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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1904-12-8, Page 6X' leintateketeetak Favoritc Nicce OR A SECIZET REVEALIBI). ee,44,4011.444-1:444+44-1,4444++4.1.4++++44-14tetet-lietelefieHteitelf4+ CHAPTER. ponishment in Oh No two io ever liad stranger solitude of a prison. education gu ad e, more neuqal lite thou had Leah and Hattie Sometimes they found. themselves i the midst of comfort and luxury. with aoartraents at the West -end and boardieg-school kept by a poor re- her to preach equaltty and freteinity the seaside., potties to ride, sere lative of his own—a. Miss Fairfax.-- —men would listen to her, would fol- vants to wait upon them, the best who resided at IOW. Ire forbade any low her in crowds; elie would on of masters, for "accomplishments," mention of their father's imprison- make o. name, have an influence. Ile an of governeeses for onlinery meat; and the children were told that remembered how many women hod feaebiage, the prettiest dresses, the he was away frozu home, absent on made themselves famous in the same daintieet, food. 'Tam would come special business, ADA Wpotird no re- fashion. Ile looked with eQuvplae- poverty, saaalor, common loagina- turn for a few years. They believed encY at her beauty. E those dark. bouses, CQ=1011 clothing, the want it implieitly. They had some, Rine •eyes of hers would flash are, if that of ,even the neveasaties of life. There of idea that their father was a great lovely mouth would give ataeranee tWa o one thing tliat eanid all their statesman, born to ,eet the wrongs,1115 tOtteilinS, mon would Hoeg on her add downs woo never forgotten—: a the world riglie. It tlie,y had peen words and eelleve them. His beau - study. No matter what hapPeneel,told that he had gone to dethrone tifeil Leah should, be a pOlnilar lee - they alwaya preserved their books the Czar of all the RMSSIO,S, they turer—not on women's rights. but on d never aniseed their lees000. t, would have believed et Just as Ira- men's freedom. He had the best unteters eloeution for ner, trooge life. moSt =suited for plicitly. ya111g glrJs; but. it Was the oniy one They spent three years wale aloes spent lioura each day itt. tt•aeltino they bad, ever blown. Diving their Fairfax—and very happy yeors they ,Iter. Te girl liereelf wondered at r mothzes lifetime they had been more were. h settleil, they lead lived longer in one "Let them learn everything." Sir strange rrairdog. There were tipies plates. they liad been more uniform- John had said, "Tile elmaces are W1131 53.4C fearell, holf steepeetoel wordientore fleree than tire bittetlk thoughte, thmegh tieUi dare utter them, leet the law seiz 1zz tgaio and render b mute! E he dared uot speek ix poblice i private he atoed for It. When the little gronp of inen met in the clingY parlor of the dingy house in Camden Town, what horrible treason was spoken.. what vile, murderous piens were etteeestcon 'The very fact that he could earry none of them out int- bitteren Martin Ray the more. He went, into prism mistaken, yet ear - neat; ge -mine out more fiend thau Alan. Before that event there had been something litunao in bis breast; ignominY and nothing ltved there now but a de- sire tor revenge. Ho looked at. the An old patroo took pity on hie beautiful face of Leah, his alaughter. 'outietul children, Sir John F,1k- 2 ho could but, odenate ber to ltis leadtenz Radical, came to the way of thioking, and send her out rescue, Ile sent tlio chitairen to a into the world like a tirebrand—send dci rico .re 0" fortable; but now Theo Meyer thot Martin Ray will never be out that bet' father intended her for thal ent lionie for more than throe of neiseldef again. owl they may' stage, a profession for which she bad together, have to work. for theic living. Make ro Altimegh she ttail them eleoer aud aecomplished wo- the Most profound min biro, It 7 was very kiwi, IoVing. int was strantee tlia,t, her taste, interests, he Farm +44.44444444-1144444 CHURNING. To secore cream in the be,st condi- tion for