The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-23, Page 7•
---.•-•-•••••••wromp•nm•--nr,
• '7110
rerr'-'5.77"*F.7".-'
(1,
;i1PF"w1PF"`""T infir•-rs
• "a"aeasas
algaWang,"•'' • r.
*
,rty
An EditoeTaiks
, And • bornee Alava welcomed their boo always 'lived Mille nursery, until'
'splendid. young .CenedienS4 Just the last fan he was 'edopted..into a good..
!other . day ono, 'Toronto .nlOther- had. taasilY in New York.
such a. ,joYtul letter. Xttold of how 1 like beet the work .anlong the 40-,
her young .sono., on his: last leeve,-. had i.•dren. but We do not neglect the old
travelled to an inland camp to see bio :and helpless, Ind before Easter lest
. brother. VI/41w him. gone on a route : .year, �jie of My _Oletera wasvisiting
march _of severe!. days, he fanti his her poor caseo, and trying to decide;
companion had tinned to go back to 'which ones should have the few
theirfemp- Without having had .e verywhichthe churches sent to us after
satisfdetory .boljday. .However, just Sunday WAS -Dot; -She: stumbled
then 4 ladY :stepped upand asked' down the .outside stair into a .dark.'
them # they would. kindly-, be her damp old cellar where, she had. never
guests for their two days' _reambeen before. gearing 4, 140n. in .0
• ,Cin reaching her home„ the . heYs far- .eorner She felt 'her way • along the
found ti;emselyes in 040 otEngland'a wall to 4 'Pile of straw Where laY;ar
stateliest homes. homee. . • old white-haired woman 'Whom. We had
t • "It was just like -one of those blg often noticed on a certain street -core.
_houses in the nitivietV wrotethe boy; net offering matches to the passers -
"You fairly stepped .oVeebutlers and by. .
things, and what do you think,. ne in, • She was all _crippled itp, with rheu-
matism, not beingahle to get out for
, several days:411W with her Matches,
-
her last cent was gone; there was no
Are and nothingto eat; ;So the,Sister,
!wow %dim last week we referred ee.-always shifting. CiTniditione to -day
.„„.. to the Ontario Safety League'sefforts are net the s they were twenip
to-estabilah. Safety Patrols in sehool% live or even ten years age. We can.
Sincee we wrote that .artiele the Am- not etand..etill and stand our. ground.
• erican Institute. of Electrical Engin- In the midst -44 the onvrterd march 0
eere have held a inotn n Toronto progress and ehifting eurroUndiniPi
• at which an evening watt Spent Indio, !A! el 4, le ,
•'cussing "Accident Prevention," the The pang men wlU underatand ia
chief epeater.,,,being Mr. Chas. •Re •the realm of athletics that a football
.Seett ef Chicago. -gm ,acldress, , ea coach, can ,not uau,th,e massed play of
briefly reported; inc the press,. was 11- live years ago against the team'Which
• hineinating on thissubject; loler was takes full advantage a the Modern
claims .agent on a .epaall railway some style a Oenplay, The genie prin4
years ago. and after* time was con- .ciple Wilde true in 'business. Writ
vinced•that Many • accidents that oc- the controlling head d a :concern
currot.conid have been prevented. wants to be certain,that be is leading
Mr. Scett•stated thatthe rnaterial!and his men"along the right path -coach,
equipmetWok his. coinPany were O.K., • ing them from' an up4o-date rule
.
the kules and discIpinie and personnel book -he MAO out in the field and
of the..operating force were the best allows them the.neWest and hest motile
•• , Obtainable, bat l'et the accidents. 'kept :ods and expects -tlaem , to 'show , indk-
aCcUrring4 Accidents were•cony step- viduaj initiative in the performaac
Fed after ,the men 'had been eolleeted of the respective. duties When a
taggther and the *atter laid before reen gets -stela& non-progressive he
• them. and their co -Operation askecPas should be relegated to a less ream,
to h�w best ' to prevent accidentSsible position. The Occupants Of re-
Since:that timeemployees have been , sponsible .positione must keep in eon -
Meeting reonthlyaand a grea•adecieaso , dition and advance with the times, Hi
'accidents has been the result. Mr. must learn up-to-the-mintite condi-
Scott made- the startling stateMent tions -must ;adopt' changes, overcoMe
that indastrial accidents in, the Unit- ,-obstacle, make- short cuts sometimes
to reachsa goal. The progressive man
tries, 'sifts, weighs, •analyz'es---it gives
him' and •those under .him' coafidence,
knowledge,aenthusiagen •and courage
that willapull them allsout of any rut
They. may be • in: -.-that will help them
to get ahead instead .of just marking'
