a tr) The wearing of specucles to pro- tect the eye: from the glue of the sun in a very old ctr-tom. The n- th" ot the In northern regions, long ago invented spectacle: of wood, with 5 very Arrow slit in tho centre, to diminish u hr " pouible the continual snow-glare oi the long aretie day; and it is said that the Emperor Nero, who yum albino, aod those eyes were there- fore very "msitire to light, used mthysts or antral: to shield his eyes. Today the use of tinted (lune: is very amnion; but unless the skates are nicely chosen, more harm thug goof! my Imam: ' In the lint place, the dupe of the glans it often wrong. (hand or "torU" - ought not to be worn except by direction ot an ocu- liu, for they are irregululy nim- tive, and sometimes “use . greet deal of eye-atnin. Unless timed [luau no and. upecislly from an wall-If. prescription, they should be perfectly plane on both our been, and equally thick through- out. The color of the glance is also im- portant. You will And both blue and smoked glance in the shops, but both, elpec'mlly the first, ik open to objection. Colored spec- tacles are men: to shield the eyes from the utinic or chemicul nys of the gun, but not to eat " the light rays BO that it will he hard to read or to see small objects. Blue glasses do not cut " the chemical rays at all. for those rays Inc at the violet end of the spectrum. Smoked glasses, on the other hand, often cut " so mach light that reading with them is like reading by twi- light. sometimes green glasses are worn; thew are better than blue, but they are nut wholly satishse- h ry. Red s/ass excludes the act. . ' , A '. ', Jt n, but they are not wnony “up“: ury. Red truss excludes the act irk fly: wmpletely. but it is dark and red 'ighs is often irritating " the "en-ms system. Yellow, nr rather amber, glasses, are much the best. They cut " almost all the chemical rays. and admit light enough for any vision They make, a dark day seem bright- er, and when the glare on a sunny day. Unless the ocu1ist prescribes some other color for a special pur- pose, wear "window-glass" specu- cles of not too deep an amber color. Eariy in the seventeenth century an English physician named t'i'i') ham Harvey diseosered that there‘ In: a constant circulation of the blond through the heart. the arter- ies, and the veins of the body. That discovery, 4rrl" of the most import- 3m, ever made by medical science. was at first rejected by other unl- Iumists; but Harvey proved his lasts by experiments so conclusive that no one could doubt any long- er. The muvem ways circular wonderful lit: which will le The movement of the blood is al- ways circular because of the four wonderful little valves of the heart. which will let the blood pass in only one direeion. Our health de. pends on the incessant and regular movement ot the blood stream, and more and more we are learning how many forms "t ill health can he traeed to dimmers of the eirealw A healthy circulation of the blood depends on the strength and regu- larity of the heart's action. and on the Condition of the walls of the veins and arteries: it the pump of the body is to work well, it must, be in prod order itself, and all the pipes or tubes connected with it must be clear and unubstructed. The arteries are not made of stiff, unyielding material. but they dilate and ocvntract, and their elasticity is controlled by the nerVuns system. It is impossible to give a list here of the innumerable troubles that a disordered circulation can cause, but for one thing, every infhunma- tion means that an unusual quan- tity of blood is rushing to one point and "congestion" means that the blood stays where it has accumu- lated, and does harm, because the heart is not strong enough to drive it on id wty._ or TBet-ans; there Dome obstruction in the veins or teries that holds it back. _ _ Among the minor troubles that poor circulation causes are insom Ilia. culd feet and hands, and n sluggish digestion. The insomnia of old people is generally owing to imperfect circulation. When the heart is at fault, constant medical utpervision ls necessary. When the drculttion is temporarily poor, much can be done to improve it by baths, by vigorous rubbing, by plentv of exercise. and strict atten- tion to the general health. , Put-n Hui-m In. "Bubl)), it you’re a nice. quiet boy this afternoon I'll give you a erot." day." Jh. 1 want a nickel." “Why. you young rm}. you were quite satisfied to be good for a penny yesterday." “I know, but that was bargain A tourist in the mountains of Kentucky had dinner with . queru- lous old mouptoineer, who yowped about had time. Ewen minutes " a stretch. "Why, man," said the tourint. "you ought to be We to not. Iota ot money shhsrimr.trPtn. corn to the northern when.