HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-10-14, Page 7• sir1,17,
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Whilst he Waa feedinkhis little Vie.
it0t4a-awho Earen woke'againe-with milk
and soaked 'biscuits to the best of his
ability, eid, eucceeding beyond his
'Wildest hopee, . another ineldratiall
tSee-bizeTed Beirellanntire40,9WW:011111144keeerl ;thetel4 '
teEde Rireeinglian, Where, he was clue.
, '
. , ,,, the next day at twelve 'o'eioele OA
„.,
..
" n neoet inapertant bieeineSe, and who
Awls, Or *owing P0007., 1,be ° 4 r It Tt t re Illin in bii-dlegun 'and. le r 0 Ii -e
CalitiO rea ere 0 pal ry I era, li . 1 . 4 0 reV 1
.... . : Wan 4, he felt mere, eyinpathiee with.
Gee of the meet important'thinge have no doubt folned certain combine Storer* .
X the ?Medal attezition of ations describe& 4n4 recoMMended astbad reallY no. tima to tall upon
the ,peultiey raieer *Ibis .scason of . being,the moot satisfactory and pro- -anY BelgiaA Refugee eetablieluneet• or
the Year 10 the matter 0 developing . &Cave of greatest results. They are eaminitteee befeee ' leaving ,Lendete
the YOung st04ele and of, SeenrilW rapid,. therefere . e ' • • • Besides' he did not few' -0-$ 4.10C •nleanh''''
_ .1_,.. IleelthY growth, There are several 1..... ._ ceereesetuelettereer . - ' 70,ifilifeed that:tha child was a Ilele
•
-'-e--e 411-"144.irect'itte7Toril. clir treggenntgtbil41/0:14:8...!loosirtl dornivotth!kono bWe 0. ewhatat .coarseof un , !4o z Su oc t i , 41'
but none is more, IMPertant
breeders and those who have. not et a;Inr's, 141rvi:receigtved*' 171M with Jen
telligent feeding, an&Iviiile. this is, leainecr :the tads, wish to etYate" 'tahreens4,t4nd WegaS:thraeQ4Sut;Yonatappdatititettit eli,veel!
Bel -
true, it, hi well to remember ttlat fetal" that there it no one formula which
..alone Will net accomplish the desired ' glen efUgee,, Whoa! she at once took
• l'Osult. Our remarks at ads
' be 'confined to the time ean. be said to be nsitivel . the best ' to her .noetheriy •heart, Brien ere
- feeding, .but we 'cannot refrain froM. ' • -.1 ' . ' ' '
question ' of under any and 1 P'
heti been said thus far .applies to the et 4 •
e I. conditions.,What ranged to leave the little b03/ With -
' 4, i . ' food queetion in . her during the fortnight, be Welelti, be
, ealneg attention to the face that feed- general, teXardleSs eraVelling about the Midlands,- after
' ing is not the- &Ile 4,004 am era113!4.2 toek-- for -Any ethoW— ' h' ,
,.. •„,„- i Of•whet4et the °Wee he to. _. j} he in- m_he_z_vres_40--eall again to discuss ;
1 d•-wha-aaasegue-at, 1 "1'41" °1-- : .- future plane fee. hie, c arge. • .. •
pee/Le-011PPO11ei- and , - . . 71 purpose. • " • ' • ' • But hie ill -luck was not yet at an
br a° not get results bacallS° of lackt „."Fee41.11,g for " growth .reanixe.K4iirer,:. end.'Before he. could keep his all
attention to other details. - '
The list of poultry .foods is long ,:ent• rations than would be the ,ctlee a • *Portant apPointMent in goer Street
` Briefly, the object arafiqi fatten fev4;ls or to i he had the misfertUne to be knocked
and is. yOrY generally kaQW21.
• .:
c eneelltage egg production. The Misel down by a motor -car, andawas carried
it consists of all kinds of grain, wnele
,, •'. and Wound, including' Btoall grains, take which 4 l* .et peemelee la to to the nearest hospital .suffering freni
Orila etc. .1n, addit!on to 'the YariOus
°lel' /as 'buckwheat . mill° kaol,' 'rather. fattening foodal"ate more dee: ea metet.neerelle,a few bruises, , , .
aee1/11141 that. tieift.iPTO1PeiV icodar l'ri'concUsaiOni Otherwise, he had escan-
' '...rains' there is g;reeh 'fuck such 4113' They everleele- the:taet that growth. 'to hold a peif,•he ,'.. *rote wtjilaihing
',peek 'elever, • elfalfa :and all kinds
sirahle for grewth than any others. erefeetly the .eeetee.t itemitteee tine
.. ee.. g,e0e04,1g, • veetation ,eild au c.e.t mans, the .cletyiplitetit-a .bone and metteeeete his firm mid ,,-0,m4bei, _
•e; VegetableS.' Anil/14 foe& feral an- 'Inusele quite as muckete.it does addi„i
'oh ' ' . p r an group, and under. total flesh and especially fat. Young. disappointment, 4he received no rep4e,
t F ' e a ter. to hi surprise end
Thhead May be inelncled all forms ' chicks intended for broilers or fries I so he coneluded that she 110 gone
, May be confined and pushed to the I away from borne for a few daYs. ,
'
of :insect he which is usallY ageea- limit with -corn , and other fattening I On tecovering sufficiently, to lere
Are to fowls that have` free ' range
• and the meat foods in the rations, but much,;handling.fits them , the'h,ospital, he, again went to see Inc
fresh zneat scraps, which many •p.onl- ,
tom °f•-• only for table poultry, and they are! Old' ilurse.,.. who now .begged ees .he. air
-Able ' co-st; . - ' - ' '
.try raisera eart_proeure at a, reason-, stock Addle be *hien. as much range •
• • • ' A small weekly sum was a
ruined .for other purposes.. The Yeenag,lowed to keep. "the dear little lamb,"
as possible, and the poultry raiser
. Bowel Regulatora. . . .should start his planswith that upon for the maintenanc,e of the
be -fore the Unfortunate man st
There- ere :als-o various meat meals, thought in mind. A plentiful. simply for e,endan, his m•ission. unfulfilled
:
beef serapa and coneentrated meat of green food should be within reach. and his praapects more doubtful than
foods on the market that are 'of valPe and if it is not growing in the mini .
