HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1905-01-12, Page 2• .r IMPO_.••••• '.•.=11,0*
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The Price of Liberty
OR, A MIDNIGHT CALL
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4
CIIAI"lEA dXXVI.-(Contineed)
'rhea let hie prophesy, and de-
clare
o-clam that ho will bo in gaol again.
Why bring him here?"
"II/reuse it. is absolutely neces-
sary," Chris surd, boldly. "'That
man oan help me -help us, lArd
...ittluner. 1 am not altogether what
1 seem. ']here is a scoundrel In your
home compared with whom James
Merritt is an lutiocont child. That
scoulfdrel has blighted your life and
the lives of your family; he has
blighted my life for years. And I
am hero to expose hitu, and I am
here to right the wrong and bring
bac}, the lost happiness of us all.
I cannot say more, but I implore
you to let me have my own way in
this matter."
"Oh!" Littintor said, dar):ly, "so
you aro masquerading hero?"
"I ain. I admit it. Turn me out
if you like; refuse to be a party to
my scheme. You may think barfly
of nes now, probably you will think
worse of me later on. But 1 swear
to you that I am acting with the
best and purest motives, and in your
interest as much as my own."
"Then you aro not untitled even
to the name yuu boar?"
"No, I admit it freely. Con.sidor.
I need not have told you anything.
Things cannot bo any worse than
they aro. Let mo try aid make
thein better. Will you. will you
trust me?"
Chris's voice quivered, those wore
tears in her oyes. With a sudden
'impulse Littimer laid his hands
upon her shoulders and looked long
and searchinglty into her oyes.
"Very well,' he said, with a gen-
tle siglt. "I will trust you. As a
matter of tact, I have felt that I
coup trust you from the first. 1
won't pry into your schemes, be-
cause if they are succc.'stul I shall
benefit by them. And If you like
to bring a cartload of convicts down
here, pray do so. It will only puz-
zle the neighbors and drive them
mad with curiosity, and I love that.
"And you'll back me up in all 1
say aid do?" Chris asked.
"Certainly I will. On the whole.
1 fancy I ain gating to have a pleas-
ant evening. I don't think dear
Reginald will bo pleased to see his
friend at dinner. if any of the
spoous aro missing I shall hold you
responsible."
Chris went of to herSfoom well
plascd with the turn of events.
Brilliant audacity haat succeoded
where timid policy might have re-
. suited in dismal failure. And Litti-
iner had refrained from asking any
awkward questions. Froin tho win-
dow sho could see Bell and Merritt
walking up and down the torrace,
the latter talking volubly and
worrying at a big cigar as a dog
night nu.ndo at a bone. Chris saw
Liltinu•r Join the other two prastent-
Iv and fall in with their eonce sa-
proachod Merritt and the roi)t. It
was not until the two found them-
selves alone that the mask was
dropped.
"You infernally insolent scound-
rel," Munson said, between his
teeth. "flow dare you conte hero?
You've done your work for the pre-
sent,
ro-sent, and the sooner you go back to
your kennel in London tho letter. It
I imagined that you meant any
harm 1'd crush you altogether."
"I didrlt conte on my own," Mer-
ritt whined. "So keep your 'air on.
That young lady Dame and fetched
me -regular gone on me. she is. And
there's to bo high finks 'oro --a
bazaar for the benefit of poor crim-
inals as can't got no work to do -
You 'oared what his lordship said.
And I'm goin' to make a spooch liko
as I used to gull the chaplains.
Lor' it's funny, ain't it?"
Henson failed to eco the humor of
tho situation. Ile was uneasy and
suvpicious. Moreover. he was puz-
zled by this American girl, and Ito
hate} to be punaled. She had social
staying at Moreton Wells for a time?
Flu guar' to live in clover for a :.it,
my pippin. Cigars and chauijstg:;e,
wino shut all the rest of it."
"1 wish you were at the bottom of
tho sou beton. you carne hero," Hen-
son growled. • Yuu mite! and Le
careful wlutt you're doing with the
champagne.. They don't drink by
the tumbler in the society you aro
in now, remember. Just one or two
glasses and no more. If you take
tou much and lot your tongue run
you will find your stay hero pretty
t)hort."
