Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-12-31, Page 6TNCLL3 DICK; i stuff I spit ' But I am afraid be , taiga takes place you 4l. grow a little older." Hi "Of course!" la She essayed a lau 4.I ther pricked up her ears, flee time the sound of it Or, The Result of Diolomaey and Tact. 0 , cu:t a fr.tln those lips a., hour ; t t' child condi f # 1 "You doe't thine 1 sin so silly as , at 1 to thick I can Le married in short . rat oaaafaakflintrtaateeetftiR+Aaakajatlaaatipaattis frocks, do you? What an old goose; !you are! Of course, 1 mean when 1 :I 1 i'TE1t XV.—(Coiit'd). . they walked. Thought to divert her 1 am Nigger and year a train." i Yeti did --did you not 1 Ali!! i mind from thoughts of the rick "1 bee. Do you think the black i t 41 .1 me there wags any alis-, chamber they were co+niu;; to. But dross will gent. too?" -the girl Faw you herself ! I' she wanted to think of it; there was '1\r—no. I forgot the t—that's promised." r'you romi e But H alt. fay P my thought.t, •s in the hu ► rues now, butcheer- .Pcue e Iwren Gracie �,' !t with CirI t to be i wouldn't come when I soot for co upaniuu's voice rang so cheer -fully promise that I will marry you, yj�,u. Sho--I---thought if I came for ily--it gave her hope. There seem- fully you ask me that I will are a big you wouldn't be so hard. You ; ed magic in it ; power to dispel could not—oh, you could not --if doubts and fears. girt." \ you knew that perhaps her p=ry life j "What did you utme snnbyalfgi half -an- "A real, real pro Hao 2" and a ire •-a>te y "A most really, real, realiect of real promises. 1f you ask me when you are a big girl, to marry you, 1 promise you I will.'' She sighed contentedly. Nestling to hire, closed h6r eyelids as she said--- Poople go away for honey -dews, don't they I" He smiled. Gathered that she do endo on you. In sp aking she had fallen on her; hour ago? My landlady went to knees; nett to him in her entreaty.' bcd about nine o'clock. There has It hurt; he t,.• d not bear to see not been a soul near the house her --a woo `,is attitude of 1 since." teat' Almost rough- { ''A mistake evidently." er feet. I Sho answered feebly. Was too ing through fatigued to seek explanation. pan tr eked Iwas there, going h lwith her— as ns that was enough. Y•ut h d "In some way, yes hadt confused names by trading the was no mistake in your thinking tere ng To label on his tobacco pn�;ket. alio tapable of such brutality as---" had seen him fill his po::ch, and He stopped. Recollected the clamored for the silver paper to words he had himself used to her wake impressions of coins on. To in his anger at their last meeting. I her huge satisfaction had more than Sho was entitled to judge him so;1 once induce'l him to pick up her vas fully justified. The rctlection' coinage in the belief that they were as bitter as gall. AI real. Shee had no suspicion why hel "Yes," he answered. "It is usu raused. Had she known, hor an -'a1 for married persons to go away. swer might have been different. As Wo must consider where ee will it was sho said meekly--- spend our honeymoon. You have "I).° Please don't bo angry with Noon to tho Hippodrome, haven't me."u " It would have been impossible Her eyes opened; sparkled at the for her to chooce words more likely) 1ncollection. The dustmen were to touch him in his present mood, banished fora moment as she sn- ot self-reproach. She spoke too with such an appeal in hor treinu- us voice, that retention of his an - would hyo meant changing his all she could tly - s0 to aps save with She i 'thfully say but for 7 t Emulsion since have • toy grave. I was •rk--could not walk without coughing • ',aIT5ad much more was written by Mr. G. W. Hower - ton, Clark's Gap, W. Va. We woul:l like to send you a full copy of his letter, or you might write hint direct. His case was really marvelous, but is only one of the n►any pruofs that Scott's mu1sion is the most strengthening and re -vitalizing preparation in the world. Even in that most stubborn of all diseases (consumption) it does won- ders, and in less serious troubles, such as anemia, bronchitis, asthma, catarrh, or loss of flesh from any cause the effect is much quicker. nn not d•Isy. Get is bottle r' BOOTTS l:a1t:1310:1_- be ante