The Wingham Advance, 1923-04-26, Page 54'44
'
,rtenesseeneelenfilsse"777-777971
4•tr, ''
, "•411
'ans -Advance i Farrning Two"Good 'Scouts" The .Ballffirlixidermere Dighway
„
pe,ut, '141Peri,e4-
4.44.444.44444 • War Robbed Europe of
) Wenders of Thu Nw scenic ftoute Through the Rockies $5,000,000 in Popu-
•
4;44
,(lerepareil under the iiirectioe. ef Dr.
• • , • . tendent General
When the bison dieepPeered rcla
• 1,40 wentern •elne of. oapa44, the In-
' diens; abeet thirty thotteand• in num-,
leer, beeanse a charge on the Pennle of
Danada. There were some persons
..*Whe held that nothin,g bettnr was to be
+expected. than that the reamen would that they will have w larger area unde
have to be rationed and cared .for by ercip this year thee, last, , In the wo,
•'the Government an long as any. of Of live stack, tae' own 18,000 horse
• le ^themremained; The 'Department ot and have aver 22,000 head of cattle
' • :Indian .A.flatrs, boesaver, believed that, 'They .leesed 200,000 acreS of land to
.1Fiveo opportnnIty and training, the In- erasing purposes.
. • died§ would bt time beoorne self -sup- Lar,ge .as these figures are in the ag
'.1)Ortiegs and Ihue an..esee4t instead of .gregate, they aee all the more import
• na1iab1ty,of the Dominion. • ant. when It -IS remembered lieW slier
• In the nearly forty peens that have is the time which the , In.dians ha -v
passed Sincete Indians 'of, the Prairie been farming. These gratifying re
Prciistineee had 'to change their Mode mini' Eire poth a.rewarci of the faith o
pf • living, the officers of • the depart- those ellen planned and 'carried ou
• Intent have 'steadily labored 67-4 brieg tale training system and also a pro
this abut, often in the .face of rnis- mise. ' of still, greater things in the
Understanding • and discOurageMent. tftiture ee •' •
. , *Howevee, th,e efforts 'of' the Indian in- . When, Hon. „Charles Stewart, Difiefe
• dustrial schools and the, training given ter Of the Interiar, whe is -alSo head
by the 'farm 'superentendents, on the (4. the Department ,of In,diah Affairs
reserve .have had' thete effect and to- en,d Dr. Dunean C. Scott; the Deputy
;day the outlook is MOSE encouraging, , Superintendent General,vistted.a hum
•".-The Indians in the West are nOteber Of the, western reserves on a tour
•' dying 'out, but are very gradually in- of inspection lase autumn, harvesting
• Creasing in numbers and the- results of Was in; progress and tii•ey were struck
.• their farining operations:In 1922 show with the big crepe being garnered and
how -far they have advanced in the way also with the efficient farming
inoth-
of self-eupport and independence. In ods used by Many ef the Indians es-
: ... :the, 'three Prairie Provinces of .Mani- peciallYnhasie Who had been trained in
toba .Saskatcliew'an and. Alberta. T.n- industrial sehoolis They•felt .sure that
of Indian Affairs).
thiree-quar(ere, of a milllett tmathoie o
70;000 bnhelo of potetoes and 47,82
tone of -bey. ' They also summer -fa
lowed so muci eld land and "broke
so fnech new land that it is expecte
••
produced'ntere than.
0
-Ast attractive pam.phlet is just holey ed it 49 a, desirable route for g meter
issued by the Canadian Natioeal, esariee Isliellevay which svould at the stame time %nit
33 /3rarreh of the oevertment of. the, rrox?•
Open len the glories of the „central 4, •
.1100ltles arna Kive to Banff Nra.. I The ten Buropean ceuntriee weleIt
teller describing the nevi,' 13anif+"Wind- teceuse Isere_ acreas were engaged in the 1Verid WU' 21r41,V6
/•4$43 0ki0h 7
4
r
Koptenay national parlo, which will
ermere highwaY travensiag Seniff and Every mile a EvrprIse.
