The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-18, Page 74
e.
,
illged, resplendent pair lail0 eat there
Ilade bY aide! eyeing One Another fond.
3L4 11 LATuJy, With thew grey heads close to
AN NE ye R gether. Lenten etered itt them curi-
tr,4
tobrooletiti:now,gi;ia;k144;t4:4
"What' s up?" be inquired.
"IVO the fonnieet thing I ever eo- 1utCarstaiM -.Merely -Iceleed
, inetieoer happening at tleeerrayele trifle graver than ueual, then eladied,
Ret," said Velger little Tenney awl seirehaetily:
Longton, grinning* I "Let' go in. It dome% event quite
Mise Islierwood'e Select' , hoerding far to stand bac prying::
Metablielefeentat Seedelteeie known :They went in, and as they entered'
to the irreverent as the Travelleed the parlor., Longton, *beet:vie* close -
Ret, leeeaufht„ n Some • mysterietue ly the faces Of the honeyntoeners,
WRY, it has become a haunt of meny saw the SAM° 100k of etzeprised recog-
bagetten, wboeatronese it Oita en- !onion reflected in 'them that he had
.
eeeeng 0 brief periods of relax -
tion.
----"Whaleeenier Weedthe' now arrive
eh Carstairs.
• An attack of nereete, dee to the , too. his Is indeed an IltleXpeetefl
war fever,: fled &Nen him. for a few eideaSere. Row are you both?",
'brief days from town, and he wete not I Longton, watching • intently,
.- in the Most aMiehle of nleode. Saw tbe old eaan ruddy eountenance
grew, perceptibly pale, whilst his
'Wife etrembled eleiblY, in her
looking Peek -stricken Afla :Shame-
faced,' But, womanlike, she was the
rnif.tiee'riceafer Inerielf
geve .Caestairs her hand. Then she
dragged her huebaneAo'hie ieeteand
'they .alithree began to Milt in hurried
undeetones: . • . ,
Longton, pressing leeward eagerlye • •
Just helield.inehehfa.ee of his felend.
.''Able-.11/feee-reee.r1"' "terietk 'Caestair
greeting ..the,Old man. Th he turtle
ed to,? ,old lady, "..4u4 Mrs. rr.grer,
. "It'r, enough teenalie cet laugh,"
cried Tommy, beginning to 'vibrate
,gently from the imees. upward. , °But,
Yoti haven't !Nen them." e
e-----ni_eeleheneYnteencoetteeee. - • ;
hOle„they're the sanie eireryWhere,
.• honexmoonere areee- eitaide VaTatairei-
Pi*Ing. ,
"These `area% ;though," returned
:Longton, "These,are quite a new
hoe in sweet young things."•
Why. didn't he postpone his
. neaniage awhile; and dere the khaki?
This is no erno. for .'sweet young
• thingsl"?' • • -' •
they're not realty voting; an
cotildret' enlist: if he tried. He can
do nothing but tell her.how neuele be
• levee her.
eAnd you listen at the keyhole?"•
'ele need to do anything of that
• sort, my boy. They're Proud of them-
seiveet There's no false shame in
theme thau_ thereisinee-,-heace---eof
doves.'Carmedlingethey are all day.
Kissing and squeezing hands. °And
WAS MIJRbER OR MISS CAVELL ANY WORSE
,
THAN BRUTAL SHOWING OF TORONTO BOY?.
-
•
tii$S .. MSS
Milltlt
leenceenioreeta texeoution oh -Vete -Tavola than over similar • siootings of
saYe Jane Addams 010).104g04•AbOVO ShOWU Eiigftqii nurseTbratgy\ abet'
leY trio triertualis! end. Jete. David-Xoneur-of tfarriert-i:Trtie,t; Tor onto, who was shot to death., while ;
• ".N,,vom240d uuu--u -gris-Oner in the hands of the enemy. The man' who shot him did so by 'phieing *be
muzzle ot the gun right against, the 'month:led 'nuon's body hegore the trigger,
•
, .
4 • 1 • PUIflhg
was in time to overhear the WhisPer- me It. ielarY, , chem. 'now!" And he
ueelleaster,Garstairs!" And ehe urge '
ed Words; ."Buteplease don't tell on 81100h hie Venerable head at her tally-
. , . S 0 FEA
, , ,•
•
,.
