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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-12-10, Page 2+0+owio areesece 4#1,4 ere ete+0+0♦*+*+-04 i1.1x.11es/i�1e0+0a state of that judicial calm which D -. 0'T should characterize dispassionate inquiry. Being angry, he spoke - after the manner of the angry man +-"Thi lily ; said brutally - UNCLE LMCI' Thus has been a bey evening with you. Don't you gget tired of hugging meal I am the second in one Lour." For a moment she made no move- ment,d no sound --save of the quick indrawing of her breath. It was as if some icy blast had suddenly ♦ assailed and frozen her to the spot. * + Her faco retained the same look; `0 + she was too amazed -not under - es standing -too astonished to do more t1Rtcktrk+4.+ct+Ot E+1R+}JNa+Kf+#+Goa+ict/04f +lC**+*.ozfa than. look. 110 wont ou-- "1 saw the parting at your back ('Fi.1PTER X1.-(Cont'd). the feeling in her heart that it door; 1 was passing. Saw your would bo good to meet hint. Ilad slobbering over a man there as you Diastem ;cached the steps which c sat, on the scat for a minutenu�e s rest seem inclined to slobber over me. led up from the sands to the seat. and a faint sense of grief that she It was if he had struck her ! She had not encountered him on her drew in her breath to that it sound - walk. Had been thinking discon- ed whistle -like. Fell back ; extend- solately of walking home, when sho ing her arms, seemed as if she was rendered joyful by his pres- would piii h him from her as some- ence. And then -then ho was treat- thing unclean. in coiorlessness her ing her like that! Had she offended face rivalled his. Miall Such a possibility passed ra- "Ho:r dare you—" pidly through her mind; was as Those words were shaped on her rapidly rejected as a theory unten- white lips. Then sho stopped. The able. Did ho disapprove of her cont- lips trembled, tightened. Rising to ing there alone, at that tune? Some her feet, the indignation in her eyes as she looked down at him complet- ed the sentence. He laughed ; that laugh with the Or, The Result of DIolomaey and Tact. Standing at their base, he look- ed away in the direction of the sea. It was easy to marl: the spot where Gracie had worked so hard with spade aesi pail. He thought of the child with a pang of pity. For his heart had gone out to her; he had boon cap- tivated by her loving, winsome ways. lien now his eyes rested on where Gracie had built her last castle. Ile could mentally ace her gleesomely swatching the water overflowing the moat and gradual- ly sweeping down the castle's in- verted pail -shaped turrets. Gracie! Poor little soul! And so she, whom he had mistaken for the governess - this woman -was the mother of that incarnation of innocence and purity! What of the child's future'? IIo shuddered to think of it; it was horrible; all hor- rible in the extreme. Well, he would go home to his lodgings. First he would look again -for the last time -on that portion of the sands. For he felt that ho would never bo able to come there again. He would have been thank- ful for a breeze just then; his brow was so fevered. Perhaps there was more air on the sea-wall; he would test it, pass up the steps. There was the. seat to avoid looking at ; the seat where- on they had both sat reading - heart reading heart. Where had been born to him the happiest mo- ment in life; love's awakening. There was other history about the seat too: pencil created. Thereon, before that meeting, had boon born 'heroes and heroines, wicked men and wicked women. All to bo bound together and tressed be- tween covers later on to gladden or sadden readers' hearts. Living a romance is less alluring :than writing ono: Masters found it so. He had been wont to believe in the parts he cast his characters for. Ho was limning! Stumbling up the steps on to the v. -all, he started to walk home. But he halted, suddenly, before he had taken half -a -dozen paces. No drill sergeant's command ever brought up an absent-minded beggar on pa- rade as did the words which fell on his car. "I thought that was you, Mr. men wore punctilious in regard to such matters. But he -natural, unconventional as lie was himself -- surely it could not be that. Itis underlying sobbing catch in