HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1903-7-30, Page 7renreninftrattrefeatentattnafentlinalettoseinialgaltanteriallOPPOpett
1
STRONGER TAN DEATH
•
A TRANSOM. ED. .L F.E.
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eatfantentinittnanattlestene
CHAPTER IV.
Ae the evening wore on. Iv' s Anx
io-
us eyes Were quick to note that
Are l WAS Me a strange snood. She
had never sem bim quite like this
before. She knew him the hapwiest
Q l The; whose lire was MI benevol-
once and enjoyment; one to whom
all pleasant things were pleasant and
beautiful -Mews beautiful. Once or
twice before she had eeea the radi-
ance of hie life dimmed, as it were.
by sone Week foreboOing. but it
this work i death is the one thing I
Onn certAin.''
"And efter death a better and
brighter life, for ever,"
He snook his head. "1 eao twee
or no other life than this," be
,4
said; "1 asn no better, nhhat religi-
ous folk hope for in Ineeveo—wolden
/tarpsand crowns, and thrones, And
spetless robes, and. jasper paereinent.
and eternal eavoioawl imitable
glorY, do not Appeal to•tne in the
leost. The world, we now is infinit-
ely more deliglitful inits bormony,
its beauty, its infinite variety, in
the myriad miner:rents it offers to
swore, and intellect, and imagina-
tion. Gi'Ve we inAninortality and I
should take it here. It is because
the world is $o delightful that death
—the end of all Deluge—is se intoler-
abl'eS.”
4urely, Vivian, your own soul
Assures wou that on can nevo,V
die?,
"me ggvatest man tbat ever Uve
and died—eave one-ehas said be
aisle is father to the thought.It
iS our owe 'van% sbong from an
ulhilatien that breeds this flottering
/tope of trumortality. When we die.
. we die; arid there is an end. Our
'birth is an accident. We issue from
nth seat tatted int nhanhat eon no„.,e,o tithe nowers klieg softiy in the Pure the void and retur to ft 19 et
new his fancies,. of Which a love of Itnnl'tnlight. =oohing the still air ;are w'—ie smite to himself rotber
Noture's loveliness shoe the ono. Istveet. with their breath. tboo to ter—"ttott we should hopo
Tha twalon Was settuog down, „50/t.,,i Vi0Ciala Arden peeing the garden to nave mar lives prolonged throtigh
a the ;two wten ell things tiro yield
Plano Paul disappear? tiur lives are,
after all, only in theme mere won-
derful then the lives of the attintals
mewed us. No one claiuts Eternity
for theno llotween the lowest and
higheet men--lietween libanespearo
or Newton or elloilstorie—ated tile
hAve Imown leita; I have never seen
hint like this bet once before. That
once was at the graveside of a dear
frievta of both. who died while Ardel
was ebroad. and wi.ose life he coulO
beet soved it he had but Untrarf1
There was a. catch Trevoe's
voice as Ire reeelled the eeene, and
this little touch of sompietlay quite
won Lucy's heart 'to him. like' elly-
ess left her, and preeently they were
talking freely together law old
Panned In a motueut, leaving an ittends.
things bright as before its coming. Then Wee slipped itainoticeel from
Rut now the gleitin Seemed 1.0 deep- the table. threw light, Only &newt
en as the tours woe*. by, end when of white wool over her bead, and
bentoused Mowed! his gaiety' Was ipktssed through the coriservatory out
et strained. !into the bni-fasbionedi garden. n•bere
on Alte• •quiet woe, For a oath
naerat the rive of the. tod Sal; touched.
the borizota turning, the river t
oid goid and settler; the woode in
blaze. Then elowly the day died
away into dusla
"Aataher glori•ous (lay :vent and.
Write." Awlel muttered impatiently,
"So melt lees liat left."
brighteutel enenently witen the
two youngent childrea. roey and
.eurila in White *eases and big blue
saalass, ',Watered into the rooraa
riciale :Jenrette deserted her now
fricad Lucy to percb Upon his limo,
and prattled to bine Mkt! au equal.
while be foraged for her amorgst the
.calie and fruit on tlie 11Mniagitable.
