HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1902-8-28, Page 3.4"!*÷•!•4444sIttlsrelsleletletel'444.441" 14÷.1÷14•.+44+4.14++++++14:, ttiTitt os"'Y °111'. h ("Id know
5: "
-4, he Power of Persuasion
is best,"
She drew her Molds from her
end looked at him. Wha,t net
Yes, she agreed, despair
man could lie have beeo that tl
guish awl despair an that g
face did not touch him?
; Or Lady Caraven's Labor of never caai
red for me?" she ed,
Then you have weer MAT
4 lye
:t Love.
say O0 more,"
"No. I are grateful to you;
J.
He saw her draw the eilvery shawl
+':. :.."" 4.1 1•4+141 ++4 ; 4.+7.** 14+4+1'1 though she were seized with violent
* eevet ; ; a++ rouud her shoulders. and alueddnr as
0.114PT1. III, "Lord Caraven," she said at last, col&
"moo you be Nrery angry aqui me it "I feel now he said. that e
of
A beautiful evening in October; it e as. yQ a A, question?" was a cruel thbee, to do. You
/was as though. some the warmth. are
'NO; without enowing wbet the Young; and your whole life Is blight -
r a,
end sweetness of summer Mid Me question may oe, I predict teat - ed. At erst I thought and believed
turned fowhile.
The sky woo' certainly not that eve understood everythieg --
blue, the eolore of the sunset everel "This question has troubled rne I that, you were as IllereenerY and am -
gorgeous, the folutge of the trees; very much; it hos been the Quo thing bitioue as your father -that you were
was magnificent; autumn Vowel -9 which e have pondered night end day as reedy as he, to give yourself
were blooming, autumn Mute tveree_a question 1 cannot answe1. ono your money in exchen 0 or
ny
over the lend. It, was twilight, and th, I feel Is the key to a secret." iI thought that you, through
Lotei eareerea, having no one tee. "You alarm me with that long pro.; knew the full "ilatte Of the eattet
play at billiards with bine, sauntered Inge. Briefly, what is your gime-, otTrYthillg on it—tho you hue
restlessly tbrOugh the moms, think- teen, Lady Caravelir htie house contained -that you
ing to himself how foolish he WI hi .
en not to provide iihoseu with od marry mye: tetorcisi tehairsa„velty did you age keen and shrewd as he was. I
gozupanion tor that most interestinge miejudgeel you -I beg your Revlon for
of agames. 1 •
"Why did I marry your' he echoed, it-"
ll
, with astonishment. S'lle raise4 her pale face to his
"I mast not. let, this happen il oe ;Ise yoq the "eetionhe she went "I swear to you." she said. '
agaiu," he said. "To HIM heroalerleV oh, ebeeemse 1 hare Watched yen and I would rather have died than
reqeires more etreegth 01 1011141 than studyou, and I am convinced at married you had I known the tru
1 AM poesehsed of." lest thatyou did not marry me for "1 believe it4 and rennet You
Lt did not occur to bine that he hoenee
WS alone-tlutt he had a feir it. For Nome short thue pas
Young eaereoo Ile eriee, ourhywhat has have fanceen that in thinking a
wife near him, He never thought of that to do with it?" did I was tedstakezi. Now 1 k
her at all, Ile would not have re- hi thenoth.
Membered her existence but that e she continued. that it. and ant glad to linow it, I
wanderiug ahulessly along the ter- you had married me because you love emenh that you were sacrificed
ed me. I knew that you were eolddlued"
room
Ptce* he °aw her -in the ar/.1.wingt undeuionetrative, that you had uo, "Ilhl Yolhello Youe-Phoef de Ile
that sehoPothY, •little kindness; hut I he. 0,11grY with, ale," she sald--"diO
Ile '91811°4 awned to hinisen ' lieved implicitly that you married .lott!' anY000 else?"
