HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1904-9-15, Page 3MITU 41 0 1.1 uUtiU IAA. •1 n rn7fftnu yptit(
The Pria of Libcrty
L.
OR, A MIDNIGHT CALL'
CHAPTER XII.—(Continued.)
"The following morning the great
;discovery was made. The Van.Sneelt
I have alluded to was an artik,
dealer, a, mita a tho shadiest repu-
tation whom my patron, Lord Lit -
timer, had picked up. It was Van
Sneel; who produced the copy of
- 'The' Crimson Illincl.' Not only did
he produce the copy, but he produc-
ed the history from some recently
discovered' papers relatingto the
Keigorskroon Tavern of the year
1656, which would have satisfied a
more. exacting man than Littimor.
In the •end the Viscount purchased
tho engraving for inhi300
"Yon eau .imagine howdelighted he
was 'with his prize—ha had secured
and engraving by Rembrandt that
was absolutely unique. Under more
favorablOcircumstances I should have
Shared that pleasure. But I was face.
'to face with rain, and therefOro
had but small heartger rojoiciug.
' "I came down tho.next morning af-
"tor. a slooplets, night, and with. a
.wild endeavor to scheme some way
• of getting the money to pay my cre-
ditor.. • To my absolute amazement
found 0, polite note from the nett -
tenant coldly thanking 'me for the
notes I had sent him by messenger,
and handing men. formal receipt for
00. • At. first 1 regarded it as n-
lioax
Dot, with all his queer ways,
• . Von Gulden was' a gentleman. Some-
body had paid the debt for me. :Anti
somebody had, though I have never
found out to this day.", - •
•
"All the same, you have your sus-
picions'?" Steel suggested.
'I hate 4 very strong suspicion,
but I have never beenable to Verify'
it. • All the same, you can imagine
Lined niy loggage for the Custom
(aces and the whole contents were
turned out without Ceremony. On
the bottom was a roll of paper on a
Stick that I quite failed, to recognise,
An inquisitive Custom Ilouse ord-1
car opened it and immediatal3r callert
the lieutenant in charge. Strange to
say, he proved to bo Von Gulden.
He came up to me, very gravely,
with the paPer in his. haucl.
'May I Moire howthis came
amongst .your Iliggage?" he asked.
"I could Say nothing; I was dunib.
For there lay the Rembrandt. ,Tho
red spots had been smudged. out of
the corner, but 'there the pieture
was.
"Well, I lost my head. then. :1 ac-
cused Von Gulden of all kinds of dis-
graceful things, And he behaveCt like
a gentleman—he made ine ashamed
of myself. But lie kept the picture
and returned IVO Littimer, and
was ruined. Lord Littiiner .declined
to prosecute, .but he would not see
neeand lie would hear of no explan-
ation. Irideed, I had none to offer.
Enid refused to 6te me also or reply
to my letters. The story of my big
gainVling debt, • end its liquidation,
got about. Steel, 1 was ruined.
Some enemy liad done this thing, and
from that clay to this I have item ix
marked mane". -
"But how on eartla was it done?"
"For the present I can only make
surmises." Boll replied. "Van Snook
was a slippery dog. Of course, he
had found two of, those plates. Re
kept the one back' so as to sell the
other at 'a fancy .price.' My enemy
discovered this, and Van Snack's.
sudden flight was his opportunity.
Ho could afford to get rid of me at
an apparently 'deae rate. Ile stole
Littimer's engraving—in fact, he
Q1 hoofs drew nearer. Then the hoofs
ceased their soiatoK of 1,110 dust and
a tnen's voice epelce.
"Better turn and wait fpr us by
the ferns, driVer," the voice 'said.
"Bell, can you nionage, Man?"
"Who was thaw. Eau whiSPcx"ed•
"A stranger?"
"Not precisely," Ruth replied.
"That is Mr, David Steel. Oh, anis
Sure wo cosi trast him. Don't annoy
hith. Think of tho trouble he is in
for our sakes.'"'
