Stránka:roll 1916.djvu/173

Z thewoodcraft.org
Tato stránka nebyla zkontrolována

Thingi to Know and Do 149 in service to others as well as the development <rf your own best self. An InTocatkm Dedicated to the Woodcraft Girb of America To Woman alcme is it givoi to nurture, bear, and rear a being vv! .h an Immortal Soul. Through the pain, self-sacrifice, and patience of Motherhood, through the undying love of Womanhood for Childhood, does she learn the infinite love and com- passion of God for Man. So may I understand my body and its uses and keep it clean and strong for its high physical calling. So may I keep my mind pure and alive to progress, that I may train other minds that may be entrusted to my care. So may I keep my spirit free from impurity and evil that I may guide other souls into full acoxd with the truths of Life and Immortality. Breathing "Shut Your Mouth and Save Your Life" was the title of an essay by George Catlin, a famous outdoor man, who lived among the Indians, and wrote about them 1825 to '40. In this he {xjinled out that it is exceedingly injurious to breathe through your mouth; that, indeed, many persons injured their lungs by taking in air that was not strained and warmed first through the nose, and in nuwy cases laid the foundation of diseases which killed them. Don't Tom Out Tour Tom Too Modi When you see a woman whose toes are excesMvdy turned out, you may knows she was Iwrn and brought up on sidewalhs. She is a poor walker and will not hold out on an all-day tramp. The mountaineer and the Indian scout always keep their feet nearly straight. It is easier on the feet, it avoids corns and bunions, and it lengthens the stride; makes, in Aott, a better traveller. A glance at her tracks wUi tell ycu ham a person walks.