HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-11-23, Page 7THE
DonsteraptionaCongies,Oroup,Sere
Sold by U Druggists en a Guarantee,
he Side, Back or Chest la haoh's Pero=
give great etztiefection•—es cent.
WS VITALIZER.,
.nawkino,Cliattanooet Tenn., sarn
Vitialear 08.4VED ii1411011,
Ittaolbestromedyforadeallitatecleystene
Ber Dyspepsia, Liver Or KeeneY
xoe/s. Pr1ee1Sets.
ILO H'S CATARRH
REMEDY:
mu Catarrh ? Try. that Remedy. It wilt
in relieve ana Cure you. Trice 50 eta
lector or its stweessful treatmentia
tlaree. itemember,Shaloesiteinedies
neer enearantee t ive satisfaction.
LEGAL.
. DIOKSON, Barrieter, Boll -
tor 4 i Supremo Court, Notars
30 naevsneer, thmtutssioner, So
t11
I 0. n •
anson'snlook, fleeter;
'olioitor, Unman!, Etc,
. -
ezettarBlie ONT.
OVer O'Neirs Bank.
ELLIOT,
1, So oitors, Notaries P
aveyaneers Szo, 86o,'
y to Loan at Lowest Bates of
interest. "
e MAIN -$TI11T, XETEB.
tr.TO.r. PRRIMIIICSC nr.mgrk.
pa,. MIN TA. .
a A P
tee
KINSMAN', L. D. R, O.
A..
Itoyal Coliegi"f mon 3ur-
1,ett., Dental Department a Torott
sity, (with honors.)
iu bridgework, and goal and
Ortraing.
!mai/4 Oxide Gae tuia hc1 anaethet-
aleee extrartione. At Luean every
tee °Mee: Fan -lona Biwa. Exeter,
. II. INGRAM, D1012151'.
Sacentsor to IT.
'of tbe Royal college of nmatt1
inMob insertee with o.'without
lit or Rubber. A bete Aniesthetia
.e panacea extraetiou of teeth,
Gold Fillinge as Required.
the Peet Mee,
PR.A.CTIOAL FARMING
The °lover.
Some sit* o he lily and daisy and rose.
And the pansies and pieks that the summer
time throws
In the green, grassy laps of the madder that
lays,
Blinkite up at the skies, through the sunshiny
days :
But -what is the lily and cillef the rest •
Of the flowers to a man with a heart in bie
breast,
That has sip/ma larirnmin• full of the honey and
dew.
Of the sweet clover blossoms his boyhood
•knew?
I never set hevey OR a clover Reid now,
Or fool round astable or climb in a now.
But my thildhood comes haek just as oleo& and
as plain
As the arnoll of the clatter Pm sniffle' again;
And X wander ewCy i abarefeoted dream,
Where I eansied my toes in the bloseonis that
gleam
With the dew ot the dawn of the morning of
love,
Ere it went o'er the graves that rm weeping
above.
And so I love clover, It seem like a part
Of the sacredeet sorrows and joys of my heart;
And" wherever ib bloesome, au there let mo
bow ,
And thank the good Lord as I'm thread/1' him
now,
And prey to aim still for the strength, when I
die,
To go mit in the clover and tell it good bee
And lovingly neetle try face in its bloom.
Whilemy soul slips away on a breath of per-
fume.
—Values Whitcomb Bike.
Olover and Wheat.
. A. W. I), writes as follows in the Ohio
Farmer :—
In 11301 we were cutting five acres
'tef good lever. aN, heu we got about
foils aares out I thought I would plow
iindor the rest for an experiment. The
center of the old field was not any better
than the outside, benause it was a little
'higher, and the outside of the Acid was well
nntierdraiffed. Where I cut the clover I
applied about II heels of good barnyard
manure, to the acre and plowed it under,
and finished plowing the lot the first day
of July.