Apparently tho hint was not lost
on Merritt, for dinner found hirn in
a chastened snood. His sutural au-
dacity was d.prossod by the splen-
dour and luxury arourrd him; the
moral atmosphere held him down.
'here were so many knives and
forks and glasses on the table, such
a deal of food that was absolutely
strange to hirn. The butler behi►r1
made hint shiver. hitherto in Mer-
ritt's investigations into groat
houses he had fought particularly
shy of butlers and coachman and
uppor servants of that kind. The
butler's sniff and his cold suggestion
as to hock slightly raised Morritt's
combative spirit. And the cham-
pagne was poor, this► stuff after all.
A jorum of gin and water or a mug
of beer was what Morritt's soul
longed for.
And want a lot of plate thorn was
on the table and sideboard! Some
of it was gold, too. Morritt's greedy
profeosianal eye appraised the col-
loctioo at some hundreds of pounds
-hnu.troda of pounds -that Is, after
the stun' had boon disposed of. In
imagination ho had already drug -
god the butler and was stuffing the
plate into his bag.
aspirations. of course; she.,cared Henson said very little. Ho was
nothir.g for decayed or reormed too busily engngud in watohing his
criminals, and thta silly bazaar was confederate. Ho wished from the
only designed so that the amtuitiuUs bottom of his heart now that Chris
girl could find her way into the had never sewn Merritt. She was
county set. 'Then she would choose smiling at hint now and apparently
a husband, and nothing more would hanging on every word. Menson had
be heard of Merritt and Co. Henson seen society ladies doing this lind
had a vague notion that all Amer- of thing before with well -concealed
icon girls are on the look -out for contempt. So long as people like,
English husbands of the titled or- to play his ganio for hint ho had no
dor. objection. But this was quite dif-
"Littinior must bo mad," ho mut- fere:rt. Merritt had warmed a lit-
tered. "1 can't understand Litt!- tlo under the influence of his fifth
niu'; I can't understatxd anything. glass of . champagne, but his eye
Which rentinds the that I have a looked lovingly and longingly in tho
crow to pluck with you. Why didn't direction of a silver spirit-ata►ui on
you do an I told you last night?" the sideboard.
"Did," Merritt said, curtly. "Got The (Honer came to an end at
the picture aril took it home with length, to Iionnon's groat relief, out
me." presently the whole party wandered
"You liar! Tho picture is in the out to the terrace. Pell dropped
corridor at the present Lime."
"Liar yourself! I've got the pic-
ture on my rnantolahelf in my sit-
ting -room rolled up as you told nro
to roll it up and tied pith a piece
of cotton. It was your own idea
as the thing was to bo lett about
casual -like ns being loss calculated
to excite suspicion. And there it is
at the present moment, and 1'11
take my hoath to it."
Ronson fairly gasped. Ile had been
inside that trail sitting -roots not
two hours before, and he had not
failed to notice n roll of paper on
the mantel -(holt. And Obviously
Merritt was telling the truth. And
equally obviously the Itentbrandt
was hanging in the corridor at the
present moment. Henson had solv-
ed and evolved many ingenious puz-
zles
urzles in his time, but this one was
utterly beyond him.
"Some trick of Dr. Bell's, per-
haps," Merritt atrg gesteel.
"Bell sutipects t.ruthing. 110 is ab-
solutely friendly to the. Ho could
not disguise his feeling li o that.
time Itis laugh canto to the girl's Upon my word I was never so ut-
ear nioro than onto.It was quite terly at sea before in all my life.
evident that that eccentric noble- And as for Littiuler, why, he has
roan was enjoying the ex-cvnvic•t's jtst made a fresh will more in my
sociesy. But Littimer had never favor than the old one. But I'll
been fettered by conventional rialto. find out. I'll get to the bottom of
The dog -cart came up presently this litesiiiess if it. costs me a for -
and ll:mson got out. lle had an
anxious, worried look; there was
an ugly frown between his brows.