theee eould fiat have been a lovelier 'inn for low; I "You ask me if I had ever 1
pictui.e. Wishing to finish something el boa never seen you -I saw you,One StIMCkattlY to Ask her to be
she wzis reading. She had breuglit her only one he he team. in estop/she" wife. No, I had net. 1 lime: n
book to the wineow and couched went.
tiOWIt where the light WI. Ile saw a.4 asked any one to marry ree. Mr
fair. flower-like face. "I know, I remember. Still. I re- simPle, alasulhelent. reason that
a shining wealth neat 1,ehat e have said to y 011; i .....1 have never 'RCM ally Olat W11004
01 ;lark hair in width lay gleaming itineledah am quite ashamed to tow, should have eared to marry,"
pearls. a, iloaing items of purple vel- you the truth. but 1 wile do so -vi "And are you very unhappy with
vet :von which the WhitC alIOS allkatle howled you had seen me somewhere me?" she asked. gently.
like snow up a purple croeus; the, and had liked me," 1 "What a strange question! 'Un-
lovely :figurethe graceful attitude. Tee ',mailed, but the latIgh Was Sett 10IPPY? Well, no: 1 eallIt(4 quite taw
the pintureeque stress. cut square in pleasant tober. ' that. I am. as I sold before., grate -
the front, leaving the white neck oield you really Mak that?" he ,ful to you; and IIOW that I find you
barethe wide hanging sleevesthe asked, musingly. "Poor childl".:havo been Nietietizett. I am sorry for
41Ruder utile hands -all made u Pie- Thee he turned to her with stiddeneYou."
& the
tunthat he must have admired bad briseheah "Uo y00 Wally :mean to "Now that our marrhige is an ac..
the sadderbeeti any other than money -lender's daughter. tell me, on your Word 01 honor. that complished fact, do you not think
you do not linow way, .
1 loarried that we might manage to make the
Seeing her, he thought it Was pos- woe
nible she understood something best of it-suight try to forget this
..women neveorr vbitile mised her fake proud face
billiards. although wretched beginning) Could youec izev-
1111,7 e„4.11:4St,.tti,11,,Pi„,",..e,f1.11,1."" `5111e .1a.IT "I assure you most solemnly that lie looked at her thoughtfully.
rare even ever so little for ute?"
---- --- '-"""" "'"`" "ts 4ne11e5' do not. It is theogreatest puzzle 1 "No, not in the sense you mean --
I that he wished to speAk to her, She ever bade; not to tore you as a num ehottld
-opened the window and went out toe "Did your father tell yon that
hint.
, I loved you?"
"You will he COW" ila said. with 1I replied, she replied, thoughtfully,
unusual thoughtfulness.
"he did not. Indeed he assered me
She went hack to the drawing- that love was not needful for bap -
morn in search :et a silvery scarf pintas. tre never said, you loved Ille
that she used. She threw it cue-
the who have to find the happiness of
their lives in the fulidluzent of duty;
way, r utast do the same."
Some girls, proudeer indignant,
face woeld have left the ouse; others
the wOuld leave retaliated fiercely; otta
era Would have grown suttei and re-
m
IS vengenn. Size eras calm almost, to
lieroisro, although e uVre cruel pos-
d,12, ithon could not lueve beea imagined -
levee his own confeesien that he
falat- could never care for her Imd not
I quite destroyed her love. lie eras
vetry frank-ainong his sins and im-
periectioes deceit certainlv coula. not
and
t•ti ;
man, Lancelot before he loved 'the Queen?'
;hd Ah, euel if could bave had such
h eh love aS hiSt But I must be eon-
"
were
be
oil was from What she had thought d •
fring ttently, nd put smee nore
warming.
How are you to get tile curd into
little squares Use steur ingenuity
only be careful. Cut across with
Yoer knife borizontally in one liend.
turn °vet. With the other hamd mut
arm. All the secret is to heudie the
;turd Carefully and werzn greheauy
op to 100 degrees,. no wermer, and
if possible visit some cheese factory
and ece for yourself the degree of
acidity allowed the whey -se pazieh
depends on that to iesure a good -
I/ • '
warier DOES A DAIRY FARMER!