"I love 'ow" she fond siveetly. re -
smiling A teem ripe strawberry with Can It NnIrat Won urll. , tn."A 11.9le,ned, her letWe soul n
het bead on ono eitte; and for a tato- ttin lintlhoo—relennt fear, ehrinninet :revolt againet hio (Hemel deetrine,
newt it woe douletnal it it was the. iddorTer. terd444ga 43t 44e lalt"talde';hut eotad fiud woad to Answer.
tenet or the. man Wa9 EO favored. .nw"tb," • They cause in their eatalit to where
I Dote 00 -conFe yetm guroup. draw- the gartletaer had left km spatie ;awl;
&Wive. Fest 1 wei up a big lady 1 to the entielder tiler brown elite,
inaWy 'via if '0011 wait for wee," on, emplewitewerelied.
""I wiett 1 Veinal, rny it' said Awki hold of the handle and
meted tho clod. • .
• ,i1oN
is what thin Wed I Mean be.
war* Ito lotion "Inw. eon ..told I
who attend here to-eirie :tlelthinne
thinting, full of the joy to life. eon-
aFacapt (lad, :Via ion." SeiOnS -a! the Wanly and wonder 01
otlieeto le. Oman iniqowlifftlb",' lett the universe -last spedeful, of dull,
ebeeted lairtwelf. wish I could be- weittus earth 'this."
14141,*fit faith Ua.si no wise
hied, bolding ter emit, tenure
d Knew it, and, in spite ot res.
., drew a vague .eortirort front bee
ettlatte belief.
llo plucked a damask yore that
pushed out over the pathwan, jet
tleeslo, was aware of o white
illa path, and two soft
eyes Joon:lett with tenderest
lathy into nie own.
Wu* tbe band she belt) to him
auti atted it softly an an elder
brother "Well. Etat" he
said. smiling; "restless, like setyt
veli? If nelieeed in ghonts 0 „Hottentot there is a winer gent than
I Wield have taken you for ltefween to Ilottantot awl my New.
now." I fornalland dog. should the life
Are you restleas? why are ,of the liotteritot—et mere bundle of
tght, Violent Tell sue blind. dell. brutal instinele—be pro -
r -trouble le, that .1 may try
11Tia, coword's trouble, tat,
ear."
"Pearl you afraid. Viviao! Pon
put with a jest.'"
longed to. all Eternity, and the life
f the dog—patient, gentle. er-
ection:Wee-owlish 'divine'? NO. our
"rit.Y.i are Mt and quereetid. line sparks
nd ehere. be et ttnetateinee
e slight howl of time."
Teem wee melt Inteery an late neep
%Taw *het the soft bream eyes
hrleanad
with pitying tears, "Old i
if 1 could 01411y 14041 Dr comfort
Artiel. "1 only 'MA 'I could wail; ""•"
but 1 can't, aou loam." "Von munch, Mu, No pewee in
Wiwn the claildren venal:nod, a how world or ont of it rart Leto or
Ale of rare wine woe eatad hoeitr; there ant no never neck
carefully by Ilw bost, in its wirier-
wort; cradle, and very carefully he
three alaSaka with tha laptid
0.
"Your health, Arden" bp evied , Neve like non, how rightly or
oneerratn eana may. math. 14oppy :066Teingir, it WIflatid i4F11141,F matter. T•
returee of the day," Mould at newt tr cape diepair. If
Weaw soft voiee repeated tho prey. I mold nope tot you do. 1 elitiold be
er. And letey breathed it Silently in baPPY."
her grateful heart. Wraith vowel arta, Vivian! halm
Rut even as r& -poke Trevor re- au,4,1,„In" WOW"
ratenhered ouddeely what Ardel -"at flan CAuTiot have ralthlw Alm idea in the white moonlight. and
card at the lava about birthdays. lerRing ter it. 1 eon fOre1-1 lareli to breathing A, faint tlelieht into the
lin saw hint Wiare, and his lips Weak. .or set, or 100ek, hat 10 1/0. Coital air.
tiglitala and bia cheeks pale as with lime 1 naanot. IVY thoughts Wen'b1 Without a word Inea took it from
it entitle') pang. change by wishing. 3 think when I hat band and fasteoed it in tbe bus-
dt patent' In a mamma. and maw roust. Reward or punishment vow am of her white dreas.
gaily Oinked glasvs all round and fuet tempt or force faith or unfaith. "A lamrderl" zadct Ardel, between
thonlied them with a wood and I ira're searched the world of fielenCO, Jest and earnest. "That rove, too.
