Human Rights Paramount 61 



OUTBUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT 



With few exceptions, the money available for 

 building the home should be expended first in put- 

 ting the house into the ideal condition just named. 

 After that, if any means remain, the outbuildings 

 may be constructed. Otherwise, crude, temporary 

 arrangements may easily suffice. There is one thing, 

 however, that must be provided with scrupulous care 

 and that is the water for the household use. It 

 must be, first of all, wholesome and comparatively 

 free from impurities. Then, if at all possible, it 

 should be cool and taste well. Actual records have 

 shown that one will not drink enough water to satisfy 

 the demands of his health in case the taste be in any 

 degree unpleasant to him. So the ideal water for 

 household use is comparatively soft, is cool, highly 

 pleasing to the taste, and is free from disease-carrying 

 germs. This comparatively simple matter of pro- 

 viding the water will prove most important in rela- 

 tion to the well-being of the household and the up- 

 building of the family life. See to it at any cost 

 that the well be situated out of the way of seepage 

 from any barn or outbuilding, even though it may 

 from such necessity be placed somewhat out of the 

 reach of convenience. 



HUMAN RIGHTS PRIOR TO ANIMAL RIGHTS 



If the farmer cannot afford to erect a good barn he 

 may take reasonable care of his horses with the use 