This last year, when we out the wheat, a
stranger .00ltiug over the field would have
suppose' ,..hat it had all received the same
kind ,e .reatment, for I could not see any
differ .enee, But I did not plow under dzy
bre.di like "1111010 Josh," Obrsoil is a good
clay loam with quite & eprinkling of gravel
underneath. I worked tho ground thoroughly
from that tizne until it was aown, an Sep-
tember 3. A good deal is saki about having
ground too fine for wheat. I never saw it
yot. always try to get my lend in as flue
a state ae possible for a depth of not more
than throe inches and have the bottom as
hard ea the road -bed if I could make it so,
aorta when ' sown under them conditions we
always get from 21 to 40 bushels per acre.
ni,n with whom I am well acquainted
bo.„ ea worn-out farm about three nsiles
from Lake Erie. His friend a said he must
se going crazy (as he bad been in the asy-
tut: a few years previous) to buy that farm.
He went to work amino lots of clover,
plowing a undor, and se ag wheat and
seeding with clover again in the spring,tben
plowing under another crop of clover and
sowing wheat, After he ha,d got over the
place with two crops of olover mixed in ehe
toilthe old skeptiee began to say, "Why,
don'it it heat all what erops that man raises
on thaeopoor farm t” The znost stook he
had on net plaee at any time for ten years
were t. wows and th homes. But hole
not in he asyln
A few told me I was
work' thee.the
se NT'
o kill the
get some wheat
mine the first week 3
ig.plowed six times after, and dragged
It about th me' days after each gaugiug ; sow-
ed it the tirat day of September, and threeh.
ed 40 bushels per acre, and killed every
thistle in the field axcept for about three
feet from the outside, :Sly neighbor plow-
ed his hdlove the first time the last of June,
than again the first of August, and the last
time the first week in September, dragging
it twice between plowings, and sowed it
September 8, He had 39. bushels per aCee,
and quite a number of thistles all through t
the held. I don't believe in plowing a
fallow more then once with a big plow,then
as eooll as you see one thistle trying to
breathe, work it up with a gang plow or
eultivator, about three inches deep. Yon
keep them under from the middle of June
to the first of Sepeember and they have got
to die,
1
AlItIDICAL
3301TNING M. D., M. 0
, a -actuate Victoria ttniveettyt
I residence, Dom.niou Lebo a
Ger .
YINTDMAN, noron or for tie
ot Reran. Oftleo, elm -We
e.Fixeter.
& AMO.
Reeldenee smio ai ken*.
ieet Spaekmanet
eamette fornmier. north
tn bulldhar, smith door, -
LB..- T. A. et 1).108, ef. D.
aft Exeter, Oat,
NBERRY, General Li.
sod Auctioneer Sales conducted
Satisfaetiouguarautead, ()bargee
llensall P 0, out.
EILBER Licensed AU e -
Leer for the Contain of Guron
osex. Steles oonduoted at mod-
es. Gmtee, at Post-otilee area.
111.1,r1M1,01M100131a.... Cill170=111112211==.111.40111
MORS Y TO LOAN.
TX TO LOAN= AT 6 AND*
ent, sile.000 Private Puede. Best •
ampoules represented.
L.II De0RSON
tha eister texeter,
SURVEYING..
---------------
W. FAUN 00 41113,
Land torveyor and Civil En-
3-Xmm,
airstSamevell'sBlook. leseter,ont.
VnTBEINAIIY.
lent&Tenneni
Ois/T.
:sot natrie veterluary Get
Ore dotirSonth of Towii
11%. ITILANCE
WATERLOO MUTUAL
INSURARO TOO
gstablisltedin 1863.
FICE- WATERLOO, ONT,
krn ny haebeen Oyer Twan(v-eieh
uoceseful otter tape in Western
continues to insure against loss or
Fire. Buildings, Merchandise
les and all other doserietioas 07
opertt. Intending insnrors kora
f insuring oti the Premiem N'ote or
L.
