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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1905-08-24, Page 2+444-1-1-1-1+144444i-144-1-1-1-1-14-144++144.1 Mccc; isFavoritc ---OR A SECRET REVEALED. +1 -1 -1 -i -I "I-te4 •144-14-1444 0I1AI''TE:It L. The firelight fell on the passage of tho letter when Leah opened it again and it seemed to her as though the words were written in blood, the —nowi I give you a chance of rotoal- scarlet flames leaping and playing in mockery over it. It was a death- !Ing it. If I may neap out your lie. 1 should say, 'Marry for wealth and warrant that she hold in her hands• position, where your beauty and She went on reading:— grace will bo appreciated, where "I cannot tell what. steps I should your pride will be looked on as an have taken or what I should have additional ornament. Do not even done, but that I was seized then seek the sweeter, softer consolations with a serious illness. Beetle war of lite; they will be of no use to most devoted to me; she nursed Ino ,. by day and night. No man bad you.. ho had reached the end of the ever a more devoted child. f con -letter but. her senses were confused. trasted my two daughters—the ono living at the great house away over tho green hilt, in the midst of luxury and maypifcence, beautiful. dainty, and proud, ignoring guy existence, not knowing. caring or inquiring whether 1 was living or dead. tho other working for me by day and by night, devoting her tv11o1e life to me. The contrast was not in your favor, Leah. I was ill for many 1 . wonder, Leah, when you have read this, whether I have written it (10111 motives of love or hate. From lovet I always thought you had some- thing of tho heroine in your nature worshipped him; had made no s�crot of it; she had told him often. with kisses and tears. that life held no- thing for her but his love! Oh. bit- ter sorrow, bitter shame! Ile had kissed her. listened to her loving words, spoken to her of the future they should pass together tie had prepared his house to be her home; ho had given her a wedding -ring; he had discussed his future with her; she had thought of herself as his wife. Ile had allowed her to tell him the deepest secrets of her heart; to make her life one with his; ho had let her believe in his truth and his affection—and all this time be had no love for herself! Nettie had won hits—Iletlie, with • Ith of olden her fair face and w g hair. Bettie, whom years ego she backs and hindrances in hog develop had forsaken! It was Bettie whom barns at 000 cad or the other of he had loved, and not herself! their existence. The American it. It is stranger still when figures "I will judge him myself," she Swineherd in discussing this subject, chow that sheep are the most profi- said; and then slowly in her own refers to the claim that pigs far- table animals the farmer can raise. min(! she went over the past, begin- rowed in March, April and May aril Year in and year out there is post - met p fling with the Rest hour that she had met. him and ending with the prey- best for profitably converting into tit•oly more money in sheep than ions evening, when he had parted pork. It is late enough to usually anything else the farmer can pro - from her with a pale, worn face, td avoid the severe weather of the duce. Mr. Farmer, if you don't though life had little brightness for season and enables then to be raise sheep you are overlooking an him. Not one circumstance escaped grown during tho summer season opportunity. her memory• She recalled the little, and futtcned before winter sets in. Wool and Mutton.—Good wool incident at the Royal Academy. It. offers an opportunity to have as well as good mutton depends when, referring to the face that she the pigs do their growing during largely upon the quality of the food. that season of the year when grass Succulent food makes the best wool, the cleanest, brightest, softest and strongest As a rule, the wool of young sheep is stronger and has more elasticity than that of aged ones, which, for want of youth, has less strength and fibrous body. The Most for Your Money and ' A ROMANTIC LiFE STORY the Best for Your Health '•ELLS NEWSPAPERS, BUT EATS AT A PINE HOTEL. THE PROFITABLE PORKER. The cost of the pig in growing it successfully into a matured porker is tho topic of interest to the hog raiser. This involves the question of when the pig should be farrowed to most profitably meet this enol. The summer pig, the fall pig and the winter pig all have their draw - LA 4 Old John Burt lias tor Years Brea Fighting to Set Right a Wrong Verdict. 