it, for voice interrupted her reflections. In his laughter was not horn of mer- e husky, strained tone, looking nee- rji r,t. S .id, righteous indigna- ther right nor left, but aimlessly tion shining in his own eyes too - in front of him, ho said -"Dare! What do you mean? The "Nice, fine evening, isn't it i" witnessing of it, or tolling you of Another credit note to our fickle it1" climate! But the titter incongru- . She scorned reply; be was really ity of his remark, the exceedingly too contemptible! Yet the woman strange tono of his voice, caused in her bubbled to the surface; she her to wheel round and look at could not, resist an effort to hurt hien. Then she saw. The moon him - chanced to be free from clouds just "And you -you played the spy?" then; .its pale beams accentuated A raising of his shoulders, a low - the lividity of Master's faco. ering of his eyes, as he answered - "Oh, my God! you aro ill ! What "Call it so if you wish." has happened -an accident'( What He really did not care what site can I do for you 1" thought of him ; plainly showed As she was quick of thought so that. The indifference roused her ; she was quick of movement. In a site tried again. Spoke with forced moment was kneeling beside him- quietness -standing a little way all the annoyance and hastily -arms- from him -her voice full of con- ed temper gone to the winds. Only tempt - her helpful woman's instinct aching "There is a man bearing your to be of service to hunt: to the man name in the High Street; a black - she loved. smith. I could understand such "It is nothing. Don't --please. worry yourself." Impulsively her arras went up to his shoulders in sheer sympathy and kindliness. All the stiffness, all the resentment, left her. Sho was just plainly and simply a woman. That being the case, her woman- ly pride was relegated to a back sent. Her precious dignity went down in value; right down to nil. It was not in the question at all - that question she asked as she gave herself to the needs of tho moment; asked with real anxiety - "Tell ine-what to dor The light was there on her face, in her eyes! Oh, unmistakably there l The light which yesterday he had prayed he might see; that he had yearned for with his heart Masters!" and soul. Her soft beautiful recli- IIer voice! The voice of his shat- ant eyes were looking with eager, tered idol! Tho same voice; just tearful anxiety into his own. as fresh and soft and kind as ever ! For a moment ---the influence of Her voice, speaking to him! Could the moment and forgetfulness in it be" Or was it a dream, simply combination -he felt that. he niust a chimera of his brain? Or was this grasp, grip, strain her to him. Hold voice -this voice ringing, singing in her in one long, hieing embrace. his ears now -the result of his f . tev- Then -ho remembered ! That an Bred imagination only 1 thour back sho had been clinging to, looking into another man's faco He feared to turn his bend to with the sante tearful eyes 1 Oh! sen. To know whether it was in reality the woman for whom he had the excellence, super excellence, of Leon ready to lay down his life- her acting! Ile would have given whom he had considered n princess n king a ransom for tho ability to among W0111011; chaste, pure, mod -laugh lust then -at himself. est; whose dothrunation had been Could it ho -could it? For a so recent. Whom he had curve to brief instant he doubted. The next think of as soiled. moment blamedhimself for being os! She was there before him in a fool. But not a blind fool -oh, the flesh! This perfidious parody r.o I Ho had the evidence of his of perfection, this tranamut.al ideal.own eyes: the eviden.c for the pro- of Ho waited for a moment motion- sedition. less; then raised his cap -a merely Most of its, tinder such circum - s.. stances, willingly take upon our - Besides. act. selves the threefold responsibility lleyides, being a woman, what -c., f witness, jury and ;edge. It is ev r else she might be, she was ex instinctive in most n►cn ; the desire etnpt from rudeness at his hands. to Indic nut justice. But the ap Her sex protected her. peal court sometimes oversets the Was he to cave in, go under, just; .♦.*.♦..♦....