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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate., 1905-05-11, Page 2tie1,..tbee seine ttc lt we tiandirAp.• and in, hie leer 59 St 411 11141 horror of the' doge. , "Temee, :youe brete", hapanted. ,tet goes Isr Veiji Well, take • and bruit: ede, :dere •,. ' thet`i ,. Ur A 4e.e.ee , .4., Utile Jwithin ret • llee„sere *Per. WP4.1'1.*W4Y, 1.ttl Seotter -had ,cf.;1140 A•4 direction. Prightme. ,Ile Lita 1,1t1 r got pii,Se. 41reAkeit n Brigbton. , it 10W peunde:ho COnlil 0111 hUi oient„ • . . *y.1 tkeetet, tuenki • iisio &d 'net nearly el:tough,. to get aveaV $,eue loge/we•queer exii4 .vvey 0444 . -fro% the countrY, '41111 at ettir LeON",ainecist: 'Ireton) this' time te-tneerieei ent\ lie Might be areested. Ile was et. ehaii bei,. arrested. But going e• :..t. .5 bat eliferiltcwoula-tree- es- ei` h -r4113vast-• r ere I.e. e _ kill gee if _11 . et the chanctt btioneeetroherewitseetteie- theirTilirifficane-67-1-rei• eons. those -dogged, patient types who can ed seise to try another tack. Weft any time for the atification ' -•-esfettestielefeeriff . esess, Merritt was pretty certain -to •I banging about her his opporteink On the whole the beat thing woiddlhe to walk -straight to the Central Brighton Station and take the first train in the morning to town There he could see Gates -who as yet knew rOPt : "help! vtte- Peiniereas. weight. • ral„,tire ;, breath, tieeiiiIliieSetViae*., tiessed term*. ' -1Iia.gtereiled 0, 0.0"41,10ti and gAve a. little Ohilt/deriPg.' Sigh, a4iti. *the world dwirelled'to a -thick sheet of blinding darkness. CrirbrV.- eiDeretttilatTeentreettreetteee" in Very, vete/ sorry; lost ' • And. got frightened. 11/erritt: • Crude Petroleum. time ere is me yet. • You always. "If you Want to ifee complexions. ma Ore money with me t.han with come to the oil wells.". remarked an atevb else. And I'm -gcerS experienced operator hi crude petrole- abroad' presently." une. smiling. • "Oh. you're going • .abroade _are "leot .,4070m,ens complexions -no; you?" Merritt said, .slowly. eGoing they are not enough in touch with nothing -and from him it would possible to borrow a hundred 10' r el.to traVel in it Pullman ear. and put, the teal atmosphere that creates the up at all the COUrte of Europe.Andpeaches wnt ad •creacheeks and brow two, and then •get away. And thero I'm coming as chief eeceptary to the and thin arid ilea and ear. These wereeothers besidee Gateii. Grand Vanity:Wrens, himself. Sounds, 1‘,„0/2apieicions. belong to the ha h.r, - Benson trtidged away for a mile OL' euesaiorin land or promarme." ___Thrigied-inen_vho_work clay.:Aite d down from the seinmit efethe ceetle • he was building with a 'rude &hock to earth again. -A. Ilse from the ground, a 'heavy clutch was on hie ehoelder, and a hearse voice ufas .112- his ear. "Got--; your the- -voice egad:7' • knew.. they'd kick- you otit yondeie geed' ___ImaskrLiyou'd wak ho aerosi 'thie downe -And rvofairly - C4Ped yottl" • ..-......,11ensineaeekneeseelnockedetegatitere Physically he was ti tar stronger and bigger • man Abair Merritt, but lie wee taken unawares, and his -nerves Ined-beenesadly-altak „_Merritt feteedehintebaetewareieenntil I - -lay on the turf with itia.antagen- , Ist-icueeling on. hie ,chest,' Ire Oared not streggle, ' be Oared not -exert , binisof. pres,elt_ly. • hefriig:t..-,_g_ et , a • hard with James slilerritt. :ohmic°, and if ho -did it ,would go gasped; 'What at you going. t6' durr itu Merritt drew a bfge Jagged Steno towards him :pith one•:foot. , "I'ar going, to bash your brains ' • one Were gleaming, ' -and in, the dim light his mouth leas sot lio a steel -trap= *Pine-goiegetoetietsree te --little • chtit with ,youelirst, and then down teas merinos onethe Anti -exteyour ---skAel- • e a braTirnin eggshell. Your tithe's coulee. Henson. Say our ra ers,'' *et 'caret." Henson whined,* • "Add • whet .