time. 'RUS1Cirt said, "Such help as we
can give each other in this world is.a
debt, to each other; and the man who
•perceives 'a superiority or a -capacity
in a subordinate andneither confesses
nor assists it, is not merely a with -
watt in him. This may be 'carried on, holderof kindness but a committer of
by buttons; banners, hurrah meetingsaainjury. He who has lociked for the
etc„ but it is far better to realize thatbest in others, and has givenathe best
aa the humblest workman has the same he had in -himself, fairly, honestly and
• father love as is felt by the highest loyally, to his business, his •company,
executive. And if. this workman is ap- his community, cannot fail to. achieve
pealed to in the right 'way and the succeae,-., His life will have been anin-
1 Work of acadentprevention presente4 spiratioriaahis memory a benedictidn.".
to him so that he sees it is for his , . .* e * •
• benefit and the benefit of his family How we should like to know how
arid children that this work is being many readers Write letters • to sol-
catried on, battens, prizes, and hur- diere? Again and often we have been
• . reit Meetings will. be absolutely unne- told an. letters teem •soldiers -at the
• eesSary., He gave thia. quotation in kront that they yearn for home let-
.
•
:eoncladioss from a man 'who knew his ters. Not many of us but can, if we
• subject: • • will, write letters td, the boys Who are
"And -the end is that the workman. fighting. our battles, defending 'our
•shall y . .
s a o , ,country from reyages lefthe enemy.
that hia mother shall have the coni Cordelia asked recently', , `What . kind
• fort of hie .arm in her age; •• that his of letters do' you send to your soldiers
• wife,. shall .n at be untimely a 'widow; actoas the seas ?" •We . aro really'
,• that his` children shall have father;, very -much afraid that very few of us,
• and that cripples.and helpless Wrecks, comparatively, write any letters to the
• • • who :Were gime strong men, shall no: soldiers except, perhaps, to Our very
• Unger' be a byopfociuct of industry."
[oWn sone, brothers or - sWeethearts.
* . I She saYs • further, Sufely nothing
• .Effieignear. should be • A constant' stands in the way of our sending the
• growthteem youth to. old age with soldier boys just what they are crav-
. . .
Dever. a let-up till Olcrage ends .life's ing for Weeder how . many of • Us
' aetivities. ,The child starts gobig to • Measure up to the mother who . got
• „echool at five and leaves' at .12 to 20 ..auchan enthusiastic' letter of praise
• years • Of age, laithis education ia,only :from, her seri in the trenchesl.' This•
begun, Be has only learned to use .• Mother had the .right idea -gave to
. the thinft.0 that are required to 'carry her sop 'what cheered' tim. and anus -
on his ..life work. Life is • a . sChOoled hipa• • •••
. . ••
• throughout. :.After the schoelmester4. a • ' * * 4s• ,• .
leaves off, that •greatest cif all teach's!. Our readlers'4111. be divided in opiri-
. ,ersa-Experimice-takes • chatge and ion, no -de-Otto. be told ,atiet •the
' •guides to the end. • This is as it should - course this fond 'mother adopted, :but
be; but we knew that there are verY, the reply she got showed clearly how
many exceptions, else ,all men vvould well her kind of letters was aPpreciat-
make, a saccesp.of life, whichthey do ed.- The best • land .6f letter, aside.
not -there are failueea here •and from real business fetters, is-the.one
there What's'. the reason' In many , that gives real .pleasure to the recia-
instaneea the reason is because . men ieti.C.• Here is a Pert of this boy's let -
get into ruts. Progress ceases •or gets ; ter to his snotheia, .-
verY slow - when a. fellow isin a rut ' "You • .don't 'know how • much your
The best thing to do when .a.man finds' kitid of lettere, mean to a 'feltow out
hiniseff working in a rut is todigherejMost-afa the boys get such
himself eittaas quickly as he possibly lugubrious -letters fromhome,' but
can. , The, teouble,:'howeveri is that • years •are snob Cheery sones and the
' they 'fail to see that ther.have -grad- : fellows• envy me for I'm about the
.
,ually dug ,themselyes into a rut. 'X,* , Only one with a fresh supply of jokes.
may tell a man he IS net makinggieed-l•MOst •of their mothers' letters seem to.
*Way because. he is in a narrow , rut be . full of nothiog. but pictures. of the
. . , • •
aand tert•Chariceato one he'll resent the '-horrors. of. war. • As if we didn't know
, charge or.get very' angry. Convince '...More'about.thetri than • anybody at
a man of His real position ,and .then • honae:CoUld. tell usl% '
himaelfseutaaa' Id you like -to know' what' kind
• .* * . • •
. 'of slettereatals boy's a Mother •writes
• • We fecall a faimee who made. a Sub-: s filie sends him nothing butthe.
cess Of his 'calling' in the daYs_. when facet :jokes- she •can .find. - She goesto
It wati only •necesstary to "tickle. • the a Matinee every ,Monday afterporm
. soil" and- seatter the seedand har- ' and writes them all down, :Then. she
,rOW it in and a big crOn .was .reapect; ' sprightly 'fills her lettee with :them
s But the day came when: --Scientific aridcloses it With a "God bless you,
'• farm in g was nedesSary, The 'SOO be son, and bring you home Sefe, to
• came exbaUsted and. mote :cultivation • Your • loving Mother." - • • .