*....N++ flflNIC CATARRH IN MURRY OLD ENGLAND I oc•ause of a woman ? ,What a fee I j 1 he was! What an unmitigated, ar + rant ori Was there a woman wo i t # he 1T,If,.I tl RELIEVED BY PE——NA. the world -the whole world -worth caring so much for 1 No. Not one . But his heart contradicted. He! remembered that anxious look on her face, the loving attitude, the feel of her arms as they rested on +f++++♦++++++++++++++t her breast, his shoulders. His, too, acts the remembrance of the warinth FEEDING VALUE OF SKIN' I of the sweet human breath ; her MILK. eyes that had looked into his. Then heFarmers who are feeding young ly outlootoed out to sea Beagyond. mental- stuck and particularly hogs, realize; ly out to the Great Beyond. Asked himself the old, old question : Was in a general way the value of skim - life worth living? milk for feeding them, but they may Bathos saved the situation. He not bo so well informed as to the remembered that a character in most profitable method of Lading' ono of his stories had asked :he it. Skint -milk in itself is an unbal- carne question : Was life worth j;,...anced ration and unsuitable for any ing 1 Tho comic doctor had replied kind of young stock as a sole feed. that it depended -depended on the It can be fed more advantageously liver ! in connection with some other feed He walked tomo. that is unbalanced iu the opposite ('Tu be contintfed.) direction. The best balance f'.r skim -milk on the average farm is! -•e< corn, or other highly carbonaceous grains, and the best balance for i these, when fed to young stock is skint -milk. Professor Henry, of the Wiscon- sin Experiment Station, has gone into this subject with great thor- oughness, and gives details not merely of his own experiments, but a tabulation of the Danish experi- ments, which are of very great value. The profit of feeding skiin- milk with corn or corn ureal de - ponds very largely on the propor- tions in which they are fed. Pro- fessor Henry's conclusions are that when feeding ono pound of corn meal with one to threo pounds of separator skim -milk, 327 pounds of skim -milk will save 100 pounds of meal. When three to five pounds of skin -milk is fed to one pound of corn meal it requires 446 pounds to save 100 pounds of meal. When five to seven pounds are fed to one of meal it requires 574 pounds, and when seven to nine pounds are fed to ono of cor nmeal 552 pounds. Oii a 475 pounds of skim -milk equal 100 pounds ofcorn CHAPTER PTER SII. decisions; Justice is not infallible- rerhaps her blindness has some - "Aren't you going to sit on Our thing to do with it. Seat 1 Or don't you need a rest I" Few of us betray modesty when it was said archly ; the significant wearing the ermine. The more rig - inference to Our Seat, subtly con- orously wo silence the opposing %eyed. She seemed to have shaken counsel --the evidence of our own off the depression of yesterday. Was hearts -the more we pride ourselves herself; her own blithe, bright self on our impartiality, our exemplary 0 of r rninistrat n A 1 again. Roman -fatherly hleshanically Masters accepted justice. We are apt to ignore any for the implied invitation ; sat. There talk of a Court of Appeal ; arrogate he ensued silence; n silence which told to ourselves supreme wisdom. an more than speech. Not the silence Curiously enough, the more se- an which breathes of sweet accord be- t•ere the sentence we pronounce, she tween two understanding hearts. the more we rise in our estimation. She. on her part, was filled with The rise may not be permanent--- Ile wonder---expectancy-an undefined seldom is; but while we are at the Why sense of something being wrong. high water mark of self -assumes(' Bi- ne 1e Ise was not insensible of the fact we generally make the rnest of the bad that the plumage of his dove was rustling. No woman could, of course. endure such treatment. The need for speech on his part was plain : hut, somehow, he was at a loss for words. Waft yet olive to the fact that she would read him down PA guilty of caddish beha- viour. 