111 Victims of injustice; are many, but few of them have such a romantic history as John W. hurt, a little, whites white -boarded old man who sells newspapers, boot laces and Lite hes for a living, sleeps in ono of the 3 ondon county council's cheap lodg- Ing-houses and feeds sumptuously three times a day at the Hotel Cecil, ' one of London's most lux+u•ious car- avansaeies. It is probably duo to t� the fact that the requirements of 7 his inner man are abundantly sat- C•ylon Tea, Positively the purest and most d• li loos tea In the world. Sold *sty la *est.d lead packets. doe. 505. �. By all Arewa' O ltlgk.*t Award. St. Louis. 1904. Her brain was dazed; she could not had thought like Bettie a, he had or pasture is in condition to bo think or realize her position. Her said, "It has the tenderness that I used. They can actually bo reared whole soul was steeped in the horror yours lacks." Tinto went by un- at less cost. than during any other of dull despair. Slowly she again herded. She forgot everything ill porion of tho year. turned to the letter and re -read it line by line, cord by word. The firelight, with its red, flickering flame tell on the whito pages as she did so, and on the desolate face of Aenune. 1t was her sentence of death; it was the warrant that cut her off the world but the task she had set herself; and each fact, each memory, as it casco home to her. brought with it confirmation of the truth. At last, with white. tearless face and with clinched hands, she fell days, but I know that. he came. upon her knees with a bitter cry. "It i:; all true," she moaned; slept In the front of the cottage; and from all that was bright and beau- "every word is true!" during the summer nights, when tho ti(ul in life. The two whom she had Bow long she knelt in the glow of window was open, I could hear the loved and trusted had betrayed her. the firelight she never knew: but it murmur of their voices, and I know Granted that Basil's betrayal had was the sound of the dressing bell by the sound of his, musical with been unconscious—that he had fallen that at length aroused her. Shelove, how matters stood. in love without knowing it—ho stood up then, with a scared look "Sometimes Bettie would tell sue should have told her. Ile should on her tare. that the 'strange gentleman' had have trusted her, and have lot her .. I must live through it!" sfie said. been. and that ho had left antes- decade. "1 must meet my uncle, and smile as though nothing were wrong; I was must dress, talk, meet him who my lover; I must go to see Bettie. ie. with this+ sharp, bitter pain at. my heart." (To be Continued.) sage for nie. She always turned ► to le I c se- cret1 lest I should read d th from cret of her face. She never knew his real name; it over we called him by name, wo spoke of 'Glen.' which "I should have given ham his free- dom," sho said withh a great t tenr- less sob. "I should have set him free." And Nettle, the fair young sister I knew to bo the title of his place. whom she had nursed back from the I was very ill during those few clays; very arms of death? Ah, well she my thoughts were not. clear. But could not say that Nettie had be - there came a summer night when I traved her, for she had learned to felt better and stronger. I told love hirer without the faintest e,u- llettie that I should get up and go spicton as to who he was; but.. when down to the garden in the cool 01 she saw him there, when she knew the evening. She objected very that it was Leah's lover for whom strongly. she had learned to care. she might "It would do me great harm. she surely have trusted her then! Lover said. And sho seemed so miserable and sister had betrayed her. lover about it that I lay still; but after- and sister were both untrue to her. ward, when she had gone down- Icer head drooped; tho faro -flame stairs, believing that I might steep died; the desolate face of Acetone for hours, I could not hear it. "The summer wind came in at the open window, the birds were singing their even -song, the low chanting of the waves sounded musical in tho distance. I could not rest. I rose, dressed myself, and stole quitctly down the stairs and out into the garden and