cantle. But he Pat down his own lava. I have strained 1ny (Wen 0111. a reeond einett lute 0, Ion aaatos jaw
"mina tamost matanota woo big into the void after death. and I find strange than ouretaa life that drew
friend'a keen eye *OM that he WAS the hope of a 'Arturo lifew-nowhere." its beauty. welor, forne its green:
heyelld hie Wont. "140 noi tlod even lo Your leaves, and blusbing twents, arid sub -
"Are .you in pain, Arden" he void. iboultilis• Vivian!" Nile tried, with a tie perfume. 'from the dull, brown
end Ow 'two WOnlen loolwd the same thriU of religious terror. data Its life has Nauished, end in o.
queetion anolounly. deny uuthiugt" 110 a1111w0red feW hew% more, form, color, petals,
"Aly deur fellow! 1 man say that sadly; oldY doubt. It 15 tho 'deo and Perfutne will bo lost for ever.
I never knew what pain is,--eot, at or My nature or the virtue., 1 an There is no immortality for the
:kale, that 1 can remember. A mere tate nothing on trust. I =via no mew"
vellielt trouble gripped me for 'Other guide than my reason, and "You would not rompare our souls
moment, a trouble that cannot be, when that AIMS I doubt. 'Nam ttocl, 'with the life of a LoWer, Vivian?"
helped or mended, that every Mina enveloped in mystery. that I should -laity not? We are all inabitely
ereature has to hear as Wall 104 T, dare to make denial or sissertion of ' little. We foolisbly flatter ourselves
that wero any comfort, %Odell it the unknown or accept the denial or with the sense of our own indispene-
is not. 111 smoke this cigar in the assation of others who eon know able importance. To every man,
garden, if you will let, me,"—he 50 more than my,Feb? am no Wolnan, and 'child the tiny sitota of
looted at Eno, who mnIltd and nod- • Mocking sceptic, Eva; no exultant self is the great centre of 0218 vast,
ded.—"and come back in whet you ,apostle of infidelity. ely doubt illimitable universe, whose wonders
would call a more Christie/01Wesprings from an humble conscious- we cannot strain our minds to grasp
frame .of mind." noes of ignorance." the thought of. Look at that. great
As Ardel left the room .Tohn Two "WE bus revealed Himself to us, globe of white light, ]Ora; look at
vor turned kindly to the young girl woh you not tow eris wordI the stars that spangle the black sky
at his side, whose eyes were full of lmdoubtinglYt"
a
c. thicld,y. Wo, know they are
sympathy. "Revelation! n'hen all is sa▪ id and worlds, many of them a million times
"Don't look so sad, lifiss--" s done it stands on human evidence
"Call her Lucy, John. You may
,Nas well begin it at once. ;She is
one of ourselves now, you know,"
nInell, Lucy, if I• may," said John
Trovor shyly (men are shyer than
women), "you must not be so pain-
ed about Dr. Ardel. We is the hap-
piest man upon earth, and shares
his happiness freely all round. The
world has been very good to him,
und he is worthy of the best the
world has to give. For tea years 7
and assertion—men's statement and
mends argument. 1 must judge the
authority, weigh the argument. I
must think for myself, as well as
they1 have tested their evidence,
and it itils to tonvinte me."
"I know and feel it is true."
"I would not shako your coon -
dance for the world, Eva. Wight or
wrong, it makes you happy, and
that is everything. I envy your
faith, but I cannot share it In all
lisn Dumps' physician once
fell ill.
Said he: "Ill have no a
draught or pill."
Said Jim: "Ho ho,you're
on the shelf,
You who cure °there,
cure yourself."
Then Jim sent up some
"Force" to him,
" That's what he needs,"
euotht " Sunny Jim."
The Iteeeyee-ServeCereai
for doctor
and patient.
Elias lEeeten Thiee
4'3 waf3 attacked last May by appeedi-
°KU. As.1 showedsigns of reeovery doctor.
and I beganto cast aroundfor a suitable diet
and as aresult we fell upon 'Force,' which
has been a wonderful boon to nee I haee
eaten almost three cases. H. II. lin,taft.,1
!i4"WPF,M4
larger than our own; that beyond
them in the vast void are worlds,
and still more worlds away into in-
finite, never-onding space. All this
we know, yet cannot realize it. I
have looked through the most pow-
erful telescope in the world, and
have seon myriads of new Worlds
start into view—mere pinholes of
light in the inuneasurable void, lily
thoughts have gone out into space
seeking a limit, and finding none,
and retureed abashed almost to an-
nihilation. I have found my own
littleness in this vast scheme of crea-
tion as hard to realize as ever, It
Is grotesque presumption to imag-
ine that, while all other thing, great
and small, die and disappear, we
tiny atoms should live *for ever."