†“You, I otter.†"a the sullen ro- ply. “You hove the land, 1 mp- m. “than gauged)" .“Yu. 1% 23773123313 "m _ tado tho plovrh' 0-3 D Colored Gin-cs. NHL TH The Circulation. troubles â€all Great Britain is touched by the less are insom loyalty of Canadians. Australians, hands. and a} and those from the Isles of the Sea, The insomnia!' who have bo grandly responded to rally owing ml the call for help, and whose sol- nl When theidiers are the best and bravest at nan-n medical l the front, in: When the‘ With a. wonderful force of 1ostsity “fl-mm. poor, ' and affection, she has held her far- , imprive it by l murdered empire together, and has rubbing, bvi rallied the Bower of its manhood to “d strict anâ€: yrr.coloys from pure love of the old walth ilimun Jack, that stands for liber- . I ty and democracy wherever its folds ---- float on the breezes of heaven. But mm Mun. her biggest end grandest part in . Hid the tield is yet to be played. .. of the blood WHAT GINA? DIE DONE. When the Mother Ct ed to embuce the a (inn, Fume, Russia. against Germ nad an“) "hm M A m of FIAT - DINA]! IA! ( DONE. When the Mother Couotry deeid- ed to embrace the aunt! of Bel- gium, PM, Bush. md Serbia, wnn‘Geg-mguy nad Quark-Hun; tho "" all-I;- ql."'%"t-eF--""7 V, Bat thin Boot was destined for u time, at but. to play only a. minor role in actual hostilities. The real test of Gryat Britain's fatness You mi: vs vs“. u---_,_, wt: to be made on land, and the soil of France and Flanders w“ to prove, whether the had become . decadent and phyed-out nation since Waterloo. or whether she was still in the hatipml race. N uiiieiraiy-,- jiers was a contemp- tible, iosignitkant, little "my compared with the others, she sent - . _ahe_s .4.-- an. tA"'""""" w.“- ...v --_.V, r to the scene of oonBict when the war begun. But it we. the best she could do in the few (by: ot mobi- liution. It is not eurpriei-ng thet the kai- ser picked it out tor ridicule and chastisement. There we. a chance, he thought, to overwhelm the pride of Eng- land in the first conquering gush, and the effect of such 5 victory} would, no doubt, have proved enor-' mous upon the spirit and morale of the whole situation. But the ht.. ness of the British regular was am- ply demonstrated in the grueling _retreat from Mons. He kept his View. and the fighting spirit, while his skilled and splendid comm‘an: der, General F ranch, who had' learned all the tricks of the game as it was played by the trickiest fighters, in the world-the Boerb-- kept him out of the grip of Yon Kluck until a position was reached from which he could strike back. The British had the most impor- tant part of the battle of the Marne. for it was on their end of the line that the issue was decided, Md it was they who started things going the' other way, that swelled into a precipitous route of the Ger- mans. They remained a small army for a. long time, but the Germans dropped the adjective "eontempti- ble" when reierring to them thereafter. . I ll llltlculwvl. Since then the achievement of Great Britain has been the mainte- nance of that original force at constantly augmented strength in spite of terrible losses, and the simultaneous creation out cf volun- teer material of an entirely new army and million men This achievement is unparalleled in military history. In seven months a great thoroughly equip- ped body of trained soldiers has been built um and there has bten bl tutu u" '.pr_.