.-ept tone. of this cm* ePlIfeal weed . The 04140 laughed out with glee;
greatly to increase ilia clarioliity., , i .q., were', an' that be a fectee she INIIC FI
, wym hay,3• met' Wore, thehe".eaid eeilfeeeed, , a faint blink stabling her•
Vies, Xsherigood.,:',as-#•thi Neweeemrs faded ',Weeks: "Ay! Well, `better
took 'their places, at the table: . late than never, Jane. I says to he. An'
owe are very old. friends, indeed," so we mom. away. An' new" -she
answered Carstairs cheerily. "Born grew suddenly grave as she levelled
in the seine village:" a knuekly forefinger at Carstairs -
It was plain, howeverethat this eta- w Y, it be better late than at the pro- Doctor Says That All Diseases
.
e •
*teeter had damped. the spirits of the Pee, toime, I find!" -London Answers. ' , Be Greatly Benefited
honeymooners considerably. Thy
werenoinnocently : gay and
HYPNOTISM.' NOW ii.4.04RD AS
: "AII).„TO 'MEDICINE. '
fond. .There, was 'aesheclow of on-
straint between them. And Longton,
my love and emy pet' to one another, as soon as-, he could, drew. Carstairs
out aloud,. as if they were. on the'
"lerell,e1A0 .eakh "whet does. it all
mean?"
rather.---" faltered' Carstairs.
"It's hardlyeee-- But, .perhaps, •as
You're going away to -morrow, I may
as well tell you. Its rather -rather
.awftzle really. You see, they're both
married people."
"Ariy fool could see that -very
much mairied."
• • "Yes. But what I mean is they're
not a newly -married couple on their
honeymoon as you suppose. They had
been married years already When they
decided tO come on this little jaunt
together. And her husband and ' his
wife are. still aliveei • _ • e
Longtonee eyes goggled. `
• "Do you 'mean to tell •That?
That those old dodderers, ' at ' their
age---.-." stammered.
• "It's thCOnly, age they've got at
present," said Cariteirs mildly. .
"Don't be weeper exclaimed Long -
ten. e And then he began to tWinkee
and smirk as a full realization' of the
amazing wickedhees of this aged -pair
began eto dawn on his fat -witted con -
stage, and rather wanted you to ap-
• plaud." ^
"Well, good luck to theln, anYweYt"
said Carstairs indifferently. •
"But, my dear. fellow," Longtcm ex-
• postulated,. "you don't know how old
theyeare. Thee Seventy, must be if
hes a. day; and zhe is, perhaps, a
year yeunger. Regular old Farmer
• hayseed he is, • And' she -well, I
• - - should -oak she's• dear, old motherly
soul -widow, ieckon, when he mar-
ried her. And, really, if it wasn't all
..e• so I don't know that I wouldn't
- enjoy watching those fussing one
another up and earrying on for all
' the , world like twit epoons in one sau-
•cer. • The very first day they came,
. the fun started." -
"AMP' e • •
I've been laying up here all
. the week, you know -been seedy -
and so I. have seen it all. It. wasen a
Tuesday afternoon they arrived, in
thelocal hatteom cab,/ with the glass
• • down, and with her/ wedding trous-
seau In a big, tin box, that hampered
the cabby rather'in his' driving
-I don't mean the cabby, but the new -riotousness. "r Would never have he-
.
• husband -wore. a tell, white beaver, lieved it" he spluttered. " Ton my
curly' and shiny, that 'would fairly graciousi-etutethis-makesethe-whole
the fortune -of a-- Muste-hall affair funnier than it was beferel"
comedian. One of those tiles with a
.
rim to it that go about -three times
round to the mile. 41-nce with a frock -
coat on -Well, 1 never rightly kriew
•' why they , called them frockcoats be-'
• . fore! And shepherds plaid pante-
. loons-ezantaleonse is the word -and
n _green silk waistcoat, sprigged With
pink roses, and a bed -valance tie; and
lavender gloves, and yellow spats, and,
oilcloth. bootie' • '
. e."And the jade?" •
' the -lady was a' bit, of all right,
too! Wore one of those okefashione
ed :white silk skirts, with thin green
"You'll not breathe a "vvora, -though,
will you?" . ' . •
• "My boy-,'.'. Longton answered him
with a, long-drawn-out wink, • "Ill be
a living tomb about it!"
"If you utter- • a syllable, mind,"
,Carstairs said, 'Pm very much afraid
-that side -line I spoke to you about,
you know -I should be sorry--"
"That's all serene, my dear old
chap! You rest on me!" said Long-
ton. • •
. Presently there Was- sonie .musle,
and Tommy Longton, who travelled in
pianos, was called upon to yarap- ae--reaches- tO the uPpermosteparte ieRseles.and
BELL:HORSE' ' Persuaded him to enlist.: .
rier-Veinilioroughly-By
, over with jingle -jangles, like a Christ- with his old' friends.. saddened him jeCteti, like myself. ' Nevertheless, in "You probably do not realize that 2,000,000 gallons of water. ..
mas-tree. They are all the world like ,to see. that 'they still looked downcast New Zealand, as elsewhere, there your brain or mind controls the Muse A ;partridge was shot in ea . slikee
'Punch.' ' And the tabby grinning at "It's quite all right," he informed more proud than any • win:4 can say
two people out of a back number of and uneasy. •
'' . are 'shirkers:" , However eve eel eles, nerves and blood yessele of your
entire body, hut it does.' Just the tree 'in the centre of the business dis-
trict of Fredericton, N It Was sent
e AN ANSWER. TO T1FIE,,KAISER. • - '
• • e -If NotoCireed.. ;
•
Hypnosis as a Medical aid has
,What the Swiss Would Do In Case of extremely popular with -author.