round among the trees, where I should be hidden front sight and could enjoy the sweet evening air at my will. I was very weak, very ill. The fresh -scented nir, for which 1 had longed so intensely, sent me to sleep. I do not know how long I slept there; but when I awoke the (noon was shining, and I heard the sound of a woman's voice sob- bing in great distress. I raised my head, and I saw a scene that has haunted me until the memory of it has driven me to write this. 1 slid not listen purposely but I could not get away; it was to me as though I were present at a death -bed. The subs were Hettie's and she was bid- ding farewell to your lover, Leah— Basil Carlton. She loved him — ah, me, how well! And he spoke up like the honest. frauk, noble young fol- low he is. Ile told her how he had drifted unconsciously into love for her. thathe was bound in honor to starry some one else, and therefore he must go. "Leah, give heed to my words. I do not know why Sir iiusil asked you to marry hint. I am sura that it was not because ho loved you. I am :::ire, too, that he acted in all loyalty. Be value down to South- wood and sew your sister quite ac- cidentally; he fell in love with her without knowing it. Ifettie loves hint with her whole heart, and will e; but she re- t orest red cb > love no one else while she lives. wood a , They parted in sorrow and tears. member ed that Sir liasil had been hot loyal bot h honest, bot h t rue. very *strange when a t Dent. -he Whet her they will tweet again I know thought of the long ranthles, when, not—i leave that with you. The without seeming reason. he had left doctor has told me to -day that I her alone. They had pisee ed her at have nut many weeks to live. and the time; she understood th.•nt now. that nothing can change my fate ile had spent these hours at the l.euh, I cursed vote du this which 1 cottage aith Ifettie or with llnrtin It is possible to plant green spring crops that will furnish cheap feed for the litters and sows and do much toward promoting the develop - went of hone and flesh. Froin experience of feeders at the experiment stations the pig increas- es with great profit until six or sev- en months old, when it has reached the nmaximurn. After that the pigs require a larger amount of grain 10 produce a given amount of pork, and they should be fattened and dis- posed of. One bushel of corn made 13 1-3 pounds of pork at six months old; at seven months old, one bushel made 13.2 pounds. and eight months old one bushel made 12.6 pounds. While there are varying conditions that have their influence upon the amount of gain remade, it is a al principle that after six or months the amount of gain t bushel of corn is on a (leer HYDROPHOBIA SYMPTOMS. scale. These gains do not come up Watch the Eye and Not the Mouth ones that have been secured of a Dog for Warning. divlduals. It may have been As dogs do not perspire, the only ally in the quality of the pi: relief they seen to get when over- there is a great deal of char - heated is from inhaling cool nir tics of certain animals. We through their wide-open mouths In farmers who have sows and short, puffy breaths. The friction be- that they can scarcely feed tween tongue and lips, caused by enough to keep them front their rapid, laborious breathing, Iwo- too (at, they have such a p faded. It seemed to Leah as though duces saliva, which is sometimes ig- sity of assimilation, which her soul was leaving her hotly; a norantly diagnosed as foam: one of of all proportion compared cold chill and sense of darkness canto the symptoms of hydrophobia. Many others. over her. . innocent victims have lost their lives "If it be death, welcome death!' on account of such stupidity. she said as the shadows closed If your dog should feel ill, trick around her. with some ordinary ailment, he will CHAI"I'Elt LI. It was not death that came to Leah Batton. only a merciful insen- sibility. She woke to find all her nerves tingling with pain. to find the crushed pages of her father's let- ter in her hand, the firelight shining en her, and the fare in the picture looking down upon her in its calm, grand despair. She woke with a pain worse than the thrust of a sharp dagger, with a low moan on her lips. A faint glimpse of hope Caine to her. The story night not be true. Her father did not like her. and he had perhaps taken this method of punishing her. 