-have donee" • Aferritt rocked heavily on the other's breastbone, almost stifling -ItineeeetWatVe-liteideeseollingt$ePhs pleasing mixture of gin and fog in his throat rendered lain More hid- • eously •hoarse than • usual. Not I make up a prayerl And .you a regu- lar (lab at all that garnet Why, I've• -cacti the women snivellin,' like babies te get Away with if yeti, will 'Got a hundred poundk of fay own -in--ray- pocket -ateethe-presentesa Ia. erre" was the unexpected reply. "As you gave me away. consequently-- X gave you away to his lordship, and be Iilitiikedettown it hundred canaries Oki) the swell that he is. So I 44---e.4141„--yue. money. And I'm going to finish you right away." - kr bigeetoneLeeeiristeirer sines head. Ile cc.teld seeethe jagged part and in fmagenation feel it g0 ' mashin into his brain. The time • it 0 -at Mereittight-earnreconledrew-th knotted:Angers down- The.nest ,--ln- stunt and he had bitten' Blerritt's • thumb to the bone. With it -cry ot rage and pain the stone was dropped.' IlienSOn snatched it up and fairly lifted kerritt off his- cheet with a Iblow under the chin. ' Merritt railed over on the grass and Henson ,WaS on his feet in an in- istant. The great stone went down perilously near to Merritt's head, •11411);(*G. cow W1flN*1 . 1aeli tnetly414 part4ctkh IQ ali 0410.T. . e. • eirceteetiktwee: ' ljt it ebeited,fatteeitt, • '4 • eayee- Write ...1,f040.4 • , , ••• '; ;,110.() here aheree of nvifis And .the 'folletvingenethod pfe„heellket ling; Abele* evhee • freeh Or ItrY, proven t- be a,:„.eatterattery. one. - First, 740 'thows are ,de.horited;. -then izi- .9r;gr.4 tij11L.'4Iiey, aro - aa peaceable •aseserentart -- -- 4fMffeeeetzlethtIe4AFFETR- lioeeett-eto-egoe-ontpart of each Jay during tlie winter,- and a thee, except for. feeding and Milking. l'hey ,arci nuinhered ind. no, nutt- ier how many there ttre in the barn, *each CO* soon' learns her own stall and goes directly tO it when allowed to come in. We practice tie) soiling system and each cow gets her feed in her own stall the year arourel,- with the ex- ception of ten .clays or two weeks while she is calving. During this miss being away tiine she does not, .55 , about the Consistency ot cre Owing' to the strength a the • too the Calves, 'should not be led much 7"f_fift-tliew.Y1-Wiiia1717eZ-' it e Is a pretty good. lass to plant potatoes as early as th ,weather and condition of soil vet: etthnits 'The sofl should be thoroughly fitted. A good clover sod will "be 'well suited to this crop. Not very enuch stable •manure shotrid be turret as it is more likely to harbor diseese. and rot. There are' special tertilizers now prepared that produce good results with 'this Crop. On farms where the same crop well or around the puteps that draw the black Or green or amber ad, as thee.case; inny be,,from tho depths. "I don't • know whetber the -akin specialist hes any explanation. of the •Pheeremenon, ^ but it is true, never- theless, -that a man, who works under eegrinir 'venditionsare 'inevi-- table around the petroleum wells keP-0#4-AlisinetliAt lhaeseciety_ woe Men 'Might envy. Where the work is the, grimiest and greasiest. the com- plexions of the men are the fairest. I have seen • men smootelh.tt,,,yea, everting reeeatons elortunereimsbege -as-living proofs- Of S6andaWlif complexion °int- Mentit. if the 'fake* could be main- teinea and the opportunity *made possible. - "To seine extent it. is the grease it- self. that does .the smobthing for the skin: where the color comes from is a guess With mee-I could hardly lay 'it to the dyes that are in the basic material in same ef, thee* oils. telt I know this 'much about crude petro- pain Merritt stumbled: o his feet and desired a blew Mind) .other -- In tiOilit OrNiZe and strength there was onlye one in. it, Had Henson 1 tomes there c.ould only' have been one issue.