. was negessary,na'was some•Syetem•Of Yea see, the boy's ;Meter sends him
fertMzatiOn, greater care in ..seleetiore all the ,honie news; PO mother feels
-of. Clean teed and •proper rotation • 'Of she .ean supply the comedy. •
•croes and senuaatteatino loathe -adept is -4 -any wonder -her --bo
• -ittion.•of cropsto. the .soil becanie ne- mutes eavy hitt) tie mothet? •
. cossary.. But this farmer -in i rutss- , •.' : •
-continued along old. lines ' and. then • :We• all have some friend or relative
wondeted atthe end of each harvest: at thafrciat'or overseas, who ie long -
why his "fields did net yield the profit- • ing .for home letters •So weare tempt-
able crepe of former Yoaas• He: saw ¶c1 to quote More of Cordelia's article
his- neighbor farmers'gettang eiCh and .the their' benefit... There tire two sides
. adding ,farm. to farin..ase tads tons, to this: • letter.Writing question. • We
but he had slopped' progretsing and
ed States for the year 1914were the.
cause of more deaths than occurred in
'• the British ,Army for the first thir.'
• teen months of the war.
* * * 4.•
While the preventative ine'aseres
referred to apply largely tofactories
and railroads, the principles are ap-
•silleahle in all spheres of human activ-
• ity. For instance, Mr. Scott explain-
. ed that to prevent accidents it was
absolutely necessary to educate; the
workman and appeal to the best that
, -t
t ngin 'toe for letters from them
Iiarely • made more than'. aliving and and. thousande-of ver* interesting let -
operating eapenses. Fiaally he passe sees are appearing!. in the news.papers
ed away, leaving' the- Mini, to his So. -US. • T mu: pbe boys ' , overseas and what
t hey haclbeen educated, in a differeat more attractive reading do we, find in
sehOol, They read .the ...pgricultnral .:the enema% .
Palsevi-c-vishieltAte -leadina' r•tO41colone--- allt aesermeass -if-4- never-kne* my-
• attended farmers' institutes and other .aon until he went overseas," declared
ineetiege and in a very few years the
motherthe
omestead was so changed as to look 'one t his wonderful letters_ a
' other day. "I fairly
•
like another place. Modern buildings gasp a.
Foe this mother is one of those for -
and fences, improved live' stock,sa difa tunate 'oats whose sane , send theist
ferent Wstera of.farming was intros
' duced and the fares began to pay good the very -letters their saute wave:
His tales of the 'life across the 'seas
•- dividends and evidences of. prosperity
were noticeable indoers and Out• on .
fill her With froth caugage ,
For years many have deplored
the Old farm. In farming is.:in most. Canada's Jack of a' literature How-
& „ot
-6776-e-65/T17:3-15-Trirrirvrialr.-55"1-----evera the wat-rtrtriMiimiffirarsai
• keep out of ruts. • . For no world master ever excelled
wee° ?"' ' • StAlle of the letters which new reach
.-- Shoiv us a man or woman either ' Canadian shor,e'S from overseas. What
' Who goe-s-altatitThele work in an aiiii- a pity so many of them ' are never
-
'lees, indifferent way, never showing read but by :the fond mothers who
• any, order, system or alethod in their cherish them.. •.
• work and it does not require a' philo- I Even before the boys reach the
sopher to foretell the resultstagnit:- battlefront, their letters teem with
' tion, which is usually followed by real their delight in their wanderings .iti
,tragresttion: We' will grow Older-- the Motherlahd, which they have
• Ole is itievitables-bit if - wa would found more Than liaes up to the tra.
Will we must progress, keep up with ditions. What a welcome has been
. the advancement ni methoda, mote pa- ' theiesl. •
ward with the advancing tide of our , • 4, IR 8, +!, •
fellowa or be, swaniped. • The effect is Canadians have won theiraway info
not ohly en ourselves, but if Nve stand British 'hearts by their • wonderful
still we block traffic, to use a trans- cotrege and braverY, and Clarinda has
'tendon( phrase. Do not allow use- been given such a place in the an -
f
• co' routine and antiquated methods Mils, of the Empire as will never die:
n .husinesS to tie pp employees and COrdelia -touches upon this idea, say -
t produce by SO doing unprofitable time. ingi• ,
•' A. Inning:03 Man once remarked . that revery mail brings our mothers
t• the business field it like desert sande, fret& laatencea of how British heartek
,.
• , s
our bedroom was one of those beli.