'fie silence became tense; the strain was fast becoming un - 1 en sable. But little time passed ; she got to her feet -being the kind of wo- man quick to take offeece. The in- sult en• felt the mo acutely he - cause. she told he .elf, she was urted it, rinnc to 1 , •• • behaviour on his part. But -a- fold gentleman!" Th Her satisfaction came then ; she had hurt. A deep flush streamed over his face, then faded altogether away, except for two red streaks. "Ain I not behaving as one?" Keenly sensitive to her rebuke, he spoke half apologetically The bitterness of the incident was mak i ENGLISH EXTRAVAGANCE. Women of All Classes Said to Spend Too Much on Clothes. A dozen years ago the simplicity of dross, not to say tastelessness, of the average English woman was so marked that she was held up before the women of the whole world either as a model of unob- trusiveness or hideousness. One served the same purpose as tho other, for underlying both was the fact that English women expended less money on dross than others. The tradesman's wife could never by any chance escape detection. Her clothes gave her away. The shopgirl paid no attention whatever to dress so long as she was warmly clad in the winter and had a white cotton dress or two in tho summer. As for the factory girl, she was completely satisfied if sho had plenty of feathers to stick in the front of her great hat. What has happened in the mean- time to English women 1 asks a London correspondent. They have developed a tendency in dress which has made them conspicuously eager for self -adornment and in- creased their spending capacity ten- NI:W!4 III' I!.tit .1BOt•'1' JO11' BULL AND HIS PEOPLE. , Occurrences in the 1 and That llcigus Supreme iu the Com - ciercial World. Newcastle has considerably Tess crime than any of town of its size in England. Mr. Granville Barker ▪ says I Manchester theatre audiences are I the best in England. Among new color photographs shown in London is one of the King lin o ui Highland ( The first iron bridge ever erected . was in 1793-6 at Wearmouth. It ' consisted of a 240 foot clear span. 1 There are persistent seniors that a field marshal's baton is to be be- ' stowed on the Prince of Wales. Tho death is anonunced, at the .. < ! ago of 75, of Mr. Samuel Farrah, who had been twice Mayor of Beverley. Only three of the 150 master hair- ' dressers of Blackburn "trade" on the Sabbath. Persuasive effort,• proving of no avail, the Ilairdresa- ers' Association have instituted a picketing crusade, which has been carried on each Sunday for mon than three months. Damage to the extent of $50,001 MRS. r. CARR. MRS. F. CARR, Vineland, Ont., 1�j C•an., writes: "For several y -ears I was af- flicted with catarrh, which made was caused by a recent faro to life a burden. The coughing and ntaltings belonging to Messrs. Ind, S' hacking which accompanied the dis- Coope & Co., Burton. case was terrible. The recent suffragist riots in Lon - "'The complaint finally extended don necessitated the employment of to the stomach and I was in a no fewer than 5,000 extra police to wretched condition. preserve order. "I tried different remedies and After being lost to view for 1,200 the best professional treatment all years, the fluor of t.ho cell of St.' in vain. Gu+lilac, patron saint of Crowland "Finally, rs a last resort, I tried Abbey, cats been brought to light. of inya upon the recommendation adution A beautiful gold lace embroidered. of my sister in Hamilton. "I could see steady improvement collar, worn by Sir Francis Drake,' n average and after using four bottles of that the great Elizabethan explorer, Therefore to get the moseavalue aftrecjous medicine I was feeling well was recently sold by auction int out of skim -milk, ono should feed et ly a thing tofntheepastttg cum- London. King t The has appointed a Royal it in the proportion of one, two or "To -day I would not take one Commission on Historic Monumon tq three pounds of milk to one of corn thousand dollars for what this (before 1700), with a view to th meal, remembering that we can re- gard the milk as weighing two pounds to the quart or eight The woman of fashion no longer pounds to the gallon. This is not thinks of dressing as she did form- absolutely accurate, but nearly erly. Tho advent of French dress- enough so for practical purposes, makers was simultaneous with the or twenty-one gallons of milk to a new inclinations. bushel. Even better results would Fashionable dressmakers used to be secured if a smaller quantity of starve in