-__"'"- r' I tribes of India, South Africa, tho colonies of Canada, Australia, New Zenland and the inhabitants of her other possessions only awaited the chance to fly into open and obsti- nate rebel-lion. Germany sent her agents of disaffection into all of the colonies and possessions of Great Britain, and they have been very energetic in tormenting strife, dis- cord and sedition, but so far with- out substantial success. About 300,000 Irishmen are enlisted in Kit-l ichener's army, the rebellion in [South Africa was put down by the loyalists of that uncertain country, while Egypt refused to respond to the cry of a "Holy War," and the Inative princes of India have given lgenerously of their wealth, while l Indian troops are among the Men’- I est of the brave fighters to be found Ion the firing line. She has held her corner, small though it be, against the most vicious assaults of the enemy through the winter; and if Dunkirk and Calais are still French it is due mainly to the invincible and unbreakable fence of steel that her forces have opposed to Gen-my in the region of Ypres and La. Bao. Bee. . Meantime, her Beet bu cloned the last of the enemy raiders from the high new; bulwark“! her coasts against invun'on. led the bombard-, mom. of Dumbbellâ€, and convoyed, without the loo, of a mu), over a lmillion teoopr to_Prnnee to “begin The world now recognizes that the mute: struggle is between Great Britain aid Gem-y. " has and Russia, and Austerit- Hum were to withinv horn the t todtr, - Brit...“ Mid to number over two iiiire%mynt is unparalleled of allies, other unions, in the Ila-c future, will join with than. and! the overthrow of militarism is complete and the world spared In- other such ihexcugable slaughter as It"; nKQ'witnegsing; " 3 WW VV.--".'-." CHAS. M. BICE. Denver, Colo., April 6, 1915. HAIR TURNED GRAY IN SIGHT Young Austrian "leer Tells of Il Hours ot Horror. " A despltch from the trout says: Much that mm during this war does not find its way into otruGl reports. A couple of day! ego I was made acquainted with Capt. Mwischke at the Fourteenth Aus- trian Infantry Regiment. who we: in Vienna on a brief leave. Be had a remarkable fwe, mainly because though but 29 his hair is white as snow. "Yea," he said, with . wan smile, "ju" a in the tale. of hor- ror I read when . boy, it turned white in n single night. It happen- ed quite simply. At koenarov I got a bad Ihot in the thigh and re- mained on the tUld powerless. r; was carried by men of the sanitary corps behind the front and placed in a. peasant’s cert filled with atrqw. There were three of up Captains. One had g bullet in the abdomen. The left leg of another we: crushed by a. shell. I “On'the way to the nearest field hospital, between Uhnov and Rave Rnskn, Cossacks made an attack on ‘our trim. The driver was so scam- ed that he overturned our cart and iriiriiitiGi/iGG {mo the adjoin- ing woedy. ., L " b. .a "In tslling my right hand had been jammed by the cart so I could not move it. We three lay under that upturned cart for eighteen dreadful hours. Ast last I lost con- sciousness BM‘UUGII‘I‘IH. “I woke and heard voices. I did not know whether it Pl" Russians or our men, but I cried for help. They were our men. They lihted up and turned the cart. The man with the bullet in the abdomen was dead. The other was crazy, insane from pain and excitement. Be dashed into the woods and has not been heard of. I alone was left.†The thousands of travellers byl the ferries to New Jersey gaze with never-ending interest at the three funnels of the giant Hamburg- American liner Vaterland, lying at her Hoboken pier, mute evidence of the suddenness with which the European war broke and of Eng- land's control of the seas. Since the declaration of war. with the exception of the sea raider Kron- ;prinz Wirhehn,.ar.nd , mirror freith punt. u ulna-u, - - -e-""-"" v [ ter or two which slipped out and, took chances, no German vessel has cleared from an American port. The result is that the Vaterland is but the type of something like 864,- 000,000 worth of idle German ships in American MIMIC. The ships are idle, the money is idle, but the men have to be kept busy, and therein lies one of the ttfest problems of the command- ers. VIE. But here is one department of work on shipboard that never lags, and that is "cleaning ship." It is safe to say that not even some and span battleship is kept in bet- ter trim than these idle German liners at Hobokep: ' , An idle ship, lying in a harbor filled with smoky shipping and dust blown from the shore, requires stricter attention to housee1eaoing than with all her machinery