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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1907-10-31, Page 15..r• .' , ft'10t*-0+01.04 41&,0+1+0+O+0. -c+0+> -+-0+O+ -.0.1 o -►-tea", hear you are ging away, very sudden- ' 2 "lt Ls .. with us as a lth the soldiers," l --� ie. replied; "we must always be at our 0 • CI Mesta. Where !s my wife?" r S I,eora bent forward. "'fere," she sa:d, without faking at him. "What do you say to this sudden OR — new -3?" lie asked, looking past her in his turn. "A pretty ease of work! 'Che steamer *ot to-tmottuw morning at FOR HER FAMILY'S SAKE. nine' o'clock. That Is the way it is when one makes u plan. 1 thought we t .-eitel be going away together to-mor- ti*/e40e04lg♦00wat♦g♦o♦04—e+04-04- 04-04 0a04-0♦04 � row, and mow ---:.1y mother will come foe you this evening," he continued. • CHAPTER XII. the • 1ruth," :she said isud.t&nly and bur- 1„ I n n;; -toward tier, "and will come tc major von 'Totten was buried tvitlt en nein"; "tell t'trm lh;It I will never come blart-'leir•g %with you when 1 come Lack. the sarmWful pont') and ceremonyre+ him; testi hen I hate hint like ---like Fromthere we Will goto Italy. Marson 'which the little town ooutd beetow on 11o:1ung else ii this wide world- That and April are the finest months on the .an old officer who had worn the iron le' is as re;,ul eve to rile as a snake that Riviera. I am sorry Vat I ata obliged -(:ross. The Soldiers' eseieety had L orne nsight (-roue may path! That he—prat.-- lot 1)w without yeti now, but my bu +i - their bur►ttit•, the SIK:oli,ag Gut:d had Site pushed the table aside and tell ties, over there is such that I r•1iuld „juir.ci theca, and tat- funeral train had co her 14nees before her nioth.'r, :with 'Lave to leave yeti alone constantly, peseed through the s!1 :els to the notes I14) vestige of a tear, now, in iter burn- tont you might gist blue." 4 1 "Chopin's I uueral \torch." Imniedi- ing eyes. Then he made hi, way between Ilio. 1'tely Melte 1114 coffin had walkeel the"Mammma." she en're'ated,'do not send leble and the o;tove. t', I')ra, and lak- two sons, and after them the son -in- It'e away; let me artuy with you! I cart- lug her by the chin he turned her Lace i•rw--the young husband whom pitiless not go \with hire—by everything that is to toward him. -(leant had robbed of his wedding jour- s;:cred to me In the world. I cannot!" Frau von 'Follett motioned to her son. icy, trill, more an air of vexation than Frail Toilet) did not stir. She and they both bitethe r(aom. sot sorrow. Tho people in the town alt ttas stunned by this ttrrll of affairs. "nut The young wife did not stir; she only knew dust lire young, neev y-n,aeei.'d —but --my Cod!" she cried ::t length. pew paler, and she kept her eyes half- { air lead CJIre back the sante night, hiking her daughter 1►)• It:e shoulder, closed end her lir; Fussed firmly to- un.l that Fr:!u Lora Becher had been "1.ora, do you 141)4►\'.• what yuu are say- gel her. in despair when, ti!trrying from the sta. iia►? You are not engaged to hire now, $ton dii e.•Ily to her father's house, she yOtn al" his wife'. You must, do you had learned the fatal. news. Year? You must!" Yea. life le surely slramne. The old "No, no! 1 lulls: trot, tmammi, do not major might al last hate held up ',is sae' !" head a little, and smelted himself in his 'then Frau von Totten drew herself clriidreu s Inegnifie:•'mee--and now led' tip- "Yen are no doubt ill," she said teas talion away! gravely. forcibly keeping down her weir, the Bechers would have lo put fears. "or you 'would exit Say such their herds pretty deep into Ririe pock- things. What can ,you he 'thinking of, .elm, far there cofiblu 1 be much left for child? You knew what you wer' doing Its' widow and childr; m. viten you engaged yourself to �, judged the women v1r were lett l'4►tt should have considered the mailer behind In the 'toilette' -purls, \tilt Ilk' then, my love. \\'hy did you acc►;1t fcpn nine portion of the famr'iy; so twins- him?" t re•d the teen- in the long to :.'cul pro- "\\'lot•, nmantntn! 1'o1i nsk that—you?" cession; and so said the gaping crowd and Lora sprang to her feet and tegan in the street. "Yes, it is wretched a:rough, when people in Mal rank have no lneneee and yet mu -t always be considering their positic,n. Lora. now. has dime very well for herself," remarked Frau Engel, as the Inst elan of the 1n'oe.