playwrights duritte the last
German Weston. ! years, being set forth suceessf
The bragging of the German Gov- and interestingly en, two brilli
ernment has caused a gobd deal of plays, "The Sbadow," by Nicode
uneasiness among the smaller neutral and in Belasco's "Case of WOW:"
nations, lately, but it is certain that In "The ShadoW" a woman who
if the*Huns were to attempt any more been stricken by paralysis goes fr
violation Of neutral territoey they physicien to physician beggieg tle
would ineet with it very Warm recite to restore ,her to health so that
tion. A very good story, bearing on may have her husband's affection
this veree question,. is told of an an companionship, instead of synepa
'sever Made to the Kaiser by a• certain and mere pity. Her happiness is ne
Swiss officer of high rank Not long complete, but 'her health is resto
.before war broke out the Keiser was by means of hypnotism Wore the
peesent at some drills performed by ,AI Curtain, • - • *
a portion of the ' 'Siviss Army. He ! • ,fin the "Case of Becky"' the patie
eves evidently very much impreseed a Young girl, has a number of ' d
by 411- he. saw and especially by the Metrically opposed natures. Af
high quality of the shooting. "Your consulting many physicians
to
Men are certainly \wonderful . shotst avail, she contee upon a'nerve speci
said the chief Hun to an officer ist, who treats her by hypnotis
standing by him. "They score a bull's ane he blends . the diametrically 9
eye every time!" "Yee, your Ma- posed personalitiea- one hap
jester., and we have 100,000 such shots personality.'•
in the Swiss Army," was the reply.' Dr: Heldring:Fabrichis says: 411Vt
Then the Kaiser assumed his usual,• tutpal way in proceeding in tree
arrogant and fiwgggering manner. ments consists in getting the confi
"But suppose I invaded you with 20Q,-, dence,of my patients and making the
000.soldiees?" he asked half -jokingly, thoroughly. believe in rny 'method
expecting, no doubt, that the officer treatment .Then 'make the p
Would pay him 'Acane complinierte•But tients go through a set of, exercise
the officer was equal to the oecaeion, which I demonetrateferthemeeThes
eeTen -that -caseie-your majerityee lie-eiiiiexerciies are fist, . Active; seem
swered quietly-, "we should each of Passive; third, exercises of; relaxe
us fire twite!'" ,
I tion, -which consist of' eiereises unde
,the patient's control and hypneeic -ex
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND ercisei which are under the opera
• tor's niental contra°
caw
:
been
and
few
tiller
ane
nie;
•
has
Ont
em.
ehe
and
thy
ver
red
fin-'
„
nt;.
b.;
ter
no
al-
PY-
t-
d-
of
a-
d,
Proud.' of Their Heroic Sons :and Brain Controls All.
Brothees. "r wait until the Patients are thor-
, _ • .
Australia and New Zealand have• oughlY relaxed, and often talk to
wide a most honor bl them to
• • • v „ • ,
#`Alletber Patient came -t9 Me suffee-
ing,. foie acute stopack.: trouble
caused by ulcers,: .1 -ler tongue - was
paralyzed .at ,elmee. I ,gava , her
tWenteefivetreatments,and she is•now,
a healthy girl. Iler sister,was'eUffhre
i eafness of the tight ear •
aimed by a catarrhal condition in the
head, giving rise to meny -headaches,
which. lasted sometimes as long as
two or three weeks. After a num-
ber of treatments, her catarrhal coneditjon . e
• improved_ancl caused her head-
iteehes to disappear and 'hearing to be-coine w
normal. A pronounced con-
sumptive under my care forgot the
'name of the disease and
Gained Thirty Pounds.
"Insanity, nervous trouble and
heart trouble have all responded to
this' cure.. The mental trouble call-
ed insanity is a .condition in Which
the circulation in the brain is the „e
same is when a patient is, a -semi- ee
tandarf*ing Canadian Eggs.
Prop% present indicatione It Would
appear that one of the Meat impor-
tant.developmente to date in the 2m-
Prorement of the Canadian 'egg trade
wat3, 007 nctiolf tabu by the Canadian
Produce Associatiozt la t
4
i'll"41"It' a, •
are peoeided in the first, ela0S, threat
in the second, and two in the third.
The grades in the "Fresh Gathered"
class' are "Speciale," "Extras," "No,
_Vst' VIsTe. we Thee grede-"Spee
*els" othitted ,from the'"Storage"
Y1ntrin 1: c ass, and both specials and extras
adopting defirtite*enderate for Vane -
hitherto each Market and inenlost
Inarkets each, dealer Lied a system ef
gradhig peculiar to hie own trade.
