is better to , 'WILL 'WIPE OUT FOES. - s courage arictfighting qualities. , g I e ros i , 4 y , .,
" En - 1 rr • chtv'tz age 50 eats aria
eight weeks. • The food' valtie of this • 1 • _----,
CAN'T KEEP OUT OF WAR. - ,.• •
upon the production of heat in the 'bOil'over than neve to boil at all The ' \'s — • ihsh people simply chi not understand -captain in' the Landwher, married .milk may he greatly reduced or even ' . •
6,, --e-t-il downright Chriatian: t's the -pesitive But French General Bays Mueh Fight- , its prestige at . home and amen; about the time tho, war ..began a wif
- -el' destroyed by feeding it cold.- -; . . • . — . ''' '
,American Youth Resists All:Efforts to
by sweat glands and quickening the 1 pole of the •battery, the business end :lug Lies Ahead, . • . •
1 aeutrals. - , - net yet. 20. . Since the war has been Feed milk Warm always, whether it
'tissues, but inereases the lOSS # h
Tireulatien. ..A.nd, as ------------------------------------------ I f '' He is e
We are only at the beginning ork to be done. the iront he has spoken often tO his • .• • -
The Guard is sent only where. dragging on and he continued at :be ' Whole "milk or skim inlk Th Send Him Home. •
• er w e sets a eelto wOrking.
ha 11 thOf r Th ' t ' d' '11 '• • ----------------------. - •
+1,. wa . e an agonism le- If you ear that it has been hurled comrades about a, matter _very near . Norman Bruce Wallis, an ',eighteen-
-stated, in lave' ;doses-, it payalyies ' .. • . - , . nearer it is to the temperature of the
the nornuil reaction to cold. - 1.,,useseveleameasdiffic,ulties and_fi ds • • cow 102 deg, the. better. The calf's ye
ar-o merican rom
Id A * • f New Orleans
played -by -the afead ---for_oessissauels-thab arge-y011-may. regt. nesured his imart,„._ stonutek_ejledles the milk, the same as.
nlisted as a private in the . British
•gb k • •
It is Plain that alcohol -is 'of no.real real joy in overcoming. • A.nd Ms en-
only the destruction of ,one by the oth- that it s striving to gain something , If this g in a cheese,vat in which remier (a por-
service to man In tidth'standing either, i.thusiesm and doWnrightnese• are con-.
er 'can be conceived, writes General on which Germany sets: the highest mush lon'ger," says he; "when it's over
high or low temperature. • • tagious, -and 'will put new' spirit into Gabriel Malletbit- a Preech military price --for the life -blood of the Guard t'll find myse:f„tled to en old woman. . • . k .
...=
-.
tion of the calf's stomach) is placed,
his coworkers
A.tmy:soine months ago. ThTee-sit-; •
tetripts• have been 'made„by his family,
e • profvided the mil is properly 'Warmed:1 through the American Embassy in
While in New ' York recently `WA
critic of highest repate. • . is the dearest that she •can pay 1
, .. .. "..'-. .5 ". - 1 ' With correct temperature and favor -
Kaiser Sacrificed Them. Court of Domestic Relations. Ole Precipitation of the card in the a
London, to him hack to the United
---'visited one cif the large gyarinpar. year, which Will -be mere terrible than I • • - calf's,' stomach injurieue gasses
• . . . . , States„, but the lad is still In . the '
' France must be prepared for a third ' • . .
not e .p ase .i 1 is other -d ,
. army-- g ing in ranee wi a 0 -
schools and as we paseed from room we hope. If the allies' effort is guid- ' active regiments of the Guard form- ried. a Week when he hit me with Awill
schools, ' corresponding to •our. pablic i In :the -battle of the Marne - thei •IVIrs. Juatwed-W , .
e hadn't lima mar-
. the first two: But it will be the last, t b f i i . But 1 't ''
leg a 'link between the armies .of piece of spozige cake. • wise, . poisonous gasses are generate Is
tish regiment • . • •
throw all their forces into the prepare -
ed by one hand throughout; and if they
Am -
tin for it, they will be _able to deliver P
the s.upreine blow. - - surged in wave after Wave against' 'IVIri...Justwedl---And I'd made the .
Bulow and Heiken were dashed like The Judge -Disorderly , conduct; d
jagged rr on cliffs when they One dollar and costs, • often prevails in t'he mtestuaes. .
1 a clay
an pu re aetion, more. or less Severe-,
Thus it is- that cold milk fed twice
injures instead. of 'building up,
7 regiment the fitst time • and arrange -
'bents made fol. his passage, to erica; he "missed the connection" by
When he was released from his
, the army of Foch at Sezanne and cake with my oWft 1:tands.. ' - * ' enlisting in another - regiment. -.All .