"I do," Euld said, drily. "1 am
also thinklag of Reginald, if our
clear Resinald escapes from the fos-
tering care of the dogs wo shall- be
ruined. That man's hearing is W011x-
clerful. 179 will come creeping down
hero on thoae flat feet of his, and
that cunning brain xvill take in
everything like a flash. Good Clog!"
A hound' in the distance growled,
and then another howled mournfully
It was the paint of the beast who
has found his quarry, /inpatient for
the gaoler to arrive. So long as
that oontinued Reason was safe. 'Any
you hag° an ally Lice that. And yet
1 arri filled With LthaMO.
"My dear young lady, what hanre
you to be asidirned of?"
Ruth covered, her face. with her
hands fOr a rimeaeat and David saw
a tear or two trickle throtigh the
slim fingers. Ile took the hands in
his gently, teaderly, and glariced in
tcothe fine, grey eyes. Never had, he
been moved to a woMan like this be,
herb.
"But what will you think of me?"
Ruth whiSPerecto 'You have been so
god and kind end I am 50 foolish.
Wlmt can you think of a girl Who is
all this way fi•oin homo at midnight!
It is 00—so uninaidenlyd
"It might be in some girls, but
not in you," David said, boldly.
"One has only to look iu your face,
and see that only, the good and tho
pure dwell there. But were you net
afraid?"
afraid. The very shad-
ows startiod mo, But when. diseov-
erect your errand to -night was
bound to come. My loyalty to
Enid demanded a, and I had not
Of Exoluisite Flavor
and Absolute Purity
v
CEYLON NATURAL. GRgEN Tea composed only of
fresh, fragrant leaves, it is to the Japan Tea Drinker
what "SALADA " Black Is thc Black Tea Drinker..
Sealed lead Packets only. By all Grocers,
21NeFoN6D
GAIRBE
water; give the damn a dozen turns,
and draw off. Fill the churn with!
water and wash the butter, again;
dra•W thr water and Salt to taste,
about one ounce to the pound, not
more than this. The butter must
b d 1 • AI bt t-
o u ex 0 n tho c min. \1ueh t
attempt at esetipe, 'and .he would bo one single person. in the world whoin
torn in pieces. just. at the presoat I could. trust." . ter is ruined by too much wOrking.
, Do you keep scrub cows or cows
THE1 FARM DAIRY, Better .get a pound butter print and
moment Enid almost hoped, that the •"•11. you had only come to Me, Miss
then Williams might lianPen along on
1Y, Was all right for the present, but
attempt would be made. It certaia- 131t; . .
n Nesse
th--"
I know, I know now. Oh, it is lot' any breed that are of less ' two
d thing for a lonely girl to hundred mind butt - a Eill ? e„ you take the surplus to your' 'grocer,
some parchment paper; it is nice for
a'nor own table and keeps better: It
il he will soon pay you an extra price
Jus 'Way to the stables at any mom -
have one good man that she can. is -j0, why not sell, trade or beef them
ly. upon. And you have been so vel'Y anCt get some good ones of three
good, and wo have treated you very, hundred pounds or more butter ca-
vory badly." - • pacity? It costs more to feed, milk;
But David would not bear any- stable and pay taxes on five or. six
thing of the kind. The whole adven-
than on tlu•eo or four. If you do
ture was strange to a degree, but
it. seemed to matter nothing so long
as he had Ruth for company. Still,
the girl must be got home. She
could not be allowed to remain' here,
nor meet she be permitted to return
to Brighton alone. Bell strode up
at the soirie moment,
"Miss Henson has been So good as
to listen to my arguments," he said:
ent. •
The two, men were coming nearer.
They both paused as the dogs gave
tongue. Through the thick 'belt of
trees lights. gleamed from one or two
windows el the house. Steel -pulled
1:1P and sinicidered slightly in spite of
himself.
"Crixostio blinds," lie said. "Crim -
Von bliuds all through. this business..