3 east ten years this company has
Pi1e, c0verie4 property to the
40„$72 03S; and paid in losses a.loo
6176,100.00 , eansisting of Cosh
eanmerit peneeit ited the uns sses-
In NOtos on nand Ji ad.. •in force
M.D.. President; 0 ..11. Tevr,oa
J. B. lieteresro gpec...tor utiA,
out for tlxeter and vicinity
Molsons 3ank
mED B Pet fireiAm'ENT, 18551
ital • ... $2,000,000
,.. 1,100,0
ea a d Oface , moutrea ,
LFBRSTAN THOMAS ;lege
GENElts.tiltirLiaga.
.aneed to good farmerson their own
e or more endorser at 7 Per cent
Exeter Branch,'
ftTf1ild0r,from3Oamtt ri,re
RDA:n.1.0a,m o 1 D.
CS of interest allowed on depOSi
YEE EIT,THDOliTt
S,1113-Manafzer;
$111ellUfiti PAl110191111
'1;/ iti011OY COY
,,rEeitz.: .44
results in creamery butter-mAkiug ll o°
from ignoring the creamery eYetern, so
net guese at cream maturity or tempere,tu
or at butter granulation, or at the amou
of salt need. Guess -work knooks
underpinning of the ereeinery systems
EXETER l'IMES
rne to have the roads well graded and euffieient.
do ly drained,
re,
alt
he
Ilea of the batter -makers in the land are
getting so that they "keep laoutiea la the
creamery buildings, where they carry on
their butter -making operations, This is
another injustice done to good butter qual-
ity, and on tins point that I mentioned in
the fore part or this article, places the
creamery product in tae same danger that
the dairy knehen butter is threatened with.
When I have to pay 30 ,eente per pound for
butter I want to itilOWtimeit r Avorth it ,.;
that the milk thereof haa 'efever dribbled
between grim fingerainegefting bna of the
coev'e teat ; that the' odors of cooking
onions, cabbage and beef steek have not
hung over it as a thiok cloud, while the
butter globulee were strugilingeto the sur-
face, and that said globules • were "gather-
ed" into marketable shape:
Bees make honey of a quality correspond, -
lug to the purity of the flowers from which
they gather it ; eows yield mi14of flavor
and richness on a par with their feed, and
it is a alur on human intelligence when
butter -makers fail to do as muoh bt, making
poor butter out of good material,
Harketin. Butter.
One et the gravest problems the farmers
have to solve is how to avoid the exactions
of the middlemen, Almost everything
which, they have to buy or eel! goes through
several handa and pays the profits which
go to build up great oities and colossal for-
tunes. If farmers could only ,get a reason-
able part of the pelotas which consumera Tilly
for farm products they would be far more
prosperous than they are. ,
The ways of markettng butter in m.
aeetiona seem to be crude and unbusines
like. The butter is put into some kind
package or receptaole and carried to th
country store, where it is exchanged fo
goods, "store pay " it is called. Such
system can only exist where small quantitie
of butter are made, where some othe
branch of farming is minty followed, an
where cows and making butter are 'make
on as a sort of necessary evil. It is a ba
practice to sell but r or buy.. goods in an
such way. Iasi' 4 of taking a dollar
worth of butter to the store to exehang
for a dollar's worth of sugar, one should tr
to have butter enough anti of good qualit
enough to mill directly to :some privet
customer for cash at the regular marke
price, and then take the ceeh and buy
seek or barrel of sugar.
No doubt money cau be made by sellin
butter from one or two eows but it pay
genteelly far bettee to keep eight or ten
It is not easy to make butter profitabl
with a few tin pana and an old dash churn
But if one must make butter with a fat
cows he should study to make good batte
and to find a good market for it, There ae
el ways some people in country villagee ve
\
buy their butter, and if the small dairy c
supply such, a great riaving may be mat
over the store pay plan.