'fhe very hope, faint as it was. seemed to gladden her and startle her into sudden brightness. The story might bot be true Let her think. let her go hack in blind to the post. and see it anything in it bore out or contradicted it. She thought of Ilene Abbey first. and she remembered the great gre'•n hill that rose between tho estate emit the town of Southwood. It was on the other side of the hill thnt mer fa- ther and sister hnd lived. She could not 1bn(1 that the faintest notion of being near them had ever dawned upon her. NO Ono had spoken in her presence of a worn-out. political agitator who had conte to South- SIIEEP NOTES. Breeds of Sheep. The questi wag welcome to you with a sad, pit- breed should ho largely o iful expression, looking up enquiring- fancy and environment. All Iv, as if asking for help and relief. have Merit when kept in tho It it has come to the worst, and hot place. If tho fancier has a feels by instinct tho germs of tho rough rugged farm some of dreaded disease in his frame, his ,tic- smaller breeds would he better tion will bo entirely differentYou the heavier breeds. It woult will find him with low bent head, too niuch to expect the Lincol withholding his usual glad welcome, instance, the product of low, hardly noticing or glancing at you•lands, to do well on the 1f your eye meet. his. the restless, sparsely -grassed highlands of nervous strange expression will startle you. The dog, feeling his doom. is con- scious of approaching danger. and would like to prepare and warn you. These unmistakable and easily recog- nized signs should he watched close- ly and always herded Corner the dog at once and, with the help of a broom or barn fork. keep hien at a safe distance until looked up. Tess—"I hear Miss trongnlind has nsked yon to be her bridesmain. Is that so?" Jess—"No, indeed! She has asked mo to bo her 'best a o - man.' " Will—"She takes a very small shoe doesn't sho?" Nell—"Oh, yes!" Will —"Whet size?" Nell—"Two sizes smeller than her foot. Little Walter was eating lunch when he gave his arm a sudden shove, and Splash! clown went his glass of milk. "I knew you were going to spill land. Points on Reding. -1t seem bo pretty generally understood Mock will not eat tomatoes. b discussion it was given as the perlenco of many growers for cannery that tho pulp from th tory, consisting of peelings, etc.. is a very gond feed for hogs and cattle. writes an li farmer in Itural New Yorker. many instances farmers have hi this pulp some distenco and fed hogs with very good results. cl ing that they grew and fatt with a very small amount of added. Somet hies the hogs w not eat it when first offered to t but. If a little salt. was scatt over it they soon learned to ea greedily. Cattle seems to have, better liking for the tomatoes than hogs. Best Ration for Sheep—Grose is the best ration for sheep. No scien- tist or skilled shepherd can beat It 1•'AIRM NOTFS. Common salt. applied at the rate of about fifteen pounds to the square rod, will kill and prevent the growth of weeds in walks and drives. The dry time will give you a chance to put down drains through tho pluccs on your farm which are wet in the late tall and spring. Get ready to brag up your big pumpkins and squashes at the fair this fall. The first thing is to have some to brag about. if you have, it is all right to let folks know it. Who can tell us anything, froth practical exie•ricnce, about frog a that!" said mamma angrily. "Well, ns a balance ration. 11 you knew," queried Walter, "why Money in Shoop.—It seeins strange didn't you tell mo?" that while the supply of cattle and t' . r 'tel i this the In c a n i on t "They tell mo that you have cured hogs i4 yourself of chronic insomnia." "Yes; country the number of sheep is de- I'>n completely cured." "It must creasing. This seems more strange be a great rolls(." "Ilelief! I when one stops to consider how pro - should say it was. Why, I lie title sheep aro and how quickly the awake halt the night thinking how I supply night be doubled if stock- men world turn their attention to tisk, and that curse will fall harm- Ray. She remembered, his ahstrac_ used to suffer from less to the ground. When I nal sty'- tion. his gloom, and her anxiety --- ing, f shall send for you. and may about him. he able to tell you thin. When I it scented to her as ihou •g,h her ani e1•.1,1, ask Sir Arthur Batton to brain were reeling. Strange