They are beginning. to get on my
nerves. What about those dogs,
"Dogs or no dogs, I •Ean not going
.back now," Bell mutterer'. "It's Per- "I am going into the house. Don't
fectly useless to come liere in the waery, about me, but wend Miss
Claytiance therefore we rnust fall hack Gates /mane In the cab. I.shall mane
-upon a little amateur burglarY. nse eoniehoW "
Th.eig.'s a 'girl yonder . who might David turned eagerly to Ruth- hay and fifty busliols more grain 'that
owo the two extra hews would ha-ve eat-
liat'o assisted me at one time, but gThat will be best," he said.
on, and put fifty dollars more in tho
can put your machine on the cab,
tbo , bank for a rainy day?
.and I'll. accompany you part of A pla.in bust -
way home. Our cabman will think ness proposition isn't it?' Does- your
that you came from the house. I wife _milk the cows xvhile your boy
for what you have to spare as his
trade will call for your butter: Bet-
ter still find ono or two private .cus-
tomers who are to pay a.
rot taltie your time, feed etc., good price for good butter. and sell
just keep cows for their company
but ptoor tlipoenuln, ageatinagncoatolvema.stthileveinaele, ji?cts
the poor ones will answer, but they price for .. common country butter.
and a little butter, cream. and milk,
will not build op your bank account 'There is a satisfaction in producing
Very fast. Not making a businese an extra fine product of anything,'
what is the difference? You aro keep-
eiv. Well try it on butter.
of sidling milk or butter,
jog cows to furniali milk, butter and The earlSieisirit lrfinbiSTsCibTrinES' tlie high -
cream for your family and costs, est prices.
more to feed six poor cows than four Merino sheep should nover be con -
good ones. Why not have the four fined on low !ands at night.
good ones and sell four tons more .ShiPPing poor sheep to market is
practically giving them away.
To seeuro the best prices. wool '
should be sent to market in the best
condition.
For poor lands and short pastor°
sheep aro 'decidedly bettor adapted
than cattle.
Sheep aro not naturally so well
adapted to rough usage and picking
their own as cattle.
It takes blood to feed sheep ticks,
and blood is too costly to be used
in that way.
Any animal when fed heavily
should have a variety of food. This •
is especially so with sheep.
All focks should be graded ac-
cording to sage, Size and conditions
as far as practicable:
Tne most unfavorable condition
under which sheep can bo grown is
to subject them to feeding on law,
washy pastures.
It is often the case tliat poor sheep
clueing the annoyance while minclog. are kept at a positive loss 'when
If you insist on having your wife good Sheep under the mane circum-
docatclaieittnitking this'arrangement stances would return a profit.
Enid slipped into the road. The
night was passabl3r. light and her
lafeautifui features were fairly clear to
tho startled men in the road. •
, "The girl is hero," she said. "What arid dog nund thorn in the lame or
sha'n't be long, Bell.''
do you went?" • . Ruth assented gratefully. As David in one corner of the pasture field?
Bell and his companion cried out put her in the cab Bell whispered to Try it yourself once or twice when
the flies ore troublesome, and wo be-
lieve you will realize the necessity of
a change in the arrangenients for
milking. Fix a. nice clean place in
simultaneously : 13e11 because he was him to return as gonn au possible,
so suddenly face to face with ono but tho girl heard notliin.g of this.
my inind, ancl how comparatively must have dors so, or I shoo who WaS Very Clear to Daadd be -
seemed to him that he had .
what an. enormous Weight it was off "How kincl—how kind you rtre,"
cheerful was as I crossed over to have it at this moment. Then he
lecogiused the voice from the dad_o- she unumuied.
crimps some (lay you will be the • darkest part of your stable
6bPa°g."...? noss7 the voice al his great adt-eu-
the. hotel of Lord Idttimer after smudged out lorrmictinailiiiinarrayy .