it• bOOTra sad try it ALL Dat'GGIBTS Let to Ked yea fir. nowertoo'. letter era . m• Iltrratore on coneuumtien. Ju.t seed t. a Yost Oerd and mention this paper. scoTT & IOWNE 128 Wellington St.. W. Taranto ip along with the maxi -1 it'uf ease. f only tale traveller is .lis runs bacLwarae and wards at express speed, the bags! eing emptied lied returned with narvellt.us celerity. To give You bo'.ue idea of the rapidity with which • the work is accomplished, I may f say that by this method fifty tons an hour may be put on hoard, so 1 that in forty hours the biggest bat- ! tleship afloat may have coaled and at the same time proceeded ou her way a distance of SOME 500 MILES. Recently a clever invention has been Fatceted by a stevedore named Louis A. de Mayo, whereby Atlan- tic liners aro enabled to coal in an incredibly bhort spans of time. The ordinary rate of coaling with these vessels is about fifteen tons an hour, seven men being employed. By 'le i in doses of 1;; to 2!�z drams ant e a admi1 n - to abs system, however, five men , da •, dissolved in water and ado are able to handle 1130 tuna an llotir. ; istaied as a drench. 'I'he dose I'I'he 1tame and the machinery om I should vary somewhat according to i 1 and a aro made of malleable trot ; the size of the animal and with the and steel, and a continuous belt effects that are produced. If the ally shaped a wheel as the top. larSp( dose is sufficiently large there ap- `ally buckets, triangular e. ( pear signs of iodism in the course appearance, form the belt or chute. ! of a week or ten days. The akin course be- i The pins on the belt travel in than-) comes scurfy, there is a weeping lei irons so as to keep rigid on one; from the ewes, catarrh of the Huse point. In the wheel h to pins top and; and loss of appetite. When these notcheshowhich catch these piny and 1 symptoms appear the medicine may throw over the buckets. Ibo suspended for a few days and If thelong slantingenough ide of the bucket afterward resumed in the same were chute to projectnnover dose.Some animals do not improve thea open f ththat it would into theeunder the iodide treatment, and andcss port the the ship piece catch these aro usually the ones which do tear macltinv, to pieces. But n t show signs of iodtsnt. the inventor utilizes gravity, and If there ere no signs .improve the contentsoforce of the coal itself.No.Thus, ! mont after the animals have been ins eying the bucket N o 2 bucassk- treated for four or five weeks, the in conveying coal in N o. 1 back et into the open chute, while Nc . medicine dhaving ben given in as I larg d.e '3 al appear desirable, it a assists No. 2, and so on• is an indi:anion that the particular The invention is a most ingeni- animal is not susceptible to the sits ono and should minimize con -I curative effects of the drug and the coalings bly the present difficulty in treatment may, therefore be aban- liners. I believe, however, doled. the time will soon coma when no It is not, however, advisable to ed �i andtthont wd e shalll be ablebe toi administer iodide of prtassium to milch cows, as it will considerably say good-byev to bunkers andpperplex- reduce the milk secretion or stop ars, and solve for over the perplex- it altogether. Furthermore, a ing questions regarding the speecli- great part of the drug is excreted methods of "coaling" our hrough the milk. and tho milk is unfit for use. It should not be giv- en animals in advanced pregnancy, as there is danger of producing abortion. Tho best results are ob- tained by pushing the drug until you see its effe t. The many tests to which this treatment has been subjected have proved, with few exceptions, its specific curative value. In addition to this, the tu- mor should be painted externally with tiucture of iodide or Lugol's solution, or ono of the solutions rhould be injected subcutaneously into the tumor. As to the moans of prevention of this disease, the limited knowledge of the ray fungous snakes any :ne- ttled rather uncertain. It is known ++++++++++++++++1 a IThe arra tF3 ++++++4+++++++++++++++ TREATMENT OF LUMP JAW. When the tumors are external and attached to soft parts only, they may be removed by a trained vet- erivarian and the animal recover. But this course cannot be