"AIN'T -ph FINE TeasiaAY?
. . hi L
Sure this world is full of trou .0
to roan we could not fail to note the -
. . . I ain't Said it ain't .
prorainefice' given to singieg and. ye-
, . I have had enough, en' double .
' 2iting' by the students. We are Reasons for complaint.„ '..
s strongly in favor o giving, m resat Rain an' storm have como. to fret me,
tentien to the study of musk hi all I - Skies *ere -often grey; • .
elementary schools, at least, and are Theitns an'.brambles have beset me
not-suri but -that -the -Value -of a I
1 On the road -but saY• "
knowledge of „musie and ability to .A.in't it fine t� -day! :
read and sing music•well is of gteater 1
real value tie the average young pets -14 .
son than some Other subjects' prescrik:
;I ?'What's the wee of always weepinS,
Makin' trouble last? ...
ed by the Education Department of'
; this Province. Leaders in the world's , What's the age of always keepin' •
. work of human uplift and advance- 1 Thinkin' of the "past? • f
'a ment are becoming convinced of the Each must have his tribaletion, • ' •
1 educational vain° as well as the cul- '' Water with his Wine- •
: thral influenie of music. • That music Life, it ain't no celebratjett.
should be made part of the average Trouble? I've had mine --
person's education is no longer ques- ' But to -day is fine! .
minded educators, haw cati stleh study . It's to -day that I am Hain%
be brought into feasibte conformity Not a mopth ago; --'
with the rest Of our accepted, routins .Havinr losinStakiriS givint,
• achod'syatern, with its gradings, tete As time wills. its. •
„ • And, ekaminatioes,?. ' 7. . • ' Yesterday, a aloud of 'sorrows ,
. •
<t * a .:' Fell across the way; .•
• It is true that in some schools thi It mar-raln-ailletaduatg"-i----
scholars are taught to sing in a way It may rain -but, say,
a . numbar 'of School songs, but in the Ain't it flpe te-day! -' -
7--Gon:glas.Malloch.
tioned; but, it is asked by practical-'
Fere Champenoise. Germany was The Judge -Assault With a deadly the formalities for his release were.:
and • the calf shivers, humps her back;
.--Pluman-Nature willing to---saerifice--those-:-euper.b--weepore---"Orse-year.
"But Yoti swill at least •admit that treops during the early part of the ! ,
there are two sides to every quos -.battle because she knew that • Von I
Kluck had- only to hold his army to-
gether, even though he did not ad-
vance,' and the overthrow of Foch
would mean a Teuton wedge driv,en
between Verdun and Paris.
One year afill ten months later elle
doh -and—"
"i admit nothing of the kind;" in-
terrupted Jt Fuller Gloom. "As tar
as I drin concerned, there is only one
Side and a lot of confeunded foolish-
- nese'!"
schools we have„ known. in Canada t
-there, has been a deploYahle •deficieney
Of the academical e ement 0. MS ruc-
thin. By this Is meant the seienee,
history And theory of art,strid the ex-
, position otito technical„ agerhetic and
" • e. yt, nelegierd ei1lcs; Ili.conimon
music teething these things tire 'hard-
ly .tottelied upon Rather than Upon
' the teacher, the Warne for such . de -.1
Might with more justice be
pliteed upon Puella, guardians and pre.
SurelY if the
people had dernahded fuller instrUe-
tion in the art of music the subject
would have rfteeived more attention
by the Department and in the Nigh
arid Normal school s where teaeberg
• are, 'trained. Altogether too few
school teachers can:" teach More Mari
the rudiments ef'music but there are
available a fair number of musie
teachors nit°, if they wish to, or are
peimitted) tan give their puPils a
broad and really cultured musical
education, while at the same time pto.
Deep Love cif Counttif Affects Those
Wlio Have Lived There.
_
We Africa seems bo exercise 'a
kind of fascination over inert who
have lived there for any tinte.
There is a sayine, "Once a coaster,
always a coaster.," and out of the most
terrible of the stories told to newcom-
ers upon -Wear ---A-fricturshreats--thiir•
deep-seated love of life on the coast
invarktbry •,ernerges.
!over -stricken men leave for civ-
ilized coentried swearing mighty oaths
they never will return, but a few rest.'
less months at hang and the'yare back
again, ready • enough, no doubt, to
abuse We Africa, but aedretly sub-
ject to its grim fascinations •
'riffle waits for no woinan but
loan must wait Or her.