words take Nettie home; it will he safer. rang through it, strange sounds Lir better for her: I ran see it now. came to her. and a voice deeper And, Leah. if you would be truly and sweeter than any she had known noble. truly generous. if you would retake a glorious atonement for your selfi'.h choice, if you would rise far "Sweet is all the Innd about. and nbove the level of ordinary woman- all the (lowers that blow. hood. if you would change a curse. And sweeter far is death than life into a blessing, if yon would do that to me that long to go." t• filch will bring music, and beauty, n••eI brightness into two lives. give There would he no sweet release of tip your lover to liettie, and let her death for her. She would have to wed him. suffer through the long years alone. "Do not think I am heartless; but, The firelight played on the beauti- when i look at Bettie, when I think fol fare of Ar'none, whose sorrows of her devotion and love. when 1 she heel sympnthieeel with only yes - think of her tenderness. and renrem- terday. Now a whole age seemed ber that those are qualities you tem to part her from that time. She live without, I urge upon you to 1e- tried to rise from the chair that she sign your lover. and let hint marry hnd drawn near the picture, but Ifettie. there was no strength in her limbs. "1f—and env heart does not receive She could not stand; rhe mutt wait me ne to what you will do—if you until the first shock of her pail had deride upon this, yon must net wise- pa sed. it se,•med to her almost ns ly: for. if either of thorn stlspect, the though Aenono were living and was snapr;!ing one will notnceept tho the only one who understood her sacrllee. however much you mnv dry- trouble tireat ileaven, how hard sire to make it. Your clesire in thio it WAS to beer! world is to shine; you prefer twilit- So, through all this lime, ll;lsil Wiry to love. Love counted 85 nn- hnd never loved her! Why had he thing to you when a stranger offered mated her to merry hint? fie hnd volt wealth. nettle would shalt the probably mistaken fancy for love, hrilitant ghir'i of your life, and and only when h,• met Ifettie knew Would earn only for boys. You IN 111 what love was. She (Leah) had sang: e s•.w,t--� 'LET'S Si.t:, 1111. 1:1. O eo 1 1111 h 1 IN N I- X'1"?" { • ub- ub- up- ting of ver - 1 of cia- rgu- low this bad int - RUSSIAN FAMINE FEARED isfted that hurt, despite his tis years, endures his lot with patient resig;nat inn and sanguhtely awaits WOES OF PEOPLE INCREASED the day when his wrongs will be BY CROP FAILURE. + righted and he will bo restored again of Peasants Might I to affluence. Uprising It is to Premier Dick Seddon of I New Zealand that tho old man is Compel the Finish of the War. ( indebted for this strange tempering of tho wind to the ahorn lamb. Tho It is feared that there will be a picturesque, colonial statesman pos- reculrence of the great Russian fame sesses the virtueof never forgetting ino of a few years ago, when Rev. an old friend. lie and hurt were '1'. de Wile. Talmageand A somber of pals at the Ballarat gold diggings Americans visited this country and in Australia long years ago. and for distributed provisions with a boon- two yours shared all the hardships tiful hand. say's a St. Petersburg- let- ; and luck that came their way, Then ter. At that time hundreds of thou- they parted company and did not sands of Russians suffered because of tncet again until they Accidentally the shortage of the crop. and the,ren across each other in London a few years ago hurt was then hnv- world-wide relief was gladly accepted by the Government. No ing the; ing a hard time of it to keep him- wur with Japan is on, it is doubtful self out, of the poor -house ,end Sed- ever the Government. will bo (ion war: being toted everywhere as willing to confess its weakness and ono of the apostles of imperial unity. allow outside aid and assistance, no That made no difference to mutter how many people may be THE IIID -I EAR'PED PREMIER. starving in the interior of Russia. He broke an engagement with a tit - According to the reports at hand from the Provinces, there will bo a god nabob that he and the old man total failure of the crop in many might dine together at The C'psjl� AM - districts of Central, Eastern and And when ho returned to Newt Northern Russia, and as a result theland he lett directions with the pro - famine in store for the affected dis- prietor that hurt should be allowed tricts will undoubtedly far surpass to take what meals 11e pleased there. the famines in the years 1891 and Tho bills are settled by Newton. 