°pea The lady just smothered us
with kindness, we went for meter
trips and the servants simply tripped
over thennelves waitiog on us. After-
Wardswe went to London and• 'saw,
the Tower and everything there was
to See. We Went all through West-
minster Abbey and there was'. the
most' wonderful old guy there who
escorted us around. Why, he knew
everybody there, and could tell you
the year they were born, the Year
they died, and What they died of1"'
No doubt thiti is only one experience
of thousands thnt might be related' by
Canadians in the old OkUntries.
WHAT SLUm. WORK MEANS, .
•
--a-- "
By Violette Knickerbocker, New York.
"Slum Angels" they call us, I might
say, everybody calls us, in the slums,
for we care for all who need our care, w rting, upon another who • Ives der whatever form and for 'whatever
whether Jew, Catholic or Protestant. stretched out on her bed of straw. A reasons, can never have the approval
About ten years ago I became inter- woman who seemed about her own of the Head of the State, and that
este(' in slum work. 'I was then a age When asked who it was she ae- the Head of the State can never find
school girl, and many Were 'the bOxes
plied that she did not know, only that mitigating circumstances for refusal
of little clothes that I sent to the she liad fallen on the cellar railing of service. The weeds quoted by you
N ANS
REPROVED EOR •.ATTITVDE ON
COMM/14801M .8ERVICE..
WilbelMlna of Hellen& Sers Every
Man Mut DefendHeartl.• a.
and Hear;
A young DUteh ar‘ist,,M.
MaYer, recently addressed a letter to
Queen Ntilhelmina, ea compulsory
military service, to Which he .said he
had a conscientioas Objection. • Re-
minding the (linen .of the words
which, he said, her Majesty had slung
or hurled into the world, "Christ
gave her the leaf of bread whsesi asie1 aatiat tout," he naaintamed that this
wastohave given te scene one else. Christian standpoint was incornPatm
ibis with Military service. - Ile. asked
She had been up and down tenement
sten* allday long, it. was , eveniug
now, ariddity ,sister Kate was tired.
She is not so very strong, but has al-
ways a brave heart and loves her
poor, She stopped long 'enough to
make the old lady comfortabliias pos-
sible, order a bit of coal at the corner
and make a fire Asshe left, she call --
ed out, "Good -night, mother, I will
bring you something good to-raorro:sr
and an Easter "bord bless ye,
lady," -we always hear •from these
eld•people.
, Next morning when she went back
with her full basket she found the old
layOpainftilly crawling along and
her Majesty to clear up what he re-
garded as a contradiction between
her words, ,"Christ ,liefore all," and
her action as ruler in summoning him
to the colors for service in killing his
fellow -inert.
- Queen Wilhelmina caused • the fol-
lowing reply to he addressed to M.
Hagemeyer: ••
- No Contradiction..
With reference to your letter of
August 29 last, -addressed to her
Majesty the Queen, I am, authorized
briefly to reply to yott.
It must be clear to you on any
reflection that refusal of service; un -
slums with the help of two or three and almost tagainst her door -and
. were "hurled into the world," as you
Neat Production and the Demand.
That Meat prednetkin bee keP
pace With the luereaBe Perulatio
nnal that Its failure to ae, combine
with increased cost of production and
diminished purchasing power of the
money unit, has contributed to higher
prices apie only in the United States,
but all over the world, -1a. stated in
Part 1 of the exhaust4ve,report on the
Meat eituation in the preparation of
which specialists of the V. S. Depart-
ment' of Agriculture have been engag-
ed. for pine time.. This country, i
/8 Said/ is participating' in a world
wide movelnent, and it is not expected
that the situation will undergo any
radical , change in the immediate fa
thee, On the other hand, it is he -
Helve& that there will be 4 gradual
growth and expainfloa in the world's
production of beef, Mutton, and pork
which may or may not equal the rate
of increase of the meat -,eating popu-
lation. . • •
• In America this gradual expa• nsion
appears to have. begun- already. be-
tween 1907 and 1913 there was a
marked decline in the number of cattle
in the country, but in .the last two
Years this .has .not only stopped, but
his given way to a perceptible in-
crease. The estimated number on
farms and ranges on January I, 1916,
6.1,44000ais, however, AM much be-
low the corresponding figure for 1907,
72,534,000. With • the exception of
temporary checks due to losses from
hog cholera, there has been in re-
cent yeas a persistent increase in the
production of swine.' On ;January 1,
1916 the number in the country was
of my school mates. from hunger! In a City a Plenty! say, but these words were inscribed ti '
t!wig bleefetalmW!thflirturalgeNeibtpayi8g.,4, Insmicalqiiroo:ry;
d ed frem the feedinglrOUglia•
s e' III f untiltthe ,largerfit earlier 'pig,s are At for
long'els. Sell as soon As fit; de net
market' it will not pay. to feed lteM
Sweet corn will' grow pigs more
rapidly than many people realize.
uriratsp60:14 be Used. i.a the e. Sul_ Obiug. -
0 regular Denrt. asacrificendprQuage oldbreteociweritha. tiluseha• :..t,
sows makiathsapig hashiess certain."