Not. loeg since we saw a Orck''t
gramme Of deiry convention with.
discussion, saye a writer in Hoard's
the aheve, named subject ehos en fori
NE.ED TO KNOW?
set down. yet bo..-. .3 C fe -.. 4 .:.., Dezryman. It set 1,IS to thinking, !
kkr MA 4AVA erti, A 4 . . e It SOUP" -
Mind, ie was 410t -What Mal/ a JUST TURN A. LITTLE.
I
...
It would bel he need to enow. The more we:
alry fartIlel` but what dt)e
teviteliesruzi. of °tiles tallinoleto.s't thought of it, the wider the sublee0
- - grew until we saw two things plain -
gruel to write such stories as the iy conearnioh it 1
histories of Lancelot
Vilma a difference betweealindsueri lamineee. quratrtsiotU tee; grhget' nbilAneabdetril anodf tbe
uu-
as the stainless knight and my hue- portance of tize truths n contains. k
band! There are women living as haeond. The great Jack of this :
4S there a man Lancelot -like farmers and tbeir leen of appreclue
4. *$ as tender, as lovely as Elaine;
needful knowledge anneng the dairy
tion of its value.
Let is consider moment a few
et the things a dairy farmer should
know for his own interest and abed
fortune
(1) IT, needs to know that this
'that
have
for
t 1
41 I "I can do it," said Hildred. "It is
nmv an uncommon fate -I can master it.
ant It might breale weak betert, an-
te
ger a proud one -it shall strong len
t ratite. Fate is what people make it
I will melte mine."
It seemed to her like an answer to
ao unspoken prayer, when she opened
a book and saw these words of Car- busmess deerntog cannot, be suc-e
lyle-."Say unto au lauds of happi- eessfully carried on without be is
vise. 1 rap do without thee. With intelligeet, Ile needs to know that;
selarenunciation life beeline." a lack of delay intelligence is con -I
That was to her new, life-aselithe-
nunciation without happinese-IIM all
duty, with no reward but the knowl-
edge of iteelf.
yam
(To Be Continued).
•••••••••••••e.....1.•monTimila
(Wed rriEitsirm rREtroa TRAIT.
ray
ever Brotherly Affectioie Utarked
the Clearacteristic,
I One of the Ways in widelt the clam
-he said you wanted to murry ine,"
lessly over /lee head and shoulders., "And what else? Co on. Mat
where It looked so picturesque, and eisor
'berame her so well that he could
not help noticing it. "That it consented his highest
•r ambition would im gretified."
"This is dull work. being hero
; .
Awe° "It is dull for both of us," she re-
plied. briefly.
"We will ask some nice :people
down at once; this kind of Oleg will
" • '
Piles
Ta prom to you thee Dr.
Meisel Otatment isscertetn
and &Moho° cure or tic%
and every forte of itch
bloodineend erotrudieeni eSt
th* menufecturees have sums -named it. Statee
neeet do. I wanted to ask you, do teatenfals in the daily emu end,aeketnienteste
you know anything Or billiards?" bore whet they think ofit, Tea ma um it *ad
setyanr money beck if net cured. SOC isat,
iagly.
ut
She reapeated wonder- an attalerserueltseteliATS11 CO..Fatette,
Dr in Chase's Ointment
"Yes -many luellee jetty remarkably
well. It is suet) a great resource.
"Do you want me to play with Lord CeraYell Mittertured seine ter.
you?" she asked. quiekly. rible Words between his closed lips.,
"Yes; I an bored to death. I am "Then he never told you why this
tired of smoking, never read much, marriage was forced upon me?"
and there is nothing to dol" "No; he never told me that."
"Extraordinary," she cried - "Then I Will tell you now. lie coin -
"nothing to dot" polled me to marry you -and begin
"What do you mean?" he asked. to perceive that he has sacrificed you
"I mean nothing. I am very as well as myself."
sorry. I have seen a billiard table; "Sacrificed us?" she repeated.