run- niptt in a. duqtless _sea.. C G lllllb .II In via-av..." ---e So, when there is no other work to be done the sailors of the Veter- land are set to "cleaning ship." Every day the visitor to Hoboken can see them so engaged, swabbing down bulkheads, holy stoning decks and polishing brassworl: until it glistews. Even with this recourse the commanders are hard put to it to keep the crews busy, but the companies, despite the fact that every day adds to the enormous deficit they are piling up, have kept their crews intact, holding (iii?, keeping on the payroll every man possible. Britain‘s Strangle-Hold. hsterioe of ma mam Mu}! to Candi-n Red cm. A...- eiatuauMmiorR.W.u-erotst.cttun'- . An elderly con-pent" who lives in a city suburb, bu worked out some conveniences for keeping his Boek of 150 hi]; that any poultry niser can euily copy. . __ - " . f,, cs, L---A “I. lel “'4. m he: his incnbttor in his tee- ment. As soon uthe young chicks come the? ere put. imediutely into a homemade broader. which is he†a few feet trorrrthe ineubntor. This broodenmny be made out of In or- dinary soap box, the dimensions he- ing about 20x301nches and its depth 8 or winches. It has n movable bottom and . hinge top, and the from end of the box is knocked out and replaced by s piece of canvas hung from the top. The brooder ie kept warm by a. small tank of wen ter that msy be heated either by I pipe frqm the basement furnsce or by a lamp on the outside of the brooder. Tank, and lumps espe- cially for this purpose may he had from poultry supply houses, but any one with a little ingenuity can devise his own. Bis brooder is placed upon 8- wide s'helf at the south side of the basement on a. level with the ground outside and junk. in front of a, small window that slides up and down. On warm, sunny days this window is opened to allow the youngsters a. chance to get out in the fresh air and exercise. When they become: cold or tired at the outdoors they can hop back through the window and under the canvas f1%r to the warmth of the heated brooder. In addition to being healthful for the young chicks and convenient for the caretaker, the broader is per- fectly safe from fire, since the heat comes from outside. The bottom of the Ibrooder does not have to he loose, but it is more easily kept clean that way. Cleanliness, he insists is essen- tial for successful poultry raising. He cleans his pens every morning and sprays with an oxide once a week. Cleaning the pens takes him only a, few minutes because every- thing is detachable. The nests stand on strips of board, just high lenough from the earth floor to give ventilation and keep them dry. The roasts and dropping boards are above the nests. Hpwa-trrtourts," running lengthwise. in the pens, rest in slots nailed to the ends of the pens. The dropping-hoard-s are laid loose across these "ttwo-by- fours" and at right angles with them. On three of these dropping- l boards, one at either end and one about the middle, the supports for the roosts are placed. These snip- ponts are made of one-inch boards. a few inches wider at the back end than at the front to give a "stair- way" effedtto the roosts. Two short strips of inch lumber are nailed on the bottom at opposite ends of these I sapports to make them stand up i and afford a solid foundation tor n the roosts when the towls are I perched on them. 7' -- . - ' . , _ AI-E- -L rm-.-" ___ - While the towls are at breakfast every morning, he goea into the pens with an empty pail, another containing slaked lime, and a. trowel. With the trowel each piece is scraped as it is lifted from its place, the droppings falling into the empty paid. When the last, piec: (my... W.-. .Ve_--- - has thus Sheen removed and cleaned the trowel and lime pail are put into service, and each piece dusted with the lime as it is put back into position. Ilt takes but a. short time and he has found it a aure prevent- ive both of lice and red mites. A simple hut effective plan of ‘ven'tilation also is incorporated in these poultry-houses. They have shed roofs with the high sides of the houses towards the south. The "two-brfour" etuddings are about four feet apart, and the rafters, which run crosswise, are equally distant. In each of the pens the space between two af the dtuddings and the corresponding two refers is sheeted up, with the exception of about eighteen inches at the bot- tom. This gives an air chamber through which the foul air from the TORONTO LE botttom of the my pm" IP. doc-the enn- botveen the PP "we" elected e strip of bond " la“ oe, which â€unit: this current a air to pee: out. A piece at can- vu an be dropped over this open space to prevent the pen from be- coming too cold on very severe dye. -.