"I Con not frightened by . that
thought, Vivian. One human soul.
is to me infinitely higher, more
tvoriderfuit more deserving the Crea-
tor's care, then a whole inanimate
utiverse, than all these great globes
of mere lifeless xnatter,"
Who can tell, Eva, Ulla they are
lifeless? Why should our little ene•th,
width is no more than a speck of
dust in the universe, be specially dis-
tinguished? Row dare we dogmatize
of worlds which we see as sparks in
the darkness—to which even our
thoughts cannot reach? Our
tiny lives have.. thole,. beginning
end their encl. There was
no life before birth, and there is
none ,after death. The sole wisdom
is in enjoymen.t, to ignore death,
since we cannot hope to evade it."
"I have never seen you like this
before, Vivian."
"I have seltioin been like this be-
fore; -until lately never. In youth
death is, a more word to us—a word
in which we can find no meaning.
But the thought of it has C03110 clos-
er to me of late. The sight of that
poor girl whose life was lost and
won has made death familiar. I
envied your children, Eva to -night;
enoird them the long stretCh of hap-
0- lee they have before them in
v-irderfid world. I felt a wild
or my lost youth as 3 look -
—ee.se.seree
ed at them, and listened W. them,
Let confees all ray lolly. Thie
birthday bas been a trouble and a
fear to Ine far a )(mg time bacle
Seine one bas said that at thirty
years is the birthday of oh) age. I
feel it is so. The best belt of MY
life has gone. n beve crossed the
summit of the hill and am going
dowe. Stalcleoly, just now, for ono
awful moment. I realized what death
,Ineant. The thought that the day
was corning, and must eon*. whoa 1,
that tbink, and speak and feel, And
We, shall be no more, gripped non
tittering Oeart-etritigs with bitoi-
ereble fear. Ciely for a moment. or
I should have gone mad. Even now
but faintly realize the meaning of
y own words. The cold fit of lean
'bas passed away. I feel I sitall live
tor over, and I shall not test the
folly of the thought. ale warm. un-
reasoning glow of life and happlaesa
full tiPon me again, and tleath
no mom then a meaningless name
'Thera is no death!"
"There is no deatba" echoed
with assured faith to her own beart.
e„
hate: !wonted together towards the
, and peeesed close to tbe open
11 window of the sitting -roma. The
Iwindow itself Jay in blacle shadow.
laeross Which the warm WOW the
towelled Streamed out till it melt-
ed in the cold. white moonshine be-
yond. Wtthin the r00411. Trevor and
Iaicy were talking old Mends.
Looking through Oa daaltriess int.)
he light, they could see tho smile
ton her lips; they could hear the
werful times of her geotle voice.
"She too has forgotten death."
said Vivien Arden "tbaugh ehe has
just escaped by a miracle front its
grasp, and her mother lies in a
newentado grave. How strange
this oblivion. and how merciful:
Wititotit it, what mieery would life
tient
(To be continued.)
oizaz WOG.
1111.1•OTIM
Calla or 3lsNester's =ail' at the
st Office,
A collie 1)og that, will the
postallis, tone tate plane in
mad ann ter the mini of Itie nate
Is Owned try Einar E. Pyle
too iiarbor. Mich,
trae dog lewatoed its tali* from sea'
Ing Jr. Pyle make WS way to the
cc:aloes window. It. is actaistomed
to roar 534 812 lie biald legs. place
Mtn forepalTe OA tile shelf, and then
to the vernier, who liTIOWS it, the
dog barna. otit Its want Awl le is
lekly filled. iteceiving the tnenelt
al lettere and papaw:, the dog trots
off to hio hor00, holding tbe ;Waft
its natutlt until Witten out by its
oter.