•s- -alon disappeared ru•tnd the corner. to her pretty serv11J11-11nai.l, who was -standing in the street. Then site shut the window •against the cold December Alr. \t hick had lowered the tempera- ture of the room by several degrees, and Wired n pa:r of felt shoes near the .st-lwe, so her Gottfried might be nook eery comfortable when he returned front the co!d tvulk to the church -yard. mei Lora sal. the day atter her fa- ther's funeral, at the hound table, op- I.nsite her mother, occupied in looking through the paper-, 8.1141 documents of ,Ila( dead nwin. Iler !ruttier, with his wife, and Helen, and her betrothed had 'Neverr he said hoarsely, "do you hear? Never! Not if you and 1 go to ner'dali )n together!" A long pau>44ensued. Suddenly he was reized by the maddest jealousy. She stood there so helpless. elle seemed lovelier than she had ever been in her anger. It he could only slay trete! It .rented as if he was the sport of a de. then—this damned American /MUoir! Tle put his Stand hastily into his pocket; there was the fatal despateh; he knew it by heart; he had long feared some. thing of this sort: "Ilave just learned that El. intends t11 seek you in Germany. (:once at once and toning., matters. "C.' (l'o lt' (o)1tinued.) MAKE THIS YOURSELF "It is damned turd lines, Lora." he h dney diseases, who snakes the state. eaten "i:h.' Everything seems to go mtc►►t ei a Toronto daily newspaper, wrong with t:s. And you treat ine 1lett it will relieve almost any case < t shamefully, i •►•t•a, and I swear i don't K:etney trouble, if taken before the stage deserve it! 1 must 18.-. ,t, ma' love, of Bright's disease. Ile stales that such on your leaving off that haughty ('x- symptom, as lame back, pain in the more open, porous and friable. ILoose, pression about yuur mouth, (.14) you side. frequent desire to urinate, especi- sandy soils become more compact when gear? I will ttlke this opportunity et tally at night; painful and discolored) treated with lint.'. Acid soils, frostily 101tirt,' you. once for all, that 1 expect urinnlion, are readily overdone. Here drained n,t►ck lam(!.:, are sweetened by is the recipe; try it: Fluid Extract Dandelion. one-half 4)unce; (:ompound !argon. one ounce; (:IVES (RECIPE FOR SIMPLE HOME- MADE KIDNEY 1:111E. It►eNpen Iwe Mixture of e'ege1able In- gredients said to Oterconu• !Sidney and Bladder 'Trouble. lime is 11 simple Borne -made mixture as given by an eminent milieu -ay cin ,P1 1.44.414114 NI *4441 Olue I 1The Form 14'l+ 1.L'tIE AND THE SOIL. Canadian farurerb have not, as a rue, givell as I1►hell ultcnticai to the subject ('i linnet; their 4,016 us hate their eomn- pe•titors in Great Britain and um the United Slates. 11 is true that itt many sox lions of the country there Is no need f••r liming owing to the abundance of ihii element already in the sail. The limestone districts, however., are clearly defined, and it is outeide of these die - trick that the applicntic.n of lime is much necessary uud is likely to yield the greatest results. Luer is of consi- derable importance to agriculture, as it is found in the ash of all plants and is an e i entint constituent of all good s(eik. It exists naturally as limestone, sleets, mi:art, chalk, coral, etc.. Quick- lime or caustic lime is made by burn- ing; limestone or any carbenale of lime kilns, at a very high tentpeliali e. Quicklime is more energetic in its ac- tion than the cart enate'... \\'hen it is exp: esed to the air it gradually slakes mei breaks down into powder and be- c(,aaaee carbonate of lime or mild II has a Very beneficial effect upon the teeture (8' physical c•4lnnditi(.1) (if the soils. It lends to (make heavy clnv soils different Irealmnen1 from you. 1 'wish lo Ire !rented in a friendlly, in a loving n.8nr.er." "1 told you. wnen 1 beenme engage" Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three to you, that I did not love you," she ounces. 'Cake a teaspoonful atter each said loudly and firmly. meal and at bedtime. "You cel thinly did display an ami- A well-known physician is author - elite frnnknese on that oceir 4on, but 'o laugh. It was a dreadful laugh. you added that you intended to be dutiful wife." "Yes; then I thought . could," she murmured. Ile did not hear. "What did you sal'?" She made no reply. "\\'e'.l, !hi; is the long and short cif it " be continued, in a blustering tone: '; shall 'hope to find you in a better frame of mind when i come back. 1 nn: not lite sort of roan to be led by the nose b)• hie wife, 1 assure you, stn)• clear. It you thought you here, doing me a great fator by giving; me your aristocratic hand, then " Ile stopped, for she had risen and was standing hy- the tall stove, her fig - coating from those pale lips. and with those angry eyes. "Yes. you -fere right, mamma. \\'hy dict 1 accept him?" And she sat down by the window rind looked out into fire street, in whi-'h tite s1m•3w had begun to thaw, and ultere the boys with load shouts and laughter, w -ere busy making a great snow pian. CHAPTER XIIi. "Lora," began Frau von Totten, af- ter a long pause; "you had better stay here to -day; I will tell hint you are not well—I ani sure you are not, the shock of your father's death has upset you so. four faro is burning; 1 um sure ,ere drawn up with an air of deler111i1a- you are feverish."lion, and an angry light in her eyes. 13u1 Lora thrust her mother's band "It was not n favor on my pnert." she at\ ay, and her cps were 11111101 t4)ward Said quietly, "it was