Ile contrived to be polite as Chris
eniergo.t. Iie wanted to know where
Lit tinier was.
"On the terrace, I fancy," Chris
said, demurely. "I guess Ifo is hat-
ing it long chat with that parson
friend of yourn-the trate] plucked
from the burning, you know."
"Merritt," Menson said, hoarsely.
"Ito you mean to nay that Merritt
le horn? And i've been looking for-
t oe• in, I Ines been tato Moreton
Wells Why did he come?"
('hrin opened her ryes in innocent
surprise.
"WO." she said, "I ft:lobed him.
I'm deeply interested in brands of
that kind."
CHAPTER XNNViL
tune."
Ile frowned moodily at his boots;
ho turned the thing over in his mind
until his brain was did t,d and mud-
died. The Rembrandt had Nem
stolen, and yet there was the Rem-
brandt in Me Witco. Was anything
more entering and pita/ding? And
nobody also seems] in the least
trembled about it. IIonson was
more than tinseled; cleop dawn in
his heart ho was frightened.
"I must keep my eyes open," he
said. "[ tnust wittnh night and
clay. Do you suppose Mies Lee net -
iced anything when she called to-
day?"
"Not a bit of it," said Merritt,
confidently. "She earn° to see me;
she had no eyes for anybody hut
your Nimble servant. Where did
Rho get my address from? Why,
behind with Chris.
"Now in your time," ho whisper- Thiss is a vor•v moderato estimate l of cows anu their care. 1 he mnner-
vd. "Henson dare not lose sight of `t,e all know of men who loso more ous grain farms have use for their
Merritt before he gout to bed, and than this by such reelect. If they laborer principally in the summer1'll keep the latter out here for a could he mode to see the loss in time, and in the winter the extra
good long spell. I've muffled the some tangible term surely they would ,men Lave to hubt other jobs. It
striker of the telephone so that the 1~
bell will make no noise when you not persist in their losing; game. �ihus arises that in the tall men can
get ycuu• call back troth Brighton, 1Vhy, I could not sleep nights with I be secured at roasonat,lo wages.
so that you must lanoar enough my machinery out of doors at this Cows coming In fresh in the tall
to the ii.atr'ument to hear the click season (It is all in. even to the have no summer drouth to dace.
of the striker. Make haste." corn marker) but any neighbor seems ;They produce their calves and begin
Chris dropped back to the library perfectly content with his grain [milk giving on dry feed, and there
and rapidly fluttered over the leavot binder still in tho field! Ours has , is nothing to cause thein to drop oil
of the "Tolo, hono Directory." She never been out of the shed a day 'in their milk the whole season
found what sho wanted at length when not in use and never a night (through, nor is there any lime when
and asked to be tut on to Brighton. without a canvas. It is now over !they aro changed from succulent food
Then she sat(14ftn in an tum -chair fifteen years old and bids fair to to dry. When the change comes in
in tho darkness close under the ton- live fifteen more. The notehhor's the spring, the change is troin dry
.phone, prepared to wait patiently. foils to work every season without. fond to green, which docs not die -
She could just see tho sten on the repairs and he changes binders about turb their milk -giving functions, but
terrace, could patch the dull rod every leap year. only atitrutlatcn then.
glow of their cigars. 1 some will argue that because a It is claimed by those that take up
Iler patience was not unduly tried. tool is nearly all iron it need not this method of producing milk that
At the Dud of a quarter of an (lour be housed. This is a fallacy. True a they get a larger aggregate yield of
the striker clicked furiously. Chits steel frame drag will not suffer like milk during the year than by any
reached for the receiver and lay bark a wood frame one, but such machines other tray. This Is because with
comfortably in her chair with the as the mower and t.ho corn binder
diaphrng►n to her car. "Are you will soon bo injured, nen or no
there?" she asked, quietly. “Is (hilt iron. What. Is the cause of a steel
you, Mr. Steel?" bridge giving away here and there
'I'o her great relief the answering throughout the country? "Froin no -
voice was Steel's own. Ile seemot glect of paint, rent had weakened the
to ben litter puzzle] as to whom rods," la the too oft heard reason.
his questioner was. do it is with machinery. 1t is sol -
"Can you g heft " Chris replied. done painted atter it leaves the shop
Phis is not the first time 1 have 8111 if ft mere tho wearing parts
had you called. You have itot tor- could not bo thus protected.
gotten 218, Brunswick Square,
yet?"
