HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-06-03, Page 6 (2)-
-"Trrir
47717, "77
itshodit
ith M bustvele
-dung IAA; lou
Of i yore, the f
ielit •
-duug Sot by
Evittentir*
the
11$0 brought home so
of Allison, which he 44 cop-
4d
from ui old---onee=iiwI which
to he very lovely
krlufly lifelike.
-
IIe
sett them to
"Takeyourvie**. 1 int
)ne for you," he *aid hu
cthat is, if you would liko it
"Indeed 1 would!"
erly, h la a* her . glance fell
litoon the exquisite face, t
beautiful girl Atalet WAS; and 1 am
• *Ur* her soul was at ;tweet and pur.
as hr faee. You can elmoet- teem
into it througiter
Tears srained from beown as
she two ou e recon.
oiled to the too girr* fate, or ti
having Otreld'a life blighted i
such a erttel wa Even though eh
had never known the fair gir sit
hzd grown to feel very ten:r
toward her, through hearing bin'
many-1ov* lo--4uali
'1. izidjrit*n
that this 1 .kpktur
whu I
,a4,Wentt Are PAX: 1`14
"Sure1" repetd 14310'11*Patil
ly2; .11 COUldtirt forget her if
ahould 4-,-.**Oriottryear
okl! She W**so pretty, X ouldn't
tzk y eye* off of her while w
were Doctor AtiltmoreLs office
itetheet. and -I've dream
no end of thee* since,"
*'"Coine here and sit down, Elle
commanded Lady Bromley,indicat-
ingelittir oppoeite her; • "I want
on to tell me all about that milt,
iip; 1 did not suspect yetterday,
when. you ; spoke of the, lady who
as, so ltind to you, that I had Any
knowledge of, or intereet ither."
he girl sat down, ae directed,
ind went through.with the Whole
ieribing how ItinAr.- ti-
-her n the
she had insistod upon havinghe,
earried into t , of the note
surgeon, instes.d of silowing he
to be $01ted over the pateme
'hospital in her ouffering condi
"Yes, Miu 'Brews r re
than three months ago
not rieh atthat-time-.--hpr fortune
hzd bon stolon frtett her,and -abe
wa actually driven from her
bcaa-
tiful home."
"Stolen! Who *tote her 1.noney
rout beet You don't means that
she was poor like met"
ex..; every dollar was taken
from her."
r
it W1i clarcd to
drive Whohe e
f
the .springing excit.edly to. ber
f
O ton; how she had remained with
her durtng the operation of settmg
the broken bone; then, mita* up the
- Iosa»of-her aunt's -money, lintritite
resented her with tendollar*3-then
*exit her and ,ht,t undle_home
an "elegant carriage."
She was-enthusitstic over ,
Alil-
- beauty; her tonesWere re.
1 -with reverenee in speaking of
er, and of her ,wonderful .generos-
i In fact, she had seemed—to the
downtrodden girl, who had
poor,been little better than a serf --like
some beautiful seint„ who had ex
• tended to her an almost divinely
beneficent hand to lift her out of
a bitter bondage to 'which,. ahnost
*II hir lite, the had been subject
.From- the Moment , that Allison
ut thet ten4ol1ar bill into her
'e whir
have daughter,
like you, aid," iheadded,
nioment, as she turned a wtst
ful look upon her companion.
The Young man could not tru
himself' to 'reply; her emotion
most unnerved him, also, and he
NOS obliged to turn to the window'
s
and gliZe ,401041:* out upon the
street, to keep himself from break-
ing down in a very !Ailments fash
ion.