churning it should be separ- ated from the milk directly after milking if a centrifugal separator is used. The temperature is then right and there is no raised cream to bother, If the cream is to be se- parated by staodieg the eoouer it eaatee (toile the better the cream will Le, hence cool the milk quickly. Eighty degreee Fohrenheit is about the proper temperature or separa- tion with the utaebine. Cool the cream immedietely alter separation. Cream should test 35 to 00 per cent, butter fat. The thickness min be regulated. by a screw on the separator. E tbe cream is too thin. the addition of skim milk starter will make it too dilute for the best results in churning. Add the starter by straiolng through a hair sieve, fine wire ambl- er or eloth, and stir the cream often to keep it well mixed and insure even ripeniog. The best temperature for ripening is 60 to 65 degrees. Lower than this is better thou higher, as it gives 0, better grain to the but- ter. If the temperature is too low, however, the ripening is very slow, as the germs cannot work.. Sixteen to twenty-four hours of ripening is lemony necessary to secure the pro- per coosisteney and nit Orlditr of 5 to aelOthei per cent. The ripening in the milk, not in the fat, hence cream requa:es el, greater degree We Keep on e about he vast uperiority of You CEYLON- UNCOLORED GREEN tea to .Tapa.ns. What we claire is true. You can prove it speedily by a tea pot infusion. Will you do see See that you do. Sold in the same foeue as the famous "SALADA'a Black tea. 25e an a. 40e per /to By all grocers. salve,. To test this break the but- ter and if it shows a grannular ap- pearanee at the broken slirface, it is not overworked. Use about one cubic centimeter butter color to two pounds butter fat in winter and one-half this amount in summer. If no measure is at hood a, little practice will give the proper amount. TOis also varies with feeds. breeds aud the cow. Cood butter should. have approx imately the following composition : Water „, 12 liter cent Fat , • ,S5 per cent Salt .. . . .. .. 2 per rent Caselo 1 per cent CHOOSING A. GOOD 00W., We want a living machine to con- vert food into milk, This enaehine must be able to produce a eertain mnount of preduct to meet ex- ItseS. and more to give a profit. 'Vbere must, be capaeity and Ability. to handle enough fooal to give these nOtifig the 'work of each. gang of lea resulte. This requires a capacious borers, until he emu° to signal- . viz EIGHT .1-013, AT LAST. The natural disposition of the, or- dinary-. Highlander, writes Sir Arcbi- bald Geikie in "Scottish Reminis- cences," would met often lead him to choose the heavy wore: of railway emestruetion; but, during the auildityo of one of the lines through the High- lands a inan came to the contractor and asked for work. "Well, Doeald, what cao you do?" "'Deed, eon do oily -thing, " "Well, there's some spade anal bar- , work going on; you can begin en that," wadna just like to be worlein* spade and a wheelbarrow." well, there's Settle roele ,that -needs to be broken away, Can you uSe piek?" "I was never usine a pick." etty man, I don't latiONV any- thlog else ran give you to do," SO 'Donald went away creafallen. But beiog of an oheerviug torn ot lointi. he walked along the track, thenh Ire loud Si; eagfa oparea expense. afiss inehnations, and lavas dia not aeree aeiditea Avoid overripeitiog if bode`, a large Stomach, long intes- boa, wherein he saw a man seated, saltwing the wbale F„iritoo no *poles. told the two 5is-1,wall biS. Tiie blood of the Iowa old lot want roncial butter. tines oral lorge heart elation. A man who canue out now and then, waved, wife ond liia ' .eam is now ready tor -the in buying overtoolcell a Wall botly ileg and then resunuel bis seat, • ' tees reel:Peed an en:ellent enucation. race a /Raton ran lier veins, Siit In be had with ...tfartin Ivo was roeuoeit from prie was a Batten, wabout one of •ton hurt Have the temperature low because the color was all right, Donald ituptirea about the bootee PleatUal. son waten th Leah was in her