Chris smiled as she heard titt'l'e
sudden exclamation.
"So you are my fair friend whom
1 snw in the dark?" he said, "Yes,
I recognise your vole° now. You aro
Miss Chris -well, 1 won't mention
(ho name aloud. because people night
ask what a well -regulated corpse
meant by rousing respectable people
up at midnight. 1 hope you aro not
going to get mo Into trouble again."
"No, but i stn going to ask your
advice and assist flare. i tvnnt you
to 1►e so good as to give me the
plot of a story after 1 have toll you
the detalin. And you are to scheme
the thick.; out at once, please, Ito -
]lesson forced a smile to his faro didn't you hitt-twine° me to the Indy cause delay is dangerous. Dr.
anti a hand from his site ns he al'- yourself, and diiin't 1 tell her 1 was il•ll—"
!I "Whnt'n that? Will you tell tno
SIII•:L'TI•:ItINU IM1'Li•;Ml•:N'1'S.
It, seem', a pity In riding through
the country even at this season of
tho year with the snow eight inches
deep to see turui implements of
every kind from a cultivator to a
corn binder sheltered by snow -snow
snakes a good covering for winter
crops, but It can't bo recommended
fur machinery. Still worse are tho
thaws and ruins and sun and winds
that may bo expected any tarots,
writes a correspondent.
Now, t ani sorry that it seems nec-
essary to write on a subject like,
this at this season of the year. A ent time more profitable than is les stiintllus of the activity in the uter-
great many people who do not house spring calving COW. Ting will re- us is drawn to the forward part of
their tools as they should during tho nulls so long as most of tho cows the animal throegh the influence of
summer months will tinct a place for calve in the spring and but few In the activity of the brain, if (ho ani -
them somewhere in tate winter. vot the tall. Gradually, however. the ' mal Is not pregnant."
there is a class of farmers who mako desire for better profits will induce
no preteusiona of storing away all more men to have their cows calve
their machinery even in winter. in the full, and If the number cats, -
Sometimes the excuse Is given that ing in the fall ever equals the num-
there is not roost or that the tools ber calving in the spring. there will
would be in the way. Occasionally then be no greater profit in fall -
this is true --here often not. Some calving cows than in spring -calving
times it is it fairly well-to-do farm- cows. At. present. however, that
er, but mind you ho did not become 'condition in not in sight. Nature
:ell -to I by rho practicebut to says that cows should calve at a
" WE SELL "
IV
ADS"
Csylou tea in sealed lead packets only, in order to be in a position
to guarantee contents. This is your safeguard. Black, Mixed
Received the gold medal
or Natural GREEN. By all grocers.
and highest award at St. Louis.
t_
4
TREATMENT OF THE POOR.
How the City of Berlin Handles
the Problem.
Many interesting details regarding
tho condition and treatment of tho
poor by the municipality of Berlin
are contained by the report forward -
spite of It. Often. too. there are time of year when the pastures are ed to the State Department by Unit -
plenty of barns and sheds where getting green and the supply of luod ed States Consul Haynes at Rouen,these things could ha tin
stored. If not. is on tho increase. Nature tless prance. hron► this report it appears
build theta. It is ect•nolnv. A renter this arrangement not because there that is is a crime in Berlin to be out
may occasionally be confronted with was a sentimental reason for doing of work. When a ragged man makes
a lack of room and be unable to so, but because the chief end of na- his appearance on one of the streets
convince the owner of the need for turo is to continuo the life of every ' in Berlin he is immediately request -
species on the earth. But man ed by a policeman to show his pap -
comes along and provides quarters era. If they show that the hearer has
for the cows in winter and food for slept more time a certain prescribed
the calf when it comes, and nature r.runber of nights in an asylum for tho
need be no longer regarded in the homeless. from three to five days, he
matter. is immediately conducted to the
Wo believe It would bo profitable, work -house, which, although not a
says an exchange, if more teen would prison, resembles the latter in all de -
have at least a part of their cows tails.