- had believed that it 'Ponta
,comfort hint to have a, better and
Or picture- of Allison than the
hi.photograph whit* he had hut new ere*, ur
or some timet' but the beautifully Money bail, indced, been "powei
tinted foot the uplifted look of the in
„ with it lying h*
rge ,soulfultzrooett UM art,- den'elo met her het tha
st bad *level in vonderfni-
lylilelike manner--,onlY, veined to
.make him realize hie loss so muelt
And almost rent Ins heart
in twain.
retover-
ed
e, whenshe at e
eproceded to draw his thoughts in-
to other ether channe
She gate him *4eseription ofher
-
adventure. 'of the previous clay, and
,-how her syMpathiesbad been enlist-
ed in behalf of tite poor waif who
bad been so sadly, neglected and
abused; that she had brought her
home, to see ifshetould not bright,
en her lite for a little while,
least:
Gerald was greatly interested in
the story; hut, after discussing it
or it while, they drifted back to
is own interests and plans; which
absorbed their thoughts almost to
• the eetelusion of all e1 -e.
The next morning Lady Bromley
took Allison's picture down -town,
and had it fitted to a. costly and
eitutiful frame, .witieb added great-
ly to its attrottveress,and, upofl
turn,I t it upon an
ght, would /*II
out its beauty
as the.gir
,her r
CaMe
uptect-it, and lir
to the best advi
"Ellen," hhe E
r—ett in the dootway, .441 Nvfo
I :)-Qh bring ma * glass,
water.'!
Ellen made nt :rtT1V,„ andi
ing no mOvement,. -ter
turned to 'itscertainthe' reason
her ' titence, fotied her. st
in upon the. threshold,: trantfix
a rapt exprestilin *it her fate
ea fattened, with au adoring 1
u the pietuttO.,..otlAllieou.
t
1se tt tedosoros the rbom
before it, her bands
n her breast, which was
ing with mingled surprise ai14
be murmured rever-
end prettier thin
seemed to feel her chsins slipping
from her, for sl* knew that it would
give her* start -on the road toward
--indepentletice-such-its:-ahe had
neve:
then spolto more in, detail
nI Doctor Aithinore'S subsequent
kindneae to is-
ing r tit a n
!el; Whenw: sv* toll cc t ashrt te dy
4
had
been so indignant, upon' learning
the n for it, that he was o
the point of having her aunt arrest-
ed. But Ellen* begged him not to
do 50 .or she feared that, in the
end, she would only suffer the
more; er .41 e onre WS to watch
her opportunity and get away from
her, and this the kind-hearted sur-
geon enabled her to dor by offering
her.** sitYiuni in his .home.
"And did you never meet Miss
Brewster after the day of your ac-
cident I" L&dy Bromley
when the 6310113(lert
"WhatMb* who?" Ellett tines-,
tioned, a startled look ‘4meeping
ever her fate, „
iss Br'ettster, the'la-Afy 01 Whom
you have been tellmg me. Did .o
not earn er name -
why, no; *he dklu't telt
aek ber ; but 1 heard
inore 411, her Mita Al-
lison.. • 1
thought that was her
said 'lien, with almost
herence,told
htttle.of her to
and :let her
but he to
Vas that
concluded looking
, sngely mystified;
"Ye Allison was her.first name,
prnbab • r 1, Ash:more was so
with bottle tel4 at
liberty to • addre her in that friend -
1 iliar Lady Beontley
p *tined.,
"Brewster Brewster" inuti
Efleri to,herielf, With *flushed,
sullengleam. in het
*
'
'Miss
mpinioni regarding her
tasty. ''What is there *hoe
latter name that
1.00 r
ed Lidy Br
en tedvtottieltly xsd tote an fltsfl'
net a *Arm
#4
her, t
her wit 4
Fitly, u
with inpr
who gave m the ten
took me to I16e
my *tit st..
*ch
4't friend -we it toe
enitig.” her %said
locoing ttrat,,y
Wkirei*.she sos' t1
'aired, still feasti
*lovely foe, w1u 1
Peet.. eteept 1'1i her int
her dreamssinre the
herhad been the rcl
lien, 'pririgiag
lit ti,,qpielt 1
b O, - Will bring yoia
water pow," and A*
to, ** if assai.
ms to cape further Deittiortiug.
.
0, toom, she
stopped and, tnrttinher hand to
stoodJur h.rn4
gazIng *peon the
1in drep perplexity.
i don't belie
•it ea, she hreathed, after
t ^ 0 inonient or
4ptointeit, to an -
ago ,
,her tiffairtt," replied rase
Bromley; but mentally wondering
why she allowed herinilf,to be drawn
into hese explanations to this poor,
ignorant ed. W110 WO alrnost a.