London. Now they be- milk was fed. come millionaires. I could name a In short, if you want to get the • , 1 h- dozen or more fashionable estab- full value of skint -milk, don't feed ing luta more himself. ilio t g t lishments of this sort which are your hogs altogether on it. To do home to tiro, forcefully, the irony row the vogue merely because Eng- so is to waste it. If you want to of things. fish women irsist on spending un- get the full value of- corn, don't "Pray pardon me." He rose and stepped towards. "Allow me to see wonted sums on their clothes. Tho feed your young pigs altogether on silo ig "Don rl, too, no longer looks like a it. To do so is to waste it. By you home." frump, hut dresses, if not so ele- combining the two in the propor- Thero, st eem duch rnan, absolute fire gently, far beyond 1_cr limited tions uofrthe skim -m skim -milk and the fiven you get the ull ll means. burning in her eyes, so intense was value of the corn. her scorn. Sho cotad not have -e' On this basis Professor Henry fig - more from him, or found him Nellie -"That Clara Sharpe is tires that when corn is worth 50 more repellent, had he been a le- just the meanest, most utterly eel- cents a bushel and fed at the rate per. Her eyes seemed to scorch fish girl I ever saw. She never of one pound of corn to one to three Itim. thinks of anyone but herself." Dora of skim -milk, it is worth 28 cents Ho knew himself to be in the __•Tell me about it." Nellie -"I a cwt. ; but that, fed at from seven richt; knew it perfectly well ; ho- ran in there the other evening for to nine pounds to ono of corn it gond the shadow of a doubt. Put standing before that searing 'mitre -a few moments, and while I was is worth only 16 cents a cwt. When nation, it was he who appeared to there Mr. Spooner called. It wasn't corn is 2S cents a bushel. fed in the long before he requested her to first -mentioned quantities skitn- bo in the wrong, even to himself- slay. He's passionatelyfond of milk is worth 15 cents a cwt., but 1 1 1 uantUes when is worth his inmost self. music, you know. \Veli, what do Such treatment hurt. Thought of ymt think that girl did? She asked the gross unfairness of it too was him to come to the piano and tura positively stinging. He who was the music for her, so that I couldn't suffering -the victim -to be put in talk to him." the wrong! To be arraigned by the victimizer. His blond, his forehead, seemed to be burning hot, the while he was, conscious of cold shivers running' through him. Was this -he despis- ed himself through him. Was this --ho despised himself as he ques- tioned --currying out his iitt tion 1 "ve by thel Was he plucking up his roots? 1 It was weakness - so -weakness on hi words, her presenct power to move hint. Ile would bo strong --strong an&+just. ]lit he e labelled it ✓part that her had still such realized the hnr ccs of the task he set himself. I ens man's work ; he would prove Imrcif worthy of it. She did not deign him another word ; the ,tad to her pride was too severe or that. Her elite eyes blazed, s perhaps only bide eyes can. .he would have given •vorlds ,ars to soften their twilling but no tears canto. Without her glance at him sho turned' walked away -assumed an ev- lay gait ; be should not think VAS excited. lid not attempt, to stop her. mild lie? it was better so. at the sharp severing blow struck then thnn later heal quickest. He w t well on her way . -"ts., moved. She must not as trying to follow. on the edge of the well flit to sea. The water �pearancc t,f invitation ,rots aspect which has ,cistihly attractive to so •ht nut too, it lotted so - v from everything. was receding; was go- d away -to the Great le knew that if he chose with it. It would be ►et, if he stepped off fhe r down -into the water viva Been. ,lied himself ftp with stcame to the rescue. ;, tide. The sailing along on it is clean cut helped by the wind of serene self- let her gt complacency ; we sun ourselves in before lie vanity of our prowess. Forgetful- think be r.ess is there; that the tide - like gremlin the proverbial lane or worm -has a he looked knack of turning wore an The dominant role in Masters at that dart the moment was anger. That such prove;: 1 a woman should have power over many. men. Ile