Give her. a good pasture so she will
keep active and healthy. •
-'' kinTliely tomakee's°thwesin'fighLuti4le, 13.andiell
It goes a long way' in making a sow i
Profitable to ha.ve her tractable and '
weather, the "tthehrabog"PerofiTaleere wiwill,ber
0
, kind. 4,. ious Bow is never,prerfit,
Keep t4 fall pigs growing. The
their development.
ProVide comfortable quarters for
the tall pigs, where they can hay(
plenty of exercise. ,
Charcoal ashes, salt and salpfun
should be kept in every feeding yard.
If you want pigs in March, mats
year sows' this month.
Early pigs are the most profitable
but the right accornmedations mus
be available. The farrowing pen4
must be warm for early pigs.
e,s mated at 68,000,000 as compared
Two years ago, while in New York,. She had just fed to her the remains by her Majeaty on a portrait which with 58,goo,000 in April, 1910. . On
I called at the Salvation Army Head- of the loaf left the night before,•Was her Majesty presented to the Argerk- the other hand, the number of -sheep
not this real charity? , In my mind it . tine • lady who , presented a reproduc-
quarters to see a friend who is a declined during this period from 52,-
Year -Old girl had just been brought in.
stenographer there. A • little two -
the last piece of bread to a stranger,
was -beantiful. Would you have given .
1 from the Andes to the Palace af As the decrease, however, is not suf-
tion of a beautiful 'statue of Christ 500,006 in 1910to 49,200,000 in 1916
„ .
She sat in one of the big office chairs, not being sureof where the next was Peece. It was, thus an entirely pri- ficient to offset the increase in cattle
such a poor miserable little face for a to come from., . '
baby, and both her feet were bandag- 'One of our very special cases -a
ed to her knees. This is the tale the dear, Crippled old lady, Who has just
,
Salvationist told who., had 'brought lately gone to heaven -sat for manyand the making oneself ready, if
her: She had a mother and a brutal, by the window in a back, room, necessary, to be able to defend
years•one's
looking into the dirty court. of a rear own people and home. On the con- g The
availablein. population.suPpp
1Pof nm:tt oe
drunkard father, there • were • four would.
other little brothers and sisters 'but house. She was so pleased when , a trary, it appears to me'• that from be much eat if it
were not for the
vate. act. •
In my *view there is absolutely no
contradiction hetween these words
and swine, it may be said that the
total production of meat in the United
States is increasing, but that the in-
crea ' t t •
Ali little One seemed to be the odd stray sun beam came in at a certain ,Bible history one' must learn from
One, there wasno love left for her.
hour .seme afternoons, and Would wait i.beginning to end that the Most sacred
'-'
She had no eare,.She fmind a bed patiently for it. A • More patient old duty of Man is to defend, wife and
.
where she could. •
wo. yeers.' old,
soul I have. never seep;. she was al- I children,' hearth and home, • is in-
. T
• think -of it! It was hitter cold weather
at this time, and she had. been Sleep-
• ing oni_a pile of rags in an outside
•closet, and her. little feet and 'arigers
pnorinous losses caused by disease and
expoeure. Since 1960 it is estimated
that from 1,100,000 to 1,475,000 cattle
have flied each year from dis• ease and
ways alone with Tommy, the cat, who I deed, is •innate in, •every animal., from 600,000 to 1,500,000 from •
ex-
-- seemed to understaad when through an instinct given it by God. posore. • With theep, the losses from
:her poor old body was aching badly.' All nature is based thereon. •disease have been about the 'same, but
,
She has told me how. TominY has rub- \,"Do Your Days!' . from exposure Much larger.
had been frozen. . bed his head. against her deformed •
Let nie give' you"' good Practical With swine the relative prevalence
len *lista nd sin' his loud -
to keep,' and so. here she est ' Her only support was wdaugh-
lf • • • .
sat' am etr friends, but 1
LOYALISTS TO KAISER IN U.S.
501000 Lamp -posts Ready to Hang
• Them, 4erard Says. .
Herbert Bayard Swope, recently re-
turned from Germany,' writes as .fol-•
lows in the New York World:
,Flow strong Germany believes her.
self to be in America can be seen ,In
. any of the political maps issued by
• the Pan,German League, on which a
great blob of pink indicates the resi-
dence in America of the nine
of German birth or parentage. Those
making up this number are claimed
• as indirect" members of the ' league,
%The are; or •oUght to be, as the Pan,
Germans it, ready a all times • to
de Germany's bidding. It is" the be-
lief or' these Pan -Germans that
through their , far-fierig membership
some day German "Matti" will `• •
dominate the world.• ,
•• .0n this • day I left berlin, only a
few Weeks age, I was informed by a
member • of the general staff' that:
Gen, Hindenburg had . sent - word
through his Chief of Stiff, von Lud-
endorff, to • COI. our
attache, and Commander Gherarde
be perriiitted to go to the front no
our naval attache, that neither .yroulk
have oppOrtunitiee for observatioo,
although these privileges are regular-
ly ' extended .t� all other neutral coun-
tries. • This is - official, and has been
Made the basis of representations.'