Tins is only one of the triens of
the dog, thieb IS tailed .D,Curg.x. 11.
will meet the center in the etreet
• looking him agratrela in tato
face, will say, as plainly no it ae
could tweak' 01
"AnwthIng for Ityle?'•
If there le, the dog gels Vhs ntail
mul tetkes it to tato slum vriesre Ids
nositer ntays en vaeh
Matt's alawea constant ccmmaalcia
Is a bay home 8 old, called
Jerry. Tbe dog rides Jerry blow -
back, the latter seeming to i111.1"0 50
objection. The herSe /um a atrange
Valley for the dog, and being told
to kba Irfax deliberately lowers Its
!mad awl licks the face of ilia col-
lie. Not hang shIce bbs harao suc-
ceeded in pulling a board off ids
manger and got his head fneteued in
the opening, trax di:wavered the
horses predietunent and raced off
after Ur. rylo and brought bim to
the reseue.
NOT TIP TO TIllt PART.
Moron in time of war the soldior
is populaely sepposed to lean in an
idle life, barring a bit, of drill. Re-
ally Ile must be an actor in addi-
tion to his more inartiaritualifiea-
tions. Irow nmny persons anuhl
stand for hours aud boors immov-
able, as tbe wuardo did vim watch-
ed (liken Victoria's cofiln?
The requisites of the "brave sojer
man" appear in a story of a drill.,
ina.eter who was patting a raw com-
pany through the exercises of a fun-
eral service. 1Te had -them drawn
up with 'their arms reversed, and
then he said)
"Now I'll be the hearse:"
So be ninrched solemnly down Ihe
line at a slow pace. Turning his
eyes to bile side to see how his men
wore behaving, he stopped suddenly
and roared:
"Can't you men p-ut on an expres-
Sion of regret?"
CURIOUS "GOOD-BYES."
When a Teak bins farewell to a
friend he solemnly eroeses his heeds
on his breast veld makes a profound
bow. The natives of New Guinea,
on the other hand, exchange oho-
eolate, conveying en eeeereosion of
corifi'denee in each other tts well as
a salutation.. 1 thoPiiI Islands
two cardinal -colored' feathers are
crossed, and the Burmese gentleman
niurnifurs soothingly, '`ITAb!
In Javan your friend takes off one
of his slippers and says, "I remar'd
thee."
117.EDDING QUOTATIONS.
A clergyman in Melbourne edver-
-Uses himself as always in readiness
to tie the nuptial Itnet, at Rolt's
Matrimonial Chambers, 648, queen
street. I -lis' tariiI of ratos is rea-
sonable. Here are two of tile items:
''llifterriage fee, $2.62; or marriage,
with guaranteed geld wedding ring
and necossee'y winneoses prbadded,
4'0,25. More costly wedding ring
in stock if required."
EAGLE 11110111WAYM'Ettlt
Walltelm. Schneider, was driving a
lnitclfer's cart along a road at Frei-
burg, C1,,rni.a.1.13r, recently, when a
pair of large eagles swooped down.
White one hovered threateningly
round his beam, the Other Seizod
big joint of fre;sh meat, Then the
two Weds made off together with
their grey.
;
t FOR FARMERS t
Seaannable and Profitable IT,
lliata for the Bun
0.1 the $ola
. aToow. 3MTI-1De erleCWARD.
Etlevartt Van Aletyne., in 8 neoeat
4rth..eti.fr:ii:Wairt.9g7A11:44redetleamod7ogQi•rheaarldss. .144sIt
trill be ehaerved that the stock - be
wooki turn into an -Orchard does not
inelude' cettle or .horseo which could
reiteh. up. And mutilate hearin2
hrenellee1 "There are those' who
101Y0 .10110Weci tbe preetice tend • the
writer' is one), when the treea bave
come . into a full bearing, of Stop -
plug . ealtivation, eeediog down to a
variety of pasture grasses, then fill
Qther -,ciartevitezrd wuletaiiine:oetttne; ssheetocpk, •Sii
sonwit:
supplementary feed in addition to,
what they get from the orwiterd
They will beep down tbe grass, de-
stroy Worm -infested apples, ae4 fere
`Mite the trees at the Safne time. The
trees W111 • nOt. MOW So ref*
growth. • bet it. till' be solid woo
and there will be a greater teittlene
to produce fruit buds. The (lidera
enee in the eapenae of caring for the
orchard .ataeOlatpared with the abeve
is roamedvery materially: no +small
iteet in this day of scarec and high-
priced labor. 1 have followed this
plan with two orehards for 25 years.
and with 8 third for 10, and Italie
had large annual crops of Ilus ap•
plea in seine CeeeS Mien cultivated
orebarda did not .produeo. I eetild
oleo tomer not a few others 'wbo boot,
been equally .steneeetni by following
this inetliod. 3 do not say that this
will work. in every ease and on MI
.50115. for I de, not believe there is
any one only And best method. NO-.