1897.It was a trumpery dispute about it A TOTAL FAILUIIE. watch that was the source of all the .. From the Governments of Vjatka, misfortune that has dogged Burt Kasansaratolf, Samara, Yekaterinoo- footsteps for the last seventeen slay, Yamboff, Orel and Itjasan, the years. For somo timo after he and ''/Mnstvos report a total failure of Seddon dissolved their gold-pna- the crops su far as winter and sum- specting partnership he prospered Hier corn, peas, beaus. and cattle and acquired a valuable term in Tas- ,.,., he"Wt u go�s1 00115 have and with tine. and and the Hugh he ko a hing i)nee. try- ell - food are concerned. ( manta. A bad harvest is predicted from i watch to a wnteh►tinker n Fingal fo the Governments of Moscow. Nov- be repaired Rut th ut h that gorod, Tula. Kursk, Tver. and was returned to himlil>is wither Tskoff, while on tho other hand watch and of inferior quality • ac - Southern Russia has a fair harvest. cording to hurt's story The mat - Rut the misfortune in the districts ter was then taken into court. Thorn of Central, Eastern and Northern the inagistdttes urged hurt to ac - Russia are likely to be all the worse : rept a judgment of non -suit and in because the men in the districts men- 1 the presence of a witness return the honed have been called in as re- watch to the watchmaker and then serves. and all that remain behind suo again to recover his own hurt are women. children, and old men, t acted on their advice. Ile got slug - incapable of work, and unable to god for his pains by the watchmaker procure broad for themselves and for and was laid up for several weeks their families. ( in consequence. Then leo sued the In consequence, the women of watchmaker for assault, claiming many villages have revolted and heavy damages. When the case tame have marched in crowds to the local + up for trial it was discovered that police stations, where they declared instead of a judgment of non -cult a that they did not want to die, and ! verdict had been entered ngain'rt that they would not leave the cen--hurt. In view of this the court dis- missed his claim with costs numunt- ing to over $1,000. Since then hurt's life has been one long struggle to obtain a rehearing tial police stations until their hus- bands were restored to theme. GOVERNMENT INACTIVE'.. Up to the present time the Gov - of the case. That a wrong verdict crnntent has maintained an attitude had been entered was admitted, hitt, of absolute inactivity towards all of as the legal authorities of Taemente. these manifestations, and it 'a be interpreted the law, there was no lieved that nothing will be done un- way by which tlio wheels of justico til, as usual, it is too late, and un could be revolved backward and sho wrong verdict changed int eo'a right k._ one. Tho watchmaker had out til famine. typhus, and scerbut have call- broken out. anter I'his year. seeing that most of the n. 1 (he railroads have handed over the larg- 1 ter part of their rolling stock to the management, of the Siberian a - A 111(3 POLITICAL PULL, R it and that was exerted against. hurt artll wfur war purposes, the provision- to tho utmost. In the fight, Burt'a vers ay fartn was gobbledup by the lawyer .. ing of the famine districts will t That naturally involve far greater diO3cul- lyv•, ties than usual as tho railways can - say. not even cope with the ordinary atm trade and commerce, at the 5tune to and has ode and weans utterly exhausted. Finally, the attorney general of the colony declared that the wrong ver dict could h•• expunged and th tfmc taking care of the forward right verdict substituted for it only through n special act of the imperial movement of this trines const ant ly I'nrlinnlrn' and the royal assent going on in the direction of Man - thereto. walking out 1 ehllria Public feeling in behalf of the old _T Warnings ,o prepareur n even - NECK. r - NECK. f 11 t' n men aho had been beggared in his NECK AND tuubtie•s, and to buy cereals for the etlurtr to obtain justice was strongly threatened districts aro daily be- aroused in Iain just, A fund was The lawyer for the plaintiff had ing recoiled by the diinislry of the raised to enable hien A undts as