This ,reseitee in endlese eorifueion to
th
from the class ter "Cracked eed Dir-
ties." •• • •
"Specials," according to the seance,
anis are eggs of UnifOrni Bize•
weigh-
ing over 24 ouncee te. the ,dozen
.aver 40 pounds net to the 30, dozen
eOneerner, and great defficulty was case; abSOhltelry, 404044 Stre/Ig: arid
experienced at fireis en the xart, of, 0 ound Ale.iiildr;,C41.-4Maili-lopt OVeri--
',Sawa-gory -87tif Of an inch depth; ',Otto of
;:inelFtlet*LsPtin4tdAkitaXdPimSrpPtfo"rr;a7 Qite:4 as vt nc wYe4ies‘:12'hirg'44!e-ate:1,ciairre:*.en41::eb:1:684°'saane,:adelefle93r.tegeilkie,4int-'1ii•-e;e:
products ' the Live „St* Branch . of
thei,Dominion Dep4tment,of.:410,ricui.. dozen or 40 pounds net to. the 80 dot.'
tore has- erideavored , poems el eri ease; clean, Mind AO; air cell
pamphlets, placards, and other meanee lessthanee of an inch hedepth; with-
altountvpo pthnee t ystandardsasi4fi bote..e egvabee and yolk Yolk:
also. been-1;00nd, 'prominent among 'least aaeuea. ceeeSto . t4seb' d°4zie44i'lerzis4a4;"
ePeratien of exhibition aesociatlen has • !W0'...„ a.f.4 0=0 • liefgh#It at
whieh' has been that of, the..Canadian pounds
Natioeal Exhibition Aseociation at eicane "alla in air e141 than
ArlYinefirhzAig; depth;Y01 visible white htft eInggoleXi leea,:tro
stuck to the shalt or seriously out of
PlaecNeo...„2,40 eggs
o.iesu., sound
'shell; may•contain weak we'tery eggs,
and eggs With lieavy yolk, a 'all
other eggs sound in shell or
feed.
Constnners, in order to p
themselves in the matter of pu
frig. eggs, should acquaint them
with these standards and the
definitions of the grades.,
**eating a demand for eertai
of egg d will the supply be'S
ing, and the demand Can co
with a- thorough knowledge
part of the ctinsumer as to w
stitutes the various, grades,
also been frequently sugges
since the adoption ----of :of the
consumers generallyein. order
guard thezeselvesewould do w 11
sist that alt eggeeaSeaffereeefor
be labelled in • accordance with
proper geadet
Producers, • to), would' do We
more systematically 'grade their e
before marketing, and, knowing de
nit*. what they have in hand,.there-
byhe in a better' position to demand a
psurpicepi-ine:17neneeereteewietz--,teum_ quality
'hose exhibition in Toronto this• e
An response to prizes offered, probably
the largest 'collection of eggs ever
biought together he' one exhibition of
the American continent was displayin
-
4, Some 7,000 dozen in 'admen, on
exhibition. The prize list for eggs
as prepared in accordance with the
standards, and .the judge's inade their
awards according to,the accuraeY 'ef
the interpretation, on the part of the
exhibitor,. of the definitions of the.
various grades. ‘. '
At a number of .exhibitioris .where
no ' extensive eleaSee for eggs have
been offered, the Live, Stock Branch
has made a display of eggs Wed. in
cordance with the steedards,andin
ch instance has supplemented' the
display -with actual 'demonstrations in
a candling .hooth specially 'designed
for the purpose, of the way in Which
egg* of the various grades appear
when 'candled.
sleep, in- which .they ezeiTee in ea
----„-
.their abnormal condition the vagaries
of -dreams, which they see enacted
and try to enact themselves', One of
my most. interesting cases •was that
of a woman sufferinvfrom' religions
irisanity. • Time and -tegain she Wait
declared insane until Iltook .her in
• bend and treated her With hypnosis.
She is now mentally steel*. ;
"We: know. what, influence a soft
hand liageon a tired head. We know
that drowsiness and sleep depend on
sluggish and diminished. blood pres-
aure-iaretheelipe In hypnosis the
same causes are at work, ;the same in
fainting, fn •somnambielierie and cata-
lepsy, because they are all different
degrees of brood pressure in parte of
the; brain. Yen may be so frighten-
ed as to turn pale while you feel your
nerves shiver and your lips chattdr.-
Sndden emothen of joy or- fright
creates the earne effect
"The norzeal stale of circulation of
the. blood and the throbbing Of the
'nerve' centres means health. When
any of- these channels are weakened
or clestriayece disease in some part of
the organism; or. the hole' organism
is bound to •be the iegult. There are'
many ways of trying to quiet tired
nerves 'in • a diseased body, but the
simplest' and ehe. most natural-. is to
• In -order' eheit the corieumers and
Producers generally may become more
familiar with the• various classes and
grades, the following explanatien is
given:
. Three •general classes for eggs are
provided under the standards, vize-
"Fresh gathered," "Storage," and
"Cracked and Dirtics."__ Four grades.
From the Ocean Shore
BITS OF NEWS FROM •THE
elARITIME PROVINCES.
_
Items of Inrest From. .: Place.