If produred and fed in a' fro h d* yards, i should . be supplied from •ever. '
tion, Oil meal, lingeed meal, cettene. the list at articles 'previonslyi.neene inaleresettriYatAQt_forr_eagiri.9.tssnedence
.
. -seed meal, etc.; • are eVaruable _ese.4ie* es tiOiked. _. .. ---:-.---, -- - - - • • fianeee, "Whete he mut with a fre
occasional additionS tn- tlie•-ations.i' Goad General Formula. , reception frone. mrs. Forrester,
. and they serve prindipally as bowel 1 Readgs.whe ptefee to"have a regu- • • "No, we have net been away',"
• iegelators. . Co_palimenta and similar ler fel-Ala and who do not wish to be said coldly,•in reply to his qnestio
prepared" foods are not necessary. . bothered with trying to ' provide a th,is .uoint. -
and frequently are harmful in ° their. changing variety Will .find the follOw.; .'•"And Where is Mabel? -Why'didn't
• , .. , .._ ..,... .
..,:effects. • Skimmed. milk buttermilk . ing a mosi „excellent combination : she answer My letter?" he demanded,
and other milk products are of value .' Cracked' wheat, . 25 parts; •pinhead beginning, to .feel angry at this quite
The. beginner in poultry, raising is :,- oatmeal, 15 arts; 'm,illet ' ,c.4;.....10.: necalledefor treatmerit., • --' ' • .• •
bewildered Whea he starts to investi- ''.aarta- granulated felnefood, 5. parts; "After, this disgraceful husineas
. tate the- foornt cijogiion and is con-;: chick. size grit, 10..parts.;' buckWheat;' you, will, please; never . wine here
fronted with the long list, Of „ avail- • 5 parts, rape seed, ---5 parts, broken again," was the only ream:moo he re -
able Vanish:4Es. He. is aptt� become' rice, 5 partereracked, peas, '5 parts, ceiVed. : • • .
disOonraged if he gains the *lyres -I and ground heel .acrapa Or other meat • - "Bit -what t/is--••-" . .' •
'sion.that be must...have ,everything hil 'meal; 5 Paiii.- Soule of the above ' "Don't Pretend to misunderstand.
the list4. which is, of course, ianpes- articles are not easily obtainable In I have heard .everytlring from : your
•" sible and undesirable. Each. section • all localities, and the MiXture: ahould landlady, who Considered it her. duty
of the country has its. zeen .local mill be Made with the ingredients at band to inform me forethe sake of. my -bee.
dittons, ,and to' Matter whole...the and considering coat.- -A- di ' mash nocent childl"o :. ' ' ., ... • -`
lt y 'der is located, he can find consisting of ground wheat, corn and It, now dawned Upon •Brian tbat,
sufficient Variety in - the ,foods at eats May be kept in hoppers where Mrs. Forrester was . alluding to the
hand to serve Inc 'needs. .1.1e should. the chick:cam go to it at will. .41. little business of the baby that had been
not be Misled into thinking that there granulated charcoal .: and cottonseed foisted Upon him. - •
• is a set formula Comprising a few meat Make- a •desirable.addition. to the Inwardly cursing Miss Mockton's
special :feeds, which is better than dry mas.h; the former sweetens the 'garrulity, and wondering. what .she
Any other combinatien that can be ,erop. and . aids digestion and the tat- had • said exactly,_he patielitlY: began
-secured. We make that statement ter is 4 good regulator. • ' , •: '. ' ' the 'story ' 'of,. his adveritures,:,..begina
. .. . - • . • ' . -.. • • •
- - --
. , , ,coveted the little:, Waif at . his . rooms
ring viritli the .night when he had dist
iaiSiValpikaMal&airealreatoaromanaeai with its. tiny hands; and.weeping piti•-•
fuilY. • , -`• .. " . ,up till that ,moineht.
, But Mrs Forrester' liatened : in
.Brian gazed at the little, intruder in stony silence, and icily repeated her
speechless aitonishrnent. .,. Bending request, that he • would never ,,call
dowato, examine this unwelcome guest again.. She. ,alpo iefused to, allow him
at diner quarters, he noticed a label oto .see Mabel, even for an instantrand
hanging from \\the fringe . of. the shawl returned him, Unopened, his last letter
in which. the • infant was wrapped:
, closer to, his neet-sighted. eyes Brian_bouse, but almost-limit-him—self 'lair
to • her.