'but I have never played. I will try "You cannot mean the word!"
to Team, if you like." "I do Mean it, both for myself and
' 'Beginners are generally very awlc- you," he replied, "1 will tell you,
ward," he said, frankly. "I cannot Lady Caraven; it is right that you
think how it is that 1 have forgotten should know the truth. :E have been
to ask auy one over. must not be a spendthrift and a prodigal. have
so remiss again." owed your father the sum of sixty
They walked down the terrace un- thousand pounds -t had mortgaged
til they reached a rustic garden seat, Ravensmere to hira. I was also
and, with an air of utter exhaustion, deeply in debt to others. had lit -
the earl sat down. Hildred took her erally come to my last shilling; di
seat, unasked, by his side. grace, ruin, poverty and shame were
"Lord Caraven," said Hildred, an before me. Your father ha,d the
thought has just struck me. We have management of my affairs, and when
been married -how long? since the I asked him what I was to do, he
athird of August, and it is now Oto- told me he had two huudred thous -
'her; and do you know that you, have and pounds and a daughter."
never once addressed me by name? A low cry came from her lips, and
My schoolfellows used to call me she CO 01 her face with her hands.
'Ikeda,' ray father calls me =1111.- "I am sorry to pain you,S he said
deed.' You have so ,contrived as -"sorry to distress you -but it is
.never to give me any name at all. better that you should know the real
You do not ' .say 'Lady Cara,ven,' truth. Your father is atnbitious;
Trildred,' `wife,' or anything of the his hopes • were fixed on your mar -
kind. How is it?" riage. He offered me the alternative
. =a cannot tele" lie replied, blank- -I could choose beggary, ruin,
ly. The question had evidently- shame, disgrace, the total annihila-
puzzled him. will not do it tion of my house and name, or I
agai n, Lasly Caraven, if it annoys cord d choose the money and marry
you he said; aud then there was you. Your fortune has saved me
silence between them, broken only by from worse than death.' I am. sorr
the sighing of the wind.
ONO his Wife -never! YoU forgive
me it these seem hard words -you
have asked me for them."
"It is better to speak frankly;
then we fdtall, both !mow what we are
doing,"
She dropped the silvery veil that
shrouded her head And face,
"Will you tell me," she asked,
meekly, "why you cannot care for
Me? Am 1 not fair enough to please
you?"
"Yes, you are fair enough; but love
is not to be taught or bought -it
collies unperceived, I cannot ex-
press myself well on the subject„; but
it seems to me absurd for a. man to
say to himself, 'It is my doter to
fall in love with such and such It IN o•
Man, So I must do "
"But if that 'Woman were his
wire?" she suggested, gently.
"No man cart love againSt his will,
wife or no wife," was the busty re-
ply,
"Then, Lord Cara:Yen, an I to live
in your house always an unloved,
uncaxed-for wife?" she asked.
"T.he fault is not mine," he re-
plied. "I believed that your father
had explained to you that the whole
affair was -was distasteful to inc.
Believing that, I married you; now
that X have found out my mistake,
pity myself and I pity you, Lady
Caraven, despise tnyself now for
What X have done. If I had to ,
choose again, I should choose die -
grace or death."
The night wind sighed around them,
the sunlight .had died away, the
moon was rising in the sky.
"I tun grateful to you," he con- t
tinued, "I will do all I eau to show t
my gratitude; you are and shall be
mistress of the whole place. It is
yours in so far as your money has
Saved it; you shall have every desire
of your heart, every wish gratified.
Your • position is one of the highest
in the Iand; you shall have every-
thing to grace it. You shall have
entire liberty; you shall invite whom
you like, visit whom you like; .you
shall go abroad when. you will and
remain at home when you will. You
shall be your own mistress in every
respect. I will always pSee -that ev-
ery honor is paid to you."
"In short," she said, "you will
give me everything but love."
"Well, if you choose to put it in
that light, yes."