Damn Basemen:lea
Is it sensible th shut a cow up in a 13ftee.
ment where the atmosphere isalWays damp
and a chillness prevails even when the mer-
cury. says it ie far above freeziog We
meke the collars to our houses so warm that
they will not freezee and yet no one goes
there to sleep, and ee man would bo
consid-
ered -a fool who would put a bed in the cel-
lar for his family to sleep in. The cellar
is warm. enough, but the one who slept
there would likely take cold, and if of a
consumptive tendency would probabiy die
vvith consumption as reault, And yet
some &mere keep their cows hi abasement
that is as warm as the house cellar and
much more damp and not nearly as well
ventilated. Besides the Atmosphere is mixed
with the ammonia tufa other gases from
their fermenting excrement Is it wonder
that tubercaloste breaks out in the herd 1 --
Dr. C. D. Smead.
Practical Pointers.
Hens should be killed when three years
old, as they lay fewer eggs every year after
the third.
you are in the habit of trading your
birder for groceries, why not try to sell it
direot to those who eat III?
If you value your macbinery oil well the
parts liable to rust and put under a tlailt
shingle roof. More machinery ie rusted and
rotted out than worn out.
The habit of eating mutton. seem to be
Geo which must be acquired, not because
people home featly a prejudice against the
taste of good mutton, but because they do
not anew what it ist
e.rt is no gain to shorten the winter by
ning anitnals exposed to the vicissitudes
A.b a fell weather and allowing them to
s- ate 4Clint a subsistence on fro.eted grass un -
of til te. w falls.
e How many farmers have recently tested
✓ sheep raising on a mutton beta $o as to
a know whether it is profiteble or not? It
s is vita natural for farmers to follow looal
✓ prejudices in such matters and continue
el along in beaten patine
de Sow one hualiel of peas' to tbe acre with
" your into and cut when beginning to poi.
Y It helps the land by clearing it of foul stook
'8 before it seeds. Anything with hollow etook
like oata would ensilag!a difficultly.
Y If feathered stock is rightly managed
3" diseases of fowls will be comparatively rare.
e Breeding "in-andein," or breedaug "eleee,"
111 even, is productive of more dhlicaeles of
a constitution than most poultry keepers are
aware of. It is bed blueness to be fussing
9 with sick fowls. Better breed right.
$ People are apt to build silos too large and
• not deep enough. Six square feet of surface
Y per cow per day is about the right proper-
. tion to keep the ensilage sweet. If the
v silo is cut down it will injure as it comes to
r the air; should feed the whole of the top
^ off every day.
A greet mistake thab has been made in
many localities where the trotting horse
bas been introdnued, is in encouraging the
farmers to believe that by breeding their
mares of no breeding to trotting stallions
they were almost certain to gee trotters as
a result.
A great many fanners attended oee or
more fairs this fall. Now let us ask, did
you see steak there that was superior to
that w,hicla you are keeping at home? If
so, why not resolve to change your hand
and set your meek to accomplish results
in this line equal or superior to your neigh -
bora ?
I cure gree"..eatea
I would prefer to have th
cook 24 hours if convenien
In the afternoon and the
just at night turn over. T
as soon as tho dew is off tur agam an • m
the afternoon begin to draw.
A person cannot expect to do everything
and do it as well as the requirements de-
mand. The tinm war when the.farmer boast-
ed of the number of soros he he.il under cul-
tivation, but now it is more, how many
bushels he can raise to the hare aud of the
high state of cultivation of his farm.
The plough, put away coated with mud,
will rust and rot though in a good shelter;
and such a coating is yet more harmful to
the delicate part of machines. Thinigh
bright steel surfaces are clean,they will pro-
bebly rust, unless coated with oil in some
form; and to be sure that even clean wood
does not rot oue must coat it with paint or
oiL For coating metal surfaces coal oil or
beef tallow is goad. Of course the tallow
should be applied in a liquid condition.
It will pay to coat rough, but unpainted,
metal surfaces as well as polished ones.