they had tee years aso ani they i
now 11,0'00,000 leas PoPular:::ci litita:::
r
. bt8.30:eneiletei,an17,elyebreol:r3egolear,/ wfohriethralvvaa81 obzitill.ittil;,nye 114171.fhtoeuebceeokifo„aetviinegailwiubsiterhatienadicawTel•otr! 4,..5:0,c010,6103,1)1.;01,0tf021r:sivtiars ae.trh,dwan'try:ththey:uscho a eit;irtil ob";
of the scenerY
-
portant bee,ause ciltirvieissib°: eQreettliii:giCiawnaa; :71:111:1eY Ina: 7tar:id:ref 'these is Sln"
t War, which has its -seat in Seven
claw Nationai parks BranehL le ini, tine:nigh which the road passes.
the Study of the Consequences on the
-
across the central Reektes and also Clair minyon, where tile road hap been
e
dian farmers harvested 745,569 bushels the final returns, would show good
•,of grain. This grain *as about equal- results for the season's operations,
17 AlvIded between wheat and eats. In and the figures given above amply con-
additicin to this, total of 'Veil up to film 'their expectations.
The Belfry of Mons. „
• At Monatherse is a belfry tall
That .chimes• from noon to -noon;
• .At every quarter of the hour •
It seatters „forth a lovely' Et•bower
Of little notes .that from the tower
• All flutter down in tune.
,
• At 'Mons from out the -Market Place
; The streets ris.e up the hill •
Where ritig the chimesthat year by
year •
• Cry out, "Look upward, lads, and•
• ohieert
, For God's own Kingdom now and, here,
4. ,..And peace and right good -wile'
At Mons there lie amort o' lads
• A -row and underground.
That shall not hear the bailey ring
Nor .hinnen voice nor anything, '
; Until at the last •sumrtioning
• . They -bear th•e trumpet sound.
'
Thorley.
• Mining With a Feather.
Placer mining in 1Viongolia-sis a primi-
tive process cam -pared even with the
American pl'oneer metivoci of washing
out -gold in a an The Mongol—so Dr.
Ferdinand Oss•endowski tells us, in his
book, Beasts, ,Men and Gods—lies fiat
• on the ground, brushee the sand aside
• with a feather and keeps blowing into
• the little excavation so farmed. From
timer tontime he wets his finger and,
• picking up on it a small bit of grain
gold or a diminutive nugget, drops it h
into a l-ittle bag hanging under his
chin. In that way he collects about a
quarter p4 an ounce, of five dollars'
. worth, of gold a day.
4
The Sort of Determination
That Wins Out.
While talking to an ambitions, young
man about his futuee, he said to me:
"I do net propose to he a- oinher in the
world. 1 tim determined to stand for
something, to make my life count. I
am going to try with all my might to
make good in the largest possible way.
n-
1 am resolved not to be an idler, I am
going to push things. I am going to
work for results, I am not looking for
an easy job. 1 ain not afraid of hard
work.
"I donot propose- to bee thin-skinsied,
to quail at rebuffs. I will neither be
cajoled or ridieuled out ef my resolve
to get to the front in my vocation. • I
am determined to be king in my line.
.1 don't propose to accept my Eieoond-
best without a terrific protest.
"I am net going to complain, to pity,
or coddle myself. It 'ihinge go hard,
experiences are painful, 1 propose to
show my grit, to stick and hang and
never acknowledge 'defeat, nor am I
going to accept misfortune. I am go.-
ing to regard myself as lucky, fortun
ate. I know that I was made, planned,
intended '-fbr the bast; for prosPeriten
for comfort, even luxury. My whole
co.nstitutione is, fitted for the best. I
am going to loolst or the things that
4i -re my birthright—for plenty, happi-
ness'. I know the way to get these
'things, is to expect them,' •
,
Is it s.urprising that a man with such
a determination. should have advanced
y marvelous strides to the front of
his business and be recOnimended to-
day as a leader ixi his, community? -
0. S. Mercier'. .
IRubberseed Oil.