I accept the terms," she said,
to tell you this story; but it is best gently. "There are many women
union of French. family life shows it-
Self is the great affection of ler
ers for each other. VIM
tiolasy between them good
evil fortune which one does not
in other countriee. A brother
takes a. high position by his tale
loses no opportunity to forward
interests of one of lesser ability
of no ability, Ile MAW tIVLIAS
latter as 0. drag On him, and, p
haps, scarcely feels that Ile is one.
Married brothers often like to live
In the same house, ou different,
floors, and to hire sultuner Alegi in
close proximity.
?host of tbe famou.s Frenchme▪ n who
I knew had each a brother to WhOM
Ile was devoted. says a writer in the
London Daily News. Louis and
Charles Blanc, though so dissimiltir
in appearance, tastes, disposition,
and married to woraen who disliked
each. other, were, morally speaking.
Similes° twins until death severed
the bond. The sante might be said
of the Garnier-Pagese of Jules Favre
end his brother Leon, of Eirliest and
Arthur Ward. of Fuech, the Kulp-
tor, and his brother the deputy,
Paul and Itippolyte Flaudr1n, the
painters, were known in their stud-
ent days aS the Siamese twins. It
not unfrequently bappens that
brothers go into literary t artner-
ship. Institutes that occur to Inc
aro the Goncourts, the Rosily's, the
Marguetittes. It would be impos-
sible to discern the work of one of
any of these brothere from that of
another, What is 'very curious, each
brother, as in. the case of Charles
and Louis Blanc, Ernest and Arthur
Picard, Jules and Leon Fevre, 'dif-
fered strikingly in every characteris-
tie from, the other. The dissimilar-
ity of the Iffarguerittes is so great
that no wonders how brothere,
could be so unlike. Alphonse Dau-
det was not a bit like his brother
Ernest, an accomplished novelist
also.
TOO 31113011 TO STAND.
The prisoner rose to Speak in his
own defence.
"Gentlemen of the jury, he said,
'I knew the man whom I am ac -
used of killing for years, and I suf-
erect much at his hands. He
windled me of the greater part of
my fortune, ran away with my wife,
orsewhir ped me tbree times, prac
ised on the cornet for hours at
iine in the room adjoinin
6
s Int brInging eerlous lOW.K.s;
stantly produeing serious waste uJ
meane and opportunities.
(I) Ile mode to itilow that
must tuella a comment effort to be
intelligent ; he must spend soeue II
tie time and meney at ierist. 122
reading and study of dairy litera-
ture.
(3) Ile needs to Itnow that he bus
not yet learned the tredo of dairy
farming: that there are a. tat of
Ideati end Metheds that he should
know sometbing about.
(4) Ile needs to Imow that dairy
farming is not, a stationary busi-
ness and that he must Reef) up with
the procession in knowledge if be
caenot quite keep up in practice. for
" 014 in this way ean he toll whet
411'.
eee, practice or method wisely to choose,
0":A" (6) Ife 41redS the hest litiowledge
ann. judgments obtaineble in the 4 it
11'4° selection breediug feeding and car- t
tits •
fyou us a-orry°uouutitotubspri'et.awdilhl°014
strainer over a sink with a rack
made of slats under the strainer,
and dip and curd whey togeteer into
the sink, stirrieg the curd te keep it
from formiug into lumps; then stir
ointr.th.00,Aell:0.9aufrtezur itishielnweh jeaythhaespreraudn
over the beep, and turn no the cor-
ners oeer the curd. After pressing
until it is sobel-it man be an hour
or two, or sin hours, eccording to
the power of yeur press -take out,
end draw down over your Cheaie
bandage mede just large enough to
raw over, lay ON'er cloth a. few
inches larger than the top of the
cheese; turn the eheeee over, place
your hoop over and turn down the
edges of ,YOUP bandegge and tit
spread over the cheese a, Mali elotin
Jac e the follower on and press untinet l
yellowJt ydoallt Y1 aSnOtin Qu. i U ette ri art e# lapel
put in a email queutity when you
put
• t4to othineitIrtilentt;illyQ ()vial rjeAlrinnotitottov
inch you want. The CIICPSO Will
Oak darker than your curd does.
