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Show """Zi; -- m r3 Pleasure and Not Penance TT7 FrODlem . .. . -- ... - ..... ,. -- fty DACHAS, E. PACE, Boston mm i ts. " s ... MUCH depends uponhe JndjviduM Vinclination that the question of eating cannot be settled by a mere yes or jio reply nor indeed by the' experience of any number of individuals, that is to say, so far 33 regards the' feeding of the thousands who are accustomed to eating three times k day and would not 4ake kindly to the proposed change, -- gating, like every other "natural function, should be a pleasuraand not a penance, and the average person would regard it'as a punishment) to omit any one of his regular meals, and hencerthe enforce- ' ment of the fegimeil would not lead to good results. ' In my private practice I favor the three-meplan, but always with itho qualification that in case of lack of appetite, or in face of t any actual Illness, themeal or meals should be omitted until convalescence, and tho return of normal hunger Personally, I eat three or s a day with pleasure and satisfaction, and without experiencing any sortjof inconven- Mnce, day in and day out, and year aftecyaar. I lake breakfast at a hotel i nmcn BBoai ciuycu o ciucn, irireet .winner at liome about seven (if I get there), and hy'kawig place," or need for it, j.TH-thlumber Jacki In man a inQderateiuDTMjr atten to twelve send3 me to bed to "sleen like a sectloaroMlie United States the '. C winter, isl the busy season of the J :.. babe, the harvest time, as It " year, It remains to be said-,- however, in this connection, that whoeyer has were, and they work almost aa already had a sufficient day's ration at any hour of the day, cannot witlr energetically to "get out" the : afetyor ultimate satisfaction eat again on going to bed. requisite number of logs during But, rightly the interim of snow and ice aa managed (meaning moderate meals of really wholesome, food), nothing fits does ta get in his, Ofinn nrr ., .1 nlnsm nnl a f . .Vrt. TiTiknTtl ,n. .... ATlVAna fvftm- ilia - - - Yili. . . ....... fny o uuu grain ere the autumn rains set j r' j In. Only, to b aure, the lura- Jresb, awanpgikfirramoderateiu pf wrofp retirrngrAil -- animal "km Lfirmea menaced ar not Jultelrtrsame uncer nnr wl: naturally sleet) affi:rpafg:VmrKmldrfigpiaf conditions as is the farmer . t&weathep jia tainty . I. i i J i, T nHT ETTI III r BTTQF DDI HIT ATI ItnllA fit I. fl ' I' Kvm t nttflf. .n.l. in autumn, for in many of the northern lumber l.n camps it Is almost unheard of for gestion. a season to embody less than five y In iny treatise, "Practical Guide to Ileal th," published some years months of sledding, that Is, five ago, occurs the following on diet, appetite etc.: "Iarn to distinguish months of continuous snow and between hunger and mere uppetency ; you may have the latter without ice. ' In the logging regions of the w: nungerf dui not nunger witiiout appetite. lNever eat without an appetite; Pacific Northwest, of -- course, is a species of nevera .mouthful, whicch. ia inexcusable ior where may be found perhaps 4b Bick or veil. There is no pleasure in it, and it of lumber greatest nature's the return prevents speedy the winter does not make of a normal appetite. This does that ono roust wait the mnrkwri riHTaraiifta Ja tondl hungiHbyaxiyTneansJR'e- should tions that it does in the forests of always atwhen we need leodJ if. we1.ajLgct.iL. --Th& ume..piser.jecuona 01 tn eoun- try. In western Oregon and ""system should always be kept fairly well saturated, so to Washington there is so little say, with nutriment; but this should never be carried snow, and that of such a tranto tjie point of incipient nausea by any means. If the, sient character, that the lumbermen cannot depend upon it as rule be rightly interpreted, this is about the way-tthey do elsewhere to help them put it; Eat when you are hungry, drink when you are with their work. Dut, on the othz thirsty and go to bed when you are sleepy; that is, er hand, the Puget Sound and Columbia River country is free never wait till you are exhausted for want of food1 from that severe weather which " drink or nervous repose. Better eat too much than too renderi JLJmperatlve-for-lumber Jacks elsewhere 'to is but in better the ; constantly aad, 7liifle7aMnaliy enough long have a care lest they suffer from ruDj more agreeable frostbitten hands and feet Siml- I Q -- ft'' al M '.wit - T four-time- mere-aoou- utt-tuiup- Li Vell-nurs- the-farm- 1 I -- I 7?3i5? ZQCQftrOttVZ 'AND CFW o.o ed U . . .. - A.Z --3. - L T er v- T (1 T : I Ti - A - " ;It : store-bouse- ja&m& JZfozwz, . $2Q self-abu- se s, avenously thaa-excess.