A report haabeen made' by the Agri-
ultural Department of the Federated
alay States on the pil froni the seeds
f rubber trees, as asubstitute for lin-
eed oil. The oil. 19 said to be of high
uality, to require but little refinieg,
nd to oeme from a waste product that
available in great quantity and that
easy td collect. •
Experiments With a consignment of
irty tons of seeds sent to England
stilted in a yield of $250 a ton Lor
e oll and $40 a ,toa for the residual
Eike • Linseed oil. at that time was
iling for $300 a ton.
cl
a
is
is
On His Last Trip.
"Extravagant ehan—alWaYs travel- tit
lag an board ship! •Wender where re
he's, going now?" • th
"Ou his last journey—in a reeeiver-
, s+3
• At a time when authorities all over
'• the American continent are giving
careful consideration to the necessity
• at developing a more rational forest
, •polley, it is most appropriate and for-
• tunate that Canada should have been
geleoted as the place of meeting for
the 1923 Empire Forestry Conference,
- The first conference of this character
was held in Lotdon in the summer of
• 1920, and was attended by foresters
froin nearly every part of the Empire.
Repree4entat1ves from -the United Xing-
• dem, Canada, Mistretta., New Zea-
land, India, South Africa, Newfound-
land, and the Crown Colonies took
part and fran1cly cliscuss•ecl the forest-
ry problems presented to the individ-
ual constituents of the Empire and
• the Empire as a whole,
• From the Statistice presented at the
cohference it was quite clear that, if
the forests be adequately protected
and properly managed, there is every
assurance that the Empire will be
Inacieentirely self-sustaining, so far as
• timber supply is oeticernecl • for all
time. It was evident, however, that to
enacts the Eniplre on ,the tiesirable
basis' suggested, vory much more ,care
must be gleen, in ell parts of the Ene
Ore, to the protection and manage-
ment of the foreat reSotteee5.0' par"
ticularly in those qttarterS. Virtes die
j?leneering stage hes not been paSsed,
there Is still a dangerous, tendeecy to
regard the forest as a "tirsiber thine,"
Sather Ilan as a crop capable of beteg
perpetaatee. The reprOcluctiee power
Of the tree Is itse Meet impOrtant and
most vatuable+ tharacterietic, and the
whole object of forestry is, to take full
advantage of this regenerative power,
and through it to provide timber sup-
plies for this and succeeding genera-
tions without diminution in woods
capital.
Canada, so far as the Empire is con-
cerned, is recognized as the one large
source of coniferous timber, that.M.the.
soft woods, therefore, In vieWinethis
subject, Canada has to take 'into con-
sideration the home demand, the de-
mand from the different parts of the
Empire, and the general export trade,
and in, doing thia the inforination fur-
nished by the deliberations of this
gathering wili be ofegreat value
Empire Timber Supplies,
The Empire Forestry Conference
,which is to be held neat summer will
go carefully let° the qUestion of Eft-
pire timber sttppliett; the foreet poll -
Mee of all eonstitnente will be care-,
fully re -viewed and definite conclu-
sions. reached as to Where improve-
mentg may be effected. The busineaa
Meetings of the Conferenee will ha"
held in' Ottawa, but a tour is being ar-
ranged to give the ,delegatee• an Op-
nOrtnnity of Studying forest 'cOnclitiOn,a
and observing fonest industries innhe
vations provineesea the Denali:don., A.
uniertut oppertimity, Will thins be ed -
forded to Canadian lite:Sher and pulp
manufacturers te demonstrate their
eoMitoditiee and praeasees, of mailin
facture, and assist In reMoving tome
of the prejudice8 Which have se far
operated tO restrict, in a ineasttro, our
Delp lee trade;
1„,t, r *34, 44, • r
TWO "GOOD4*8COUTS1l.