kind to me," David said, and Ruth where the cows may be tied and fed
brealdisst. I found him. literally be- on the other blushed in the darkness. a couple of quarts of bran or meal
side himself -with passion. Some gage, knowing that it would be t)urris% asAinl,ed statievreRittetahs oanaotestliesridesibuza
each; rip up three or four old bone
side with: the 'owner. of that wonder- (To be Continued.)
dust sacks and se* them together;
thief, had got in his room in thanight found. Also he Ithew that it woeld I
and stolen his Itembranidt.' The be returned to Littimer and that the
• throw this over the cow while you
frame Wag intact, but the eneaving stolen. plate could be l'aid aside and ail voice.
"Enicliq Bell cried h.oarsoly. "I
every liko the story of the stolen original' find. The find has been did not expect—" ,
• DRAMATIC ARRESTS.
had been rolled up and taken away.produced at some remote date as an
"To confr t m the "
are milking to keep the /lies off; or
better still to keep some Shoo Fist
. C ai nsborough.' ' /nine, and it will go bard if I ,can't o 1 e Lthis,"
girl, said, coldly. "That.I quite un- -
Queer. Feats . Which ' the Poli:ce•
Have to Perform. that two or three
on hand and. apply
..., e --.Ro doubt the one theft inspired get to the bottom of tho mystery.
derstand. What I don't undes'stand creaeed flow of milk as woll iii i•e-
tunes per week. It pays in the in -
the other.' I was sent oft on foot to now. It is strange that your tays-
look for Van' Slink, only to find terlous trouble end mine shaald be is why you. intrude yoirr hated pre- -A sliext time ago, just as a large
gence here." ' . steornor was .about to leave tho
that he had suddenly left the city. bound up so closely. together, but in
Bello shook Ins handsome head docks at seaport ono morning, the
, He had got into trouble with the the end it will simplify matters, for
. mournfully. HO" looked strangely sone° quietly stopeed aboard and
• police, and had fled to avoid being the vary reason. that we are both on
..
sent to gaol: :And from that daer to the hunt, for the same man."
this nothing- has been seen of that' "Which- man . WO 11:OX e got to find,
picture." Bell."
"Bat 1 midi to -day that. it is still. "Granted. We wM bait. for him as
0 in Littimer Castle ,h said David. end does for a wily old trout. The
' "Atiother one," Dell obseiVed, fly shall he the Rembrandt, and you
"Oblige me .by opening yonder par- see be will rise to it in time. But
-col. There you seo is the print that beyond this I have one or two im-
I purchased to -day for £5. Then portant discoveries to -day. We are
this, my friend, is the print that going to the house° of the strange
Was stolen from Littimer's lodgings lady. who owns 218 and 219, Brun -
In Amsterdam. Amsterdam. If you look closely wick Square, and I shall be greatly
at it yon will sea four dull red spots mistaken if Me does not prove to be
in the left -band corner. They are an old e.cquaintance of mine. There
supposed to be blood -spots from a will be danger."
:cot finger of' the' artist. I ampre- "You propose to to -night?"
pared to swear that this is the very "1 propose to go at once," Bell
print, frame and all, that was pur- said. "Dark hours are always best
chased in Amsterdam• from that for dark business. Now, Whieli is the
shady scoundrel Van Sneek." nearest way to Longdean Grange?"
"But Littimer is credited with hav- "So the holes.° of the Silent Sor-
ing one in his collection,!! David row, as they call it, is to be our
Urged.. destination! I must confess that the
'He has one in his collection," place has ever held a strange fascia -
Dell said, coolly. "And, moreover, ation for me. We will go over the
, be is firmly Eimer the impression golf links and behind Ovingdean vil-
that he is at present happy in. the lege. It is a ram spat for a trag-
possession of his own lost treasure. qdy.".
And up, to this very day I was tai.- Bell rose and lighted a fresh .cigar.