finished his argument, and counsel anterior from 'Zenist vote but the England prosecute his claim for tho defense stepped Corwin('Government clues nothing, and to all here. ate andivrcl in II tK). len claim speak, when the new judge interrupt intents •and appearancves it would ed him. ILs oyes were wide "Pell, i seem as though it was relying upon 1>�'aled h, Queen V ictorin, t0 the 0 open, and filled with wonder and ad -;a miracle to resurrect, sho burned I rivy Council, to the House of nitration for the plea of the plaintiff.crops. Lords and to hing Edward, and tho "Defendant nerd not, speak," be MAV 141: REBELLION. Ell1:L1,iON. only result has been nn nrcumula- ea1d. "I'Iniutiff wins." tion of doe it till evidence that. f •'lint, your i • honor " said the nttor-� Should famine among the peasants w"old nearly Till a furniture, yen. ney for the defendant, "at Icnst let • of a large part of Russia be added The wrong verdict stilt Stands mo present sty case." i to the trouble s growing out of the ngainst hint. No cotnpeneat.iai for "Welt, go ahead, then," said tho war with Japan. it is believed that a 1'011111w dissipaloel in Striving to Judie, wearily, ;rebellion among the peasants will be get it set right has been awerded The intvyer went ahead. When he increased, and it may be difficult, it hint But sustained by the Irounti- had finished the judge gaped in even not impossible. to put down the up- 1121 fare pretcitecl for hint through •r man still u Indeed. t may generosity th ld t t )r future. in a I n a rt t in tl v I' cn greater Dons tme ill 'risings sadden's g Y "Don't it beat ell!" he exclaimed. be next to impossible for the Gov- cealtinter his ,•anent tight against "Now defendant wins." reagent to curry on the war with legal red tope and eircundoenlion. Inn in rase the troops are n )so- • hely required to suppress rib(! lions in Central, Northern, and East- 1 _� 11 Ile declares he will not return to MIG Ins S'1'iLI. BESAID. - Tustnnnia until he has ol)1uincd a decision one way or the other. Tho "'!'here was a time," remarked crit Russia, caused by famine. ! chances are that he will be dead, young Rakeley, who had gono It is believed that these represen- and probably buried in a pauper's through a fortune, "ahem people usedtations of the Zemstvos regarding grave, before it Is reached. to say i had more money than the famine possibilities boyo been bruins. They can't say it now." giving the Czar more trouble than ------.-----� "Why nut?" asked Knox. all the other questions combined, I'ROVOKI\(i dtlS"1'11c1 - lloc ause I'm down to my Inst and that they were the subject of penny." several earnest conk -veneer; with M. i Tho caller was angry, and etre "Yr'. but you've the penny 1•aven't Kilts before the depart nut of f you?'' (I I 1• want It seen •. utr Witte for America on his errandv An 0xpinnntlon nt.tl ) me fence. if the situation should be- i apology, nir," he said. "in lic- t 0^t' tll,asttf�i�llrtttr come too had, it is likely that the- paper tits morning you had cimitlt- I count of the wedding at the peace -at -any -price policy nany be ! hys' Inst night, and yo'r 51)01.0 of pressed Foote upon M. Witte and the' 't.ho jay that attended the happy —......4staff at the Peace Commission. I pair as they went to the altar.' Now, sir, I'm tho--- Insurance Agent—"fly dour sir, -Gracious henvest" leaped the cel- sir. have you made any provi• ion for Iter. "I aruto it 'Joy! , • those who come after you?" Hang - uppe—"Yes; 1 put the clog; ret tho door and told the ser•ant to say I'm out of town.' Young 1fusbnnd—"1 s'eali he away f its/ whole (ley it, enol se elle, frab••Ile, • e..i • • •,n to IP r,itbe�r� 1:1.041 I'M go' 1 ci;eng Wife --"If to r n I h• Ip ' 'this is the Gnat thence j ; . 0 !,;; I . If ..e! ii !et ler ft •!:n Vet/ thew - Hump Back SCOTT'S EMULSION wo8't nate s Ihump back etral,ht, ,tither will It mitts a short Its long. bet It feeds soft bons and h(ils titewsd bone and 1' amoral the •few pentaine means of recovery la rici..tt a:s4 bele consumption. seed 1 .r f•.e amp'.. !,Torr , DOWN[, Chisi1eta, Tone.:o, (:::rN. l e. sot Volt all II-*1tets. A young doctor xnid to it pretty girl; "Do yon know, n.! deur, 1 have n heart affection) foryo 1"l "'MVOiatsei you hnd it bung. r- ed ''0. vex; i feel 1 tc•'l liver trvv- bled lift• without yes." he responded. "Then you hod bcttee t ithinn," tats softly- murmured.