,Quickly detaching this arid holding it • He needed•no third hint -to leave the
-s.,ea,,dr:le.a,s,e ,,v....pi_iy.Qa , a
• . the street, too utterly iniseeable for
Belgim refewgee." - . • • • • •
Pore • littel words and hot with indignation: ... r
. passinga tea-shop, he became. con -
'Rum sort of Spelling.: , More like scions' Of feeling,. _both_ ethiesty :and
.
Cockney. than ,artything elie!" he eXa• titeda he had eaten.- nothing ;.. Billie
hau.stedly into a chair. ts .think.
claimed, as he threw himself,' ex- morning; . • , ; • -..
,"What in the name of blazes ans I Having •seatedhhnaelf laid 'given his
to da with it?" he presently ejaculat-.,
ed, running his fingers 'through . his
hair, distractedly. ' , • . ..,
Suddenly an inspiration seized him.
VIVORS TIESPERIAN
JUST AFTER, THEY LANDED
. The above imapshot of a group of ifesperian survivors' Was •aai'wn jest
after tiboir landing at Queenstown, ,oy sir stanley liarOngton, Tra-
falgar, Cork, *lie scat a copy to Mr. join .W, Price, Toronto, an-
other survivor of the Wrgek, „.who ratitough net 'tn. the Vetere, yam
4 ,an *.terosted _spectator •at.-tire•tairie it' %atm.:taken. •
ettled
atcl SAVAGERY GROWS
AS WAR GOES ON
shammed dead, -when. a German officer
went round with a revolver and a
squad of men to • kill 'all the British
wounded. He gaw .the thing done.
Wounded himself, he sharnnied• dead
ezing .
his TEMFEE OF THE ' !BOHM IS, and so saved- hislife. Can Yon blame
!rut people -if they are getting savage ?•
"We have 4 long and a bitter War
ahead of us, and it locsks as if it
might become a wiir of extermination.
You in Ainerica are hapily outside of
04 crime' and misery, and we alera•
. ing England Will Cathie ' tainly do not Wish to drag yeti into
, ReactiOn. it We have got to . fight this quarrel
. • thrciu h, just as you had to fight; your .
- -' • ' - -- • --- • -Civil ar-throtEghl , bait it' is- going to ,
Professor John . D, Latvson, of the be a terribly tragic business. We are
University of Missouri; has received now pi•eparang 40,000 more . 4espitel ,
from a friend in England. a . letter beds, and ,more still will be recitired." ,
which describes ,the German savagery - , .1.' - •
and howzit Ws looked uPOn in England: THOSE -STRIPS- oi- 6oLifilt.
The writer is an- ex -colonial Governor,
an alitheritY on international s law, Wbat the Nartot•lir -Ribbons Mean on a 1
t.
whose acquaintance Professor Lawson
made at the.iriternetional law confer- . ' , . Soldier's Coat.. • , 1
1913; • .• ' he has won, So a small piece of the, ',t
p ss
'""Wilen a fnari is iii'lchalci, it is iiie.
o dole for him to wear the medals t
ences which he attended 'at laniden,
Perla and 1Vladrid in 1919, 1912; .encl
"As regards the war;- two things
ribbon on which the medal is siis00.0-- f
are eVidenti. First, it will 'be a, twig in-.
ed, and N;T'llich differs in•color,,aceind- a
and atrennous and eXhansting .war; g to the decoration, -is worn *De the* an
tecond,that .it will grow ineavagery*. tunic.*
left breast above the ,Pecket Of the I
Our people _ate getting savage, and By the colors -of these scrans a
ehere is a vasty temper about, whickAhl
.- of ribbon a civilian who knows any- s
rigi-,abont7Clecoratione can tell what. - g
and 'incidentally what campaiges, he 'i
had been through; for, *eery survivor, 0
of a campaign is awarded .a special s
medal at its conclusion. •
The Crimean' veteran Wo.uld wear a; /2
she •
non
RISING' IN BRITAIN.
Brian •Fordr§.hilethina
'.''elea*P.404174mitliitarelt
"One moment before' yolk have,
please, Brian. Mr. Forrester would
like a word with you," said Mrs. For-
rester, just a trine. acidly, as. the
•
arcieng-marawas-oh-the-point-ef-leav;'
Ing after having bidden • his fiancee
good -night and good-bye. • Be intend-
ed leaving London on business the
next .day. • - • '
'
• He obediently followed:. his. pro-
spective rito le4antlaw into' the din-
' Ing -room, where • her husband was
„.; smoking and reading; '
"Novi, Julius," said this worthy,
lady, with .a comprehensive Wave a
order, he took up a paper which h
found on his table. Quite meelianiea
y he seed:
her hand, which non command e paad to anybody restoring Alfred, of English prisoners- of war.
News of .Gernian Barbarities Reach-,
B ANI) F
01111)111111J/ -IJP TIE
TEAM- WORE IS NEwirmr) AXONGST THE BUSINESS 14EN
Strong ?lea ter 1VIovemeut to be InAugurated by Bankers and
Business Monier the Brifiging of the Gulf Between
'
the %mu People and the Farmer.