If your curd bakes together in
the Milk it is too warm or the whey
has not on:piked the proper degree
of ecidity, or it is sour, If your
cheese is bard .an crumbly, it in
either too salt or sour.
pOCTORING l'HE SWINE.
Should sick swine be doctored ?
seem the seutimental viewpoint it
'sem comet'', to relieve the suifer-
ig,e Of althealS. but the hog LS uot
o be viewed sentimentelly. If he
is ski: the question for the grower
o consider ie : Can thie animal Lat
reated Ea ns not only to save his
ea but 80 48 to make his flesh it
Id Safe to be eaten by bewail
e ugs . Tbat queation answered the
roblem is FOIred.
There are some aliments of hogs
at can be owed perfectly, leaving
o flesh of the animal above all
me for the dairy cow. Any one of
the Case four questions could he dis-
24. cussed to the extent of a, vol -
1120 ume, but we have not the space and
er" time now.
(6) Ile needs to know what crops
to grow that will best aid the dairy P
cow in her work. lie needs to be a ,
good student of the soil. the needs th
11
41*
to know how to aPIAY fertilizers, th
cion of unbealthfulness. In such
see it is proper to doctor the dis-
sed animal. There are other
ine diseases that are incurable.
t which may be Alleviated ,Int dos -
g. Such cases should he ended al
on as diagnoeed by the prompt
atwitter of the invalide. There are
ill other ailnaente that, while they
ay be chethed so as to Prolong the
imars life, affect 1.1 flesh in such
any as to make it 'unsafe for
cal. In all such eases the ono
ins to do at once is to SInUglaer
X0t ilgeilelteeLSrbo true that an 'ounce
prevention 19 worth a pound ol
a The fzwin e grower, therefore,
ould be wise enough to prevent a
eat many of the conunon diseases
ich attack stvine and hence not
corapelled to resort to remedial
0110108 for curing them. The study
bygierte in relation to the grow -
of swine would prove most pro-
CLINO of good results. Although
unclean animal the hog is mul-
led in ninny cases to Ilse in
is and lots far beneath his dig -
y, or, in other words, filthier
brl
tiltlietebIlteltiniTirteltre4 in. the soe apart-
nts of swine is not suggested, but
t more attention given to tide
a;:e of swine growing by the fare
would increase' the health and
ift of the animals is undeubtedly
e,
1;
*le
THE COST OF THE WAR.
he war cost Z228,000,00n. which
good tillage and right care so that Pi
his farm is constantly growing WO.- ea
er and stronger.0*4
(7) Ile needs to know all he, Ow
can know about the best construe -
tion of barns and stables. His cows, In
in these northern lattitudes, live in 30
them at least 20 hours out of the 81
he for one half of the year. For a ot
farmer to go to work to build a, n%
barn. expending a large sum of :111
a.
fo
th
th
money and make no calculation for
a fully supply of light and pure air,
shows at ouce that he does not un-
derstand the subject and wbat it
means to him and his future profit.
te that is just. what a large pro- of
portion of farrnerS are doing when cur
they bnild barn er and stables. They SIIdo not seem to know what it means gr
to shut up a stable full of Cows and wh
comPel them, to breathe over and he
over again, poisoned air for 1.2 ag
huse ours. Becathe poor animals of
cannot talk; because the farmer will ing
not read and post himself on sanit-s441
ary principles; because he 'will not an
keep a record of what hie cows arei pel
doing and beeause he does not read Pet
what cows are doing under better nit
conditions,--becauze et all this, he the
builds every yenr the same delete A
ba.dly ventilated and unhealthy me
stable that his grandfather did. tha,
Within the past ten years there ba,ve ph
been built in this great dairy conn- Ine
try, over 1,000 barns and not one in the
fifty of them is provided with any tru
intelligent system of ventilation, or,
provided with one tenth of the light
they should have. What is it but
ignorance of the right principles of T
sanitation that does this ?