- Under this system of caretaking, his 118 White Leghorn hem hat year produced en new. of s lit- tle better than 197 a“: each, with a. net pro4it of more than, two dol- lars apiece. Hie total income from his Boch was $443.62. Of this) amount may, dozen eggs broutthtl $357.67; spring chickens sold net- ted 821.25; twenty-nine hens and rooster: sold to the butcher brought '14; four settin'g hens sold for " and 101 phllets and cockerele re- mini-ng at the end of the yen- were valued at $48.80. For feed, lime, medicines and other incident- “I“, â€W‘luuvw - vv-.v- -e-"-----" do he span}. during the year "6t.49,1earvintt . net pradlt of m bu a. natural fondness for birds, and he: been keeping nemall Bock, partly as pets, for the luv twenty yum. In view of his ad- vancing use he is increasing his floek gradually to about 600 birds, which, he believes, will support him and his wife. m says he prefers to develop his Bock gradually be- cause he has found that. there are new things to be learned all the time, and he wants all the experi- ence and knowledge possible be- fore placing too much at stake. - The Farming Business. "All I mutt to see of a man," said the observer, “is how he holds a. newspaper. to read it., I can tell by that alone what sort of a. man he is and how he attends to his work or buaineaa. . “In a. carlood of people reading" you always find one or two holding their paper spread out to its widest extent to the great discomfort of their neighbors, Bach a man'is either a bully in a, small way or I. narrow minded, selfish chap who never thinks beyond himself and his own small affairs, who has not yet learned the first duty in life; namely, to be considerate of other people. In either case he is a man of bat trifting account in his busi- (ness, whatever that may by. “Then you .see the man who when he turns over a newspaper leaf turns it anyway it happens to come and then crushes it down so, all crumpled up; going y serene.- ly with his reading. By the time he cornea to his street he has turned over two or three leaves in this manner; and then he folds the messed‘up paper into the smallest possible compass and stuffs it in his poflret.to take home to the Its: w-..“ .- -__- -____H "I always hate to see a. man han- dle a. now/paper in this manner; and it distresses me to think of the folks at home compelled to read a. newspaper all crumpled and wrin- kled when they would have found so much more comfort and pleasure in reading a paper with a fair, smooth page. _But you find may. men who ‘handle a newspaper in that rough or thoughtless manner, and you may be sure that whatever work these men do is done with the same disregard for oieety and or- der; amiable and kindly natured though they may, themselves per- sonally be. C "And now we come to that'large i number ot readers who handle their papers in what may be described as j the average manner, holding them a over with some degree of care, but i not taking the trouble to get them exact; commonly holding up the whole page to read, but when they told the paper crosswise of the page, doubling it as likely as not more or less diagonally and letting it go so as if it happens to come that way. "Then you see occasionally aman who folds his paper vertically of the page, holding the paper up for its full length from top to bottom, but folded to half the width of the page. This manner of folding a paper to read commends itself to some peo- ple. Indeed, I have a friend who thinks that newspapers should is- sue special editions with a page of the standard length, special narrow page editions for sale at elevated railroad and subway stations for greater convenience of reading ini crowded cars; but I scarcely think that this would prove practicable, and for myself I do not much fancy the vertically folded paper. What I like