7-47' !•`-;e-14:cif)Teilcelnet,,),11:' tire
11. aP'4V- , IV4I'gilelePP.htz're sainefrP‘alf•PqYrentft .fil-tPrnSd: 7Z .' .
' . ;
,
' There •ate at least twice ai many "Plon9Y where You. get it, You will be.
people . living in our smaller eitiee;! able to 'get It where 701e.a.Pend, le '
towns and villages AS live in our fifty 1 • The second •.' great !Movement that
great cities. The home market of our should be inange.rated by the bankere
farming 'population living about thee ; And lewdness raga is that Ot bridging
. Smaller cities and tewh, s is lust twice ' the gulf whiele exiSte between the '
as great as the city! markets: Yet we town people nrui the ferleleeeTt•tnight
bear much Piet would lead one to }eel be, to the ,advantage of .perhaPe :one.
.heve that all of the people be. thieepepinn. in tete tbousand,M tbia caulk,. - _
.#00ntey40-10:fed.leithe producers trytoAte gulf Made' widen but '
' the farm are to be found in the great ..!40. Mare,. There., are many of' our
centres Where the high 004 Of • living j farmers,, and •seme Haring in Omar,.
.seerna now, more than ever, the ane who have been educated to believe •.
great NOV 'talked about, and "t� Ifii. that the 414 merehant is a thief and."
considered'' Yet, the home enerleet of i n,r0bhere and that the local banker Ile - '
.the taainer:-is his largest .., and beet ,.elnietei guilty of :i:harp' practices than: -.
nierkee, , right' at hi a door Where ha'f.theloan.oaric, of our ;eitiefr, . Theue-;..
tan" bring his produce every working :•egiehe fag thenl:de not e'en ' give the
day in the year and sell it to the'vene-i holne -merchante'n thence, fe• supply'
• anMet direct, without the .intet*tion : their wants,. MO, Wender the hOlike.
of any •neiddleznap•tivliatteever, and .enetchant 40e4 not .caeleer .the stock in ..
Wore therefor every `cent withouti vim •and qualjtt to Med the deinands •
any profit of conunission to any mid-. of some of :our communities, How
(Benno whatsoever. ' • , ban he? and why.ehotild he?) ,, • .
In these nine states "Wiaconsin • They send the Money- Away when
Missouri, „,lowa; Indiana, Michigan, • they have the cask and the home mer-
. . .• •
,leTeev York, Illinois, •Ohio and Penney'. chant is only of use and benefit when
yenta, 6,956, towns hale lost popula- the crops fait and when the price Is .
tion, notwithstanding the 'tett that the Kr ,loW thatethey bold for :a When '
population of the whole , country ht.' and in the meantime. the inerehant,be,
creased in the decade covered,11 per comes the 'barker,. in that be lends his. ..,
cent. Out of the 78 county seats in goods without intereat and often bore
these nine states; 217, or. nearly 23 rows the Money...from. you in °order to •
per cent. ,..of them, have lost poptila4: perform this service, Oar, farmer'
tion, though the county seat is in friends, out neighbors -best friends
many ways the centre of most of the . -have become . estranged- from . lq4l,,. ,
.4ctivitiesrof the county unit along the -•and the. inieginarY eine between the
line. of gpolitice, courts, _collection f country_ancl.-the•-towir ta-4--bartier to •
taxes and in othir directions. And, the prosperity and the co-operation, -
strange' to say, this tendency of the .and td the good of ate in solving this '
decline of the towns is "greetese in problem We Will not have to Work
Pthe richest and most thickly settled upon all of ,: our farmer friends, and
art of the states., . „.„.. .- ......, .- ..... -, 1 onr.neighbors; most Ok. them are loyal •
What does this mean to you and to, to us and to their own tewn, btli it is ' '
me, and to all of the forty '.inillion our dirty to co -Operate to stifle, everY. ••
-People. living In these towns? It nyiiertiont, working to augment this -
nes; sittilmi stat.seadnerr depreciation eilLitil:Iptioti? away :from his h . . should. ,
effoit-to-take-the trade of the farmer
per y NTIUQS in these towns; it means; enlist every influence to join with us. '•
a• depreciation lie farm land value, for i There.taka. great: quartet Of interest
the better the town the higher. the,in thiscountry,:which, if th011. 001.114
.11.1.tie there ie to the land because of he. brought together, and in: the end
Its proximity to the town; it means they will when conditions become tine '
ess deposits in your banks; it means "
hat you will have less money to lend
o the fanner and to the • businea
man. it Means the•bo s t ' going:i press and the:country paper... .
0 Stay in the towns; it Means that :The Moventent: inaugurated ,by the
he boy is .noVoing to --stay... on the bankers, looking to co-operation with •
arm unless the town affords,•aome other interests in the upbuilding and .
ttraCtioe; it means °cenobite ruin 'to :increasing of effietency of the. farm; •
any of our best .interests; it means" -is the great movement of the day. It
ncreased problems , for ' the country will not sueceed,ai the expense, of the,
nslestates in matters of handling our millions Of ,People and particularly .