simply a bargain the door, as if she must get away and 1 , which ycu ent Bred ui o doth my family, t hide herself semewIlere. I;ut there was and 1-1 allthwed myself to 1.e sold m gone aatV44V early in ltemorning. The no longer nay place I!:at l r•longed to order to spare' my father n bitter sor- t lamer had magnanimously resigned all her alone, for Katie had taken posses. rcw. 1 did not know it was to 'mini on .he "pittance" which the 01(1herd t sion of her little room ill, moment she to sacrifice one's self. I would have man had saved up and deposited in the had left her father's 'house; this she had 101(1 you this on That evening in Hrrlin, lank; there t\ere two 'thousand than felt as an injury beyond all other's, an cult. a little 'Then 1 was e-rs. Ilei had taken out a thousand actual robbery, for prose foo:1' plain K differently. I 1).111:.s ',�.r Lorga's outfit, and she walls had been witness to all time dreams ever yourr hoose. \\lttwanted tooaskesde 'eel r.ol beeel ,ed 111 lnymor the other of e esr was c i joy and happiness which she had !o give ale time and oportunity to ac - !dreamed there; had seen all her rejoic- c1cir0 by degrees the trust in you that .11r:ee. It:tel•el.eh received nothing. as the tugs, and all her 1(1115. She might, vott asked for. Mone is not as nature year het .re ciente; hail been paid for perhaps. have found 'peace, even now, th t can sit !rust n 0 ., lent to den amount which far exceeded if site could have fled Thither, and. my father adea(I r and a. lite. Now is . and 1 have no longer any right fel claim of his. This one- drawing the bolt behind her, could the ."tech ,Ill to endure for a whole fire. new aidutn the old gentleman had put 'have given vent to herdespairunseen. t' lune that which in 1)r)• desnair 1 prom - tie, n sated envelope, with his per- .Nevertheless, She got up. Should she iced, fpr 1 am :snare 1 shall newer lake .,nal pia t+ s. a::'I with it was a stern (0 11110 the garden? it lay buried deep vett, shall never feel c(rtlidence In you. or m••ney. which o as destined for his Smile!. With was a slip of paper, again. Her mother geniis -eel up the)re snow. She' cam" back ""d sat duan v.gate me myfr not tospeakof love. And 1 entreat u. freedom." via which he had \t ritten: p1){ ens. to put them away in 'he drawer, For one mcan►ent after Iver t•oice hnd "N ► mere is 10 be paid out than this. She felt hurt at Lora'e words; large d - ( (,akin (011111 is rot nee<esarv: car- ceased it was quiet in the roost. MTh - An pettier '1'11 cl:eurnr-1 knows already; i er:s little round eyes had widened have s n, l: 11 att•cnrly to tabu atout ,t, (11nng('ly. Then he Lroke into a loud .pt:d h' t. '11 111: kr it for six ihalers. And I,ltrg;h. "i certainly did not think f should eo wine or eche shall 1'e given out. wall 11* unit'int to 1'e prat (Yat, and find you inclined for joking."' he said t1)) soon!. W)) " a 1 use 1 in my earn- rel length. still s!rugsaing; with laugh, .paiges. tej 1 e lila 9-1 any coffin, as \veil e1s the li.r' '1 \V,e•atlt. (Vey!' the picture 4.1 lite (diet -rote wit cit I ora gave me et•hen s!a r was 11 1:1114 ;f•rl. V. hon 1 calve -tack from the war. If the Soldiers' !Won \w's') t i fire n tc•ltula over my g,1IIVe. they shall he :Mowed to (14) it. Fan therite ie. my wife acne) children .etisi1 to 1 wear nmuri •:r•g 1 ,ng.'r 111811 1( 111 wt e!cs. 11: cause 1 lime alit 1►ys dis- 1lkdsl black 411• sses. 11n(1 1 1.110w ihey -Witt . me•11.t'11 for me stttlieietin\- without 111.11. "VON T(11.1.. -.N.' e lira hail just finished rearli:mg; this ream".cable (!(et:meat, and Low ons .I(nrinif leek In the (,id chair. in tt hich ter father had always eat, sobbing tie). 1.1111y. "i'hanl: (71)111" said her 1); )tl►er. who tt•ith red eyes 01141 ,a :• rr'ett•ful face, •tta• looking Through the papers. "Thank hod. child. ihat you can cry at last." "!enti mad. (1•, you think flint papa ex- t. C 041 MP ba 'k? Dnd he r_'nlly look for mei!' "Yes. lora; we hnd told him that you had been fele graphed for." The )dung wife had already asked a t`'ur.t?re I self -t ,t menting questions about her fet'ter's last 9n:)menI.s. "And ine elwnyc kept kx►king at the doer." entre nturnmtt•eed, "and 1 did not come. and 1 never dreamed of it!" She sprang up, and precseing her handkerchief firmly eosin,' her lips, she walked up and nown the room in a hurried and nerv- ous manner, that t\ as quite unusual tvitlt her. She looked strangely alter- ed in fur mourning dress, .which fitted SO eIO:ely to her figure, and wl►ich made her skin stem whiter, and her hair fairer than ever. ".\larn►na," she began al length, "if Becher should comp ---1 think he said aomchling about it ---to fetch ate, tell him 1 have gone with Katie to the church yard -1-----" "Rut. Lora, why? Consider that you have been here four days, now, and that he has n right to de+mend that you should) come to his house, now." Lora temaln4'd standing at the door. "A rig.R►t!' she inarrn tiecel, as if (7) berseif, end looked at her another with eyes so full of a deadly anguish that Fran von Tol:en slldelenly undcm ,tool 11 all. "Why. Lora!" "Fell hint 1 41111 ill." Arta" nluraetme41, and as if She had tak. n a snti:l.