Stnit1Pr to her.
"Ifls ,natnet Vhat-wi
-
la detilatlied - 411014,
l5001001Sf audible 11,0106.
'
"Alt.that's iti Now I know, itl
0014 it; and I'm going to tell
I'M going to tell t, X don't tate *
they tur me for_ it!" panted„ the ex-
cited giri, as she *gain sank,, al--
Oete exhantted from mtntal excite-
ment, upon the Spot. from which
she had but at'moment before
(To be continued.)
it
1F1
ruany of t e
the nteotin
at liran ii a. ebap
'*either I hog5 do 'well
n it Mixed with water. It s good
or growth. or to lose an Ski
origin ,st.healthy-e
s *11 that 'la neeeatittly with breed-
ing sows. They do not need fatten
-
ins; the more, tot the worse it is
for them. It does not cot so moth
per ton so middlings„ and besides,
the* hulk of manure is about twice
much.
There is nothin
indicatoi the ent
of,a farmer, or the lack o
ee
tiint1f the work borses re ettort
lias re&thed theage:o ter
more likes abby 31 3
Mr ., $
6 t Awh.en , „the
animal
txcited.
"MU farrnitighje looking; InfinaY
yielding brute is often eonfnsed
with the:walruit, which sa a matter
Aritet__*,,reitemblea-ouly itt-s
ITS TWO ItOWS*Or TWIT
... .
or tualts—thostt ot the buil—are be
tween six , end weer* niches long
in front and grow shorter, toward
it haek of 04 jaws. The tusks
do notior,oject like those of the wal-
Tha.' latflest. elePhent. I ever
countered -we* aiatoork- feet in
1esgth and aiit feet • high at the
ahouldera.
'
"Thebiint has
gesetel‘opbro
ili o
0. 0
littitt more ,
tor , 0, emte
• twice
.„aiid *tickles them like * whale.
beat to , kill the female firtt,
Oen; lie around
tupinely; while if the mete is kilIrd
,nrst the females take lielterskelter
4
look for their c9rolIary in
1144eng 74'trittP4xfrlituYildtiinitge:1•:
tclusions do net always
exceptions are no
provehan .arc needed. to.
!t tsm strong enough
workrequired
aintenante
unfit for its tasks.
occupationwbicb few, oliosr
0
-sea elephants,
wineb are found ingreatbut rapid -
*creasing drOves in the Ant-
arctzc regions, especially on or near,
The twent-y.firat annual repof&
:Dominion .Experimental
contains valu le 44114 ftoin
Seamier,* in regard manuresancl
emmervial fertilizers. 1t is pointed
out that the 'ex tat :plot* at
he Central Experimental Fat:to,
Ottawa, for o teting of different
kinds, of 1etiIiTzers,as applied to
wheat, barley, oats, corn and roots,
are conducted on lines timilar to
thoee *Melt have lieen in existent!
for et, 6$ rear* at /Whams
England. They are reported
for e 2Oth toctiftlitive
and niuch instructjve info in o
may he derived by Canadian farm-
ers from a awful study of.the
tablas. These show„ for each of the
wheat, barleyand oat eropsft the
yieltlit,.0,--grain, and straw' for the
season Ot 1007, and the a'&ae
444 fot-Ittand--00 years -of -wit
and for la attbd-19 $0eitr.Sof Larley
nd o te • from. I*
Yazd,- manure and of stiapiai
ferti-
hzers. The experinients were.
op 10 plots el one-tenth of an acro
tub, as teiiiikoitred With two pl
which hive been unnottnired frozn
the ginning; 0 The exceptionally
unfavorable ehariteter a the se,040
of tetv is telltale, in the *
tbee .being lower than the aver
moat every plot. Thus, in the
C*Se'•of wheat, one utimanured piot
giti,* only .0 Knott*, e
compared with a twenty-year Jive
tistk of„ 11 bushels aoy uncto„ It
is eating tel ,thsitlt
yield a
1u,l\eat on the un-
inanured plot, is nIy I4
leo than that fruin the unr
plot at ltothamsted, which as
over 13 'bushel* for * period ef 66
year*. The heat reoulta ar
from the use of barnyard
he yield from -Irma 01 w
the average of,50 itus,
ticall double that of uflni&flur-
id
pitot. Of the two hareir
re plot", the rosinire is
*oiled fresh, at‘d
* well -rotted„ eottd.