depend- ed upon, for, unless the tumor is completely removed it will appear again. Good results have been ob- tained in the treatment of this dis- ease by tho use of iodide of potas- sium. Tho iodide of potassium. is given One in e \\I If the rl��ael a pauper in a -aa. could not rightly claret . well's last mato descer.d a fact that several pe could trace a direct lin from the dethroner of a King kt the ruler of a great kingdom h: ended their days in poverty as groat, and wenn within house walls. The story of tl 'l i a so us farm nt this famous y 'ire of t tt cline dramatic and so little known that it clay be worth telling in some de- tail. The Protector himself, as is well known, was a cadet of 1 knightly family which for generations had held its head high in the world. Ho was tho grandson of Sir Henry Cromwell, who himself sprang iron& a nephew of Thoeaas Cromwell, Earl of Essex. His ancestors had owned thousands of broad acres in Huntingdonshire, and ono of them had played the host to no less a personage than Queen Elizabeth, so that when Oliver found himself practically raised to the eaninence of a throne he had no reason t be ashamed of the house from whic� he sprang. But great as was his rise in the world, it was but the prelude to a still grea'er fall for those of his blood swered— GC,11,iNG SIIIPS AT SEA est "Twice! That's where I itaw , Cinderella!" - "That wouldn't be altogether a fleets. had place for a honeymoon, would' it? Then there's the Zoo—how GREAT IMPROVEMENT ON TILE s anal- I alsont that?" ovely! You arc a very dear -'herlie. I think if 1 von I wouldn't sorry for all 1 t can't lit - up hll ofres gave a si: 1)011 t too late. nit had not o°king at the dour, admitted. I don of enthema cr ingger than you; have i main a� o1 and the culd aptain wops uld as I vandalismrhas, occurred China! that the fungous gets into the tis - up in bcd- n given up cryi little silos 1900, especially in North sues from the food and the disease an - allows. Mas-eOlt, big girls cry! Rut. 00111, hail the collier, who would) China. Some of the most colebrat-! is, therefore, not contagious. Heal - might bo 1 ; they were they don't make a noise and they, twine alongside and also anchor,! don't like you to ace. I've seen tweet tenders would be placed be- i ed and valuable monuments, sculp- I thy animals will not contract lumpy materna cry !" tweeu the two vessels, and the coal -tures, etc., are threatened with de-; jaw froiil.� eased --animal. unless Prince Charlie las silent; be tae tits would hegiu. if there was a struction. This can be said of the the fungous passes directly into Net's Ceara. incsmooth sea then the operation. monoliths at the Ming Tombs to some wound or abrasion of the heal- thy animal or aro son the fend OLD PROCESS. Atlantic Liners are Enabled to Coal in a Very Short Spaoo of Time. FOREIGN DEVILS MISBEHAVE. Violate Tombs, D: #ace and Steal C'hina's Sacred Monuments. The following letter, received by the secretary of the American Asi- atic Association and published in In the old days, said a retired' the Journal of that body, indicates aval captain recently, the coaling that the "foreign devils" in China rrocess adopted by, war:Mips was occasionally conduct themselves in ;et: only hazardous both to the coal a manner to earn that title. The a won't cry, all lier aul the uiai ,f -war, but a sad,letter is signed by Frederick Mc - waste of time besides. For instance,!Cormick Cormick and is dated Pekin, Sep- t think they w'11. Some a cruiser on her way to join the tomber 2, 1908. It reads: great ase i WIIO CAME AFTER HIM. Not many years after the Protec- tor's death we find his grandson Henry writing to an aunt, "Our family is Po low, and some are will- ing that it. should bo kept so; yet I know we are a far ancienter fam- ily than many others. Sir Oliver Cromwell, my grandfather's uncle and godfather's estate that was, is now let for above £50,000 a year." And a few years later still Ilenry was reduced to such financial a straits that when he petitioned the "`se Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to give him any kind of employuient, elle prayed to be excused from aCC01fl. The child to„ked--nil �ectantly at had aeon thcc mot rmght terminate without say seri-1 the r as her mother opened it. child prattled oLl_—_ �. the north of Pekin, whore the stet - "We fiercely, as •� 1 "\Ve shall haven o go all tho wayioua damage to either vessel, but ores in the famous avenue of stone ng, he held Her ch,)eks and eyes were bright with a heavy swell and it strung images have been defaced and epc'nted it-- with the fever in them. Then the to Heaven when we aro married, , shipswhore depredations of images, d t 8119,,,t, !” tido runningthe would grind .I . 