to Bee is the man in the car who, taking it as it is, handles his newspaper with the greatest con- venience to himself and yet always with an evident scrupulous regard for Ahe paper; with a manifest rea- lization of what a really wonderful thing a newspaper is. How to Read a Newspaper. “Such a reader never cru-mplesl or mussues his paper in any way, but keeps it always smooth and‘ perfect. When he folds a, page over he folds it always in Jie) crease that “as made on the press, straight and true all the way down, l he keeps all the pages trimly in their original relation. If, as he isl likely to do, he folds the papar‘ crosswise of the page he takes our“ in the first folding to get it exactly in the crease and so he gets all the ‘pages folded truly. Then if he makes another fold, a vertical fold still further to reduce the paper's compass for convenience in holding it, he does not crease this fold closely with danger of creasing a column of type, but this fold he lave; punding,_ so M the htlt 'ii"iiiiGririGLrs' __ “an and fair again why: it is 9991104 trut.. - . "In ' whole cuboid of Ttlt handing newspaper: you will Md perky: one nun who reads hiss-y- per this fashion; with no mm toe is Peybtr.oy and ,itls ilFiiFe Lhe - Gr the (hung and '0 own." ae-a'" Anished my speech. tgtse--,What in the subject! Ire--"' my Who Strikee Ber HM I: No In.†Dull: Sex. Un- “If SUM!" tgigll.tfttilll Lesson ly. - David and Goliath. 1 Sam. 17. Glu. Golden ', Text, Ron. 8. " Verse 38. And Saul clad David l with his aspparelr--A military dress i to which a sword was attached. It would seem that David was almost , as large as Saul. Otherwise Saul surely would not have put his ar- 1 mor on the boy. David undoubt- I ‘edly rattled around in the unusual and unwieldy corselet and helmet. This was due rather to his inexper- ience than to his size. l 39. I cannot go with these; tor I have not proved them - David knew nothing about warriors’ 3a.:- ments, particularly the equipment of a king. For the moment his boy- ish pride was quickened as the king ‘put his weapons in his hand. But lowly for the moment. He knew that he could not fight thus weight- ed down and handicapped. Bo he put them off with the respectful excuse to Saul that he had not proved, or tried, such a coat and helmet and sword. ’ 40. Took his stalf in his und.--. ' Not to fhtht with, but because he l always carried it with him. Even ' if he did not lay it aside when he! I was ready to use his sling, it would , be no impediment, but rather a I help to him. The weight in one , hand would balance- the weight in t the other. . Five smooth stones out of the a brook-Her was sure of himself, but he intended to take no chances. l Be would not risk the battle on a one throw or two or three. The Wrttte. " .CI. W. - Fw.~_ ,7, . 'yuau'i"iiiifiijli'""'"'T 1.L,-s-ooirrmeetttee.'tt',t anouwmwmmqmm,mm shoG'luri"iiiiiiriairieattef . anroqertt,rirr. that - W o _ bl. bio thud: br' ouch thugs“ - 1"Jlul','l'l'l 2iuogi',ur'U'Sl'll aobthr div. ste nothing but labor and sorrow. - _ . , _ai.-K---s.- hut-hdtmitoven f'"'"'"' "- w.'--'"' 4. Thou ink not desertynNrheeolrp, whilst than New maid duh, Mnoe th it War. whether in early m. H Wall“ m '""tNer-' -- _ _ . _ it War, when»: in only want, Int-4pm, may». or autumn. . 6.1huohuuwvgoodnodmunddovn.w the Nature, but pendmtm it not up m. In who sowed: hie need in dry toil oaatoth “my “a.“ of renting. 6. Thou shalt not overload thy dd land farm with. seed, .. . 1 ALL ' Anni-it‘d his or oe m!“- tr.qhemahWootrtr1ro" â€all": --""c_. moisture, hummus-e 'lrUilitki'iriGltt.iett Me who math his seed in J',','UiCrii'iitiraci-'"'" ot renting. 6. Thou shalt not overload thy dd land farm wig-ed. 4F5rett u the merciful mu doth not overload his or or In- no. This audio; beat withstands“: the mug“ of deouabt and hot w: B. 7. 'Nou duh hep on thy farm and: kinds and numbers . . . - _:..