Ocial and political preblereaeine .91111.-rnerchapts arid bankersibeatedin the"-.
reat'elties; it ineans concearatien • towns and smaller cities' They •ar.-- -
f businessevery - kind in the vitally interested and .should beeome : •
.. • •,
reat, centres; it rit.enns the downfall a Part and. parcel of a *great • joint
I the *- 11 ' ' as mari and the . movement that will increase'. the pro,.
mall 'banker; it ineane' seeialiein. ductiee ability, Of our farmers, You
What are we as bankets and busi- cannot hope le accomplish this
ess 'men' •
ou i
would work wonders for the goad of
all I refer to the bankers and the
budineas men of the towns, the farm
le-crtrs t•4° aSckmg '.6-erman .slueleS, medals a soldiee is entitled to -weal.
an incident of which we are Eal
ashamed. But this temper, especially
Of the women,, is rising. 'The causes
are cumulative, and are:.
"L. The publication,of the report -
and evidence on German outrages in
Belgium and France, and the arrival
in England of nuns who have been
:outraged by Germ,an soldiers. '
"2. The use of poisonous gases. •
. "3 -The -poisoning -O. -wells -in -Gu-
inan South-West Africa, the poisoning
of a stream with arsenic in Flanders;
and the placing of baccilli• in a well
in Gortnan South-West Africa.
"4. The airiking -orthe Lusitania•-•
• "5. The _Wadeg of bombs. in war-
ships by ..German spite or agenta
Four men-of-war are believed' to have
a. been blown up in this way; and Ports.
"One thousand thousand peunds reward Will
r •
to her huaband to, proceed, and an in:- Lincoln' ilatheyer&aged oneayeEta-and -"These,thtilarty-e-Wa'k'ing our pee,:
• ---,---vitatieeLte.:„Bilan7Fal.-• . • : • three•-therithi; Who wars . presumably- ple Mad With, rage, especially the' wo-
' .' -Ibilir, - e- -a• • • Mit, aslie half fearea at this - late •stoleri from bis borne, 129 Portarling- men; 4 ' • . .. . '
- "Weil, My boy,•". began Mr. Forrest::: retired for the night. ":- •
" • hour,. hip elderly, maiden landlady had: ten Place, W, on the ..night of August .
er, Coughing- apologetically, and ra- Re therefore' ran npstairs, three at dressed to:Cyrus .13fithover, Esq,• 129 -- "On :the •German• side thete ere ne.
, Germans Vertex's With Hate; .
• ' 1st. All „.commtinications id' be ad- • •
• ther nervously knocking the ashes a time -and - kneeked*:liet bed -room •Portarlingtori- Place; W." " . ' "•-
‘ • from bfs.piper ori •to. the :.bars of the door, first gentlY;then, receieing • • no • , on taking in the sense of this ad-
.. .
dications of:a fury of hate which
• grate, "We 'both think--.,er---ania- response, Mere persistently. Finally, passea comprehension. Take the fol-
.
. . unless you have Sortie prospect of wrathfully "elinfronted him; • '
mouth dockyard was •set on fire by Ei.
german spy. . ". •
"6. The shooting and ill-treatment
"I'll call_ el'd Mraekten,", he .cried,.
ushirig4Cathe-deor-"-
1:A.=
. • Oat is, my wife and I think, that Miss Mocicton opened her -door and
• shortly holding a better and more see; "Er-er-a baby has been left in
cure position, that--er-the •engage- my, morn. -Da. You know' anything
•• -went between' You and , Mabel bad-T,,,aboilt it? • stammeredBrian;'
:- - -
, , um -better -terminate:" -
I ' , .
, T "What did you say, Mr. Ford?" she
• Mrs. Forrester' nodded approving- demanded, in a voice of thunder; and
.1Sr• as, she turned her head towards a face as black as .night. e",A. baby?,
.
Brian and waited:for him' to :speak.- .1 Do / knew anything about it? And.
' The latter had flushed up painfully you don't know who left it? there,?"
• . at Mr. Forresterel words. . elle now shrilled; as she -started rue-
,
• ,gr nm naturally- trying MY hardest .ning cl°*tistaitl.,"her unhappy lodger
...._10_11,21mwie_nty_pinitiori,e he Terdiedi_fellowing-eloselarbehirithier.,
• ,after a short pause; • "and much • de- I • a.And where is this baby?" she ask -
Pends Upon the result of met journey' ed :dramatically, and as though allude
, through , the Midlands, upon which I ing to something highly objectionable,
. start_to.moriow.,„ , I whilst she flung open the doer ' of
• . "Very Well, then, we will discuss 'Brian's sitting -room with -the air of a
this again on your return in a fort:tragedy queen. • . -- •
•night's •tiMe.:!.._egreed...Mr.-Forresterat---WithhatApeakingiimpoirited.Rialfi,
' c YeleVed at being able 6 postpone the sofa where the poor infant lay now
•' evil day., ' , .. , asleep from sheet. exhauste .
Drawing herself Up to .•hev.- ' ter tell yer that yerebiby's .sife at sum
Brian, after a shatte rather stilted!' •
l‘ -full i 'Ouse near yoUrn, but i forgit ware,
general conversation • with , his host height, Mite -Meekten pointed to thel, 'eying bin to egsited at ther time tee
and hostess' wished them goed-nighte.slum,_kering child. -
and started off for his.' -digeinfeees- in • "4•'-a4° it alrly-ft-teleWmre-the-leetere spite yer iree in' orty nerse 'esi...Was
'• • ' maize ware i lefe'im. a Ala it tar
"-Mandeville Tereacet t.'.. - , ' lefirit thing .01 -Morrow -morning/. eshe, ere& -kipper at ther time, oo treeted
His refiletiOns on;the way were not cennrianded hauglitilee, "And if ' ; me ike dirt. 1 rote on a peece er piper
,
Of the pleasantest. He resented be. wish to remain bore,' she continued, 'ter sy 'e vai er BeIgun refew ,
. .