•t; r• tears sprang again to her already swol- len eyes. And this horrible anxiety— this pr.'.sing tveight of care! If Itulolpb would only come, if he could only tell het \viten:et• Becher would advance hint some money for their immediate mints? \\'hnt could the roor fellow do if Recker would trot? She could not pay anything for him with her little pension. . The hell rung: IRtt(lolph's steps carne tie the sl.nirs, and imnnedinlely rifler he entered the room. Ile looked dis- tur1•ed ns he Shrew his wet overcoat down on a chair, and his cap on the lal•!e. " I'leere!" he er:ed, "that is all we gel! 'l ur Mistime!. i.orn, offered to get 1114" 11 Sitlatlorl ill America. in the (ellice of his former pitiene'r. and ns he ;s going to start for there this even- ing, o11 business, he pr.eposes that i should come with hint, at Once --- to g.(ep him company. I suppose." Lora turned her head. and her !eau - 'Mit gloomy eyes looked at him uncom- prehendingly. ncom- ret all c p en ugtly. .he thought he must be 1111nxicntedl. "1 8111 quite in earnest!" the ttermlen- anl assured her. "four Itttsband nits just Packing his ►xlrtmnntPau 1•)r o lit - 1:(. run to New York; i fled before the storm of curios that was raging. when 1.is mother entreated hint to slily, lie nearly tock her head off." "What Ilea happened?" ached lora, leaning her head lack in her chnir. "ile received n despatch, and that is a:t 1 know about it. 1 was jlISt arrang- ing; with him abrntt some money --that he ons only going to lend nip, of course tv:ni n In came 1hLs cable-dc.patch. and he ran instantly down lo Frau EI ricda. Probably sortie business ntntler " "Anel I am to stay here?" (murmured I er1), "Yes; at Zenist there seemed nb.tolute- iy no question of your going. 1 tvas only to !ell you that he was coming in n quarter of an hour, to sny good- bye." Frau von Totten sat there speechless. "\Vill he give you the money?" she Asked at length. The lieutenant shrugged his shoul- ders. "Ile will not let me spent( to him. he Is frightfully cross; at last lie asked m' why \'ict4)r didn't do it??" The young officer Ialugheel shortly. "It is it charming situation. But there lc the sleigh; he Is coming!' The sleigh stopped before the house; the door -bell rang, and some one en- tered Pie hall. stamping the sne\v off to:. feel. Then a heavy step came ap 111( Stair. I!era hntl I and had !Hien refuge in n ehair behind the stove. Frau von T. it,'n went to the (kOr to tm'et her iuU•►n. She a'o'd 1'efere ':t • te.it.•l }e een-tido. S.crnen with clasped 11attJl "ter IC:1 h11,1 "C u to.n:llg, my dear De,11er; i the use of lime, and consequently pl.u- duce more readily crops like clovers. Lime appears to act on the insoluble ct•ilgxol.nls of potash and phosphoric acid in the soils, milking these ingredi- ent; more available for the use of p!tlnls. 11 (lec(.mposes organic platter, Sty that these ingredients are alt lemic, to pr)1n44 a 'nitrification and in - `harmless and easily mixed at home by shaking well in a bottle. This mix- ture has a peculiar healing and sooth- ing effect upon Lite entire Kidney and Urinary structure, and often overcomes the worst forms of Rheumatism in just a little while. This mixture is said to remove all blood disorders and cure the flheumlatisn, by forcing the Kidneys :o filter and• -strain from the blood and sy'.:lem all uric acid and foul, (Ice •11rp 4 -ed tweste matter, which cause these afflic- tions. Ti -y it if you aren't well. Save 'he I:rescriplion, 4s— (:1I tN(:i•:S iN TUE. DESERT. The Sahara Is Not Altogether the Mo- tionless, Dead Thing it Looks. There is always a wearing out of the desert. but it is never worn rut. The winds are blowing the finer particles of dust out over the ocean, hundreds of miles from \there they were taken up. I! rain ever falls, the water wc:hes This 118st from the coarser sand to the la- goons. 'rite question rises, How is the character of the desert kelt t.niform, and how is its extent rather increasing than diminishing? It is easy to understand Lott' the fine sand is produced from the coarse by the netart of the tvincll, but still it remains to be explained how this coarse sand is all the time being re- newed. From the pages of "In the De- sert" one learns somaethimg 411 tl►is went. The Sahara is carrying on n \work of destruction all the lilac. The means it cnlplo)•s are the san(1t thenen- \ es, helped by • heat and cold and wind. The Variation of temperature by (lay and dight, often eighty or a hundred de - glees, causes all expansion a11(1 (•'11) - traction of the rocks so sudden as often 1.1 split them asunder as if a qunrry- ntan's hammer had done the wore. "S(mietimes," says Professor Schir- mer," a