'der :exactly the same delusion. Now "002110 along," he said. "Polco
know that there havo been two that Rembrandt behind your books
• copies ef the plate; and that this with its faco to the wall. I would
, tenowledge was used to ruin me." not loso that'for anything now. No,
11 "But," Steel murmured, "I don't on second thoughts I find I shall
. -
oxactly see—" have to • take it with me."
"I am just confine; .t� that. We David closed the door carefully be -
hunted high and low for tho picture, hied him and tho two striped out
but nowhere could it -be found. The into tht niglit.
•afPair created profound impreMion.
in AniSterdam. A da or two later • CRAFTER XIII. • of anybody else but themselves. Day- • . "' '
downcast and dejected, and none the nailen a. paper to lies. mast. ()illy The pernianertt futility of a. farm
less, perhaps, 'becanse a fall. in cross- those...cognizant :With the methods• of ' • 11111r,:li EASIER FOR iarn,..
. ,. - is increased to a. great extent, by
e have cdways held the opinion iitahroinnumber of sheep kept on the
ing the downs had severely wrenched the police understood that this was air
his -ankle' But for a belated .cab on the..means by which the police arrest " -
that onder most circurastan.ces it is I Under present conditions it is 'very
the Rotting -dean road he Would not i a slop, and the papor nailed to her
the man's place to do the milking. 'poor economy to select a cwo for
have been here now,. ' tmast was litertnly st warrant for
"As bard and cruel as ever," ;she% her aereet. The crew were at. liberty Surely a man has but /ittle thought breeding. that has no merit to recom-
of his wife if, he compels or allows mend her.
said. "Not one word to me, not one to leave die vessel or not as they
. • the • • .. couldher to tramp around in 0 dirty barn- fie far as • can be done the flock
chocast of from her moorings. Heal lyiscu'ild toiriostahle after cows. Her place sbould be culled, cut out so that
• .1 ,
house.and if she takes pro- there will he ono grade of wool,
sho clone so and attetupted to put !-- -3 - .
pet. care ot that, and cooks whole- One half .. the trouble that is ex -
to ma she would 'Liao° been called some meals for you alai your Mred periencecl from foot rot might he
upon to surrender .oe have been fired mart and the children and keeps your avoided if the sheep's feet were kept
upon..
in, eagerly. ."A most extraordinary , clothes clean and in order, elle has taimined and the animals kept dry
tahuit'e a short, time ago the polico
conspiracy. The kind of thing that done enauedi without milking cows, under foot. Wool is a nroduct
word in my defence. And all the time
I am the victim of a vile conspiracy
"Conspiracy! • Do you call vulgar
theft a conspiracy?"
"It was nothing else," David put
were at/led .11flOil to arrest a church. . . • `.
you would not have deemed possible . • . . . hceing the garden and many other which dot s not take fertility from
On the canals in the Midlaads a
out of a book." - . things come men seem to think their the soil like grain growipg, but if
clerovnian launclied-a flOatine church
"And who might this gentleman - . --:- - • g WIVOS 'Should do. Do you still use slightly managed adds to value of
with the idea of =eying froin place
he?" Enid asked, haughtily. the old fashioned gallon crocks or the soil for grain growing.
"A thousand pardons for my waat to place and holding services ether- cans for getting milk? if so, dis- Sheep to fatten the most rapidly
of ceremony," David said., "If I had over he thought fit. This succeeded card then.' and,arlopt a better sys- and on the least grain must be kept
not been ruder the impression that admix ably foe . a time, until, he moor- tom. Of course a 110,11(1 separator 15 quiet and not allowed to run about
we had met before I should never ocl at the canal bank one day anu
have presumed—g"
a truce to this," Bell cried.
"We are Wasting, time. The hour is
not far distance, Enid, when you will
was promptly levities:tea to move on.