.•
Ing willed to order in this fashion by in a slightly more concilzetery tone, , i 'ope Pe's•bin treetecl kind.
Mabel's 'parents. Besides, his eaneee,! re °inhering how regular Brian had edore was open at the 'onse i left 'im,
• 'tliegeetereseet
. in
although devoted to him, was as -en&ellwaYs been in his paymonts, "rite& eo i jest shuved IViaster Elfred • inter
their hods, and he dreaded the let such a thingeiceue egainr, • . I ther fust rume i ore fine left 'ini. ' •i•
possibility of losing her. ne, wo f with all the dignitY she co Id - ' .
.
vertisement, Brian gasped. "August .lowing cases: - • ,. • ' ' '
1st! Ile had left Lohdon for Binning- - "1.• In the Heligoland fight a Ger
hamon August 2nd!" . man petrel officer was picked :out of
Rushing out of the tea.shop at a the water by an . English officer; :as
pace that greatly ser.prisefa taalaa,... _aeon Italie' could -recover breath he'
old young lady who was just about spat in the face of his reseuer. A blue -
to hand him his tea, he hailed a cab, Jacket;standing by them floored him.
Which soar! landed kink At 129 ikrbt '-`2.- A weehd,ed German °akar was
_itilington' Place. - • tended -an -the .field'by-an--Engli-4 iced
Iri reply to hie breathless aecoUnt, Cress •doctor, who, -did the first-aid
of what had happened at lia.roones on &Oahe& etc'. As . soon as the doctor's
the night of August 1at, Mr. and Mre. hack Was turned the German pulled
Cyrus; tatbovet, wealthar---Ameei '. , outalie--revolveraihd-ohot• the doctur
Whe bad only on the previous day re- in. the back.' -
turned from the States, and who Were "3: A Gernian destroYer had cap -
almost too. agitated to utter a -Word, tuted two English. officers from a
handed him the following letter,'which• •mine -sweeper. • The Germans were
they had just reeelved froni • a kW:: chased bY.British destroYers and re-
lery-maid, who had been discharged tinged to a sinking condition.' They
oh A11311.14. 1st:. ----,, ,4^.7 J.acked : theAr:•;,P,4490.14.*Attkez---abin;
-"Mieter-un'2Vilielii HathOVer,-i am suriendeeed, and *ere ..rescued by the.
now startin' for Australier, an' -write English, but said nothing about the
t,
What
. at crease by in any war crippling- that
ribbon with a broad, ,light blue stripe does your home town most neede great, body Of put people who-ard the. .
between two narrow yellow. stripes. 'First •Of* all, it needs team work„. co-. nearest to, and the only ones to whom'
e%eniryignilitedbael-rmibebnotnioniehde hzteiptehsat . b
are operation, first amongst bankers and the 'farmers' as a class go to anada.
and secoed, by. all. of
vertical. The naan who fought in the • _these -and •""the 'faieniege•Oorninnilitiee
Indian-FititinY woad ' Wear three about us. There are tocemany bank-,
White and tare red stripes placed alter.: 'erA and business men in these...Owns.
nately, in the , Egyptian eataroeiga who are disloyal to each other --.1a leek
three blue and two „white stripes donfidenee exista. ComPetition-and
-placed alternately, in the- Matabele- tidiness. rhialry have tended- ;te make
campaign' Taut orange and three bine
atripes, in the Sudan a bread Yellow - aenneanicioes.wlifialeL, .The local drygooda
rather that friends
and broad black sti•ipe divided by Et Mari cannot suPply,.the.waras of the
narrow red stripe, and in the South bankees wife and °family because his
African campaign, for 'which • there iteek is hot fine enough, hence they
are_two 'medals, tee; twe blue, and. trade by mail or visit the dePartinent
an orange stripe, or a. green, white, store. 'Let •m -e ternincl such a on
and orange sr.tr_:.ipthe,enibm6411.,s,4n-ecia," tihat "a town that is good enon he to
ve m is good. enough to spend your
was awarded by • King Edward. soon
after his mother's •death in 1901, and money M." If you cannot spend your
Tx-is:prey where yen make it-' you are
the latter, kn:own as the King's, in sacking the life blood :our '. of our
1902, to, be *ern in additien• te the
Queen's by men -completing; eighteen -tewn 41111.7911 ought, la move. ,The
la/lineman and the .hardwareenter-
menthe' service in South Africa 'dui'.
ing the war. , The Sedan medal was chant and their families are just 'as
awarded by Queen Victeria in 1898 to often ,guilty of the same practice, and
the men Who carred out the 'opera- then theriVtinder why the town does
tions' under Lord Kitchener; which led not iniprove, and. their business pres-
to the te-eonquest of the Sudan. p,er. What inducement, let me , ask,
Apart item :thee:foregoing aapaiaa‘ !orexample, is -there for. -the local dry
there are a number. of special deeota- goods Store to carry in stock goods
tions. . The ribbon eccomPanying, the fine 'enough for the banker's, the
Victoria. CrosS, the most coveted of lumberman's, and the bardWare
• „._;_deborationsr,,tn. .73ant!ifarnil Whateiret.--ThiS
• - .