mentally thanked (lod so --so nw that her power over him was of the The tide past. Laid the flattering unction ung out a to his soul that. perhaps he was Beyond. cleaner -minded than his fellows. he could Maur applies curious ointments to Pe ensu nn his wounds! reeks fart) But that thankfulness did not Chat was ssl nen. arrest his anger ; mode it the great- Then he h er perhaps. y in a a jerk. Pr' "i purchased a bottle of Scott's Emulsion and im- mediately commenced to improve. In all, I think I !uok lit botties, 'iiid my weight increased from 133 pounds to 184 pounds in less than six months. I know from personal results the efficacy of Scott's Emulsion."—FRED. R. STRONGMAN, 417 Bath- urst St., London, Ont. Let us send you a copy of D1r. Strongmen's letter. ile had a trying experience, had got run down Scott' s mulS10II built hint up, as it has theme ands of others. The strengthening and flesh - producing properties of ;'•o•rr's I•'.Wotstory, are un- equalled by any other prepa- ration, and it's just as good for the thin, delicate child as for the adult. Be sure to get Scorr's. It's been the stand- ard of the world for 35 years, and is worth many times the cost of the numerous imita- tions and substitutes. ALt, neroniSTS 1..t Its eend Ino a roll .^or er Kr. atrensman'e vitrr end ..'me nth.r 111.-rs• tars oe fps rubs ct. Just m.r.tlos t►1e pa,wr. SCOTT ! AOWNNE 126 Wellington St., W. Toronto grand medicine has done for me. Peruna is a universally recogniz- ed catarrh remedy. It will relieve catarrh in its most obstinate form. MOSLEM BELIEF IN JINN. Methods of Protection Against These Bad Spirits. Mohammedans believe implicitly in the participation of spirits (Jinn), both good and evil, in most of the concerns of daily human life, ex- plaining that Jinn become visible or invisible at will, either by rapid extension or ratification, and con- sequent diminution of the particles of which they aro composed, and that good Jinn arc immediately rec- ognized by their resplendent beauty, the bad ones being correspondingly hideous and shocking. Many cultivated Mohammedans oven in this twentieth century, says the Queen, profess not only to have seen Jinn but also to have held converse will• them, and to possess certain talismans by which the ser- vices of gond Jinn may be secured as well as formulas by which bad ones can be put to confusion. Constant endeavors are made - except duringthe Feast of Rama- dan when all evil spirits aro sup- posed to be kelt in strictdurance in the bowels ofthe car 1— y daily sprinkling the floors of rooms, especially empty ones, with salt or preservation of those worth pro - serving. By the will -of the late Sir G. Livcsey aged employes in the com- panies in which ho was interested will ultimately benefit to the ex- tent of $100,000. Mr. Michael Maybrick, Netto known as "Stephen Adams," th. famous composer of songs, has cora sented to accept the offer of th Mtiyoralty of Ilyde. The steamer tuaurentani a h gone into dry dock for an extensiv overhaul. 'l'he I.usitania will con tinuc running during the greate part of the winter. Mr. Tom Lidget who wag we known through - the Easter counties of Eng end as a lues preacher, fell dead while prcachin: recently at \Wainilcet. The directors of Lipton, Ltd. have declared an interim divider,• for the past half year on the 01 dinary shares of the company' at th rate of rix per cc per an,,urn• The Admiralty mos deeidr that the Gladiator not wet h pairing, and she is to bo st The chances are ti>jat she will f; fed m the ,tiger q - much less than was spent it. but 9 coats. floating her. The death occurred at Dov LIVE STOCK NOTES. p Gently of Mr. ;11.Morgan, who the 100 yards champion of Eng Bean pods and oats straw make in 1800 apd 1580. He was a good ration for sheep once a day. 1 1 tl b twice Northern Counties 100 y For the other meals give clover, 1 g champion. or nice clean timothy, with some ( Probably the largest goose grain feed up to the lambing time. iron filings, fur which bad Jinn are 1 in the world is that e The ducks have quit laying, and considered to have especial aver- (,110 Robert Browing will ne's begin again until next Feb - the to insure their exclusion from South London• Tho ruary, although it is not unusual the dwelling places of the "sons of, open its hooks 10,000 for early hatched and keep to be- the faithful." 