- Rut his • nerves were shatter -I ed. he was nothing liko. the man. be, s had .beon two months age. At the; c first onslaught. ho turned and fled to.; wards the town, leaving Merritt '1 standing there in blank amazemeaie -"FrighteiTed-ele-ine; e twe- "Dut this ain't the way it's going to finish." He darted off In hot • pursuit; he raced avross a rising shoulder olf the hill and cut. oil Ilensen's retreat. The lett r tu n d cl. • - en * -up with War ealtrifeithir db - she forget - which is her- stall when --heegees---haek- -ott. her -line. - Each cow's' le weteltect once per Month and the weight of the milk with the fcow's record kept on 4 heard in front of her stall. All feeding is. done according t• o theeenneonnt _ Pf=snitk-_,thcoet-:- give2e and when one. gcies dry she. In ptit orv a very small grain .rat:ion, and is iiiitualyefedes-rheaper grede efrongir- age, or if roughage is very good she gets no grain at all: My nim to -have them -contented _ lessi• osunec. esiforithen, lc:Lewitt' good manage- - ems. -When grown -Mr barna-use* Principally, choose the varieties -that !cote then of course these kinds -thould be at -least -early -.varieties, a first anti -second for sue. best in yield and prices. 'there are the best liked. If, for the mar - should be selected that eromise the inent. there should be the best suc- ing. • met itz._ good_ • ficr the geeirer crop and lete keep - et. ditiou .the year round-. The - cow empe ...eel sere wteasureet-azt, ,,. et ei-keer dresertild'Aeepethemeinetheeeame•-conee-,„-eeee - ----,---.1--. e- . probably loves regularity more than ICU& 'They 'Weig/r. any other animal living. • Give her "Pipes." said it dealer in ship wip- • e etafl and let it be her home, and plies, "aro measured by the* dlame- all the vacation 'she wants from ter. Thus when Ave speak of a . six-, built at l'embroke and :fifty - home is a feW days before and after inch pipe we mean it PIPo giXinclum'tww:IliYngeatorsn adgioed,sn She vwer asy daay that ' calving. • Let her go •out when the in ditirneter. , weather is goodbut always let her "But hawsers are measured by to marvel at in her youth, with her :regular hour, she will find something AM knew that once or twice a day at --a, speak of 'a Six-inch hawser we 'do thell'e circamkrenee; and so whe R GRIM TIERS OP GUNS, _ - • rt we' -0,07.1 tons and good to eat at home. . , not mean it hawser six Indies ha dia- .. . 01Weir-Tifiry'hutil a '`e r s,„ , -. AIL -- t the skin will Make it .complexion for but with. a large, herd and untfer oUr two inches 'in dianieter. All martical roe of her launching that her main- , f_ . --e se--pne-,w1m--will- takeethertourse in 1 ni - -. ,e,--- cr. 'Tit d' - p* -11r. -.--inen--so-.understand -hawser-emeas meeteedcost .ne.-lessthan2ti00i her f $1,, earnest. If I were a woman, seeking , - leaves alTh ways contented. ere is Merits. and never think of them, in. orerriast 875and her mizzen .mast $500.; and that to build her • any other way. • A comPlexion, as many women ere.; never any contusion inetlie barn. seventy-six acres ,of forest ImiL beer. petroleum and bathe An it regularly. less. a. big and powerful hawser. A ftetriptbed -of 3000 .oaks. each tree it "An eight -inch heweer is, neverthe- Leeetildeirevest-.4-nele=bantet--44 -crude' Loud language end -clubs -unnecessary "Years ago, when petroleum was I and never used, be•cause the cows ornething new in rennesivania. it • Manila hawser of this +Gil° will ' good two centuries old. ropped out-• in the bed of. a dry creek, and the first uric. for it. some - low. wee that of -an emollient. It eeeeeeeevits_ heralded is 'Seneca feR.,,:_gpoll' requires less work and gives better tr-t-Itie-iliefirriatfithie aficra-dozee gill; reeulteethebeartetesysternelekneweof.