"come in" in the fall, as is bang Every person of humble means is
done on our lending dairy farms. It insured by the Statesistants a( (:erdtnanser-
y,
Cl rk shop as
it, but as I said before. this is not
often tho cane
Now. brother farmers. let us rea-
son together. Suppose you have
$500 worth of implements. buggies
and wagons Onion" farmers have
twice as touch) and neglect to Rhel-
ter therm how much would you loso
by it? Most of them would need re-
placing
o-placing or extensive repairs in five
years while it kept housed continu-
ally while not in use they could last is the only way when the Hulk flow vents are ell's gilled to insure against
fifteen or twenty -let us say fifteen must be regulated to supply familiesI
sickness and old age. The State has
to bo liberal. This means, then a every day in the year. The than Built nit immense sanitorlum at 13ee1-
loss of $1,000 during the fifteen with no curtain customers to supply itz at a cost of nearly $2,500,000,
years (two replacement:01 from ne- but with a dozen Cows. will probab tvhero the invalid citizen is sent with
glect to shelter the tools. or S75 ly find it more profitable to (10 tho his pension, in order to expedite his
annually. This would build a neat hulk of his dairying in the winter return to the ranks of the wage -
little tool shed each veer or a large than in tho summer. If his cows go earners. The whole object of the
one blennally, or pay for a hired dry, it should be in the summer, Berlin municipality is to secure the
man three or four months in the ;when the tarts hands are busy with physical and intellectual well-being
year, or hire a girl for your over -,the crops. In winter also it is touch of its citizens, and although the
worked wife the .entire summer. 'easier to get help for tete milking Germans aro not soft-hearted in the
No, brother farmer. if your tools
are out thero Is no excuse. You are
to blame and the sootier yon realize
it and get them In tho better for
You. Do it to -clay.
WiNTE.It DAIIt\'1`(:.
'Phe fall calving is at the g,res-
Branchitis Crows
• I mwher ere you aro speaking front?"
li
ton ec "Camastutle. proseYee+s,]Dr. loatilii]d atfa IJther° .
Do you want him?"
Into "1 should think 80," Ste l csx-
An(1 ROturntlf Yoar After Year or Dt3veIOJ7a ttitimotel. "Please tell hint at onto
Asthma or Consumption. The Cure is that the man who was found hero
Mil dead -you know the than I
CR. CHASE'S SYRUP OF LINSEED AND TURPENTINE ices—got up and dressod himself in
Bronchitis Is too serious a disease
to trifle with.
Children are most likely to con-
trnct hronee tie. nod. if neglected, it
becomes ch. •'lc stns] returns veer
after year ur. t• it wears tho patient
out or develops tato some deadly
lung disease
f hills and fever, nasal or throat
catarrh. quick pulse, loss of appetite
and feelings of fatigue and languor
are ntnung the first symptoms.
'nip rough is dry and harsh. 'i'here
no. nuns in the cheat. which aro eg-
grn v ttcvl by deep breathing and
coughing. Expectoration is of a
(rot liv nature. stringy, tenacious
and s nnetintes streaked with blood.
rains in the 1i111hs or joints and
extreme depression and weakness ro-
tten from continuation of the die -
ease.
Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and
Turpentine Is, we believe, the most
of ertivo treatment for bronchitis
that money will buy.