"You're a goodScout," said Sir Robert Baden-Powell as he bade au -revoir
to Mr. G. D. Fishwick, R.N.R., purser of the Canadian PaCifie liner "Marloch,"
at St. John. The "Chief Scout" came to Canada primarily to attend the
National Conference on Education and Citizenship, in Toronto at Easter,. but
Scout officials and toresanizatiOns throughout the country are anxious to bring
themselves once mere under the eye of the originator of the Boy Scout move-
ment, an -d he has ample opportunity of seeing some of the far-reaehing effects
of his work in this -connection. Bad -en -Powell was accompanied on the "Mar -
loch" and to Toronto by Lady Baden-Powell, and Sir Michael and Lady Sad-
ler, who are also well known 'authorities' on matters pertaining to education,
Lady Baden-Powell is accompanying him on. a tour of the Dominion.
Cheaply Earned Fame.
A person who speaks English Is
reasonably sure of being understood in
any good hotel on the Continent. Some-
times, however, the rule fails., and then
one's• native ingenuity and resource-
fulness are .put to the test. George
Bernard Shaw is a man of varied ac-
quirements, but, it is said, a knowledge
Of Italian it not among them.
• .Neverthelese, a report got currency
that he could speak Italian fluently,
and a representative of the Giornale
d'Italla caraf3 to interview him en con-
• sequence. This is the explanation
which the great -,man lo said to have
given forethe genesis- of the neport:
"Once I was in Milan with a party
Of lInglieh folk, We were dining at a
restaurant, and • our waiter knew no
language other than his own. When
the moment came to Pay we were un-
able to make him unnerstand that we
wanted not one bill, but twenty-four
sep•
arate
oiennedss-4 i
,mnsisted that -I must
know Italian; so to act as interpreter
I racked my memory for -chips from
the language of Dante, but in vain, ,
• "All of a sudden a line from the
opera, `The Plugnuenots' flashed
tie -thigh my mind---`Ognuno per se;
per tutti (Every man for
himself; and Heaven for all'). I de-
claimed it. The army -6-f waiters was
doubled up with laughter; my friends
amilauded wildly, and my fame as an
Italian scholar • has been on thie in-
crease ever since."
. French postal atithorities have in-
stalled a xn'achine this,t prints 3,000 I a
sheets of 100 stasape4n
perforates, num- '
1
bers, cuts, counts, and makes them up
into bundtles in an hour. •a
She—"Why is it poul prete.r a rusty
old pipe to. cigarettes?".
He --"Can't afford cigarettes. The
girls graft 'era all."
. Water for Rock Blasting.
There has been more or less em-
ployed a hydraulic contrivance for
blowing up rocks and reinforced con-
crete foundations thak is based ton the
principle of the hydraulic press, BY by just so much the- inflammability of z•-• cz•
ence Allows Us Only
moans of a pipe line pressure Is trans- the fereat'
mitted to a cyliader 85 millimeters in The rain will not w.ay's e vene.
diameter, in which are eight 'pistons, Seine day there will be a holocaust in- A good deal of our "tasting" is done
that telescope, one within another. The cle6d. The extent of the devastation by smell! The organs of Innen con -
cylinder -is inserted hi' a bele drilled Bastecrn Canada will not be enumer- vey to the brain their opinion of our
In the rack that is to be broken, and
the pistons are driven ,horne, one after
another, by the, water. pressure. The
machine has .proved useful in mines
rtd quarries where the use of explo-
tves would be dangerous.
Over 500 tons of flowers are sent
nnuallY from the Scilly Islands.
blasted through towering walls of rod
because it forms the 1119t link in tb-e ritro 0" who has nOt nno.n„ i Of the European pewees—with the
great 6,000 -mile Circle 'Dour, a system re— - "e exception of Russia, for whieh on
of motor highways • whlels extends ;them," says the writer, "it 19 impoe-
down the Pacific coast erom Seattle to
southern California, returning via the
Grand Canyon, the Yellavestane and
the United States Glacier national
parks to the Can,aellan bouudary. The
booklet does not profess to be a com-
plete guide but tells in an interesting
way the story of the construction of
the road and gives a brief derieriPtion
of some of the attractive points along
the route.
Vermilion Pass.