-- . .._._ ereeldeee Auction to Be Used as riritwo-ad. • there IS something tprite pathetic in the thought that in the eentenary• year of Nelson's glorious victory at • Trafelgar some of the last survivore • of the "wooden walls." which • for • so many centuries were the bulwarks of England, should be in the halide, of the ship -breakers. It Is not many, months since several „ of these_ gallant old vessels were ps that Were once the pride and boast of our Navy. e weir --the-Forte, -striledee --- be seas bang before our oldest ad- miral:• Of to -day was cradled; also tho Bello Isle, which, after betty; •AL target for sheas Innumerable In inir- - rale warfare, was sent to the bottora or Portsmouth Harbor by a torpedo', and was _floated. again.- only to -end. - her days •ender the auctioneer's , mrneri rhe queenriest or these veterans was the Duke of Wel- lington, vrhleh with the Elannibaleis now being broken up into firewood haltiai=fiefTelTliffi fairer Strip on all the, seas than this Duke of Wellington, the tirribers • of . which are destiited to supply • logs , for our -next Winter's fires. She WAS now t eir stal s, an go to them di- stand it strain of 50.000.pounds, and ---So stately and impressive was this feed; because her ration is kept on rectly. Mich cow gets the proper Manila rope will weigh 2.300 pounds a coil of 200 fathoms of eight -inch fine ship that she was placed in the .; procesion that sailvd so proudly the board opposite her number. It or considerably more than a ton. i past Queen Victoria in the S ithead "Rope used to be made in coils of ,, iittNieW of 18'43; and in the days of' tr-thimsai '-feet ixr lerietle- bat- now ttre-rirnett--stre--uca--sf cnOsiiirio-egrry----.--- Ia slat...dart' coil is of 200 fathoms, or Admiral Napier's flag. merits of the throat and chest. This might have ben the pioneer. exploit- COOKING CA'rTLII FOOD. 1,200- fe.et. Lengths of 100 fathoms • And this is the end of her proud Ing of petroleum for its medicinal A member •ef farmer's and - dairy- ... on less ere, ,however, commonly used career. Well.tnight Itaskieteeexclairn. value. 'This value has been attested mon -labor under the misplaced idea 311"tii7icilogrilag.0 men and neutical men another _ecitially_ollant vessel the as he looked at Turneeti pictore of In later years in seine of the bypro- that it pays to cook cattle feeeds.e tat,er __If - ductq af the_oile Mat .1 am• etettafied and -thw • TiSt tlfernSelie-s-iii Mud ropes ompes'eagurin9gwiteart ltancartd-4:11:_valudiwing:43 iteesestieserie 190 in petrolenin work and- trout& In cooking sr, , eesbt*niotg involv- e r - aret-trett •- when au've---hten-_ _ /leavens. vaa, a chap you would be with ereetin_hoLoo._ hAeta 34-'%ete-glareotad nori-diake the latter off. - the eti " itt leasepludding-deggetter-- "Merritt, _of his garae-41.4..systs. ' vas -if v n a ea o t r n lima:irate in o. - tr s or CAMPI1011. . ary and who had previously cooked e -es elie•-efood---before-gleingteehlif on Hensone-tirtiessehelp- telatee ' - litiow-Thinr-oxif--015r6A-Wgew steel.. But this year he cone:tided pectedly Ilenson woe still in dire, Every Part of t e Tree. . ..... ...._...--- • aideeernakeeeeepractical-exper ie. 