•
Practical Advice, • '
;
hea-coaastaria-and-her-paunekes-peen,
again gone through, and an official h,f,
fully distended. Asa result her fu-;.
ture usefulness as a cow is impaired. his embassy personally installed him ,
• in the home of some friends to • The qoa..../, a a thrift calf shonld, be wait '
the sailing date of the boat in :Which ' '
i• • Editli-Oh, dear! 'With the rtar smootb, close and shtnys not staring
n that . don't ' hive and. the poor and Succeis with young ani- I his passage had been taken.,
ma '
young Man that I de lesve, I am be, • ' 'Wallis however, returned his old
en the . horns of a Alkaline, .1 conies. from correct 'and.hufficia segame4
Marie• -Then chose „the horn. where, through •asmistinder-
twe:
ent.feeding, and it must be earriecton standing, he wits arrested for clesers
plenty, my dear.
with persistent regtilarity. etion11unishthent was averted by of-;
• ••—_
m.Segiela-11,
- - , Butchering Directions;
•
tidal explanations, and to -day Wallis
now known ea No
an Macgregor
flesh is a maxim of good- .butchers, • • _s_s, !ss______
"Never kill an animal that is %sing — . m
. ,Bruce—is his unit in France.-
foi"the meat ia growing to.igher and " • ' • . ' •
Trapping a Slacker.
dryer. But it is possible to have .. .
pigs tanfat _ ' • . • He had no stomach, for • the 'army, •
(.1iVe the 'hogs water but no feed a but lied Presented tifiltself tee examilt-- . e., --
ation with a "sure Welt"' up his 'Xieeire .1
day before killing: Be sure • the
to "work hieticket.': He was phySicals -.
Marring ie donehefore'scelding or the
ly perfect; but his eye eight was shock, t. '
,skin may be left too 'red. Serape it
, ing-se bad, indeedsthat'the sergeant
as quickly and rapidly as possible aft-
•- thiought the doctor should see Ir.
aiding. , -A eold prcase-ki-hard_.—
Tied class physically," pron tilihjed
to 'id ape well, keep the hog mov- I
the doctor,: but when the Medical man
. in a .barrel. •• If the animal is left
applied the eye tests the would-be're. '
.,preistel against' the barrel, ' the hot
cruit'S . sight appeared much worst.
water -can; net get at that part of the '
! than ashen the sergeant had flilil -hi :
' Har-gerittillig-b easiest-
. .
hand. , .
"No, no:4 . my 'man; with 'eight like
a shovelfUl of hardwood ashes, a lump
ei' lime, aame cencentreted lye, or .6 I •
that yptete no use for the einee," said
. handful of sett :map, has. been added ,
I the mddieo. "gut you ought .to get
to the Water.. Scald when the tem -
'aeries. Stay, I've a rah. tike -micro,: --
deg.pdrature of the water •is tietween 140 I...i
scones arid if:you see with them yea.
and 150 deg, • • . ,
.can have them."
• After Sealding and SeraPing off the
The spectiteles were produced ank •
hair, hang tip the earcatis, earefully re-
, ht. .• fitted:ota,the recruit at elide eried, "Oh
reeve alt ifiternill organs, strip out
the leaf. let& Ratty Where there is a I .See sPlehdidly!" . ...., .
...Ito 'you now?" said the elect*, with, ''-. - ''• •
,.
circulation 'or coot thy air;. Until eil
''Take.hint along, sergeant,
animal heat is out -from twenty four shreasita
.get :him sworn in ' There's noA
to thirty i' hours after slatted:thing. Iltla
. There are two m.etheds of•caeleg meat glso'4.40 the sheetadea."
For Univetsal Peace. • . . . •
-the brine and the (10 cure. For a
-Warm climate the brine May be safest; , •••
hut for the highest quality and finest Willie -I wonder. If there will ever,'
flavor the dry:seure k preferred, tor , be universal peace?
brine tieStroysi some of the soluble pro- ' Gillis -.Sure. All they've *got to
thin in meat which given its flayer, do is to get all the. natiesie to agrees
A piece of meat that has been 'soaked, that •in ease �f war the Winner paye • '
or even wet, is uot so good as 'before. the pensions. - I
s - J
a,
.*. ;CANADA'S NEW GOVEBNOR.GENERAL
Duke (.1 PeVelasiftre erten& a tirmithtins at his Vlasi
nd aetvediehshrill 'display ,hy• convoloacenta wore staged.
.0
NetiC.11 INTEREST5,0 LN SlaOthrs.
bairn 6 seat, Wit on cola:eras numberless d e•ah owe
altowa the" Duke watching the aporte:
. • ,
'