- “.2 mung-v u the WM supply Five smooth swnes out I); """t-"-." - . brook-Her wee sure of himself, but? part of an my’e equipment as he intended to take no 'iSi,e'rriih,et.tt,og.t, or trenching tools. In Be would not risk the battle on , war bubedsnre is used in various one throw or two or three. Thel way/st but Its main object is mum brook nenr the scene of battle was stoppmg. It. is interlnced with full of smooth and rounded pebbles, l ground pep in front of trenches the very kind Dnvid had used my for the purpose of tripping (harm times, doubtless, in his sling. mg troop; it is strung across His siing--/Ne shepherds of Syria. bridges end main mods to prevent wire ill used to the sling. Even the padtr'atre of envelry. and it is left-handed men were experts. In used for fencing in camps to guard Judg. 20. 16 we read: “Among all against rushing tactics on the .2an this people there were seven hun- of the enemy. dred chosen men 1ett-hamied; Whenever possible barbed wire every one could sling stoneth a entanglements are hidden in lung hair's-breadth, and not miss." grew or in hedgee, so that mix anc- . 41. And the man that here the In; troops will be trapped while the shield went before him-Goliath enemy rake their lines “in: .utnut, was so heavily equipped that he and shell. Barbed wire concealed icould not carry all his implements in undergrowth is particularly of the battle. deadly where eamlry is concerned, 42. He disdeinpd hinv-Bmr' Prov. for the wire gripe the horses' hunts, 16. MV. "Pride iced! laden des- causing them to tall on the spike- truction, PIE] . nughty spirit he- strewn ground. 4 4A..-- -u. rustle Hunt it. is INTERNATIONAL LESSON APRIL 25. "Timon aunt keep on. thy of horses, e,e.iti: ttr, Jl'S'd tna.hrth irreili , at..- duh. tl (gluon - - v... Tar, the o nee, We, deep, page pouitry u was WWI: â€tulip-ilk, endthoumetgapom.toddet.mm and gran for. Thus shalt thou protected 'aeiet..tdvt,r, arty, and thus cult than give thy children all chutes: 9 children curse to cell! the bleeeed. Mud! at thou didst not too greatly diaairnte in thy ileum the fer-truly stored m thy not! through my thorn-ad- of yeere. th Thott shalt not live unto thyself alone but shalt join the Grain -rts' Associution, the G7iiGiFi, enact/y m thy distract or my like minded organs-tiara that " good. Through these thou shalt work unceuingly tor the welt-re of thy diirteiet and the urtruildintr of Saketchewm "ricultoe. 9.. Mu halt study thy dry ' Uean and its {chicane un- ceasungly and ponder on ways and means where y its fruit- fulneas my be increased, keeping drug. in memory the fact that not done by speeches and resolutions, but also by krtel- ligent end timely hard work shall production be ir/creased and the economic salvation of thy country be wrought. - . .. _,, m- t"... Than EAR; tin." "G.%ria dog 1--The dog even in Palestine in jll engaged: . ., 44. I will we thy Beah unto the birds of the heavens, and to the beasts of the held-The anger of Goliath seemed tf dyive hiry.t.o the Written " 'trt.. ifiirirp-aG." irofessor Kirkpat» rick calls attention to Hemr’l de- fiance of Ajax in Homer’l "Iliad," 13. 831. IO. Thou smut Jil covet thy neighbot’o shmlt not covet thy noitrhbor'as big our, n gory his worry, not his hurry, nor anything or 9. Remember these dry wholly. Thy flesh Shell'glut tho dog: and anion birds of Troy. 45. I come to thee in the name of Jehovah of hosts-h childlike faith such " could be the inspiration of the Shepherd Palm. , 46. That there is a, God in Israel -h God who is worthy of Israel (see 19Lintrri8. p). . . 47. That Jehovah saveth not with sword and BpeBr-- This wu a, oun- viction of the Israelites (see 1 Sam. 2. 1-10; 14. 8; Pa. 44. B, T; Hos. l. T; Zach. 4. B). It in the experi- cm of all who trust God. (Bee especidly 1 Cor. l. 27. Sty). 48. Ron mad the tsmtr-ahat in towud the bottle line of the Am“... David did not wait tor the that to approach him. The â€daemon, as well a the swiftneu, of stid’l movement“! nut has taken Goliath at a new MW. go. 8mm Phil'utine and sim' tar-David runways and tome expooed M’s had. Mu t,r:.lll {in Mtilutirte. av M their ehm waded. tho: TEN DRY nun": COIIA‘DIIITI. w. I. Idle-val , a. an tu--' 2ti,tgtY" t Jia" any 'neifhbot’o big fun. Thou 'ysitrhtror'as big our. nor his norm, has hurry, nor anything that ia thy neigh- â€I- “I “IV" -_.