There aro several methods of disposing o
the product of larger dairies. Where there
ie a good creamery it is uaually best to send
the milk to ib. But if the Babcock teat is
not used,I should hesitate stgood deal about
sending my milk. live in a large dairy
town in Vermont where there se a creamery,
but not half of the farmers send their milk
to it. Some send to commiesion ho
market men in cities
the best
ne
an the inar-
80 e it out to consumers,
al i n.i ekes a good profit. A few send i1.rent to friends or relatives living in large
places, who pay a little more than the
regular price here. But the most of tile
butter la sold direet to butter buyers who
aro at certain stores in the village once a
week. These buyers pay cash for butter,
and usual! give a fair price. Farmers
have the : ket reports anti so MI forrn a
good idea to what they ought to get. The
prices are graded according to quality of
aroduct and style of package. The butter
ubof various sizes is the principaa form of
package utted, but the hve.pound box is
corning to be used by those who make an
extra quality of butter. It is made in von.
ous shapes, but the round box is meetly
used. Batter packed in these brings frorn
two to four cents more than that packed in
tubs, but it must be good butter.
The highest -priced package is the one.
pound print, but a good deal of time and
skill are required to put up butter in these
packages. Moat of the prints made here
are put up in a veneer box.
The buyers who take inbutter weekly,do
not hold itbut ship it immediately to the
city where it is consumed, _Very'', utter
is itept more then a few days in this pert, .
m iit
ie
the country. In Boston there is an Mune se
cold storage plant where butteris sto
O freezing temperature and thus kept in,
good condition for weeks or months, In
the spring with a rapidly decliningmaeltet,
there is frequently a loss by tho buyer, as
a few days musb elapse efter it is bought
before it reaches market. But in the fan
when butter comes tip in price this loss is
made up. Those farmers who have their cows
come in about Oct. 1, get the most for their
butter, if the quality is good. Not with-
standing all the drawbacke, butter is as
high this fall as useal, if not a little higher.
It now looks as dough the making of
firstadass buster wasitoing to be one of the
most pr %e,-ble branches of farming.—[Je
W. Newt
Some Butter Notes.
A correspondent writes as follows. Let
us hope that no such criminal carelessness
is known in Ontario :—
Last summer while visiting in MichigareI
went into a section Where soarleb fever was
raging of frequent
aud the deaths of ehildren
were o. frequent occurrence. I n one family
the disease was especially malignant Three
children out of five had need toed another
lay at the point of death. The family lived
practically in one room, and having several
cows they depended on the butter made
from them to assist in supporting the house-
hold.
The milk was actually set for creamrais-
ing in the room where sickness existed and
deaths occurred from this infectious disease,
and the butter was sold to be unwittingly
eaten by other families.
Is itany wonder .that scarlet fever was
unnstieley malignant in that section, and
that it spread iapilly from such a airect
source of infeetton as this? The above may
seem to the reader as an extreme ease, but
in snore well-to-do families I have known
She dread scourge of typhoid fever to be
propagated in the same way. I have known
milk -setting and butter-makiug to proceed
right along in the same house in which a
typhoid fever patient was sick, and this
occurring in a wealthy and "well,.regulated"
family. From sueli a source, where milk
was sold about a village in eastern New
York, was traced an epidemic of typhoid
fever then prevailing. As the cold season
is now approaching, when in thousands of
daivy faMilieS the kitchen or the ' pantry
will be used in which to set milk for °ream-
ing, ibis important to call attention to these
facts. Disease may not exist in your fami.
ly when yea Set a crock of tnilk On a shelf
in the living room, but disease is nettle to
be inaugurated from the poison absorbed
by the use of milk thus exposed.
We often hear experts speak of the in-
jury done to dairy butter by overworking;
where the battertnilk is crushed out in-
stead of being drained. It isgenerally
eupposi
ed that creamery butter s treated
faultlessly in this respect, but I have see0.
too much of the inside workings of cream-
eries to accepb this wholly. The crearnery
system i8 all right, par excellence,' bat its
employes are not always systematizers.