Lapped By, Wavee of "the
' Atlantic. •
• eeing's College, Wind*, N.Se has
55 studente.'thie year, '-as compared
with 65 a year ago. • - • •
An American -sportsman shot a
, a e and sacrificial em o get them into a receptive reduce the blood Pressure and create .moose in the Tebique woods, N.E.,
offering to this war. Aecoriespondent 1..horMal circulation-• by: meane '
ee which had record etztead orantiers.
mood; Now, whether I- induce- hyp-
writes:-"I send you these few lines
nosis at this point or•not depends' on strong , personality wokle It measured 62 inches.
rem a far back sheep -station ,among the. condition of the patient, In either
.the New Zealand hills.' I assure you easel speak to them .such Weeds as A blind man at Halifax topic 'a 're-
eruit to the recruiting station. • He
that the throb' of emotion of patriot- these: eI want nu to.relax all . your had Met- the man on the 'street and
weaker -one, as done in ,hypnotiantand
autoz:siiggestion-in- the right' ditece
tione*,,
- --threads in -it, end a purple_ frounce .coznpaniments to ohe and eh -other of eif theeen,leiee. Every man of eligible doing this you will quiet your netves,
- over bodice, and a ,bonnet hung
round the hern; and a perple cross- •the party. Carstairs ,took advantage -age On this station is either on. the You will'seffer less pain arid get' well secured the • contract for a dam at
Messrs. A. R. -d. -Clark it Sort have
all of his Pre -occupation to have chat list of those accepted or has been re-
. • faster.' \
•,, •
A'. White Animal .Nearly Always.Se-
- • lected to Lead °Mule -Train. •
A necessary part of every Arney
mule -train is the bell -horse He ear-
e„.....lewtsciously--eorttroiseyoureheart' ae ion, t
ses_father (extremel
Le and a cleae-esozinding •bell,onansid-
Glen Palls, N.B.,. -which will 'hold
thein till he tickled his ears with the them. "There -was only one man here of our heroic sons and brothers, and seine as Your brain or mind uncon-
corners of his mouth: e kind o' smil- -Longton-who mi h‘ ape to Victoria. Hospital.
edeaeleitemyeelf:" . e truth, and ve 'put, hint off on Capt. C. T. Kno'tylton,. cemmander
of the fishing peotective steamer Gel-
. "I Wonder miss ieherweod •took an entirely false scent now;•soeroU're
them in," remarked Carstairs ; absolutely safe. But I wish you
"It seems she's a ,sort of connection would tell me all about it, if you don't hitendent of car ferries at Halifax.
of theire, Andeanyeray, she' e just as mind. How is it you seem to have As the result' of a runeway, John-
, bed as they are Saye it's beautiful laid yourselves out to be mistaken for, Arsenault and Angus McLean were
en -
and pathetic. Bizt I was telling you. a heneynumn couple" " killed at Sydney Mutes, The
: 'The best is to eozne. All in her hair, "We are a honeymoon couple," pro,
gine.
horse bolted right in front of an and ah in her pleat's and flounces, and teseed lehe 'Fryer sturdily:. eIt• be Main Body. These reasons, Which i
consciously or -unconsciously. rt is ettekwards le he is not leading. Foe •
TT Boggs„ Who had been on thet
. •
refuse to move either forwards or
• 30 years
1 1.4
married men have gone from New all mules destined to serve his iedajes-
1 your breathing, and your circulation;
Zealand). The New Zealand Minister i Sd does it control all other parts 0 I ty are trained td follow hiin. ' A white
of Defence, in reply to a deputation ;your ebody. There are running to epcl 1 animal is .neaely always selected, as
Which waited on .hien to strengly urge 1 from the brain innumerable nen* or 1 fee scene redson or other metes fele
inpreased contributions. of men from ! wires to all the differ** parts of the I low -thine**. most faithfully'.
NeW Zealand, stated reasons of • a ! bo -4, jest like eelephope or telegraph: i Peek -mules become very .inuch at -
confidential nature, explaining Why 'i Wires. ,'The brain or mind seeds mess- I tacked lo the .bell-hefee of their train
New Zeeland could not send another ages from all :these different art ,
in the brim of his .hat,-- -4rice in the true as we've been Marled nigh on the Prette was asked not to publish; 1 (MIX this reason the deeth of the bell-heree
in sicknees that sometimes there
• creases of his waistceat, and in his fifey year, and ha' gotten grove'd-up, quite satisfied this influential eeputtlei gee breeks made in thia coninuniic is -a, groattedoolity;-- ---: -::.---- Halifax post office staff*
- you') not -confetti. • And, to *men it
._Pockete-reglerej. _Was_ riee...... Itice,__min -grandchildwh-buteafter all What ettieftlierie-TAfeitelcReieliiiiiiiit le
• 1 tioe, like the breaking 'Of a Wife -due et 0 0 eieined_th e8th B ttah and was
given a wrist watch by Ins associates
hare, has resigned and will be super -
that there Mateee, Muster Caretairs ?