This the stoutly refused tad°, so the
owners of the,bank had no alterna-
tive but to call in the police, when
ask my -pardon. 'Meanwhile I am ..go- the chureli vas placed under ar-
ing up, to the Ithose, awl you are go- rest,
ing to take me there. Come what One of. the Most dramatic arrests
may, I don't sleep to -night until 1 in the'llistory of crime was made a
have speedi with, your aunt." few years ago, when, a diver was
David had drawn a little aside. trapped by the law %lien engaged at
By a, kind of lustiest Ruth Gates work at the bottom of the sea. For
followed hint. A shaft of - 1 ight a long tune the police had been chas-
glinted upon her cycle in the grass 'by ing ,th te'lebrated malefactor, but on
tho roadside. Enid and Bell were each: occasion he eluded their efforts,
talking In erehement whispers—they until at last he was found to Mtn°
seemed to be absolutely unconscious got en m t TI
Von Gulden went back to his duty
•
C 0 0, t 1 1. es arrived on 'tile vend
Two &masa eyes of flame we...0 id cOuld see tho anger and scorn on „mist t so " , two inches wide, one-rnalf inch larger the largeSt l'etalT118 under the pecu-
man was tinder water,
on. the Belgian frontier 'and business in diameter than your can is, so Mar conditions and surroundings un -
'called nle home. I Packed my soli- streaming up the lane towards the the Pale, high -bred n licklywcixpletning his mission,
face; he could ens,
see Bell gradually expanding as lie ott of'dh that the cone-shaped lid will go 'der which they aro raised and they
'tory portmanteau caul departe'd. girls, a long. shadow slanted across
brought all Ills strength and Deal . • ern . s fitted with a diving- sown over she cep and rest on the will vary radically in different lo -
When T arrived at the frontier I op- the white pathway, the steady flicks f;Int awl was lot down to the bot- handles,
. power of will to bear. tom o; ilia sea. There he placed bis Fill within one inch of the calities.
It tl •IL I t• •••ll - top with inillc and set; in cold water.
"What will be the upshot of it?" 4 -
the hest proposition, and following
that some system of deep setting,
using ice or cold water. Be careful
about inveeting in socalled creamers.
About one-lialf of the kinds sold on
the market are worthless. Do not
use. aoy kind that require any pre-. the heaviest fleeces grow on sheep
pai•ation put in the milk, or the whiclj are well fed and are kept
milk diluted with water. You can steadily in a good condition.
go to a tin shop and get a. very good. It is a very exceptional case that
ontfit without very big outlay. Have it was advisable to purchase old'
the Unmet' make you a number of sheep even to fee1 to fatten, the
cans about sixteeit inches high, and 'hotter elan is to get rid of old
eight inches in 'diameter; put handles sheep and keep oniy vigorous thrifty
on, two inches from the top, make cites.'
a tin lid for the can in tho shape of The type of sheep most to be de -
e cone; eolder on to the cone a rim steed is the one that will bring in
so much as to run their flesh off.
Sheep are the most difficult of all
stockto put into a good condition
again, after they have been allowed
to run clown.
The iongest and finest wool and
No
twfirs
nergy r
The IaUy
Rich Blood Makes ihe -Weak Strong and the Blood
is Made Rich by Dr. Cha•se's Nerve Food.
Von are tired, listless, weak and
languid; have no inteeest in your
Work; lack the energy required for
going Eihout your usual occupatioa;
youg appetiteis *not good, Emit your
meals have he attraction for you;
yeti hay° headaches, it may he, and
spells of weaknessand diSziness; you
Feel down -hearted- and, discetiragecl,
and wearier what causes you, to bo
SO Miserable.
Lt is in the blood. The blood is
thin,' weak, and 'watery, and lacking
in the qualities, which go to forna
nervous energy, the vital force
which runs the machinery of the
body. Your health has become run
. demo, and you cammt get better
arithOuCtlie 4tssistance of 801310 res-
torative. Th this connection we
, Mention Dr. Chase's Nerve reoo'd, lie-
. noose it has proven itself to be the
most thibroughly satisfactory spring
inallicien and system -builder that
Can be obtained.