It is the most effective treatment
for t,•onchitis because it is so fnr-
renehieg in its elect on the whole
at sten, tat oely loosening the hard
dry swigs but actually and thor-
oughly curing the disease so that
it docs not return
ilirs. lachmond Withrow. Shuhen-
ncatlic. Hants Co., N. S., writes: "i
have used 1)r. C'hase's Syrup of Lin-
seed and 'Turpentine with good suc-
cess. My second daughter was trou-
bled with bronchitis from the age of
three weeks. Oftentimes I thought
she would choke to death. The sev-
eral remedies we got did not seem
to be of much use. but the first doe..
of Dr. C'hase's Syrup of Linseed and
Turpentine brought relief and further
treatment Lunde n thorough cure
'Phis trouble used to come back
from time to time but the cure is
now permanent.
Dr. Chase's Syrup of linseed and
1Turpentine has saved us many dnc-
I tar's bills, and 1 would not he
without it In the house for mane
times its cost."
Dr. C'hase's Syrup of Linseed and
Turpentine, 25 cents n bottle; family
size, threw times as much, 110 cents.
at all dealers or F.dnnaneote Bates
& Co.. 'Toronto. To protect you
against im'tatiuns. the portrait and
signnturo of Dr. A. W. Chase, the
famous receipt book author, are on
every bon,
the absents! of the nurse and wnikod
out of the hospitnl this morning.
Since then he has not been seen or
hoard of. 1 have been looking up
)Sell everywhere. Will you tell hint
this at once? 1'11 go into your mut-
ter nflerwnials. Don't 1►e afraid; I'll
tell the telephone people nut to cut
us of till i ring. ]'lease go at
once."
The voice was urgent, not to say
imperative, Chris dropped the re-
ceiver into its space nrxl crept into
the darkness in the direction of tho
terrace.
('i'o be ['omnis;'.)
ALREADY S11'1'1,1I•:11.
The than who has to pitch the hay
Sighs "Oji, to jest sit down
Beanie n disk and work the way
'Those fellows do In town."
The man who's caged from morn
till night
"rakes liver pills. and then
Says Reilly, "if I only might
ito on the farm a}'ain"'
Thu cotton hondkerchiefta provided
for French soldiers have printed up-
on them a number of eenitary pre-
cepts to be ob'ertcd on the march
and during a ;.alnpaign.
ilbotil COkIS
llon't think you arc justi-
fied in tying laid til) with a
cold half the 11 inter merely
manner of achieving this purpose
they have this recommendation -they
succeed.
Dr. I'reund, the chairman of State
insurance in Berlin, takes the ground
that the State should do everything
to fit its citizens for the battle of
comtnercial competitions, and when
it has done everything. when it has
first equipped, then safeguarded and
afterward assisted in distress, it
should punish sternly arid steadfast-
ly the lazy and the indolent. Fall
sick, says tho State to its work
people, and two ei11 nurse you back
to vigor; drop out of employment
and wo will find you fresh work,
grow oltl, and we will provide you
with bread and butter; but become
lazy and vagabond. and uo will
lock you up and make von work
till you have paid the uttmost farth-
ing of your debt.
Hagg and misery dare not lie about
in the perk or scatter disease
through the crowded streets. If
spring -calving cows there is a great there is any t irtue in the unemployed
falling off in the milk yield when tho the State wi11 certainly develop it as
cows aro changed from pasturage to well as it is possible to do so. There
dry feed In the fall. '}'his shrinkage is a central bureau for providing
no amount of scientific feeding will rnen with work, and wise a man
recover. Moreover, in most Cases knows that not to work means the
there is n derided failing of during work -house ho solicits employment
the summer drouth, which falling of
Is neeSr regained.
'i'he prices for milk and butter nro
far better in the winter than in the
summer. and this is a very import-
ant consideration. 'Pho unsklllt it
dairyman is far less likely to males
poor putter in tho winter than in
the summer. for the reason that the
air is not so full of lactic acid
germs and other ferments of a more Merlin to the other by electric tram -
objectionable character. way or electric railway. 'lir streets
here and elsewhere with such a will
as almost compels wages In ono
year the State has secured employ-
ment for 50,000 men.