We be as fond te one another now is•
their tea, ane went Oat on the front, ever ,we was the day we first got Wed
alLin -the rain; '-they weeldeete -hew- -eettyean" fonder, -Per weehalegeoveed
cared ir it had Cpip down tenpenny to one another, as the sayin' , But
when he put up his um- d'ye see, we couldn't afford it at the
brae it was like a hailstorm. And
were they_in __thee-leaet-annoyed,
On one ecagion, in one Of oer _Halifax has 46 barrooms, and Rev.
ell, hi the evening, when they had had
H. R. Grant moderator of the N S
, .
eng over.. 3,000, men as reinforcer:hints' to too much peessure, en• the. braM'Or.
dian frontier wars, says 'Loriden
An- every • two months."
ewers; the whole mule-traine_gem n
:1-eiresbyterianeSerritedrefteeted a" Moe&
• , aleng the nerve's , course. • These
realm -pulse ke-ateredeleYe_therelievingeetandathl. °Wing :the -death of the mint asking the N.te.. Government to ell: Ow::(...illree- U1-.:11.4.--Sha:WaS-R-eellevetT
•
•
. .
nese, took an oath in the -police court
by smashing, a saucer., Re was. told,
that if he did not .tell the truth hes
.soeleeneuld imieleed,•like the :situ-
P1A11-EbECT1t1 POW:'
Buddhists Profit by Tactfulness of
British Gireernmene.•
Simla, the summer capital of India, .
is rich in scenery, cooling breezes -and
little mountain streams which eissue -
ditect from the snow fields above,' .-.
says the World Outlook .. When .seine
practical, hard-headede unsentimental
engineers came along and proposed to
haniese' those streams up to • dynamos
to supply light and power to
'they met with unexpected opposition.
For' eentiries the ' BuddhisM had ; •
mumbled. their eerpeteal preyees until e:
wheel were sufficiently efficacious, The
same mountain streams. Now some '
that water for commercial purposes. .
Simla preferred her praying mills to
and tacked to ti continually revolving
godless American wanted to divert ,
power for these prayer millehadheen
obtained •from water Wheels in these '
that prayers written on slips of paper
they -grew Weary- a, n4-'th.en some in, ,
genious votary received?, revelatiop
electric light.
Then the Government stepped in,
the wise, 'tactful British Gewernment,
which bas learned by long and costly
Miperience how to deal with the old
customs . and prejudices. • Yes, the •
power companies might prodeed. They
must- agree, however, -to supply all
the prayer wheels ' with electrie ma.
sitz.e„. Simla prays by 'electric- _
• , -ELECTRIC FANS DID IT.
---,THOUGHTS -FOR-THE DAV "'tile- Orcisarc eiVelt menneebellehereee 'Nor would anything
ceit them of . . . Mosquitoes-. .
. ,
The path of , dety is the 'wee to oue system. • • • '!" .•the officers substituted another white
tonne. It were all along of her •fayqg Ory. -Tennyson . s "You may Wonder' what disease. ca,n horse in the eead one's place. •Onsee- Mary ioullces while "skylarking." --He
-ther dying, and she •being left , al • Elxcessive distrust is as hurtful Halifax shot 'a 'young gitl.• named 'neer tells this story, says G. T. Had-
leyin Ve'orld Ontlook: ' - - . • •
40.44.440.
•
strengthening of the. nerves arid aerv- duce the animals to move till Otte of
Clifford Kelly, It young soldier in A 'round -the -world electrical engi- •
• be treated b h •
. either of them? Not a hit of it. • No,. a one, t at I ups and says to she • I towering presumptione-Swift. : as ' • ence prompts me to say .that. dist -place'oriee more, all the mules • •
little 'deal with alt in his the Pasha- a former
• Y Peri- ing as they 'thought the old' fevorit
' • • e• SaYg he didn't know the revolve).* was "We ran up• to Bagdad to put Over
- 'laughter,' as. if gettirig Mania 'et' e, an marry .01 out 0, hand,, I says, drink, but drunkenness .helongs. only cured; end I include the morphine by deezing. the fraudulent bell horse '
They just steed up and reeked with. says, !Mary, my _dear, come . now, !do I Thirst teaches-- all - - ' le ` ee• vator,--Yi beel - -ir. eiTe fed, if not , moved forward to -,greet him, loaded. . e 1 • . s e German , ee a . . . . h had b' n
..• theiretime of life, instead of getting 'an' well go fur our libneymeoriewheel, to meree-Fieeeinge e ;e* ' . . and Only
Abdul, Hu-
., quetave I artewege a. _ .... en' i Go official w o. oe
' • (habit, codeinehabit, Se Vitus dance, foiwaid quicker than the Mules could •
heeled, wits quite a thing of ,Mreey- the money rani to ,' I says. Ay! ! -I like to be at -my post doing my , , g Y follow, was the deception kept up.. , . e k' had to ' rink habit stutterin and .h steria: ' ' .