I have found them overworking butter the
same as in a poorly conducted private
dairy, a/1cl doing 1.5 with a patient butter
worker ! How did they do it? Why, they
kept the worker revolving too long, -while
they turned the initter with a ladle. The
butter was eupposed to havo bad all of
milk washed out of it in the churn, while
in a granulatedstate'bet the maker kept
at it as though he thought it was full of
milk. Ile professedto be working the salt
in, but he had been manipulating it long
enough to work the salt id and out again
Drainage for Good Roads.
The good reads congress at the World's
Fair broeght out many good ideas. Prac.
Meal systems of road, drainage was presented
in a. paper by J. J. Billingsley, editor of the
Drainage J mewl. He said:
Atnoug those who have given the subject
of road improvement cereal' attention
there is a setblea conviction that the good
condition of any roads depend upon a sys-
tem of thoreugh drainage—a system which
ernbreoes uot only, the removal of the
storm water width falls upon the surface of
theroad and, the land adjoining, but also
the water which filters through the:ground.
The letter if allowed to percolate into and
through the sebsoil underlying the roadbed
will render the travel way soft ani springy,
often affecting the compere surface of the
road s as to cause it to break up, or, in
other worde, "the bottom drops out" The
remedy is through drainage.
We are convinced that the best improve-
ment of oils highways will combine at least
three essential features, which are :
A. road. embankment of suffieient height
to be at least tt hove overflow from extra.
ordinary rainfall and sufficiently crowning
to shed the water readily and wide enough
to accommodate the travel and not of
greater width.
Thid the road shall have open ditches on
each side of suffietent capacity to carry all
geed water from the roadway and from the
Ands adjoining into the nearest watercourse
without hindrance. The surface or open
ditches should have such a perfect grade
that n water will find a Iedgment along
the
ata
MYRTLE'S OVEROOMINC+.
To him that evereoreeth I will give
crown of life," Myrtle Tileston reed t
words slowly, ehe had just come home fro
church and wes thiultiug aver an imustial
thrilling sermon, wit/a the above text. T
minister was ayoung man and very mu
interested in his subject. Ile had. epok
especially of the smell sins of life, "5
little foxes that spoil the vines ,» and hit
quoted, "Know ye not that 'ye are th
temple of Gd, and that the spirit of Go
dwelleth in you. If any man defile th
temple of God, him shell God destroy, f
the temple of C4od is holy, which temp
yeNaorew.,"Afyrtle was what is melted a negat-
ively good girl, that is, she was not bad,
but she had these little sins which beset ue
all, those same "little foxes." Myrble disI
like to gossip; the minister had spoken
particularly against that. Then she did
like to exaggerate a little. I don't mean
that Myrtle told Iles ; she bad simply the
habit of not being careful to tell things
exactly as they were, and she had a quicat
temper, and did not like to help her mother.
That was the extent of Myrtle's sins, and
Still they kept her from. being "perfec
even as your Father which in. heavenie per
feet." Probably if you had asked anyon
in town what kind of a girl Myrtle Tfleston Mass„ hew suceeeded in taming the vil4g6
was, they,would have said, "Why,
good girl., but in her own heart illyrtl
she's -8-• terror, the worsts boy in the wheel, and is
o' going to marry him.
Ifet es Re Meant it.
want to live so thee She made
LiOnie happy' may be truthfully placed on
my monument."
Fle—" Frew delighted I should be b be
the one to buy you such a tombstonf 1"
Bough Treatnt
" What do you. mem fey an ad= of the
old :5010011"
"Why, 011.64f those, histrions who rolls
his eY813 -and laja until he wears the eor-
nem off them.'
Prisoner -4'1 beg you, judge, not to con-
demn me—not on my amount, but so as
not to injure the prospects of my counsel."
,71hen Baby Iwut der, we *are herr:aster/it.
When she was a Clad, she cried for Cestoria.