titer de 3 believe to the orehard be-
teg Welled int.° a meadow from
winch ,antroal crops of hay aro re-
moved, 3 tun glad to record that
the -time has some when -the onan
who followsthis plan dares lift his
voice ie public and take Ills place in
*0 Saline SOeirty as the exee•selve
cid-
vatur. It is results we are Mter."
instead of keeping her in tha dai
herd and wasting feed On her. Rome
ber that 11 cost e about as weigh t
keep o Peer refiner on the farn3as i&
doe$ A geod one,
There are three essentials necessary)
to twelve a good growth and yieln
of from crops, They are; A goP4
eclat thoroughly prepared, good aeett
planted in, good eeason. And thent
ough cultivation at tne proper timed
Eaell is importaat And One is den
pendent upon the other, and a faller(
to give either ths required attentio
will effect, to a more or less ezttt
the Mulls.
Those farmers who are sowing tear
tracts of alfalfa ehould not expect.
tne same results as though sowing!
clover, The alfalfa, at first is a sloNve
grower, it does practica)ly nothin
the Ora season, and many A plot 15
• Ploughed up by a clover farmer, and
the crop denounced an a failure at'
just about the time it is beginning(
to makena little progress toward
showing up "A sterol."
ALWAYS IN DEMAND.
Fresh eggs are not easily obtained
en when tte market is well 5 tOCIE-',
e4. It is only when eggs are used
the geometer kerns that they
et froeh, and as a rule be is
ra willing to pay a larger SUM
that be knowe to be good
are delivered to him from.
th• e yard. In order for tho fawner'
ta procure double prices, custionerW
s ould never receive AU egg over ons'
opatioa ape; 0.111aaSpQ Woof
deliver the eggs to them ie
Invite them to visit you/
and give them every opportene.
know your Methods. Hide
ing. and never anew a stale ow
erne on your place. When OnCel
have secured the cortfidextee
customers, they will pay a high
than buy elsewhere.
ANAOINO A FRIGUTENZR
HORSE,
any young and spirited lames
become utterly panic-stricken at the
sight and sound of a moving rail-
road train or aut automobile. When
so frightened 710 amount of reassur-
ing talk or restraint of the reins can
control them for they lose all con-
trol of them:wives. John Gould has
Sound a method which is at once hu-
mane anti safe. Ile writee; "When
we two trouble towing 'We get out of
the carriage, throw the lap -robe
over the head of tho Mem, take the
four corners of It in the hand,
grasping the reins close to the bia
wad just let the monster pass. A
bone hooded in this way is abso-
lutely in the bolding control of the
driver, and while it suay tmaglee
things, so loug as it cannot see, it
will stand by tho man woo holds it.
Many a time when bridges have
looked 'scary' or trolley ears Caught
me, the lap -robe bits been a sure
protection against trouble, and
many A horse, whom driver takes
his life in his bands (hiving
into a city with its—to the horse—
many objects of fright would drive
like the best with a light blindfold.
It may not bo considered bY some
as a mark of horsemanship to blind
a horse to control Ws fear, but It
leseens the danger of accident great-
ly, and horse itud driver aro on
quite as friendly terms when the
danger is over, as though a. strenu-
OuS time had been risked with
doubtful results."
FARM TOPICS.
Dried blood as a food for laying
hens is said by those %vho have used
it to give much better results as re-
gards increased egg production than
either meat or cut green bone. The
quantity to feed is about one ounce
for each fowl at a. meal.
A good cow should produce at
least one pound of butter per day.
This is not an extraotdinary per-
formance for an individual. but it
can be claimed as a good record
when all the animals in a herd come
up to such requirements.
When nature did not intond 0 cow
for a dairy outman you can't make
one out of her; and you should send
her to the butcher where she belongs,
ADIIINISTMNG A DRENCII.
The usual Method of giving liquidi
edielnes to domeetio onimals is by
058 of drenching—that is, pouring
11, down tile patient's throat. This
is usually done by WOW 0! 8 Pak
bgtt Ie. Rut it is awkward to handle,
and liable to be broken by contact
with the animal's teeth. A drench -
tag tub6 is ranch ;were catiefaetory
and one should be kept on every
fano. It may be Made 01 05 ordinel
mw funnel. a piece of half inch rubel
her hose three feet long, and a pleeea
of iron gas pipe Live or six inebein
lung. and of proper tiler/toter to fit'
snugly into one end of the rubber
hose. Into the other end insert thet
narrow end of tile tin funnel and the,
instrument is complete.