crimson for the at and blue- for the • being often the ease, how . can :the
navy; the Khedive's ;Star ribbon, is• .banker expect - the merchant, 'whose
plain Wire; that of the Long' Service- •note he holds,:to meet .his obligations'
and Oo t . , . ,. •
instituted ' by • • Milian IV., a,nd is onTY ineans° whereby- he. ynay bp. able
., . • 'el ton--away-froi '
Awarded after eighteen years' service to ',meet them -his profits... on. goods
in the British army, and carries with sold. to. his neighbors. '•• ••• • .. A . ' .
..it a gratuity •Of ,$25• on ' diseharge..is• The whole. questioe • ia -.summed. tiri
plain red; that •of. the.thedal. for Dise in and ateted in the • following from.
tingifished Conduct on the Field; which , one 'whnieas at one time the editor of.
carries With it a gratuity f tine
. . . ..
eselittereiVeFen increase o 1 Cents
a •day on. the. echelon, es 'two red end HOW HE LosT HIS FISIL ,• - • !• -The fisherman eindiged 'seine' dise '
. . •
one Nue stripes, while of 7R.oberts' ' , .. •• • ••• ----", -- --- '' -;
• • •tance farther down theeetreenit• ,Miclee e .
pend upon for..Assistance and•co- opera-
Eitinn in -times of extremity. It is the
Preblene of. to -day, that of feeding .
this nation, which is already, a con-
tunaing rather than a producing One.
To this cause \the- -merchant-a. and
business Men :Of tie town e pledge -
their eaenest seepport. • There. :are .
inore. than **.a , millioh of them, They ;
ask in.return reciprocity% oil 'the part
of our neighbors and faimere larder,
that, peace, happiheas, and° presperitsr
may be. the •portion of. all alike. . -
Our fourth, great aim' should be, in
xier_to-Preser•voakirselves;acrer-centa---7
munities and those about us, tO be --
come conimpnitY builders. Cemmunity
builders to the exfeht of blotting rout
the Corporate limits, atendieg the
.fluence of the cOnienercial-club and tlie
•-bilsireara -citganiiiitiond to cevee the
country surebunding. It had been my •
privilege. the meat of my .life to4eva-ie,
a conimunity,Which to a ' large extent „.• -•
has aceonailished this thing: We have
found out by ea -operation' on the.pArt
ef -the banleets' and -the -.Inatiness men
th4 the farming tenimunity about us :'
was: in heartir sympathy with eve,rY. .
effa2rt. meet _conditions. in and oat of -
town, arid ..Mhere 1 have lived, and
What we as merchants arid bankers
have done is being:repeated through.?
out the Country. Man
come awa -ened to the Situatien:
they are inviting co-epetation; they
are seeking light; therare spending
money; they are doing ev'atything •
-that fa possible in -their pqwer to•
promote the feeling of friendship,
and •eo-operation with all elapse%
-
two English/nen' leeked"in the e---ehing ' Ster :which bears the -- . el
um s, • Anew . '
e„ , A Fielierman Rad ;Aie Eeperience I scrambling to -the bank, backed 'back: 1,
whe weie left to drown.
"4; Two aviators, to Kandahar,: 1880." ha e One' red one 1 ' with a Hear. ; I :There on the pine, sat' the bear, in. • • '
Gerrnani were I yellow and • one blue and to %I 't ' ' • ' . e
rescued by a Ilietish patrol boat" Me • • ' ' „ ' e• el, e i ..Aii leneteener wee spending lard firat- d. , d. .
: tently watehieg the ..hole•ieheie he! had •
'the reeoith -Seii They were ' _ _ • _ ,i-
gIven.1 ._ --..---- .T. --.--,---±.-,..'er--...---...---. , .
. . - - ,-- *inform her:that he wee not there, but.
Tood;.--d-rP:-elething, etc., aid as seal f AuRemeA wAs Fta:RED:. , i good opportunfty to indulge in his , tn,„ .. .
as they reeevered from tenet exhatee
, .
' favorite sport 4 trout 'fishing. One "ae zei camp a oo espee .
t d d
—.........40.-..„.....-L,a- •
strtpcs; - .
oununer m.the_weat-where-be•had elieededeelet gte:ba;?k-
tion broke • out into abuse •of their ' Aneients Leeked U • i.Uni It as
415. A• 'German °theory eaptured ttf. I. • • '
lei f I ; '
• re 111--• Slaila' 10) • ' • - for camp. with n beaVy string' of .fisTi t The mirita. ie: cem' wet ' '6; a Steteet
nmer. et. atterneen he bad been tfliusualirsue.
..
.. ,
.
reSeners. * . . .
. - . •
. . ..
ceis.-ful- but lust as be wits setting mit • Canif(ira Shot Threligh the Aire':
,, . , . .
ter the poison episode.; laughed nt the.' Marty people believe thet the abrora
.. ..