rock (lies all to bits mule.. ;of* influence of the sudden contra1i41n." And he quotes a passage tram Living - ter. "So you will never be able to love 1 alone. who used frequently to hear. after me? And you were going In tell me pr.rticallnrly blazing (lays, the black so in Berlin? And olio is it dual you basaltic ro •ks exploding and the ringing; love, and have confidence in? that other 411 their fragments as they fell to the one—that--Iltal— l"'u are certainly de- licious. you tvomen!" Ile wiped a\yny the tear-. that lam: m- eng; hnd brought to his eyes, icok 'call bis wa1elt and looked at 11, then su11- ( 01113 ncsmiling a grove, almost bust - nese -like tone. he continued: "Yon will live with )1)y .mother from this time forth. In order that you may not feel homesick, I freely permit you In invite your 'family to visit you .is often as you 1ik('. And 1 have no oh. jection to your sighing at the window 0n moonlight nights 115 men as you plense. I ant not jeninus, in spite of our Interesting 'neighbor.' And if you t'at•e a desire to see any new r4,emS That you do not happen to have in your library, let the bookseller seed them to you. In short. amuse yourself in your own fashion during my absence, but -- :4 1 you get a divorce. or, ns you SO de- licately express it. give you back your Freedom, after four days of married life" —114 burst into a laugh again --"you can lewdly exact that, my dear! ilut it is certainly piquant, it is original. end would mak.' a very pretty comedy." ile had taken up Il:c major's ruler. widen lay before hire en the table, ane flourished it in the air. "A very pr11- 1y comedy," he repealed. She still stood before 1)1411 \lit)) a scornful expression in her benulifegl e) es. "I was not speaking in jest," she snid. Ile stopped laughing. and looked at Ler. nil his face flushed. "Alt!" "1 entreat you in all seriousness to leave me with my mother. It will be ery suitable, as you .are going away, snit it will make less scandal if we seri- mrnte afterward." 1i•' caught her shoulder suddenly in an iron grip, and shook her es he tweorldl a y'eiing sapling. Lora looked at his face distorted wit!' nnssion when he released her. She had made no attempt to defend her - "Why?" he nskcil hoarsely, culling the air with the ruler. "1 don't know." she gasped, nearly fainting; "i only knohv one thing, 1 cannot live with yoer--give 411e back my morel" The ruler broke with a loud crack en the edge of the table. creases the power of the soil io fix and retain such valuable material as arn- 11onia, etc. It is claimed that meadow weeds like sorrel are checked, and the growth of valuable forage plants is en- couraged by Lite use of line. In reno- vating tvcrnout soils green manuring find timing go hand-in-hand. On -heavy sc 1iS quicklime is frequently of great value, 1111d is applied et the rale of 20 to 40 bushels per acre. A moderate applie ('ntiun should first be made to see he►w it acts. On light lands poor in vegetable matter mild or small applicati4,ms of emetic lime are likely to give. Ihetbost results. 1t is best to apply lime. to the soil in a slacked con(lition, and it should be broadcasted and cultivated in the surface soil. On permanent grass lands it should he applied with barnyard ma- nure. poultry manure or nitrogenous fertilizers, as it may injur.! them by driving off the ammonia. It is frequent- ly llpplicd to composts of course ma- terials like straw, co, nstalks, isle., with at view to has:ening decomposition. Experiments indicate that timothy, orchard grass, c'.o-er. Norley. o1111i, wheat, mangles and garden crops. such as asparagus, onions, red raspberries and currants, are Locally bemeftied by tinting. FARM N(rES. One thing can be cone by any farmer. Ile can limit his production of overdone staples, and concentrate effort 011 some specialty .suited to his experience and surroundings that promises a ',eller margin sof profit. All implements that are to be t.sed no mere during the preeeul season should be washed clean and wiped dry, and the ircntworli should be oiled to prevent. rusting; then, remove the wheels. (,r certain pare, and store them in the up- per part cif some outbuilding. where they will be secure aid out of the way. \\'hen storms prevent going In the 110111, 1:11111111111 every idle helper to clean 1!r' 1)ar11 :111(1 carriage,-ho11c-.•. Lel all the cobwebs be swept down. 'fake out the window snsties (1(11)1 the frames,and wash every part clean. Sc. ae to let in the light. If the 'es -melee)! k ne'e'ds paint,. nig. till the holes and crack, with putty ground. 