'When she became Miss, she clung to Cestoria.
Mao shebadcgadren,shegavo them Ca/stories.
e A pretty achoolinem Weyarsoutli,
was t ot pat satisfied.
Usually the aerraons passed from ItIyetle'e
mind as water rolls off a duck's back, but
this one did not. Myrtle did long to do
something great, and these things were so
little no one would ever know of them. It
was hard to be real good ; she had tried
that before, but it had only lasted a little
while before the desire died out and she
went on in the old way. But now she
oould never be q,uite the same again; the
minister had put a new light on these little
stns. He had told how many a person's
life ia ruined by their aots being /ninon*
etrued, and how someone who is trying to
do right is dicouraged by some past fault
being brought to light by some inIscbief-
making gossip, and bow what is but a little
thing in the beginning assumes immense
aprdeopzoorleuoautehiate.r it has passed through half
Myrtle knew all this. She sighed a little,
closed the book and started to put it away
when a bit of paper fell out, on it was
written, in her grandmother's handwritingi
"Whatsoever thy hand find to 40, de
"I will," and Myrtle laid down the book
andstarted downstairs.
Her mother met her at the kitchen door,
" Well, it should. think it was about time
yen came down to do some thing; here's the
baby as cross as a bear and your father
waiting for hie dinner, Leave me to do
everything as venal." That was not just
true, for Myrtle would iron, or sew, or
mend by the day together, but she did
dislike kitehen work; besides Myrtle's
mother was tired and not well, and she did
not always do the girl justice. Myrtle was
very sensttive, and it was her custom to
answer back in a sharp tone, but this time
she did not; she was overcooling.
"Well, Mother, whet shall I de, tele the
baby or get dinner on the table?'"
"Well, I should think you would know
by thia time that when baby is cross he
won't let anyone but me touch him."
"Well, then, I'll see to the diener," and
'Myrtle went about taking up the potatoes,
and ald not stop work mita the baby was
asleep and dinner wail on the table.
After dinner, insteeel of going out as
usual, Myrtle wathed and wiped the dishes,
and it took her so long that her friend Kitt
g for her at t
impatient and
see ton, Myrtle ,
llie Bleke has done
A SIGNIPIOANT SPBBOlf.
It indIrates the Growine: 'Friendliness
Between, Britain and Um United States.
That American feeling toward England is
dergoing a. change can be gathered from
recen events. The spirit of hostility which
AlnerieiNqng manifeeted towards the old
land is being subdued or suppressed, and
the 13ri5ieb. 11, use of Commons has gone so
far in the path of friendliness as to decide
that disputes in the future between the two
countries s 11 be submitted to arbitration,
which suggests the erection of a courtier the
settlement of international differences. The
interests of the two peoples are so clottely
interwoven that the one depends largely.
upon the other, and no rupture could occur
between the two without bringing irrepar-
able injury to both. In this riew a speech
made by American Ambassador Bayard at
the Banquet given last week to celebrate the
2$0 anniversary of the formation of the
Cutlers' -Association of Sheffield, is signifi-
cant These extracts from his address show
the larger spirit which is dominating men
and drawbase the two greatest nations in
the world clo;er together :
"I believe that whether it be the Stars
and Stripes thavare so dear to me, or
whether it be the Union Jack that is so
glorious and dear to you, neither of us will
ever ask under what conditions, bat we will
say: 'Cutler them all we follow the
fleg,"'
, He claimed that every Americau bad. the
utmost pride and fellowship in all the
traditions of the English -people and went
on to say :
"1 come as a friend to be received as a
friend. Eighty years ago my eitther's
father cisme to make peace with England.
(Applause.) He came while war was flag-
rant between the United States and Eng-
land and passed some three months in Lon-
don endeavoring to establish peace and to
put an ena to the war. Those efforts
terminated in. soccess, and he 1814, in the
month of October, at the libtle town of
Ghent, in Belgium, ;was signed a treaty of
amity and peace between the United States
and Great Britain, and that act has keet
peace ever since. (Applause.)