Not only does Germany belieye that
her political strength:in this ••6ountry
is great emiligh to make the Ameri-
can Government take it into 'consider-
ation, but the- belief goes furter.'
One preminent member of the Gov-
ernment told • the Ambassador that
America would not risk a break with
.Glermany, because "there were 500,-. •
000 trained Germans ready to bear
arms in the United States • against
the Ainerican Government" •
• "There may be," was his quick
re-
sponse there are 506,000 lamp-
posts in .America ready to string
them up on if they ever, try it"
HOW -SHE FOUGHT -FOR -SERBIA --
• The mother gave her readily to the and swollen a g counsel, Young man! Do not allow of hog cholera is perhaps the deter-.
ong an.ge u real k
ivords and thou
u e by theatrical mining factor in the annual lose. In
Ott. Have coon- 1894 this was as low as 2,200,000, but
o rse t be misl d
country, near New York, she stood alp '
Spring Valley; a little way out in the
This summer at our "Home" in' earned just enough to keep the 'Ante
back room. I caeried this old lady.
even if ybu cannot understand
her dinner every day while I Was. in
, • • i consider quietly and calmly
;
dence in ,those who haVe to lead you,
the clatY,
it. these 7,000,000 ;hogs had been sailed,
in 1914 it amounted to 7,000,001 If
it is said, they would have produced
for us to take 'a "snap shpt." A dear New Yorlt. . I
af which not Covcrnment alope," hut all enough meat t� furnish every family
little thing In a white slip hee anti
, s
1 ',Being fond a cats their. cries , •
natuie and your own manlY 'feeling in the .United States with 4Q pounds
'full of field daisies. ' Well cared for, pain always- attracted my- . attention, . ••
., ', -
arid happy indeed: ' • - • • " i and following one night laimpose Qii
st summer youto 13e preparedto be of pork
, . .
Perhaps this ineident is • what' in- I what we supposed to be the cry • of A ! able to defend,..your people.', And, fix • Despite these' facts,., the United
States remains the greatest meat -eat -
yourself firmly on • that. alope'i Do .
duced me to take up the alum work, cat to,an old ash can, foiled instead '
year ,chity• add try to serve Cbrist by .
ing, aswellas. thegreatest meat pro -
to become an Officer by taking . a. I a. new ,born babe -but that . is nothing • :
Observing alWaye.in you nearest sur- deciag nation in the World. Approxi -
00
geiag... new, only an old story. mately twice as -much meat it- con-
course of trairiing, instead •
I an not able even now to speak of
and self -•sacrifice as • possible, but not , '7-
sumed in this country as in Germany
roundings as .much , love, devotion',
on as a •'soldier, and giving only . a-1'
the .firet time I. came io contact with before the. war, and the total norinal
little of my time now and then: As en 'by . ilmatrical .Wo-rds or deeds. Once
1 th 'th t tt• Id 11
officer we leave everything to go and • .• •
• . y .
..
live in the, slime and get along with see as plainly. jtiat• now, °as tha again listen tomadviceThere isee,'
i no :, . '' S ••
•aa •little as possible, just at the peo- smell room, dark, as ushal-but oh! Contradiction
• • ' .
pla" de The letter issigned.vJonklieer ..that we want to help We such fool air! A bed. in corner, I '
van .Geen, the; Qiie•hn.a.Private secre-
'have found that this. is the only way composed of a door, each a end on a .
• , c, a dirtetraw-filled thik and ' ta,'7Y* • ' ' • . .. . : ...' •
in which ave can win their confidence.
, The slum work is a:pert of the Sala Y ged womanl • - .
• .
lialf eat up' on it, or in it, stating sat t PEOPLE HAVE TWO BRAINS.
vation Army, but it is the smallest
branch and is found only • in la•rge me out of glassy eyes, her breast eat- I •
• filth qui--------------
,
cities, ' is not often heard at . for, we en out by cancer, .1 said, "Good mein- . One 'Ministers to idOsly and Serves in
mg,
have no time to waste writing • 1- have brought pee sometet soup •an Emergency. •
it•
and bread," ' but she never moved -her: • •
up, and no, one but a 'shimmer unde•iaI N tu r . t s. , ,a •
coniumption in Russia, Great Britain
and France is less than ia German*.