fifteenth 'ehar arterittlh ee whieh dislingaieed tnateeee I apetten+,,o, ti ;year and wetti., him ahnoot a aolo }e Rav, s, \ Wile Martin Ray amale a "7,n 4 him ar21531vrtteld aro' ra,"c'5' 'tot fourteen. Ile was not gratefol to .liere of °liver Cromwell. and ware 0 "nue' ' Per John. He bad intended to value 1 shipped bun as the saviour a his e their iliscontente greater eate, the girls atter his own essoion, 1 country, Leah hated the name. and sago teroperatuce„ ileir entsery more uneudarable ! goalie who was gifted,. clever. and 1, lovOi the urmory a the lutnaso,nLe. Overripe cream ability to digest. The COW Sholliii etiinZ, bah in. their Mat:Nest of : requires a higher temperature. Thin° have a wide spoce from the hind- la* .brilliont, he had meant to briug out 'graceful, geacelees Stuart% 'mute eivaep, churned at a high temperature quarter to the rib. The shape and then be lived in IXEKur-Y• 4114 k..5, a levturer: a. beautiful young svo-;Marlia saw aothing but le'roism itt will foam. Foaming also takes place bones, even, of all aullnals are ghters eharea it with him. pviall lecturing on etolitic$ woald be ao the Palle inob who dregated their when ervara is c1iurne3 too .nvei,t or gradually. changed by environments nough to preserve thee granular a'earaoee of tbe butter, It Varlee it h breeds, feed and the in of the cow from 4i to 61 al grees. Fifty-four to 08 degrees is TIIEGREATESTIANDLORD JOHN JACOB ASTOR HAS a0e 000 TENANTS. .Ancl, They Fay Him. the ImmenSe Suni af S7,500,000 a Year. John Jacob Astor, cousin of Wil -i limo Waldorf Astor, is the Monte Cristo of real estate owners. Ho owns .'.-20,000,000 worth of trioK:- ings alone in the United States, ohletly in the tome of ten huge hotelss, twenty sky -scraping °Mee and apartment beildiegs. and fiity blocks of dwellings and fiats in the heart of New York. These struc- tures are occupied by ;30,000 tenants. Thus Astor, unquestion- ably the greatest landlord on this planet, owns a city withia a city—a city witle o. population Neal to that of the City ot Lu London within mnt- Opal and Parliameutary, limits says Loudon Tit -Bits, Ofttside oi New York he owns a chain of estate e across the Unitid States, including -verious sunmier and winter palaces ond fishing and hunting parks, from Florida, where he owns a river trona. mouth to source, to Oregto, where he has a rand). of 100,000 ere's. Altogether his tenants pay- him 4120,000 a month, or nearly £1- 600,000 a year—enough h to Pay te poultice of any Royal family in Europe xxegarr THAT OF RUSSIA. This vast estate is managed from a Central ofacc in New York, alr, Ase tor personally directs the business, evbich es divided iota many deport, menta. There is a reaalr depart- ment, eraploylug an many Of pima-, here, Carpenters, electriciaan, and other mecbanics. The managere or this department are called. "doctors" and houses in need of repair are called "patients," Each such "doctor" has his ONVia partieular `Donk of itl Worthle,es as a Machine his rate of Rae', and returned to !Tatienta," and his day awl but color right. Would you. buy a he contractor, who, when he easy' night emergeney just like a thless tool beeauee it. Was Pointe in 4'fe^wrivu' i„„iv wilmtitioner of medicine. Not a d a bright, red? Quantity of milk "a. • et* --4'"'" Are inaltralle0 is placed on V 43" r profit. reqiiireS the conditioo of You astor buildings, because it costa In Use For Over to sutler the total loss et one mo buildings a year than to pay, "c*"""'"""""*T"nsuSooce on all the buildings. re the palmy days or Weste,to.ceiter that would pay well. As tor beautiful queen to the scaffold, I•Ralt at to() 10W a temperature. anal feed. Robbiug the, udder con- . , aleartenehhats. and,„nr'it-4:lass rus2triettie, there wets Plenty a lima to ,!10.kred and admired Marie Antoinette. chaeniax should not occup.:,, untie. stimulates action of those r-.3 4"ea "the 1 o''''''' 0, '-uf' „think over what should be **low with She througra oli the PAWS of lilstorY ban a half hour or three-fourtbs j, parts and voile for more fooa—oe, *Aimed