0 me 1 How expo"tont look ulcllowc, too a e tan WO and pound each other unit 16 was Ho wondered what childish idea carvings, etc., by visitors are in what the hind! She had aeon the man be -could prompt such a question; a der sometimes the side of the creasing world hind ! asked— weaker vessel wast t stove i "I knew you would r Jme, Prince stile ." celeste-y'O tng�i which is consumed by the healthy. It is best not to allow a diseased animal to run with the healthy ones. Very little information is now at hand as to_just what plant* woo n. 1the fungous come from and it woo. The process was • slow one, too, During 1007a foreigner abroad, be well for farmers, who are troll - otherwise with the best intentions the, otherwise respected, financed an bled with the disease, to make as Wren seldom succeeded in stowing expedition to Sian -fu in the Prov litany observations as possible ince of Shensi. 'Inc head of the away more than fifteen tons an along this line, as to the season le hour, and in this way thirty hours of expedition assorted afterward that the year, the kind of food, the na would be spent in putting on board , his primary object had been to filch tore of the soil, ate. When this in- thos matter of •i50 tons. And this, 1 Noatortan Tablet and float it formation is gained, then means ish . away by the Wei an•: Yellow rivers. can be taken to prevent the disease ui'U 'sdwf sued `sic .; sun9 i%I pug s.IIlb s� cc which she never thought of disobedience. "You will come?" • She put the quesetion trembling- ly ; holding the gloss to her lips with a shaking hand. "At once." A feeling of anger took possession of hint; that site .could put such a question; he continued— "How can you ask 2" Her only answer was a soulful, grateful cry ; a cry from her heart— "Thank God !" He was feeling himself consider- ably less of a hero than on the last occasion of their meeting. But this was not a tine for thought; as he opened the door he said, almost gruffly -- "You can see your way 1" There wee quite light enough shed by the moon for that : and there was light ahead too! She knew she could rely on him: the very sound of his voice told her that: was an insp:rntitt in itself. Making her may to the hall door she staggered nut ; down the little stone flight to the pavement. Ere she reached the bottom step, he had turned down the lamp, closed the house door and joined Iter. "'fake my arm. . . . Cling to me tightly. You are not fit to walk alone." And she clung. Forgot all he lend said to her. Just had souinething strong and powerful to cling to in her time of trouble, and she clung Her heart beat �£ eaks to and a in nkher. She heard hist speak e to hill in reply lut all the %bile her heart was prayers of grati- tude. Go ecn very good to her. brought are Ir r• "What makes you tbiiik that, dar- should come when I knew yen want- "When we went to church last cd rho. I shouldn't have been much Sunday --no, it was the Su, day be - of a Prince Charlie if I hadn't, fore; the man in the white dress should Il said ro." Masters sat nn the bed with his "Did he 7" back against the headrail. Put his arm round the little one and snug- gled her to hint. Sino nestled up to him with a croon—a little grunt- ing ejaculation of content—as he tucked the clothes closely round her. Did not. scam to desire to talk, was just simply , happy in having hint there. lie inquired -- "Comfy 1" -- "Awful." He wa+ grieved to feel how she }utd fallen away. How, in a few days she had grown so thin. For "Yes; he did really. I rheard him mind yon, could only be accumpl Tho enterprise failed owing to the quite plainly. He said marriage ed when Father Neptune was in his 1 Thenpresence sof foreign owing residents e aro made in heaven.' is heaven