The per capita consumption is alsd
far greater in.this• country than anY-
where else, with ah.e exception of Aus-
tralia and New Zealand. •
• Our own exports now consist large,
ly of pork and pork products, and
these are deriired to a great extent
from .corn. • In the fiscal years 1914
and 1915 we • imported More fresh,
chilled, and frozen beef and mutton
,
•
.
stands it well enough to write of it. If eyes, only mumbled, . I am dyrii•g,
than we exported; and more 'beef of
• . has giyen us •two brains aupt as she
one is .sympathetic then the work is 3' I-, Y g• , you •vo all descriptions was imported -in 1614,
has given- us a Pair of eyes hancls,
that I droPped my pail and bundle and
very • wearying. It is a. ,ceaseless
t Ern
h waa•txportedInattis
ph (shier _to
aeldem lives
,,ran n
thi gh the streeta_4 a ae t____and ears, which` betp„eahmitd
•
"A-f-S.Iti-nuner"
resect we
have. joined. theg resit -ma-
, • 4 • che the work of the body. -
be .over fifty years' of • age,. bat frein tl •• 11 .
world's• export' trade in meat is mahi-
onlysuses • one for intellectual put -
hardly ,tell about it The spoor thing .
d
is everything.
:. Everyone has ,. two brains, bats' he iwitY' Practically the whole of the
could'
posee. • If.. a Man is'right-handed he tame _ by oirie countriesArgentina,
Our work we get satisfactien and itrat .as 1 could • '1 was "Ying 59 1
•: Connected.ahth pearly all mir relief' had. lain there for Months With no ' Australia, Canada, Denmark; Mexico,
use the :•.left hi in The lefts -handed.
posts, now we have bay Nurseries„!,physical.eelief-just living on what • under normal conditions, New. 4a -
one uses . the ' right brain. Which
where the -psioi.' 'nether, or peraeps .. a ' was. Sent in to her by 'kind neighbors . land, the ajnited States and Uruguay
brain' we ' are going to use is there::
in.,the.boildirg , and poor tenement •
fatber; may leave his motherless bo•••••;
• fore -decided by Which .13Snd we make • ' '
•• .• • • H e I ki d h tl b Sh ' a ., ... , -.:--• •
h 1 h • p op e are n w en ley can e. e • •
s e e. goes to •his• labor, call-
• .. • . .
'Englishwoman Describes Her Life as
Sergeant. •
..Miss Flora Sandes, -an English..
woman who served as .a Serbian sol-
dier; gives her experiences in a book,
which has just been published it Lon-
a doh. • •
use of first, when we. are babies. •' Conservation of. iVnature. •
• ,• f theni -„bt 't ; died that' evenilig and is betfer • off,- .
.1 The brain wbich is not .being -used. While manure y od Jet
it only a b - •Sie wo'rke as a vo untary nurae
soula although • she didn't want . • • a g een, mon s _ ore
later. What would some of these pee-Ipoor , • for. the intelleet helps the °thee , tat on the•larin,itis the farmers' greatest in Serbia' for ei th he.f -
pie do if it were not'for our nurserYIA to die.. , .
minister to the. budy,•.•It also serves aSeet in the mainte.nance of soil -ferti- the .Bulgarian invation; and was with •
us : •Perhaps -you ai•e tirecp•of hearing
Some of these little- ones sonie to as an embrgencv. brain in case . of lit . . . oil_s_e_sseginseatawhenait_retreated into
with no anderweat , to •Speak. of. What I this, but it's what we 'get from early
late tit Inglis. It seems, ' "PerlY'anie Alb'
disease aec.ioe 1 . ome .ine- and given the care that `is 'deserves is an before the overwhelming • en-
•,.
• a
(
be ha v t.. ib. VOI, n. an ragge . a limey or speech is _desti,oyithes ed by aceisa strikingly Shown •by the resulta of the emy forces. She :ultimately • reached
is • we alweyS ask for. small 'ail- ; soinetaines,. that. Ij should be . glad to-•
. dent, and if the Second brain is train:I Agricultural . Survey of .the 'Commis-. DurazzO and.'.Corfck.' Finding her de-
eren's..clethes first of all when some • get away for atisl- an hour hi:1M Stiffer- .
Evo as • vse • .walk.- the • street ed it .May do the J work of •-Jthe other 1 sion of Centervition in1915, • Seventy- collation- ivone, she • enrolled .as a .P.e1- '
one offers to help us with ' cast off :Ing• Whieh has been •deStl'oyed.. It is •ea•-•' I seven - per• cent of 'the-410_,..rtners *ate soldier, and within h ,short time
clothing:. . . ' ' , • . - .. ,i- freni oae latree• . •to. atiothera many.
id r to train the beaks ii.a. this way if,1 visited. in - Ontario 'Were ekereising . no . was..
promoted to be ., corporal, and
. ,
. '
One anorping,•• four skeare age ., ta,,tintes I have had a little hos, take. Mid
young, desperate lookingwoman ° liKv cat sleeve and say, "Say,Sisa
the patient is urlder thirty years of ., care to „prevent .waste. - of manure, latei to the grade of sergeant While
. lett s .'' ,
.. , ' twenty-two per cent chinned to :be ex. she was with the retreating ,Serbians •
a little . girl about 'a -year old at the tee, can , o Qt Pail job? Thereat.; agOs• . ' .• .• a . J. .