iv good brow:Moth., lash ,00d yet- he thought to /stake her e b most,. If more time is required, a larger paunch—and the ribs wore nttthiog is wrong. More generale in the way. Illiere are many cows it l the teraperoture, Or, again, wbklt have a floating rib. and Poem a WHY, Or the <Team may be too SOULe it has disappeared. The eon - bin, or the churn too full. AU these 4tnfltly enlarging patent% increases nd =Any other eases tbe experience ibe strain on AlaP back. the ribs are sprung and the crest and fish ed dairyman knows well and can,Iesa Iv''''trutg W4'1 waleh 4nd 4113* ztd Ifaving plans of hls. ow. patient. ovm.ettsed. toranw multiteontrally grateful to sir John t Inde gove their penee cheerfully, and ing sent them to a sehool ;via was olononneer of royalty! . lore. Leah Ray was just sixteen,nt heo beautiful as Vile opening bud of never thoutelit of the nacon,gruity. ,itad received a solid., se,,nsime rose; graca, dignity, and pas - When riot and anaroliee reigned1 when atom' , eontfortera lorasou by the elon were, marked in evetar line of her slake; hate grew into tierce venge- thought that it vannot o late leol fare. The 13row was somewhat low time and broaa. fall of ideality nod 4, tistiPie When Man ifilatler With doe -teed dein* for ruira-tlien 'Martin rem amerleired and bin beautiful life . -tie alangliters wore fine eilithes and ate good food. But, war% the loyol good sense of the people prevailed, I r when oubmiesion to lawfd authorItY/cureal a reigned. when tho tire of discontent hilasel wee extinguished—then doleful days Ihe intende, undo the darts of it; generally guess the Vallee frOM. a yet to form their •MIMS aS WOUld. thought: the M.'S were dark, the 4 knowledge of the conditions and ea* eatue put of prislon )10111010S% eyebrows straight. It was a face easily apply the remedy. To pre - f • o almost petualees, but the period in *hope and harmony. with vent foaming, thicken the cream, be did was to tali(' his a Proud hid sensitive mouth—a face 1 lower the temperature, or add hot rom salami. ire liad se- dielleult to read. The liatitnese and water or salt. ents tem them anil for brightnese of girlhood were not on Never have the t 1 h den Town, and there it it was slightly mystieal and one-half full. fana. d better. , in for Martin loor inetead of liis time. first ,dreatnen and the lustrous eyes had a Inds IS a Place where it doesn't pay . . • ° ' -- -- to maaing moue and then to the SlindOW in OM- to do too much. Two mall churn, - - - 4 ;education of Ws daughters. They , The noble head, the graceful figure lugs eon often be done as quickly o the agitators Who Avoided 11 a. While they led others into •it, never heard of or suspected tlie see ,, and its movements, tho mass or: aud More eosily than one large ono, traen kept their recarey. en, , et os ln;prisoniuent, 0 would deek weeein e hoir, se tine and aleonetlf the barrel clown is used (1 prefer rather balm died, thao, let them know dant delighted Martin Ray. Too this to the swing churn) a little It. He received their homage ana ,more beautiful she Weep the more sure practice will eunble one to tell by sound When the churn is too full, worship much as he had reeelved `.arees she to influent% aim Ire never Martin Bay Was often at a loss to Immo where his dinner or his chit- tireb's clothes were to •came from, Yet, in spite of all tirawbactio, the their mother's before thou, as a tltought w le ler Sfle nut; a_._ u. .. il girls grew up beatitiftd and intent. right, as incense they ought to burs log to devote her youag ate To Ole gent. Wherever Martin Ray went betore bine, 'When they talked, in Propagation of lils ideas, whether alie I be took them v:itlf him; and they their simple girlish fashion, of how g would care to lye up all the al - loomed much that was useful. with great a statesmen he was, of what lurements and pleasures of the world much that was the reverse. They great things lie would do, he was to decileate herself:to the people, To had no frioudol it Wan impossible to Pattered and pleased. had never thought that she