It is intere,sting to note that so long
ago as•1858, Sir James Hector, geolo-
gist to the Pal-lier Expedition', who
explored this. region in -connection
with.his search for a suitable pass for
a railway, pointed'bnt the feasibility
of the ratite for a read. "Of all the
passes traversed by our expedltion,"
he wrote, "the most favorable and !Il-
ene/Isere to render available for
wheeled conveyance would be Ver -
count of Its internal -political eircunts
sable to deseribe' the delights of the stances exact data a.re es:eating--
new motor highway. From the east-
bia valley is a little more.-' t.4. -a4124 125
ern wall of the Rockies' to the Colunn France mobilized the largest pe,rc.e.et,
age. of her male population, See pee •.•,'
cent., or 7,000,000. Immediately after'
miles, and ev-ery mile is a surprise and .lier GOele Germany and Austria -Hun-
an enchantraent. It does not, matter
Whether the naotorist enter by the garys with 36 per 'cent., or 11,00'0,000
and 9,000,000 respectively; than ItalYe
eastera or western ,gateway, he IS
-' with 29 'Per cent.; or 5,000,000, and last
swept at once into an enebanted, world.
The magnificence of the mountain Great Britain, with 26 per cent., or :
ocalel 000,000.
ranges and the inamensitY of the
The total losses of men. of all Epee -
ore which they have been laid otit, re-, -pean. warring states'--liere Russia is
fuse to be put into words. Something Included with, apprexinlate figures—
is left'out in ekVery picture Or 'photo- amounted to 35,400,000. Ten millions •
graph. Only the eye can gather the of the,se remained ou the battlefields,
sense of -height and vastness, the in- Five millions, are ,charged off to the
finite Serenity and taaj•esty, whioh, high mortality doe tofamineand els$„
thrill the beheld'er on hi s• 'first glimps,e dems_
ins and the remainder are esli
of the Canadian Rockies. The endless mated as lost owing to. the decrease of
sucoession of ranges billowing off tO the birth rate,
the distance as far as the eye aa see,1 The tota:1 waeelosses, for the different
the countless variety of forme, peak' countries range between 4 and 10 per
after peak rearing 144 glorious bulk cent. ct the population; in Germany rt
more than a mile up, into the radiant
milion Pass, •as the ascent to the blue, the shifting play of light and a -eve 9 per cent. A. veldt -
•••+'
height of land is the most gradual of
them all." After Hect.or's disoevery of
the Kickingharee rase and its selec-
tion for the route of the Canadian Pa-
cific railway, the Vermillion pas,S was
pra/etically forgotten, hut when the
project of a transmontane raoter high-
way was formulated in 1912 the low
elevation of this pass at .once suggest -
able catastrophe was sustained by Ser.
• shade, the indescribable variation of bia. There the total losses are 35 per
oolor, yea, the very opulence of the cent.
teinonne,,,h,fne iteelf, are a joy and a relrela- haTdhietttle9n13waar.n-wopauglinafiosntaotfes440eof,0Bouoi-070!
Copies of the pamphlet may be ob-
tained 'wean application to the Com- With a normal development this numa
ber would have increased in 1919 te
ralesion.er of the Canadian Nations:is. 424,0.00,000, while the actu,a1 population,
tarawritei, DePartnaent a the Inteeior,
Bill& 1
Ot- in 1919 wen only 3.`'o9,00'0,000.
Lumber Bills Include Fire
• The weather was hot .and dry, NO
rain for a month. Tho ea.st wind
ratiatted through the trees. Pin
needles snapped underfoot
The crest. of failing trees. The ring
of axes. The s -w -h -h of saws. Logs,
peoducing any considerable wealth. •
logs everywhere. Dry tops, branches
In France, switeesland, eweden, and stlashing. And amidst all these a
DNeorriwanacyed-ande- 0ount othersofhalf dozen men smoking cigarettes,
waste lands are set too' fwtehtilrekepinrsoolrcueacill4necizg" ses.Oeneee, glopTiongiZaorsk. buArninwgisip)inael,
timber and forest crops which are Crackling flames sweeping onwa.rd
atatiknegnth()ffeY'ea'earpibtyalyseatorckw'i'thofoutthdeeforreescit- BsirkarddeathA, lainycliugdewstarulinatifonvl.v'id fire. I
itseTP , account largely for the pros- o
The,Coming Holocaust.