- ',a ---.•--a-• 1 her nothing more t
nursery arid.nvetailed thr dt at. our ,heuse," ; . ercising some. care, . while • less than they were •• aghting .1 rearguard . tic-
. 'ee '. '',.. .* --• ' •
-
.again. It 'is believed that she : ended , and so' I take his • street 'ancl• number •• ' „ a . The Authority. . .• .. . one,per•cent claimed to be exercising tion practically for sbOVeeks.
.• -13luejacket (tb Chi n.ese ship's • stew
her liteeinathstariswe „papa , and .go to bis home anth bread.•
i Only. one and. ode talf per cent were . . . • •
anotmeement •that -she is eagerly
- --:- a a -ata -------a- aa---------atalaa,,,,tansealeolc 'ere; Oswald. Yob
foung a trace of. her. - Little Bather- , • • .
eavieigatal-a,le 'ea -lima nure which
efin't teach the anything abalit China..
. tookiag forward to the time when we
inc had been neglected fora so Ring 1 • : Punishment.. , - 7
really thorough care cif the manure.. She ends the volume with the an-
that her littte face Wee...covered with ' • kouw 'cos I've been there. .:,cOntains *mere actual plant food than
Ethel -I'll. bads out and. let yea th ' •
•e solid exetement. The •annual and mareh victoriously. back to Set- •
sores, but with good aare .she has marry the 'wretch.- . • a• .••• •
• , es -whack -at -the -enemy
-loss itmounte to millions of dollars and bia. Wath any. luck, I hope some
• grown ,t o be a- brightana pretty. tat ea -t. hy do Yob' do that • .: the. impoitant aliii•opeatialand if can be readily seen that •our
•
girl; -ilia IS now eland fiVe years -old t--- yrepesee 4.0 autalt. .at.4. Tattles of. the last .thi•ee, centuries 'tett of fanniat is not on a sound
syss day to be able to describe how we -
aceornplished it, and the. -triumphant
(o do not know. her et.:act age). Sito 1 and want tO. see him punished; .have taken plate .in Beleitini. • this ;Taste' is allosyed to Con- entry into Nish, which we were al-
• le lari ' 9 • • I •
international Police at Saioniki, Including English, Frehch, Serhlan, Ruesian, and italiati,
Cope.' • Any farmer who knows these ways talking about."
facts: but takes no' steps to , prevent •`• • "
, •
the ., waste, ' commits an : injusticeThe:English Face Altering.
against himself' andhis coontry,anlrofessor Keith 'has told the Brit-
,
ie....preParing_to, Jetivao: to succeeding.,
T;CiP
ish, Association 'that the English - fete .
•generations a heritage 'oriiiiaafty.a•-"lia
altering Tfiemoat dellnitca
c
. This lOssacan be prevented in sev-• '.-„,"7"” assars a
changes in the moderit . skull are in •
-era •ways. •Now, at the beginning
the
of the stabling'. season, .prepare a stip- jaws, • gums, palate, and teeth.
'In ever*. tenth •modera woman and in a
• o absorb the liquid .man-
•ure. - As the straws crop is s o ts ever fifteenth Mcideen man are . de- •
'ficiencies in e ilevelopmathiaaaaa.---•-a---a-----
yetie. it .is •acleisable to store a
I
quantitY of leaves, dry sods or saw jaws, eontraCtiOns of the palate, .and •
dust fot this •purpose. • Where ' irregularities of the -Oath, svtich 'did eft -not 'become common until quite re-
mthistances aertitits it ts n good 7plati co..,4, cont.orl.,,%;. A initinte. comparison
to draw the •manure to the .11eld as1 of
.made. If it, has Who piled see that ,. skulls -shows- that tha•tingiish fuse.
has become 'narrower and.jonger. •
, • ' • -
it is piled so as to prevent heating
and leachiag. • Mix the cow manure
,•r5nd horse, manure together and keep
the pile corapaeted and level on top.
4oncrete !leer inthe barn yard is a
•plying its -vestment, although it Indy
London's Many Martiages. •
The number of marriages, r,:egistele.
ed in London in 191B was the high-
est.. ever recorded -58,545,. 05- 0010.
expensive. nave tight floors pared with 43,313 in 1914 and 41,409,
in the sbable to prevent loss of the in 1913. The increase over 1914 is •
•, liquid, and, if there 11.4 not enough lit- 34 per cent., but as thecorresponding
terto absorb it, drain It off 1nt 4 increase for the rest of England and
cement pit or some kind of a reeept. Wales is only 20 per tent., there is
,reason for thinkirig that a,considero
able number ok -these marrieges may •
not ,properly heiong to the .I.oedon
population.
ado from Which it can be occasional-
ly taken and spread upon the land.
peen't waste C. N. in Conserve.
tion,