would form even aequaentances living as .1fany people looked coldly ; upon taey did. alternately in luxury -and hint now who had once seen noble poverty, in great cities mot remote qualitiee in hint. The imprisonment villages. The men witli whom. their Nati been against, him. He was tlie father ossociatea were almost lInt more determined that his daughters lenown to them, and never brought at least Should retain their venerae wife or sister to see them. '-rhe37 tion for him, People began to look evert. lonely and friendless. Then upon him more as a popular agita- came a tinae of reat trouble el tor tlia.n as a guide or aleader. He Ivhivh they urt111111:443' krUlv but lit-) was soured, intbittered, yet conkpell- th'• When Leah was eleven anded by the force of tile law to be more lreuie ten, Martin ilaY• rendered des'', careful and reticent. He dared not iterate by witat seemed to him long-! again advocate the nturller of a king; refuse life mission it had appointed for her. The man who preached lib- erty to the world never dreamed of giving it to his oWn daughter; he who openly taught rebellion against all authority never imaginetl that hie daughter would disobey libn. Vre be Conthrea) A BARBARIAN' STATE. .1.0.mmeme Three Quarters of Southern. Niger- ia in a Primeval State. continued peace and order, made a and the fierce sentiments he had been Inclosing his report to the British. opeeeli which brought him under the wont to express openly now seethed Colonial Pince on Southern Nigeria Iran grip of the law. He was trier', and gathered in his heart. Sullen. for 1903, the Acting Secretary, Mr. curl sentenced to three years irriPris- bitter, vengeful rage liad Possession H. 13edwell, records that the areas einment; and, In spite of all that of hin3 • How lie beiged to crush all vet under control, where slave -deal' friends could do, of aetitions, and of those above him, the 'queen in whose ing, 'human sacrifices, juju obserV"L' an agitation which spread all over name he had been arrested, the jury ances, and inter -town warfare still the country, tbe sentence was carried out. -Martin Ray, who liea not scrupled to use the most offensive language with regard to lils sovereign; who liad not hesitated to incite the peo- ple to sedition and rebellion, found who had found him guilty, the judge liad sentenced bim, the governor and chaplain of the jail where he had been imprisOned, every aristo- crat who had read his trial and smiled at his sentence! Ellow he hated them! How he clothed in o You Choose Your Medicine with Care and irssist on Having DR. CHASE'S SYRUP OF LINSEED AND TURPENTINE lion cannot be too particular in buying medicine. - It may be a question of life or death. There are so many cough: and cold remedies that there is a tendency to be ceieless in the selection of trnat- ment, and yet what is more danger- ous than a cold? You would not thine of taleitig any medicine that might be offered ,for heart trouble or kidney 'disease, and yet far more people die from the re- sults of neglected colds titan froth tees() nil/Wilts. INSIS'I‘ ON RAVING Clan OF IIELTABILITy AND RE- PlITATION, SUCH ' AS, DR, CHASE'S SYRUP OF LINSEED AND TURPENTINE.. ' This great family Medicine lists stood the , test of years and never (lisp ',pointed those who put, their trust in it, as a cure for croup, bean - chi tis 'who Dping ,co ugh, asthma, coughs, colds, and theoat, treubles, , Do .mot, be satisfied with', Substitutes and imita.tionS, for thee(/' lack. the curati powerte. which ',have giercea Dr. Chase's Syrup of Lineeed and Tur- pentine its world-wide reputation. 31RS. GEO. GOOD, 'Tichborne, dixigton Co., Ont., writes:— It is with pleasure that 1 certify to the wonderful success of Dr: Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine as a cure for colds. It is the best and surest treatment for cougas .end colas that we have ever been alele to find.