To 11SO thiS„ raise the anima's
just high enough for fluid to
rim down its throat, insert the tube
between its teeth and pour the mein-
ein,e into the funnel, This requires
two mett. one to bold the animal's
head steady and. inaterge the tube,
while the other pours down the
medicine.
••••••
THE GREEK.' InXECIITIONXIt.
al. Greece the death penalty be
said to be often pronounced, but laud
lifficultw of obtaining execratiOnensf
was for a long time almost inotipez);1
able, It was at laat aurtattuated 1
giving to a. mtir.derer the choice be-
tween his OW21 death or atezeptanwh
of the office of permanent sweetie!
tianer. Tho Man lives ultme in an;
old tower built by Vonetiars on an:
Islet autenide tbe port of Natiplied
owere ;Recess -tones aro Wilton to him!
every morning by the boatioate who
is citrate' to exolotage no evonel with
hien. TWICO a year a steamer calls
for him and his instruments of
death, and be lea -is upon a tour
of executions. 1
pie TO prove to ran that Dal
S Cheseez Ointment is
and absolute euro for each.
a ceelain 4
Sid eve./ form of itebluz,s
b1etatagarelneetrudiagp1lea,1
the manufacturers heve enargeateed it,. See tetel
timeniale in the daily' prose and ask eourneigh-
bOre wwwther tblnk ode You can use it 0511i
seteeur manes- back if Dot cured. 60:tabor,
512 dealeraerlheitaeeme,Da'res & CoeTerento„
InChase's Ointmenti
33e careful how you go to Sleep at*
an anction. A gentleman settled
himself in a comfortable chair and,
his senses soothed by the auction-
eer's lullaby, soon dropped asleep,:
When his nap was over he left the
plate. The next -day he was astoun-
ded at receiving a bill her nearly,.
$aao worth of carpets ond other
things. The auctioneer has received
his somnolent nods for bids.
A 11r.A.RNING.
readful Case
of Itchin Hes'
Ofiotor Wanted to Burn the Ekin With a Red Hot iron—Patient Was
Cured by 'DR. CHASE'S OIRTMENT.
Mr. Alex. McLean, Tarbot Vale,
N. S., writes'—”For two years I
worked as sectionman oii the Domin-
ion Coal Company's Railroad be-
tween Sydney and Glace Bay, N. S.,
and during that time was exposed to
ail torts of weather. Gradually my
health failed, and t became a
tim of peotruding piles. • At first I
did not know what' nay. ailment was,
but cortsulted a -doctor, and though
lee treated ie for piles, they only
grew worse.
"I was forced to give up work and
return to my home. My suffering
could scarcely be described. I could
not walk or lie down, but while the
rest of -the family wae sleeping I
\
would be groaning and aching from
°the excruciating pains.
"Again I ddeided to consult a doc-
tor. This one stripped me, and
said 'the piles would have to be
burned withka red-hot iron. I shiv-
ered at the thought of burning tho
flesh, and told him I could not
think of undergoing such an opera-
tion, so he, gave me .sorne salve, for
which he charged me two dollars,
hut it did not do me any good.
'`I was in a deswate condition, au4
had about given up hope of ever beq•
ing freed from this dreadful suffer%
in when a friend told me about Dr..
Chase's Ointment, Re said he had
seen so many cases that it had
cured that he would pay for it him-,
self if it failed to cure.
"My experience with Dr. Chase's
Ointment is that the first applicae
tion did 333,e more good than did the'
two doctors, and it has made me as
well and as free from piles as any
man. Since being cured I veer1,70,1
during the winter in the lumber'
Woods and experienced no return of;
my old trouble,. I am not putting
It too strong when I say that DV
Chase's 'Ointment was worth $100 c
box to me. You are free to use me
testimonial for the benefit of others;
as 3 feel it ray duty to make knowsd
this great ointment,." _...
Dr, Chase's Ointment, 60 cents a!
box, at all dealers, 6r TOtimonsonr
Dates and Co., Toronto. S
To protect you against imitatioell
the portrait and signature Of Dr. A„
W. Cbase, the famous receipt booli
author, are on every box of his reen.:i
,
e
•00108