1 js eslinteted that thio jg g p Fi0000 peoples are prot•i . gun in January, Hoed kec 1 on laying The favorite ahidin laces of ' until the last of August. Any ducks Jinn are supposed to be empty) auyntnr,rrnt t'luistmas dinner ev not intended for next year's breed- houses, cross-roads, baths, i ny en- ing, should be marketed now, when covered jugs or basins or 1100d tin -At Liverpool proceeded. n ns 1 q good. coverelrs and yawning mouths. women prices are still carrying As a mile, the largest annual gond Moslems not only out their nn monP:w,glntrdd� hmein It w milk yield is derived from COWS that doors when obliged to leave their without being registered.• tomo fresh in the fall. They then houses but besprinkle and cover tip stated that file rate r` ter receive a strong stimulus to their in so far as they can every article charged on small tonna rang; lacteal glands and, with good treat- of domestic 1180 whose emptiness *i63per cant. to 1.340 pt' uutnt, will continue n geed flow of would tempt a roving evil spirit to Fines of ►20 and costs were impo• milk through the winter: then, with enter into possession, besides mak in five cases. fresh grays in the spring, a still ;rig use of the special prayers order- a_e. / further stimulus is received. On eel by the Koran to keep such ria - the other hand. the cow that is ;tame at bay. JEWISH RAC': Th'.DiPERATI'. fresh in the spring receives all the The words, "I seek refuge with Lombroso, the Italian eri stimulus at, once, then as fly :foie God from ,Satan tho stoned," or Prof.inologiet, whose main theory its t asshn t 1 and don e domes she begins Co shrink and <,In the name of God p criminality is a disease. when shP goes on winter fled she 9ionate., the merciful, arc con - .be treated as such, recently tnlk falls off eapirlly. atantly upon the 1ps of Moslems, to a represenlativc of�}ho Jew' llogs t rty he fed most healthfully) for without previous pious cjacula' C1►rnnicle, of Lundin. .n the don in the w•ioter if a kart of their food ,tions of the kind to di: Aipnte evil , of his remarks 1,c cont entwl u! t is of roots, of which mange's' presences they daro not undertake' are the hest, being soft, tender and, even the most ordinary business of the extraordinary (re„ oto of nutritious. With a peck of these their day, neither enter or leave atJetrish race from dru roots four pounds of corn daily a which he could yen store hog of 150 pounds should gain house, meet with et part from a Ile stated, how friend, partake of a meal, corn- Ile 5 a s ,io a pound a day if it is provided with menta or complete any commercial per cent. of the a clean and comfortable pen. Any l matter or journey, take n bath, nor cent. ty to air oho in the n ether grain may be used in placer oven kill any animal fur food, lora of the corn, and potatoes will an -the bad Jinn take possession as life ish lunatic asylum at Amstr' sorer instead of mange's, but they ceases and work madness or de- there were no such cases, should be cooked, as the starch of atn►ction upon th. sacrilegious mor- ----.- -.f. the potato is not digestible in a tai who presumed to eat or make THY. "ALMS COW." \Vell raw state. Well cured, early cut clover hay will be eaten very rend other use of it.Probably for the same reason is A curious costo y bsp by swine, and it wetted and rho singing of n continuous ant;- in the village of 1Wnddes*• sprinkled with ground corn. nats, phonal funeral chant kept up try Buckinghamshire, England,, uckwheat and bran mixed, this p food will keep pigs growing well all relatives and watchers from the on any morning or evening of moment the breath leaves a human year, you can claim a free dein the winter. body till it is safely hidden away new milk from a cow 'pecially ---'p- under the sod ; usually ns short a for the benefit of the-• ty wayfer A critic is a man who isn't tatis- pericd as possible among Moham- This animal is known levelly fled to hit the nail on the bead driv- heingnthe customary feur lours or interval l058 the be- another thess uto be tiro shei►t ,�1' y cants to bit the fellow who isarish authuritics. tux the nail. twcen death and burial. P i