111 many places under the 1+11(1 apply a generous coat of paint. slopes of hills are to be seen heaps of Women Glenn house; \vlly should led broken stones which hnve been split in rues clean burns? Send a helper \with t);; manner and rolled clown the ind'line. 1t gold twool I into the gr•annr•y and let Irl the same way it is the common testi- hint clean ewer)' hill, ►:i(1•' n►1ei r•nrner. molly of the natives !lint in the deeert The better the farmer the greater the cast of Damascus the block stones burst 1►nnals on the f;arms. Intelligent and ju- ug summer. dicious farming is perhaps 111e greatest In the Sahara niany of the plateaus need of the tinges. Farmers, as 11 are (strewn \with these .tarp fragments, (1•, not genet -1111Y appreciate what 1110)' which cul the feet of camels and make be done with small fireas of land. They \\-nikimg difficult; and Indeed one ex. ere accustomed to spread labor, culli- 1,l(►rer relates how he was forced lc, t'ation and thought over a large farm. make little sandals for his dogs to pie- 11►e' way to begin is not to attempt a vent their feet from being lacerated by little better cultivation all 0rntiod, but 1'.•' splinters. tc try experiments with a 1)1111e area of This rough quarrying. made easier by land and see wheat its capabilities are. tide dark, 111111 )st black, color of the Select rt esti:able piece of land, a5 much rocks, due. it is sail, to the chemical a: you call matke good and rich with notion of the light upon their surface, manure. With 30411' ground in shape, which incre41s(e: their heating capacity, pill in your crop, whatever it imay be. is the lirst stage in the \\olio Where then take "stir Me soil" for a subject and this process stops another begins. stay close to it. DenlIan1 will inlicnte Apart from the newly- split frag- Late crop, and whatever is marketed, mines. the common aspect of I!►e' .14'..•11 have it of the hest. Earn u pdI's:)nal tr- is n surfadTe scattered unit &ord.'s and pulnliot► in this tegatd. pet►ble, worn a5 smooth and glossy ns if — they line lain for rages in the bed 1f a [AVE STOCK NOTES. river. This smoothness is 11110 to the sand. which works upon the broken Sheep's wool will nbsorh a heavy frngginent0s, rubbing and wearing thein weight of rain it the sheep are left out away. No 0114 wl10 has felt n violent, in storms. wind in the desert and the culling force Cows chew foreign metro -lee like of 111e Sand borne eking by the blast win leines. bont•els, ragas, etc„ to satisfy 11 wonder at this ett'ct. unclog for some element, inching in their hollies that is supposed to have he- '1'lli; I'.1\II\1: ‹-\\ I:D 111\1. conte exhausted ly giving it out in the milk. They aro satisfied by feeding A renIeark made nearly Wilily years 1110111 salt, wood ashes and Mone meal •Peng--"Oh. yes; sl certainly get - ago, 5a)'S 11 writer in lite 14,1idon 'fele. in 47(111'11 (111antitill4. Lug (.1(1." Jess-- "1'(s?T"re.sIt- "Yee; graph, is still numbered among the Farmers 111e (haling nut that to have `toe's beginning to rnmpinln !het 111(: genes in the King's collection of Iii;h I.ogt, \4.4111plenty of 101111 mt'a4 Ihey stylet; 4 f innnets and gowns no. not ns bulls. netaa feed .oint'lhing; h;'si(Ios (:Orta. \14)10 l.a,.lty :.. Ihcy uc4,1 1,, 1e. - It e."It \was a time of famine, end Miss ilal- fc.ur. the sister of the former Premier of Lr.gland. Arthur oilmen', then Chief Secretary for Ireland, was one of the noble-henrled band of men and %%Tanen who were h(lpiig with food end clothes the victims of those black (lays. As she sal in n cabin one morning, nn old men called down blessings on the head of her distinguished brother, and on the i1ea11s of all those who hnd min - lo the wants of the pour. "And sure. me sweet teddy," he 5111.1. "ii it hadn't been for the famine, ft's starving Wei be this dny." than ever they are keeping their swine° THE HURRYING 1Gi 1N. 1tu-o1.gh the summer on grass and ego- --- Vi r, only feeding teem enough to finish .rind the Mutt %'.hu Keeps Cool and boas them off. Another :nettled LS 10 /OW peas Things %lithoul Hurrying, and oats 1 eg.'tti.•r. and \when the crop Iles reached the proper stag' of growth, turn in the anu1a:es and "flog it Joon." This method le eery wasteful of the crop, but 11 sawei, 1? 1)t r. Where they can have the skin) milk of n dairy, that ,) a valuable adjunct, and helps to make eau meat. "I like 10 See 11 11),11) (uit;. utiiut Itis work." eai.l Mr. Qt►,tll.uttosii, "but 1 dou'1 like a 1114111 t4114.; 11etbllual!) 11111 ries. "Tile 111110 mg nem gels 011 111) nerves, 114'• grabs thing up and slums things ( w1) apt makes a great show of doing Things. For that natter 11P earnest, hurrying 111811 may n•'tuatly do things, but he does thein at the List 01 an un• t.t'cesary expenditure (1f lierwuuo force ail his own part, rind 1 (1181 sure he lilull + wear on the• nerves (f other people at\cmutd hint. "Novy the hu-Iler Is a very different proposition fluent the hurrying mart rod SI) also the num of energy. The hustler' is indeed a ratan of energy, but he is one working. or ceintientl ee. within a 0„Idt- pivati4't'• nry.►\e.