By Dr. C. D. HowesDean of the Faculty
of Forestry, University of Toronto.
Some day in Canada there will be a
forest disaster indeed. 'The rain will
not always lend. its, pro.te•cting
fluen,ces Not ,only in the colonizing
areas are conditions ripening, but
throughout the forested areas as well.
In fact, there never has been so mu.ch
slash and debris in the forests await-
ing a prolonged draught ta convert
them into highly inflammable tinder.
Lumbering operations. every year are
How Canada's Lands Are
Divided for Use.
Of the total, area of Canada, eighty
per aent. is non-agricultural and ex-
cept where timber is growing very lit-
tle of this great non -arable section Is,
becoming more highly inteasifietd; e one.. --and in
verity of those lands Plw ,14
4••• ".€1 -en and 1t9 Virake • 60,000 acres f 'fi t
more trees are •cul on a given -area and •
Norway maintain a high average ef land; 30 million feet of burned timber,
o re-swep
four logging camps; 20 tiouees, three
automobiles, and $90,000 worth of
other property.
And the very next summer every,
body was. wondering why lumbeiti .
prices had to. go up. If the wheat arc*
fails, the world expect -s dear bread
When the forest disappears from hun-
dreds. of miles by human carelessness
meet- people never connect the faoN
'with highersbills for spruce or pine. `,
Every forest 'fire xmlist be paid for by "
the user of tenet products,.
more ,slesh_ is left on the- ground.
Larger openings are made in the forest
and the duff and litter on the forest
floor are mere rapidly and more thor-
oughly dried., out—often so dry that
they crumble to powder when taken
in the hands,. This, highly dangerous;
conditio,n is augmented a thousandfold
by the ravages of the bud-woim and
oth-er death dealing parasites. It is
estimated that the budworm alone has.
killed over 30,000,000 cords of balsam all the taxes and furnish the local
In Eastern Canada within this pest few
ball billion trees will go to the ground
years, This, means that more than a
taticin.
with practically no costs of tranepor-
population with woodi requirements
in the next few years and -will increase
personal Income -and yet one -half of
the whole national area is permanent-
ly under timber and all of ecientifical-
ly operated. No one in Sweden is per-
mitted to operate for lumber or pulp
except under the guidance of a trained
forester whose buelness it is to look
after the reproduction of the forests.
In many parts. of Prance and Swit-
zerland the pieces of forest, own -ed by
the "communes" or municipalities, pay
al • tt r Four Tastes.
,—AND T
E WORST TS YET 70 (-7,QME
NINTH STRIKE114
;WEE *TIMES AT
BAT;, ,
ated in thousailds of acres, nor in food bear& true "tastes" operate at
township, but in -whole districts and all. We actually taste, howe'ver, with
r,egione1/4 The lose, in human, life, in the tongue. This has on it a number
farm and mill property, in coramercial, of tiny "pimples," and one of their pure
timber, in gam.e and in failing water- poses+ is to taste for us. Utley contain
powers w1L Stagger the iminagination. cells which are connected with nerves
At the first shack we shall be starked through which a naessege can be pees -
and gaped with horror; upon medita- ed' to the brain.
tion • we Shall be bowed down with scientifically, ,there are only four course of time wrong lies do xvn and it
shame and self-reproach, real tastes—sweet, biter, aeid, and is only right that lives on. Unjust in-+
This is no time for captious critl- salt; and the cells Wrose job it s, to equalities are net what they used ti
This 18 no time tor evasion of re- tastes lie in different parts ot the every generation. • . •
report tble presence of any one of these be and they ane growing!" less With
sponsibility, We must spread the
knowledge of public ownership in
'crown. lo -rest lands and we must de-
velop the responsibility ot trusteeship
whie.ht this ownerehip involves.