"Of late yearsit has been oallea ttho
hot war,' (Applause.) And now lot 'me
disclose to you my only diplomatic mission.
It is that the war of 1812 shall always be
the last war. (Prolonged applause.) I
suppoze that ends my mission, 1because if it
etIteeessful I really want no more."
(Apillause).
.
Alter a lengthy tribute to the varied in-
dustries of Sheffield, he concluded :
le prosperity of your ooun try I leek
ith no unerudging eye. (Applause.)
-no belief in any ether doctrine for a
for a nil tinn_tlien to do
"1 don't know. Kitty, did you go to
church to -day ?"
No," and Kitty looked a little surprise
ed, "1 Wasn't talking about church, I
was talking about Nellie Blake ; it's per-
feetla 'terrible the way she is acting."
"Kitty, did you ever think that perhaps
Nellie is not as bad as we think she is ? I'm
quite sure the doesn't mean any harm, and
we ought not to judge her."
Kitty opened her brown eyes and stared.
"Why, Myrtle Tileston, what ails,yor?
I thought you liked to hear the news.'
"So 140, Kitty. I can't help thinking
of what the minister said to -day. He told
O story of a woman who wentto ride with
leer husband. He sat on the front seat and
she on the back. They had been married
recently. Someone noticed them and told
someone else that she guessed he didn't care
much about his wife or he would have sat
on the same seat with her. Then theother
lady told it to her friend, and so oh; until
it got to the wife, and then she began to
feel as if it was a little queer if folks should
notice it, and perhaps her husband really
didn't care for her, and she kept thinking
until she made herself and her husband
miserable all over just such a little thing as
that. I don't think it is kind to spread a.
story of anyone's actions, though 1 ha.ve
been just as bad as you, Kitty."
Wellt it has got to be a sort of habit
with us girls, Myrtle; when we can't find
anything else to talk about, we idek to
pieoes our neighbor's characters. I tell you
let's get up an anti -gossip club and pledge
all the members not to encourage goasip."
"Let's." And it was done.
Myrtle kept on overcoming. It wasn't
always easy and she did sometimes forget,
but she made allowances for her mother's
ill -health and tried to speak pleasantly on
all occasions. Whenever she felt the desire
to tell a thing a little different from what
it was, she stopped and corrected herself.
She helped her mother all she could ands
after a time got her temper well under con-
trol. And she had her reward.
"Miss Myrtle," the doctor said one day,
"1 thought you wouldn't have a mother
long awhile ago, but you have taken so
rnuch!off her shoulders this suimnete she is
grTowhienngbleytrtbeirfeat."e thought,
ht, Erow glad 1 am
bellanVf.egroipb
tTaminelu2)
Teanprospeeed, and one
day they were surprised by a visit from
Nellie Blake herself, " Girls," she said,
"your antt-gossip olub sexed me. When
you picked up every thing I did I thought
I might as well be bad, but since you have
tried to keep people from talking about me,
-eve tried too, and if you'll let me I want to
oionithooenerlsuebt.1'1'
y let her, -and that wasn't
all. That summer a young minieter came
to board at Mrs, Tiloston's. Myrtle recog-
nized him as the one who had presetbed
about the overcoming. He was talking to
her mether one day about how he was dis-
couraged, his sermons never seemecl to touch
his listeners, and then Myrtle told him how
one had affected leer, and the minister took:
courage and to -day he is 0 successful preach-
er and Myrtle Tileeton is his wife.
My young friends, please don't say
Myrtle Tileston was a Sanday-sohoca book
girl, because she wasn't. Myrtle Tileston
is alive to -day, and she is still overcoming
and helping others to overcome. Don't
think she became good in a moment, far
she didn't; she fought hard encl grew in
grace as you and I may do, for the over-
coming applies to US OM 'much as to her,
Commonly those whose ,tongue is their
weapon use their fe
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