Mrs. G, itt. Brown, Cobourg, Onto
States;—‘1 Wag completely run closen
In health loot spring, and could' not
40 one day:s 'work Wit:hoot being,
laid op foe anotte two days after-
wards. I felt weak, languid, and
miserable most of the time, arid was
often blue and diseeuraged because
of my continued ill-healtli. When
in this. state I was advised to try
Dr. Chase's Nerve Fort, and did so
with most, satisfactory results. 11
built up my System wonderfully,
strengthened and fostered my nerves,
and took away all Eseling of languor
and fatigue. I cannot say anything
too good about Dr, Chase's Nerve
Food, and hope that others May pro-
fit by my experience,"
Dr, Chase's Nerve Food is bound
to prove beneficial to you, for it is
composed of nature's greatest re-
storatives, and acts in accordance
with nature's laws. Gradually and
certainly it inereaNes flesh and
wcight, adds aelv, flem muscles and
thistles" to tho body, rounds out the
fOrm, and instils en,* coorgy end
vigor into the system, 50 cents a
bog, 6 boxes for $2,50, et all deal-
ers, or Etbnaesan, Bates SG,
To vont o
To .protect you eget est, imitations,
the portrait and eig•nature of Dr. A,
W, Chase, the 'famous rectelpi: book
author, are an every bag.
• hand 011 the Slit/tinier of his victim, Make a water tight boa to hold the NOT IN Thin RECKONING.
, • who. completely t Liken by sisrprise,
. ,
"Ball will couniter,h David replied.
hind no ulternative but. to F;urrender.
"Ire always. does, you know."
"1 am afraid yon don't take ley Equally dramatic was the capture
meaning, Mr. .Steel." n fannies forger in France two
'ha etc. ,en tly j 17 essed by
David looked down Into the sweet. Years When • •
troubled face of. his COM [1 anion, 7attit Ibe l'oiite the mole -factor hired
thence away to the vivid erimSon balloon end &tempted to cross to
patches beyond the dark belt of fol- Englund' front Calm Cris-Nez, weli
ia,ge. Ever and • anon the intense aver° that the seining vessels were
stillness of the night was' brokon by so carefully wetehed that, escape that
the long -di awn howl of one of the way was 1111)0" 1111)' The police an -
hounds, ' David reinenthered it for rived Mat as the balloon was rising
years aftei wards. it formed the most in mid-air. Whereupon the mum's, a
realistic chapter cif one of his most well-knnwn firm 'of aeronauts. were
popular novels. • ordered to immediately prepare a
cans and tin the box with water so
that it will come up above the low -
et' edge of the cap. If you aro an.y.
kind of a mechanic you can arrgnge
au'li a tog conveniently; possibly so
you can have ionising, wator through
it, at any rate so you can 1111 it
one° or twice: from the- well each
say. 75 is little work, hest it pays
in more and better cream and' hut -
ter and you. will ahvays have sweet
milk end cream for breakfast. earen
if it did thunder daring the night.
' HOW ABOUT YOUR CHR
UN.
To a young man who stood smok-
ing a cigar at a street corner the
otter day there.approached the older -
?3'' awl impertinent reforms: of im-
memorial legend,
"Row many cigars a day do you
usually. smoke?" asked asked the licensed
Meddler in other people's affairs.
'".1.1hree,'replied the youth as pa-
tiently as he could.
Then the inquisition continued.
"How much do you pay for them?"
"Ten . cents each," confessed the
young man.