1 ... - • . soner ho escaped from Impale.. a e
day deCtirketice.ft- ' ' ' ' ' ^ : Well, arid she did croy a bit at first ,' duty, iheifferent whether one set or: Dr. R. Osgood records one hundred e ., . - .. . .. , - ., ' ' • year ago, was captured in .John, , mid Has
N.B. n ..1
St -
1 promanent in the. days of
t palace as infested ekith
' "They're not coy at all, then?" • You did -croy, Mary, -didn't yett??, 1 another govern provided they gov- and fifty *these- of children treated ' '. t ' . .----: -°- 7 his trunk the authorities , - • • •
mosquitoes, and We ad to a t
"Coyl Rather not! And that is The old lady . nodded and .19alied. ern wen.-•-ir .1'. iVfoore. ? , *I-fOr- herveni insomnia _arid. edinnani- l'i ...-
foun0 many valuabla-Maps.
James. -Milligan, -an I.Pet- cehedece ' eHe lived' in. -the esuel Mearisie 'e-
t gitee him 'relief. - . _____...... . ,; .....„.
1
_
-
just where therdiffer bent. ie -do - con rte. 1, Only he who lives a life of his oWn hythis auto -suggestion. - _ -
. mon run. ette heneymeorier'se 'fhey` • "Well; end that weft nateeal t eh! h -•
- , P 0 ot eiseeellem.ye„ " case of a bee who was a great- What Ile Advised:a Lady, eceeleoleete elyeeee
. eo e • A 9 eh' patiteitte feW -Windows re elide- .eleetete-
• e ecie treaty setup
es someone-ilookinquitcebit- at .satesflece them! -me...pate-Wee ed-handgentlyFryer, n' bu
"sh,srnoothing tier" glitift.-1-, Weird 'Maher. • --• - - enwerird, alidtlidir 10--p&ssessed" of a ; Warm'
les g "• ,e, e boit a gal, i, -Disceetion is the peefection rens., desire to cemreit suicide, a bo of ' N.B. Tie Organized the order,of 'court. The old Pasha loolced exactly
.way_conductors. there. • - - '2,1' he had just -stepped -out of -a
re who -lied, beetle -55- years--au-the-'-
. lio-Use with' high walls, fiat roof with
And they lase each other with such an' seeire ae she'd got' 11 her p tt d gu'd t Y ,•
erePhileid- W161 Theneetet itwasthe truck ready, and we had talked seeh a of life --Add . . • e I.recall
e_e re y, e, e tfre -ter kn w eforieuelte eemereerfee_eheeeee,---"-Scenevehere --Ftrili-de"-thete-li a ° The b-oierninont Of %Nut tcotia ap- B d
et 0 n roa way u •
ivalf a ,gfccup of English (eitukers, pointed Willitun P. Lockhart, a re- ' h• • g • 1. b
m sieal -comedy With his
postriaan once, and rushed out --being ,mort .about the lenieymoon an' the Isolated discoVeries' born out of Were Cured by Hypnotism. e
anxious about' a letter -only to find ' rest 'But it he ably put off fo ra bit,' date Weald positively fall dead ,•epon ; 1 tion 'in rescuing -an& tending the of the new Seneca Building ih the isr. i'• “T ee i . d ' I;
thein at it on the mat. But, as I say, ' I says to she tithe -in' as bb • el the' • . e c ,. ,. . ' "One 'of my most, interestirig pa- 'wounded on. 'many a battlefield have'
you will see teem for yourself to, ; take place a feae, months later on, The eyes of other people are tee
night, about eloper -time; and, then ', (Tye see? An' then --ah, things 'got 'eyes that ruin us. be Young. She was a paralytic, After chiles, the liearty respect and 'Mang
; tients. 'was a D -year-old girl, Grace Won there, despite their peace' pejo-
It all but elYself studying My 'little patient earefulle I of both "Temmiese and "piou-piouse!
you'll be able to judge whether I've. mortal bad wi" we, and the teddies were blied.1 should never, wantea fine, diagnozecl that she had a clot on the ' Anteing .them es one young.mati wheee-
Ootee ,
boot telling 'you any fairy Wee or ,' eegunte come %rig, arid there weren't house nor 'film eurnitureee-Dr, Frank,: beeiti and that theY possible way ' ancestors have been notable more for
1 enough motley -hie vittlei let • 1 • lin., • , . . . i
The two old cionies then went out . hellqr.days. An " -man' so It ,got sort If a man has ordinary chairs andrezneve it Wm .to reduce the blood wit arid epliftethan for ethe vietues'
pressure end the circulation in those oftenest . Associated -,:with-rdralr:--uoats-
• • " • whose 'tool :courage and tireless deVo- I turned wOunded 'soldier, to bo janitor,
Shoes tInd upturned toes.: ,
: e
to play an elderly, releurely game of I o put off an' put ,off," he conclude+) tideless no one notices it; but if , he j parts. . There were times when 1 al -l -and broad hat -brims
billiards at the hotel round thcor- ruefully. ' . •
-stick vulgar' gaud pictures. . ' most lost hope, because the ehild, Was ' It was a member of that rattily, a
ner, and• *avert -there initil •ifino ee"We haen't•neeer forgot it, though," Walls, which he need not have at all, blind
'o'clock. • , in. one eye and was paralyzed century dr more ego, that. found Man-.