LO three thnes the cost of the Cri-
u war; the people have boreit
lout a murmur ; and this enor-
s expenditure has no whit int -
ed the credit of the United
.gdom says th 11 P . az-
. Could Germany bat% achieved
result, or France, or Ituesie, ?
'financiallyhe tUnited States
merice, might have been equal to
(8) He needs to know vastr3r more mea
than, he now knows about profitable/ witl
feeding of dairy cows. Re wastestmou
costly feeds, all because he will not t pair
study the meaning of a balanced f Kin
, ration. He calls such ideas "news -1 ette
I
Paper stuff," "book farming," etc. this
- (9) He needs to know the value of No.
, . succulent feed for his cows in win- of A
i
lid seriously annoyed me in various
ther ways, but I bore all uucom
lainingly and forga,ve him. But
entlemen, when he came to me wit)
a, tale about how he caught sixteen
Lour -pound trout in a brook that
wouldn't support a half -ounce min
now, the iron entered my steel and I
slew him."
MAKING A MENAGERIE Oh' IT.
A bright boy had attended some
evening lectures on astronomy, and
after three or foulvisits was ques-
tioned about it by his mother, a
good and very devout, het very ig-
norant woman.
The youngster, proud of his supe-
rior knowledge, probably exaggerat-
ed what he had heard. At ally rate,
he told her about the Great Bear,
the Swan, the Lion, the Bull, Ram,
Scorpion, Fishes, and other con-
stellations. '
The mother listened with ill -con-
cealed dismay, and when the boy
stopued she turned round to her
husband, and said •
rin very much afraid
that that boy is, being, Contaminated
by winked atheists, because he's
making the blessea firmament into a
menagerie t" •
and thc value of tbe silo to pro-
vide such feed.
-
(10) A look over the herd of cows
.M111,-.011.110:11.33[3.111•311=MINSIIIII.p.M211P/11.2.11•MMISIMIrr
Xidney Disease and Stomach Tr,otables More Evidence
Dr. Chase's Kiciney-Liver Pills.
'Kidney disease and storna,ch and
liver disorders are ahnost always
found together, and for this rea.son
Dr, Chaae's ICidney-Liver Pills, on
account of their direct and coatinued
action on these several organs, are
wontlerfully ,enective in curing such
omplicatione.
Mr. J'ames Keeley, caretaker of
the Primary School and Presbyterian
church, Newmarket, Ont., states :-
lea find that , Dr. Chase's Kidney -
Liver PilIs are the best medicine I
ever used.. I was troubled for some
time evath kidney disease, 'pains in
the bade and stomach disorders. At
, ULU," ,r suflered very ,severely from
MallreweerniniMillieftee•naurosnisinsicstamarailinalealealSSE.qiieliMil•••••
of the Efficiency cf
ba.ckache, but since using Dr. I not long, before the paint) crltirely
Cha.se's Kidney -Liver Pills I am all
right again.
it is my belief that they are the ytiip ot .Lmseed ai.70 Tu -
I1 most efiective medicine a person can pentine for the children when they
um for kidney disease. and stomach I had coughs and colds .100 I t1Ce1•
troubles."
I knew it to fail to relieve the trouble
Mrs. 1 -loss, 100 Maaitoba stweet, at 01 ce."
St. Thomas, Ont., states, Icid a ...here is no quic1,-se1 cr more cer-
tain way- of curing back pains, and
kidney ci ISO LI 1 li • n by the tir,0 of
Cha' s Eh:hey-Li er Pills.