►lnl►us; or 8Ig; some spI).'eiala111)4' Of\ a huuull :seri of titan, a driver, t\ ho 1110\ % u lila bt.sine.s to get tt►ing�s (480 and to• 14. t'p Del getting lhe•nt d4)1u� and(1altways 's•illi (h. least g►O;:sible Waste of lime or f• ref.. There are either sorts 4►f hustlers, nett who make it great deal to do and Can't to ronlple;11 (much; but the (.1)e I have de- s&•rale'd is the 1111.11eit of the best type. -rho man of energy is n 1)1un of Strength and numtentum eel►o gives tins) 1111 iImpressi )n 1)l reserve power. Ile is 11kely to be the head of the enterprise end he conumunicules his strength to the hustlers and diffuses power all around, l;verybed)' 4\ ilhin range of his influence leets his strength and storks better for it and he puts hi; own shoulder to the \olet'1 on occasion. "Hut nrilher the hustler of the best type nor the nom of energy ever hurries. The hustler rushes things. he crowds 'con hard and keeps crowding. but he doesn't hurry. For hurry means nervcrts116911, and nervousness means '. 1p8irnaenl of str('nhLth, and and on a big job hurry is likely to meats confusion worse con• U:1111110(1. , "The real hustler first lays out the work to be done clearly in his own mind and then, with i10 false moves, with no warste of time or effort, he crow.ts Ilia work forward to its conclusion, all with - nut lite turmoil of hurry. And the ratan of energy diffuses slreeg111 al\\nys stead- i►), et•cr conlributing to the highest re- sults. "So I don't personally fancy the inetk• vidunl ratan who, however efficient he. may really be, does things in a hurry. I like the cool man, the man \who keeps his head and who is easy and deliberate in his movements. In him and in his tvcrk you feel full confidence, and the cited of his presence is good in evert tray on tall around hint. "Give me cool open, not then who worse in a hurry.” I'OCL'1•ItY 'LUX, 1f yot. meet feed few writ. go slow Loose teethe! s that gather i14 the eor- nes of this pc,ulity !tense these days furnish hiding places far lice. A very simple remedy thus will cheek r.eup when the flock begins to ancrze, is turpentine. 11(11) un the head and neck, inel swab the throat With same. 'there are pielis of newt ' ahead for the (one who neglects lu trent his foals I n roup in the first stages. 1 10111 in the beginning is nothing more 00 loss than cold. Th. late -hatched pullets are worth seine little time and attention.- They will return a good profit in eggs next spring and summer for care given and !cod cc,t)6ulned. When young sleek is st.fiicienlly ma- tured s.► that it is not dillicult to judge their quality, the appearance of the (leek is tinteh improved 1)y gelling rid et the culls at this season. huts, old or y. •ung. are not good. They take up r4)m 11)111 other fowls deed in order to d 1 well and attain fin' development. AMERICANS INVADE CANADA. Correspondent Gives Reason For the Invasion. \\'1)t. Redwood writes from Canada h, the \\'estern i)811)' Press, Bristol, England: Reference has been made to the large number of people coming into Canada It.'nt the States. This move- ment, we are bold, does not find -Ls tnolive in any political or religious con 411(1011; 1:eilite'r is it because the Atneri- ctn farmer has failed on the broad acres a! the States. On the contrary, the American farmer I'as prospered, and in many instances has L'e:ome rich. Agricultural ljursuits is the United Slates have been satrsfac- tdery and remunerative. The farmers 1.110 cornu into Cana a from Ihe'tinited Stales are, as a clalkvery \tell -to do. They have money. '1'I►ey have made money and they want to slake more Coatis!) matey. The majority of them trent into their 1;4eme,teads when land was cheap—from $10 to S25 per acre. 'l'ttey have made money by farming. Moreover, the land that cost from 810 to 420 or $25 per acre will sort sell for Sin, $100 or 8150. The shrewd American farrier sees three things: Ile sees that it is hard to ninkc six per cent, net on his land at pr.' - sent market values. He secs that there 16 no reasonable prospect of the price of his land advancing materially in the next decade. It has reached the limit, read he realizes that toe must go to a Dew cr'unt'y to secure farms for his sons. Ile ens not do it in the home slate. Wilk the money obtained from Mc stile of 160 acres in the States the farmer can go into Western Canada and buy t 11) acres. or ('tell more, and itis Canadian land yields more in crops per acre than the farm in the States. It is so uncommon thing for nn Ameri- ' an to pay for his Caundinn farm and its improvements out of the first crop, and l,esides, the value per acre Canadian farm is increasing 1 of is lerger will continue to increase just a. 'is American farm did in the pest decade. In other words, the American fernier can ex•ehnnge each neve of his land in the• Slates for from four to ten acres of 11141,4' 110111104*e 1111(1 more profitable land in Cnnadn. and at the sante time reap the rich harvest of the inevitable rise in lite value of the Innes. 'Thus he can secure a large Canadian farm for himself add one for each of his sons with the money de: feed from the sale or the home farm `lt:N WITH GREY 1'.11-:9. 