'Min was ti-T31-a-War-ar-ice a Every part 44 a. camplior tree. even meet. so he took two healthy a villager, might be about; but Long- to the leaves. coetains camphor. The calve& both in equal condition. He dean was more or less .ii primitive forests are .not tonfined to Forinosit" tea one on cooked, and the other ,on placic'and most of the honsee there alone; but are also found in Japan had been in darkness for hours. proper. With theeextenirion of the uncooked enailage from the silo.: At His foot slipped, he stumbled, and induStry the large rrreas of this tree the beginning of the experiment or.' Merritt, with it whoop of triumph. have been greatly teduced.though test, the t,lf fed -on the uncooked, food Weighed 208 pounds. The exe Wets AMOY' upon_ him, thit .ite_ replanting•and cultevation are -peace per/meat- coltsred_ii._pericia. of fifteei only_ a .fiftaggere- geld he. Was -Hems -4 . ° --to- it conisiderstbla, extant* 4 itt4 again. - statt.gerritt was close tree requiring fifty years to attain a 'weighed zi5 pounds nod n few , days and 'at its conclusion the ant - behind; Ifenson ould-alratiet-geel diameter of putt foot. In Vormoria, hawever, there Is /alit 'tnthet-3* Into ealf fed tb° e°1-"Iteed "Take a -petroleum bath 0 oti ererritnirertellifeefr-WiThlive watched eraetlertietriala...0M-eximlineuts---1 mann.". itrter°P"-17roCitelessumthimhve-anfall an thant Peertians-etrilt9-eria-11111:111aSI-P_painted." this 'natter, and have •Concluded that described etwe red -cestecHrds--rockihrior -h ;and d'I f 11k . By .37:non . . . y .0 ru- -------morne and th-6:- laughter died out of hie g earning, eyes. . 'I don't *ant to be prematoor,' a-eeteit--te-Ves,ees.ouetl--oalrieea-4 chaplain's pet, but I can't spare you. I'M -going to smash that 'ere -wily brain of yours, so as it won't be useful any, more. Ulla. you to. put the nerks on to- a. poor chap like myself." . 'Merritt,. I. swear to you that I • never -a -et . --"Yoer-cpr israttrAtit -y"4-0're b1ee2 in .the .fate. and You can keep, •on • efeeerhertill your'retIlly-White again, and then it well be any good, You , gave me away to Taylor because yip were afraid- 1--shotdd do you berm at Littinter Castle. that Daisy „Bell. of airirl _thereAftlderatteaciertt__ . trisTifi groaned. It was not the mere girl got, the better of him in this way. And what on earth had eh° known ot Reuben Titylor? But the feet retrained thrill she bed known, and that she had warned Memitt of hie danger. It Was the One unpardonable crime in Ilenson's decalegue, the one thing Merritt could not -forgive. * . Renion'e time.' was come.. Ile did not. `need atnyonti to tell hint that. 'finless something _in the nature of a miracle happened, he was it dead • men in 'Yew Merrimas: and life hail tasted -at the present tfme. "You WING Me *Way, tor ee "'moon at tal." rterritt: went on. "I'm ' prette• bad lot, but I never re,9m1"it YOt; 'St° re thee one, of theta have ,Perved nte ' bal. but I always let them go their owe way, and rye been et good -and faithful servant .to yo*-" • "It was not you," Benson gurgled. 'that I 'wrap that letter about.. -Muck it," Merritt said,,lueleusy. 'Tell me ally more of your lies awl, • 1qt-smash your .jti*lfl for you.' It his hoe breath on his neck. And he was breathing heavily and dietrees4 fully hlinselc whilstebeeconld-e-hear how eteadily lierritt's lungs Were working. Ile esiutd see the lights' of Oran, Orangeebieloweerkinge left they seemed a leng Way urt, whilst • hat-steadr-pursoit-behindebratattmee thing relentlesti and verve -destroying about it. They • were pounding through the village now. Henson gave vent to one cry of distress, but nothing came of it but the mocking echo ot his own 'void(' from it distant belt of ars extensieu supply