.. he caught siglIt qt a_:groat jaine Iliitt_ni141. Ka matit is .cui•ricd by, a roeaei
toreeres,'a t ,.
he. peeeereen sefferent,, hoeeetis is -a--eyhenornouten -neenther
• . . •
to, ' luid-hlown• downa and was lying • with - • = • 'tI ' • ,
I) fan nelson • • From all acc th
she now made way to the "Gwen °len Irene Ones.'" torttv-ee eee'hot•Pole. • 4111
except for Mabel, quite alone' in the, ter, h ' Before could realize it his .
world. At the outbreak of war hi h d door. :In vain 13
ore to was once more being Wiled off to
' ! -- offered to niece lehaSelf at the•seirvice I indnee her to read the label. he held) Birrnirigham With Mr. and 141m. Bathe
• bf his country, but was rejected owe! in• hie' head* . dhe merely shook her over, where, on their arrival, Master
lag te his defective eyesight, ' • . I
"I'm hanged if there is anybody exe In !elisolute despair, the unhappy , delighted parents:
Alfred Hathoier was restored to his
•
head incredulously and waved him off, I
cept Mabel, IVIni wants Me at all,"
• • he men imploted her, at leest, to lee hirril More0Ver, the father's gratitude
, muttered as,, having readied home, he i have some milk for the behir, hi case ' for the .kirithiesi and eonsideration
turned the handle of his sitting -room 1 of a 1'0011're-flee ' of • the . screaming . "
door. •Should it awake.
"in the !oder!" wad the day 'con
'
'
S CAM to hisSW) 'Was so great
As though in protest to, his state- 11,000, he also offered Brian en the
• trient, a low, wailitig cry greeted him, Cession he could drag from her, and spot a prominent 'position in the firm
Which inereosed in voluine before he .with this he was forced to be content. of Cyrus ki. RethoOer and Co. ,
had time to rush to the sofa front 1 Ile tilmoit decided to 'take ° the child And lest, )nit not least, thanks to
Where. the ieund emanated. 1 to the tweet' Police etatioil, but Was the "Ilelgun Itelewitee,w Itriap toord,
.1 somebody, flicked; weetee him et .efreid that, the endleee inquiries this '
,in addition to the 'reward' of
Lost Moral lialarice.
these are merely sit/Mies o
hundreds. of cases, and they shot
that the Genoa% Must:have lost thel
moral brdanee. The teeelt must be in
exeased bitterness' on our side and
grewth of savagery. em. sorry, leti
what is to bee de/ft ? u
• "My eldest sop "wad Entorigirt the
thitatir soels:,111 Afrierin ileser
.when they came to the POisoned teals
and were fetbiddere to drink,. -My
'locoed Son woe -in the fleet that wig
trieked into allowing his brother-0Ni-
e •,enodern times, But this is not true.
The wickets used to cat it ehasmate,
bolides, and trebes, names which ex-
pressed the .different colors. of the
ligh,te, "The scarlet aurora was looked
on by the euperstitioue barbarians as
an emen of direful slaughter; se it is
not unusual for deseriptione of
bloody -
battles to contain allusions to northern
lights. In the , Anna's. of
110150 it it is recorded thateiri C,88
aeComesneying' terrjhle battle be-
tween 1Leinster and Munster, Ireland,
a purple aura% lit•the northern skies,
foretellifig the slaughter.
The bellows of the otetin in Seville
Cathedra are Worked see -saw by tt.
man. walking up raid down a long
plank. • • • „ .
t at ire:intent, for there lay 4 little,' eenree evonid entail nught delay a 111abled e elm his wife in the tem to clrowneetrieked by the seerecy
. ,
Alt/11110de hat% gestienlatifig wildly Journey. , .„ peroon of :Miss Malyel Porrester.* end tretieheey of ehe testued Ger-
•* • • London ; Answero,
causie waa wounded and
,"
•
r
cape la neh vs.to plica
its top iit the wiitari:aant the plaf,e Ogrtip'hed. The, toeket, twentY feet
tor heating a Monstertraut. • ; • - long - and aveighing; fifty peunds, is • •
• rushing along te 5811,:m Aim), he • mama ed on apecial support Which iq.
elinibed upon it by 'dint. of hard eraieed to the degree necessary ahit
scrambling, holding en as, best hp 1 alined by motes 0. eighte, tied the
couldevith his ted ie 'one hand and his , eleettitally ignited peWder charge
shit* of the other.no tree !,carrtes the reeket OA height of abollt
"was etese to the bank, and tht stream i.g,opg feet. As it turns to fall, expel'.
Was running bank NI. He•was •in the:, sure is !mule be an electro-pneumatie
midst of the btanthes, erOwding on- 'shtittet, worked. by a -steal' battery. •
award,. when suddenly- an imineesebeee Directly. afterward a parachute .opens, •
_rose, up ,elose bade the camera thirty feet above the .
• There Was hesitation.' To ,runerocket, and the whole apparatus falls
was. impossible. . On the inipulse ' gently .to the ground. Very distinet
the moineet theme daehedhis string pictures seven hullos square are eli•
of trout 'in the beer's rem In tabled. •
tieing se he lost his baltuteeetind the • •
next instant there Was a tremendous , %What the shrill Voree of; the pea -
'splash, told he diseppeared . the; eoele is beerdo chango.of wenther.es .
oshing'watei. ..
. . • $e
• , A
. •
•,"
•