1-Itro\t s hiscretbon to Ile(' N,inds %\ hen Their illi 1)d 1•, 1p. "I always feel n hit nervous." remark - 4.: a sergeant ref police. "when 1 have to arrest a man with grey eyes, for 1 know that iie is a torn fighter, and 11;11t I ant likely to have a lough job. "Most mien. \vt►ert they are fighting, relnin a certain nlmount of discretion. 11)1(1 remember 111(11 a brutal assault (.11 the police is a very serious offence. ilut the man with the grey eyes. though he may in lma calmer moments be quite aware of the folly of resistance, forget* n!: about that when tris blood ie up. IIB thinks 4)t only one thing, and that is 10 twin the (lght. "IL isn't amongst criminate cad" that the grey eyes denote lite fighter. 1 :ate ot•served the same thing amongst professional pugilists. a(1) enormous pro- perliOn of tvhon► hnve grey eyes. "\\'ilh soldie. r and sailor, it is just the same. Many of our foremost gen- erale and n(Irnirals hare eyes of this celOr. it is the more remarkable when We rem►4ntber that the number of peo- 1.le' who have grey eyes is small com- pared with Other shades. 'The moral is thnt when you Bre deal- ing; with a grey -eyed man )sou should) le cautious in provoking him." Feminine curiosity originated w•tlh Me.1h('r Eve \when she to tk the llrst bile out 01 the apple. Rickets. Simply the visible sign that baby's tiny bones are not forming rapidly enough. Lack of nourishment is the cause. Scott's Emulsion nourishes baby's entire system. Stimulates and makes bone. Exactly what baby needs. ALL DRUGGISTS: 5Oc. AND 11.00 0000000000001040000.0. --+iii•--- 0141:EI' (TRE FOR CIIii.DitEN. German Doctor rinds That Standing U\ erluxes the Spinal Column. Prof. Klapp, of the University 4•( Bonn, believes Ilial creeping; is 11:e true 1111(1 nntrral reined} for halt the trou- bles of infancy. Every child sirommld to allowed to creep plentifully before 11 taught to walk, he says; it is nature's law. and when this is neglected he pre - .scribes n return to cf. a ping to uncle lite injuries to the opine, joints. en muscular system that results frau le premature habit of standing erect. His attention \tus first called to Ilia* subject by dogs which had suffered 110 r vow% breakdown and showed Syml►- t(•ms of paralysis as u result of train- ing in tricks for the .stage or circus ring. Ile undertook to treat some 4 f Iltese anal naturally began 'with a reef cure, including stoppage of the require- ment to stand upright on their hind It g;s. To his surprise he found that ilia dogs jrcovered .l•engglh tend nervnu t( ne withent further treatment. an. her concluded that the strain on Ina spinal column from the unnatural erect, visite-in was the sole cause of the syn l- toms. Front this it wrist an easy step to the deduction that children of front `to 4 years of age who showed wry - (us symptoms and general hreakil eeyn were t ielites of strain placed on the vertebral system too soon, too suddenly and before they were fll to bear it. Ile exp4'rinllrtted with n crecpin;.; treatment and it is said achieved such 1C1alts tt:at sewe1'al children's hos- pitals are ruIopting the system that '+e has introdII ed in iterlin. The children, et en up to 6 year, of age, are enc :urng- ed and even forced to creep about the iIcor 4,f their ward. Creeping kterrncs nr•e provided and the nurses see to it that there is as lit - t" standing or walking ns possible. The altitude of creeping prevents spinal curvature in a lateral dire lion and the weight of the Lody forces 11.0 we,gle- t.t•ae to adjust themselves in 11►e natural ft,1'4vmlyd curve at 1110 waist line the shoulders thrown back. The neck is strengthened by support- ing( the weight of the tend, anti the shoulder, back. abdominal nod 'tip n:use)4s are et•,'ngt1oned. The eland- ing habit k redeveloped grnduolly in such a manner that the body a(Ijusls .1- 5111 to it gradually. ---- --+ - :1.1.1\(;t1'K. .\ shop `18SSi6la111 was -(11.1\\ tog sones clocks to an Irishman W110 48111. rl lo present one to his 14 ife (,n their mint - t( rsnry of their marring;e, and he had exhausted hie entire Stock ex0ept some 111(•ko4) (141(145 Oen a shelf 1)084 by. TheCrit n'l.e(1 to see thein. anti 1110 ocsistnnt he k ti '1)l crown, litinl;ing{ IIlal :1l last he wou:(I melee a sale. After tel- ling 1'aI the prie.e, the taller rested It they sine k the hours. Itt'beadl of nn- 4.wcring directly. the aeeis18tit t'(eumd the tie,'"4' ar,d ."('t (he ti:iim'Is 0111 few '('(ands to twelve, As the little door npencil Patti -k's (t8% h111Jf4d with intere-l. lout \w1t m 1ho ir••tided ho plciinty arnttcd his e!ict'appr•ping,t ol. 'Phe rnnn tr hit►d the c' 44111• 1(•r, not M 11(' daunted. $niel:-- "\Vell heir d ► you tilde ill" i'at thought o moment, and then re- "Fntlil. an' it's all right except on (,nn point. It's !rookie enough to remember how to tt•il141 11. without !vin' to think t i feedln' tine bird."