kindliest mood. t very very beautiful, Prince Char- I have known occasions when a , Sian -fu and the precautions of the lief" man of -war and her collier have Governor of Shensi, who removed "Much more beautiful than we Leen together for best part of a the monument into the city of can even think it is darling." day, and nt the end of that time Sian -fu. "All 1 d little girls go there the exchange of c„al has been less Recently one of the Government 11 than i ty tuns. P on the ground that he was want of the necessaries of a gentleman to appear in his suite. Thomas, orle of Henry's sons, was apprenticed to a London grocer, and served for many a long year behind the counter of Its shop on Snow Hill, within living memory of days when his great-grandfather was virtually a Sovereign, and while his great-unche, Richutd Cromwell, also Protector,_ W as st'' alive. Thomas's son, Oliver,' ified as an attorney, and w many years clerk to Et. Th$ Hospital; and when he din. 1821 the male line of the fame Oliver, Lord Protector, carne end. any ing His Excellency to Ireland - - of lumpy jaw. FARM NOTES. He who sells butter nt common prices, which is made from milk produced from common cows, fed the common way, will never rise to "� t e goo i ff In braes of war, hoards called the attention o the don't they 1 g foreigncomfortable circumstances, but "Yes. Mast certainly." of course, the question of coaling throne to vandalism in the lead a hard life of toil all his days. "When doctors tome t people was a very serious one and was of- Temple of Heaven enclosure nt 1 c- A miller knows just what can they are ill, aren't they?Ai.d ten the greatest hindrance to the kin. Last year foreign trespassers - et from a ton of wheat, so he much they die sometimes when they are mobility of a fleet, but things have commited outrages there which at ill don't they? . 11 I die new changed since then, and a warship I traded the attention of the throne. may now coal without even having About the same time the depreda- to reduce her speed. tions of foreigners caused the the mother's and child's sakes, lie shall I go right straight to Heaver. Prince Charlie?" grief ; esprcascd no surprise. The woman kneeling by the bed - made no outward manifestation of He felt that his mission just then side turned her heed. The tre►nh- was to brighten, not to shed gloom. Spoke jestingl:-- 'Now that, Prince Charlie is here, what have you to any to his royal highness 7 Nothing 1" "I dreamed n dream, Prince Charlie f" "Oh !" "Yes. That you were married to the ; that you were my husband." "1)id you 1 Now that. was some- thing like a dream ! What sort of husband did I snake 1" "I don't know. Yon see the POSSIBILITIES OF STEADINESS dream didn't last long enough."Ster.diness is a virtue, but it can "That was a bad job! Because if be carried tan far. you had liked mein the dream, you, "Mrs. illndden," a gentle-ranonce said to nn old trio:. man in might have married me later on. ''1 thought that." S!;e spokeIhis town "Your neighbor, Herbert to me for HOW IS IT MANAGEDI ling hand found her throat and \\,,11 as you probably know every helped to stifle the sob hnrstintt wan -of -war has its own collier, theist Life and death were fiahf ing which accompanies her in all her for conquest. Contempintlon u tae tri tae ever ready to supply the battle is ever sad : sadder heenase bituminous mineral as soon as she the watchers can do nneetit to tarn shall run short. Each warship is the tide to virtnrv. Time was nr- now fitted with a cable which en - biter ; yet the little one was st+esk- aides her to tow, or be towed, by ing as if the (.tint Ones victory her collier, the gehral rule being were asal►red that the bigger vessl supplies the (To be continued.) motive power. As soon as the bat- e_. --- tleship expresses her desire for more coal it cableway is run from the mast of the collier to a jury toast rigged on the battleship. When the connection is made, a small en- gine on the collier is constantly at work keeping the cable from sag- ging. for, as you can understand, the distance between the vessls (usually about 400) feet) is constant- ly varl ing. When the cable has Beau axed, the roan -of -war con- tinues her journey at a speed of about ten knots