The versa., yield* trot* totta two
phits are about the wee, the fre4h-
duitg showing, however,
light advantage of about 0 or 10
poundpersore. But as the toe
tities applied ate of the sato *•
*ad as dung in this procees 01
tins tottes weight to the exkt
aliout„ 00 per ent.,, there ix-,
dolly, in the long ran, a dee
economy in the litation 4.4 dursg
in the freith coiditrn,
featur• ef the botto
to is tits tss 4duced in
faytr of toot
s Capt.
mpton's Magazine
onto the beaches
in in gre*t 'pods) 1
have seen as Many as sty
or it hundred ,insiESed in sueh *
bunch. This is alto the shedding sea-
son,
and the stramsla rub the ha
from their thick hides in Pr
ion for the now emit.
females and the yotmg haie
no distinguishing trunk; and the
trunk, the the elephan
tory naila. The animal when,. o
ore move* with hobbling, ram
motion, tte whole, body - quivering
likelelly, but it navigates the **ter
with almost the agility of an eel. tt
feeds on, cuttlefish and matt**.
"When you stop, to think •,thatt
the otittlefish—"of"lio-Pitat waters
metiolog attains,* weight of
yott will realize the prowess
the *et elephant and the strength
of its, taws. *
"Having feasted for many Months',
upon these grim delicacies of, the
deep, 'the boll elephants hobble' out
onto' the beaches And in the mating,
season engage
eptiugrpoag%ellai:s t0reach fierce'bataette is-
44,0014J:he Owe that the OA
elephant lends. Ilia blubber—the
100" of fat immediately the
bide --is - then,iteten 'inches thick o
an, average,' wit tuo
attutto..-subsiO4 for aix or eight
Moo, at the end wbichtimg
itis
educed to atitiegneos of
danger-
-kzlling 01 ho nt
prowIiln(f too near its. ter
iswe, which are capable of biting
in two an iton rod the thiekness of
ontea finger. The hunter, however,
muott get pretty elose, as the Wei
Idde and blubber have rendered the
anirnal praetically*impervions to aft -
tack, thetonly 'vulnerable point be-
ing spot the.size-of *walnut above
each eye. -
.""Pateleschunters- have .a
11-
ef the'
• youwriggling frozn - their'
-clothes. 1 bad occasion once to her1
rny coat with great agility, 'ontoof
tlie smeller beasts having caugh
me by the sleeve."
SAKES OF EAST AFRICA;
For out thing East Africa must
.havocredit÷snakea,are
ous, SS they are in the, South,- at
least I neveritave-sten-many,
* -writer in 'kunst ':*tkd' Strearn
There are' pythons, but Op *do not
appear to be. dangerous. 1 ,1°4
never forget how, down in South
Atria* duraig the war, I once awoke
and found * bleak Illytailikba it% bed
with me. This *alike is absolutely
deadly. It frightened me so thst
after the whole thing was over
went out attlfl was 010t. ro,tturt*
ately 1 was quite ignorant of the
fact that it was limier the blankets
with me and r011ett-out un
• Hatt I known it was
n alt probability it would
kook me.
The Bible is nowt ip 500
4$10sges;
The glop Ope .Daimler
of remarkable cfflcicncy
Ilolty. of , construction
silences In running Is Inco
otor yet dcsigne
Its IntroditcOort has callcdforth
of appreciation from. a number of leading.
otorists lithoi have te4e0 rid' aft igettem .
beaF4q1utthe (116 ifiado ft)! It by thc
Daimier CO.
A full Illustrated
,
t
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