The (*Risen is provided with snni-
Lary dwellincs, with unadulterated
food, with schools and technical col-
leges, and with insurance for sick-
ness and old age. For a penny he
can travel almost from one end of
aro clean, brilliantly light.owt and
131t151':U1NO HEIFERS. noiseless; his cafes and music halls
are innumerable. Ile lives in a pal-
ace. .And nil this is tt.a result of
munleipnl government by experts in-
stead of by amateurs
There has always bean a consid-
erable divergence of opinion as to
the best age nt. which to breed the
dairy heifer. not a few dairymen be-
ing
o-ing of the opinion that sho would
become .1 better milker if bred at
an onrly age. Ott this much -mooted
(mention Dr. Kitchen writes ns fol -
town:
"if this practice is carried out we
have got to accept the small or
because it's the season when tnedietn size cow. If we breed late Bobby-"li-1t-1;-I)."
and less frequently, the at becomes thele ---"Tho dictionary smells it
everybody iS supposed to larger. became the blood shale in with nn 'A.'
the animal is di'e'ter] to the untie- nobby—"s'r•a, but you didn't ask
have colds. At first a cold sirable parts during lines when it nn' how the dictionary spelt it. You
would otherwise be directed In part asked nes how 1 spelt 11."
may not amount to much to lho udder. Furthermore, the
1115 11'AY WAS DIFFERENT.
Uncle --"So you go to 'shed now,
do you, hobby?"
Bobby -"Yea, uncle."
Uncle -"Let me hear
bread."
yon spoil
but it is likely to hangOn nervous system, which presides over i T111:Y iWEItl•1 IMI'ItOVI?' U.
}the distribution of the blood through '
these undesirable parts, becomes en-' "Year wife is Improving with her
long enough t0 give you target] during these periods to such c"^king• Isn't sic?"
"Oh, Vett."
trouble if it is not stopped a degree that even when maternity cakes and pies now are pestpestensues not 80 h blood Is direct-'ct''Ilefie' rough to ant, eh?"
ed to the udder ns would otherwise
With "Oh, no; but xhc•'s g!•lting so sho
have been the rase. Furthermore• tic- can make them look good enough
SCO
' ,f cause we wish to ovoid the tendency
of the nervous system to direct blood to
1 and energy to these undesirable parts
of the dairy cote, we do not feed the I A french scientist has mad.• some
I lie c colds that ]]silt on animal too luxuriously 'luring the triterenting ohsen-can a ns to the
time she is not 1n tnilk. 'This prat. hive of different wild animals for
wCakell the throat and lungs tics also tends to prevent the cow the sen. 'Ii'e f'etnr bear. he saN''
from becoming it Targe one. is the only one that takes to lin
all(] make theway easy for ''There is nn almost general agree- sen, and is quite jolly when aboard
pneumonia and perhaps con -nest of (minim' that the right titne ship. All ethers violently rtwenti
to breed for the first calf is nt .n trip on water, and vociferously
sumption. it is just as
• ,l
about finless months of age, this give vent to their fcrliugs until eoa-
period vnrying somewhat according sickness brings silence,
to the Rile find vigor of the animal.
If an animal Is sufficiently vigorous To toll a man with a to in hi
and of a good enough size when head that colds always n","
she comes to this age, and is not weakest spot, is adding t,. il• .
bred, she goes on to a beefy tend- injury
envy more or less fast according to
beretlilary Inclinations. IMrtor--"A men of y:•!t' ph 1,,
needs perpetual eaerris , ;o,.1 tie., Ilinot be perpetual!' Indoors. A .;ti
dentary regime doesn't e it y' �. �
should }ire le the open s r. arsj
bare plenty art walking;. Irl rte +'r
--what are roe?" Pati wt'. —" A i ab
mark doctor I"
to reduce the chance as much
as poS.-iblc.,,Scott's Emulsion
soothes, heals and cures a
cold and docs it quickly --
that's a good point to re-
membet..
'wilt tend yea a tit 1e 111zy if you lite,
scorn tc BOwlirs.l'uroate,oat.
"1 suppose every breeder of long
experience has noticed tho tendency
to a hull -headed development in
heifers that are delayes in breeding.
This tendency Is due, to the fact that
blood which would have been direct-
ed to tho hind quarters through the