an hour, towing the collier, aid thus assisting the small engine in keeping the cable taut. At a i. ivea signal a coal bag con - 1 ut 2,00) pounds weight to give it p to the "traveli••r " or travellers a lis • quite gravely. "But you seer+k. a tc tt. lflj know } should likt,yyu a,L✓ Mrs M,rld'a th .ew band." ink that" ";trendy, is it l' elle if he was tiny stat dead." Hindu eh' "I am glad yo,r to "Who a--ks1 Po you sad• to me o, 'starry me." y y 'marry n+e' 7��or do I s1 "\'well, that depends. I really don't thi it would matter much wh ay you like lost." r t w ,incl war'riremo' are heir er hands. e'dbe ran, pollard, coarse flour and fine. Oliyer' A baker can tell you how s descendants alive to -day, many many of them, 00 doubt, ignorant loaves of bread from a sack of flour, ' of their distinguished descent. The but somehow the farther seems to• best known of theta all is an Eng - OTHER DESC'END:\N of Oliver Cromwell, thro younger sun, Ilenry, far worse. One became the shoemaker at Soham, nearceeaaa bridge ; and another marri ...ed fellow -servant, who was the sono a small butcher, called Smolder( In still later years many of thot Protector's descendants sank to the lowest depths of de.t itution ; some were reduced to begging the very bread that kept life in them, and one died a pauper after fol- lowing her husband from a war house to a pauper's grave. '1'1) much tragic depths fell the proud family of Cromwell, Lords of Hinchinbrook, which had produced one of the most splendid figures in history. There are probably hundreds of temple Ta Kao lien in Pekin to be content himself to re►nein in the lisp clergyman, the Rev. 'f. ('rum closed to visitors. most happy state of ignorance so well, gush, who is the proud teener The destruction base of carvings far as technical knowledge is con- around the tense of the famous eerned, and matters that are quite "f a most rcmnrkablo int l mom+ marble tope in the Otherw Temple essential to his vin l being in bust- I relies of his great ancestor. begun before 1900. instances essential `gull► pease sea the very hat, brow%t than the above might be cited if r of brim and high -crowned, whir. t3 Dairymen w t P 1 required. At the present rate of progress there is danger that the monuments that are to be the chief attraction of China's future parks, museums and historic shrines will be effect- ually destroyed within a few years. The improvement of railway con- nections with Europe during the last year has been the means of this rapid development of vandal- ism. Tho destruction nt the Ming Tombs has occurred since the open- ing of the railway to Nan-kou, little more than a year ago. in a short time a railway will he opened to the Tomb of Confucius, where sim- ilar outrage will most certainly be committed if something is not done to prevent it.. The formation of a society which shall receivt. sufficient prominence wee to impress upon d other visitors that Chuen has reacheda 711 • who cannot n roiizc creameries will find it to their ad- snntage to secure customers in the nearest village or city, who will re- gularly consume all the butter they can make. If a first-class article is produced it is not difficult to get Cromwell wore when he so marily dismissed the i.ong ment; the helmet tint h• the Battle of Naseby : h of beautifully chaser powder -h n with hi more consumers then needed. aside ed on it: a @ n from the advantage of obtaining re- one of which a' e tail prices, there is really a saving tector's name. --Lon in delivering the butter over the system of selling it at the attires, for private customers. having once learned the quantity they will use for the week or fortnight, rarely take leas and frequently order extra quantitie:i for special occasions, if it can be obtained. There is no far- mer, however distant from market, who should not go at least once in two weeks. THE ALIEN IN Flt.\N+'1:. it. is a mistake to think that Eve: - land alone receives a large forei n population. in France _- nn.i n i,el THE LOGICAL Pi.ACE An Irishman one day wa put up a signboard on wi, the words, "To Motoribts- t is dangerous." Away went Mike with th board and placed it at tie of a very steep hill. later his employer wr the board was put it at the hotter and