—Mrs Geo. Good, riehborne, Addington Co., Ont." MRS, A. A. VAN 131.1SICIRK, Rob- inson street, Moncton, N. B., writes: "For years 1 have used Dr. .Chases Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine for nay children whea they have colds in the winter. I•first used it witli my daughter, who suffered from a severe forra of asthma. The least exposure to cold would lay her up and she would nearly suffocate for want of breath. I must sayX found it to be a rfaost satisfactory treatment, and it has entirely cured her. It seeetis to go direct to the diseased parts and br' im, the desired relief." Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed ant turpentine, 25 cents a bottle, at all 'dealers, or .e.‘"-'drtaanson, Bates & Co., Toronto, go on unchecked, amount to rather more than One-fourth of the total aren of the Protectorate. A, cousid- erable portion of the remainder (lis still in a very unsettled state. The opening up of the Protectorate has been gradually and steadily pushed fortward; Much of it has been accom- plished in. the last five years. Pa- tient work and time will do much with the native, but' only when he is in constant contact with the Eur- opeans. Given sufficient European supervision, the work done, and to be done, will the more easily be con- solidated and made firm and lasting. The territory under the control of the Protectorate Government has been estimated at some 48,000 square miles, for the most part thickly populated. Of this popula- tion an infinitesimal proportion only makes any claim to the rudiments of education. •Speaking broadly, Mr. Beclwell says the type of native to he dealt- with is of a lower class than probably any other ta British West Africa'. Long before a Euro- pean set foot in this protectorate, inter -tribal warfare had been waged on a very large scale. No domin- ant power effected a conquest; a see -saw victory went on from week to week, and the intervals of peace must have been few and far be- tween. ENVY. ,E see it stated here that the sul- tan Wears" an iron imdershirt.'' "Say, I wish I had one like it to Sencl, to my laeinciree. I'd like' to • get even with 'em mice in awhile." - G erman m ed i cal- jo tuna Is 010 re- eonemeneing as a remedy for ap- appendicitis walkingon all -fours for twen ty mi nut es, , f o Ur tiimes a, . day. the exercise strengthens the abdom- inal muscles. • 'Mien the MAID foams, wben it breaks" and when tel1 is going 'well or is not. Butter should "come" in granules the size of a wheat kernel. Wash it immediately once. Too numb wash- ing removes or impairs the flavor. This should be done while in the churn. Then remove to the butter worker, and add from one to one eighth ounces of salt to a pound of butter, depending •upon, the amount of buttermilk and water present. Then work it slightly to remove a little of the buttermilk and set the butter away for twelve to twenty- four hours to "season" or dissolve the salt. Then give it tho final working. The chief caution is not to work the butter too much especially at the first working. Just enough to remove most of the buttermilk. Ex- cessive working destroys the granu- lar appearance which is the chief test of good butter and makes it Nether am Babe Sick mother—sick child! That's the way it works when a mother is nursing her infant. Scott's Emulsion is an ideal medicine for nursing mothers. It has a direct effect on the milk. Sometimes the mother is weak; her thin milk does not make the baby grow. SceiPs Emulsion a le appear to give more strength. t so hatilisome, perhaps but (150510 IS the bane of the breeder. prung rib indleates fat on the rather than int the pail. AU meet is converted, into milk througl te blood. Peed and cave tend to ate form. 00 many altuost over- ate breed tendeneieS anti ruin the ml. We should feed to (OW girth and give heert capacity; action of the lungs so blood will be purified. The great tendency to and prevalence of tuberculosis may be from insufficient lung ac- tion and improper form. Tito pelvic arth should be above the level, an indication of strength, and enables the cow to calve easily. Such cows. with a proper selection of the sire, aro usually well able to transmit their qualities to tbe