of native forest Weiglied 2°15 rounds In the bet:inn:4W wthe erverther-Scteritific --Aerictui, 4:124 lit'i,t1* °I/4. °! tho Eratwt and many huge trees are to be found vile scales onlY tif, 413)* -.Ane leeuing in regions still unexplored. mit imp_ was very earefully done and in inn., Pitkto c7-4;:truhr. *14eiit Isur*cL e tot' 1"Iconelusio'ri -reached' **tut that cooked teneeteo-Teeeetteriveho form oe -ensilagervesefood-forentork-witi-nor crystals In the wood tissues and la pay, for the *taxon that by the separeted from the crude oil b cooking it looses much of its diges- double distillation. From the Arid Ubility. - The analyele -riih,de in the distillation is secured Am oxidized et/pear/lent- here described ehowed product, ettelphogenotol, the princie that the Percentage of digestibility plo 61 the camphor oils of commerce?). in the uncooked ensilage was 11.6 The crude camphor is a dark colored per cent.• and in the cooked 80A5 trees. llerritt _ _Mut. nut a. short,- eubetanceilusing et 110-- per 'emit or" but littU---ti-Ver sneer-ing laugh. lie had not expected .Apirmg the be -products may ba Cooking releisees the sugar products flagrant Cowardice like thih_ no 'mentioned crude .camphor ell, whith contained in the foods, and thie fact shade a seuldtqi spurt forward see; eon*" out iiimultatteousty with the' being_ generally krtoWn, line led rilartY caught- ellensen by tile tat* of UV eettelhoe; wbite oil; obtained by flub- to believe that this would hasten: coWntlimating ith a howl 6 1' the: crude oil. asd used in the .frittening rocees, but the greet e tatter tore the manufacture of soap. Iled ail e 50 5 o rom 6 cru perfeete til . ba rir e. came down /wavily phor oil, s. sts black oil,. his result. r-tore$11:7-,eitiCeeless-e-itehr-saidr-titalithee of strands. each steroid comPrishig copper in her had cos_Lnne barely nutieher --ar° twelifielh of what had been spent cotnposed of the nu:aerial. The numher of threads in rope varies TaLittlt 4141, • "The rope text smaller than the& One can scarcely realize in these, knownas-Ineh and -a -quarter-ls -days of iron -gads 114014)4*am with. rope of 15 &breads, and having- a whet pride these• stately wooden circumference Of it shade more than ships of swveral generations ago were kn. inch and an eighth'and diame- regarded. It is true that a line -of -- ter ter of three-eighths of an inch full. battle stop in NeLson.8,40ys. magma. 1 coil of 200 fraluMes of 15 -thread ficent_vessei _though As. „tot, with_ _ litailite :retie weigh* iggitottridi.," Ore than a hundred guns aboard euch rope when now • will bent' a toet barely a tenth' of the price 0111 \ strain of 1,60(rpounds. fully-equirped, first-class battle:J.-hip "Six,thread rope has a diameter of of our day: but she carried lrer • one @eller of an ineb; 200 fathonts tirebei.e the growth. of anittred_ of, litautila- six -thread-- weighs 2 years•oe more of good firitieli oak. pounds,, and new six -thread Manila s will stand a. atritin of 620 Pounds." • Nothing lesthan fifty acres of iorest would \ aurply_ _the _neee_ ssitrv o er, an a co p e at 'hundred shipwright * were kept hard at worts. for twelve months before Theseedy diner was enjoying h4Fa'' she, was reitdy or launching. Then,, 81WIP'elts:r1Y,': he called, "fetch .1110 '':;oecjols:vihtehrhierrant wertibngbul showing etherfit v.:I piece of belled turbot." The dish was Obtained. placed\ ahnutindredenorpolo ortressirealider fsl of7iisTassht : edagitillt' fore (bit customer, and then ba call- IraS it picture' of c9n1b1ned power 'eWatiter--; fetchet choice- vortion or tonveys. and,wrate *MIL *9 no Inall-Oi-riar of curried fowl-andoh, waiter, fetch it is curious to note how. as long 'Tho