- " pfTS8 .,rA;i.. rwfiefe"nitons' muc&Tof the"" C ' t I nave known one man to hate another man because of the color of his hair. Another one said to me: "I hate a man who parts his hair that way." Another ono said to mo of a very good man; 11 can't liko him, he eats with his knife." I knew a preacher, who was a great theologian and - thought his theology was religion, who with everyone he eoiildjOelp-qu4116- ?met of a different theology. - He was quar--4 -- jrelingalLthe time and thought Jie was is king-an- d logging swamps, the scribes no method or 1 done in winter pre- change of equipment and to the trees marvels one better. In principle, the ice 'autoleft standing mobile Is not very different from the ordinary commercial motors which are now employed for lumbering Is done after the delii'p.rv wnrlr .ln . trorir . Ltjtr cril Aiuwvvt.t Tat j v. . Um. ' growing reason is over ; ' propelled adjunct of winter logging is provided ft- -instead of being allowed witt sharp teeth which It sinks into the snow or .' ice as it progresses, thus insuring on to the in spring go i Ttfjfc 1- . steady progress With BO sliDDine or rIMIup on tho and summer while the awteces. bark is loose andhe But because the winter finds the lumber leaves and twigs are ten-- . jacks der. Moreover, if there very busy in a temperature that ranges as low as 20 to 40 degrees below zero it must not be Supbe a heavy blanket of snow on the ground, a posed that they do not find time and. opportunity; By rontw Vmit4 States Sautor for plenty of fun in the isolated camps where tree, after it has beea- fightingjha good fight" wuilaai b. Mum they felled with ax or saw, spend the season. A logging camp may be anyI have known lawyers who constantly where from five to twenty-fiv- e stands a chance of miles from the quarreled with opposing clients and coun nearest store and posrtofflce, but the "Jacks" are crashing to earth with kept liberally supplied with fresh butter, fresh sel, while neglecting the fight due their own client. I have known merless damage than it meat, smoking and chewing tobacco, etc. A would sustain at another 1 chants go basy quarreling withcompetitors as to. neglect their own busiThe or phonograph is an almost Inevitthe season of graphophone year. ness, I Lave read of soldiWajvho were etrong oh dress parade, splendid able adjunct of the isolated loceine camn .nH fhi tree trunk that falls on a lumbermen manage In one way and another t in tactics and communications and orderly in retreat. "bed ?1 Bnow ts not likely records of the latest song "hits" from time t6 , to split or to break as The greatrat soldier ol all History was urant ana lie couia iignr. wun-o- ut : montime. x or the twentieth century logging crews. In what we forest the when case would otherwise bathe me quarreling.XlIe ''demanded" things and the things ho "demanded" might term the traditional seats of the lumber uneven average ground. logging camp has two main'struc-ture- s arch comes down on rocky, the bunk house where the loggers sleep In were "immediate and unconditional surrender " "When the demand was Industry, Jiowever; winter puts a very differ-en- t After all. however, it is in the various stages bunks arranged in tiers, and theook face on The whole matter of ' getting . but of the transportation of the logs that '(the snow shanty wmpliedjwitrrt where the food Is cooked and served. 'To the logs and 'transporting them to the sawmills Ice yield the greatest aid. First of all it and call norses tnwr to. tnem led the starving enemy and gave Dacjrineir this eating hall a shanty is, however, cuiuvaije that transfornhenvtoilJJiem if skidding or'dragglng the something of a misnomer, since the word is the onlygrcat man there. ; General lice knew how known to the average consumer. In Maine, In log lengths from the depths of the forest This likely to suggest a modest hut, whereas the cook mules or New northern in .Yok in and horses, by Canada, W88 formerly d,one Michigan, shanty of an up- to fight, but not to quarrel.' He was great in. defeat, and jecuring the best Minnesota, Wisconsin and the Dakota the summer D uu im v oxen, and ia wt to some extent, but for the most enougn To ac- he could for his men, he Burrendered, without quarreling with, his foe or is in one sense a vacation season for the lumber yum ? jor.t-tn- e mnrtpm dnnkyinejaa.J&iani-'-wui40 fet ,u . Slu.. ,iue cooKing m a restrirted other forms of energy for skidding, bupposedly cursing his enemvTheJ&ddl logging camp Is and the lumbermen, unlike some other usually done by a man and wife (almost invarthe skidding operation is designed only to get vas in Jhe highest sense the "Temple of Liberty " Thank God, the jinglo actlvlty members of the community; welcome the passing iably German), who hire out as professional cooks the logs out of the forgst depths where no f gold was not heard there,; nor. was the place desecrated by jangling of the long, bright days and the advent of the Ice and whp have the help of tw6 masculine vehicle could be operated without Infinite assistants. Xbey work over a range that is 10 King. The explanation of this state of affairs is trouble and damage to the standing timber. Howw orda or petty disputes. feet Ion ice of f course, tn the fact that snow and found, andn top which stands a coffee'urn that holds ever, when the Snow King Is In command It someThis is what is meant by ''Blessed is he who can fight without quar-reling- .1 affoTd as much as a barrel; a meat boiler the material for the Ideal arteries of coma jimilar method may be em-haprensthat that holds 100 ' jlmes munication - In the lumber -- regions. The-fell- ed ployed for moving the logs to. the rojway or sW-- i there trees may be conveyed to market . more quickly age yard rfhaps a mile or two distant, where lune more than a bushel nf potatoes. "Z.a'vu. and