offspring. A. big mouth is an indication of abil- ity to use coarse foods; the mouth is an indication of the size of the in- testines. A weak, 81118.11 mouth and inferior sized intestines are not good signs of a great producer. mothers of Olden() for funds to maintain 'the thousand sick children that it muses within its walls every year. ------ The Hospital is not a local institution— but Provincial. The 1 siek ehild from any piece in Ontario who ean'e afford to pay has the same privi. lees as the child living in Toronto and is treated free. The Itospitid had last year in its beds and cots 761 patients, 267 ot these were front 196 places out- side of Termites The cost is 98 eente per patient per day, and there were 129 siek little ones a day 'coon DAY,DQCYDR.' in the Hospital. Since its found°, . don the Hospital -1,5 has treated 10,371 children —about c 7,500 of these were unable to pay and were treated free. Every dollar may- be the translator of your kind thoughts into the Hospital kind deeds. Everybody's dol- lar may be th o Friend in Need to SAAESARE. Somebody's child. Let the money of the strong be mercy t4 the weak. The Hospital pays out divi dends of health and happiness to suffer- ing childhood on every dollar that i. paid by the friencl- of little children. If you know of any sick child in your neighborhood who is sick or crip- pled or has club feet send the par- ent'e name to tilt Hospital. "scen's ICNITTING" See the example of what can be done for club -foot children There were 14 like cases last year and hun- dred@ in 28 years. changes all that. The rich cod- liVer oil in. Scott's Emulsion feeds the mother and gives ,a floW of rich, nourishing milk for the baby. The medicine in Scott's Emulsion not only strengthens the mother but goes naturally through the milk and strength- ens the child. NOthin rr to harm --all for good --Scott's you little to. try 0 yea like COTT'&1:30.WN.E,,TorerAo. Ont. isiVEROUS irlvst Ilonrdcr--'41 eneUbevn of a .were obliged to eat fl to save themselves ft You wouldn't think eat such a thing!" Second Boateler--"Better not nt landlady hear of it. We dot AUL any Wafer complications bashi" 1 ' that Ilto Ile expedition wed tree bark starvation. ay could OSPITAL FOR.. or SICK CHILDREN For it Cares for Eva17 Sick MN in 'Ontario Athos° Vomits Canttot Afford to Pay For Treatment. if if or The Hospital for Sick Children, College streeb, Toronto, appeals to Om fathers and eaumworaosil )AIRY POINTERS. Never breed a "kicky" cow. YoUr herd needs cows, not mules. Never put a line e•ow in the care of a, poor mincer. The milker makee or *unmakes the cow. Scrub tows, on scrub farms, fed oft scrub rations, cared for by scrub persons produce nondescript milk and butter that is hardly good enough for axle grease. Soured milk affects the cretin In- juriously. Get the cream oft The cows Should be thoroughly ac- quainted with the milkers. Cream irregularly ripened makes streaked butter. Dry salt can not be worked into dry butter suecessfully. Slow milking erets the cow. Hasten the performance as much as possible. Fresh cream and ripened crewel mixed will always result in dubious butter. A 'mess' of cream in a churning should be of one degree of ripeness 'throughout. Butter will not keep well if eiVer- worked so that its natoral gran is destroyed. The overworking tends to smash the globules of the butter and to give it a "greasy feel." Dirt' in milk makes more undesir- able butter than all the wrong me- thods of working. No perfection of working out buttermilk and :work- ing in salt can secure the proper flavor of butter from dirty milk.. The manure -coated cow is proof that her owner is in the wrong busi- ness. He should change occupations. The old churn used to turn out line butter on the farm. Toecia.y, with the knowledge of handling, ripening, and churning that had become so gen- eral, the churn should be able to turn out really gilt-edged butter. Such butter would promptly put a profit into dairy farming. The dairy farmer afraid of the churn can. not hope to make money out of milk. Always remember that milk sent off the farm that produces it carries away forever the nitrogen and miner- al matter, and thus impoverishes the farm. The churn would retain these elements on the farm and send oft only the butter, which contains no fertility worthy of mention. A project for applying the scheme of free land for settlers in Siberia, in order to attract colonization from the congested districts of European Russia, is attracting much favorable comment' in, St,. Petersburg, Enr011n AFTER Please send contributions to Je leas nobertson, Chairing:in, or to Douglas David ec n, Sec.