Seares, of Uouunti 11111 e proved
this, and maily ha N C FA'n t sl a to-
mente similar to the ahm.c. ene pill
a doe°, 2:5ci.o. a box, at all deahr
1111,0 .me, and I was quite Nt.rong and
well again. We have alm used Dr.
vet y back, and at times suffer-
ed very Much from sev,ere pains
across the small of my back. Be-
lieving these to be caueed by de-
rangements of the kidneys, I began
the ma of Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver
Pills. This treatment seemed to he
exactly what I req,uired, for it vete
or li.'dmalascia, 1.lates Co., Torent6
t
HONESTY IN PERIPECTION.
To find honesty in its full perfec-
tion it is said that one must gu to
the Welsh. colliers of the Ogmore
Valley, who travel by it worknutn's
train which runs from iffaesteg to
Abergwynd every mornin.' and rtuins e -
i 0 the evening. There are
heavy r e0011110',d
for taking pipes 411
4-1 down the pit, so when the
train reacheS 115 destMation in the
mnp; ornievery smoker lays his pipe
on the seat, and when Ile returns in,
the evenin&,, it is exactly where he
left it. :During the day the Coaches
are shunted to a siding; the doors
are not locked, hut there is no sin-
gle instance of a pipe having heen
the ask, but there as not a &Ingle
power on the Continent of Europe
which it would not have ruined. In
•
even the most, advanced dairy any one of them the expenditure
districts shows plainly that the would have bred riots, revolution,
dairy farmer needs to know more mad the loss of =Wire,. Still, even
than he now knows about breeding 418 England has never gloated over
and raising a good cow. Ilis ideas her military, successes in the great
on dairy breeding are so badly ndee extremity with which she was re-
ed up with, general purpose, beef cently beset, so she will not be
and all sorts, that his cows average purse -proud over her financial tri.
at a, low grade neerla everywhere.
The cows he produces mark uner-
ringly his ideas of cows. They are
the work of his hands, the outcome
of bis ideas. Do they not show
clearly that he neeas to know more
thaw he seems wmilling to 'ow on
this question. ?
We might prolong this article in-
definitely, but here are ten beanches
of knowledge which we believe all
will admit the dairy fernier needs
greatly to be better posted in.
HOMPe-MADE CI-TEES:LI
Now that rennet tablets can be
procured, the directions will help
you to know how much, rennet to
use, writes a farmer's wife.
Warm the milk to SO degrees, use
both night and morning's cheese,
stir a few minutes to keep the cream
from risieg. Any cleau kettle or
boiler will do to fleet the milk in,
any cb lean tuwill do to set your
milk. But a cord knife to cut the
coageUtted milk; cut across one way
then across the other. Get a square
of coarse linen strainer cloth larger
than your tub, wet it and spread
over when the whey comes the
top, and with a shallow pan dip
oft the whey and put it in your
kettle to Warm; do not let it gct
very warm. When you have your
curd cet into little squares, begin
dipping the warm. whey in it, stir-
uniphs.
CHOOSING HIS PRESENTS.
Those about to celebrate •their
birthday might take a hint from
Grand Secretary '1:-.1.11112,', Li of Peking.
On the sixtieth anniversary of his
birth a, few days ago he refused to
accept any presents unless they were
of intrinsic value. ,elome brought
him storks and deer of solid pure
gold, each a foot high and beauti-
fully chased ; gold, buddhas; green
lodestone vases and rings ; and u.
foot high ''Ood of Longevity" 01
solid pure gold, enkonced in
minia,ture temple m the finest jade --
Stone of the purest white C010r, in-
crusted with diamonds and precious
stones of great value. All these pre-
sents were graciously received, but
others, such as strolls and tablets,
unlese of great antiquity, were uni-
formly refused without even a word
of thanks.
-------
Teacher--` 'What does the word
celibacy mean ? U1'1 .1 -••The state
or condition of being eines.' Teach-
er—"Correct. Now, if you wanted to
express the opposite of celibacy or
singleness what word would yoli
use ?" A Bright Pupil—"Pleurisy."
--
"All things come to him who
waits." "Yes; and when they come
1
• he finds they weren't worth. Waiting
fens"
Safe
mi;Sfs'