more economically over snow roads and tee -- 1. the log are beld to await the spring freshets or Beiow are the " iome 10 to' 15 square feet of Mon!f. . Nature paints in the most striking col trails than by any- - other method known to the , are loaded aboard railroad cars that convey them . oaTf tier In some camps heavv Birni e are lumber regions where . . . there For this to Indeed, the Industry. log mills,, trailing shades and tints with a delicacy without these factors and their or and he 'ab'' sequel, the "big - there is employed a more powerful type of engine a maToV;; 0f7ogS never achieved by the bruslv in tlfc hands thaw" In the spring It would be virtually Imeach of th." an t than the" donkey above referred to and a stronger . " allowed a snoon i.; "uu CUD '5 tin18 81mPlT' wire cable is supplied. The pathway for the logs of the artisCThe highest ambition of the practicable to get the timber to market at an and a Vni- f. .u y "flood-would that Is condition an in boulevard operations. Justify Icy by kept is" to , manufacturerer of paints produce col .aid-aThe .snow and ice, Jmpp.rt8nt..aa.ls .their re in?" as ciroumstances require "ortf "fthtch look" likenaaTurir8They never not the only influences that are now tending - so smooth from the polishing process afforded by" PRAISE WORTH WHILE. to make the lumbermen concentrate their actlv- the passage of the logs that it is practicable to r 'succeeded. . at each operation not merely a single transport irass has a green of its own. bo has 8tantl. increasing number of our lumbermen have 1A to . le log "strings" of logs attached-en- d woman nn M vmi n w Cm- the leaf and so hu9 the distant ocean. Js one been brought to see the wisdom of adopting what - " Pllmentsociety end by means of stout chains. the other lumas Js. known conservative Is some that It emto lumber is the At lumbering camps ao, maeea: Mav t .cb who the practice "of tlieseTias ever been reproduced and put lady was?" ploy giant sleds to carry the logs on the first bering which treats a forest as a working capital It was Mrs. "Certainly. in cans with a price label on them.' wnoopindyke. She whose purpose Is to produce successive crops and stage of their Journey from the forest to the saw said yon sold the best dog 80ap ,n mill Of course snow is requisite to the ia,tls-- ' ""Winter applei now repose on the shelves which calls for work in the woods tliat will leave-thBy L. M. RICABD and as trees young ... nenr'y growth standing but a when Tqf the paint chemists. "Honor awaits the unharmed as possible Well, the minute a man EXTRE.MELV POLITE. "path has been worn for the sled runners -man who can combine colors to produce tho becomes a convert to conservative lumbering he 4he Icy. roads. the vehicles traverse thf line along thns furrowed with, a facility suggestive of that with tints of red o the : Baldwin and Xorthern Spy- - They come pretty near ityls certain to become an advocate of 'the cold sea rv- XOU OUCht in .oil .. which a locomotive glides along the steel raila on me as son, --ail, " lue..Pf3'Fej.uinyiyr.Krryiiiij In oeai that is all, town. aentist ' :':r--'.' 7 -- There Js.t of course, a minimum of "resistance to ;V operations of lumbering. ' all thb paint grinding wrk m the world were multiplied ten thou-tan- d - To make-rhl- s ' "V6 k! tth,?8e f point clear it may be pointed out the progress' of a led along such a glazed surface dentist., eh always says. 'I beg your and in many instances log loads of almost Incred timet they" couldn't "Turt out pigment enough in a year to do what that the difference between practical work under pardon oeiore pulling a tooth." ' ordinary roethods of .numbering and under con- - " " ible weight are thus transported over the ellKten- cature does Ufa change from MasontoPca8on.;. servant turobering is principally In the selection lng surface. A "new wrinkle" that character!.. Xature's brush "is busy everywhere all 'the time, In the lif o.a leaf of the trees to cut. In the fellrng or hese trees, winter practice in some or the logginr; REVENGE. districts consists .of what' might be denominated 'In, the first part; of their Journey from the it applies the Vrush day hy day, following with its tints fxoia budding mil. the is ah It established to an fact lee that automobile for log., carry lng. Powerful Official , (toTbarber condemned to -;; ' stump time until it flutters from the branch. ;r ""f the amount of harm done to a forest by the cuttracOon ettflnes, have been used for some tfrae deatl)ia aa hour's time now m It toiichcs the ralleys and the hills, the growing grains, the flowering ting depends considerably upon the season of the past on the Pacific' Coast to draw trains of 'for h.'ve your doom, vo trucks out of the forest, but this new fonn year when the work In the woods Is carried on. : 'ii';--;; j.hsta. Much'Iess damage raoedlBarbereavagelynsTd HjrsulJpthjrounf.trowth. .uicommr use " thess . to shave crown the Ncvir is it idle, ... ..T General Grant Knew How to . M of mess e .mik . . to-ge- - ! lieldtJorsGrant k "!. ' 1 tri9r , . long-distanc- -- Pretty Colors by Nature's Paint Brush e ThVf b'at Z "'l..' but-who- " daylSg.. e -' ' - Jf ' . j. :':' ' r 0f"llB,M'; r w',7 Pr. .v.r ':'''"-'V;L- XMi ad log-lade- n |