"Didn't you know, sir," continued
".Reaven only knows, he said.. "1 seeond balloon, Tins was clone, artd still using the old-fashioned up and- the sage, 'that if you would savo
have been &egged into Iltx /In -stogie in due lime live poliee-desseers eat that money, by the tilne you are as
but what it xneans lorow 110 luore out after their nnarry, area crone ILnecisiiintider Elth'eltk7artfeewdireintariknctitIglactt old as 1 am vou would own. that
than a child. I 0111 mixed UP in it,' tip with hint ns his lialtoon was in ace a splinter new bas•rel chnrn. One big building at the corner?"
and Boll is mixed np in it, 'end so phe art of exiling, ioto the .sea. The of flyo 011011S capacit3t won't cost 'Do you own it?" inquired the
are you. Why We Shall Perils:Ps know es.sistance of a pnasing ship W 16 011-
SOMO day.", ' . (fetal, end the criminal was dragged
"You are not angry with me?" mis of it, „atm, snot, ttottng
"Why, no. Only yeti might have prest000ty seeseres h.misoest
had a little more confidence in me." Sorne• years rtgo two oxen belong -
more than three dr four dollars, and
is ever so math bolter. Do not buy
Day egurns 01. peediera—the kind thEtt
• enorn in two minutes., or get one
or two oounds of butter out of Ex
smoker.
"No," replied the other,
"Well, do," said the young man.
CATIIILDnAL ,1 .1
"afr. Steel, we claf•ed not; We ; to tt r,rin„,0-01 0 od gegen or milk, they ere rakes, Yell
, The most remarkable and striking
wanted your &tooled, aial nothing . t ti. - all gdt the right Lind 01 111111 11111 hard- of the LOW' Liverpool Cathadral will
wai•o merchant it he is up-to-date. Do'
• t 0, p your cream stimiling around
more. Even now 1 am afraid 7 ens '
saying too much. Ttsro is it wither_ of , rieighlthriug landowner, who
was so greatly incensed that he an -
be
1. thrbt roe ond r houa 1.1 t 'a
, • dm:roved 1 0 take out a summons •I • 't 'a het. r tvb ve nil fli will
tlio coolest
ibtienytoricshoTtetio•einnoTirclIslitve A enoclmtowri,e)orwgactrici c,1 gn imt t tie a rist °era t 1 e u‘v nee of tb 0 ;•.v.li,elirroli; Ill tt --,1c0601) i tL: in 0 es - rel vaulting I 1 6 ft., and in the h igt
trausepia 141) Gs—Which canuot fait
assistance. Beth of sixes anitnets, only to be fold that sech e ; place 110 -slide until you get enough to produce a very mognilicent effect.
atore 0ctlierad. And if We liad dragged ' ("°"r'e wasl iillii"I'hIn rre' 111011 de- i for a churl -Ong. Then warm it tip to Igo cathedral in England approaches
fixer -legged ti ; a hon I; Cl 0 dt'grees inti keoP it warm its height. The nen teet is West. -
You , a total stranger, into the erena rided t° 'Irrisst the
red parsers themselves, end fteeordingly:entil it begornea slightly sour. Ilednee 'Wrist er, the nave of Which has • a,
we should morally have notate
you." he d a errant 1 al en 0 Is t foe their . the tempevator 0 to abets 5 68 : de- 1.; eight of 1 02 ft., while York. mcas-
"Axn I not 1,171thin the Manned eir- n rye,' t- i}* oh l llo Piths's Wore com- i gl cos and thnrn. AS "nn,* as lite. tires 00' f t., LS al isburo Id ft, , arid
de I tow?" Unsold sirs lied.
be the height of the vaulting of the
nave Mut choir—mea.Sured /a the bar-
CZ 1, •
pallid o x-oento, Dist, in the morns Ibutiee hrtexPs and the 'butter • aloe Isincnle 82, ft. Chester reaches only
ga-iit of our rice will," Ptah sail, titre the oWner stopped in paid for ibules ere about the size of No. 4;78 ft. The "whi$ParillT ffallorY"
mgorty, "You came into the tenni° the divot:L.0 incurred. end .t..ite aniinals !shot, drew off the bottermilk end !'St. Paul's Cathedral 'is LOC' ha: froth
With I tat her13, hst11, Thank neaten, were allowed to go free, put hi three 05 foil's gallons' of cold 'I tile. door,
.";.4
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