- --i'" li I 57:! fuming commandments to keep them Bed--1n verse: 4 and 23 the word used is "champion" in our acme; here "cumpion" mews “mighty man." The strongest man the Philistine’o had. As soon as be in dead hope left the Philistines Fgitiatine's 1m was dead hope and they Bed. Don't let your life become a mere mooey-iettintr humdnun. Get out into the open and live. The object of life is not money, but more and :1qu better living. Selling is not teaching; teaching is tho an. of linking 3 man learn. Work exists for life; not life for work. When you ate attending to busi- ness be all there. But for heaven’s gaffe do not become . machine your- se . Know something beside! business and the everluting buainem point ii, view. Moat men no breaded with the trade-wk of their buri- i Barbed wire we. invented by . tsrmer fifty you. ago for the harm- Hess purpose of preventing eattie -from bucking their way through fencee. Be did not imagine that 31m: his discovery would be taken up by every my in Europe. Yet such bu proved the can, and barbed wire in (0-day u .uooemry hell "e"... If you are not . big man the job in time will get you. hypnotize you, "allow you up. We need mote men who are big enough to tower above their eco- nomic inherent. and give us a. vision of something better. An executive is . man who do- cideo quickly and is sometimes right grm or in hedgu, so that uh unc- ing troops will be trapped while the enemy rake their lines with g1not, and shell. Barbed wire concealed in undergrowth is particululy deadly when cavalry is concerned, for the wire grips the horses' hunts, causing them to tall on the spike- At times certain roads that it is deevirubher to hue passabe to tawny people, have to be rendered im. passable to the enemy. To Act-om- plith thU zigzag fences of barbed wire - built (ram one side of the road to the other until they form a. tat A pen-at with time to PM can pull this barrier by la- boriously threading his wcy ii'iiliii the W zigzag we left open. but . detachment at new» en! (would men, but . detarlr ment of several hundred men, ea- pecially it they tusve guns or are mounted, mun. halt. to dest my the The barbed wire used for mili. tary pulp»!!! foo-senses Long. ifgi!tt' pointa, which ioisst moat uni le wounds. upecidly when men and horses tall on to them headlong IS Extra-o Cruelty. "What In: the cause of their CHI-ml!†_ _..- A .. . "In in the bill gt divorce .8 ex heme cmqltyt" - -i7iitit"j/iria, gentlest mannered Inn in the .orid.", _ " know, but thag'a the only way the lawyers could explain the one. You no tho "mile all started when u dhUrt return her lead in . with! we." Tb road to also.“ is - to all, by. too many moons there "that an no“. ot going. so often happens. Barbed Wire In War. tmt,trtt..-istet.t PBOVERBS. Thou le “I! qrht' TRL' I'IH’M " I I)†lMMBHJH/HI The morn‘ng l “red their iir, Hi in Lamb!" - count. the “In“! mun-n “T959 the loss Pierre. "Th" drove in an “I through the Ft Belttiatet trenches before we kuess tet yards “f thr he Cossack _ fl . gunâ€. “ever by er not out uh “one and can informath m gents. The road INF Caede was fu both Wayh, p, to tbree “mm" tttr. but with md " apples W with Pwr isttention to tr, "MI which v to the cutting their faces. T the point of l v- "y “mention (I beg: do you no killed by ont' " iireti-tire : Tin Directly aha-ad ed through l ..,\\ buildings ittts, ti “Him with Gout-Dunkerkr. der tre. The l em for tite buixngs and tl the dunes, but. a oounrry ttit' putting. there Mt of French gun~ 3Utre's {numb We could hear 1 ntl about ttu, but d their whereal Germ-n mun. theouglt . Immh Del every dag) tri, I am running It!" I Iniimn they ‘ere burn the German d.- w.. to drop ds, We; of 11ml and: better tl pert golf plav directly into t" (to: the Mn and each yc'bl" each of the In Others I' ml: . "ICU“ ol bring the his: in them int, the price fa" In. Au The ssh. for]; for h but it (If that†a! from than til they hi, ace of at 'Nthe sele ter that n object in , uve an ' dipmem _ (ht prrh breeds as or am l should Le eggs. hr breeds a be kept. breed lt' cm in ( " cunsull miles iron .ot too f, good slug (.0in tra it I.) m . good rt' in the ' In M shall More tir, -ie, It is tra nor voted 1 "gnu. culled nearby heltt 0- hold e', On MI" l' _' are used. 'l-, d to puny, Eden. and an" living t M"" virtually paid ll “named and _ tbe .msdrtts from - winter bouwi h‘r.'n, Wher - in there i,, a w the heasy was. repair I" only making Whe r! The ma can" WHITE" . - wttitat tU --- tb m in "ror tt our†Brand" Expedition! to H. "but! - tC gruw (Illa-r tt ah mg came 66 A.“ V