We must gain th'e co-operation otall
who use the fovests for business of
pleasure. ,
• We must support our forest pa•otec-
tion, eery -lee with all the intelligence
and all the means at our command. 4, T•here is a step), of a, chemist who
t
Conditions mast be made sate for° sees lecturing before a Europeat re.e.t-laPlatgi7:eirnftti°4mIgs"frtor P}leeztlart.g74A
the 'pioneering agricelturisiner:2
Severeign who had professed a. eurions. ise
Our lunthering interest%
and pa8r w0044-1184- On perfumes has' 'been- found
PiriP , Interest in that branch of science. At
a critical momentIn an eiperlment title steelle''n1.3r.a. a Greek s'Plerldst mare
'th4Zt
:.
ing industries, Must not *nay live, but chemist announced With -a loW hove to . •'
must grow in stature and wealth -pro- ,the king:
duclng A bar
Pewer•er°lee Canada deellne "Sire, thes.e two gaStes.will now have Sin 1-"P-trr7 leand-exe the Seetelf 0,331.1944
and becom.es, a weakling in the great
fa/1111y of natimus that look lip to one the 'distinguished honor to nombinenin dim; hf4 eleventh ,
bag. '
Na obligation of •citizenship reixte.
more firmly on our ,shoulders than the
protection of our 'forests, from fire,
What is Wrong With the
• • World?
• What's Wrong 'with the World le -not
money or property at all. What's '
wrong with the world is a deficieney
of justice, mercy, and courage, Th'ene
•bas been ten much whining over i
poverty in terins of money that we
have forgotten the only horrible- and •
distressing poverty, which .is poverty
of Inemiality founded upon lin•
just privilege and not upon worth is,
undoubtedly •-Wrong;Biit the first
truth about the universe th•at every'
man ought to learn Is, that in the
tongue. The "sweet" cells- are mostly
towards the tip, the "bitter" eells to
the back, and so on.
Each group of • cells, on tauching
food that stimulates it, sends its, re-
port to headquarters, really as Na -
tare's warning, .and so we so. we
"taste." enenvi •
Sycophancy,
When Perfu*mes Were a
Luxury.
Perfumes. first were used only in tee
ligiou,s services, ahd were eontseerated
to this use. The World iiri cotne ii
long way from th,e t1ie when any, /
othter -use was, consideired, a saer140ges4
The industry is a very old 'one. The
dare:Van which brought Joseph as a
gypsum Buttons. •
Buttons, are being made •Of powdered
gypeami whinb 40 pressed In Molds and
Inthstefeed N'inIkh water to Make it
harden:
'Thinking of the absolute
good, the absolute peace, the
absOlute perfection of every.
thing ,that God has made, and,
conyernplating G.od s world o:
Lin iits-aeti- AdVitee,
Pl.fet.CO-Oti ftllat t? )*1.•114 ti -A6 "TIVIS grand plane wte'ne
d hint !Mt) "the, attefoltt YOU VIII get 04 tirso one,
o 4
the presence Of your Majesty."
Whieh they accarding•ly did!
„tttl te • - •
tett ittleVia
Der In Ns* York; •
"Scotchmen succeed becauee they- •
watch the pennies. 'Bang went sat.
penes,' That sort of thing, ye ken,
" ler and ten) Angus' Marrit •
again' I said to Donald Mu one do.,
'oh, aye, ' said 1)oaald •satilYt 1-4,0414 • ..•.,
•
he's been a dear f1 -in' tae nee, has, An-
gus. IleSS oott Me three weddin' pies ,
Vents and tWe•Wreathe ,o' itamortels ,•
" '
Tlie consciousness of per.
Petual • eXPansiort, rteritally,
morally' and spiritually, Imolai!:
necessarily constitnte the hig1i.
est kind of .happiness, because ,
there is no 'qlther 8A14.6faCtibrie
like that whi0'). comes from the '
consciotirsoos,of