Returning, they pansed outside a Month age, when. our youngest boyee-Sydee.Y. &nide*
he Went on. "Not we! An' so, come eeerY. one laughs at him for his follY• lin seeeChelimbs and bowels. . . -self irrthaiite bi ,a carriage with a
"
Visa- Isherwodd'a establishment '' lia,...1,joined Lord Kiteltethrei , Army, an'. 1 -----_.-.' 4' - ' "At first progrese was very slow; mery fine lady *tired id the low-
Miss
fore they entered; to 'peer ' -theeUgh ' there wasn't nobody left to fret over! At 'Target il `c . I but after a while I became entourage necked, short-eleeved ineslin dress
t le ealling into the parlor where the , at hem, an' we found we bad gotten i A' new repillit Watt Ont foe, target, things. One Morning, silo was able to ed ty a profuelon of jewelS tan d trie-
, 1 ed when fikw she took .interest in then in :the height: of fashion, adorn -
boarders ' were assembled at supper.; n bit put hY--weli, I brings up the! practice, and his target .Seein'ed the ; say to Mr mother, !Mamma; hear the I kets, and protected only by a lace
Themulcting not being drawn,: matter o' our boneyMoon axon,V0*, ably ,peint in the landscepe 'quite, safe ,church bells ringing!" The one blind Shitivl as light as a cobWeb. A chine,
,i
they eould me iete the bright inter. i coursei Mary here; she be abet-ibe: from his bulletA. ''Great :Sena! rite 'Itye Allowed the same blow but sure wind blew up soddenly) and she ot..
eoet the honermoonetw to Min, tut '. set on it, roan AS 01 be reYeelte "I don't !Mew, ' eir," replied the ', new glasses. of different strength . .tAt the "I 'really don't 1(11011," said' the
I
for of the roomi 811(1 Longton WW1 idea, are Maid as how ,it would look ',man, said an 0 wei,.litirlying up to progress atter treatment by hyp. 1 claimed, shivering, 'What r hall I do
checked .carstairs' footsteps te 'point funny, an' like that, AY; IAA she he: hini, 'fiivilet'e 'are yo.ur, shots fr,oing?" ' notiterioided by the use of lenses and to get want V' .. • ,
;
carstairehad utterm
ed a urmur ,of liVere elle nci thought O' the riee-4 recruit, oenildoniklin "Vtlf
ut ey. all cell of ton weeks 1 htind 43race 0, Quaker synapatheticallyi "u iless thee
prisod recognition :at sight Of the Did ye bear tell o' that? Ye were set lett hero all righti". • '
° 1 healthy and nottard child:- • ' put on another breastp M"
•
tott;i"4,....4.,...4;,!,,..
'.••0 ' •
S. College Of Agtieulture, 1 with a fell of abotit 10 feet. it would
• d" ajninigu7alst, 0110 thef 1 V theea r i bettmkP omv r in c rear :ev;i tev he 1oi dl built aoatti ntWa onetewiredfinal r ti It' hi pq° aur ape in ip eet aV re tirdt:
has ,ehliSted in the .8Stli Eattalion;
Sussex; IsT:P. He SAYS 'he is gOilig to, started up some gigarttie eieetric fans.
get the
I(
got seal». .11 These fans oithect the air end also .
While excavating for a 'corierete,' biew. through ; the roonis"a narcotiee
-walk totind the Fredericton, pal. post :.eufneiortly pewerftirte.eanse the mos.
Office evoelimeee dug tip 0, Spanish ail, tititdes to fall in a coma. All :dot ye.
ver Coin, issued in 17119; dutirige the . mined was fee ',the servants to gr.
reign Of Itieg Clunhee the Third
Ste George's Anglican . Church at.
ParisUro was discoverekto he,,ion fire
while services 'were going on $onday
Morning. lt,tooksbnie time to round .
the firemen up, they being at other! .A benevolent eleieeei while weeeeth
chtathed• ' ' "elorig theeeotid, spied et, little tot.weep;
MAdclino. th
istedhi o?t-M.P; ; good by and
'01e 85th end So walked tiat “Now be auchi
p to the ld.
ney, Cape Breton, enl;
as a private. Ile Wak, offered a caP- : stets yotir eying" - The child rePlied;.
' at, • ;
tainey, but reeueedt ;saying, it would ',ex. teeter 'But *by earkyle7i,
be unfair for he, an .nutrained man, '.ee11tt.1,) elven, bare penny,. Ten
to take...preeedened.e nie why you can't be a good: boy mete
titteng,' • 6t4 4,01111, st4:0. e rr truuseltuk u
around And -sweep-them .upjn piles
be destroyed."
. lee -ern
• 4e,
4•••
-
r.
4