-Treas., of Tho ospital for Sic: C`hildren, College $treet, Toronto. nerable alnety-almoyear leetsee iitottl.ecinc1:13ab eteionnte 0tiltlidoreal tai for e idea never to sell. Thus the Aatoes holdings, most of lalterited. repraseut the ace ula of four gerterations, he being the ourth John jaeob in direct, descent from the original Ja- cob, who went to America from, Ger- mony a penniless furrier. The rade for tenants in rears aef rent is thirty days' notice of oleo on—a rule not always enforced, le one 'Astor house a widow took n boarders and paid the rent re- liantly for three years. Then sua tell Ill, was obliged to distniSa ber hoarder% awl COULD NOT rAY THE RENT. The collector mode perfunctory calls, but. At the end of Fix moults, as the widow Was still unable to pay, alto eceired a receipt in full for all kW - rent's, Signed by Mr. Astor himself. This real estate lain, itt not yig forty, is the father of thca thiid e'en, colonel of a voluntee ur egient: thor of four =Waffle b inventor of a, bleyele-bralae, a groove track for tranacars, and more ban a dozen eleetricat appliances. During an interview with Mr. As- tor I asked him 'what he would have done for a living if he had been, born poor. "I think," be replied, "I should have beea a locolhotive engineer. I lways had a mecnanical turn of mind, and am now developing an ap- parittus by which, I will run ante of my yachts by eleetricity." Ire then alluded with pride to the time when he took bis place at the throttle of a, locomotive on a Cana- dian railway and ran. the train from Ottawa to Montreal, about 1.50 miles, making all stops. On an- other occasion, clad in an. engioeer's cap and jacket lie acted as driver 01anengine drawing a. prtvate car - PILLED WITH. MILLIONAIRES. He accomplished the journey of nine- ty miles, in the State of Kentucky, at the rate of sixty-two tunes an hour. At the end of the run he re- turned the cap and jacket to their owner, and then rejoined his mil- lionaire friends in the private car- riage. "But suppose again, Mr. Astor,". I said, "that you had been born poor. Would you have any am- bition to become rich?" "Decidedly," he answered. "Every- body should. I cannot believe that-'- anybodo is content to remain poor. He is a great traveller, and speaks with delight of his interview with the Sultan of Turkey. During the -Spanish-Atherican War this great landlord vome to Oitba at the head of a company of his tenants, slept, in the trenches, offered his health. and his life to his country, and out of his abundance gave to the nation a mountain battery fully equipped., Once a phrenologist, to -whom he was not `known personally-, "Your head is large above the ears, so you will never suffer for want of a T o of." Whereupon the owner of more roofs than any other. man in the world smiled grimly., FOREST DENUDATION. , A report from Rio Oe Janeiro points out the warning afforded by Brazil, concerning the effects of $ forest denudation, Through the de- struction of trees in northern Brazil, the report' says, large states have been. brought to the verge of ruin. In Rio Grande do Norte and Ceara."-----' chronic droughts occur, causing famine and depopulation 1 n regions which were 'once richly thnbered and well watered, The Brazilians are beginning to call for the selentific replanting of their devast ated fore ests. It is 'eke little worries •of life that make a luau grow old. An agreeable pee,,,on, eel° talks to you about teourselt;