anohilir rtittoleof win it wome*.h'ut stin4,a century agowhen there wee no of ---7-11,000 tons Stoat, it wee seedy one limed, the *tate. e to feet, oug 9 ,sfe • ,kratil thAt th f, had t,over ee big tifeiie, at the sated- ITIOTIV**14--ettlirairely-risa-Iti:&t: (*tent lIeesen trod on a liedgeeetake.,1tion of loornishee. A turielentine Is c' fa tabbed leeuri *tut hen' ti Matt 1-41tat-19-1 upon his foe. Thit the sight of Mer- great dootand for nie'Hcal afid Judd* ritt'e grim file° was teo muds for- - tii5t purpOses. Froni-red 011-11-.401)rt • him, and tie turepel nue yesunted' his 'feint!! -the ProdUet, known a taffrel/ onto 1110re. ' tkmplo,yrd to it ronxiderahle indent -OS yelled again as 110 ;retched -the in the manufacture of perfunito 'and L_OrtnER... one dainty alter ttnothter. At in_st be lit a fragrant cigar and eertnblir bee" rea Ti nber, , c teret-Liteeeitiledr"ittelr--7---- essir„" said the waiter; - 'Ierch y.;eutcyhousepobliiiielelin' an; haven't got a .._41 4.0,-4., • "liar.'2. entna_-__tha languid- -11.1elleert outd be to grade up his herd to a _„„.,at high standard of produetiveness. No. cent-! thing but ft pure- bred sirs oho' uld- be used, °tied when coMmeneing the S. sit BY INA, farmer should choose one Particular ,ihe horseshoe superstition .110 lodge -gates, but the OD resPenso also ene13.; .end tank Is it,,,10 teul then etick to It. Chang' to .hoetri Con!el front it Jested of, tho,bnrkleg saw howling of the, distilled from rod. on. tater 1-116 Itattio Trq fivIn 'one brc-ed to another WO orbts moo, was 4,,eenieete dogs In the thick ,underwocid boronit. tiori of . other substances, claimed, ,to the--entige of Many, ft failure, t'alveS. j'etrier, one day *hue at ivork Tnero- Wris to help- for'it. Dorabtlees kill the eholera beelike. Attothee!!iiltermw for ow (leery heed, should he tbo deaf oid lodge-keekr beek Irrachwt 10 inieetEehleo *hid* Wh6h celeeted front, dame with ,A SfOOd re- tbe eviL1111--t1-7:4!"'"1-ri-11-1.1? In bed hOurs. ago. Viten the dogs e ntingled With 100. parts et..Watee de- cone .44 pretioe\os; 'The 'dam, hoott.rou.'117:4'Zitinxio.: Were 'Utterable to Merritt; Itereten‘stroye MOOS' linjurious Urge h tdd 'To ilok itwa .4*Iry I romtiono. Ite`TecOgni c us- strambled headlong over the 'well trote • o 'awl 'crashed the tbiekefie *fennel hif.:e •A&0* tattoo. and v0: t0dfI h evertion. (4,-tOvar..!- ' ona--tency doge there Might have . weakness totting my threPt out„ and Ileinto Will keep. rit.just hang ^bent. her till daylight and, wait for My gentle- man. And ru totiow:hito to the tad of the earth. • Japan teiPer• ho and Shikoku. Jiy af the law ef'iptv't t holt produced lit .d.speit4 red by\ tins, (Ioternment ft idiot* • ot tbe *le of Was net properly atterukd 10 ng the tar • t Was. frequent 'tit, and the rchttneke 0 Pretteble ed, -rho (ollowlnt 1, a good tratile from met hs *in* PrOPOrttotat4 100 t oak., 25 The, grouml id aad O Th. 10*Ittrititia tour. 'Ow ha eyil one pront se that ae4th. nor- sin.$ of that 149100'irti iratM1 his',errant*, aroa/d. to* test tha innate* of aWoVia vtheire hoe *iu 0 OW _ s much"as triaa. -eourtiot--lye made to grow larger, anti the 'Very element (in harbors at hate't47intettl-lithicy'eertkitit).:(.3414kttlis44°'-thlalativ4gatt&- cAi41401*. •11141 illettEASEID. ot4eige; too, when retitle larger. Will be rendered difficult . to pass", dillAtwoftln:rtgotto'nfo boPas:tonit oa%liv.; oAti: Pitough the tulltOti, and...so, large 4tt Yeti halt a eentto later, the Duke tons, Andit:45*day even • thte r bierkatied fivefold. ApsrL front .sentitnerital room hatiat,, Pitt as 'well that oameto 13%0,es-sotto oak. toe thd , 4410.2t 'centur e *.Inetr tti4 oft& of tern, Ott.d h3pbuild1ng 131